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+ <title>
+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of Comet's Burial, by Raymond Zinke Gallun.
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Comet's Burial, by Raymond Zinke Gallun
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Comet's Burial
+
+Author: Raymond Zinke Gallun
+
+Release Date: September 17, 2011 [EBook #37448]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK COMET'S BURIAL ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Greg Weeks, Dianna Adair and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/cover_3.jpg" width="250" height="354" alt="Front Cover" title="Front Cover" /><br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="figcenter extraspacetop">
+<img src="images/frontimg_2.jpg" width="400" height="612" alt="Illustration_BRINKER_BRINKER_in_footprints" title="Illustration_BRINKER_BRINKER_in_footprints" /><br />
+</div>
+
+<div class="blockquote extraspacetop"><i>A man may be a scoundrel, a crook, a high-phased confidence
+man, and still work toward a great dream which will be worth
+far more than the momentary damage his swindles cost.</i></div>
+
+<hr class="r15" />
+<h1><i>Comet's Burial</i><br />
+
+<small><i>by</i> RAYMOND Z. GALLUN</small></h1>
+
+<div class="cap">OUTSIDE Tycho Station on the Moon, Jess Brinker showed Arne
+Copeland the odd footprints made in the dust by explorers from
+Mars, fifty million years ago. A man-made cover of clear plastic
+now kept them from being trampled.</div>
+
+<p>"Who hasn't heard about such prints?" Copeland growled laconically.
+"There's no air or weather here to rub them out&mdash;even in eternity.
+Thanks for showing a fresh-arrived greenhorn around..."</p>
+
+<p>Copeland was nineteen, tough, willing to learn, but wary. His wide
+mouth was usually sullen, his grey eyes a little narrowed in a face that
+didn't have to be so grim. Back in Iowa he had a girl. Frances. But love
+had to wait, for he needed the Moon the way Peary had once needed
+the North Pole.</p>
+
+<p>Earth needed it, too&mdash;for minerals; as an easier, jump-off point to
+the planets because of its weak gravity; as a place for astronomical
+observatories, unhampered by the murk of an atmosphere; as sites for
+labs experimenting in forces too dangerous to be conducted on a heavily-populated
+world, and for a dozen other purposes.</p>
+
+<p>Young Copeland was ready for blood, sweat, and tears in his impulse
+to help conquer the lunar wastes. He sized up big, swaggering Jess
+Brinker, and admitted to himself that this man, who was at least ten
+years his senior, could easily be a phony, stalking suckers. Yet, Copeland
+reserved judgment. Like any tenderfoot anywhere, he needed an
+experienced man to show him the ropes.</p>
+
+<p>He already knew the Moon intimately from books: A hell of silence,
+some of it beautiful: Huge ringwalls. Blazing sunlight, inky shadow.
+Grey plains, black sky. Blazing stars, with the great blurry bluish globe
+of Earth among them. You could yearn to be on the Moon, but you
+could go bats and die there, too&mdash;or turn sour, because the place was
+<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_56" id="Page_56">[56]</a></span>too rough for your guts.</p>
+
+<p>Afield, you wore a spacesuit, and conversed by helmet radiophone.
+Otherwise you lived in rooms and holes dug underground, and sealed
+up. The scant water you dared use was roasted out of gypsum rock.
+The oxygen you breathed was extracted from lunar oxides by a chemical
+process. Then air-rejuvenator apparatus reseparated it from the carbon-dioxide
+you exhaled, so that you could use it over and over.</p>
+
+<p>Copeland had read the tales: With that kind of frugality as the price
+of survival, lunar prospectors could turn selfish to the point of queerness.
+Afraid somebody might follow them to their mineral claims, they'd
+take more pains to leave as little spoor as possible than a fox being
+tracked by dogs.</p>
+
+<p>"Speaking of how footprints last around here," Copeland remarked for
+the sake of conversation, "I understand you've got to be careful&mdash;stick
+to high ridges, and to parts of the flat <i>maria</i> where there's no old volcanic
+ash or dust of thermal erosion."</p>
+
+<p>"Guys who do that are misers and old women, kid," Brinker scoffed.
+"Hell&mdash;it sure ain't because they're modest that they're so cautious!
+Me&mdash;I do things right."</p>
+
+<p>He lifted a foot from the dust beside the path, revealing the mark
+of the specially etched steel sole of his spaceboot. A name was stamped
+across the print: BRINKER.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm proud of where I've been and where I'm going&mdash;like a true
+explorer," the big man said. "Get some soles like mine made for yourself,
+fella, and come along with me."</p>
+
+<p>Copeland was intrigued. "Let me think about it a little."</p>
+
+<hr class="r15" />
+
+<div class="cap extraspacetop">DURING the next few hours he heard quite a lot.</div>
+
+<p>A big, blonde nurse&mdash;one of the two women in the sealed
+warrens of Tycho Station, said: "Young man, I <i>love</i> Jess Brinker. But
+keep away from him, or you'll wind up in the prison pits, or worse."</p>
+
+<p>And Copeland heard about Tom Brinker, Jess' dad&mdash;the kind of
+swindler always found in rough new territory, anywhere. He had promoted
+the idea of a real city on Lunar. Yeah&mdash;one with trees and
+flowers. What sentimental bait that was for home-starved, desolation-sick
+wanderers! No wonder somebody had murdered him recently.</p>
+
+<p>By common opinion, twenty-odd years was the only difference between
+Jess and his father. "Stay clear," was the warning; the name of
+Brinker was mud and poison.</p>
+
+<p>Arne Copeland was a cagey youngster; nobody influenced him when
+he made up his mind. He was no cow-eyed hero-worshipper; yet, on<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_57" id="Page_57">[57]</a></span>
+his own, he kind of liked the large, battered, egotist. Copeland knew
+that he was an egotist himself. He also knew that merely to be on the
+sketchily-explored Moon was to take chances.</p>
+
+<p>So he said "Okay," to Brinker, and got some metal boot-soles made,
+with his name etched into them in reverse, as in a rubber stamp.</p>
+
+<p class="extraspacetop">Under packs that no coolie could ever have lifted against Earth
+gravity, they left Tycho Station and moved toward the fringe of that
+lunar hemisphere which is never seen from Terra&mdash;though it is no
+different from the visible half in general character.</p>
+
+<p>Wherever their feet found a medium that would take an impression,
+they left their trademark behind them. Copeland could brush a name
+out with a glove; otherwise those names were about as permanent as
+if carved from granite, for there was no wind to blow the dust, and no
+rain to wash it away. Passing tractor-caravans would never blot out all
+of the footprints. Not in ages of time.</p>
+
+<p>"At least we got us a monument, Jess," Copeland said once, feeling
+somewhat thrilled. "That's what guys out exploring and prospecting
+need. A legend. A reputation."</p>
+
+<p>Jess Brinker's eyes narrowed, making him look sinister. "Yeah,
+Cope," he drawled. "But in my case it's a <i>counter</i>-reputation, with a
+little of Robin Hood thrown in, to help blow the stink of my Old Man
+off me. I want some friends and backing, so I can do what Dad really
+wanted to do&mdash;though he was as much of a rogue as a saint. You
+listening, Cope?"</p>
+
+<p>Copeland kept his face stony. "Tell me what you want to, and then
+stop," he said softly.</p>
+
+<p>"Thanks," Brinker answered. "It doesn't matter too much that I can
+guess who killed Pop, and would like to square things. Yeah, a hatchet-faced
+ex-partner who turned pious and legal on the outside, after he
+got the breaks. How old is that story, I wonder? ... It doesn't even rile
+me terribly, knowing that Dad wasn't all crook, knowing he <i>believed</i>
+his idea was good for everybody, and was trying to get funds to put it
+across."</p>
+
+<p>Brinker sighed and went on: "The idea is the <i>important</i> thing, Cope.
+A place with trees and flowers, a city, maybe&mdash;an antidote for the
+Moon's desolation. Anyone here feels the need in his bones and nerves.
+But it would take more air and water than could ever be imported, or
+drawn from the lunar crust. You wouldn't know it on the dead surface,
+but two hundred miles deep in the Moon there's still molten lava,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_58" id="Page_58">[58]</a></span>
+plentiful water in the form of steam, volcanic carbon-dioxide gas&mdash;the
+makings of oxygen. There's nitrogen, too.</p>
+
+<p>"How to reach that stuff is the question. Drills break under the pressure
+of depth at a tenth of the distance. Pop's idea involved Brulow's
+Comet, which will be coming back sunward from far space in three
+years. Imagine&mdash;a comet! It could be dangerous, too; nobody could
+ever get permission for an attempt."</p>
+
+<p>Brinker paused again. Copeland and he were plodding through a
+jagged valley. The stars were merciless pinpoints, the silence brittle
+and grating.</p>
+
+<p>"But there must be a way of blasting down to those life-giving raw-materials,
+Cope," Brinker continued. "Maybe with atomic explosive.
+Experiments call for funds and backing. So I save my money, and wish
+I had a head for making it faster. And I look for weak spots in the
+lunar crust with radar. And I try to get people to know I'm around,
+and to like me..."</p>
+
+<p>Copeland realized that what he had just heard could be a line of
+malarky meant to kid a yokel, or a bid to get him involved in something.
