chum and it’s been nice knowing you. See you on the Moon-I hope.”
But Oscar wasn’t going to the Moon. Oscar was going to Akron, Ohio, to “Salvage.” They were going to unscrew parts they could use and throw the rest of him on the junk pile.
My mouth felt dry.
(“It’s okay, pal,” Oscar answered.)
See that? Out of my silly head! Oscar didn’t really speak; I had let my imagination run wild too long. So I quit patting him, hauled the crate out and took a wrench from his belt to remove the gas bottles.
I stopped.
Both bottles were charged, one with oxygen, one with oxy-helium. I had wasted money to do so because I wanted, just once, to try a spaceman’s mix.
The batteries were fresh and power packs were charged.
“Oscar,” I said softly, “we’re going to take a last walk together. Okay?”
(“Swell!”)
I made it a dress rehearsal-water in the drinking tank, pill dispensers loaded, first-aid kit inside, vacuum-proof duplicate (I hoped it was vacuum-proof) in an outside pocket. All tools on belt, all lanyards tied so that tools wouldn’t float away in free fall. Everything.
Then I heated up a circuit that the F.C.C. would have squelched had they noticed, a radio link I had salvaged out of my effort to build a radio for Oscar, and had modified as a test rig for Oscar’s ears and to let me check the aiming of the directional antenna. It was hooked in with an echo circuit that would answer back if I called it-a thing I had bread hoarded out of an old Webcor wire recorder, vintage 1950.
Then I climbed into Oscar and buttoned up. “Tight?”
(“Tight!”)
I glanced at the reflected dials, noticed the blood-color reading, reduced pressure until Oscar almost collapsed. At nearly sea-level pressure I was in no danger from hypoxia; the trick was to avoid too much oxygen.
We started to leave when I remembered something. “Just a second, Oscar.” I wrote a note to my folks, telling them that I was going to get up early and catch the first bus to the lake. I could write while suited up now, I could even thread a needle. I stuck the note under the kitchen door.
Then we crossed the creek into the pasture. I didn’t stumble in wading;
I was used to Oscar now, sure-footed as a goat.
Out in the field I keyed my talkie and said, “Junebug, calling Peewee. Come in, Peewee.”
Seconds later my recorded voice came back: “ ‘Junebug, calling Peewee. Come in, Peewee.’”
I shifted to the horn antenna and tried again. It wasn’t easy to aim in the dark but it was okay. Then I shifted back to spike antenna and went on calling Peewee while moving across the pasture and pretending that I was on Venus and had to stay in touch with base because it was unknown terrain and unbreathable atmosphere. Everything worked perfectly and if it had been Venus, I would have been all right.
Two lights moved across the southern sky, planes I thought, or maybe helis. Just the sort of thing yokels like to report as “flying saucers.” I watched them, then moved behind a little rise that would tend to spoil reception and called Peewee. Peewee answered and I shut up; it gets dull talking to an idiot circuit which can only echo what you say to it.
Then I heard: “Peewee to Junebug! Answer!”
I thought I had been monitored and was in trouble-then decided that some ham had picked me up. “Junebug here. I read you. Who are you?”
The test rig echoed my words.
Then the new voice shrilled, “Peewee here! Home me in!”
This was silly. But I found myself saying, “Junebug to Peewee, shift to directional frequency at one centimeter—and keep talking, keep talking!” I shifted to the horn antenna.
“Junebug, I read you. Fix me. One, two, three, four, five, six, seven—“
“You’re due south of me, about forty degrees. Who are you?”
It must be one of those lights. It had to be.
But I didn’t have time to figure it out. A space ship almost landed on me.
Chapter 4
I said “space ship,” not
London Casey, Ana W. Fawkes