you out of this hydrogen tomb just as he pulled you out of Golconda's black sands and rotten swamps. That's what Dauge thinks anyhow. But Alexei won't. Or will he? In the sick bay, breathing through nostrils extended with pain, Mollard was smearing himself with thick tannic ointment. His face and arms were lobster-red and shiny. Catching sight of Bykov he smiled amiably and struck up his song about the swallows. He was almost calm now. Had he not started his song Bykov would have been sure he was really calm. But Mollard was singing in a voice that was over-loud and deliberate, hissing with pain every now and then. 3. The engineer reminisces while the navigator advises shutting off memory. Zhilin was repairing the reflector control combine. It was hot and stuffy and he thought the ship's air conditioners must have broken down but he had no time or wish to see to them. At first he threw off his jacket, then his overalls, and remained in shorts and shirt. Varya settled promptly on the discarded overalls and soon was invisible, save for her shadow and her prominent eyes, which flashed into presence sometimes. Zhilin was getting out of the torn casing plastic-metal printed circuits, sounding the good ones, putting aside those that were cracked and replacing them by spares. He worked steadily and unhurriedly as during a repairs test, because he had all the time he needed and because anyway it would probably be to no purpose. He tried not to think of anything and was happy he remembered the general scheme quite well, enough to avoid consulting the servicing volume more than a couple of times, and that he'd been knocked about not so badly after all and there were only scratches on his head. Behind the photon reactor casing the computer buzzed, Mikhail Antonovich rustled paper and hummed to himself something unmelodious. He always hummed something to himself when working. I wonder what's he doing now, thought Zhilin. Or perhaps he's just trying to keep his mind busy. It's great to be able to pick up work at a time like this. The planetologists are also working now most likely, dropping bomb-probes. So I haven't seen a stick of probes go off after all. Or a lot of other things either, for that matter. They say, for instance, Jupe's a smashing sight from Amaltheia. And I always wanted to go on an astral trip or a pathfinder expedition to another planet to search for signs of beings from outer worlds. And then they said there were some nice girls on the J-stations and I wanted to meet them to have something to brag about to Perez Junto-he's been assigned to lunar routes and is happy about it too, rum sort as he is. Funny the way Mikhail Antonovich is singing out of tune-as if on purpose. He's married and has two children, no, three, and the eldest, a girl, is sixteen; he's been promising to introduce me and winking raffishly every time, but that is not to happen. Nor a lot of other things. Father will be terribly upset-that's bad. Just my rotten luck that it should have happened on my first independent trip. It's a good thing she and I have drifted apart, it suddenly occurred to him. Altogether easier. It's much harder, say, for Mikhail Antonovich. Or for the captain. The captain's wife's beautiful and clever, likes a laugh, too. When she was seeing him off she didn't seem worried at all, or perhaps she was, but didn't show it, though I rather thought she wasn't, being used to it. You get used to anything. I for one got used to acceleration, though at first felt suicidal and even expected they'd transfer me to the Ground Control Department. It was called "joining the girls", the Department being mostly female, and considered a disgrace. Nobody was quite sure why though, for the girls were good company and later worked at the various Spu's and stations and bases on other planets, giving a very good account of themselves. Better than boys sometimes. Anyway, thought Zhilin, it's a good thing we've drifted apart. Just imagine what she'd be thinking now. And he stared meaninglessly at the cracked circuit he was holding in his hand. We kissed in the Bolshoi Park and then on the embankment under some white statues, and then I saw her home and we kissed more in the entrance hall of her block of flats and people kept going up and down all the time despite the late hour. She was afraid her mother might appear any moment and ask her what she thought she was doing there and who that young man was. That was in summer, during the white nights. Then I came for my winter vacation and we met again, and it was like that first time, only there was snow in the park and bare branches stirred in the grey low sky. Her lips were soft and warm and I remember I told her I found kissing more of a winter occupation. Gusts of wind showered snow on us