+But he found himself kind of falling for the yarn. More than ever
+he suspected that folks were wrong about Jess Brinker; his warning
+instincts were being lulled to sleep.</p>
+
+<hr class="r15" />
+
+<div class="cap extraspacetop">MONTH-LONG lunar days passed, while the two men ranged over a
+segment of the hidden hemisphere. They trod plains and crater-walls
+unsullied by human feet before; they took photographs to be sold
+to the Lunar Topographical Commission; they located deposits of
+radioactive metals, which could be registered for investigation by an
+assaying party, and for possible royalties. Periodically they visited
+scattered supply stations, and then set out once more.</div>
+
+<p>Such a life had its poisons even for Brinker and Copeland, who were
+braced for meeting the unknown and the strange.</p>
+
+<p>Living in space suits for weeks at a time; smelling their own unwashed
+bodies; slipping an arm out of a heavy sleeve to draw food through a
+little airlock in their armor's chestplate; knowing, in spite of effective
+insulation, that the heat of day exceeded the boiling point of water,
+and that the cold of the protracted night, when usually they continued
+their explorations with the aid of ato-lamps, hovered at the brink of
+absolute zero&mdash;all those things had a harsh effect on nervous-systems.</p>
+
+<p>They found two human corpses. One had been crushed in a long fall,
+his spacesuit ripped open; he was a blackened mummy. The other<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_59" id="Page_59">[59]</a></span>
+was a freckled youth, coffined in his armor. Failure of its air-rejuvenator
+unit had caused asphyxia. What you did for guys like this was collect
+their credentials for shipment home.</p>
+
+<p>Copeland also found a Martian&mdash;inside its transparent version of
+a spacesuit, for the ancient Moon had been much the same as now. The
+being was dead, of course. Its brain-case had been a sac; its tentacles
+were like a snarl of age-hardened leather thongs.</p>
+
+<p>Lying near it was an even greater rarity&mdash;the remains of a different
+sort of monster from the planet that had been literally exploded in a
+war with Mars, to form the countless fragments that were the asteroids.
+That much of remote history was already known from the research-expeditions
+that had gone out to the Red Planet, and beyond.</p>
+
+<p>The queer, advanced equipment of these two beings from two small,
+swift-cooling worlds&mdash;which had borne life early, and whose cultures
+had rivalled briefly for dominance of the solar system until they had
+wiped each other out those fifty million years ago&mdash;lay scattered near
+them. It was still as bright and new as yesterday, preserved by the
+Moon's vacuum: Cameras, weapons, instruments&mdash;rich loot, now, to
+be sold to labs that sought to add the technology of other minds to
+human knowledge.</p>
+
+<p>For a year, things went well. The names, BRINKER and COPELAND,
+footprinted into the lunar dust, helped build the new reputation that
+Brinker wanted. Copeland and he were a hard-working team; they
+covered more ground than any other Moon explorers.</p>
+
+<p>The fights that Brinker got into with other toughs at the various
+supply stations, and never lost, added to the legend&mdash;that old Tom's
+son was savage and dangerous, but with a gentler side. For instance he
+once carried a crazed Moon-tramp, whom Copeland was too slight to
+have handled for a minute, fifty miles on his back to a station. Oh,
+sure&mdash;the stunt could be pure ballyhoo, not charity. But Copeland
+knew that more and more people had begun to admire his buddy.</p>
+
+<p>Brinker never found a weak spot in the lunar crust. "It's always
+about two hundred miles deep, Cope," he said. "Lots thicker than
+Earth's shell, because the Moon, being smaller, cooled more. But don't
+worry; nothing is impossible. Soon I'll have enough money to make
+minor tests. And maybe enough friends for serious support."</p>
+
+<p>Yeah&mdash;maybe it was all just a brain-bubble. But Copeland had
+seen enough of desolation to grind the spirit of the Brinker idea into
+his bones&mdash;even if he didn't think it was quite practical.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll throw my dough in with yours, Jess," he said.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_60" id="Page_60">[60]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Their named bootprints helped build their fame as explorers; but
+there was a flaw and an invitation here which they both must have
+realized&mdash;and still faced as a calculated risk.</p>
+
+<hr class="r15" />
+
+<div class="cap extraspacetop">A LUNAR day later, they were plodding through the Fenwick
+mountains on the far hemisphere, when streams of bullets made
+lava chips fly.</div>
+
+<p>As they flopped prone in the dust, a scratchy voice chuckled:
+"Hello, Brinker. Maybe you and your pal want my bunch to escort
+you back to Tycho Station. We might as well have the reward. Robbery
+of a minerals caravan and three killings, they say. It's terrible how you
+scatter your tracks around..."</p>
+
+<p>Brinker grasped Copeland's wrist to form a sound-channel, so that
+they could converse without using their radiophones. "That was Krell
+talking," he said. "Dad's old partner."</p>
+
+<p>Luckily, it was not many hours to sunset. The mountain ridges,
+slanting up to the peaks, cast inky shadows that could hide anything.
+Brinker was canny; while more bullets spurted, he led a dash back
+to a ridge-shadow that went clear to the range-crest. Even with bulky
+packs, climbing was a lot faster than on Earth, where things weigh six
+times as much.</p>
+
+<p>So they got away, over the mountains. The black night of the far
+side of the Moon, where Earth never shines, hid them.</p>
+
+<p>"Making boot-soles with our names on them," Brinker growled bitterly,
+using the radiophone at reduced range. "The crudest kind of
+frameup."</p>
+
+<p>"Your Krell is quite a man," Copeland stated.</p>
+
+<p>"He <i>could</i> have arranged all of it&mdash;sure," Brinker answered. "He
+knows I suspect that he finished Pop, so I'm dangerous to him. He
+might hate me, too, as part of my Old Man&mdash;sort of ... Whatever it
+was he got sore about, originally&mdash;money or principle, no doubt ...
+Besides, I don't think he wants the Moon to be a little more livable.
+It would encourage too many colonists to come, increase metals
+production, spoil prices, cheapen his claims. He's a corny man, with
+all the corny reasons ...</p>
+
+<p>"He, and some of his guys, could have robbed and killed and left
+footprints like ours. But any other lugs, seeking someone else to blame
+for their crimes, could have done all that. If that is so, Krell has got
+me even <i>legally</i>&mdash;without blame to himself."</p>
+
+<p>"Footprints!" Copeland snapped. "They're so obviously a frame<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_61" id="Page_61">[61]</a></span>
+that it's silly; anyone could see that! Another thing&mdash;maybe Krell
+was kidding, scaring us by saying that we are wanted. Tell you what,
+Jess: In any case I won't seem as guilty as you; I'll go back alone
+to Tycho Station, and clear us both."</p>
+
+<p>"You're an optimist, ain't you?" Brinker laughed. "Krell wasn't
+kidding; and in a rough place like the Moon, justice jumps to conclusions
+and gets mean, fast. Sure, the purpose of the footprints is
+obvious. But I've been fighting uphill against my Old Man's reputation
+for a long time. Who's gonna say I haven't backslid? What I want to
+accomplish is tough enough with everything in my favor."</p>
+
+<p>Brinker's voice was now a sinister rumble with a quiver in it. Arne
+Copeland turned wary again; he had never lost entirely the deepseated
+notion that Brinker might cause him misfortune.</p>
+
+<p>"So now what?" he demanded softly, flashing his ato-light beam
+against Brinker's face-window, so that he could see his expression.
+Copeland meant to forestall danger aggressively.</p>
+
+<p>But as the darkness between them was swept aside, he also saw
+the muzzle of Brinker's pistol levelled at him. The bigger man's grin
+was lopsided. "I'd give you my neck, Cope," he rumbled. "But I'd
+give both our necks for you-know-what. Now, because that's all there's
+left, I'm gonna try it Pop's crazy way. You're gonna help. If you and I
+can last through a couple of years of <i>real</i> silence and solitude, it
+might have a chance. I got a ship hidden. Give me your gun. Easy!
+If you think I wouldn't shoot, you're a fool. Now I'll wire one of your
+wrists to mine; we've got a long march ahead."</p>
+
+<hr class="r15" />
+
+<div class="cap extraspacetop">SOME march it was! Copeland was fiercely independent. The warnings
+about Brinker had gone to waste; so had his own wariness. Bitterness
+made him savage. The harshness of the Moon still ached in his guts&mdash;he
+wanted the steam and gases of its interior tapped and used, yes&mdash;but
+by some reasonable means. Jess Brinker must be truly Moon-balmy,
+now. Desolation-nuts. Wild for the sight of growing things. Else how
+could he think seriously of using Brulow's Comet? Was it hard to
+guess how? Copeland knew that he and Brinker had courage, and
+willingness to work for a sound purpose. But to trade long effort and
+hardship in a proposition that courted suicide, even in its probable
+failure&mdash;and wide destruction if it managed to be successful&mdash;was
+worse than folly.</div>
+
+<p>So, when these meanings became clear in his mind, he wrestled
+Brinker at every turn. Twice he almost won. He argued and cursed,<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_62" id="Page_62">[62]</a></span>
+getting nowhere. He defied Brinker to shoot him. The big man didn't
+do that. But at last Brinker jabbed a hypodermic needle&mdash;part of the
+regulation medical kit&mdash;through the flexible rubberized fabric of the
+elbow-joint of Copeland's spacesuit, and into his arm.</p>
+
+<p class="extraspacetop">Many hours later, and many miles farther into the mountainous
+country, Copeland awoke in a cavern with glassy walls, illuminated
+by Brinker's ato-light. Brinker stood near where he lay. He seemed
+just grimly good-humored.</p>
+
+<p>"This is an old Martian supply depot, Cope," he offered. "I found
+it before I knew you, and I kept it in reserve for possible trouble,
+like now. I knew I could convert its contents to considerable money
+at any time. So it was like a bank-account, and a last resort, too. There's
+even a small Martian spaceship; only three others have ever been
+found, intact. I also cached some Earthly instruments here. You can
+bet I didn't leave <i>any</i> tracks for miles around."</p>
+
+<p>Copeland's gaze caught the errie gleam of the strange little craft.
+He saw the stacks of oddly-made boxes and bales. His hackles rose
+as he thought of a senseless plunge into unplumbed distance.</p>
+
+<p>"Unwire my hands, Jess!" he coaxed again, trying to control fury.
