“They’re pretty jumpy,” Roger whispered, nodding toward the remaining passengers.
“Yeah,” answered Tom. “Say, where’s Astro?”
“I don’t know. Probably went to take a look at the jet boats to see if one could be repaired so we’d have a third ferry running.”
“Good idea,” said Tom. “See if you can’t cheer these people up, Roger. Tell them stories or sing songs—or better yet, get them to sing. Try to make them forget they’re sitting on an atom bomb!”
“I can’t forget it myself,” said Roger. “How can I make them forget it?”
“Try anything. I’ll go see if I can’t give Astro a hand!”
Roger turned to face the assembled passengers and smiled. All around him in the main passenger lounge, the frightened men and women sat huddled together in small groups, staring at him, terror in their eyes.
“Ladieeees and Gentlemen,” began Roger. “You are now going to be entertained by the loudest, corniest and most miserable voice in the universe. I’m going to sing!”
He waited for a laugh, but there was only a slight stir as the passengers shifted nervously in their seats.
Shrugging his shoulders, Roger took a deep breath and began to sing. He only knew one song and he sang it with gusto.
“From the rocket fields of the Academy
To the far-flung stars of outer space,
We’re Space Cadets training to be.…”
On the lower deck of the passenger ship, Tom smiled as he faintly heard his unit-mate’s voice. He made his way to the jet-boat deck of the Lady Venus and opened the hatch.
“Hey, Astro,” he called. There wasn’t any answer.
He stepped inside and looked around the empty deck. Walking over to one of the jet boats, he saw evidence of Al James’s attempts to send out emergency signal messages. He called again. “Hey, Astro—where are you?” Still no answer. He noticed that one of the jet boats was missing. There were three still on the deck, but an empty catapult for the fourth made Tom think that Astro might have repaired the fourth and taken it out in space for a test. The light over the escape hatch indicated that someone had gone out. It was odd, thought Tom, for Astro to go out alone. But then he shrugged, remembering how Astro could lose himself in his work and forget everything but the job at hand. He climbed back to the passenger deck.
When Tom opened the hatch to the main lounge, the sight that filled his eyes was so funny that, even in the face of danger, he had to laugh. Roger, with his hands clasped behind his back, was down on his knees trying to push a food pellet across the deck with his nose. The whole passenger lounge echoed with hysterical laughter.
Suddenly the laughter was stopped by the sound of the bell over the air-lock hatch. Strong and James had returned to ferry more passengers to the Polaris. Immediately the fun was forgotten and the passengers crowded around for the roll call.
“Where’s Astro?” asked Strong, as he reappeared in the lounge.
“He’s down on the jet-boat deck, sir, trying to fix another one,” replied Tom. “I think he’s out testing one now.”
“Good,” said Strong. “How’re they taking it?” He indicated the passengers.
“Roger’s been keeping them amused with games and songs, sir,” said Tom proudly.
“They’ll need it. I don’t mind telling you, Corbett,” said Strong, “it’s a wonder to me this tub hasn’t blown up already.”
In less than a half hour, the forty passengers and crewmen of the Lady Venus were transferred in alphabetical order to the waiting Polaris. Roger kept up a continual line of patter and jokes and stories, making a fool of himself, but keeping the remaining passengers amused and their minds off the dangers of the rapidly building reaction mass.
“Just one passenger left,” said Strong, “with myself and you three. I think we can squeeze five in that jet boat and get off here.”
“That’s for me,” said Roger. “I’m the only man in the whole universe that’s ever played to a packed house sitting on top of an atomic bomb!”
“All right, Barrymore,” said Strong, “get aboard!”
“Say,” asked Tom, “where’s Astro?”
“I don’t know,” replied Roger. “I thought you went to find him half an hour ago!”
“I did,” said Tom, “but when I went to the jet-boat deck, one was missing. So I figured he had fixed one and taken it out for a test.”
“Then he’s probably outside in space now!” said Strong. Suddenly the Solar Guard captain caught himself. “Wait a minute! How many jet boats were on the deck, Corbett?”
“Three, sir.”
“Then Astro is still aboard the ship,” said Strong. “He couldn’t have taken a boat. James told me he couldn’t repeat the message he sent out because he only had the power of three jet boats. One was damaged and left behind at Atom City!”
“By the rings of Saturn,” said Roger, “a coupla million miles from home, sitting on an atomic bomb and that big Venusian hick decides to play hide-and-seek!”
“Never mind the cracks,” said Strong. “We’ve got to find him!”
“Captain,” said the little man with the round face and glasses who had first spoken to Strong when he came aboard, “just because my name happens to be Zewbriski, and I have to be the very last to get on a jet boat, I don’t see why I have to wait any longer. I demand to be taken off this ship immediately! I refuse to risk my life waiting around for some foolish cadet!”
“That foolish cadet, Mr. Zewbriski,” said Strong coldly, “is a human being like you and we don’t budge until we find him!”
At that moment the bell began to ring, indicating that the outer hatch to the air lock was opening.
“By the craters of Luna,” said Tom, “that must be Astro now!”
“But if it is,” said Roger, “how did he get out there?”
From behind them, the hatch to the inner air lock opened and Al James stepped through.
“Captain Strong,” he said excitedly, “you’ve got to come quickly. Some of the crewmen have broken into your arms locker and taken paralo-ray guns. They threaten to leave you here if you don’t return to the ship within five minutes. They’re afraid the Venus might blow up and damage the Polaris at this close range.” The young skipper, his red-brown uniform torn and dirty, looked at the Solar Guard captain with wild-eyed desperation.
“They can’t leave us here,” whimpered Zewbriski. “We’ll all be blown to bits!”
“Shut up!” barked Strong. He turned to Tom and Roger. “I can do one of two things,” he said. “I can order you to return to the Polaris now, with James and myself, or you can volunteer to stay behind and search for Astro.”
Without looking at Roger, Tom answered, “We’ll stay, sir. And we won’t have to search for him. I think I know where he is.”
“Now that I think about it,” replied Strong, “I guess there is only one place he could be.”
“Yes, sir,” said Tom, “down on the power deck trying to save this wagon! Come on, Roger! Let’s get him!”
CHAPTER 15
“What’s the reading on the Geiger counter now?” asked Tom.
Roger