Isaac Asimov - Lucky Starr 04 - Oceans of Venus

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The Oceans Of Venus –
Lucky Starr 04
Isaac Asimov
Other books in the Lucky Starr series by Isaac Asimov:
Space Ranger: 1
Pirates of the Asteroids: 2
The Big Sun of Mercury: 3
Also available from NEL by this author:
THROUGH A GLASS CLEARLY
The Oceans of Venus
Isaac Asimov
NEW ENGLISH LIBRARY
Timbs mirror
First published in the USA by Doubleday & Co. Inc., 1954
Published in Great Britain by New English Library Ltd., 1973
Foreword Copyright © 1972 by Isaac Asimov
HRST MEL PAPERBACK EDITION AUGUST 1974
Conditions of sale: This book is sold subject to the condition that it shall not, by way of trade or
otherwise, be lent, re-sold, hired out, or otherwise circulated without the publisher's prior consent in any
form of binding or cover other than that in which it is published and without a similar condition including
this condition being imposed on the subsequent purchaser.
NEL Books are published by
New English Library Limited from Barnard's Inn, Holborn, London, E.C.I. Printed in Finland by Uusi
Kivipaino Oy.
450 01926 8
Dedication
TO MARGARET LESSER
AND ALL THE GIRLS IN THE DEPARTMENT
CONTENTS
1 THROUGH THE CLOUDS OF VENUS
2 UNDER THE SEA DOME
3 YEAST!
4 COUNCILMAN ACCUSED!
5 "BEWARE WATER!"
6 TOO LATE!
7 QUESTIONS
8 COUNCILMAN PURSUED!
9 OUT OF THE DEEP
10 THE MOUNTAIN OF FLESH
11 TO THE SURFACE?
12 TO THE CITY?
13 MINDS MEET
14 MINDS BATTLE
15 THE ENEMY?
16 THE ENEMY!
FOREWORD
This book was first published in 1954, and the de-scription of the surface of Venus was in accordance
with astronomic beliefs of the period.
Since 1954, however, astronomical knowledge of the inner Solar system has advanced enormously
because of the use of radar beams and rockets.
In the late 1950s, the quantity of radio waves received from Venus made it seem that the surface of
Venus might be much hotter than had been thought. On August 27, 1962, a rocket probe called "Mariner
II" was launched in the direction of Venus. It skimmed by within 21,000 miles of Venus on December
14, 1962. Measur-ing the radio waves emitted by the planet, it turned out that the surface temperature
everywhere was indeed considerably higher than the boiling point of water.
This meant that far from having a worldwide ocean, as described in this book, Venus had no ocean at
all. All of Venus's water is in the form of water vapor in its clouds, and the surface is exceedingly hot and
is bone-dry. The atmosphere of Venus is, moreover, denser than had been thought and is almost entirely
carbon dioxide.
Nor had it been known, in 1954, how long it took Venus to rotate on its axis. In 1964, radar beams
bounced off Venus's surface showed that it was turn-ing once in every 243 days (eighteen days longer
than its year) and in the "wrong" direction as compared with other planets.
I hope that the readers enjoy this story anyway, but I would not wish them to be misguided into
accepting as fact some of the material which was "accurate" in 1954 but which is now outdated.
Isaac Asimov November, 1970
Chapter 1
THROUGH THE CLOUDS
OF VENUS
Lucky Starr and john Bigman Jones kicked them-selves up from the gravity-free Space Station No. 2
and drifted toward the planetary coaster that waited for them with its air lock open. Their movements had
the grace of long practice under non-gravity conditions, despite the fact that their bodies seemed thick
and gro-tesque in the space suits they wore.
Bigman arched his back as he moved upward and craned his head to stare once again at Venus. His
voice sounded loudly in Lucky's ear through the suit's radio. "Space! Look at that rock, will you?" Every
inch of Big-man's five-foot-two was tense with the thrill of the sight.