+"Get wise! Damn you&mdash;you're more dangerous as an altruist than any
+crook could be!"</p>
+
+<p>Brinker's laugh was sharp, but his eyes held real apology. "Want to
+help me ready and load the ship?" he said almost mildly. "No&mdash;I
+guess not; you aren't quite in a cooperative frame of mind, yet. I'll
+need you later. Sorry, but you're the only guy around, Cope."</p>
+
+<p>Brinker blasted queer bulkheads out of the ship, in order to make
+it habitable for humans. The exit of the cavern had been masked with
+debris, but now he cleared it. He tossed Copeland aboard and took
+off into the lunar night.</p>
+
+<hr class="r15" />
+
+<div class="cap extraspacetop">THE vast journey lasted for months. Once Brinker said to his sullen,
+and again partially-drugged, captive: "Maybe in two years, if we're
+very lucky, we'll be back."</div>
+
+<p>Hurtling outward, they passed the orbits of Mars, the asteroids,
+Jupiter, and Saturn. There, with Earth-made instruments, Brinker
+located what he sought: Brulow's Comet.</p>
+
+<p>So far from the sun, where the fluorescence-inducing radiations were
+thinned almost to nothing, it glowed hardly at all. And it had almost
+no tail; it was only a gigantic, tenuous ghost, with a core of stone and
+magnetic iron fragments.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_63" id="Page_63">[63]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Still dazed, Copeland thought about comets. Wanderers, following
+elongated orbits that loop tight around the sun at one end and plumb
+the depths of space at the other. Of all large forms moving through
+the void, they were the least dense. In coma and tail, they were only
+intensely rarefied and electrified gas. The great enigma about them was
+that things so deficient in mass and gravity could hold onto even that
+much atmosphere for long. Perhaps new gases were baked out of the
+meteoric core, each time a comet was close to the sun; maybe some
+of them even renewed their atmosphere periodically, by capturing a
+little of the tenuous substance of the solar corona, during their very
+near approaches to it.</p>
+
+<p>Brulow's Comet was on the sunward swing, now, gaining speed
+under solar gravitation; but it still had a long ways to go. Brinker
+guided the ship down through its coma and toward its lazily-rotating
+nucleus, where thousands of fragments of iron and rock swirled around
+their common center of gravity.</p>
+
+<p>The chunks clattered against the craft's metal hull, but did no
+damage at their low speed. Brinker brought the ship to rest at the
+center of the nucleus, where there was one solid mass of material a
+hundred yards in diameter.</p>
+
+<p>"Well, we're here, Cope," Brinker said grimly. "We don't have
+to work right away&mdash;if you don't want to. We've got too much time."</p>
+
+<p>Those two years looming ahead were the worst. If the Moon had
+been harsh, it was nothing to this eerie place. The heart of this small
+comet was illumined by faint, shifting phosphorescence, ranging from
+blue and tarnished silver to delicate if poisonous pink. Perhaps the
+cause was the same as that of the terrestrial aurora. The silence here
+was that of space; but the swirling motion of the nucleus suggested a
+continuous maddening rustle to Copeland.</p>
+
+<p>He had to yield to Brinker's wishes. Toil might divert him some,
+keep him from feeling the tension of time and strangeness so much.</p>
+
+<p>"Okay, Brinker," he said. "You win. Brulow's Comet is headed for
+a close approach to the Earth-Moon system. So you want to be
+spectacular, and shift it a little from its orbit&mdash;so that it will hit the
+Moon and maybe break its crust. Was that so hard to figure? That
+sounds pretty big, doesn't it? But I'll humor you. Let's see how far
+we get ... Since we're here." His sarcasm was tired.</p>
+
+<p class="extraspacetop">As a preliminary, they cut a cavern in the central mass of the
+nucleus with Martian blasters, and fitted it with a crude airlock. The<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_64" id="Page_64">[64]</a></span>
+cavern would be better to live in than the interior of a ship meant
+for alien beings. They moved Martian apparatus and supplies into it:
+Air-rejuvenators, moisture-reclaimers, cylinders of oxygen and water,
+and containers of nourishment&mdash;all millions of years old.</p>
+
+<p>Their remaining supply of Earthly food in their packs was now
+very short. It was weird&mdash;eating what had been preserved so long ago,
+on another world, for beings just barely close enough to human for
+their food to be edible. Gelatins, sectional fragments of vegetation,
+and what might have been muscle-tissue. Copeland and Brinker both
+gagged often. It wasn't the bland, oily taste so much, but the idea....</p>
+
+<p>Some of it, Copeland decided, was not native Martian. It was more
+like terrestrial fish. And slabs of coarse meat might have been flesh of
+the last dinosaurs! Martians surely must have visited Earth briefly,
+though evidence there had long since weathered away.</p>
+
+<hr class="r15" />
+
+<div class="cap extraspacetop">WHILE the still-distant sun sent thin light into the comet, Brinker
+and Copeland removed the propulsion-tubes from the ship and
+welded them to the central chunk of the nucleus. They had a number
+of other spare jet-tubes. These they fastened to lesser masses.</div>
+
+<p>Whenever, in the slow swirling of the nucleus, tubes pointed in the
+calculated proper direction at right angles to the comet's course, they
+were fired in long bursts. Thus, slowly, like a perfectly-balanced bank
+vault door moved by a finger, the mass of the comet&mdash;slight by volume,
+but still measuring many thousands of tons&mdash;was deflected in the
+opposite direction. Astrogation-instruments showed the shift. Copeland
+had expected such coarse deflection to be possible; still, it startled him&mdash;this
+was the moving of a celestial body!</p>
+
+<p>"Just a little&mdash;for now, Cope," Brinker said. "We'll leave the fine
+aiming for later. Meanwhile we've got to pass the time, stay as well
+as we can, and keep our heads on straight."</p>
+
+<p>Sure&mdash;straight! If Brinker hadn't turned foolish before they had
+come, they wouldn't be out here at all. In a month they were already
+thinning down from malnutrition and strain. At first, thinking coldly,
+Copeland was sure they'd wilt and die long before they got near the
+Moon.</p>
+
+<p>Then, as they managed to steady themselves some by the diversions
+of playing cards, and studying the intricacies of Martian equipment,
+he began to fear once more that Brinker might succeed in his efforts&mdash;but
+fail terribly in result.</p>
+
+<p>Many times Copeland went over the same arguments, struggling<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_65" id="Page_65">[65]</a></span>
+to speak calmly, and without anger: "I wonder if you realize it,
+Brinker&mdash;with enough velocity one large meteor carries more energy
+than a fission bomb. A whole comet would affect thousands of square
+miles of the lunar surface, at least. Smash equipment, kill men. And
+if the comet happened to miss the Moon and hit Earth&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Sometimes Brinker's expression became almost fearful, as at an
+enormity. But then he'd turn stubborn and grin. "There's plenty of
+room to avoid hitting the Earth," he'd say. "On the Moon, astronomers
+will warn of the shifted orbit of Brulow's Comet in plenty of time for
+everybody to get out of danger. Most of what we've got to worry
+about now, is our lives, or jail ..."</p>
+
+<p>A moment later, as like as not, they'd be slamming at each other
+with fists. Copeland found it hard to contain his fury for the man
+who had brought him such trouble, and&mdash;without intent&mdash;was so
+determined to extend it to many others.</p>
+
+<p>Brinker kept winning the scraps. But Copeland's ten-year age-advantage
+meant something when it came to enduring hardship and
+partial-starvation over a long period. They didn't weaken equally.</p>
+
+<p>This levelling of forces was one thing that Copeland waited for.
+Another was that when Brulow's Comet was found to be off course, a
+ship might be sent to investigate. He never mentioned it, certainly;
+but once Brinker said: "I'm ready for what you're thinking, Cope.
+I've got weapons."</p>
+
+<p>By then they spent much of their time in torpid sleep.</p>
+
+<p>Another difficulty was that it was getting harder to keep one's mind
+consistently on the same track. Space, tribulation, and the months,
+were having their blurring effect.</p>
+
+<p>Often, Copeland spent many hours in wistful reverie about his girl,
+Frances, in Iowa. Sometimes he hated all people&mdash;on Earth, Moon,
+and everyhere, and didn't care what happened to them. On other
+occasions Brinker's basic desire to lessen the desolation of the lunar
+scene looked supremely good to him&mdash;as of course it always had, in
+principle. Then, briefly and perhaps madly, he was Brinker's pal, instead
+of yearning to beat him to a pulp.</p>
+
+<hr class="r15" />
+
+<div class="cap extraspacetop">SOMEHOW, twenty months crept by, and the first spaceship hove
+inquisitively close to Brulow's Comet. A shadow of his former self,
+Brinker crept out of the cavern to man his weapons. But like a famished
+beast seeking prey, Copeland followed him.</div>
+
+<p>His victory, now, was almost easy. Then all he had to do was wait<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_66" id="Page_66">[66]</a></span>
+to be picked up; the ship was coming nearer. Through the now much-brightened
+glow of the comet, it had ceased to be a planetlike speck
+reflecting sunlight; and showed its actual form.</p>
+
+<p>Confusion whirled in Copeland's head; hunger gnawed in him. Yet
+he looked down at Brinker&mdash;poor Brinker, beaten unconscious inside
+his spacesuit. Brinker had tried to fight lifeless dreariness. Copeland,
+weak of body and fogged of mind, was now close to maudlin tears.
+Dreariness was the enemy&mdash;here as elsewhere. He tried to think; his
+stubborn nature mixed itself with splinters of reason, and seemed to
+make sense.</p>
+
+<p>His twenty months of suffering out here had to be used&mdash;mean
+something&mdash;didn't it? It couldn't be just a futile blank. You had to
+follow a thing started through to the end, didn't you? Brinker wanted
+to improve the Moon, which certainly needed that. Okay&mdash;finish the
+job that had gone so far. Damn desolation everywhere! Fight it! Smash
+it! Sudden rage made Copeland's thin blood pound. Dimly he realized
+that he was driven by the same dreariness-disease that motivated
+Brinker. So what? Who cared about smashed lunar equipment, after
+all. And beside experience, prison would be paradise.</p>
+
+<p>Copeland fired a Martian rocket-launcher, aiming behind the ship.
+He saw the blaze of atomic fission. Jets flaming, the craft fled.</p>
+
+<p>In his phones he heard a voice that he remembered: "That you,
+Brinker? Trying your father's trick, eh? Idiot! You'll kill yourself, or
+be executed. And now you even shoot!"</p>
+
+<p>Fury at Krell clinched Copeland's decision. He did not answer him.
+But when Brinker woke up he said savagely, without friendship or
+forgiveness, yet with cooperation: "We're on the same side, now.
+Let's aim Brulow's Comet."</p>
+
+<p>Concentrating was hard, but they had their instruments and calculators.
