It takes forever to open. When at last it swings wide on the dark tunnel what comes through is a storage rack, empty, floating on antigrav.
What follows is a figure in a s.p.a.cesuit; modern type, but the windows of the hopper are semipolarized and I cannot make out the face inside the bubble top.
He slings the rack upon the bulkhead, takes off the helmet and hangs that up, too. Then he just stands. I am beginning to muster enough sense to wonder why when he comes slowly across the hold.
Reaching the doorway he says: "Oh it"s you, Lizzie. You"ll have to help me out of this. I"m stuck."
M"Clare.
The outside of the suit is still freezing cold; maybe this is what has jammed the fastening. After a few minutes tugging it suddenly gives away. M"Clare climbs out of the suit, leaving it standing, and says, "Help me count these, will you?"
_These_ are a series of transparent containers from a pouch slung at one side of the suit. I recognize them as the envelopes in which we put what are referred to as Personal Background Sets.
I say, "There ought to be twenty-three."
"No," says M"Clare dreamily, "twenty-two, we"re saving one of them."
"What on earth is the use of an extra set of faked doc.u.ments and oddments--"
He seems to wake up suddenly and says: "What are you doing here, Lizzie?"
I explain and he wanders over to the hopper and starts to explain the controls.
There is something odd about all this. M"Clare is obviously dead tired, but kind of relaxed; seeing that the hour of Danger is only thirty-six hours off I don"t understand it. Probably several of his students are going to have to risk their lives--
I am on the point of seeing something important when the speaker announces in the colonel"s voice that Professor M"Clare and Miss Lee will report to the Conference Room at once please.
M"Clare looks at me and grins. "Come along, Lizzie. Here"s where we take orders for once, you and I."
It is the colonel"s Hour. I suppose that having to work with Undergraduates is something he could never quite forget, but from the way he looks at us we might almost be s.p.a.ce Force personnel,--low-grade of course but respectable.
Everything is at last worked out and he has it on paper in front of him; he puts the paper four square on the table, gazes into the middle distance and proceeds to recite.
"One. This ship will go off Ma.s.s-Time on 2nd August at 11.27 hours ship"s time....
"Thirty-six hours from now.
"... At a point one thousand miles vertically above Co-ordinates 165OE, 7320S, on Planet Incognita, approximately one hour before midnight local time.
"Going on planetary drive as close as that will indicate that something is badly wrong to begin with.
"Two. This ship will descend, coupled to _Gilgamesh_ as at present, to a point seventy miles above the planetary surface. It will then uncouple, discharge one hopper, and go back on Ma.s.s-Time. Estimated time for this stage of descent forty minutes.
"Three. The hopper will then descend on its own engines at the maximum speed allowed by the heat-disposal system; estimated at thirty-seven minutes. _Gilgamesh_ will complete descent in thirty-three minutes.
Engines of _Gilgamesh_ will not be used except for the heat-disposal and gyro auxiliaries. The following installations have been made to allow for the control of the descent; a ring of eight rockets in peltathene mounts around the tail and, and one outsize antigrav unit inside the nose. "Sympathizer" controls hooked up with a visiscreen and a computer have also been installed in the nose.
"Four. _Gilgamesh_ will carry one man only. The hopper will carry a crew of three. The pilot of _Gilgamesh_ will establish the ship on the edge of the cliff, supported on antigrav a foot or so above the ground and leaning towards the sea at an angle of approximately 20 with the vertical. Except for this landing will be automatic.
"Five."
The colonel"s voice has lulled us into pa.s.sive acceptance; now we are jerked into sharper attention by the faintest possible check in it.
"The greatest danger attaching to the expedition is that the Incognitans may discover that the crash has been faked. This would be inevitable if they were to capture (a) the hopper; (b) any of the new installations in Gilgamesh, especially the antigrav; (c) any member of the crew.
"The function of the hopper is to pick up the pilot of _Gilgamesh_ and also to check that ground appearances are consistent. If not, they will produce a landslip on the cliff edge, using power tools and explosives carried for the purpose. That is why the hopper has a crew of three, but the chance of their having to do this is slight."
So I should think; ground appearances are supposed to show that _Gilgamesh_ landed using emergency rockets and then toppled over the cliff and this will be exactly what happened.
"The pilot will carry a one-frequency low-power transmitter activated by the change in magnetic field on leaving the ship. The hopper will remain at five hundred feet until this signal is received. It will then pick up the pilot, check ground appearances, and rendezvous with this ship at two hundred miles up at 18.27 hours."
The ship and the hopper both being radar-absorbent will not register on alarm systems, and by keeping to planetary nighttime they should be safe from being seen.
"Danger (b) will be dealt with as follows. The rocket-mounts being of peltathene will be destroyed by half an hour"s immersion in water. The installations in the nose will be destroyed with Andite."
Andite produces complete colecular disruption in a very short range, hardly any damage outside it; the effect will be as though the nose broke off on impact; I suppose the Incognitans will waste a lot of time looking for it on the bed of the sea.
"Four ten-centimeter cartridges will be inserted within the nose installations. The fuse will have two alternative settings. The first will be timed to act at 12.50 hours, seven minutes after the estimated time of landing. It will not be possible to deactivate it before 12.45 hours. This takes care of the possibility of the pilot"s becoming incapacitated during the descent.
"Having switched off the first fuse the pilot will get the ship into position and then activate a second, timed to blow in ten minutes. He will then leave the ship. When the antigrav is destroyed the ship will, of course, fall into the sea.
"Six. The pilot of _Gilgamesh_ will wear a s.p.a.cesuit of the pattern used by the original crew and will carry Personal Background Set number 23. Should he fail to escape from the ship the crew of the hopper will on no account attempt to rescue him."
The colonel takes up the paper, folds it in half and puts it down one inch further away.
"The hopper"s crew," he says, "will give the whole game away should one of them fall into Incognitan hands, alive or dead. Therefore they don"t take any risks of it."
He lifts his gaze ceilingwards. "I"m asking for three volunteers."
Silence. Manning the hopper is definitely second best. Then light suddenly bursts on me and I lift my hand and hack B on the ankle.
"I volunteer," I say.
B gives me a most dubious glance and then lifts her hand, too.
Cray on the other side of the table is slowly opening his mouth when there is an outburst of waving on the far side of B.
"Me too, colonel! I volunteer!"
Mr. Yardo proceeds to explain that his special job is over and done, he can be more easily spared than anybody, he may be too old to take charge of _Gilgamesh_ but will back himself as a hopper pilot against anybody.
The colonel cuts this short by accepting all three. He then unfolds his paper again.
"Piloting _Gilgamesh_," he says. "I"m not asking for volunteers now.
You"ll go to your cabins in four hours" time and those who want to will volunteer, secretly. To a computer hookup, Computer will select on a random basis and notify the one chosen. Give him his final instructions, too. No one need know who it was till it"s all over. He can tell anyone he likes, of course."
[Ill.u.s.tration]
A very slight note of triumph creeps into the next remark. "One point.