Bigman had been born and bred on Mars and had never in his life been so close to Venus. He was used
to ruddy planets and rocky asteroids. He had even visited green and blue Earth. But here, now, was
something that was pure gray and white.
Venus filled over half the sky. It was only two thou-sand miles away from the space station they were
on. Another space station was on the opposite side of the planet. These two stations, acting as receiving
depots for Venus-bound spaceships, streaked about the planet in a three-hour period of revolution,
following one another's tracks like little puppies forever chasing their tails.
Yet from those space stations, close though they were to Venus, nothing could be seen of the planet's
surface. No continents showed, no oceans, no deserts or moun-tains, no green valleys. Whiteness, only
brilliant white-ness, interspersed with shifting lines of gray.
The whiteness was the turbulent cloud layer that hovered eternally over all of Venus, and the gray lines
marked the boundaries where cloud masses met and clashed. Vapor moved downward at those
boundaries, and below those gray lines, on Venus's invisible surface, it rained.
Lucky Starr said, "No use looking at Venus, Bigman. You'll be seeing plenty of it, close up, for a while.
It's the sun you ought to be saying good-by to."
Bigman snorted. To his Mars-accustomed eyes, even Earth's sun seemed swollen and overbright. The
sun, as seen from Venus's orbit, was a bloated monster. It was two and a quarter times as bright as
Earth's sun, four times as bright as the familiar sun on Bigman's Mars. Personally, he was glad that
Venus's clouds would hide its sun. He was glad that the space station always ar-ranged its vanes in such
a way as to block off the sunlight.
Lucky Starr said, "Well, you crazy Martian, are you getting in?"
Bigman had brought himself to a halt at the lip of the open lock by the casual pressure of one hand. He
was still looking at Venus. The visible half was in the full glare of the sun, but at the eastern side the night
shadow was creeping in, moving quickly as the space station raced on in its orbit.
Lucky, still moving upward, caught the lip of the lock in his turn and brought his other space-suited hand
flat against Bigman's seat. Under the gravity-free conditions, Bigman's little body went tumbling slowly
inward, while Lucky's figure bobbed outward.
Lucky's arm muscle contracted, and he floated up and inward with an easy, flowing motion. Lucky had
no cause for a light heart at the moment, but he was forced into a smile when he found Bigman
spread-eagled in mid-air, with the tip of one gauntleted finger against the inner lock holding him steady.
The outer lock closed as Lucky passed through.
Bigman said, "Listen, you wombug, someday I'm walking out on you and you can get yourself an-
other"
Air hissed into the small room, and the inner lock opened. Two men floated rapidly through, dodging
Big-man's dangling feet. The one in the lead, a stocky fellow with dark hair and a surprisingly large
mustache, said, "Is there any trouble, gentlemen?"
The second man, taller, thinner, and with lighter hair but a mustache just as large, said, "Can we help
you?"
Bigman said loftily, "You can help us by giving us room and letting us get our suits off." He had flicked
himself to the floor and was removing his suit as he spoke. Lucky had already shucked his.
The men went through the inner lock. It, too, closed behind them. The space suits, their outer surface
cold with the cold of space, were frosting over as moisture from the warm air of the coaster congealed
upon them. Bigman tossed them out of the coaster's warm, moist air on to the tiled racks, where the ice
might melt.
The dark-haired man said, "Let's see, now. You two are William Williams and John Jones. Right?"
Lucky said, "I'm Williams." Using that alias under ordinary conditions was second nature to Lucky by
now. It was customary for Council of Science members to shun publicity at all times. It was particularly
ad-visable now with the situation on Venus as confused and uncertain as it was.
Lucky went on, "Our papers are in order, I believe, and our luggage is aboard."
"Everything's all right," the dark-haired one said, "I'm George Reval, pilot, and this is Tor Johnson, my
co-pilot. We'll be taking off in a few minutes. If there's anything you want, let us know."