+Velocity, position, and course of both comet and Moon had
+to be coordinated to make them arrive in the same place at the same
+moment. It was a problem in astrogation, but a comet was not as easily
+directed as a space ship. Copeland had once thought that the necessary
+fine guiding couldn't be done. The jet-system they had rigged in that
+inconveniently whirling nucleus was crude.</p>
+
+<p>But one thing was in their favor; they had ample time. They could
+adjust their course with the jets, check with instruments, and re-adjust&mdash;again
+and again. Copeland found himself doing the vital part of the job;
+he was better at math than Brinker.</p>
+
+<p>They still had plenty of Martian food left&mdash;for what it was worth<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_67" id="Page_67">[67]</a></span>
+to human insides. Perhaps unified purpose and action brightened their
+outlook a little, helping their bodies. They could never work very
+long&mdash;even in the almost total absence of gravity. But&mdash;at least&mdash;their
+weakness wasn't increasing now.</p>
+
+<p>During those last four months they drove several ships away. Earth
+and Moon swelled to spheres, ahead. Brulow's Comet lengthened its
+tail under increased solar light-pressure. Intensified radiation made its
+shifting colors glorious.</p>
+
+<p>Brinker and Copeland lined their gigantic missile up on its target
+as perfectly as they could. Fifty hours before the crash was due, they
+smashed most of the jets. The remaining ones they tried, feebly, to
+refit into their ship, meaning thus to escape.</p>
+
+<hr class="r15" />
+
+<div class="cap extraspacetop">THREE Space Patrol craft showed up, and they had to man their
+weapons. Copeland hated to be an outlaw; but now he could not
+see effort brought to nothing. Brinker and he had survived so far,
+accomplishing much&mdash;far better results than he had expected; it made
+him surer that their purpose was generally sound.</div>
+
+<p>More missiles were fired carefully&mdash;not to do damage, but to
+discourage the intruders; the latter were held at bay for another twelve
+hours. Copeland and Brinker left radio commands and threats unanswered,
+so it was hard for their opponents to get a fix on their
+position in the whirling nucleus.</p>
+
+<p>Explosions blazed around them, but never very close. Masses of
+iron and stone were shattered and half vaporized, cooling subsequently
+to fine dust. The nucleus of Brulow's Comet expanded a bit under the
+battering that went on within it.</p>
+
+<p>At an opportune moment, Copeland and Brinker clung to one of
+their jet-tubes and, gunning it very lightly, rode it from the central
+core-mass of the nucleus to a lesser meteor, and hid in a cleft. A dust-poll
+had concealed their change of position. And now, with so many
+other large meteors around them, they would be almost impossible to
+find.</p>
+
+<p>They glimpsed the Patrol craft invading the heart of the comet.
+Men poured forth, struggling to set up jets in the hope of still deflecting
+this juggernaut from the Moon. But the comet was already much too
+close; before the setting-up was half completed it had to be abandoned.
+Still, the ships remained almost to the last.</p>
+
+<p>Copeland wondered tensely if they'd ever go. His withered palms
+perspired.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_68" id="Page_68">[68]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>"We could still yell for help&mdash;have them take us off," Brinker
+suggested when they had left. He spoke by sound-channel contact.</p>
+
+<p>The Moon loomed huge and ugly ahead. Copeland gave it a scared
+glance, and then laughed grimly. "Ironic, that would be," he snapped,
+"No&mdash;we've got this jet to ride, and we're still at liberty."</p>
+
+<p>From space, lashed to the flaming propulsion tube, they saw the
+crash happen. It was a terrific spectacle. Copeland's hopes now had
+jagged cracks of worry. The comet seemed to move slowly, its coma
+flattening over the Moon's spaceward hemisphere. There were blinding
+flashes as the chunks of its nucleus bit into the lunar crust, their energy
+of velocity converting largely to heat. Then dust masked the region
+of impact. The comet's tail collapsed over the Moon like a crumbling
+tower.</p>
+
+<p>Copeland gulped. He saw that Brinker had gone limp&mdash;fainted.
+Weakness was enough to cause that; but the fact of a plan carried out
+had a shock in it, too.</p>
+
+<p>Copeland worked the jury-rigged controls of the jet, continuing to
+decelerate. At spotty intervals, under the terrible thrust of reducing
+speed, he was unconscious, too.</p>
+
+<hr class="r15" />
+
+<div class="cap extraspacetop">THERE was no such thing as picking a landing-spot. Checking
+velocity soon enough, so close to the Moon, took all of the propulsion
+tube's power&mdash;so he just followed the comet down. Almost at a stand-still
+at last, balanced on a streamer of flame, he toppled into hot dust
+Feebly he worked to unlash himself from the tube. Brinker, jolted
+back to semi-consciousness, managed to do the same.</div>
+
+<p>Weakened and spent, they could not even lift themselves against
+the slight lunar gravity for a while.</p>
+
+<p>The darkness around them was Stygian. But as more dust settled,
+the sky cleared, and the normal stars of the lunar night blazed out.
+Their attention was drawn in one direction inevitably.</p>
+
+<p>Red-hot lava glowed there, in scattered areas over what was clearly
+an extensive expanse of territory. White vaporous plumes spurted
+high above the ground, and against the sides of new-formed meteor-craters,
+a white layer was collecting.</p>
+
+<p>Copeland staggered erect. "Frost and snow!" he stammered. "From
+volcanic steam! The first frost and snow on the Moon in a billion
+years! We've done it, Brinker! Brulow's Comet really did crack the
+thick lunar crust...."</p>
+
+<p>He heard Brinker's grunt of premature enthusiasm.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_69" id="Page_69">[69]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>The Patrol picked them up hours later, wandering dazedly. They
+were emaciated ghosts of men&mdash;almost skeletons in armor. They
+gave their names, but didn't really come to their senses until the
+prison doctor in Tycho Station treated them, and they had slept for
+a long time.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't worry, fellas. Relax," he said&mdash;with fury in his eyes.</p>
+
+<p>Other faces were grim.</p>
+
+<p class="extraspacetop">At the speedy trial in Tycho Station, sharp-featured Krell was among
+many who flung accusations.</p>
+
+<p>"In the impact-zone itself&mdash;an area a hundred miles across&mdash;mining
+installations and machinery of tremendous value were utterly destroyed,"
+he said. "But lesser damage extends to a far wider circle.
+Thousands of claims have been buried in dust, till much of the far
+lunar hemisphere will have to be resurveyed. Luckily, miners and explorers
+were warned in time, and sought safety. But the charge of
+wholesale vandalism&mdash;terrible enough&mdash;does not stand alone.
+These men are to be remembered as accused robbers and murderers."</p>
+
+<p>In rebuttal, Brinker's defiance was a little uncertain, as if under so
+much blame, he had lost his assurance.</p>
+
+<p>"Men who know the Moon know that its barrenness is poison, and
+not right for people!" he growled. "I tried to change it with Brulow's
+Comet&mdash;when I had no success by other means. Anyway, Copeland
+is blameless. I forced him to help me."</p>
+
+<p>Embitted, there was no warmth in Copeland for his older codefendant
+and jinx. Still, even without Brinker's attempt to shield him, he would
+have been loyal.</p>
+
+<p>"During all important parts of mine and Jess Brinker's joint project,"
+he told the court, "I was in full agreement with his purpose."</p>
+
+<p>Their attorney accomplished one considerable victory before these
+angry people. The charge of previous murders and robbery was barred;
+it was admitted that footprints were easy to duplicate, and that the
+presence of some bearing the names of the guilty was unlikely.</p>
+
+<p>Brinker got fifty years in the mine-pits, and Copeland thirty.</p>
+
+<p>"You always figured I might get you in a jam, didn't you, Cope?"
+Brinker said. "I'll keep trying to fix that."</p>
+
+<hr class="r15" />
+
+<div class="cap extraspacetop">COPELAND found nothing to grin about, in a thirty-year sentence. It
+was goodbye wandering, goodbye girls, goodbye everything. He'd get
+out middle-aged, finished, and marked. He might as well stay another
+twenty with Brinker&mdash;complete a sour association with him.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_70" id="Page_70">[70]</a></span></div>
+
+<p>Copeland had another recent jolt to brood over. A bunch of old
+letters from his Frances had been delivered to him. His inability to
+receive or answer any of them had brought the worst result. She had
+married another guy, and who could blame her?</p>
+
+<p>Arne Copeland wanted to kill Brinker. Getting desolation-goofy, and
+dragging him into this mess.</p>
+
+<p>But from Brinker's infuriating grin, Copeland caught a hot spark
+of hope, backed by reasoning.</p>
+
+<p class="extraspacetop">Later, sweating in the penal mine-pits near Tycho Station, Brinker
+and Copeland still heard scraps of news.</p>
+
+<p>Explorers moved back into the region where the comet had split
+the lunar crust. The rising columns of steam and gas were perhaps
+unspectacular phenomena in themselves. But there they were, ready
+to fill a tremendous need. The sleepy internal fires of the Moon were
+unlikely to be violent. Yet they would push vapors up to the surface
+here perhaps for centuries.</p>
+
+<p>In balancing benefit against transient damage, was it necessary even
+to mention that deeper and richer mineral deposits had been laid bare
+for easy mining by the blast effect of the comet's downfall? All free
+men&mdash;good or bad, and of large or small holdings&mdash;were set to gain,
+Krell included. But better mines were a side-issue.</p>
+
+<p>The prisoners soon heard how roofs of transparent, flexible plastic,
+brought in bundles like fabric, were being reared over that smashed-up
+region, to trap escaping volcanic vapors. One tentlike structure. Then
+another and another.</p>
+
+<p>Here was ample water from volcanic steam, and vast quantities of
+carbon-dioxide from which ordinary air-rejuvenators could release
+breathable oxygen. Men who had lived so long in the lunar silence
+and barrenness, soon saw that these raw materials of life need not only
+be used locally, but could be piped anywhere.</p>
+
+<p>"Folks have caught on, Cope," Brinker said. "They were a little
+desolation-balmy, too&mdash;hence on our side all the time. Now they'll
+feel better about my Old Man. There'll be more than one city, I'll
+bet&mdash;clusters of big, plastic air-bubbles, self-sealing against meteor-punctures,
+warmed inside at night by volcanic heat. It won't happen
+all at once, but it'll come. Seeds'll be planted, and houses built. Parts
+of the Moon won't look the same."</p>
+
+<p>Krell's death was part of the turning tide. He was found in Tycho
+Station, head smashed by a boot-sole of metal; it was good that Brinker
+was in prison, because his name was printed into Krell's skull.<span class='pagenum'><a name="Page_71" id="Page_71">[71]</a></span></p>
+
+<p>Who did it? Neither Brinker nor Copeland cared very much. Some
+wronged stooge of Krell's, no doubt. Let the forces of law figure out
+the details.</p>
+
+<p class="extraspacetop">Things got really good for Copeland and Brinker after popular
+demand forced their vindication. They were feted, honored, praised,
+rewarded. All Earth knew of them, and feminine colonists arriving as
+part of a new phase of the Moon's development, shined up to them as
+heroes.</p>
+
+<p>It is not to be said that they didn't enjoy the advantages of fame.
