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The three cadets went to their quarters without saying a word. When the hatch was closed, Roger turned and faced his unit mates.
"Well, it sure looks like we made a mistake about that s.p.a.ceman!" he said. "I think he's all right!"
"Yeah," said Astro, "you can't blame a guy for not wanting to take a desk job."
Tom merely sat in his bunk, starting to pull off one of his soft leather s.p.a.ce boots. He held it a moment, thinking, and then looked up at his two unit mates. "You know, I think I'm going to have a talk with the governor."
"About what?" asked Roger.
"Vidac," said Tom simply.
"What could you say that he doesn't already know?" asked Astro.
"Why--" Tom stopped. After a moment he dropped his boot to the deck, looked up at Roger and Astro, and smiled. "Nothing, I guess."
"Come on," said Roger, yawning. "Let's turn in. Just the thought of facing those applicants tomorrow makes me tired."
Astro turned out the light and hopped into bed. Tom lay in his bunk, hands under his head, wondering about Vidac, and then he began to think about the colony of Roald. He lay a long time, thinking about the fine people who were giving up comfortable homes, successful businesses. He thought of Hyram Logan and family; the shopkeeper from t.i.tan with three sets of twin boys; the Martian miner who had spent twenty-five futile years searching for uranium in the asteroid belt. They were all ready to go over fifty billion miles into deep s.p.a.ce and begin their lives again.
Tom shook his head. He wondered if he had a choice whether he would chance the mystery and danger of deep s.p.a.ce.
With the steady hum of the electronic generator on the power deck droning in his ears the curly-haired cadet soon fell asleep.
"What did you say your name was?" asked Roger of the applicant standing before him. He was a man badly in need of a shave and his clothes looked as if he had slept in them. He was the sixty-sixth applicant Roger had seen that morning.
"Tad Winters," replied the man in a surly tone, "and hurry up with this business. I haven't got all day!"
Roger looked up sharply. "You'll wait until I've had time to check your application, sir. Or you can leave right now!"
"Listen, punk," snarled Winters, "I just saw your boss--"
"My boss?" asked Roger, puzzled.
"Yeah," said Winters. "Your boss, Vidac! And he said I was to tell you to pa.s.s me!"
Roger stood up and looked the man in the eye. "You've had your s.p.a.ce papers suspended twice, Mr. Winters. Once for smuggling, and once for insubordination on a deep-s.p.a.ce merchantman. Your application to go to Roald is rejected."
"We'll see about that!" growled Winters. "Gimme that, you s.p.a.ce jerk!"
He s.n.a.t.c.hed the application out of Roger's hand and stomped out of the room.
Roger smiled. It was nothing new to him for the applicants to threaten him and seek higher authority. He buzzed for the next applicant.
Meanwhile, Tom was interviewing a small man with heavy eyebrows and a thin face. One side of his mouth twitched continually, making the man look as though he were laughing. Tom read over the application and looked up quickly.
"Mr. Bush," said Tom, "you've stated here that you were once a messenger for the s.p.a.ceways Bonded Messenger Service and that you were dismissed.
Why was that?"
Ed Bush's mouth twitched as he played with his hat and stirred uneasily in his chair. "I was framed," he said finally.
"Framed?" asked Tom.
"Yeah, framed!" snapped Bush. "I was taking a credit pouch to Venusport from Atom City when it was stolen from me."
"Could you prove it?" asked Tom.
"How could I prove it when I don't know what happened to it?" growled Bush. "Listen, Corbett, you can't hold a little thing like that against me. A man is ent.i.tled to one mistake--"
Tom held up his hand. "Mr. Bush, you also had your s.p.a.ce papers suspended for six months and were caught during the suspension blasting off with false papers. Was that a mistake?"
"Well, what do you expect a man to do? Go hungry? I've been a s.p.a.ceman longer than you've been alive. I had to have a job. There wasn't anything else I could do." His voice trailed off into a whine.
"But you did, willfully and with full knowledge of your act, violate the s.p.a.ce code by using false papers, didn't you?" pursued Tom.
"Yeah, but--" whined Bush.
"I'm sorry," said Tom, standing up. "Your application has been rejected."
Bush stood up and s.n.a.t.c.hed the application from Tom. His mouth began to twitch furiously. "Why, you little--"
"That's enough, Bus.h.!.+" snapped Vidac, who had suddenly entered the room.
"Leave your application on the desk and get out!"
Bush turned and looked at Vidac, nodded, and glared at Tom before stalking from the room. Vidac smiled at Tom's questioning look and walked over. He sat on the edge of Tom's desk and picked up Bush's application.
"Funny thing about Bush, Tom," Vidac mused.
"What, sir?" asked Tom.
"Notice the nervous twitch he has on the side of his face?"
"Yes, sir," said Tom.
"I've known Bush a long time. Many years. He used to be the happiest little s.p.a.ce joker in the system, singing all the time, playing a concertina. And then he lost that credit pouch. It bothered him real bad."
"I guess it would, sir," said Tom.
"And then he got caught blasting off with false papers and of course that made him a marked man. He developed the nervous twitch right after that. He's a good man, Tom. And I think we ought to give him another chance."
[Ill.u.s.tration]
Tom gasped. "But, sir, he's broken the s.p.a.ce code!"
Vidac looked at Tom and smiled. "I know, Tom, and it's a serious thing.
But I think he deserves another chance."
"We've refused people for a lot less than that, sir," said Tom emphatically, "before you came."