
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?"