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Spacehounds of IPC by E E. Doc Smith

five centimeters total enroute—claims it upsets the dainty customers and loses business

for the road. They’re tightening up on us all the time. A couple of years ago, you

remember, it didn’t make any difference what we did with the acceleration as long as we

checked in somewhere near zero time—we used to spin ’em dizzy when we reversed at

the halfway station—but that kind of stuff doesn’t go any more. We’ve got to hold the

acceleration constant and close to normal, got to hold our schedule on zero, plus or

minus ten seconds, and yet we’ve got to make any detours they tell us to, such as this

seven-million kilometer thing they handed us just now. To make things worse, we’ve got

to take orders at every check-station, and yet we get the blame for everything that

happens as a consequence of obeying those orders! Of course, I know as well as you

do that it’s rotten technique to change acceleration at every check-station; but we’ve told

’em over and over that we can’t do any better until they put a real computer on every

ship and tell the check-stations to report meteorites and other obstructions to us and

then to let us alone. So you’d better recommend us some computers!”

“You’re getting rotten computation, that’s a sure thing, and I don’t blame you

pilots for yelling, but I don’t believe that you’ve got the right answer. I can’t help but think

that the astronomers are laying down on the job. They’re so sure that you pilots are to

blame that it hasn’t occurred to them to check up on themselves very carefully.

However, we’ll know pretty quick, and then we’ll take steps.”

“I hope so—but say, Steve, I’m worried about using that much plus equilibrium

power. Remember we’ve got to hit Mi4 absolutely all x, or plenty heads will drop.”

“I’ll say they will: I know just how the passengers will howl if we hold them

weightless for half an hour, waiting for those two moons to get out of the way, and I

know just what the manager will do if we check in thirty-one minutes plus. Wow! He’ll

swell up and bust, sure. But don’t worry, Breck—if we don’t check in all x, anybody can

have my head that wants it, and I’m taking full responsibility, you know.”

“You’re welcome to it.” Breckenridge shrugged and turned the conversation into a

lighter vein. “Speaking of weightlessness, it’s funny how many weight-fiends there are in

the world, isn’t it? You’d think the passengers would enjoy a little weightlessness

occasionally—especially the fat ones—but they don’t. But say, while I think of it, how

come you were here and loose to make this check-up? I thought you were out with the

other two of the Big Three, solving all the mysteries of the Universe ?”

“Had to stay in this last trip—been doing some work on the ether, force-field

theory, and other stuff that I had to go to Mars and Venus to get. Just got back last

week. As for solving mysteries, laugh while you can, old hyena. You and a lot of other

dim bulbs who think that Roeser’s Rays are the last word—that there’s nothing left to

discover—are going to get jarred loose from your hinges one of these days. When I

came in nine months ago they were hot on the trail of something big, and I’ll bet they

bring it in . . .”

Out upon the dock an insistent siren blared a crescendo and diminuendo blast of

sound, and two minutes remained. In every stateroom and in every lounge and saloon

speakers sounded a warning:

“For a short time, while we are pulling clear of the gravitational field of the Earth,

walking will be somewhat difficult, as everything on board will apparently increase in

weight by about one-fifth of its present amount. Please remain seated, or move about

with caution. In about an hour weight will gradually return to normal. We start in one

minute.”

“Hipe!” barked the chief pilot as a flaring purple light sprang into being upon his

board, and the assistants came to attention at their stations. “Seconds! Four! Three!

Two! One! LIFT!” He touched a button and a set of plunger switches drove home,

releasing into the forty-five enormous driving projectors the equilibrium power—the

fifteen-thousand-and-odd kilofranks of energy that exactly counterbalanced the pull of

gravity upon the mass of the cruiser. Simultaneously there was added from the

potentiometer, already set to the exact figure given by the computer, the plus-

equilibrium power — which would not be changed throughout the journey if the ideal

acceleration curve were to be registered upon the recorders—and the immense mass of

the cruiser of the void wafted vertically upward at a low and constant velocity. The

bellowing, shrieking siren had cleared the air magically of the swarm of aircraft in her

path, and quietly, calmly, majestically, the Arcturus floated upward.

Sixty seconds after the initial lift Breckenridge actuated the system of magnetic

relays which would gradually cut in the precisely-measured “starting power,” which it

would be necessary to employ for sixty-nine minutes—for, without the acceleration

given by this additional power, they would lose many precious hours of time in covering

merely the few thousands of miles during which Earth’s attraction would operate

powerfully against their progress.

Faster and faster the great cruiser shot upward as more and more of the starting

power was released, and heavier and heavier the passengers felt themselves become.

Soon the full calculated power was on and the acceleration became constant. Weight

no longer increased, but remained constant at a value of plus twenty three and six-

tenths percent. For a few moments there had been uneasy stomachs among the

passengers—perhaps a few of the first-trippers had been made ill—but it was not much

worse than riding in a highspeed elevator, particularly since there was no change from

positive to negative acceleration such as is experienced in express elevators.

The computer, his calculations complete, watched the pilot with interest, for,

accustomed as he was to traversing the depths of space, there was a never-failing thrill

to his scientific mind in the delicacy and precision of the work which Breckenridge was

doing—work which could be done only by a man having had long training in the

profession and possessed of almost instantaneous nervous reactions and of the highest

degree of manual dexterity and control. Under his right and left hands were the double-

series potentiometers actuating the variable-speed drives of -the flight-angle directors in

the hour and declination ranges; before his eyes was the finely-marked micrometer

screen upon which the goniometer threw its needle-point of light; powerful optical

systems of prisms and lenses revealed to his sight the director-angles, down to

fractional seconds of arc. It was the task of the chief pilot to hold the screened image of

the cross hairs of the two directors in such position relative to the ever-moving point of

light as to hold the mighty vessel , precisely upon its course, in spite of the complex

system of forces acting upon it.

For almost an hour Breckenridge sat motionless, his eyes flashing from,

micrometer screen to signal panel, his sensitive fingers moving the potentiometers

through minute arcs because of what he saw upon the screen and in response to the

flashing, multicolored lights and tinkling signals of his board. Finally, far from Earth, the

moon’s attraction and other perturbing forces comparatively slight, the signals no longer

sounded and the point of light ceased its irregular motion, becoming almost stationary.

The chief pilot brought both cross-hairs directly upon the brilliant point which for some

time they had been approaching more and more nearly, adjusted the photo-cells and

amplifiers which would hold them immovably upon it, and at the calculated second of

time cut out the starting power by means of another set of automatically-timed relays.

When only the regular driving power was left, and the acceleration had been checked

and found to be exactly the designated value of 981.286 centimeters, he stood up,

stretched, and heaved a profound sigh of relief.

“Well, Steve, that’s over with—we’re on our way. I’m always glad when this part

of it is done.”

“It’s a ticklish job, no fooling—even for an expert,” the mathematician agreed. “No

wonder the astronomers think you birds are the ones who are gumming up their dope.

Well, it’s about time to plug in on E2. Here’s where the fireworks start!” He closed the

connections which transferred the central portion of the upper lookout screen to a small

micrometer screen at Breckenridge’s desk and plugged it into the first check-station.

Instantly a point of red light, surrounded by a vivid orange circle, appeared upon the

screen, low down and to the left of center, and the timing galvanometer showed a wide

negative deflection.

“Hashed again!” growled Breckenridge. “I must be losing my grip, I guess. I put

everything I had on that sight, and missed it ten divisions. I think I’ll turn in my

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Categories: E.E Doc Smith
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