<h2>3</h2>
<p>In the early dawn, out at the hangar, away from the main E
buildings and the endless discussions going on inside them, Thomas
R. Lynwood moved methodically through his preflight inspection.</p>
<p>Speculative thinking was none of his concern. His job was to
pilot an E wherever he might want to go, and bring him back
again—if possible. To Lynwood reality was a physical thing—the
feel of controls beneath his broad, square hands; the hum of
machinery responsive to his will. He liked mathematics not for
its own sake but because it best described the substance of
things, the weight, the size, the properties of things, how they
behaved. He was too intelligent not to realize mathematics could
also communicate speculative unrealities, but he was content to
wait until the theorists had turned such equations into machines,
controls, forces before he got excited.</p>
<p>He was one who, even in childhood, had never wanted to be
an E. He didn't want to be one now. Somebody had once told
him in Personnel that was why he was a favorite pilot of the E's,
but he discounted that. They didn't try to tell him how to run
his ship—well, most of them didn't—and he didn't try to tell them
how to solve their problems.</p>
<p>The men around the hangar had another version of why the
E's liked him to pilot them around—he was lucky. Somehow he<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_27" id="Page_27">[27]</SPAN></span>
always managed to come back, and bring the E with him. Well,
sure. He didn't want to get stuck somewhere, wind up in a gulio's
gullet, gassed by an atmosphere that turned from oxygen-nitrogen
into pure methane without warning or reason, and against all
known chemical laws, or whiffed out in the lash of a dead star
suddenly gone nova.</p>
<p>But sometimes a pilot couldn't help himself. These E's would
fiddle around in places where human beings shouldn't have gone.
Most of the time they weren't allowed even one mistake. He
was lucky, sure, but part of it might be because he'd never
been sent out with the wrong E.</p>
<p>There could be a first time. Luck ran out if you kept piling
your bets higher and higher. But until then ...</p>
<p>He was square-jawed, a freckled man with red hair. Contrary
to superstition, he didn't have a fiery temper. He was forty and
had already built up a seniority of twenty years in deep space.
He was captain of his ship and wanted nothing more. Sure, it
was only a three-man crew—himself, a flight engineer, an astronavigator.
But it was an E ship, which meant that he outranked
even the captains of the great luxury liners.</p>
<p>There was a time when the realization caused him to strut a
little, but he'd got over it. He was single, had no ties, wanted
none. He had a good job which he took seriously, was doing significant
work which he also took seriously, was paid premium
wages even for a space captain, which didn't matter except in
terms of recognition. He didn't mind going anywhere in the known
universe, or how long he would be away. He hoped he would
get back someday, but he wasn't fanatic about it.</p>
<p>In a routine so well-practiced that it had become ritual, he
checked over the cruiser point by point. Of course the maintenance
men had checked each item when they had, after his last trip,
dismantled, cleaned, oiled, polished, tested, and reassembled one
part after another. Then maintenance supervisors had checked
over the ship with a gimlet-eyed attitude of hoping to find some
flaw, just one tiny flub, so they could turn some luckless mechanic<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_28" id="Page_28">[28]</SPAN></span>
inside out. The Inspection Department, traditionally an enemy
of Maintenance, took over from there and inspected every part as
if it had been slapped together by a bunch of army goof-offs
who knew that pilots were expendable in peace or war and, unconsciously
at least, aided in expending them.</p>
<p>Both departments had certified, with formal preflight papers,
that the ship was in readiness for deep space. But Lynwood considered
such papers as so much garbage, and went over the entire
ship himself. This might have had something to do with his so-called
luck.</p>
<p>He wondered if Frank and Louie had checked into the ship
this morning. Probably had; last night's outing wasn't much to
hang over about. A steak at the Eagle Cafe down in Yellow Sands,
a couple of drinks at Smitty's, a game of pool at Smiley's, a few
dances at the Stars and Moons. Big night out for his crew before
they left for deep space. Yellow Sands was strictly for young
families, where bright-boy hubby worked up on the hill at E.H.Q.,
and wifey raised super-bright kids who already considered Dad
to be behind the times. Their idea of sin in that town was to
snub the wrong matron at a cocktail party; or not snub, as the
case might be. Not that it mattered much, neither Frank nor
Louie was dedicated to hell-raising.</p>
<p>When he at last opened the door to the generator room, he
saw his flight engineer, Frank Norton, had a couple of student
E's on his hands.</p>
<p>It was one of the nuisances of being stationed here at E.H.Q.
that you'd have swarms of these super-bright youngsters hanging
around, asking questions, disputing your answers, arguing with
each other, and, if you didn't watch them carefully, taking things
apart and putting them back together in different hookups to see
what would happen.</p>
<p>The first thing these kids were taught was to disregard everything
everybody had ever said; to start out from scratch as if nobody
had ever had the sense to think about the problem before;
to doubt most of all the opinions of experts, for, obviously, if the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_29" id="Page_29">[29]</SPAN></span>
experts were right then there would be no problem. Most of them
didn't have to be taught it, they seemed to have been born with
it. Time was you batted a young smart aleck down, told him to go
get dry behind the ears before he shot off his mouth. But not
these days. These days you looked at him hopefully, and crossed
your fingers. He might grow up to be an E.</p>
<p>Tom wondered what it would be like to doubt the realities,
the very machinery under his hands, to assume that although it
had always worked it might not work this time. He could not
conceive that state of mind, or how a man could live in it without
going insane. Every time he saw these tortured kids saying, "Well,
maybe, but what if ..." he was glad to be nothing more than
a ship captain who knew his machinery was exactly what it was
supposed to be and nothing else.</p>
<p>But, in a way, it was nice for the lads too. After thousands of
years of man's almost rabid determination to destroy the brightest
and best of his young, the world had finally found a place for
the bright boy.</p>
<p>This morning, probably because of the early dawn hour, there
were only two of them in the generator room. As expected, they
were arguing over the space-jump band. Frank was standing
over to one side, observing but not participating. His cap was
pushed back on his blond head, his big face expressionless. It
was common gossip throughout flight crews everywhere that
Frank, blindfolded, could take a cruiser apart and put it back
together without missing a motion.</p>
<p>"The jump band is founded on the basic of the Moebius strip,"
one student E was saying heatedly. "This little gadget sends out
a field in the shape of such a strip, a band with a half twist before
rejoined. Its width is as variable as we need it, up to a light-year."</p>
<p>"Only it hasn't any width at all," the other student argued.
