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Earthbound (Winston Science Fiction Book 1)

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by Milton Lesser




  Table of Contents

  Dedication

  A New Frontier

  Chapter 1 — Washed Out!

  Chapter 2 — Big Pete and Little Pete

  Chapter 3 — Carnival of the Worlds

  Chapter 4 — Bargain with Ganymede Gus

  Chapter 5 — At the Spaceport

  Chapter 6 — Reunion

  Chapter 7 — See-Garr Goes to Space

  Chapter 8 — Pirates!

  Chapter 9 — Red-Handed

  Chapter 10 — Jailbreak!

  Chapter 11 — Beyond the Land of Fire

  Chapter 12 — The Last Frontier

  Chapter 13 — Escape!

  Chapter 14 — White Sands Again

  Chapter 15 — Balked!

  Chapter 16 — Blast-Off!

  Chapter 17 — Luna

  Chapter 18 — In the Swarm

  Chapter 19 — And Far Away . . .

  Glossary

  Earthbound

  Milton Lesser

  This is a work of fiction. All of the characters, organizations, and events portrayed in this novel are either products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.

  EARTHBOUND

  Copyright © 1952 by Stephen Marlowe (as Milton Lesser); copyright renewed 1980

  Published by arrangement with Ann Marlowe

  All rights reserved.

  Edited by Dan Thompson

  A Thunderchild eBook

  Published by Thunderchild Publishing

  1898 Shellbrook Drive

  Huntsville, AL 35806

  First Edition: April 1952

  First Thunderchild eBook Edition: December 2013

  Cover design by Peter Poulton.

  Endpaper design by Alex Schomburg.

  Dedication

  For

  My mother

  A New Frontier

  Due to the nature of their profession, scientists are cautious people. If this weren’t so, they’d spend their time exploring hopeful but fruitless blind alleys. Yet most scientists and engineers you speak to today will insist that space travel lies no more than fifty years in the future — and many of them are willing to compress that figure to a mere five years!

  The first flight to the moon and beyond is within the offing of our lifetime, and surely, as one science-fictionist so aptly put it, "Columbus was a piker!" by comparison. So a glorious new frontier is soon to be opened . . . but it will make all previous frontiers look a lot like your neighbor’s back yard.

  We will not speak in terms of hundreds of miles, but of millions.

  Arctic cold will seem like a Turkish bath, if you’re on the dark side of the moon.

  You’d need earflaps in the Matto Grosso jungle, if you happened to come from the sunward hemisphere of Mercury.

  In short, we’re in for some mighty stimulating changes.

  Basically, however, one element will remain the same, and that element is man. Of course, life won’t be quite the same after the advent of space travel. The limitless imagination of science fiction will give way to the endless facts of everyday life. Yet man will survive more or less as we know him today. Old emotions will be there . . . naturally, faced with new problems, but the gamut from love through desire and fear to hate will still cover all facets of life. . . .

  But high adventure will await tomorrow’s youth as it never awaited any generation before them. And because I believe Earthbound is a story of high adventure more than it is anything else, that’s an important thing to remember. The youngsters on the corner won’t play cops-and-robbers any more, but spacers-and-pirates; their older brothers won’t dream of baseball, but of rockets and the far horizons; and you won’t talk of your cousin in Salt Lake City, but in Canal City — which will be on Mars.

  And West Point? Well, West Point will be only a quaint historic shrine on the banks of the Hudson. Sure, you’ll be able to visit it on a tourist trip around the vicinity of the little-used Greater New York Port Area . . . but you’d rather inspect the gleaming new Solar Academy, which trains men for the stars. . . .

  M.L.

  Chapter 1 — Washed Out!

  Pete Hodges groped about the dormitory room in the dim half-light of early morning, found his rain slicker and donned it. He raised a finger to his lips for silence, then whispered, “Are you ready?”