until we felt quite frozen and ran for warmth and shelter to a cafe in the Street of Spacemen. I remember how happy we were to find it empty. We settled at a window and watched the cars sweep by outside. I betted her I knew all the car makes and lost: a flash low-seated job pulled up at the kerb which I couldn't name. I went outside to enquire and was told it was a Golden Dragon, the new Chinese atom-powered car. The stake was three wishes for the winner. It seemed then that it would be like this always, in winter and in summer, on the embankment under the white statues and in the Bolshoi Park, and in the theatre where she looked breathtakingly beautiful in her black dress with a white collar and was nudging me all the time so I wouldn't laugh so loud. But one day she didn't turn up and I made another date by videophone. And she didn't come again, and she didn't answer my letters when I went back to the School. I still wouldn't take it. I kept sending her long and foolish letters, though I didn't know at the time they were foolish. A year later I saw her in our club. She was with another girl and didn't recognise me. I felt then life was over for me, but it wore off by the end of my fifth year and I can't even understand why I should be remembering all this now. Probably because it doesn't matter any longer. Yes, I think I wouldn't want to be reminiscing otherwise. ... The hatch clanged. Bykov's voice said: "How're things, Mikhail?" "Finishing the first spiral, Alexei. Dropped three hundred miles." "Well..." Zhilin heard somebody kick plastic fragments along the floor. "And of course no communication with Amaltheia?" "The receiver's dead," said Mikhail Antonovich and sighed. "The transmitter's working but there are such radio storms here...." "What about your calculations?" "Almost finished. We'll drop something in the order of four thousand miles and then hang, it appears. Floating, as Vladimir says. The pressure'll be terrific but not big enough to crush us-that's clear. It will be big enough, however, to make it hard for us, with a load of anything up to 2.5 G's." "Hm," said Bykov. For a while he was silent, then said, "Have you got any idea?" "Pardon?" "I say, have you got any idea-how to get out of it?" "Why, no, old chap," the navigator said gently, almost ingratiatingly. "How could I. It's Jupiter. Why, I have never even heard about anybody ever ... getting out of here." A long silence descended. Zhilin began working again, quickly and noiselessly. Then Mikhail Antonovich said in a rush: "You stop thinking about her, old chap. Much better not to, or you start feeling so rotten, really...." "But I'm not," Bykov said in a grating voice. "And you'd be well advised not to. Ivan!" he yelled. "Here," Zhilin called back and started working urgently. "Still at it?" "Finishing soon," he said. He heard the captain coming across to him, kicking plastic fragments out of his path. "Litter everywhere," Bykov was muttering. "A real pigsty." -He emerged from behind the casing and squatted beside Zhilin. "I'm finishing," Zhilin repeated. "Taking your time about it, aren't you," Bykov growled. He grunted and started emptying the spare blocks out of the kit on to the floor. Zhilin shifted a little to make more room for him. They were both big and broad, and there was really not quite enough elbow-room for both of them in the space in front of the combine. They worked silently and rapidly, and soon heard Mikhail Antonovich start his computer again and then begin humming to himself. When they were through Bykov called out: "Mikhail, come here, will you." " He straightened up and wiped sweat off his forehead. Then he kicked aside the heap of Cracked circuits and switched on the general control. The 3D reflector scheme appeared on the screen. It was revolving slowly. "Well, well, well," said Mikhail Antonovich. A blue graph started tick-tick-tick, unreeling slowly. "Not too many microholes," Zhilin said quietly. "Microholes be hanged," Bykov said, made an ugly face and bent close to the screen. "Look at this bastard." The reflector scheme was tinted blue. Now this blue was showing ragged patches of white. Those were the spots where either the mesosubstance layers were pierced or control cells smashed. There were plenty of white spots, and to one side of the reflector they ran into a big blotch of white taking up at least one-eighth of the paraboloid's surface. "Just look at this bastard," Bykov repeated and thrust his thumb between his teeth. He was thinking. Mikhail Antonovich shook his head and went back to his computer. "The thing's only good for fireworks now," Zhilin muttered. He reached for his overalls, shook Varya out and pulled them on: it had got cold again. Bykov was still standing looking at the screen and biting