Space Platform by Murray Leinster (miss read books .txt) š
- Author: Murray Leinster
Book online Ā«Space Platform by Murray Leinster (miss read books .txt) šĀ». Author Murray Leinster
Despite extensive research, no evidence was found that U.S. copyright on this book was renewed.
Ever since ancient man first gazed in wonder at the stars, humanity has dreamed of traveling to outer space. Now scientists agree that space-flight may very soon become a reality.
Space Platform tells of manās first step into outer space ... of the difficulties and dangers of reaching for the stars. It is also an exciting adventure. When young Joe Kenmore came to Bootstrap to install pilot gyros in the Platform he hadnāt bargained for sabotage or murder or love. But Joe learned that ruthless agents were determined to wreck the project. He found that the beautiful girl he loved, and men like The Chief, a rugged Indian steelworker, and Mike, a midget who made up for his size by brains, would have to fight with their bare hands to make manās age old dream of space travel come true!
This Pocket Book includes every word contained in the original, higher-priced edition. It is printed from brand-new plates made from completely reset, clear, easy-to-read type.
SPACE PLATFORMShasta edition published February, 1953
Pocket Book edition published March, 1953
1st printing January, 1953
All rights reserved. This book, or any part thereof, may not be reproduced in any manner without written permission of the publisher, except for brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews. For information, address: Shasta Publishers, 5525 South Blackstone Avenue, Chicago, 37, Illinois.
Copyright, 1953, by Will F. Jenkins. This Pocket Book edition is published by arrangement with Shasta Publishers. Printed in the U.S.A.
POCKET BOOKS, INC. NEW YORK, N. Y.Notice: Pocket Book editions are published in the United States by Pocket Books, Inc., in Canada by Pocket Books of Canada, Ltd., and in England by News of the World, Registered User of the Trade Marks. Trade Marks registered in the United States and British Patent Offices by Pocket Books, Inc., and registered in Canada by Pocket Books of Canada, Ltd.
Of other books by Murray Leinster, the following are science-fiction:
SIDEWISE IN TIME
MURDER MADNESS
THE LAST SPACE SHIP
THE LAWS OF CHANCE (Anthology)
GREAT STORIES OF SCIENCE FICTION (editor)
This acknowledgment is necessary if I am to say thanks to some experts to whom I am indebted. There is Captain Charles Benjamin, who read over the aviation parts of this book with pursed lips and a belligerent attitude toward questionable statements of fact or observation. There is Dr. John Drury Clark, whose authoritative knowledge of rocket fuels was the basis for admitted but not extravagant extrapolation on my part. There is the crew of a four-engined transport ship, who argued over my manuscript and settled the argument by a zestful, full-scale crash-landing drillārepeat, ādrillāāexpressly to make sure I had described all the procedure just right. There is Willy Ley, whom I would like to exempt from responsibility for any statement in the book, while I acknowledge the value of personal talks with him and the pleasure anybody who has ever read his books will recognize. And there is Dr. Hugh S. Rice of the Hayden Planetarium, who will probably be surprised to find that I feel I owe him gratitude. They are in great part responsible for the factual matter in this book.
I think I may add, though, that I worked on it too.
Murray Leinster
āArdudwyā
Gloucester, Va.
[Pg 1]
1There wasnāt anything underneath but clouds, and there wasnāt anything overhead but sky. Joe Kenmore looked out the plane window past the co-pilotās shoulder. He stared ahead to where the sky and cloud bank joinedāit was many miles awayāand tried to picture the job before him. Back in the cargo space of the plane there were four big crates. They contained the pilot gyros for the most important object then being built on Earth, and it wouldnāt work properly without them. It was Joeās job to take that highly specialized, magnificently precise machinery to its destination, help to install it, and see to its checking after it was installed.
He felt uneasy. Of course the pilot and co-pilotāthe only two other people on the transport planeāknew their stuff. Every imaginable precaution would be taken to make sure that a critically essential device like the pilot gyro assembly would get safely where it belonged. It would beāit was beingātreated as if it were a crate of eggs instead of massive metal, smoothed and polished and lapped to a precision practically unheard of. But just the same Joe was worried. Heād seen the pilot gyro assembly made. Heād helped on it. He knew how many times a thousandth of an inch had been split in machining its bearings, and the breath-weight balance of its moving parts. Heād have liked to be back in the cargo compartment with it, but only the pilotās cabin was pressurized, and the ship was at eighteen thousand feet, flying west by south.
He tried to get his mind off that impulse by remembering that at eighteen thousand feet a good half of the air on Earth was underneath him, and by hoping that the other [Pg 2]half would be as easy to rise above when the gyros were finally in place and starting out for space. The gyros, of course, were now on their way to be installed in the artificial satellite to be blasted up and set in an orbit around the Earth as the initial stage of that figurative stepladder by which men would make their first attempt to reach the stars. Until that Space Platform left the ground, the gyros were Joeās responsibility.
The planeās co-pilot leaned back in his chair and stretched luxuriously. He loosened his safety belt and got up. He stepped carefully past the column between the right- and left-hand pilot seats. That column contained a fraction of the innumerable dials and controls the pilots of a modern multi-engine plane have to watch and handle. The co-pilot went to the coffeepot and flipped a switch. Joe fidgeted again on his improvised seat. Again he wished that he could be riding in back with the crates. But it would be silly to insist on perching somewhere in the freight compartment.
