Blackworld as a reference-book entry was hardly an
eyebrow-raiser. Nothing more than a note to make people wonder why
anyone would live there.
It was a hell of a world. Even the natives sometimes wondered
why anybody lived there.
Or so Frog thought as he cursed heaven and hell and slammed his
portside tracks into reverse.
“Goddamned heat erosion in the friggin’ Whitlandsund
now,” he muttered, and with his free hand returned the
gesture of the obelisk/landmark he called Big Dick.
He had become lax. He had been daydreaming down a familiar
route. He had aligned Big Dick wrong and drifted into terrain not
recharted since last the sun had shoved a blazing finger into the
pass.
Luckily, he had been in no hurry. The first sliding crunch under
the starboard lead track had alerted him. Quick braking and a
little rocking pulled the tractor out.
He heaved a sigh of relief.
There wasn’t much real danger this side of the Edge of the
World. Other tractors could reach him in the darkness.
He was sweating anyway. For him it did not matter where the
accident happened. His finances allowed no margin for error. One
screw-up and he was as good as dead.
There was no excuse for what had happened, Brightside or Dark.
He was angry. “You don’t get old making mistakes,
idiot,” he snarled at the image reflected in the visual plate
in front of him.
Frog was old. Nobody knew just how old, and he wasn’t
telling, but there were men in Edgeward who had heard him spin
tavern tales of his father’s adventures with the
Devil’s Guard, and the Guard had folded a century ago, right
after the Ulantonid War. The conservatives figured him for his
early seventies. He had been the town character for as long as
anyone could remember.
Frog was the last of a breed that had begun disappearing when
postwar resumption of commerce had created a huge demand for
Blackworld metals. The need for efficiency had made the appearance
of big exploitation corporation inevitable. Frog was Edgeward
City’s only surviving independent prospector.
In the old days, while the Blakes had been on the rise, he had
faced more danger in Edgeward itself than he had Brightside. The
consolidation of Blake Mining and Metals had not been a gentle
process. Now his competition was so insubstantial that the
Corporation ignored it. Blake helped keep him rolling, in fact, the
way historical societies keep old homes standing. He was a piece of
yesterday to show off to out-of-towners.
Frog did not care. He just lived on, cursing everyone in general
and Blake in particular, and kept doing what he knew best.
He was the finest tractor hog ever to work the Shadowline. And
they damned well knew it.
Still, making it as a loner in a corporate age was difficult and
dangerous. Blake had long since squatted on every easily reached
pool and deposit Brightside. To make his hauls Frog had to do a
long run up the Shadowline, three days or more out, then make
little exploratory dashes into sunlight till he found something
worthwhile. He would fill his tanks, turn around, and claw his way
back home. Usually he brought in just enough to finance
maintenance, a little beer, and his next trip out.
If asked he could not have explained why he went on. Life just
seemed to pull him along, a ritual of repetitive days and nights
that at least afforded him the security of null-change.
Frog eased around the heat erosion on ground that had never been
out of shadow, moved a few kilometers forward, then turned into a
side canyon where Brightside gases collected and froze into snows.
He met an outbound Blake convoy. They greeted him with flashing
running lights. He responded, and with no real feeling muttered,
“Sons of bitches.”
They were just tractor hogs themselves. They did not make
policy.
He had to hand load the snow he would ionize in his
heat-exchange system. He had to save credit where he could. So what
if Corporation tractors used automatic loaders? He had his freedom.
He had that little extra credit at boozing time. A loading fee
would have creamed it off his narrow profit margin.
When he finished shoveling he decided to power down and sleep.
He was not as young as he used to be. He could not do the Thunder
Mountains and the sprints to the Shadowline in one haul
anymore.
Day was a fiction Blackworlders adjusted to their personal
rhythms. Frog’s came quickly. He seldom wasted time meeting
the demands of his flesh. He wanted that time to meet the demands
of his soul, though he could not identify them as such. He knew
when he was content. He knew when he was not. Getting things
accomplished led to the former. Discontent and impatience arose
when he had to waste time sleeping or eating. Or when he had to
deal with other people.
He was a born misanthrope. He knew few people that he liked.
Most were selfish, rude, and boring. That he might fit a similar
mold himself he accepted. He did others the courtesy of not
intruding on their lives.
