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"How about the job? And this?" Clare indicated the bowl. O'Neil gazed at it and chewed his whiskers. "Suppose," he said, at last, "I make an honest attempt, to the full extent of my ability, to supply what you want -- and I fail."
Clare shook his head. "We pay only for results. Oh, your salary, of course, but not _this_. This is a bonus in addition to your salary, _if_ you are successful."
O'Neil seemed about to agree, then said suddenly, "You may be fooling me with a colorgraph. I can't tell through this d.a.m.ned screen."
Clare shrugged. "Come and see for yourself."
"I shall. I will. Stay where you are. Where are you? d.a.m.n it, sir, what's your name?"
He came storming in two hours later. "You've tricked me! The 'Flower' is still in England. I've investigated. I'll . . . I'll punish you, sir, with my own two hands."
"See for yourself," answered Clare. He stepped aside, so that his body no longer obscured O'Neil's view of Clare's desk top.
They let him look. They respected his need for quiet and let him look. After a long time he turned to them, but did not speak.
"Well?" asked Clare.
"I'll build your d.a.m.ned gadget," he said huskily. "I figured out an approach on the way here."
Beaumont came in person to call the day before the first session of the conference. "Just a social call, Mr. Clare," he stated. "I simply wanted to express to you my personal appreciation for the work you have done. And to deliver this." "This" turned out to be a draft on the Bank Central for the agreed fee. Clare accepted it, glanced at it, nodded, and placed it on his desk.
"I take it, then," he remarked, "that the Government is satisfied with the service rendered."
"That is putting it conservatively," Beaumont a.s.sured him. "To be perfectly truthful, I did not think you could do so much. You seem to have thought of everything. The Callistan delegation is out now, riding around and seeing the sights in one of the little tanks you had prepared. They are delighted. Confidentially, I think we can depend on their vote in the coming sessions."
"Gravity s.h.i.+elds working all right, eh?"
"Perfectly. I stepped into their sightseeing tank before we turned it over to them. I was as light as the proverbial feather. Too light -- I was very nearly s.p.a.cesick." He smiled in wry amus.e.m.e.nt. "I entered the Jovian apartments, too. That was quite another matter."
"Yes, it would be," Clare agreed. "Two and a half times normal weight is oppressive to say the least."
"It's a happy ending to a difficult task. I must be going. Oh, yes, one other little matter -- I've discussed with Doctor O'Neil the possibility that the Administration may be interested in other uses for his new development. In order to simplify the matter it seems desirable that you provide me with a quit-claim to the O'Neil effect from General Services."
Clare gazed thoughtfully at the "Weeping Buddha" and chewed his thumb. "No," he said slowly, "no. I'm afraid that would be difficult."
"Why not?" asked Beaumont. "It avoids the necessity of adjudication and attendant waste of time. We are prepared to recognize your service and recompense you."
"Hmmm. I don't believe you fully understand the situation, Mr. Beaumont. There is a certain amount of open territory between our contract with Doctor O'Neil and your contract with us. You asked of us certain services and certain chattels with which to achieve that service. We provided them -- for a fee. All done. But our contract with Doctor O'Neil made him a full-time employee for the period of his employment. His research results and the patents embodying them are the property of General Services."
"Really?" said Beaumont. "Doctor O'Neil has a different impression."
"Doctor O'Neil is mistaken. Seriously, Mr. Beaumont -- you asked us to develop a siege gun, figuratively speaking, to shoot a gnat. Did you expect us, as businessmen, to throw away the siege gun after one shot?"
"No, I suppose not. What do you propose to do?"
"We expect to exploit the gravity modulator commercially. I fancy we could get quite a good price for certain adaptations of it on Mars."
"Yes. Yes, I suppose you could. But to be brutally frank, Mr. Clare, I am afraid that is impossible. it is a matter of imperative public policy that this development be limited to terrestrials. In fact, the administration would find it necessary to intervene and make it government monopoly."
"Have you considered how to keep O'Neil quiet?"
