Forster, meanwhile, had been studying his adversary. “Well, you’re here with us again. So we’ll just go fetch Ms. Mitchell and . . . hold you both captive, as you put it, until we get back to Ganymede—or until the Space Board arrive. Whichever comes first. Then let the bureaucracy sort it all out.”
“After I took the photogram views I wanted, I moved it.” Mays paused just long enough to let the news sink in. “Oh, I
do
exaggerate. You
might
find it again, with enough time. But I assure you it won’t be easy.”
“My
estimate
of the situation has not changed since the last time we talked, Professor,” said Mays. “You have ille-gally held me and my associate, Ms. Mitchell,
incommuni-cado
.” It was becoming his favorite word. “Everything I’ve done has been in my . . . in our self defense. I want merely to communicate the news of this extraordinary discovery. I claim it as our right.”
Blake was wearing his spacesuit sealed, and having prepared for the event by leaving the hatch of the Manta open, he slipped free of the craft and pushed himself gently through the white night toward the burned black capsule. He had a moment’s rush of sympathy for the lonely young woman inside who, despite Mays’s assertions, could not see out, could not hear anything, did not know that her capsule was even now drifting out of a narrow and rapidly dimin-ishing zone of radiation safety.
“Ms. Mitchell, do you hear me?” Forster’s voice intruded on the link, coming through clearly. “Sir Randolph has ex-plained what he’s done, Marianne. All of us feel strongly that all of this . . . complication is completely unnecessary. We have treated you both as colleagues, and as such we still regard you. We’ve asked only that Sir Randolph obey the most basic rules of scholarship and ethical conduct.”
“Does that mean you’re willing to call it off?” Marianne asked. “I hope so. I’m getting so . . . bored.”
“It’s apparent that you don’t take me seriously,” Forster said sternly. “Therefore I’ve arranged a rather drastic dem-onstration—to indicate that I at least am serious. In order to have his way, Sir Randolph has exposed you and the rest of us to extreme dangers. Now it’s his turn.”
“I’m trying to impress upon you our curious, indeed our precarious position. If your videoplate were functioning—alas, another deficit you might want to ask Sir Randolph about when you see him next— you would have only to look at it to remind yourself how close to Jupiter we are. And I need hardly remind
you
that Jupiter has by far the most intense gravitational field of all the planets.”
He was alert to the edge in her voice, and continued with less condescension. “You, and we, and what’s left of Amal-thea are going around Jupiter in a bit more than twelve hours. A well-known theorem states that if a body falls from an orbit to the center of attraction, it will take point one seven seven of a period to make the drop. In other words, anything falling from here to Jupiter would reach the center of the planet in a little over two hours. As I said earlier, your computer, if it is functioning, will confirm this.”
“We’ve worked out the actual time, and it’s about an hour and thirty-five minutes. You’ve worked with us long enough, Ms. Mitchell, to notice that as the mass of Amalthea boils away and the moon shrinks beneath us, what was a weak gravitational field to begin with has grown considerably weaker. Computer tells us that escape velocity is now only about ten meters per second. Anything thrown away at that speed will never come back. Your own experience will confirm the truth of that, I think.”
“I’ll come to the point. We propose to take Sir Randolph for a little spacewalk, until he’s at the subJupiter point—immediately under Jupiter, that is. We’ve disabled his suit’s maneuvering unit. We can operate it, but he can’t. We’re going to, ah, launch him forth. We’ll be prepared to retrieve him with the
Ventris
as soon as you give us the detailed directions to the whereabouts of the statue, which Sir Randolph himself assures us that you have.”
Forster cut him off angrily. “Enough of that, Hawkins. And no more digressions, Ms. Mitchell. After what I’ve told you, I’m sure you appreciate that time is vital. An hour and thirty-five minutes will go by rather quickly, but if you could observe what is happening to Amalthea, you would agree that we have little more time than that in which to confirm any information you choose to give us.” “You’re bluffing,” said Marianne.
Blake’s cue: he broke in excitedly. “Professor, what’s to keep Marianne from thinking this is all a colossal bluff? She’s gotten to know you in the past few days—you saved her life, after all, and she doesn’t believe you’d really kill the guy, throw him into Jupiter. And even if
you
would, she knows Angus and Tony—she probably doesn’t think
they’d
do it.” Pause . . . “Right, Marianne?”
“I think we ought to let her come out of that tin can and see for herself. She knows we’re not interested in grabbing
her
—if we were, I could have towed her all the way back to the
Ventris
by now. And she’d never have known it.”
That suggestion took about four seconds to sink in—little more than the time it took Marianne to seal her helmet. All the explosive bolts of the capsule’s hatch blew off at once and the square hatch went tumbling straight off into heaven. The massive capsule itself recoiled and drifted slowly backward as Marianne clambered out of the open hatch.
Evidently she’d already determined that the Moon Cruiser was a useless relic of games past. The new game would be played here in vacuum; no matter who won or lost, whoever went home would be going home in the
Ven-tris
, if not in a Space Board cutter.
She looked around, noting the spiraling umbilical cable that connected the acoustic link on the capsule to the Manta, which drifted a few meters off—Blake’s face was vis-ible through the sphere, but she spared him hardly a glance—and noting, too, the distant bright reflection of the
Michael Ventris
floating above the glowing fog. The vast curve of Jupiter rose above them all, turning the tendrils of mist to fleshy pink in its backlight.
“If you use the magnifying visor plate on your suit hel-met, you’ll be able to reassure yourself that Angus and Tony aren’t dragging an empty suit between them. They’ll be over the horizon in a minute, but you’ll be able to see Sir Ran-dolph as he begins to, er . . . ascend.”
Time seemed to stop then. The aether was silent. Forster said nothing; Marianne said nothing but only watched the sky; Blake lay in the Manta saying nothing, apparently studying his fingernails, deliberately sparing Marianne his curious stare.
Amalthea’s diffuse horizon was ridiculously close. Mar-ianne made a tiny involuntary gesture that upset her equi-librium; she had seen the exhaust of McNeil’s and Grove’s maneuvering systems drawing thin, straight lines against the orange backcloth of Jupiter. She adjusted quickly, in time to see the three figures rising into space.
Forster said nothing—perhaps he hadn’t heard her—so Blake took it upon himself to allay that particular horror. “We’ll take care of that on the ship. We’ve got the enzymes to clean up the dead cells, repair the damaged ones. You know from your own experience that even twelve hours’ exposure won’t kill you if you get treatment.”
“Yeah,” Blake said, not without a hint of satisfaction, “Mays knew
that
when he crashed the two of you. He counted on us to save your lives. And we did.” Almost im-mediately, Blake regretted his words. This was not the time to discourage her sympathy for Mays.
Forster’s voice came over the link. “I hope I don’t need to impress upon you the urgency of the situation. As I said, the time of fall from our orbit to the upper atmosphere of Jupiter is about ninety-five minutes. But of course, if one waited even half that time . . . it would be much too late.”
Marianne floated there in space, arms akimbo, head tilted back, and Blake thought that even in obvious anguish, swathed in a bulky spacesuit, she was an image of dignity and natural grace. Watching her, Blake sighed. He felt sorry for her. And for Bill Hawkins. Love gets people into the worst tangles.