  When his roommate nodded eagerly, Pete opened the door and peered out into the hall. The blue night lights cast his crouching shadow back into the room. The hall was silent, deserted. Pete waited only for a moment, looking carefully in both directions, listening to the rain drumming incessantly on the hall window. After that, he stepped out into the hall, aware that Garr MacDougal’s tall, lanky form followed him.

  Together, they reached the far end of the hall. They looked anxiously down the escalator well. “Hear anything?” Garr wanted to know.

  Pete shook his head. “No. Come on —”

  The two roommates allowed themselves this breach of dormitory regulations once a week. In an hour — at six o’clock — the Spaceport would explode in violent activity. The great, gleaming liners would blast off for Venus, for Mars, for the asteroids and the Jovian moons. Ground crews would scurry about furiously, doing last-minute things. Passengers would wave gay farewells to their earthbound friends and relatives. Cargoes would be loaded — refrigeration equipment for hot, tropical Venus, machinery for Mars, mining tools for the asteroids, hothouse plants for the dome-cities of the Jovian moons.

  But Pete and Garr would see all this only as so much background. They would come to see the proud space-liners themselves, and nothing else would matter. The liners of polished steel and quartzite windows, the liners standing on their tails in readiness, pointing straight up at the sky and beyond it. . . .

  The roommates splashed and stumbled along the muddy path which led from their dormitory to the athletic field and out across it to the Spaceport highway. Soon they were jogging along the shoulder of the road, watching the jet-cars streak by toward the Spaceport. Panting, Garr related a joke about a frightened Solar Cadet on his first flight, but Pete hardly listened. His thoughts had soared far ahead to the Spaceport and to a day next week when they would receive their rockets. He would keep his emblem polished and wear it proudly on his tunic, and soon after that his home would be out there in the far-distant sky.

  They reached the foot of a steep hill where the rain-swollen streams gushed down angrily. Here they left the road to climb the side of the hill. Soon their boots made a sucking sound in the mud, and more than once they tripped in the treacherous footing.

  “You would bring me out here on a day like this!” Garr moaned. But he was smiling, and Pete knew he too loved the Spaceport and all that it meant.

  Pete clambered up over the last muddy ridge. Ahead of him the hill fell away sharply, almost like a cliff. Below it and stretching out to the horizon was the Spaceport, a broad flat plain of white, dotted with the dark maws of the firing-pits. Beyond these were the clusters of administration buildings, shining brightly even through the rain. And three of the firing-pits were not empty!

  “See?” Pete cried, pounding Garr’s back. “See? There’ll be three blast-offs this morning! We might be on one just like them — next week.”

  Now they could wait and catch their breath, now they could talk, for according to Pete’s wrist chronometer, it would be half an hour before the first ship thundered away. But strangely, little talk passed between them; the sight of the Spaceport was enough, even through the early morning murk and the rain. What undreamed-of adventures awaited the young spacemen out there in the silent ships? Mars with its rusty, age-old sands, or Venus with its myriads of
tropical islands . . . ?

  “Are you afraid, Garr?”

  “You mean scared that we’ll be caught? Of course not! Who’ll come out here in the rain, except a couple of crazy Cadets?”

  “I don’t mean that,” Pete said. “I mean about next week — after we get our rockets. We’ll be men after that.”

  Garr laughed. “We’ll be seventeen, you mean.”

  “We’ll be men,” Pete repeated. He ran a hand through his black hair thoroughly drenched by the rain. “Only men can take the ships — up there.”

  “I . . .” Garr began. Then, “Listen! Do you hear it?”

  Softly it came to them, from far away, the muted refrain of the Spaceman’s Chant. Tiny dots across the field, the spacemen had emerged from their quarters, and were heading for their ships. They sang as they marched, the words bringing a lump to Pete’s throat:

  “We’ll thunder off to Io,

  Out in the Jovian Moons.

  We’ll feast our eyes and seek the skies

  And plunder Martian ruins!”

  Pete had heard that verse before. He knew them all. With Garr, he joined in the chorus, and suddenly the pouring rain was forgotten.

  “Ho! for the void and far away!