at a nail. Presently he picked up the blue graph and ran a cursory eye over it. "Zhilin," he suddenly said in a tense voice. "Get a couple of sigma-testers, check them and go to the air-lock. I'll be waiting for you there. Mikhail, drop everything and start reinforcing the holes. I said drop everything." "Where're you going, old chap?" Mikhail Antonovich asked in surprise. "Outside," Bykov said and went out. "But what for?" Mikhail Antonovich asked, turning to Zhilin. Zhilin shrugged. He didn't know what for. Repairing a mirror in space and in flight, without mesochemists, without huge crystallisers, without reactor furnaces, was absolutely impossible. As absolutely impossible as, say, pulling the Moon to the Earth with your bare hands. And as it was, with a corner smashed, the reflector could only impart a spinning movement to the ship. Just what it did when the thing had happened. "Makes no sense," Zhilin said uncertainly. He looked at Mikhail Antonovich and Mikhail Antonovich looked at him. They never said a word but all of a sudden were both in a terrible hurry. Fussily Mikhail Antonovich gathered up his sheets, saying urgently: "You go, Vanya. You go quickly." In the air-lock Bykov and Zhilin got into space suits and then squeezed themselves into the lift. The cab raced along the gigantic tube of the photon reactor which stringed all the ship's compartments-from the living quarters down to the parabolic reflector. "Good," said Bykov. "What's good?" asked Zhilin. The lift stopped. "It's good the lift's in order," said Bykov. "Ah." Zhilin was disappointed. "It might have been out of order," Bykov said sternly. "You'd have to crawl all of seven hundred feet there and then back." They stepped out on to the upper platform of the paraboloid. The black ribbed dome of the reflector sloped in a curve from under their feet. It was enormous: 700 yards in length and 500 yards in diameter. From where they stood they could not see its edges. Poised over their heads was the huge silver disc of the cargo bay. On its sides, slung far out on brackets the hydrogen engines shot out silent furious blue flames. An awesome world gleamed eerily round them. A bank of carroty fog stretched on their left. Far down, incredibly deep underfoot, the fog lay-in fat layers of cloud with darker gaps in between. Still farther and deeper, the clouds ran together into a dense brown expanse. On their right all was enveloped in an even pink haze in which Zhilin saw suddenly the Sun-a small bright pink disc. "Take this," said Bykov. He thrust a coil of thin cable into Zhilin's hands. "Make it fast in the lift shaft, will you," he said. He made a noose with the other end of the cable and fastened it round his waist. Then he slung both testers round his neck and swung his legs over the railing. "You pay it out," he said. "Here goes." Zhilin stood against the railing, gripping the cable with both hands and watching the thick awkward figure in a bright space suit slowly disappear beyond the curvature of the dome. The suit gleamed pinkish and the ribbed dome sent off pinkish reflections too. "Pay it out livelier," Bykov's angry voice boomed inside Zhilin's helmet. The space-suited figure crawled out of sight and there was only the bright taut line of the cable on the ribbed surface now. Zhilin glanced at the Sun. It was veiled by haze now, sharply outlined and almost red. Zhilin looked down at his feet and saw his own blurred pinkish shadow. "Look, Ivan," Bykov's voice said. "Look down!" Zhilin looked. Deep down, bulging out of the brown expanse, was a colossal whitish mass looking like a monstrous toadstool. It was swelling out slowly and a pattern like a bunch of writhing snakes could be seen quivering on its surface. "An exospheric protuberance," said Bykov. "A rare thing-as far as I know. A pity the boys aren't here to see it." He meant the planetologists. The mass was suddenly lighted from within with trembling lilac luminescence. "Whew, what a sight," Zhilin said involuntarily. "Pay it out," said Bykov. Zhilin payed out more cable without taking his eyes off the protuberance. At first it seemed to him as though the ship was going to pass through it, then he realised it would be far on the starboard. The protuberance tore off the brown mass and sailed towards the pink haze, trailing behind it a tail of yellow transparent filaments. Again a lilac glow flickered on in them and died out. Presently the protuberance was lost in the pink haze. Bykov worked for a long time. He would return to the platform for a short rest and then crawl in a new direction. When he climbed back for the third time he had only one tester. "Dropped it," he said laconically. Zhilin payed out the cable patiently, bracing his foot against the railing. He felt quite secure in