as he studied the feeble little patterns on his wave analyzer. “You said it,” he breathed. “We’ve got ourselves a sweet little Earth-type planet, if we can believe the spectro, and unless I’m stark space-happy, there’s something or somebody down there beaming a broadcast smack in our direction, following us around like the string on a yo-yo.”
“How do you figure that?” Larson wanted to know.
Mac replied, “At this distance the field strength is too strong for anything but a beamed transmission. Mister, they have us bracketed.”
Mac swung to the panel on his left and cut in the communication circuit. “It’s strong enough to listen to, now. Let’s see what kind of gibberish we can wring out of that carrier wave.”
He threw a couple of switches and hunted for the exact frequency. A whisper and a rustle of the carrier brushed the speaker. Mac centered in and turned up the volume.
Then even I sucked air. A voice issued from the sound-cone. A man’s voice: “—lcome to New Columbia. Welcome, Albert E. Come in, please. Welcome to New Columbia. Welcome, Albert E. Come in please.”
It repeated over and over. Larson let his breath go first with a nervous snort. Mac and Larson both looked at me as if maybe I had something to do with it. Hands trembling, Mac picked up the microphone and reached for the transmitter switch. Larson grabbed the mike from his hand. “Not so fast, damn it!”
“But they know we’re up here,” Mac protested. “They even know the name of our ship!”
“And our language,” I added. I wasn’t bored any more.
Larson nodded slowly. “What kind of devilish intelligence have we run into? I need time—to think.”
The way he said it sent a cold draught down my spine, and then my imagination started catching up to his.
At our rate of approach to the star system, how could any living being have had time to sense our presence, pick our brains to learn our ship’s name, our language, master our method of communication, contrive a transmitter and get on the air?
The magnitude of the accomplishment sent the importance of our little triumph of space travel tumbling into a cocked limbo of insignificance.
For a moment I considered the old curvature of space concept. Could we have somehow doubled back—completing a mystic circle? Was that old Sol up there burning through our green shield? What a laugh that would be! The mental giants of our times backtracking and circling like a tenderfoot lost in the woods on Lake Minnetonka.
Mac cut off the transmitter reluctantly, but he said, “Yeah, I guess I see what you mean, skipper.” Larson got to his feet and paced the crowded wedge of space, punching a fist into his other hand with meaty slaps.
He stopped and listened to the soft muttering of the sneaker and shook his head. “It makes no sense. It’s impossible. Utterly impossible!”
The man’s voice from the planet implacably continued repeating the message—no trace of an accent, nothing to suggest an alien origin in its tone, pitch or enunciation.
Perhaps that’s what threw Larson so hard. If there had been the faintest taint of other worldliness about it, I think he’d have hauled stakes and gotten us out of there. But the 5ong of the siren was too powerful—the irresistible mental image of a fellow human out here in the bottom of space was salt in the bleeding wounds of Larson’s loneliness.
He stared out where the planet must be, some million miles before us. Suddenly the tenseness relaxed from his face and he got the damndest expression of mixed incredulity, hopefulness and sorrow. Tears began welling from his eyes and streaming down the rugged contour of his cheeks.
It didn’t add. Nor could I reason a motive for his laconic command: “Intersection orbit, Mr. Hulbert. We’ll take her down,” he said quietly. That was all. He hunched over the control board and moved things according to Mac’s computations.
* * * *
Soon I could make out the planet. We came in from an obtuse angle with its sun, so it showed first as a crescent of pale, green silver. Then it filled the viewing dome, and Mac began working the homing equipment. “May I acknowledge their message now, skipper?”
Larson shook his head with compressed lips.
“But if we are going in anyway—” Mac argued.
“No!” Larson exploded. Then his voice softened. “I think I know the mystery of the voice,” he said. “It must be, it must be! But if it isn’t—if I’m wrong—God alone knows. We must chance it. I don’t want to know differently—until it’s too late.”
This was just real great. Larson had some fantastic notion, and he wanted it to be true so damned badly that he was taking us into blind jeopardy when we had the means to probe it first. Real scientific, that.
Humans! Men, and their so-called sense of reason! Larson was a crowning example of the sloppy-hearted thing I was fleeing when I embarked on this joy-ride, and now it would probably be my undoing.
We were homing in on the transmission from “New Columbia”, easing down into the atmosphere, and now clouds and land and water formations took shape. The beam led us to the sunlit rim of dawn, and suddenly we were hovering over a great forest, slit at intervals with streaks of glittering blue that looked like deep, wide rivers.
Now Mac touched a switch, and the CW whistle gave us a tight audio beam to follow to the source of the signal. Larson switched to the micro landing controls to ride in like a jet liner on the Frisco-Shanghai run. We slanted gently down until the forest became trees, and the little blue-green splotches were lush, grassy meadows.
And there was the tower, and the low buildings—and the spaceship!
Something happened to me inside when I saw that. It was a kind of tremolo feeling, like a note in a new symphony, a note that springs free and alone, wavering uncertainly, and you don’t know which way it will turn.
In seconds that seemed like hours, we were on the ground, the ramp was jammed out and Larson was blundering down it crying like a baby.
* * * *
I stood in the port breathing the warm air redolent with exotic new scents and yawped like an idiot, trying to make sense of the huge banner strung a hundred yards across one whole side of the little village. The banner read:
WELCOME, HANS!
WELCOME ALBERT E.
WE KNEW YOU WERE COMING, SO—
And near the center of the banner was the largest chocolate cake, or facsimile thereof, in all creation. It must have been ten feet high and twenty feet in diameter.
But Hans Larson wasn’t amused by the cosmic gag. He galloped off that gang-plank like a lovesick, gorilla. And I’m a comet’s uncle if Tina wasn’t there, racing out to meet him, Larson had guessed the truth, and no wonder he hadn’t had the guts to test it beforehand!
By the time I got down, out and over to where they were all wrapped up mingling tears, I had it pretty well doped out myself.
I don’t know why we had figured that all progress and improvement in interstellar flight would cease just because we had left Earth. The eternal, colossal conceit of men, I guess.
When our last signal back to Earth had given the okay sign, sure, they started building bigger ships and recruiting another crew. But by the time that the Albert E. II, was ready to take off for a more extended expedition, the Larson Drive was now the Larson-McKendrick Drive, with a velocity of a full half the speed of light, some five times our velocity.
Somehow, Tina had managed to get herself in the party, as Hans had sensed she would. And the time-differential, as it worked out, wasn’t serious at all. Tina had been only 32 when we left her on Earth. Including the year and a half she had already been with the colony on New Columbia, she was still quite a bit younger than Hans, and just twice as pretty as the day of their separation.