The two passengers were shown to their small cabin, and Lucky sighed inwardly. He was never
thoroughly comfortable in space except on his own speed cruiser, the Shooting Starr, now at rest in the
space station's hangar.
Tor Johnson said in a deep voice, "Let me warn you, by the way, that once we get out of the space
station's orbit, we won't be in free fall any more. Gravity will start picking up. If you get space-sick"
Bigman yelled, "Space-sick! You in-planet goop, I could take gravity changes when I was a baby that
you couldn't take right now." He flicked his finger against the wall, turned a slow somersault, touched the
wall again, and ended with his feet just a half-inch above the floor. "Try that someday when you feel real
manly."
"Say," said the co-pilot, grinning, "you squeeze a lot of brash into half a pint, don't you?"
Bigman flushed instantly. "Half a pint! Why, you soup-straining cobber" he screamed, but Lucky's hand
was on his shoulder and he swallowed the rest of the sentence. "See you on Venus," the little Martian
muttered darkly.
Tor was still grinning. He followed his chief into the control room toward the head of the ship.
Bigman, his anger gone at once, said to Lucky curi-ously, "Say, how about those mustaches? Never saw
any so big."
Lucky said, "It's just a Venusian custom, Bigman. I think practically everybody grows them on Venus."
"That so?" Bigman fingered his lip, stroking its bare-ness. "Wonder how I'd look in one."
"With one that big?" smiled Lucky. "It would drown your whole face."
He dodged the punch Bigman threw at him just as the floor trembled lightly beneath their feet and the
Venus Marvel lifted off the space station. The coaster turned its nose into the contracting spiral trajectory
that would carry it "down" to Venus.
Lucky Starr felt the beginnings of a long-overdue relaxation flooding him as the coaster picked up speed.
His brown eyes were thoughtful, and his keen, fine-featured face was in repose. He was tall and looked
slim, but beneath that deceptive slimness were whip-cord muscles.
Life had already given much to Lucky of both good and evil. He had lost his parents while still a child,
lost them in a pirate attack near the very Venus he was now approaching. He had been brought up by his
father's dearest friends, Hector Conway, now chief of the Council of Science, and Augustus Henree,
section direc-tor of the same organization.
Lucky had been educated and trained with but one thought in mind: Someday he was to enter that very
Council of Science, whose powers and functions made it the most important and yet least-known body in
the galaxy.
It was only a year ago, upon his graduation from the academy, that he had entered into full membership
and become dedicated to the advancement of man and the destruction of the enemies of civilization. He
was the youngest member of the Council and probably would remain so for years.
Yet already he had won his first battles. On the deserts of Mars and among the dim lit rocks of the
asteroid belt, he had met and triumphed over wrong-doing.
But the war against crime and evil is not a short-term conflict, and now it was Venus that was the setting
for trouble, a trouble that was particularly disturbing since its details were misty.
Chief of the Council Hector Conway had pinched his lip and said, "I'm not sure whether it's a Sirian
con-spiracy against the Solar Confederation, or just petty racketeering. Our local men there tend to view
it seriously."
Lucky said, "Have you sent any of our trouble shooters?" He was not long back from the asteroids, and
he was listening to this with concern.
Conway said, "Yes: Evans."
"Lou Evans?" asked Lucky, his dark eyes lighting with pleasure. "He was one of my roommates at the
academy. He's good."
"Is he? The Venus office of the Council has requested his removal and investigation on the charge of
corrup-tion!"
"What?" Lucky was on his feet, horrified. "Uncle Hector, that's impossible."
"Want to go out there and look into it yourself?"
"Do I! Great stars and little asteroids! Bigman and I will take off just as soon as we get the Shooting
Starr flight-ready."
And now Lucky watched out the porthole thought-fully, on the last leg of his flight. The night shadow
had crept over Venus, and for an hour there was only black-ness to be seen. All the stars were hidden
by Venus's huge bulk.