this position and could watch for sights. But nothing happened. Only when the captain climbed up for the sixth time and muttered, "That'll do," did he realise that the carroty wall on the left-Jupiter's cloudy surface -was visibly nearer. It was clean and tidy in the control room. Mikhail Antonovich had swept it out and was sitting in his usual place, huddled in a fur jacket over his overalls. It was so cold in the room that one could see his breath. Bykov sat down in his chair, 'leaned forward, propping himself against his knees, and looked closely first at the navigator, then at the engineer. "Have you plugged the holes tighter?" he asked the navigator. Mikhail Antonovich nodded several times. "We've got a chance," said Bykov. Mikhail Antonovich sat up and took in a noisy breath. Zhilin swallowed. "We've got a chance," Bykov repeated. "A tiny chance. A fantastic chance." "Go on, Alexei," the navigator begged. "It's like this," Bykov said and cleared his throat. "Sixteen per cent of the reflector surface is gone. The question is: can we make the other eighty-four per cent work? Less than that in fact, because another ten percent or so is-uncontrollable, the control cells being smashed." The navigator and engineer listened intently, craning their necks. "The answer is we can," said Bykov. "We can try anyway. We must shift the plasma burning point so as to compensate asymmetry in the damaged reflector." "I see," Zhilin said in a trembling voice. Bykov threw him a glance. "That is our only chance. Ivan and I are going to reorientate the magnetic traps. I've seen Ivan in action. You, Misha, will calculate a new position for the burning point in accordance with the pattern of the damage. You'll have that pattern straight away. It's a hell of a lot of work, but it's the only chance we've got." His eyes were full on the navigator. Mikhail Antonovich looked up and their glances met. They understood each other immediately and completely. They understood it might be too late. That down there, where pressure was terrific, corrosion would eat into the ship's hull so that she might dissolve like a lump of sugar in boiling water before they finished. That they couldn't even hope to achieve complete compensation. That nobody had ever attempted before to steer ships with such a compensation, the engines at least one-third below rated power.... . "It's the only chance we've got," Bykov said loudly. "I'll do it, old chap," said Mikhail Antonovich. "It's not difficult to calculate a new point. I'll do it." "I'll give you the pattern of the dead areas straight away," Bykov repeated. "And we must hurry all we can. Overgravity'1'1 soon be on us and make all work a hundredfold harder. And if we fell too deep the reactor'd be too risky to switch-might start off a chain reaction in the compressed hydrogen..." he paused and said, "make gas out of us." "I see," said Zhilin. He felt a terrible urge to start that very minute, at once. He liked very much that tiny fantastic chance. Mikhail Antonovich stretched out a stumpy hand and said in a thin voice: "The pattern, give me the pattern, Alexei." On the emergency panel three red lights flashed' on. "There you are," said Mikhail Antonovich. ''Fuel's running out in the emergency engines." "Never mind," Bykov said and rose. CHAPTER THREE MEN IN THE ABYSS 1. The planetologists play while the navigator is caught smuggling. "Load her," said Yurkovsky. He was hanging at the periscope, his face thrust into the suede frame cover. He was hanging horizontally, stomach down, legs and elbows spread wide, with the thick log-book and fountain-pen floating within easy reach. Mollard slid the breech open smartly, pulled a case of bomb-probes out of the rack and, pushing it this way and that, forced it into the rectangular slit of the loading chamber. The case slid slowly and noiselessly into place. Mollard closed the breech, locked it and said: "Ready, Voldemar." Mollard was bearing weightlessness very well. Sometimes he made rash movements and hung at the ceiling so that he had to be pulled back, and sometimes he felt like being sick, but for a man experiencing weightlessness for the first time in his life his performance was very creditable. "Ready," Dauge said at the exospheric spectre-graph. "Fire," ordered Yurkovsky. Dauge pressed the trigger. They heard the deep doo-doo-doo of the breech, immediately followed by the tick-tick-tick of the spectrograph. In the periscope Yurkovsky saw white balls of fire flare up one after another and race upwards in the orange fog through which the Tahmasib was now falling. Twenty balls of fire for twenty bomb-probes, each carrying a meson emitter. "Lovely," Yurkovsky said quietly. Pressure was increasing outside. The bomb-probes were exploding closer and closer because