In truth, though he could admit it only in the dark hours, when
he could not sleep, he was frightened of people. He simply did not
know how to relate.
Women terrified him. He did not comprehend them at all. But no
matter. He was what he was, was too old to change, and was content
with himself more often than not. To have made an accommodation
with the universe, no matter how bizarre, seemed a worthy
accomplishment.
His rig was small and antiquated. It was a flat, jointed
monstrosity two hundred meters long. Every working arm, sensor
housing, antenna, and field-projector grid had a mirror finish.
There were scores. They made the machine look like some huge,
fantastically complicated alien millipede. It was divided into
articulated sections, each of which had its own engines. Power and
control came from Frog’s command section. All but that
command unit were transport and working slaves that could be
abandoned if necessary.
Once, Frog had been forced to drop a slave. His computer had
erred. It had not kept the tracks of his tail slave locked into the
path of those ahead. He had howled and cursed like a man who had
just lost his first-born baby.
The abandoned section was now a slag-heap landmark far out the
Shadowline. Blake respected it as the tacit benchmark delineating
the frontier between its own and Frog’s territory. Frog made
a point of looking it over every trip out.
No dropped slave lasted long Brightside. That old devil sun
rendered them down quick. He studied his lost child to remind
himself what became of the careless.
His rig had been designed to operate in sustained temperatures
which often exceeded 2000° K. Its cooling systems were the
most ingenious ever devised. A thick skin of flexible
molybdenum/ceramic sponge mounted on a honeycomb-network radiator
frame of molybdenum-base alloy shielded the crawler’s guts.
High-pressure coolants circulated through the skin sponge.
Over the mirrored surface of the skin, when the crawler hit
daylight, would lie the first line of protection, the magnetic
screens. Ionized gases would circulate beneath them. A molecular
sorter would vent a thin stream of the highest energy particles
aft. The solar wind would blow the ions over Darkside where they
would freeze out and maybe someday ride a crawler Brightside once
again.
A crawler in sunlight, when viewed from sunward through the
proper filters, looked like a long, low, coruscating comet. The rig
itself remained completely concealed by its gaseous chrysalis.
The magnetic screens not only contained the ion shell, they
deflected the gouts of charged particles erupting from
Blackworld’s pre-nova sun.
All that technology and still a tractor got godawful hot inside.
Tractor hogs had to encase themselves in life-support suits as
bulky and cumbersome as man’s first primitive spacesuits.
Frog’s heat-exchange systems were energy-expensive,
powerful, and supremely effective—and still inadequate
against direct sunlight for any extended time. Blackworld’s
star-sun was just too close and overpoweringly hot.
Frog warmed his comm laser. Only high-energy beams could punch
through the solar static. He tripped switches. His screens and heat
evacuators powered up. His companion of decades grumbled and
gurgled to itself. It was a soothing mix, a homey vibration, the
wakening from sleep of an old friend. He felt better when it
surrounded him.
In his crawler he was alive, he was real, as much a man as
anyone on Blackworld. More. He had beaten Brightside more often
than any five men alive.
A finger stabbed the comm board. His beam caressed a peak in the
Shadowline, locked on an automatic transponder. “This
here’s Frog. I’m at the jump-off. Give me a shade
crossing, you plastic bastards.” He chuckled.
Signals pulsed along laser beams. Somewhere a machine examined
his credit balance, made a transfer in favor of Blake Mining and
Metals. A green okay flashed across Frog’s comm screen.
“Damned right I be okay,” he muttered.
“Ain’t going to get me that easy.”
The little man would not pay Blake to load his ionization charge
while his old muscles still worked. But he would not skimp on
safety Brightside.
In the old days they had had to make the run from the Edge of
the World to the Shadowline in sunlight. Frog had done it a
thousand times. Then Blake had come up with a way to beat that
strait of devil sun. Frog was not shy about using it. He was cheap
and independent, but not foolhardy.
The tractor idled, grumbling to itself. Frog watched the
sun-seared plain. Slowly, slowly, it darkened. He fed power to his
tracks and cooling systems and eased into the shadow of a dust
cloud being thrown kilometers high by blowers at the Blake
outstation at the foot of the Shadowline. His computer maintained
its communion with the Corporation navigator there, studying
everything other rigs had reported since its last crossing,
continuously reading back data from its own instruments.