Then they were out in the sunlight again, but now the viewport was only gray. They were too close to
see the planet as a whole. They were even too close to see the clouds. They were actually inside the
cloudy layer.
Bigman, having just finished a large chicken-salad sandwich, wiped his lips and said, "Space, I'd hate to
have to pilot a ship through all this muck."
The coaster's wings had snapped out into extended position to take advantage of the atmosphere, and
there was a definite difference in the quality of the ship's mo-tion as a result. The buffeting of the winds
could be felt and the plunging and lifting of the drafts that sink and rise.
Ships that navigate space are not suitable for the treachery of thick atmosphere. It is for that reason that
planets like Earth and Venus, with deep layers of air enshrouding them, require space stations. To those
space stations come the ships of deep space. From the stations planetary coasters with retractable wings
ride the tricky air currents to the planet's surface.
Bigman, who could pilot a ship from Pluto to Mercury blindfolded, would have been lost at the first
thickening wisp of an atmosphere. Even Lucky, who in his intensive training at the academy had piloted
coast-ers, would not have cared to take on the job in the blanketing clouds that surrounded them now.
"Until the first explorers landed on Venus," Lucky said, "all mankind ever saw of the planet was the outer
surface of these clouds. They had weird notions about the planet then."
Bigman didn't reply. He was looking into the cello-plex container to make sure there wasn't another
chicken-salad sandwich hiding there.
Lucky went on. "They couldn't tell how fast Venus was rotating or whether it was rotating at all. They
weren't even sure about the composition of Venus's atmosphere. They knew it had carbon dioxide, but
until the late 1900s astronomers thought Venus had no water. When ships began to land, mankind found
that wasn't so."
He broke off. Despite himself, Lucky's mind re-turned once again to the coded spacegram he had
re-ceived in mid-flight, with Earth ten million miles behind. It was from Lou Evans, his old roommate, to.
whom he had subethered that he was on his way.
The reply was short, blunt, and clear. It was, "Stay away!"
Just that! It was unlike Evans. To Lucky, a message like that meant trouble, big trouble, so he did not
"stay away." Instead, he moved the micropile energy output up a notch and increased acceleration to the
gasping point.
Bigman was saying, "Gives you a funny feeling, Lucky, when you think that once, long ago, people were
all cooped up on Earth. Couldn't get off it no matter what they did. Didn't know anything about Mars or
the moon or anywhere. It gives me the shivers."
It was just at that point that they pierced the cloud barrier, and even Lucky's gloomy thoughts vanished
at the sight that met their eyes.
It was sudden. One moment they were surrounded by what seemed an eternal milkiness; the next, there
was only transparent air about them. Everything below was bathed in a clear, pearly light. Above was the
gray undersurface of the clouds.
Bigman said, "Hey, Lucky, look!"
Venus stretched out below them for miles in every direction, and it was a solid carpet of blue-green
vege-tation. There were no dips or rises in the surface. It was absolutely level, as though it had been
planed down by a giant atomic slicer.
Nor was there anything to be seen that would have been normal in an Earthly scene. No roads or
houses, no towns or streams. Just blue-green, unvarying, as far as could be seen.
Lucky said, "Carbon dioxide does it. It's the part of the air plants feed on. On Earth there's only three
hundredths of one per cent in the air, but here almost ten per cent of the air is carbon dioxide."
Bigman, who had lived for years on the farms of Mars, knew about carbon dioxide. He said, "What
makes it so light with all the clouds?"
Lucky smiled. "You're forgetting, Bigman. The sun is over twice as bright here as on earth." Then as he
looked out the port again, his smile thinned and vanished.
"Funny," he murmured.
Suddenly, he turned away from the window. "Big-man," he said, "come with me to the pilot room."
In two strides he was out the cabin. In two more, he was at the pilot room. The door wasn't locked. He
pulled it open. Both pilots, George Reval and Tor Johnson, were at their places, eyes glued to the
controls. Neither turned as they entered.