  We’ll chase the stars and race old Mars

  And maybe land one day-

  Ho-ho — Ho! for the void and far away!”

  “That’s us,” Garr said. “Hey, can you picture us out there, where the Earth’s only a bright star, where . . .”

  “Hold it!” Pete hissed. “Someone’s coming.”

  Pete heard the footsteps coming closer, sloshing up the muddy hillside. With Garr, he ducked behind an outcropping of rock and waited. Presently someone appeared, called loudly, “Hodges! Hodges, come on out. I know you’re there!”

  Garr grunted. “It’s Roger. What the heck does he want?”

  Pete knew that every school, and that included the Solar Cadets, too, had its Mr. Unpopular, a student who bullied the lowerclassmen and who made life generally unpleasant for everyone. Here at the Solar Academy it was Roger Gorham. But Pete and Garr had made it pretty clear to Roger from time to time that they wanted no part of him. Then why had he followed them?

  Roger snickered. “I hope you guys don’t mind if I tell you that you sure can’t sing. Boy, did you ruin that song.”

  “Can you do better?” Garr bristled. “At least we like the song — and what it stands for. That’s more than I can say . . .”

  “Forget it,” Pete cut in. “You came here for a reason. What is it?”

  “There was an office-gram for you, Hodges.”

  “At five o’clock in the morning?”

  “I didn’t come out here in the rain to argue with you, Hodges. The office-gram buzzer in your room woke me up, and I couldn’t go back to sleep because no one answered it. I knocked on your door, got no answer. So I walked in. There was this gram, and it said urgent.”

  “What else did it say?” Pete asked him.

  “You don’t think I read it?”

  “What else did it say?”

  “Well, I — yeah, I read it. I didn’t want to come out here in this storm if it wasn’t important. But I better not tell you, Hodges. You can go back and find out for yourself.”

  Garr, still angry, took a different tack. “How did you know where to find us?”

  “Are you kidding? Everyone knows you two come here once a week, even the officers, I think. It’s a big joke.”

  “Very funny,” said Garr.

  Roger shrugged. “Anyway, this gram is important, Hodges. You better hustle on back and read it.”

  Pete looked at Garr. “Why don’t you stay here and watch the blast-off?”

  “Umm-mm. No, I think I’ll go back with you. If Roger thinks it’s important, but won’t tell you why — well, I’d better go with you, that’s all.”

  Pete nodded and stalked down the hill. The rain had slowed to a trickle and the sun showed signs of rising in the east and bringing up a clear day with it. Roger would not have ventured out in the rain unless, unless what? Roger envied them, envied their grades, their athletic ability, their comradeship. If they were in some kind of trouble, he’d gloat. Now, as they walked back along the edge of the highway, he had a smug look on his face.

  Pete did not like it at all.

  The gram was simple and to the point: Cadet Hodges, report to the Marshal’s office. Please prepare yourself for a shock. This is urgent.

  “See?” Roger was smiling.

  “Thanks for telling me,” Pete said numbly.

  Garr’s freckled face split into a broad grin. “Don’t you worry about it one bit, Pete. You know how they have a way of exaggerating things.” His voice trailed off lamely.

  “Sure,” Pete said. “Sure.”

  And then he was walking briskly out through the door. Behind him he heard Roger saying, “Boy, does he look scared!”

  Pete took the elevator down to the ground level, then boarded one of the moving ramps which took him quickly across campus to the Headquarters Building. The Marshal’s secretary looked up from her desk, and Pete told her: “I’m Cadet Hodges.”

  “Oh.”

  “I — I got an office-gram.”

  “Yes, I know. Don’t mind us, cadet. We work twenty-four hours a day. Three shifts, three Marshals. I think he’ll see you now. Good luck.” As Pete passed her desk, the woman averted her face.

  Pete pushed open the door at the far end of the little reception room. He stood very erect when he walked inside.

  “Good morning, Cadet Hodges. Relax, young man. At your ease.”