+Brinker said more than once: "Forget your Frances, Cope. Problems
+are easy, these days."</p>
+
+<p>The time came when Copeland growled in answer: "Sure&mdash;too
+easy. Having a lot of pals after the need is gone. No&mdash;I'm not
+criticizing. Most folks are swell. But I'd like to make friends and
+maybe find love a little more naturally. I thought I'd stay on the Moon;
+now I think I'll shove off for Mars. People are going there; whole
+towns are being built, I understand. And there's plenty of room for a
+lunar tramp, with a prison-record, to get lost ..."</p>
+
+<p>Copeland chuckled at the end. His vagabond blood was singing.
+He was also pitching a come-on at Brinker, for he'd seen him with
+some letters while they were prisoners. Copeland had glimpsed the
+name and address of the writer: Dorothy Wells, the big nurse that
+Brinker had known at Tycho Station. She was in Marsport now.</p>
+
+<p>"By gosh&mdash;I guess I'll go too, Cope!" Brinker rumbled.</p>
+
+<p>Looking back, Brinker thought it sort of funny that they were pals.
+He laughed.</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter extraspacetop" style="width: 189px;">
+<img src="images/backimg_1.png" width="189" height="186" alt="spacecraft" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<hr class="r65" />
+
+<div class="center extraspacebot">
+<b>Transcriber Notes:</b></div>
+
+<div class="blockquote">
+
+<p>This etext was produced by Science Fiction Stories 1953. Extensive research
+did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright on this publication
+was renewed.</p>
+
+<p>Corrections made and noted items retained as printed:</p>
+
+<p>page 62 original: Many hours later, and may miles farther<br />
+replacement:Many hours later, and many miles farther</p>
+
+<p>page 69 no change: Embitted, there was no warmth in Copeland<br />
+retained: Embitted</p></div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Comet's Burial, by Raymond Zinke Gallun
+
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Comet's Burial, by Raymond Zinke Gallun
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Comet's Burial
+
+Author: Raymond Zinke Gallun
+
+Release Date: September 17, 2011 [EBook #37448]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK COMET'S BURIAL ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Greg Weeks, Dianna Adair and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration: BRINKER BRINKER in footprints]
+
+
+
+
+ _A man may be a scoundrel, a crook, a high-phased confidence man,
+ and still work toward a great dream which will be worth far more
+ than the momentary damage his swindles cost._
+
+
+
+
+_Comet's Burial_
+
+_by_ RAYMOND Z. GALLUN
+
+
+Outside Tycho Station on the Moon, Jess Brinker showed Arne Copeland the
+odd footprints made in the dust by explorers from Mars, fifty million
+years ago. A man-made cover of clear plastic now kept them from being
+trampled.
+
+"Who hasn't heard about such prints?" Copeland growled laconically.
+"There's no air or weather here to rub them out--even in eternity.
+Thanks for showing a fresh-arrived greenhorn around..."
+
+Copeland was nineteen, tough, willing to learn, but wary. His wide mouth
+was usually sullen, his grey eyes a little narrowed in a face that
+didn't have to be so grim. Back in Iowa he had a girl. Frances. But love
+had to wait, for he needed the Moon the way Peary had once needed the
+North Pole.
+
+Earth needed it, too--for minerals; as an easier, jump-off point to the
+planets because of its weak gravity; as a place for astronomical
+observatories, unhampered by the murk of an atmosphere; as sites for
+labs experimenting in forces too dangerous to be conducted on a
+heavily-populated world, and for a dozen other purposes.
+
+Young Copeland was ready for blood, sweat, and tears in his impulse to
+help conquer the lunar wastes. He sized up big, swaggering Jess Brinker,
+and admitted to himself that this man, who was at least ten years his
+senior, could easily be a phony, stalking suckers. Yet, Copeland
+reserved judgment. Like any tenderfoot anywhere, he needed an
+experienced man to show him the ropes.
+
+He already knew the Moon intimately from books: A hell of silence, some
+of it beautiful: Huge ringwalls. Blazing sunlight, inky shadow. Grey
+plains, black sky. Blazing stars, with the great blurry bluish globe of
+Earth among them. You could yearn to be on the Moon, but you could go
+bats and die there, too--or turn sour, because the place was too rough
+for your guts.
+
+Afield, you wore a spacesuit, and conversed by helmet radiophone.
+Otherwise you lived in rooms and holes dug underground, and sealed up.
+The scant water you dared use was roasted out of gypsum rock. The oxygen
+you breathed was extracted from lunar oxides by a chemical process. Then
+air-rejuvenator apparatus reseparated it from the carbon-dioxide you
+exhaled, so that you could use it over and over.
+
+Copeland had read the tales: With that kind of frugality as the price of
+survival, lunar prospectors could turn selfish to the point of
+queerness. Afraid somebody might follow them to their mineral claims,
+they'd take more pains to leave as little spoor as possible than a fox
+being tracked by dogs.
+
+"Speaking of how footprints last around here," Copeland remarked for the
+sake of conversation, "I understand you've got to be careful--stick to
+high ridges, and to parts of the flat _maria_ where there's no old
+volcanic ash or dust of thermal erosion."
+
+"Guys who do that are misers and old women, kid," Brinker scoffed.
+"Hell--it sure ain't because they're modest that they're so cautious!
+Me--I do things right."
+
+He lifted a foot from the dust beside the path, revealing the mark of
+the specially etched steel sole of his spaceboot. A name was stamped
+across the print: BRINKER.
+
+"I'm proud of where I've been and where I'm going--like a true
+explorer," the big man said. "Get some soles like mine made for
+yourself, fella, and come along with me."
+
+Copeland was intrigued. "Let me think about it a little."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+During the next few hours he heard quite a lot.
+
+A big, blonde nurse--one of the two women in the sealed warrens of Tycho
+Station, said: "Young man, I _love_ Jess Brinker. But keep away from
+him, or you'll wind up in the prison pits, or worse."
+
+And Copeland heard about Tom Brinker, Jess' dad--the kind of swindler
+always found in rough new territory, anywhere. He had promoted the idea
+of a real city on Lunar. Yeah--one with trees and flowers. What
+sentimental bait that was for home-starved, desolation-sick wanderers!
+No wonder somebody had murdered him recently.
+
+By common opinion, twenty-odd years was the only difference between Jess
+and his father. "Stay clear," was the warning; the name of Brinker was
+mud and poison.
+
+Arne Copeland was a cagey youngster; nobody influenced him when he made
+up his mind. He was no cow-eyed hero-worshipper; yet, on his own, he
+kind of liked the large, battered, egotist. Copeland knew that he
+was an egotist himself. He also knew that merely to be on the
+sketchily-explored Moon was to take chances.
+
+So he said "Okay," to Brinker, and got some metal boot-soles made, with
+his name etched into them in reverse, as in a rubber stamp.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Under packs that no coolie could ever have lifted against Earth gravity,
+they left Tycho Station and moved toward the fringe of that lunar
+hemisphere which is never seen from Terra--though it is no different
+from the visible half in general character.
+
+Wherever their feet found a medium that would take an impression, they
+left their trademark behind them. Copeland could brush a name out with a
+glove; otherwise those names were about as permanent as if carved from
+granite, for there was no wind to blow the dust, and no rain to wash it
+away. Passing tractor-caravans would never blot out all of the
+footprints. Not in ages of time.
+
+"At least we got us a monument, Jess," Copeland said once, feeling
+somewhat thrilled. "That's what guys out exploring and prospecting need.
+A legend. A reputation."
+
+Jess Brinker's eyes narrowed, making him look sinister. "Yeah, Cope," he
+drawled. "But in my case it's a _counter_-reputation, with a little of
+Robin Hood thrown in, to help blow the stink of my Old Man off me. I
+want some friends and backing, so I can do what Dad really wanted to
+do--though he was as much of a rogue as a saint. You listening, Cope?"
+
+Copeland kept his face stony. "Tell me what you want to, and then stop,"
+he said softly.
+
+"Thanks," Brinker answered. "It doesn't matter too much that I can guess
+who killed Pop, and would like to square things. Yeah, a hatchet-faced
+ex-partner who turned pious and legal on the outside, after he got the
+breaks. How old is that story, I wonder?... It doesn't even rile me
+terribly, knowing that Dad wasn't all crook, knowing he _believed_ his
+idea was good for everybody, and was trying to get funds to put it
+across."
+
+Brinker sighed and went on: "The idea is the _important_ thing, Cope. A
+place with trees and flowers, a city, maybe--an antidote for the Moon's
+desolation. Anyone here feels the need in his bones and nerves. But it
+would take more air and water than could ever be imported, or drawn from
+the lunar crust. You wouldn't know it on the dead surface, but two
+hundred miles deep in the Moon there's still molten lava, plentiful
+water in the form of steam, volcanic carbon-dioxide gas--the makings of
+oxygen. There's nitrogen, too.
+
+"How to reach that stuff is the question. Drills break under the
+pressure of depth at a tenth of the distance. Pop's idea involved
+Brulow's Comet, which will be coming back sunward from far space in
+three years. Imagine--a comet! It could be dangerous, too; nobody could
+ever get permission for an attempt."
+
+Brinker paused again. Copeland and he were plodding through a jagged
+valley. The stars were merciless pinpoints, the silence brittle and
+grating.