The crossing would be a cakewalk. The regular route, highway
hard and smooth with use, was open and safe.
Frog’s little eyes darted. Banks of screens and lights and
gauges surrounded him. He read them as if he were part of the
computer himself.
A few screens showed exterior views in directions away from the
low sun, the light of which was almost unalterable. The rest showed
schematics of information retrieved by laser radar and sonic
sensors in his track units. The big round screen directly before
him represented a view from zenith of his rig and the terrain for a
kilometer around. It was a lively, colorful display. Contour lines
were blue. Inherent heats showed up in shades of red. Metal
deposits came in green, though here, where the deposits were played
out, there was little green to be seen.
The instruments advised him of the health of his slave sections,
his reactor status, his gas stores level, and kept close watch on
his life-support systems.
Frog’s rig was old and relatively simple—yet it was
immensely complex. Corporation rigs carried crews of two or three,
and backup personnel on longer journeys. But there was not a man
alive with whom Frog would have, or could have, stood being sealed
in a crawler.
Once certain his rig would take Brightside this one more time,
Frog indulged in a grumble. “Should have tacked on to a
convoy,” he muttered. “Could have prorated the damned
shade. Only who the hell has time to wait around till Blake decides
to send his suckies out?”
His jointed leviathan grumbled like an earthquake in childbirth.
He put on speed till he reached his maximum twelve kilometers per
hour. The sonics reached out, listening for the return of
ground-sound generated by the crawler’s clawing tracks,
giving the computer a detailed portrait of nearby terrain
conditions. The crossing to the Shadowline was a minimum three-hour
run, and with no atmosphere to hold the shadowing dust aloft every
second of shade cost. He did not dawdle.
It was another eventless crossing. He hit the end of the
Shadowline and instantly messaged Blake to secure shade, then idled
down to rest. “Got away with it again, you old
sumbitch,” he muttered at himself as he leaned back and
closed his eyes.
He had to do some hard thinking about this run.
Blackworld as a reference-book entry was hardly an
eyebrow-raiser. Nothing more than a note to make people wonder why
anyone would live there.
It was a hell of a world. Even the natives sometimes wondered
why anybody lived there.
Or so Frog thought as he cursed heaven and hell and slammed his
portside tracks into reverse.
“Goddamned heat erosion in the friggin’ Whitlandsund
now,” he muttered, and with his free hand returned the
gesture of the obelisk/landmark he called Big Dick.
He had become lax. He had been daydreaming down a familiar
route. He had aligned Big Dick wrong and drifted into terrain not
recharted since last the sun had shoved a blazing finger into the
pass.
Luckily, he had been in no hurry. The first sliding crunch under
the starboard lead track had alerted him. Quick braking and a
little rocking pulled the tractor out.
He heaved a sigh of relief.
There wasn’t much real danger this side of the Edge of the
World. Other tractors could reach him in the darkness.
He was sweating anyway. For him it did not matter where the
accident happened. His finances allowed no margin for error. One
screw-up and he was as good as dead.
There was no excuse for what had happened, Brightside or Dark.
He was angry. “You don’t get old making mistakes,
idiot,” he snarled at the image reflected in the visual plate
in front of him.
Frog was old. Nobody knew just how old, and he wasn’t
telling, but there were men in Edgeward who had heard him spin
tavern tales of his father’s adventures with the
Devil’s Guard, and the Guard had folded a century ago, right
after the Ulantonid War. The conservatives figured him for his
early seventies. He had been the town character for as long as
anyone could remember.
Frog was the last of a breed that had begun disappearing when
postwar resumption of commerce had created a huge demand for
Blackworld metals. The need for efficiency had made the appearance
of big exploitation corporation inevitable. Frog was Edgeward
City’s only surviving independent prospector.
In the old days, while the Blakes had been on the rise, he had
faced more danger in Edgeward itself than he had Brightside. The
consolidation of Blake Mining and Metals had not been a gentle
process. Now his competition was so insubstantial that the
Corporation ignored it. Blake helped keep him rolling, in fact, the
way historical societies keep old homes standing. He was a piece of
yesterday to show off to out-of-towners.