of the greater drag. Dauge was speaking into the dictaphone, glancing at the reference device of the spectroanalyser. "Molecular hydrogen-eighty-one point three five, helium-seven point one one, methane-four point one six, ammonia-one point zero one.... The unidentified line is increasing.... I told them we should have an automatic reader-it's so inconvenient...." "We're falling," said Yurkovsky. "Just look how we're falling. Methane's down to four already...." Dauge, turning adroitly, was keeping up with the readings on the other equipment. "So far Kangren's right," he said. "There. The bathometer's dead-at three hundred atmospheres. No more pressure readings." "Never mind," said Yurkovsky. "Load her." "Is it worth it?" said Dauge. "Without the bathometer synchronisation will be faulty." "Let's try," said Yurkovsky. "Load her." He looked back at Mollard. He was swaying against the ceiling, smiling ruefully. "Pull him down, Grigory," said Yurkovsky. Dauge straightened up, caught Mollard by his foot and pulled him down. "Charles," he said patiently. "Try and avoid rash movements. Thrust your toes in here and hold fast." Mollard heaved a sigh and slid the hatch open. The spent case floated out of the chamber, hit him in the chest and rebounded towards Yurkovsky, who dodged it. "Oh, again," Mollard said guiltily. "I am terribly sorry, Voldemar. Oh, this weightlessness." "Go on, load her," said Yurkovsky. "The Sun," Dauge said suddenly. Yurkovsky plunged his face in the periscope frame. For a fleeting moment he saw a reddish disc vague against the orange fog. "It's the last we'll see of it," Dauge said and coughed. "You have said that three times," Mollard said, closing the breech and bending down to make quite sure he'd done a good job of it. "Adieu, le soldi, as Captain Nemo used to say. But it turns out it was not the last time. I am ready, Voldemar." "So am I," said Dauge. "But shouldn't we really call it a day?" At that moment Bykov strode in to a loud clang of his magnetic boots. "Knock off," he said morosely. "But why?" Yurkovsky enquired, turning to him. . "Big pressure outside. Another half-hour and your bombs'll be exploding in this bay." "Fire," Yurkovsky said hastily. Dauge hesitated, then pulled the trigger. Bykov listened to the doo-doo-doo in the breech and said: "Enough's enough. Batten all the instrument portholes. And spike this thing," he pointed at the bomb-release. "Spike it good and proper." "Are periscopic observations still allowed?" asked Yurkovsky. "Yes," said Bykov. "You may play a little more." He turned and strode out. "Just as I told you-not a damned thing," said Dauge. "Not with synchronisation gone." He switched off his equipment and recovered the reel out of the dictaphone. "Grigory," said Yurkovsky. "I have a shrewd suspicion Alexei's "up to something. What do you think?" "I don't know," Dauge said and glanced at him. "What makes you think so?" "Just something in his ugly mug," said Yurkovsky. "I know my man." For a while everybody was silent, only Mollard, overcome by a feeling of nausea, heaved occasional sighs. Presently Dauge said: "I'm famished. Where's our soup, Charles? You spilt our soup and we're hungry. Who's on duty today, Charles?" "I am," said Charles. At the mention of food the nausea came over him again. But he said: "I shall go and make some more soup." "The Sun." said Yurkovsky. Dauge pressed his black eye to the viewer. "You see," said Mollard. "The Sun again." "But that isn't the Sun," said Dauge. "No," said Yurkovsky. "It doesn't look like the Sun." The distant luminescent mass in the light-brown haze paled, swelling and drifting apart in greying patches, and then disappeared. Yurkovsky watched, his teeth clamped together so hard that his temples ached. Farewell, Sun, he thought. Farewell, Sun. "I'm hungry," Dauge said testily. "Let's go to the galley, Charles." He pushed off the wall deftly, sailed towards the door and opened it. Mollard too pushed off and hit his head against the wall above the door. Dauge caught him by his spread-fingered hand and pulled him out into the gangway. Yurkovsky heard Grigory ask, "How's life-good?" and Mollard answer, "Good, but very inconvenient." "Never mind," Dauge said cheerily. "You'll get used to it soon." Never mind, Yurkovsky thought, it'll be all over soon. He glanced into the periscope. He saw the brownish fog grow still denser overhead, while deep below in the incredible depths of the hydrogen abyss into which the ship was falling an eerie pinkish light beckoned to him. He shut his eyes. To live, he thought. To live long. To live eternally. He clutched at his hair. To live even if he were deaf, blind, paralysed. Just to feel the sun and the wind on his skin and a friend by his side. And pain, impotence and pity. Just