“They have nothing for us,” agreed Clavering tonelessly, watching disappointment momentarily
soften the fine lines of his wife’s face, watching it succeeded by a combination of hope — surely a
hopeless hope — and determination.
“We’d have been better off,” growled burly, black-bearded Rokovsky, “if we’d never won that
blasted lottery. What do we do now? Sell the ship for scrap, hoping that she’ll bring enough to pay our
passages back to civilization? Or do we lay her up and get jobs with Rim Runners?”
“It was a gamble,” said Larwood, “and it just didn’t come off. But we were all in it.” And I’ll
gamble again, said the expression on his dark, reckless face. And I, declared the mobile features of his
wife.
“At least,” pointed out the slight, heavily bespectacled Taubman, “we have reaction mass enough to
take us up and clear of the planet, and the Pile’s good for a few years yet.”
“And where do we go from here?” demanded Rokovsky. “And what do we use for money to pay
the last of the bills?” asked Sally Ann.
“Buy another ticket in the Nine Worlds Lottery,” suggested Larwood.
“What with?” she countered. “The prizes are big, as we know, but those tickets are expensive. And
we have to get back to the Nine Worlds first, anyhow.”
“Damn it all!” exploded Clavering. “We’ve got a ship, a good ship. We didn’t show the profit that we
should have done on that load of migrants, but that doesn’t mean that there’s no profit to be made
elsewhere in the Galaxy. That Psionic radio operator of ours will just have to wake up his dog’s brain
in aspic and keep a real listening watch for a change. There must be something somewhere — a planet
newly opened up for colonization, some world threatened by disaster and a demand for ships for the
evacuation…”
“He says that it’s time that he got paid,” stated Sally Ann. “And so does Sparks.”
“And the second mate,” added Larwood. “And the quack.”
“What fittings can we sell?” asked Clavering hopelessly. “What can we do without?”
“Nothing,” replied his wife.
“We could…” began Clavering, then paused, listening. Faintly at first, then rising in intensity, there
was the wailing, urgent note of a siren, loud enough to penetrate the shell plating and the insulation of
the ship. Without a word the Captain got to his feet, strode towards the doorway of the axial shaft and
the little elevator that would take him up to the control room. Wordlessly, the others followed. This,
obviously, was some kind of emergency — and in an emergency the spaceman’s conditioned reflexes
impel him automatically towards his station.
Clavering and his officers crowded into the little elevator cage, waited impatiently as it bore them
upwards to the nose of the ship. They almost ran into the control room, looked out through the big
ports.
The sun was down and the sky was already dark save for the pale glow in the west. Falling slowly,
winking balefully, were the red stars of the warning rockets that had been fired from the control
tower. Scurrying out on to the spaceport apron like huge beetles, the beams of their headlights like
questing antennae in the dusty air, were two red painted fire trucks and the ambulance. There was
activity around the two Rim Runners’ ships, Rimstar and Rimbound, as their personnel hurried out of
the airlock doors and down the ramps.
“There!” cried Larwood, pointing.
Clavering looked up, almost directly overhead, and saw a fitful glare in the sky. There was a ship
there, and she was coming down, and the siren and the red rockets and the lifesaving equipment made
it obvious that she was in some kind of trouble. There had been, he remembered, a ship due that
evening — Faraway Quest.
“Switch on the transceiver,” he ordered.
Larwood had anticipated the command. Suddenly there was a fresh voice in the control room — a
crisp voice, calm, yet with an underlying note of anxiety.
“Impossible to pull out and clear. Numbers one and two liners gone, number three tube liner
starting to melt. Will try to bring her in on the other three — if they hold that long.”
Grimes’ voice replied. “Do your best, Captain.”
“What the hell do you think I am doing? This is my ship, Commodore, and it’s the lives of my crew
and passengers that are at stake. Do your best! What else is there to do?”
“I’m sorry, Captain,” replied Grimes.