Read Stainless Steel Rat 11: The Stainless Steel Rat Returns Online

Authors: Harry Harrison

Tags: #Science Fiction; American, #Families, #Humorous, #Satire, #Satire; American, #Interplanetary Voyages, #General, #Science Fiction, #DiGriz; James Bolivar (Fictitious Character), #Adventure, #Swindlers and Swindling, #Fiction

Stainless Steel Rat 11: The Stainless Steel Rat Returns (7 page)

BOOK: Stainless Steel Rat 11: The Stainless Steel Rat Returns
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“But we did take off . . .”

“We did. But we are going to have a bit of trouble landing.”

“Explain!”

He tapped the gauge again.

“Reads full. It’s not. I began to think about how I found that swine Rifuti down here. I began to wonder if he had been up to any more sabotage as well. Then I checked this reaction mass tank for the atomic thrust jets. We had to use some of the mass for takeoff, but this gauge read full. That couldn’t be right. So I used the override and reset—like this.”

The needle quivered and jumped to one extreme and back to the other. Then slowly moved a short distance up the dial and stopped.

“Meaning?”

“Rifuti dumped most of the tank. We had enough mass left for takeoff and a bit left over. But there is not enough for deceleration when we have to land.”

“Trapped in space! Doomed to roam the stars forever . . . !”

“Not quite. But we’ll have to scout about and find a solar orbiting satellite station where we can take on more reaction mass.”

“What is that?”

“Water.”

Put the old thinking cap on Jim.

“Don’t we have more water aboard?”

“We do. But not a lot. We can keep drinking—or use it to land.”

“Not much of a choice,”

I chewed my lip—always a helpful cudgel for thought. But all I did was hurt my lip. Think, Jim!

“Is water the only reaction mass that we can use?”

“No, but it’s the easiest to handle in bulk. Throw any mass away fast enough and you get a reactive force.”

Newton’s first law: you learned it in school. But what else besides water could we use . . . ?

With the question came the answer!

“Tell me, Stramm, what is it they always got an awful lot of down on the farm?”

He frowned. “I don’t know—I’m a city lad. But . . . !” His
eyes bulged—and then he smiled broadly. “You can throw anything away!”

“Right! So this will be the first spacer to land using . . .”

“Pig Poo Power!”

I was quite pleased with myself for this keen bit of lateral thinking. Stramm was rubbing his lantern jaw, deep in thought.

“Logistics,” he muttered, “logistics . . .”

“Not a problem. Call a specialist.”

I grabbed the ship’s phone, switched to all compartments, spoke in my most authoritarian voice.

“Now hear this. Will Elmo report to the engine room at once. Elmo needed below.”

I was examining the seals on the tank’s inspection hatch when he arrived, brimming with curiosity. This instantly became bucolic bliss when the nature of my request became clear.

“Why that is shore a great idea, Cousin Jim. I admit that this was getting to be a problem what with . . .”

“Work first, explain later. You will need buckets and wheelbarrows, shovels and pitchforks . . .”

“We got all them things.” He rushed off, his voice dying in the distance. “When the boys hear about this they will be happier than swine with their trotters in a trough!”

It was quite easy to visualize what came next with the boys, and I wanted none of it.

“I leave you in control of the situation, stout engineer Stramm. Until things have been . . . finalized . . . I should avoid the corridors between here and the sty deck. Should there be any more problems please contact me on the bridge.”

I fled. Buckets and barrows and hearty earthy oaths were already sounding in the distance. I joined Kirpal and accepted his kind offer of a cup of tea. His placid smile turned to a scowl when I told him about Rifuti’s latest perfidy.

“I shall radio details to the planetary police. They may grab him before he goes off-planet.”

“A possible chance,” I muttered. Sure that he would long be gone.

A bell on Kirpal’s computer pinged and he put his cup down. He muttered to himself, punched in some more figures and nodded happily when a throaty buzzer sounded.

“Good. Course alignment entered and correct.” He pressed a large red button. “Done. We’re beginning our first Bloat.”

I scratched my finger in my ear, not having heard right.

“Earwax maybe. I, ha-ha, did not hear right. For a moment there I thought you said bloat!”

“I did. This spacer isn’t exactly new . . .”

As he said this his face had the same gloomy expression as that of engineer Stramm when he talked about the ship. His voice echoed from the depths of depression.

“You’ve seen what antiques we have for landing jets. Well, the ship’s main drive is not much better.”

“No Faster Than Light Drive?”

“Hardly. We have what is an ancient, long-superseded, outdated and archaic form of transportation called the Bloater Drive.”

My finger quivered toward my ear—but I resisted. “Would you mind, sort of, you know, explaining that in a bit more detail?”

“Of course.” He took a pair of wire-rimmed glasses from
a drawer in the console and put them on, then steepled his fingers before him. Why did I think that he had been a professor in one of his many incarnations? “How acquainted are you with nuclear physics?”

“Use words of one syllable—or less!—and I’ll be able to follow you.”

He nodded gloomily and sighed. I could hear his thoughts: another microcephalic.

“Have you heard of molecular binding energies?”

“Positively! I have used a molebinding device most successfully in the past.” In the profitable pursuit of crime, I neglected to add.

“Then you are aware of molecular theory. In this reaction molecular binding energy is weakened so that another molecule can actually penetrate the molecules in an existing structure. The Bloater Drive works like this as well, only on a far greater scale—to the square of two million in fact—with results equal to the forces released. It permits the ship’s molecules to expand exponentially until they are literally approaching light years apart.”

I wish I had some of what he was smoking!

“You can’t be serious?”

“Regretfully, I am. The Bloat operates along the central axis AB. With no observable motion of point A and continual acceleration of point B . . .”