as now. He tore at his hair. Let it be just as now, but for ever. Suddenly he became aware he was breathing laboriously and came to himself. The feeling of unbearable, unreasoning terror was gone. This had happened to him before: on Mars twelve years before, in Golconda ten years before and again on Mars the year before last. A spasm of crazy desire just to live, a desire as obscure and primordial as protoplasm itself. It swooped on him like a black-out. But it always passed. It had to be endured like sharp pain. And he must start doing something. Alexei had ordered the instrument portholes to be battened. He took his hands from his face, opened his eyes and saw he was sitting on the floor. The ship's fall was being braked and things were acquiring weight. Yurkovsky reached for a small panel and shut the instrument portholes, the orifices in the ship's hull through which the receptors of the instrumentation are thrust out. Then he carefully spiked the breech of the bomb-release, collected the scattered bomb-cases and stacked them neatly on the rack. Then he glanced through the periscope and it seemed to him that the darkness overhead had become denser and the glow underneath stronger. He thought that no one before had penetrated Jupiter to such a depth except Sergei Petrushevsky, may he rest in peace, and even he had probably been blown up earlier. His reflector was smashed too. He went out into the gangway and headed for the mess room, glancing into all the cabins on his way. The Tahmasib was still falling, though more slowly every minute, and Yurkovsky walked on tiptoe as though under water, balancing with outspread arms and making involuntary little skips every now and then. In the quiet gangway Mollard's muffled call came to him like a war-cry: "How's life, Gregoire, good?" Apparently Dauge had managed 'to restore the Frenchman's high spirits. He could not catch Dauge's response. "Good," he muttered and even did not notice he was no longer stammering. Good-in spite of everything. He glanced into Mikhail Antonovich's cabin. It was dark and there was an odd spicy smell. He went in and switched on the light. In the middle of the cabin lay a ripped suit case. Never before had he seen a suit case in such a state. It looked as though a bomb-probe had gone off inside it. The mat-finished ceiling and the walls were spattered with brown, slippery-looking blotches. These gave off a spicy aroma. Spiced mussels, he defined promptly. He was very fond of spiced mussels but they were unfortunately never part of space flyers' rations. He looked around and spotted a bright black patch-a meteoric hole '-just above the door. All sections of the living quarters were air-tight. When the hull was pierced by a meteorite, the air supply was automatically cut until the synthetic resin layer between the ship's sheetings had had time to seal the hole. It took a second, at the most two seconds, but pressure might drop quite substantially in that time. It was not dangerous for man but it would be fatal for contraband tinned food. Tins would just explode. Particularly when spiced. A plain case of smuggling, he thought. The old glutton. Well, you'll get it hot from the captain. Bykov's never stood for smuggling. Yurkovsky gave the cabin a last glance and noticed that the black patch shone silver. Aha, he thought. Somebody must have been metallising the holes. Quite right too, for such a pressure would have just forced the resin stoppers out. He switched off the light and stepped back into the gangway. He felt dead tired and lead-heavy in his whole body. Oh, damn, I'm cracking up, he thought, and suddenly he realised that the tape on which his mike hung was cutting into his neck. Then he understood. The Tahmasib was arriving. Their flight was coming to an end. In a few minutes gravity would be doubled, overhead there would be six thousand miles of compressed hydrogen and under their feet forty thousand miles of supercompressed, liquid and solid hydrogen. Every pound of their weight would increase to two or more. Poor Charles, he thought. Poor Misha. "Voldemar," Mollard called from behind him. "Voldemar, help us carry the soup. It's a very heavy soup." He looked back. Dauge and Mollard, both flushed and sweating, were pushing through the door of the galley a heavily-swaying trolley with three steaming pots on it. Yurkovsky made to meet them and only then fully realised how heavy he had become. Mollard uttered a vague sound and sank to the floor. The Tahmasib stopped. The ship, her crew, passengers and cargo had arrived at their last port of call. 2. The planetologists interrogate the navigator while the radio astronomer interrogates the planetologists. "Who cooked this meal?" asked Bykov. He ran his eye round them and stared at the pots