Part 14 (2/2)

Her mind was not wholly on her words. She'd been frightened for Joe. And he was acutely aware of it, because he felt a peculiar after-effect himself.

”Normal,” he said drily, ”except that he doesn't weigh anything.”

”I've worried about that,” said Sally. ”Sleeping's going to be a big problem.”

”It'll take getting used to,” Joe agreed.

There was a momentary pause. They were simply looking about the great room. Sally stirred uneasily.

”Tell me what you think,” she said. ”You've been in an elevator that started to drop like a plummet. When the Platform is...o...b..ting it'll be like that all the time, only worse. No weight. Joe, if you were in an elevator that seemed to be dropping and dropping and dropping for hours on end--do you think you could go to sleep?”

Joe hadn't thought about it. And he was acutely conscious of Sally, just then, but the idea startled him.

”It might be hard to adjust to,” he admitted.

”It'll be hard to adjust to, awake,” said Sally. ”But getting adjusted to it asleep should be worse. You've waked up from a dream that you're falling?”

”Sure,” said Joe. Then he whistled. ”Oh-oh! I see! You'd drop off to sleep, and you'd be falling. So you'd wake up. Everybody in the Platform will be falling around the Earth in the Platform's...o...b..t! Every time they doze off they'll be falling and they'll wake up!”

He managed to think about it. It was true enough. A man awake could remind himself that he only thought and felt that he was falling, and that there was no danger. But what would happen when he tried to sleep?

Falling is the first fear a human being ever knows. Everybody in the world has at one time waked up gasping from a dream of precipices down which he plunged. It is an inborn terror. And no matter how thoroughly a man might know in his conscious mind that weightlessness was normal in emptiness, his conscious mind would go off duty when he went to sleep. A completely primitive subconscious would take over then, and it would not be satisfied. It might wake him frantically at any sign of dozing until he cracked up from sheer insomnia ... or else let him sleep only when exhaustion produced unconsciousness rather than restful slumber.

”That's a tough one!” he said disturbedly, and noticed that she still showed signs of her recent distress. ”There's not much to be done about it, either!”

”I suggested something,” said Sally, ”and they built it in. I hope it works!” she explained uncomfortably. ”It's a sort of blanket with a top that straps down, and an inflatable underside. When a man wants to sleep, he'll inflate this thing, and it will hold him in his bunk. It won't touch his head, of course, and he can move, but it will press against him gently.”

Joe thought over what Sally had just explained. He noticed that they were quite close together, but he put his mind on her words.

”It'll be like a man swimming?” he asked. ”One can go to sleep floating.

There's no sensation of weight, but there's the feeling of pressure all about. A man might be able to sleep if he felt he were floating. Yes, that's a good idea, Sally! It'll work! A man will think he's floating, rather than falling!”

Sally flushed a little.

”I thought of it another way,” she said awkwardly. ”When we go to sleep, we go way back. We're like babies, with all a baby's fears and needs. It _might_ feel like floating. But--I tried one of those bunks. It feels like--it feels sort of dreamy, as if someone were--holding one quite safe. It feels as if one were a baby and--beautifully secure. But of course I haven't tried it weightless. I just--hope it works.”

As if embarra.s.sed, she turned abruptly and showed him the kitchen. Every pan was covered. The top of the stove was alnico-magnet strips, arranged rather like the top of a magnetic chuck. Pans would cling to it. And the covers had a curious flexible lining which Joe could not understand.

”It's a flexible plastic that's heatproof,” said Sally. ”It inflates and holds the food down to the hot bottom of the pan. They expected the crew to eat ready-prepared food. I said that it would be bad enough to have to drink out of plastic bottles instead of gla.s.ses. They hung one of these stoves upside down, for me, and I cooked bacon and eggs and pancakes with the cover of the pan pointing to the floor. They said the psychological effect would be worth while.”

Joe was stirred. He followed her out of the kitchen and said warmly--the more warmly because these contributions to the s.p.a.ce Platform came on top of a personal anxiety on his own account: ”You must be the first girl in the world who thought about housekeeping in s.p.a.ce!”

”Girls will be going into s.p.a.ce, won't they?” she asked, not looking at him. ”If there are colonies on the other planets, they'll have to. And some day--to the stars....”

She stood quite still, and Joe wanted to do something about her and the world and the way he felt. The interior of the Platform was very silent.

Somewhere far away where the gla.s.s-wool insulation was incomplete, the sound of workmen was audible, but the inner corridors of the Platform were not resonant. They were lined with a material to destroy reminders that this was merely a metal sh.e.l.l, an artificial world that would swim in emptiness. Here and now, Joe and Sally seemed very private and alone, and he felt a sense of urgency.

He looked at her yearningly. Her color was a little higher than usual.

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