"That's the whole point. The Moebius strip has only one edge,
so it can't have width. We enter that edge, go through a line
that doesn't exist, and come out a light-year away, without taking
any longer than the time to pass a point."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_30" id="Page_30">[30]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"But that's <i>what</i> happens, not <i>how</i>," the other shouted angrily.
"Everybody knows <i>what</i> happens. Tell me <i>how</i> and maybe I'll
listen."</p>
<p>Tom caught his flight engineer's eye and signaled with his head
that it might be a good idea to get rid of the students. Any other
time it would be all right, a part of their stand-by job, but they'd
got word last night to have the ship in readiness from six o'clock
on. They might have to wait all day, but then again, some E might
get an idea and want to go shooting out to Eden right off.</p>
<p>Frank caught the signal, grinned, and began to herd the two
students toward the door. They were in such heated argument
now, accusing one another of parrot repetition instead of thinking
for himself, that they didn't realize that they were being nudged
out of the ship, down its ramp, and out on the field.</p>
<p>"Don't think it hasn't been educational, and all," Frank murmured
to them as he got them off the ramp. "You get the how of
it figured out, you let me know."</p>
<p>The two looked at him as if he might be an interesting phenomenon,
decided he wasn't, and wandered away, back toward the
school dormitories, still arguing.</p>
<p>"Sometimes I think a quiet milk run out to Saturn would have
its brighter side," Frank muttered to Tom when he came back
inside the ship. Tom grinned at him in wordless understanding.</p>
<p>There was no tension between them. They had worked together
so long that they had got over all the attraction-repulsion conflicts
which operate far beneath the surface mind to cause likes and
dislikes. Now they accepted one another in the way a man accepts
his own hands—proud of them when they do something with extra
skill, making allowances when they fumble; but never considering
doing without them.</p>
<p>"Wonder who the E will be this time?" Frank asked, without
too much concern. It didn't really matter. An E was an E, for
better or for worse.</p>
<p>"Haven't heard," Tom answered. "Probably not decided yet.
If the Senior E's think it isn't much of a problem, they might<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_31" id="Page_31">[31]</SPAN></span>
send a Junior. Or if they don't want to be bothered, they might
send a Junior who's up for his solo problem."</p>
<p>"Whoever, or whatever, I'm sure it will be interesting," Frank
commented with a grin. Tom returned the grin. There wasn't any
malice in it, nor any of the basic enmity and destructiveness of
the stupid toward the bright, just a recognition that an E was
an E. They had a vast respect for an E, but you couldn't get
around it that some of them were—well, maybe eccentric was
the word.</p>
<p>"I hear there's trouble on that planet we're going to—Eden, isn't
it?" Frank commented.</p>
<p>"You think we'd be hauling an E out there if there weren't?"
Tom countered wryly.</p>
<p>They continued to check over each item in the generator room,
their flying fingers making sharp contrast to their slow, idle conversation.
They gave the room extra care this time because there
had been some quick-fingered students around who just might
have got it into their heads to improve the machinery. Satisfied
at last that there had been no subtle meddling, they snapped the
cowl of the generator back into position. They took one more
sharp look around, then walked, single file, up the narrow passage
to the control room. Louie LeBeau was sitting in the astronavigator's
seat, checking over his star charts and instruments.
He glanced up at them as they came level with his cubicle. He
was the third man of the team, as used to them as they were to
him.</p>
<p>"Fourteen hop adjustments to get us past Pluto and out of the
heavy traffic," he grumbled sourly. His round face and liquid
brown eyes were perpetually disgusted. "They keep saying over
at Traffic that they're going to provide a freeway out of the solar
system so we can take it in one hop, but they don't do it. Wonder
when we'll ever go modern, start doing things scientific?"</p>
<p>They paid no attention to his grumbling. That was just Louie.</p>
<p>"Then how many hops to Eden, after Pluto?" Tom asked.</p>
<p>"I figure twenty," Louie answered. "Can't take full light-year<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_32" id="Page_32">[32]</SPAN></span>
leaps every time. There's stuff in the way. There's always stuff
in the way to louse up a good flight plan. Universe is too crowded.
There'll be no trouble getting <i>to</i> Eden, no trouble <i>getting</i> there.
Make it in about fourteen hours. Fourteen hours to go eleven
lousy little light-years. Fourteen hours I got to work in one stretch.
Wait'll the union agent hears you're working me fourteen hours
without a relief. And are you letting me get my rest now, so I
can work fourteen hours? Or are you stopping me from resting
with a lot of questions?"</p>
<p>"But you think there may be trouble <i>after</i> we get to Eden?"
Tom asked.</p>
<p>Louie looked at him. There was no fear in the soft, brown eyes;
just an enormous indignation that life should always treat him
so dirty.</p>
<p>"Don't you?" he asked.</p>
<hr /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_33" id="Page_33">[33]</SPAN></span></p>
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