Danger in Deep Space Part 7
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"Now you two spindly Earthmen are going to have the best meal of your lives! Broiled dinosaur on real Venusian black bread!"
"D-dinosaur!" stuttered Tom in amazement. "Why--why--that's a prehistoric monster!"
"Yeah, Astro," agreed Roger. "What are you trying to hand us?"
Astro laughed. "You'll see, fellows," he replied. "I used to go hunting for them when I was a kid. Brought the best price of any wild game.
Fifty credits for babies under three hundred pounds. Over that, you can't eat 'em. Too tough!"
Tom and Roger looked at each other, eyes bulging.
"Ah, come on, Tom," drawled Roger. "He's just trying to pull our leg."
Without a word, Astro grabbed them by the arms and rushed them into the restaurant. They were no sooner seated when a recorded voice announced the menu over a small loud-speaker on the table. Astro promptly ordered dinosaur, and to his unit-mates' amazement, the voice politely inquired:
"Would the s.p.a.cemen prefer to have it broiled a la Venusian black bread, baked, or raw?"
A sharp look from Roger and Tom, and Astro ordered it broiled.
One hour and fifteen minutes later the three members of the _Polaris_ unit staggered out of the restaurant.
"By the rings of Saturn," declared Tom, "that wasn't only the most I ever ate--it was the best!"
Roger nodded in silent agreement, leaning against the plastic window in front of the restaurant.
"You see," Astro beamed, "maybe you guys will listen to me from now on!"
"Boy, I can't wait to see Mom's face when I tell her that her chicken and dumplings have taken second place to broiled monster!"
"By the jumping blazes of the stars!" yelled Roger suddenly. "Look at the time! We're ten minutes late!"
"Ohhhhh," moaned Tom. "I knew it was too good to be true!"
"Step on it!" said Astro. "Maybe he won't notice."
"Some chance," groaned Roger, running after Tom and Astro. "That old rocket head wouldn't miss anything!"
The three boys raced back to the electric elevator and were silently whisked to the air-lock level. They hurried aboard the _Polaris_ and into the control room. Major Connel was seated in a chair near the chart screen, studying some papers. The cadets drew themselves to attention.
"Unit reporting for duty, sir," Tom quavered.
Connel spun around in the swivel chair, glanced at the clock, put the papers to one side, and slowly advanced toward the cadets.
"Thirteen and a half minutes late!" he said, dropping his voice to a biting growl. "I'll give you five seconds to think up a good excuse.
Every man is ent.i.tled to an excuse. Some have good ones, some have truthful ones, and some have excuses that sound as though they made them up in five seconds!"
He eyed the cadets speculatively. "Well?" he demanded.
"I'm afraid we were carried away by our enthusiasm for a meal Astro introduced us to, sir," said Tom honestly.
"All right," snapped Connel, "then here's something else to carry you all away!" He paused and rocked on the b.a.l.l.s of his feet. "I had planned to give you three liberty of the station while here, whenever you weren't working on the new transmitter. But since you have shown yourselves to be carried away so easily, I don't think I can depend on your completing your regular duties. Therefore, I suggest that each of you report to the officer in charge of your respective departments and learn the operation and function of the station while we're here. This work will be _in addition_ to your a.s.signed duties on the new transmitter operation!"
The three cadets gulped but were silent.
"Not only that," Connel's voice had risen to an angry bark, "but you will be logged a demerit apiece for each minute you reported late.
Thirteen and a half minutes, thirteen and a half demerits!"
The gold and black of the Solar Guard uniform never looked more ominous as the three cadets watched the stern s.p.a.ceman turn and stomp out the exit port.
Alone, their liberty taken away from them before they even knew they had it, the boys sat around on the control deck of the silent s.h.i.+p and listened to the distant throb of a pump, rising and falling, pumping free air throughout the station.
"Well," sighed Tom, "I always did want to know how a s.p.a.ce station worked. Now I guess I'll learn firsthand."
"Me, too," said Astro. He propped his big feet up on a delicate instrument panel of the control board.
"Me, too!" sneered Roger, his voice filled with a bitterness that surprised Tom and Astro. "But I didn't think I would find out like this!
How in the universe has that--that tyrant managed to stay alive this long!"
CHAPTER 5
"The s.p.a.ce station's biggest headache," said Terry Scott, a young Solar Guard officer a.s.signed the job of showing the _Polaris_ crew around, "is to maintain perfect balance at all times."
"How do you achieve that, sir?" asked Tom.
"We create our own gravity by means of a giant gyroscope in the heart of the station. When more weight is taken aboard, or weight leaves the station, we have to adjust the gyro's speed."
They entered the power deck of the great ball-like satellite. Astro's eyes glowed with pleasure as he glanced approvingly from one ma.s.sive machine to another. The fuel tanks were made of thin durable aluminite; a huge cylinder, covered with heat-resistant paint, was the air conditioner; power came from a bank of atomic dynamos and generators; while those ma.s.sive pumps kept the station's artificial air and water supply circulating.
Dials, gauges, meters, were arrayed in seemingly endless rows--but each one of them actually played its part in keeping the station in balance.
Astro's face was one big, delighted grin.
"Well," said Roger with a sly wink at Tom, "you can't tell me that Connel has made our Venusian unhappy. Even if he had given us liberty, I'll bet Astro would have spent it down here with the grease monkeys!"
Astro didn't rise to the bait. His attention was riveted on a huge dynamo, which he watched with appreciative eyes. But then Terry Scott introduced the _Polaris_ unit to an older Solar Guard officer.
"Cadets, meet Captain Jenledge," said Scott. "And, sir, this is Cadet Astro. Major Connel would like him to work with you while he's here."
"Glad to know you, boys," said Jenledge, "and particularly you, Cadet Astro. I've heard about your handiness with the thrust buckets on the cruisers. What do you think of our layout?"
The officer turned and waved his hand to indicate the power-deck equipment.
"This is just about the finest--the most terrif--"
The officer smiled at Astro's inability to describe his feelings.
Danger in Deep Space Part 7
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Danger in Deep Space Part 7 summary
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