"In view of the change in circ.u.mstances, no. What is your thought?"
"A corporation, in which he would hold a block of stock and be president. One of our bright young men would be chairman of the board." Clare thought of Carson. "There would be stock enough to go around," he added, and watched Beaumont's face.
Beaumont ignored the bait. "I suppose that this corporation would be under contract to the Government -- its sole customer?"
"That is the idea."
"Hmmm . . . yes, it seems feasible. Perhaps I had better speak with Doctor O'Neil."
"Help yourself."
Beaumont got O'Neil on the screen and talked with him in low tones. Or, more properly, Beaumont's tones were low. O'Neil displayed a tendency to blast the microphone. Clare sent for Francis and Grace and explained to them what had taken place.
Beaumont turned away from the screen. "The Doctor wishes to speak with you, Mr. Clare."
O'Neil looked at him frigidly. "What is this claptrap I've had to listen to, sir? What's this about the O'Neil effect being your property?"
"It was in your contract, Doctor. Don't you recall?"
"Contract! I never read the d.a.m.ned thing. But I can tell you this: I'll take you to court. I'll tie you in knots before I'll let you make a fool of me that way."
"Just a moment, Doctor, please!" Clare soothed. "We have no desire to take advantage of a mere legal technicality, and no one disputes your interest. Let me outline what I had in mind--" He ran rapidly over the plan. O'Neil listened, but his expression was still unmollified at the conclusion.
"I'm not interested," he said gruffly. "So far as I am concerned the Government can have the whole thing. And I'll see to it."
"I had not mentioned one other condition," added Clare.
"Don't bother."
"I must. This will be just a matter of agreement between gentlemen, but it is essential. You have custody of the 'Flower of Forgetfulness.'"
O'Neil was at once on guard. "What do you mean, 'custody.' I own it. Understand me -- own it."
"'Own it,'" repeated Clare. "Nevertheless, in return for the concessions we are making you with respect to your contract, we want something in return."
"What?" asked O'Neil. The mention of the bowl had upset his confidence.
"You own it and you retain possession of it. But I want your word that I, or Mr. Francis, or Miss Cormet, may come look at it from time to time -- frequently."
O'Neil looked unbelieving. "You mean that you simply want to come to _look_ at it?"
"That's all."
"Simply to _enjoy_ it?"
"That's right."
O'Neil looked at him with new respect. "I did not understand you before, Mr Clare. I apologize. As for the corporation nonsense -- do as you like. I don't care. You and Mr Francis and Miss Cormet may come to see the 'Flower' whenever you like. You have my word."
"Thank you, Doctor O'Neil -- for all of us." He switched off as quickly as could be managed gracefully.
Beaumont was looking at Clare with added respect, too. "I think," he said, "that the next time I shall not interfere with your handling of the details. I'll take my leave. Adieu, gentlemen - and Miss Cormet."
When the door had rolled down behind him Grace remarked, "That seems to polish it off."
"Yes," said Clare. "We've 'walked his dog' for him; O'Neil has what he wants; Beaumont got what he wanted, and more besides."
"Just what is he after?"
"I don't know, but I suspect that he would like to be first president of the Solar System Federation, if and when there is such a thing. With the aces we have dumped in his lap, he might make it. Do you realize the potentialities of the O'Neil effect?"
"Vaguely," said Francis.
"Have you thought about what it will do to s.p.a.ce navigation? Or the possibilities it adds in the way of colonization? Or its recreational uses? There's a fortune in that alone."
"What do we get out of it?"
"What do we get out of it? Money, old son. Gobs and gobs of money. There's always money in giving people what they want." He glanced up at the Scottie dog trademark.
"Money," repeated Francis. "Yeah, I suppose so."
"Anyhow," added Grace, "we can always go look at the 'Flower.'"
Searchlight
'Will she hear you?'
'If she's on this face of the Moon. If she was able to get out of the s.h.i.+p. If her suit radio wasn't damaged. If she has it turned on. If she is alive. Since the s.h.i.+p is silent and no radar beacon has been spotted, it is unlikely that she or the pilot lived through it.'