  Pete could tell at a glance that the Marshal was an ex-spaceman. He didn’t know how, but he could tell. He had gray hair and his eyes were tired, but something in those eyes said, clearer than any words: I’ve seen space. . . .

  “I called you at once, Cadet Hodges, because this was important. Next week is graduation, and your family might be coming here to see — but I’m getting ahead of myself.” He thumbed rapidly through some papers on his desk. “Your grades are fine, Hodges. You’re in the top third of the senior class. You’ve handled yourself in athletics with flying colors. You even have a propensity for sneaking off in the morning to visit the Spaceport!”

  “What, sir?”

  The Marshal smiled. “We know all about that. Officially, it’s against regulations. But unofficially, we like it. I did the same thing myself, Hodges, thirty years ago. If space is in your blood, that’s what you do.

  “Hodges, before I go any further, realize this: for all our thunder and our noise, spaceflight is still in its infancy. We reached the moon sixty years ago, Mars fifty. Everything is new, and dangerous. As a result, the spaceman must be a perfect specimen. Each man is a cog in a great machine; he can be nothing more than that. He must act as one with his fellow crewmen, and as one with the complex machinery of a spaceship. It could mean disaster for everyone concerned if he didn’t.

  “He must have rapid reflexes, on the order of seventy percent above average. And still he must be able to suspend judgment. He must have a body which will respond instantly to those reflexes. And finally, as you know, he must be young. Seventeen to twenty-five, and that’s all. Past twenty-five, his reflexes slow down just slightly, but sufficiently to be dangerous. And that’s a spaceman, Cadet Hodges. It’s important that I tell you this, as you’ll see.”

  Pete had heard all that many times before. But what was the Marshal getting at? Why did he single him out — at six o’clock in the morning?

  “The Academy is a huge, complex enterprise, Cadet Hodges. It is inevitable that clerical errors will occur from time to time. One such error occurred where you are concerned. I have reference to your first-year medical report.”

  Pete remembered that day dimly, four years ago, when a frightened, skinny kid of thirteen named Peter Hodges had been given his medical exam. They’d been thorough; they’d done everything. And he had come through with flying colors — or so he had though
t.

  The Marshal’s voice had become cold and businesslike, and it snapped Pete from his reverie. “There is a memo attached to your medical report to the effect that you had an old injury which did not heal properly. Do you know anything about it, Cadet Hodges? A broken collarbone?”

  “Why, yes! I was ten or eleven, I forget which. I was playing out on the spacefield when a guard ran after me. I tripped and fell. . . .”

  “You broke your collarbone,” the Marshal went on for him, “It did not knit properly, and the report indicates that it was a nasty break, a double compound fracture. Somehow the report was overlooked these last four years, but fortunately it was found in time. For any normal activity, the injury has healed satisfactorily. But not for spaceflight, Cadet Hodges. I’m sorry.”

  Pete stood there, the words drumming in his mind over and over again. But not for spaceflight. . . .

  “As you know, now,” the Marshal was saying, “acceleration is a rugged affair. The human body was built to withstand a pressure of one gravity, which is what it normally encounters on the surface of the Earth. In order to blast off, however, a spaceship must build up tremendous speed. Rate of increase of velocity, that’s acceleration, Hodges. And it means that the body is faced with a pressure of five or five and a half gravities instead of one. At times that must be increased to six. Such a pressure, according to the judgment of the medical board, might be sufficient to re-break your collarbone along the line of the old injury. If that were to happen in deep space, you would be a danger to your passengers and the crew.

  “It is therefore the, decision of the medical board that you be eliminated from candidacy for a spaceman’s rockets. I am sorry, Hodges; truly sorry. It is further the decision of the board that you notify your family at once and prepare to depart from the Academy. . . .”

  The impersonal voice droned on and on. The Marshal was sorry to break the news so suddenly, but he had only found out himself this morning. It was considered necessary to inform Cadet Hodges immediately, in order that he would not go ahead with his plans for graduation. It was possible he might be transferred to a ground-crew school to do earthbound maintenance work. . . .

 

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