It seemed impossible. The equipment was still a couple of hundred meters away. The whole landing operation — minutes according to his mental clock — must have been completed in just a few seconds. He had time to examine the bundle of equipment closely, and decide just where he would secure it.
It swung in toward him, drifting down to the surface. The velocity match had been exact. It was less than five minutes work to place another array of pitons in a parabolic curve along the surface, and set up catapult cables to run around the array. The final web of cables and springs looked fragile, but it would hold and secure anything with less than three hundred meters a second of relative velocity.
Peron made one last examination of his work, then activated the suit phone. “All set.” He hoped his voice was as casual as he would have liked it to be. “Come on in anytime. The catapult is in position.”
He took a deep breath. Halfway. When they had explored the surface as a group, the catapult would be used to launch all the others away from Whirlygig; and Peron would be alone again. Then he would make a powered ascent (with fingers crossed) to the safety of the waiting ship.
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
Peron could not recall the exact moment when he knew that he was going to die on Whirlygig. The knowledge had grown exponentially, over perhaps a minute, as his mind rapidly ran through every possible escape and rejected all of them as impossible. Cold certainty had finally replaced hope.
The landing had gone almost perfectly, as the six other contestants assigned to visit Whirlygig sailed in to a smooth encounter with the landing web. Wilmer, paired with Kallen, had proved the exception. He had come barrelling in too fast and too high, and only Kallen’s hefty pull on their line had brought him low enough to connect with the cables.
He seemed not at all upset by his narrow escape. “Guess you were right, Kallen,” he said cheerfully, once he was safely down. “Odd, that. I’d have bet money I had the speed accurate and you had it wrong.”
“Be thankful you weren’t first man in,” said Rosanne severely — she had seen how close Kallen had come to losing his own hold. “If Peron had done that he’d have been in big trouble. And what do you have in there? That’s probably the mass you didn’t allow for in your calculations.”
Wilmer held up a green case. “In this? Food. I didn’t know how long we’d be here. I’ve no wish to starve, even if you all don’t mind it. And if I had been first one in, Rosanne, with my trajectory I’d also have been first one out. At that speed and height I’d have missed Whirlygig altogether. There’s a moral in that: better come in too high and fast than low and slow.”
He had begun to hop gingerly from one foot to the other, testing his balance. The effective gravity on Whirlygig’s equator was not exactly zero, but it was so slight that a tumbling upward leap of hundreds of feet was trivially easy. Everyone had tried it, and soon lost interest. It took minutes for the feather-light float down back to the surface, and one experience of that was enough.
They soon began the careful trek away from Whirlygig’s equator, travelling in small groups and heading for the comforting gravity of the polar regions. Only Sy was left behind, making his own solitary and perplexing experiments in motion over the rough terrain.
Progress for everyone was slower than expected. They could fly low over the surface with little effort, using the tiny propulsive units flown in after they were all landed. But Whirlygig’s rapid rotation made Coriolis forces a real factor to reckon with, and allowing for them called for constant adjustment to the flight line. The suit computers refused to accept and track a simple north reckoning, and it was easy to stray twenty or thirty degrees off course. After they had been on the way for a couple of hours, Sy caught up and quickly passed them all. He had discovered his own prescription for estimating and compensating for Coriolis effects.
As they flew north the appearance of the land below gradually changed. The equator was all broken, massive rocks, heaped into improbable, gravity-defying arches, spires, and buttresses. A few hundred kilometers farther toward the pole the terrain began to smooth, settling down into a flatter wilderness of rugged boulders. It was not a pleasant landscape, and the temperature was cold enough to freeze mercury. But compared with some of the other worlds, Whirlygig seemed like vacation-land.
The suits had efficient recycling systems, and ample food supplies. The contestants agreed to carry on right to the pole, then rest there for a few hours before returning to the equator and leaving. According to Gilby they would find a sizeable research dome at the north pole, where they would be able to sleep in comfort and remove suits for a few hours. All scientific surveys on Whirlygig had been completed many years earlier, but the dome facilities should still be in working order.
Elissa and Peron had chosen to travel side by side, with their radios set for private conversation. The suit computers would monitor incoming messages and interrupt for anything urgent. Elissa was bubbling over with high spirits and cheerfulness.
“Lots of things to tell you,” she said. “I didn’t have a chance to talk to you yesterday, you were too busy getting ready for the landing here. But I’ve spent a lot of time making friends with one of the crew members — Tolider, the short-haired one with the pet tardy.”
“That hadn’t escaped my attention,” said Peron drily. “I saw you petting it and pretending you liked it, too. Disgusting. Why would anybody want a big, fat, hairy pet worm?”
Elissa laughed. “If I were to tell you what some people want with it, I’d shock your innocent soul. But Tolider just likes it for company, and he looks after it well. Love me, love my tardy, that’s what he seems to think. Once he thought I was a tardy-lover, too, he was ready to bare his soul. Now, are you going to spend the next few hours sounding jealous, or do you want to know what he said?” “Oh, all right.” Peron’s curiosity was too great to allow him to maintain an aloof tone, and he knew from his own experience how good Elissa was at winkling information out of anyone. “What did he tell you?”
“After he felt comfortable with me we talked about the Immortals. He says they aren’t a hoax, or something invented by the government. And they aren’t human, or alien, either. He says they are machines.”
“How does he know?”
“He saw them. He’s been working in space for over twenty years, and he remembers the last time the Immortals came. He said something else, too, once I’d softened him up — shut up, Peron — something that he says the government doesn’t want anyone down on Pentecost ever to know. He told me because he wanted to warn me, because he feels sorry for me. He says that some of the winners of the Planetfest games who go off-planet are sacrifices to the Immortals. They — that means us — will become machines, themselves.”
“Rubbish!”
“I agree, it sounds like it. But he made a lot of good points. You hear about the Immortals, but you never hear a description of one — no stories that they’re just like us, or that they’re big or little, or have green hair, or six arms. And you tell me: what does happen to Planetfest winners when they go off-planet?”
“You know I can’t answer that. But we’ve seen videos of them, after they won the games. How could that happen if they had been converted to machines?” “I’ll tell you what Tolider says — and this is supposed to be common rumor through the whole space division. It’s like an old legend that goes back to the time we were first contacted by the Immortals. We know that the computer records on The Ship were destroyed, but there’s no real doubt that it left Sol over twenty thousand years ago, and travelled around in space until five thousand years ago when it found Pentecost.”