+
+"But there must be a way of blasting down to those life-giving
+raw-materials, Cope," Brinker continued. "Maybe with atomic explosive.
+Experiments call for funds and backing. So I save my money, and wish I
+had a head for making it faster. And I look for weak spots in the lunar
+crust with radar. And I try to get people to know I'm around, and to
+like me...."
+
+Copeland realized that what he had just heard could be a line of malarky
+meant to kid a yokel, or a bid to get him involved in something. But he
+found himself kind of falling for the yarn. More than ever he suspected
+that folks were wrong about Jess Brinker; his warning instincts were
+being lulled to sleep.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Month-long lunar days passed, while the two men ranged over a segment of
+the hidden hemisphere. They trod plains and crater-walls unsullied by
+human feet before; they took photographs to be sold to the Lunar
+Topographical Commission; they located deposits of radioactive metals,
+which could be registered for investigation by an assaying party, and
+for possible royalties. Periodically they visited scattered supply
+stations, and then set out once more.
+
+Such a life had its poisons even for Brinker and Copeland, who were
+braced for meeting the unknown and the strange.
+
+Living in space suits for weeks at a time; smelling their own unwashed
+bodies; slipping an arm out of a heavy sleeve to draw food through a
+little airlock in their armor's chestplate; knowing, in spite of
+effective insulation, that the heat of day exceeded the boiling point of
+water, and that the cold of the protracted night, when usually they
+continued their explorations with the aid of ato-lamps, hovered at the
+brink of absolute zero--all those things had a harsh effect on
+nervous-systems.
+
+They found two human corpses. One had been crushed in a long fall, his
+spacesuit ripped open; he was a blackened mummy. The other was a
+freckled youth, coffined in his armor. Failure of its air-rejuvenator
+unit had caused asphyxia. What you did for guys like this was collect
+their credentials for shipment home.
+
+Copeland also found a Martian--inside its transparent version of a
+spacesuit, for the ancient Moon had been much the same as now. The being
+was dead, of course. Its brain-case had been a sac; its tentacles were
+like a snarl of age-hardened leather thongs.
+
+Lying near it was an even greater rarity--the remains of a different
+sort of monster from the planet that had been literally exploded
+in a war with Mars, to form the countless fragments that were the
+asteroids. That much of remote history was already known from the
+research-expeditions that had gone out to the Red Planet, and beyond.
+
+The queer, advanced equipment of these two beings from two small,
+swift-cooling worlds--which had borne life early, and whose cultures had
+rivalled briefly for dominance of the solar system until they had wiped
+each other out those fifty million years ago--lay scattered near them.
+It was still as bright and new as yesterday, preserved by the Moon's
+vacuum: Cameras, weapons, instruments--rich loot, now, to be sold to
+labs that sought to add the technology of other minds to human
+knowledge.
+
+For a year, things went well. The names, BRINKER and COPELAND,
+footprinted into the lunar dust, helped build the new reputation that
+Brinker wanted. Copeland and he were a hard-working team; they covered
+more ground than any other Moon explorers.
+
+The fights that Brinker got into with other toughs at the various supply
+stations, and never lost, added to the legend--that old Tom's son was
+savage and dangerous, but with a gentler side. For instance he once
+carried a crazed Moon-tramp, whom Copeland was too slight to have
+handled for a minute, fifty miles on his back to a station. Oh,
+sure--the stunt could be pure ballyhoo, not charity. But Copeland knew
+that more and more people had begun to admire his buddy.
+
+Brinker never found a weak spot in the lunar crust. "It's always about
+two hundred miles deep, Cope," he said. "Lots thicker than Earth's
+shell, because the Moon, being smaller, cooled more. But don't worry;
+nothing is impossible. Soon I'll have enough money to make minor tests.
+And maybe enough friends for serious support."
+
+Yeah--maybe it was all just a brain-bubble. But Copeland had seen enough
+of desolation to grind the spirit of the Brinker idea into his
+bones--even if he didn't think it was quite practical.
+
+"I'll throw my dough in with yours, Jess," he said.
+
+Their named bootprints helped build their fame as explorers; but there
+was a flaw and an invitation here which they both must have
+realized--and still faced as a calculated risk.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A lunar day later, they were plodding through the Fenwick mountains on
+the far hemisphere, when streams of bullets made lava chips fly.
+
+As they flopped prone in the dust, a scratchy voice chuckled: "Hello,
+Brinker. Maybe you and your pal want my bunch to escort you back to
+Tycho Station. We might as well have the reward. Robbery of a minerals
+caravan and three killings, they say. It's terrible how you scatter your
+tracks around...."
+
+Brinker grasped Copeland's wrist to form a sound-channel, so that they
+could converse without using their radiophones. "That was Krell
+talking," he said. "Dad's old partner."
+
+Luckily, it was not many hours to sunset. The mountain ridges, slanting
+up to the peaks, cast inky shadows that could hide anything. Brinker was
+canny; while more bullets spurted, he led a dash back to a ridge-shadow
+that went clear to the range-crest. Even with bulky packs, climbing was
+a lot faster than on Earth, where things weigh six times as much.
+
+So they got away, over the mountains. The black night of the far side of
+the Moon, where Earth never shines, hid them.
+
+"Making boot-soles with our names on them," Brinker growled bitterly,
+using the radiophone at reduced range. "The crudest kind of frameup."
+
+"Your Krell is quite a man," Copeland stated.
+
+"He _could_ have arranged all of it--sure," Brinker answered. "He knows
+I suspect that he finished Pop, so I'm dangerous to him. He might hate
+me, too, as part of my Old Man--sort of ... Whatever it was he got sore
+about, originally--money or principle, no doubt ... Besides, I don't
+think he wants the Moon to be a little more livable. It would encourage
+too many colonists to come, increase metals production, spoil prices,
+cheapen his claims. He's a corny man, with all the corny reasons ...
+
+"He, and some of his guys, could have robbed and killed and left
+footprints like ours. But any other lugs, seeking someone else to blame
+for their crimes, could have done all that. If that is so, Krell has got
+me even _legally_--without blame to himself."
+
+"Footprints!" Copeland snapped. "They're so obviously a frame that it's
+silly; anyone could see that! Another thing--maybe Krell was kidding,
+scaring us by saying that we are wanted. Tell you what, Jess: In any
+case I won't seem as guilty as you; I'll go back alone to Tycho Station,
+and clear us both."
+
+"You're an optimist, ain't you?" Brinker laughed. "Krell wasn't kidding;
+and in a rough place like the Moon, justice jumps to conclusions and
+gets mean, fast. Sure, the purpose of the footprints is obvious. But
+I've been fighting uphill against my Old Man's reputation for a long
+time. Who's gonna say I haven't backslid? What I want to accomplish is
+tough enough with everything in my favor."
+
+Brinker's voice was now a sinister rumble with a quiver in it. Arne
+Copeland turned wary again; he had never lost entirely the deepseated
+notion that Brinker might cause him misfortune.
+
+"So now what?" he demanded softly, flashing his ato-light beam against
+Brinker's face-window, so that he could see his expression. Copeland
+meant to forestall danger aggressively.
+
+But as the darkness between them was swept aside, he also saw the muzzle
+of Brinker's pistol levelled at him. The bigger man's grin was lopsided.
+"I'd give you my neck, Cope," he rumbled. "But I'd give both our necks
+for you-know-what. Now, because that's all there's left, I'm gonna try
+it Pop's crazy way. You're gonna help. If you and I can last through a
+couple of years of _real_ silence and solitude, it might have a chance.
+I got a ship hidden. Give me your gun. Easy! If you think I wouldn't
+shoot, you're a fool. Now I'll wire one of your wrists to mine; we've
+got a long march ahead."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Some march it was! Copeland was fiercely independent. The warnings about
+Brinker had gone to waste; so had his own wariness. Bitterness made him
+savage. The harshness of the Moon still ached in his guts--he wanted the
+steam and gases of its interior tapped and used, yes--but by some
+reasonable means. Jess Brinker must be truly Moon-balmy, now.
+Desolation-nuts. Wild for the sight of growing things. Else how could he
+think seriously of using Brulow's Comet? Was it hard to guess how?
+Copeland knew that he and Brinker had courage, and willingness to work
+for a sound purpose. But to trade long effort and hardship in a
+proposition that courted suicide, even in its probable failure--and wide
+destruction if it managed to be successful--was worse than folly.
+
+So, when these meanings became clear in his mind, he wrestled Brinker at
+every turn. Twice he almost won. He argued and cursed, getting nowhere.
+He defied Brinker to shoot him. The big man didn't do that. But at last
+Brinker jabbed a hypodermic needle--part of the regulation medical
+kit--through the flexible rubberized fabric of the elbow-joint of
+Copeland's spacesuit, and into his arm.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Many hours later, and many miles farther into the mountainous country,
+Copeland awoke in a cavern with glassy walls, illuminated by Brinker's
+ato-light. Brinker stood near where he lay. He seemed just grimly
+good-humored.
+
+"This is an old Martian supply depot, Cope," he offered. "I found it
+before I knew you, and I kept it in reserve for possible trouble, like
+now. I knew I could convert its contents to considerable money at any
+time. So it was like a bank-account, and a last resort, too. There's
+even a small Martian spaceship; only three others have ever been found,
+intact. I also cached some Earthly instruments here. You can bet I
+didn't leave _any_ tracks for miles around."
+
+Copeland's gaze caught the errie gleam of the strange little craft. He
+saw the stacks of oddly-made boxes and bales. His hackles rose as he
+thought of a senseless plunge into unplumbed distance.
+
+"Unwire my hands, Jess!" he coaxed again, trying to control fury. "Get
+wise! Damn you--you're more dangerous as an altruist than any crook
+could be!"
+
+Brinker's laugh was sharp, but his eyes held real apology. "Want to help
+me ready and load the ship?" he said almost mildly. "No--I guess not;
+you aren't quite in a cooperative frame of mind, yet. I'll need you
+later. Sorry, but you're the only guy around, Cope."
