ENTOVERSE

But Dalgren’s expression remained serious. “But why not?” he asked. “It simply involves the same way of looking at things: Instead of jumping to the conclusion that it can’t work because, try saying, it could work. . . You’ve only got to open your eyes to see that the world is filled with animals that propel themselves and creatures that fly. If we can make other objects do whatever they do, then why shouldn’t they behave in the same way?”

Thrax nodded, but his expression remained unconvinced. “Maybe I’ll believe it when I’ve seen a drodhzless carriage,” he said. “You know, Uncle, it wouldn’t surprise me if you start talking about spinning objects next.”

Dalgren let go the rods and straightened up. “Spinning objects?” he repeated. “Now you are getting fanciful. I couldn’t even imagine how to begin.”

Thrax stared out at the patch of sky visible through the top of the basement window. “It’s the same seers who tell of them,” he pointed out.

“Ah yes. But if it’s true, it’s something that can only exist in Hyperia. Our animals prove that at least the concepts of objects propel­ling themselves and objects flying are possible in Waroth. The prece­dents exist. But we don’t have a precedent for what you’re talking about. If it’s possible at all, space itself must be different from what we know in this world. And quite beyond my ability to contemplate.”

Thrax continued to stare up at the window. “Another universe, beyond our wildest imaginings,” he said distantly.

“I think I know how to compensate for the daily contraction, now,” Dalgren muttered, returning his attention to the mechanism.

“Where objects spin Thrax went on dreamily, more to himself.

“Then we’ll have to think about getting it to turn corners.”

“And inhabited by strange beings.”

“We’d need two more slides at the top.”

“What kind of beings could they be . .

CHAPTER TWO

Dr. Victor Hunt closed the starter circuit, and the turbine engine of the GM Husky groundmobile standing in the driveway outside the garage kicked into life. As Hunt eased the throttle valve open with a screwdriver, the pitch rose, then settled at a smooth, satisfying whine. He held the position steady and cocked an inquiring eye at his neighbor, Jerry Santello, who was on the far side of the opened hood, tapping at buttons and watching the screen of a portable test unit connected to the vehicle’s drive processor.

“It’s looking better, Vic. Try it a few revs higher. . . Now gun it a few times . . . Yup, I think we’ve cracked it.”

“How about the burn on idle?” Hunt ran the turbine down to a murmur while Jerry inspected the panel; then Hunt’speeded it back up a little and repeated the process several times.

“Good,” Jerry pronounced. “I reckon that’s it. It had to be the equalizer. Shut it down now, and let’s have that beer.”

“That sounds like one of the better ideas I’ve heard today.” Hunt turned tile valve fully back, operated a cutout, and the engine died.

Jerry unplugged the test lead, which rewound itself into the case. He closed the lid, gathered together the tools they had been using, and returned them to their box. “How is it with you English guys? Is it right, you drink it warm? Am I supposed to put it in the cooker or something?”

“Oh, don’t believe everything they tell you, Jerry.”

Jerry looked relieved. “So it’s okay normal?”

“Sure.”

“Hang on there while I get a couple from inside. We can sit out here and take in the sun.”

“Even better.”

While Jerry’s swarthy, mustached form, clad in beach shorts and a navy sweatshirt, flip-flopped its way eupeptically up the shallow, curving steps flanking the rockery by the side of the apartment, Hunt walked around the front of the Husky to toss a few more items into the toolbox. Then he sat down on a grassy hump below the wall separating Jerry’s driveway from his own and fished a pack of Win­ston’s from his shirt pocket.

Around him, the other apartment units of Redfem Canyons clus­tered in comfortable, leafy seclusion on terraced slopes divided by steep ravines climbing from a central valley. The main valley con­tained a common access road running alongside a creek that widened at intervals into shady pools fringed by rocky shelves and overhangs. Although the name was more than a little forced in the middle of Maryland less than a dozen miles north of the center of Washington, D.C., and the artificiality of the pseudo-Californian contouring went without saying, on the whole it had all been pleasingly accomplished. The effect worked. After the months that he had spent inside the cramped, miniature metal cities of the UN Space Arm’s long-range mission ships and at its bases down on the ice fields beneath the methane haze of Ganymede, Hunt wasn’t complaining.

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