'She's got to be found! Stand by, s.p.a.ce Station. Tycho Base, acknowledge.'
Reply lagged about three seconds, Was.h.i.+ngton to Moon and back. 'Lunar Base, Commanding General.'
'General, put every man on the Moon out searching for Betsy!'
Speed-of-light lag made the answer sound grudging. 'Sir, do you know how big the Moon is?'
~No matter! Betsy Barnes is there somewhere - so every man is to search until she is found. If she's dead, your precious pilot would be better off dead, too!'
'Sir, the Moon is almost fifteen million square miles. If I used every man I have, each would have over a thousand square miles to search. I gave Betsy my best pilot. I won't listen to threats against him when he can't answer back. Not from anyone, sir! I'm sick of being told what to do by people who don't know Lunar conditions. My advice - my official advice sir is to let Meridian Station try. Maybe they can Work a miracle.'
The answer rapped back, 'Very well, General! I'll speak to you later. Meridian Station! Report your plans.' Elizabeth Barnes, 'Blind Betsy', child genius of the piano, had been making a USO tour of the Moon. She 'wowed 'em' at Tycho Base, then lifted by jeep rocket for Farside Hardbase, to entertain our lonely missilemen behind the Moon. She should have been there in an hour. Her pilot was a safety pilot; such s.h.i.+ps shuttled unpiloted between Tycho and Farside daily.
After lift-off her s.h.i.+p departed from its programming, was lost by Tycho's radars. It was.. . somewhere.
Not in s.p.a.ce, else it would be radioing for help and its radar beacon would be seen by other s.h.i.+ps, s.p.a.ce stations, surface bases. It had crashed - or made emergency landing - somewhere on the vastness of Luna.
'Meridian s.p.a.ce Station, Director speaking - ' Lag was unnoticeable; radio bounce between Was.h.i.+ngton and the station only 22,300 miles up was only a quarter second. 'We've patched Earthside stations to blanket the Moon with our call. Another broadcast blankets the far side from Station Newton at the three-body stable position. s.h.i.+ps from Tycho are orbiting the Moon's rim - that band around the edge which is in radio shadow from us and from the Newton. If we hear-'
'Yes, yes! How about radar search?'
'Sir, a rocket on the surface looks to radar like a million other features the same size. Our one chance is to get them to answer . . . if they can. Ultrahigh-resolution radar might spot them in months - but suits worn in those little rockets carry only six hours air. We are praying they will hear and answer.'
'When they answer, you'll slap a radio direction finder on them. Eh?'
'No, sir.'
'In G.o.d's name, why not?'
'Sir, a direction finder is useless for this job. It would tell us only that the signal came from the Moon - which doesn't help.'
'Doctor, you're saying that you might hear Betsy - and not know where she is?'
'We're as blind as she is. We hope that she will be able to lead us to her. . . if she hears us.'
'How?'
'With a Laser. An intense, very tight beam of light. She'll hear it-'
'Hear a beam of light?'
'Yes, sir. We are jury-rigging to scan like radar - that won't show anything. But we are modulating it to give a carrier wave in radio frequency, then modulating that into audio frequency-and controlling that by a piano. If she hears us, we'll tell her to listen while we scan the Moon and run the scale on the piano -, 'All this while a little girl is dying?'
'Mister President - shut up!'
'Who was THAT?'
'I'm Betsy's father. They've patched me from Omaha. Please, Mr President, keep quiet and let them work. I want my daughter back.'
The President answered tightly, 'Yes, Mr Barnes. Go ahead, Director. Order anything you need.'
In Station Meridian the director wiped his face. 'Getting anything?'
'No. Boss, can't something be done about that Rio station? It's sitting right on the frequency!'
'We'll drop a brick on them. Or a bomb. Joe, tell the President'
'I heard, Director. They'll be silenced!'
's.h.!.+ Quiet! Betsy - do you hear me?' The operator looked intent, made an adjustment.