again. Mikhail Antonovich was breathing in gasps, leaning heavily against the table top. His face was purplish and bloated. "I did," Mollard said timidly. "But what's wrong with it?" asked Dauge. They all spoke in hoarse voices, only able to wheeze out a few words at a time. Mollard smiled crookedly and lay back on the sofa. He felt quite bad. The Tahmasib had stopped and their weight was becoming unbearable. Bykov looked at Mollard. "That meal will kill you," he said. "You'll eat and never get up again. It'll crush you, you understand?" "Christ," Dauge said, annoyed. "I forgot all about gravity." Mollard lay still, eyes closed, breathing heavily. His jaw was hanging open. "We'll have the soup," said Bykov. "And nothing more. Not a bite." He glanced at Mikhail Antonovich and grinned mirthlessly. "Not a bite," he repeated. Yurkovsky took the ladle and served the soup. "A heavy meal," he said. "Smells tasty," said Mikhail Antonovich. "Won't you give me a little more, Vladimir old man?" "No more," Bykov said harshly. He was sipping his soup slowly, holding his spoon in a childish way in his fist, which was smeared with graphite lubricant. They began eating in silence. Mollard made an attempt to get up and sank back again. "I can't," he said. "Excuse me, but I can't." Bykov put down his spoon and rose. "I recommend all passengers to get into their acceleration absorbers," he said. Dauge shook his head. "As you like," said Bykov. "But make sure Mollard gets into his." "Right," said Yurkovsky. Dauge took up Mollard's plate, sat down beside him and began spoon-feeding him expertly. His eyes closed, he was swallowing noisily. "And where's Ivan?" asked Yurkovsky. "On watch," said Bykov. He took the pot with the remaining soup and strode heavily towards the hatchway. With pursed lips Yurkovsky watched the stooped figure go. "My mind's made up, boys," Mikhail Antonovich said in a pitiful voice. "I'm going to start slimming. This won't do. I'm over four hundred and fifty pounds now-the mere thought of it makes me shudder. And that's not the limit. We're still falling a little." He leaned against the back of his chair, crossing his bloated hands on his stomach. Then he wriggled a little, transferred his hands on to the armrests and almost immediately was asleep. "Fatty's asleep," Dauge said, turning to look at him. "The ship's aground and the navigator's asleep. One more spoonful, Charles," he said. "For Daddy. That's good. Now for Mummy." "Excuse me, I can't," Mollard murmured. "I can't. I'll 'lie down." He lay back and started mumbling incoherently in French. Dauge put the plate on the table. "Mikhail," he called softly. "Misha." Mikhail Antonovich snored away. "Watch me wake him up," said Yurkovsky. "Mikhail," he said softly. "Mussels. Spiced mussels." Mikhail Antonovich started and woke up. "What?" he mumbled. "What?" "Troubled conscience," said Yurkovsky. Dauge fixed the navigator with his eye. "What are you up to, you in the control room?" he said. Mikhail Antonovich's red lids blinked, then he shifted in his chair, mumbled faintly: "Oh, I quite forgot..." and tried to get up. "Stay put," said Dauge. "What're you up to there?" asked Yurkovsky. "And what's the ruddy use anyway?" "Nothing special," Mikhail Antonovich said and looked back at the hatchway. "Nothing, boys, honest. We're just...." "Misha," said Yurkovsky. "We can see he's up to something." "Spill the beans, fatty," Dauge said fiercely. Again the navigator tried to get up. "Stay put," Yurkovsky said implacably. "Mussels. Spiced mussels. Speak up." Mikhail Antonovich flushed poppy-red. "We're not children," said Dauge. "We've faced death before. What the hell are you plotting there?" "There is a chance," the navigator mumbled faintly. "There's always a chance," said Dauge. "Be specific." "A tiny chance," said Mikhail Antonovich. "Really, boys, I must be off." "What are they doing?" asked Dauge. "What're they so wrapped up in-Alexei and Ivan?" Mikhail Antonovich looked longingly at the hatchway. "He doesn't want to tell you," he whispered. "Doesn't want to raise a false hope in you. But he hopes to get us out of this. They're rearranging the magnetic trap system.... And please stop pestering me!" he shouted in a thin voice, struggled up and hobbled to the control room. "Mon dieu," Mollard said softly and .lay back again. "Oh, nonsense, straw-clutching," said Dauge; "It's just that Bykov can't sit still with the Old Floorer about to get us. Come on. Come on, Charles, we'll put you in the acceleration absorber. Captain's orders." Between them they got Mollard on his feet and walked him along the gangway. His head was lolling. "Mon dieu," he mumbled. "Excuse me. I am a bad space flyer. I am only a radio astronomer." It was no easy job to drag Mollard along when