There was a steady roaring in the cabināthe motors. Oneās ears got accustomed to it, and by now the noise sounded as if it were heard through cushions. Presently the coffeepot bubbled, unheard. The co-pilot lighted a cigarette. Then he drew a paper cup of coffee and handed it to the pilot. The pilot seemed negligently to contemplate some dozens of dials, all of which were duly duplicated on the right-hand, co-pilotās side. The co-pilot glanced at Joe.
āCoffee?ā
āThanks,ā said Joe. He took the paper cup.
The co-pilot said: āEverything okay with you?ā
āIām all right,ā said Joe. He realized that the co-pilot felt talkative. He explained: āThose crates Iām traveling withāā. The family firmās been working on that machinery for months. It was finished with the final grinding done practically with feather dusters. I canāt help worrying about it. There was four monthsā work in just lapping the shafts and balancing rotors. We made a telescope mounting once, for an observatory in South Africa, but compared to this gadget we worked on that one blindfolded!ā
[Pg 3]
āPilot gyros, eh?ā said the co-pilot. āThatās what the waybill said. But if they were all right when they left the plant, theyāll be all right when they are delivered.ā
Joe said ruefully: āStill Iād feel better riding back there with them.ā
āSabotage bad at the plant?ā asked the co-pilot. āTough!ā
āSabotage? No. Why should there be sabotage?ā demanded Joe.
The co-pilot said mildly: āNot quite everybody is anxious to see the Space Platform take off. Not everybody! What on earth do you think is the biggest problem out where theyāre building it?ā
āI wouldnāt know,ā admitted Joe. āKeeping the weight down? But there is a new rocket fuel thatās supposed to be all right for sending the Platform up. Wasnāt that the worst problem? Getting a rocket fuel with enough power per pound?ā
The co-pilot sipped his coffee and made a face. It was too hot.
āFella,ā he said drily, āthat stuff was easy! The slide-rule boys did that. The big job in making a new moon for the Earth is keeping it from being blown up before it can get out to space! There are a few gentlemen who thrive on power politics. They know that once the Platformās floating serenely around the Earth, with a nice stock of atom-headed guided missiles on board, power politics is finished. So theyāre doing what they can to keep the world as itās always beenāequipped with just one moon and many armies. And theyāre doing plenty, if you ask me!ā
āIāve heardāāā began Joe.
āYou havenāt heard the half of it,ā said the co-pilot. āThe Air Transport has lost nearly as many planes and more men on this particular airlift than it did in Korea while that was the big job. I donāt know how many other men have been killed. But thereās a strictly local hot war going on out where weāre headed. No holds barred! Hadnāt you heard?ā
It sounded exaggerated. Joe said politely: āI heard there was cloak-and-dagger stuff going on.ā
[Pg 4]
The pilot drained his cup and handed it to the co-pilot. He said: āHe thinks youāre kidding him.ā He turned back to the contemplation of the instruments before him and the view out the transparent plastic of the cabin windows.
āHe does?ā The co-pilot said to Joe, āYouāve got security checks around your plant. They werenāt put there for fun. Itās a hundred times worse where the whole Platformās being built.ā
āSecurity?ā said Joe. He shrugged. āWe know everybody who works at the plant. Weāve known them all their lives. Theyād get mad if we started to get stuffy. We donāt bother.ā
āThat Iād like to see,ā said the co-pilot skeptically. āNo barbed wire around the plant? No identity badges you wear when you go in? No security officer screaming blue murder every five minutes? What do you think all thatās for? You built these pilot gyros! You had to have that security stuff!ā
āBut we didnāt,ā insisted Joe. āNot any of it. The plantās been in the same village for eighty years. It started building wagons and plows, and now it turns out machine tools and precision machinery. Itās the only factory around, and everybody who works there went to school with everybody else, and so did our fathers, and we know one another!ā
The co-pilot was unconvinced. āNo kidding?ā
āNo kidding,ā Joe assured him. āIn World War Two the only spy scare in the village was an FBI man who came around looking for spies. The village cop locked him up and wouldnāt believe in his credentials. They had to send somebody from Washington to get him out of jail.ā
The co-pilot grinned reluctantly. āI guess there are such places,ā he said enviously. āYou shouldāve built the Platform! Itās plenty different on this job! We canāt even talk to a girl without security clearance for an interview beforehand, and we canāt speak to strange men or go out alone after darkā.ā
The pilot grunted. The co-pilotās tone changed. āNot quite that bad,ā he admitted, ābut itās bad! Itās really bad! We lost three planes last week. I guess youād call it in action against saboteurs. One flew to pieces in mid-air. Sabotage. Carrying critical stuff. One crashed on take-off, carrying irreplaceable [Pg 5]instruments. Somebodyād put a detonator in a servo-motor. And one froze in its landing glide and flew smack-dab into its landing field. They had to scrape it up. When this ship got a major overhaul two weeks ago, we flew it with our fingers crossed for four trips running. Seems to be all right, though. We gave it
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