“Hello, Nibelung,” said Ryerson.
Maclaren started. “Are you getting to be a telepath?”
“It’s possible,” said Ryerson. His voice had become a harsh whisper. His glance searched darkness. “Anything is possible here.”
“After we put this load through,” said Maclaren, evading the other thought, “we’d better move the slag out of the ship. That ninety-nine-plus per cent of material we don’t use piles up fast.”
Ryerson clumped heavily to the truck and began unloading. “And then out once more, cutting and loading and grinding and . . . merciful God, but I’m tired! Do you really imagine we can keep on doing heavy manual work like this, after the last food has been eaten?”
“We’ll have to,” said Maclaren. “And, of course, there is always—” He picked up a rock. Dizziness whirled through him. He dropped the stone and sank to his knees on the ground.
“Terangi!” Ryerson’s voice seemed to come from some Delphic deep, through mists. “Terangi, what’s wrong?”
“Nothing,” mumbled Maclaren. He pushed at the other
man’s groping arms. “Lea’ me be . . . all right in a minute . . .“ He relaxed against the stiffness of armor and let his weakness go through him in tides.
After a while, some strength returned. He looked up. Ryerson was just feeding the last rocks into the crusher. The machine ate them with a growl that Maclaren felt through the planet and his body. It vibrated his teeth together.
“I’m sorry, Dave,” he said.
“‘S all right. You should go up and bunk for a while.”
“Just a spell. Maybe we shouldn’t have cut our rations as short as we have.”
“You do seem to’ve been losing weight even faster than me,” said Ryerson. “Maybe you ought to have an extra ration.”
“Nah. It’s metabolic inefficiency, brought on by well-spent years of wine, women, and off-key song.”
Ryerson sat down beside him. “I’m a bit short of breath myself. Let’s both take a break while the stuff goes through the crusher.”
“Well,” said Maclaren, “if your tailbone insulators can stand it, I suppose mine can.”
T
HEY remained in silence for a while. The machine rumbled in their flesh and the stars muttered in their heads.
“How long do you think it will take to prepare the web?” asked Maclaren. “I mean, what’s your latest estimate?”
“Hitherto I’ve underestimated the time for everything,” said Ryerson. “Now, I just don’t know. First we’ll have to get our germanium. Then, to make the units . . . I don’t know. Two weeks, three? And then, once all the circuits are functioning, they’ll have to be tuned. Mostly by guesswork, since I don’t really know the critical constants. That will take x time, depending on how lucky we are.”
“We’ll open the last can of food soon,” said Maclaren. In itself it was a totally useless reminder, but it was leading up to something they had both avoided.
Ryerson continued to squirm: “They say tobacco helps kill appetite.”
“It does,” said Maclaren, “but I smoked the last butts months ago. Now I’ve even lost the addiction. Though of course I’ll happily rebuild same the moment we strike Earth.”
“When we come home—” Ryerson’s voice drifted off like a murmur in sleep. “We haven’t talked about our plans for a long time.”
“It got to be too predictable, what every man would say.”
“Yes. But is it now? I mean, do you still want to take that sailboat cruise around Earth, with . . . er . . . a female crew and a cargo of champagne?”
“I don’t know,” said Maclaren, faintly surprised to realize it. “I hadn’t thought—Do you remember once in space, we talked about our respective sailing experiences, and you told me the sea is the most inhuman thing on our planet?”
“Hm-m-m—yes. Of course, my sea was the North Atlantic. You might have had different impressions.”
“I did. Still, Dave, it has stuck in my mind, and I see now you are right. Any ocean is, is too—big, old, blind for us—too beautiful.” He sought the million suns of the Milky Way. “Even this black ocean we’re wrecked in.”
“That’s odd,” said Ryerson. “I thought it was your influence