Howards clutched graspingly at his head and did not know if he was screaming or if he was hearing someone else scream.
Welcome blackness engulfed him.
"Now just sip this and you will find yourself feeling fine in a few moments."
Howards took the cup that the Examiner held out to him and was surprised to discover that he needed both hands to hold it. He noticed that the backs of his hands were beaded with sweat. As he sipped he felt the helmet lifting from his head and when he looked up he had a swift glimpse of it just before it vanished through a recess in the ceiling.
"The examination — aren't you going to proceed?"
The Examiner chuckled and steepled his heavy fingers on the desk before him. "A not uncommon reaction," he said. "The examination is complete."
"I have no memory. It seemed as though the helmet came down, then went up again. Though my hands are covered with sweat." He looked at them, then shivered with realization. "Then the examination is over. And I—"
"You must have patience," the Examiner told him with ponderous dignity. "The results must be analyzed, compared, a report drawn up. Even electronically this takes time. You should not complain."
"Oh, I am not complaining, Examiner," Howards said quickly, lowering his eyes. "I am grateful."
"You should be. Just think of the way all of this used to be. Hours of oral and written examinations, with the best marks going to the crammers. You can't cram for a simulator examination."
"I do know that, Examiner."
"Just a few moments of unconsciousness and the machine mentally puts you through your paces, puts you into situations and judges how you respond to them. Real situations that a postal clerk would face during the normal course of his duties."
"Normal duties, of course," Howards said, frowning at his hands, then.wiping them quickly against his side.
The Examiner stared at the figures that raced across the screen on his desk. "Not as good as I expected, Howards," he said sternly. "You'll not be a postal clerk this year."
"But — I was so sure — the twelfth time."
"There is more to clerking than just knowing the Book. Go away. Study. Apply yourself. Your grade this time is high enough so that your student's status will continue for another year. Work harder. Very few students are carried past their fifteenth year."
Howards stood, helplessly, and turned before he left. "My wife asked me to ask you. . we're not getting younger. . planning permission for a child…"
"Out of the question. There is the population problem for one thing, and your status for another. If you were a clerk the application might be considered."
"But there are so few clerks," Howards said weakly.
"There are so few positions. Be happy you are a registered student with rations and quarters. Do you know what it is like to be an Under-unemployed?"
"Thank you, sir. Goodbye, sir. You have been most kind."
Howards closed the door quickly behind him — why did he keep thinking there was blood on his hands? He shook his head to clear it.
It would be hard to tell Dora. She had hoped so.
But at least he still had his Book. And a whole year to memorize it again. That would be good. And there would be inserts and additions, that was always good.
He walked by the post office in the lobby of the building with,his eyes averted.
Captain Bedlam
"What is space like? How do the naked stars really look? Those are hard questions to answer." Captain Jonathan Bork looked around at the eager, intent faces waiting for his words, then dropped his eyes to his space-tanned hands on the table before him.
"Sometimes it's like falling into a million-mile pit, other times you feel like a fly in the spiderweb of eternity, naked under the stars. And the stars are so different — no flickering, you know, just the tiniest spots of solid light."
Even as he told them he cursed himself a thousand times for the liar he was. Captain Bork, spaceship pilot. The single man privileged to see the stars in the space between worlds. And after five round trips to Mars, he had no idea of what it was really like out there. His body piloted the ship, but Jonathan Bork had never seen the inside of a ship's control room.
Not that he ever dared admit it aloud. When people asked him what it was like he told them — using one of the carefully memorized speeches from the textbooks.
With an effort he pulled his mind away from the thought and back to the table surrounded by guests and relatives. The dinner was in his honor, so he tried to live up to it. The brandy helped. He finished most of it, then excused himself as soon as he could.
The family house was old enough to have a pocket-sized backyard. He went there, alone, and put his back against the dark building still warm from the heat of the day. The unaccustomed brandy felt good, and when he looked up the stars wheeled in circles until he closed his eyes.
Stars. He had always looked at the stars. From the time he had been a child they had been his interest and his drive. Everything he had ever done or studied had that one purpose behind it. To be one of the select few to fly the space lanes. A pilot.
He had entered the academy when he was seventeen, the minimum age. By the time he was eighteen he knew the whole thing was a fake.
He had tried to ignore the truth, to find some other explanation. But it was no good. Everything he knew, everything he was taught in the school added up to one thing. And that was an impossible conclusion.
It was inescapable and horrible so finally he had put it to the test.
It happened in physiology class, where they were working out problems in relation to orientation and consciousness in acceleration, using Paley's theorem. He had raised his hand timidly, but Eagle-Eye Cherniki had spotted it and growled him to his feet. Once he was committed the words came out in a rush.
"Professor Cherniki, if we accept Paley's theorem, in a problem like this with only minimal escape-G, we go well below the consciousness threshold. And the orientation factor as well, it seems to me. . that, well…"
"Mr. Bork, just what are you trying to say?" Cherniki's voice had the cold incision of a razor's edge.
Jon took the plunge. "There can be only one conclusion. Any pilot who takes off in a ship will be knocked out or unable to orientate enough to work the controls."
The classroom rocked with laughter and Jon felt his face warm and redden. Even Cherniki allowed himself a cold grin when he answered.
"Very good. But if what you say is true, then it is impossible to fly in space — and we do it every day. I think you will find that in the coming semester we will go into the question of changing thresholds under stress. That should—"
"No, sir," Jon broke in. "The texts do not answer this question— if anything they avoid it. I've read every text for this course as well as other related texts—"
"Mr. Bork, are you calling me a liar?" Cherniki's voice was as frigid as his eyes. A dead hush fell over the classroom. "You are dismissed from this class. Go to your quarters and remain there until you are sent for."
Trying not to stumble, Jon went across the room and out the door. Every eye was fixed on him and he felt like a prisoner on the last mile. Instead of getting an answer to his question it looked as if he had got himself in deep trouble. Sitting in his room he tried not to think of the consequences.
He had never been certain he could get into pilot training — even though it had been his only ambition. Just about one out of one hundred made it that far, the rest ending up in the thousand other jobs of the space fleet. Very few washed completely out of the Academy; the entrance requirements were so high that deadheads never got that far. Of course, there were exceptions — and it was beginning to look like he was one of them.