+
+Brinker blasted queer bulkheads out of the ship, in order to make it
+habitable for humans. The exit of the cavern had been masked with
+debris, but now he cleared it. He tossed Copeland aboard and took off
+into the lunar night.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The vast journey lasted for months. Once Brinker said to his sullen, and
+again partially-drugged, captive: "Maybe in two years, if we're very
+lucky, we'll be back."
+
+Hurtling outward, they passed the orbits of Mars, the asteroids,
+Jupiter, and Saturn. There, with Earth-made instruments, Brinker located
+what he sought: Brulow's Comet.
+
+So far from the sun, where the fluorescence-inducing radiations were
+thinned almost to nothing, it glowed hardly at all. And it had almost no
+tail; it was only a gigantic, tenuous ghost, with a core of stone and
+magnetic iron fragments.
+
+Still dazed, Copeland thought about comets. Wanderers, following
+elongated orbits that loop tight around the sun at one end and plumb the
+depths of space at the other. Of all large forms moving through the
+void, they were the least dense. In coma and tail, they were only
+intensely rarefied and electrified gas. The great enigma about them was
+that things so deficient in mass and gravity could hold onto even that
+much atmosphere for long. Perhaps new gases were baked out of the
+meteoric core, each time a comet was close to the sun; maybe some of
+them even renewed their atmosphere periodically, by capturing a little
+of the tenuous substance of the solar corona, during their very near
+approaches to it.
+
+Brulow's Comet was on the sunward swing, now, gaining speed under solar
+gravitation; but it still had a long ways to go. Brinker guided the ship
+down through its coma and toward its lazily-rotating nucleus, where
+thousands of fragments of iron and rock swirled around their common
+center of gravity.
+
+The chunks clattered against the craft's metal hull, but did no damage
+at their low speed. Brinker brought the ship to rest at the center of
+the nucleus, where there was one solid mass of material a hundred yards
+in diameter.
+
+"Well, we're here, Cope," Brinker said grimly. "We don't have to work
+right away--if you don't want to. We've got too much time."
+
+Those two years looming ahead were the worst. If the Moon had been
+harsh, it was nothing to this eerie place. The heart of this small comet
+was illumined by faint, shifting phosphorescence, ranging from blue and
+tarnished silver to delicate if poisonous pink. Perhaps the cause was
+the same as that of the terrestrial aurora. The silence here was that of
+space; but the swirling motion of the nucleus suggested a continuous
+maddening rustle to Copeland.
+
+He had to yield to Brinker's wishes. Toil might divert him some, keep
+him from feeling the tension of time and strangeness so much.
+
+"Okay, Brinker," he said. "You win. Brulow's Comet is headed for a close
+approach to the Earth-Moon system. So you want to be spectacular, and
+shift it a little from its orbit--so that it will hit the Moon and maybe
+break its crust. Was that so hard to figure? That sounds pretty big,
+doesn't it? But I'll humor you. Let's see how far we get ... Since we're
+here." His sarcasm was tired.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+As a preliminary, they cut a cavern in the central mass of the nucleus
+with Martian blasters, and fitted it with a crude airlock. The cavern
+would be better to live in than the interior of a ship meant for alien
+beings. They moved Martian apparatus and supplies into it:
+Air-rejuvenators, moisture-reclaimers, cylinders of oxygen and water,
+and containers of nourishment--all millions of years old.
+
+Their remaining supply of Earthly food in their packs was now very
+short. It was weird--eating what had been preserved so long ago, on
+another world, for beings just barely close enough to human for their
+food to be edible. Gelatins, sectional fragments of vegetation, and what
+might have been muscle-tissue. Copeland and Brinker both gagged often.
+It wasn't the bland, oily taste so much, but the idea....
+
+Some of it, Copeland decided, was not native Martian. It was more like
+terrestrial fish. And slabs of coarse meat might have been flesh of the
+last dinosaurs! Martians surely must have visited Earth briefly, though
+evidence there had long since weathered away.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+While the still-distant sun sent thin light into the comet, Brinker and
+Copeland removed the propulsion-tubes from the ship and welded them to
+the central chunk of the nucleus. They had a number of other spare
+jet-tubes. These they fastened to lesser masses.
+
+Whenever, in the slow swirling of the nucleus, tubes pointed in the
+calculated proper direction at right angles to the comet's course, they
+were fired in long bursts. Thus, slowly, like a perfectly-balanced bank
+vault door moved by a finger, the mass of the comet--slight by volume,
+but still measuring many thousands of tons--was deflected in the
+opposite direction. Astrogation-instruments showed the shift. Copeland
+had expected such coarse deflection to be possible; still, it startled
+him--this was the moving of a celestial body!
+
+"Just a little--for now, Cope," Brinker said. "We'll leave the fine
+aiming for later. Meanwhile we've got to pass the time, stay as well as
+we can, and keep our heads on straight."
+
+Sure--straight! If Brinker hadn't turned foolish before they had come,
+they wouldn't be out here at all. In a month they were already thinning
+down from malnutrition and strain. At first, thinking coldly, Copeland
+was sure they'd wilt and die long before they got near the Moon.
+
+Then, as they managed to steady themselves some by the diversions of
+playing cards, and studying the intricacies of Martian equipment, he
+began to fear once more that Brinker might succeed in his efforts--but
+fail terribly in result.
+
+Many times Copeland went over the same arguments, struggling to speak
+calmly, and without anger: "I wonder if you realize it, Brinker--with
+enough velocity one large meteor carries more energy than a fission
+bomb. A whole comet would affect thousands of square miles of the lunar
+surface, at least. Smash equipment, kill men. And if the comet happened
+to miss the Moon and hit Earth--"
+
+Sometimes Brinker's expression became almost fearful, as at an enormity.
+But then he'd turn stubborn and grin. "There's plenty of room to avoid
+hitting the Earth," he'd say. "On the Moon, astronomers will warn of the
+shifted orbit of Brulow's Comet in plenty of time for everybody to get
+out of danger. Most of what we've got to worry about now, is our lives,
+or jail ..."
+
+A moment later, as like as not, they'd be slamming at each other with
+fists. Copeland found it hard to contain his fury for the man who had
+brought him such trouble, and--without intent--was so determined to
+extend it to many others.
+
+Brinker kept winning the scraps. But Copeland's ten-year age-advantage
+meant something when it came to enduring hardship and partial-starvation
+over a long period. They didn't weaken equally.
+
+This levelling of forces was one thing that Copeland waited for. Another
+was that when Brulow's Comet was found to be off course, a ship might be
+sent to investigate. He never mentioned it, certainly; but once Brinker
+said: "I'm ready for what you're thinking, Cope. I've got weapons."
+
+By then they spent much of their time in torpid sleep.
+
+Another difficulty was that it was getting harder to keep one's mind
+consistently on the same track. Space, tribulation, and the months, were
+having their blurring effect.
+
+Often, Copeland spent many hours in wistful reverie about his girl,
+Frances, in Iowa. Sometimes he hated all people--on Earth, Moon, and
+everyhere, and didn't care what happened to them. On other occasions
+Brinker's basic desire to lessen the desolation of the lunar scene
+looked supremely good to him--as of course it always had, in principle.
+Then, briefly and perhaps madly, he was Brinker's pal, instead of
+yearning to beat him to a pulp.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Somehow, twenty months crept by, and the first spaceship hove
+inquisitively close to Brulow's Comet. A shadow of his former self,
+Brinker crept out of the cavern to man his weapons. But like a famished
+beast seeking prey, Copeland followed him.
+
+His victory, now, was almost easy. Then all he had to do was wait to be
+picked up; the ship was coming nearer. Through the now much-brightened
+glow of the comet, it had ceased to be a planetlike speck reflecting
+sunlight; and showed its actual form.
+
+Confusion whirled in Copeland's head; hunger gnawed in him. Yet he
+looked down at Brinker--poor Brinker, beaten unconscious inside his
+spacesuit. Brinker had tried to fight lifeless dreariness. Copeland,
+weak of body and fogged of mind, was now close to maudlin tears.
+Dreariness was the enemy--here as elsewhere. He tried to think; his
+stubborn nature mixed itself with splinters of reason, and seemed to
+make sense.
+
+His twenty months of suffering out here had to be used--mean
+something--didn't it? It couldn't be just a futile blank. You had to
+follow a thing started through to the end, didn't you? Brinker wanted to
+improve the Moon, which certainly needed that. Okay--finish the job that
+had gone so far. Damn desolation everywhere! Fight it! Smash it! Sudden
+rage made Copeland's thin blood pound. Dimly he realized that he was
+driven by the same dreariness-disease that motivated Brinker. So what?
+Who cared about smashed lunar equipment, after all. And beside
+experience, prison would be paradise.
+
+Copeland fired a Martian rocket-launcher, aiming behind the ship. He saw
+the blaze of atomic fission. Jets flaming, the craft fled.
+
+In his phones he heard a voice that he remembered: "That you, Brinker?
+Trying your father's trick, eh? Idiot! You'll kill yourself, or be
+executed. And now you even shoot!"
+
+Fury at Krell clinched Copeland's decision. He did not answer him. But
+when Brinker woke up he said savagely, without friendship or
+forgiveness, yet with cooperation: "We're on the same side, now. Let's
+aim Brulow's Comet."
+
+Concentrating was hard, but they had their instruments and calculators.
+Velocity, position, and course of both comet and Moon had to be
+coordinated to make them arrive in the same place at the same moment. It
+was a problem in astrogation, but a comet was not as easily directed as
+a space ship. Copeland had once thought that the necessary fine guiding
+couldn't be done. The jet-system they had rigged in that inconveniently
+whirling nucleus was crude.
+
+But one thing was in their favor; they had ample time. They could adjust
+their course with the jets, check with instruments, and re-adjust--again
+and again. Copeland found himself doing the vital part of the job; he
+was better at math than Brinker.
+
+They still had plenty of Martian food left--for what it was worth to
+human insides. Perhaps unified purpose and action brightened their
+outlook a little, helping their bodies. They could never work very
+long--even in the almost total absence of gravity. But--at least--their
+weakness wasn't increasing now.
+
+During those last four months they drove several ships away. Earth and
+Moon swelled to spheres, ahead. Brulow's Comet lengthened its tail under
+increased solar light-pressure. Intensified radiation made its shifting
+colors glorious.