they had difficulty in walking themselves, but still they got him to his cabin and then into the acceleration absorber. He lay in the oversize box, small, miserable, blue-faced, fighting for breath. "You'll feel better in a moment, Charles," said Dauge. Yurkovsky nodded and winced with the pain in his back. "Have a rest," he said. "Good," said Mollard. "Thank you, camarades." Dauge slid the top in place and tapped on it. Mollard tapped back. "Well, that's that," said Dauge. "I wish we could get a pair of antigrav suits." Yurkovsky went to the door without saying anything. There were only three such suits on board their ship-for her crew. The passengers were expected to take to their acceleration absorbers whenever the G-load was increased. They made a round of the cabins and collected all the blankets and cushions they could 'lay their hands on. Back in the observation bay they made themselves as comfortable as they could at the two periscopes, then lay back and were silent for a while, resting. Breathing was difficult. They felt as though heavy weights had been laid on their chests. "Reminds me of the time I had acceleration training," said Yurkovsky. "Had to slim a lot." "So had I," said Dauge. "But I don't remember much. What's that spiced mussel nonsense?" "Quite a delicacy, isn't it?" said Yurkovsky. "Our navigator had a few tins stowed away and they went bang in his suit case." "No," said Dauge. "Not again? What a glutton. What a smuggler. He's 'lucky Bykov's busy." "Bykov probably doesn't know yet," said Yurkovsky. And never will, he thought. They fell silent, then Dauge took the observation logs and began leafing through them. They made a few calculations, then had an argument about the meteoric attack. Dauge said it was a stray swarm. Yurkovsky claimed it was a ring. "A ring round Jupiter?" Dauge said contemptuously. 'That's right," said Yurkovsky. "I've suspected one for .a long time. Now it's been proved." "No," said Dauge. "Anyway it's not a ring. It's a half-ring." "Perhaps it is," Yurkovsky agreed. "Kangren's a wizard," said Dauge. "His calculations are amazingly exact." "Not quite," Yurkovsky demurred. "Why not?" 'asked Dauge. "Because temperature increases have been markedly slower," Yurkovsky explained. "That's inner luminescence of a non-classical type," Dauge retorted. "That's just it- non-classical," said Yurkovsky. "Kangren couldn't have possibly taken account of it," said Dauge. "But he should," said Yurkovsky. "There have been arguments about it for the last hundred years and lie should have taken it into account." "You're ashamed, that's all," said Dauge. "You had such a row with Kangren that time in Dublin and now you're ashamed." "You're a fool," said Yurkovsky. "Of course you're ashamed," said Dauge. "I was right," said Yurkovsky. "I took the non-classical effects into account." "I know," said Dauge. "But if you do," said Yurkovsky, "why don't you stop your nonsense?" "Don't shout at me," said Dauge. "This is no nonsense. You took the non-classical effects into account all right, but look at the price we're paying for it." "It's the price you're paying," Yurkovsky said, getting angry. "I see you haven't read my latest paper." "Well," said Dauge, "don't get shirty. My back's got numb." "So's mine," said Yurkovsky. He turned over and got on all fours. It wasn't easy. He reached up to the periscope and glanced into it. "Have a look," he said. They looked into the periscopes. The Tahmasib was floating in a void filled with a pinkish light. There was absolutely nothing to rest their eyes on. Just an even pinkish light everywhere. It seemed they were looking at a phosphorescent screen. After a long silence Yurkovsky said: "Rather dull, isn't it?" He straightened the cushions and lay down again. "No one has seen this before," said Dauge. "It's metallic hydrogen radiation." "A fat lot of good such observations will do us," said Yurkovsky. "Suppose we pair a periscope with the spectrograph?" "Rubbish," Dauge said, hardly able to move his lips. He slid on to the cushions and also lay on his back. "A pity," he said. "To think that no one has ever seen this before." "I feel just rotten doing nothing," said Yurkovsky. Dauge rose on an elbow suddenly and craned his neck, listening. "What's happened?" Yurkovsky asked. "Quiet," said Dauge. "Listen." Yurkovsky listened. A faint low rumbling came from somewhere, changing in volume like a giant bumble-bee buzzing. The rumbling rose in pitch, then died down. "What's that?" said Dauge. "I dunno," Yurkovsky said in an undertone. He sat up. "Surely not the engine?" "No, it's from that side." Dauge waved a hand at the periscopes. "Well now...." They listened and again heard a rumbling sound swelling into a high-pitched buzz, then dying down. "Must have a look,