Lucky said, "Men"
No response.
He touched Johnson's shoulder, and the co-pilot's arm twitched irritably, shaking off Lucky's grip.
The young Councilman seized Johnson by either shoulder and called, "Get the other one, Bigman!"
The little fellow was already at work on that very job, asking no questions, attacking with a bantam's
fury.
Lucky hurled Johnson from him. Johnson staggered back, righted himself, and charged forward. Lucky
ducked a wild blow and brought a straight-armed right to the side of the other's jaw. Johnson went
down, cold. At nearly the same moment, Bigman, with a quick and skillful twist of George Reval's arm,
flung him along the floor and knocked him breathless.
Bigman dragged both pilots outside the pilot room and closed the door on them. He came back to find
Lucky handling the controls feverishly.
Only then did he ask for an explanation. "What happened?"
"We weren't leveling off," said Lucky grimly. "I watched the surface, and it was coming up too fast. It
still is."
He strove desperately to find the particular control for the ailerons, those vanes that controlled the angle
of flight. The blue surface of Venus was much closer. It was rushing at them.
Lucky's eyes were on the pressure gauge. It measured the weight of air above them. The higher it rose,
the closer they were to the surface. It was climbing less quickly now. Lucky's fist closed more tightly on
the duorod, squeezing the forks together. That must be it. He dared not exert force too rapidly or the
ailerons might be whipped off altogether by the screaming gale that flung itself past their ship. Yet there
was only five hundred feet to spare before zero altitude.
His nostrils flaring, the cords in his neck standing out, Lucky played those ailerons against the wind.
"We're leveling," breathed Bigman. "We're level-ing"
But there wasn't room enough. The blue-green came up and up till it filled all the view in the port. Then,
with a speed that was too great and an angle that was also too great, the Venus Marvel, carrying Lucky
Starr and Bigman Jones, struck the surface of the planet Venus.
Chapter 2
UNDER THE SEA DOME
Had the surface of Venus been what it seemed to be at first glance, the Venus Marvel would have
smashed to scrap and burned to ash. The career of Lucky Starr would have ended at that moment.
Fortunately, the vegetation that had so thickly met the eye was neither grass nor shrubbery, but
seaweed. The flat plain was no surface of soil and rock, but water, the top of an ocean that surrounded
and covered all of Venus.
The Venus Marvel, even so, hit the ocean with a thunderous rattle, tore through the ropy weeds, and
boiled its way into the depths. Lucky and Bigman were hurled against the walls.
An ordinary vessel might have been smashed, but the Venus Marvel had been designed for entering
water at high speed. Its seams were tight; its form, streamlined. Its wings, which Lucky had neither time
nor knowledge to retract, were torn loose, and its frame groaned under the shock, but it remained
seaworthy.
Down, down it went into the green-black murk of the Venusian ocean. The cloud-diffused light from
above was almost totally stopped by the tight weed cover. The ship's artificial lighting did not go on, its
workings apparently put out of order by the shock of contact.
Lucky's senses were whirling. "Bigman," he called.
There was no answer, and he stretched out his arms, feeling. His hand touched Bigman's face.
"Bigman!" he called again. He felt the little Martian's chest, and the heart was beating regularly. Relief
washed over Lucky.
He had no way of telling what was happening to the ship. He knew he could never find any way of
control-ling it in the complete darkness that enveloped them. He could only hope that the friction of the
water would halt the ship before it struck bottom.
摘要:

    TheOceansOfVenus–LuckyStarr04IsaacAsimov      OtherbooksintheLuckyStarrseriesbyIsaacAsimov:SpaceRanger:1PiratesoftheAsteroids:2TheBigSunofMercury:3 AlsoavailablefromNELbythisauthor:THROUGHAGLASSCLEARLYTheOceansofVenusIsaacAsimovNEWENGLISHLIBRARYTimbsmirrorFirstpublishedintheUSAbyDoubleday&Co.Inc...

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