+
+Brinker and Copeland lined their gigantic missile up on its target as
+perfectly as they could. Fifty hours before the crash was due, they
+smashed most of the jets. The remaining ones they tried, feebly, to
+refit into their ship, meaning thus to escape.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Three Space Patrol craft showed up, and they had to man their weapons.
+Copeland hated to be an outlaw; but now he could not see effort brought
+to nothing. Brinker and he had survived so far, accomplishing much--far
+better results than he had expected; it made him surer that their
+purpose was generally sound.
+
+More missiles were fired carefully--not to do damage, but to discourage
+the intruders; the latter were held at bay for another twelve hours.
+Copeland and Brinker left radio commands and threats unanswered, so it
+was hard for their opponents to get a fix on their position in the
+whirling nucleus.
+
+Explosions blazed around them, but never very close. Masses of iron and
+stone were shattered and half vaporized, cooling subsequently to fine
+dust. The nucleus of Brulow's Comet expanded a bit under the battering
+that went on within it.
+
+At an opportune moment, Copeland and Brinker clung to one of their
+jet-tubes and, gunning it very lightly, rode it from the central
+core-mass of the nucleus to a lesser meteor, and hid in a cleft. A
+dust-poll had concealed their change of position. And now, with so many
+other large meteors around them, they would be almost impossible to
+find.
+
+They glimpsed the Patrol craft invading the heart of the comet. Men
+poured forth, struggling to set up jets in the hope of still deflecting
+this juggernaut from the Moon. But the comet was already much too close;
+before the setting-up was half completed it had to be abandoned. Still,
+the ships remained almost to the last.
+
+Copeland wondered tensely if they'd ever go. His withered palms
+perspired.
+
+"We could still yell for help--have them take us off," Brinker suggested
+when they had left. He spoke by sound-channel contact.
+
+The Moon loomed huge and ugly ahead. Copeland gave it a scared glance,
+and then laughed grimly. "Ironic, that would be," he snapped, "No--we've
+got this jet to ride, and we're still at liberty."
+
+From space, lashed to the flaming propulsion tube, they saw the crash
+happen. It was a terrific spectacle. Copeland's hopes now had jagged
+cracks of worry. The comet seemed to move slowly, its coma flattening
+over the Moon's spaceward hemisphere. There were blinding flashes as the
+chunks of its nucleus bit into the lunar crust, their energy of velocity
+converting largely to heat. Then dust masked the region of impact. The
+comet's tail collapsed over the Moon like a crumbling tower.
+
+Copeland gulped. He saw that Brinker had gone limp--fainted. Weakness
+was enough to cause that; but the fact of a plan carried out had a shock
+in it, too.
+
+Copeland worked the jury-rigged controls of the jet, continuing to
+decelerate. At spotty intervals, under the terrible thrust of reducing
+speed, he was unconscious, too.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There was no such thing as picking a landing-spot. Checking velocity
+soon enough, so close to the Moon, took all of the propulsion tube's
+power--so he just followed the comet down. Almost at a stand-still at
+last, balanced on a streamer of flame, he toppled into hot dust Feebly
+he worked to unlash himself from the tube. Brinker, jolted back to
+semi-consciousness, managed to do the same.
+
+Weakened and spent, they could not even lift themselves against the
+slight lunar gravity for a while.
+
+The darkness around them was Stygian. But as more dust settled, the sky
+cleared, and the normal stars of the lunar night blazed out. Their
+attention was drawn in one direction inevitably.
+
+Red-hot lava glowed there, in scattered areas over what was clearly an
+extensive expanse of territory. White vaporous plumes spurted high above
+the ground, and against the sides of new-formed meteor-craters, a white
+layer was collecting.
+
+Copeland staggered erect. "Frost and snow!" he stammered. "From volcanic
+steam! The first frost and snow on the Moon in a billion years! We've
+done it, Brinker! Brulow's Comet really did crack the thick lunar
+crust...."
+
+He heard Brinker's grunt of premature enthusiasm.
+
+The Patrol picked them up hours later, wandering dazedly. They were
+emaciated ghosts of men--almost skeletons in armor. They gave their
+names, but didn't really come to their senses until the prison doctor in
+Tycho Station treated them, and they had slept for a long time.
+
+"Don't worry, fellas. Relax," he said--with fury in his eyes.
+
+Other faces were grim.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+At the speedy trial in Tycho Station, sharp-featured Krell was among
+many who flung accusations.
+
+"In the impact-zone itself--an area a hundred miles across--mining
+installations and machinery of tremendous value were utterly destroyed,"
+he said. "But lesser damage extends to a far wider circle. Thousands of
+claims have been buried in dust, till much of the far lunar hemisphere
+will have to be resurveyed. Luckily, miners and explorers were warned in
+time, and sought safety. But the charge of wholesale vandalism--terrible
+enough--does not stand alone. These men are to be remembered as accused
+robbers and murderers."
+
+In rebuttal, Brinker's defiance was a little uncertain, as if under so
+much blame, he had lost his assurance.
+
+"Men who know the Moon know that its barrenness is poison, and not right
+for people!" he growled. "I tried to change it with Brulow's Comet--when
+I had no success by other means. Anyway, Copeland is blameless. I forced
+him to help me."
+
+Embitted, there was no warmth in Copeland for his older codefendant and
+jinx. Still, even without Brinker's attempt to shield him, he would have
+been loyal.
+
+"During all important parts of mine and Jess Brinker's joint project,"
+he told the court, "I was in full agreement with his purpose."
+
+Their attorney accomplished one considerable victory before these angry
+people. The charge of previous murders and robbery was barred; it was
+admitted that footprints were easy to duplicate, and that the presence
+of some bearing the names of the guilty was unlikely.
+
+Brinker got fifty years in the mine-pits, and Copeland thirty.
+
+"You always figured I might get you in a jam, didn't you, Cope?" Brinker
+said. "I'll keep trying to fix that."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Copeland found nothing to grin about, in a thirty-year sentence. It was
+goodbye wandering, goodbye girls, goodbye everything. He'd get out
+middle-aged, finished, and marked. He might as well stay another twenty
+with Brinker--complete a sour association with him.
+
+Copeland had another recent jolt to brood over. A bunch of old letters
+from his Frances had been delivered to him. His inability to receive or
+answer any of them had brought the worst result. She had married another
+guy, and who could blame her?
+
+Arne Copeland wanted to kill Brinker. Getting desolation-goofy, and
+dragging him into this mess.
+
+But from Brinker's infuriating grin, Copeland caught a hot spark of
+hope, backed by reasoning.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Later, sweating in the penal mine-pits near Tycho Station, Brinker and
+Copeland still heard scraps of news.
+
+Explorers moved back into the region where the comet had split the lunar
+crust. The rising columns of steam and gas were perhaps unspectacular
+phenomena in themselves. But there they were, ready to fill a tremendous
+need. The sleepy internal fires of the Moon were unlikely to be violent.
+Yet they would push vapors up to the surface here perhaps for centuries.
+
+In balancing benefit against transient damage, was it necessary even to
+mention that deeper and richer mineral deposits had been laid bare for
+easy mining by the blast effect of the comet's downfall? All free
+men--good or bad, and of large or small holdings--were set to gain,
+Krell included. But better mines were a side-issue.
+
+The prisoners soon heard how roofs of transparent, flexible plastic,
+brought in bundles like fabric, were being reared over that smashed-up
+region, to trap escaping volcanic vapors. One tentlike structure. Then
+another and another.
+
+Here was ample water from volcanic steam, and vast quantities of
+carbon-dioxide from which ordinary air-rejuvenators could release
+breathable oxygen. Men who had lived so long in the lunar silence and
+barrenness, soon saw that these raw materials of life need not only be
+used locally, but could be piped anywhere.
+
+"Folks have caught on, Cope," Brinker said. "They were a little
+desolation-balmy, too--hence on our side all the time. Now they'll feel
+better about my Old Man. There'll be more than one city, I'll
+bet--clusters of big, plastic air-bubbles, self-sealing against
+meteor-punctures, warmed inside at night by volcanic heat. It won't
+happen all at once, but it'll come. Seeds'll be planted, and houses
+built. Parts of the Moon won't look the same."
+
+Krell's death was part of the turning tide. He was found in Tycho
+Station, head smashed by a boot-sole of metal; it was good that Brinker
+was in prison, because his name was printed into Krell's skull.
+
+Who did it? Neither Brinker nor Copeland cared very much. Some wronged
+stooge of Krell's, no doubt. Let the forces of law figure out the
+details.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Things got really good for Copeland and Brinker after popular demand
+forced their vindication. They were feted, honored, praised, rewarded.
+All Earth knew of them, and feminine colonists arriving as part of a new
+phase of the Moon's development, shined up to them as heroes.
+
+It is not to be said that they didn't enjoy the advantages of fame.
+Brinker said more than once: "Forget your Frances, Cope. Problems are
+easy, these days."
+
+The time came when Copeland growled in answer: "Sure--too easy. Having a
+lot of pals after the need is gone. No--I'm not criticizing. Most folks
+are swell. But I'd like to make friends and maybe find love a little
+more naturally. I thought I'd stay on the Moon; now I think I'll shove
+off for Mars. People are going there; whole towns are being built, I
+understand. And there's plenty of room for a lunar tramp, with a
+prison-record, to get lost ..."
+
+Copeland chuckled at the end. His vagabond blood was singing. He was
+also pitching a come-on at Brinker, for he'd seen him with some letters
+while they were prisoners. Copeland had glimpsed the name and address of
+the writer: Dorothy Wells, the big nurse that Brinker had known at Tycho
+Station. She was in Marsport now.
+
+"By gosh--I guess I'll go too, Cope!" Brinker rumbled.
+
+Looking back, Brinker thought it sort of funny that they were pals. He
+laughed.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+ Transcriber Notes:
+
+ This etext was produced by Science Fiction Stories 1953. Extensive
+ research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright on this
+ publication was renewed.
+
+ page 62 original: Many hours later, and may miles farther changed to:
+ Many hours later, and many miles farther
+
+ page 69 no change: Embitted, there was no warmth in Copeland - retained
+ Embitted
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Comet's Burial, by Raymond Zinke Gallun
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