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lens by the screen, and I assumed he could see me as well as! could see him. “I’d kind of hoped
for the Moon. I didn’t expect the O’Neill colony,” I added.
It took a while before he reacted, confirming my guess: a second and a half each way for
the message, and the way he was floating meant zero gravity. I couldn’t think of anything but the
Construction Shack (that’s what they called it then) that fit the description.
“This is where we are,” McLeve said. “The duty tour is five years. High pay, and you save
it all. Not mush to spend money on out here. Unless you drink. Good liquor costs like U’ansplant
rights on your kidneys. So does bad liquor, because you still have to lift it.”
“Savings don’t mean much,” I said.
“True.” McLeve grimaced at the thought. Inflation was running better than 20%. The
politicians said they would have it whipped Real Soon Now, but nobody believed them. “We’ve got
arrangements to have three quarters of your money banked in Swiss francs. If you go back early,
you lose that part of your pay. We need somebody in your field, part time on the Moon, part time
up here in the Shack. From your record I think you’d do. Still want the job?”
Industries.
I wanted it all right. I was never a nut on the space industries bit—I was never a nut on
anything—but it sounded like good work. Exciting, a chance to see something of the solar system
(well, of near-Earth space and the Moon; nobody had gone further than that) as well as to save a
lot of money. And with that job on my record I’d be in demand when I came home.
As to why me. it was obvious when I thought about it. There were lots of good
metallurgists, but not many had been finalists in the Olympic gymnastics team trials. I hadn’t won
a place on the team, but I’d sure proved I knew how to handle myself. Add to that the heavy
construction work experience and I was a natural. I sweated out the job appointment, but it came
through, and pretty soon I was at Canaveral. strapping myself into a Shuttle seat, and having
second and third thoughts about the whole thing.
There were five of us. We lifted out from the Cape in the Shuttle, then transfened in
Earth orbit to a tug that wasn’t a lot bigger than the old Apollo capsules had been. The trip was
three days, and crowded. The others were going to Moon base. They refueled my tug in lunar orbit
and sent me off alone to the Construction Shack. The ship was guided from the Shack.
and It was scary as hell becaus~there wasn’t anything to do but wonder if they knew what they were
doing. It took as long to get from the Moon to the Shack as it had to get to the Moon from Earth,.
which isn’t surprising because it’s the same dis. tance: the Shack was in one of the stable
libration points that make an equilateral triangle with the Earth and the MoOn. Anything put there
will stay there forever.
The only viewport was a small thing in the forward end of the tug. Naturally we came in
ass-backwards so I didn’t see much.
Today we call it the Skylark, and what you see as you approach is a sphere half a
kilometer across. It rotates every two minutes, and there’s all kinds of junk moored to the axis
of rotation. Mirrors, the laser and power targets, the long thin spine of the mass driver, the
ring of agricultural pods, the big telescope; a confusion of equipment.
It wasn’t that way when I first saw it. The sphere was nearly all there was, except for a
spiderweb framework to hold the solar power panels. The frame was bigger than the sphere, but
it didn’t look very substantial. At first sight the Shack was a pebbled sphere, a golf ball stuck
in a spider’s web.
McLeve met me at the airlock. He was long of limb, and startlingly thin, and his face and
neck were a maze of wrinkles. But his back was straight, and when he smiled the wrinkles all
aligned themselves. Laugh-lines.
Before I left Earth I read up on his history: Annapolis, engineer with the space program
(didn’t make astronaut because of his eyes); retired with a bad heart; wrote a lot of science
fiction. I’d read most of his novels in high school, and I suppose half the people in the space
program were pulled in by his stories.
When his wife died he had another heart attack. The Old Boys network came to the rescue.
His classmates wangled an assignment in space for him. He hadn’t been to Earth for seven years,
and low gravity was all that kept him alive. He didn’t even dare go to the Moon. A reporter with a
flair for mythological phraseology called him “The Old Man of Space.” It was certain that he’d
never go home again, but if he missed Earth he didn’t show it.
“Welcome aboard.” He sounded glad to see me. “What do they call you?” he asked.
A good question. Cornelius might sound a dignified name to a Roman, but it makes for
ribald comments in the USA. “Corky,” I told him. I shrugged, which was a mistake: we were at the
center of the sphere, and there wasn’t any gravity at all. I drifted free from the grabbandle I’d
been clinging to and drifted around the airlock.
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