My head was beginning to hurt. “Simplification I beg!”

The captain took the steel glasses off. “The ship gets bigger and longer in one direction.”

“Understood!”

“So, when one end of the ship is at its destination it begins to shrink again—from that direction. Like stretching a rubber band between your hands. You pull wide with your right hand. Then bring your left hand over after it. The stretched band contracts back to normal size. But it is now in a new place. The same way that the expanded ship contracts. This is done until the ship is small again, only now it is at the new location in space.”

The professor put his glasses back on, scowling at the stupidity of the untutored.

“That’s why it is named the Bloater Drive. It also uses a great deal of power and is very inaccurate. After it arrives at the target, star observations are made, a new course is calculated and the next Bloat is made. Usually a number of these are needed.”

“Well, thanks . . .” But I was too late. He was in full Bloater Drive now!

“Gravitons are responsible. The graviton is an elementary particle that mediates the force of gravity and molecular adhesion in the framework of the quantum field theory. The graviton is massless, because the gravitational force must have unlimited range, and must have spin of two because gravity is a second-rank tensor field.”

I was feeling third rank myself by this time and badly in need of rescue.

“And how is all this powered?” I asked desperately, maybe forcing a change in subject.

“I explained that in detail that I thought was quite clear. Gravitons are orientated in the tensor field as you can see here.”

He pointed to a glowing screen, looked away, then pulled his attention back to it sharply. His jaw fell and he reached out and almost tapped it. Grimly he whipped off his steel glasses and thumbed a switch, spoke sharply and abruptly.

“Engineer Stramm to bridge—code red.”

CHAPTER
8
 

This was the first time I had seen our highly efficient captain loose his cool. He punched the buttons angrily, ran a quick program in the computer—growling under his breath—then wiped it from the screen with a muttered curse. He became even more active when Stramm hurried in. They bashed at the control console, ran equations. Even tapped dials.

“Something wrong guys?” I asked.

I must say that Captain Singh exercised great self-control and did not strike me down on the spot.

“Gravitons . . .” Stramm muttered darkly and they sighed in mutual disgust.

“Might I ask you to expand on that just a bit?”

“That treacherous swine Rifuti . . .” The captain growled. Then grabbed his self-control and was in command again.

“More sabotage. He was the wily one, making acts of double sabotage in the hope that when we were dealing with one
we wouldn’t notice his second dark deed.” He tapped a meter. “He bled off over eighty percent of our gravitons.”

“Weren’t they seen?”

“Hardly. Since they are invisible, infinitesimal and exist only in quantum terms. The ground might be heavier for a few microseconds before they vanished into the planet’s core.”

“So . . . what do we do?”

“Hope there is a graviton refueling depot waiting at the other end—when we finish our Bloat.”

“They are not very common.” Stramm said, adding to the general gloom. “The collection stations are located on massive high-G planets where there are plenty of gravitons lying around.” He raised his finger and smiled. “But we do have a graviton concentrator on the engine room!”

“I’ve seen it,” the captain said, gloomily shaking his head. “It’s an antique like everything else on this ship. Working flat out, on a one-G planet, it would take about two years to collect enough for our needs. Three months on a three-G planet would be fine. Except we would all be dead.”

I dropped the obvious question into the growing silence.

“Then . . . what shall we do?”

Captain Singh took himself in hand—sat up straight and shook himself like a dog.

“We’ll get out of this.” He looked at his watch. “Our first Bloat will end in about five hours when we are scheduled to make a navigation check. We’ll have to forget about getting to Mechanistria until we have had the opportunity to refuel.”

“Where we will end up after the first Bloat?”

“Hopefully we will be close to a solar system that contains a single inhabited planet named Floradora.”

“Sounds nice!” I said chipperly.

“The cheerful names usually stand for very repellent planets,” Stramm said, bringing the gloom level back up again. The captain read from the screen.

“Inhabited planet. Early technical world type Alpha-X. No orbiting satellites or space stations at time of survey.”

“When did this survey take place?” Stramm asked.

“Four hundred and two years ago come next Groundhog Day.”

“Gosh, a lot could happen in that time!” I said brightly. This sally was greeted with cold silence. The captain hammered at a program he was running. When he finished he actually sat back and smiled.

“I estimate that when this first Bloat ends we will have enough gravitons for two more Bloats of the same distance.” The smile vanished. “I hope we will be able to load gravitons at one of the two destinations.” His voice grew cold. “If not, be prepared for quite a long visit.”

I could think of no snappy answer to that. But I did have an important question.

“Instead of carrying on this course, why don’t we simply return to Moolaplenty?”

He shook his head. “It’s not that simple. When the Bloater Drive is in operation it leaves a virtual tunnel through interstellar space. These tunnels gradually die away, but sometimes take years to disperse. But they are easily detected and avoided.”

“Then there is no way of going back?”

“Not the way we came. And we don’t have enough gravitons for a more circuitous course.”

I went back to our cabin under a cloud of gloom. I was mixing a lethal weapons-grade cocktail when I heard soft footsteps and the clatter of little trotters. I doubled the quantity of drink and filled a bowl with curry puffs. I cooled the drink mixture and poured it into two glasses over ice.

Pinky sniffed the air and burbled happily. I threw her a puff.

Angelina raised an eyebrow at the sight of the drinks.

“Are we celebrating?”

“Yes and no,” I said handing her a glass. “Yes we are celebrating a successful takeoff and first Bloat—”

“How many of these have you had?”

“Like you, this is my first. Here’s to a successful journey.” I raised my glass and drank deep.

“But . . . ?”

“There are difficult times ahead. Sit, drink, nibble a puff. And I’ll explain.”

BOOK: Stainless Steel Rat 11: The Stainless Steel Rat Returns
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