Frog did not care. He just lived on, cursing everyone in general
and Blake in particular, and kept doing what he knew best.
He was the finest tractor hog ever to work the Shadowline. And
they damned well knew it.
Still, making it as a loner in a corporate age was difficult and
dangerous. Blake had long since squatted on every easily reached
pool and deposit Brightside. To make his hauls Frog had to do a
long run up the Shadowline, three days or more out, then make
little exploratory dashes into sunlight till he found something
worthwhile. He would fill his tanks, turn around, and claw his way
back home. Usually he brought in just enough to finance
maintenance, a little beer, and his next trip out.
If asked he could not have explained why he went on. Life just
seemed to pull him along, a ritual of repetitive days and nights
that at least afforded him the security of null-change.
Frog eased around the heat erosion on ground that had never been
out of shadow, moved a few kilometers forward, then turned into a
side canyon where Brightside gases collected and froze into snows.
He met an outbound Blake convoy. They greeted him with flashing
running lights. He responded, and with no real feeling muttered,
“Sons of bitches.”
They were just tractor hogs themselves. They did not make
policy.
He had to hand load the snow he would ionize in his
heat-exchange system. He had to save credit where he could. So what
if Corporation tractors used automatic loaders? He had his freedom.
He had that little extra credit at boozing time. A loading fee
would have creamed it off his narrow profit margin.
When he finished shoveling he decided to power down and sleep.
He was not as young as he used to be. He could not do the Thunder
Mountains and the sprints to the Shadowline in one haul
anymore.
Day was a fiction Blackworlders adjusted to their personal
rhythms. Frog’s came quickly. He seldom wasted time meeting
the demands of his flesh. He wanted that time to meet the demands
of his soul, though he could not identify them as such. He knew
when he was content. He knew when he was not. Getting things
accomplished led to the former. Discontent and impatience arose
when he had to waste time sleeping or eating. Or when he had to
deal with other people.
He was a born misanthrope. He knew few people that he liked.
Most were selfish, rude, and boring. That he might fit a similar
mold himself he accepted. He did others the courtesy of not
intruding on their lives.
In truth, though he could admit it only in the dark hours, when
he could not sleep, he was frightened of people. He simply did not
know how to relate.
Women terrified him. He did not comprehend them at all. But no
matter. He was what he was, was too old to change, and was content
with himself more often than not. To have made an accommodation
with the universe, no matter how bizarre, seemed a worthy
accomplishment.
His rig was small and antiquated. It was a flat, jointed
monstrosity two hundred meters long. Every working arm, sensor
housing, antenna, and field-projector grid had a mirror finish.
There were scores. They made the machine look like some huge,
fantastically complicated alien millipede. It was divided into
articulated sections, each of which had its own engines. Power and
control came from Frog’s command section. All but that
command unit were transport and working slaves that could be
abandoned if necessary.
Once, Frog had been forced to drop a slave. His computer had
erred. It had not kept the tracks of his tail slave locked into the
path of those ahead. He had howled and cursed like a man who had
just lost his first-born baby.
The abandoned section was now a slag-heap landmark far out the
Shadowline. Blake respected it as the tacit benchmark delineating
the frontier between its own and Frog’s territory. Frog made
a point of looking it over every trip out.
No dropped slave lasted long Brightside. That old devil sun
rendered them down quick. He studied his lost child to remind
himself what became of the careless.
His rig had been designed to operate in sustained temperatures
which often exceeded 2000° K. Its cooling systems were the
most ingenious ever devised. A thick skin of flexible
molybdenum/ceramic sponge mounted on a honeycomb-network radiator
frame of molybdenum-base alloy shielded the crawler’s guts.
High-pressure coolants circulated through the skin sponge.
Over the mirrored surface of the skin, when the crawler hit
daylight, would lie the first line of protection, the magnetic
screens. Ionized gases would circulate beneath them. A molecular
sorter would vent a thin stream of the highest energy particles
aft. The solar wind would blow the ions over Darkside where they
would freeze out and maybe someday ride a crawler Brightside once
again.
A crawler in sunlight, when viewed from sunward through the
proper filters, looked like a long, low, coruscating comet. The rig
itself remained completely concealed by its gaseous chrysalis.
The magnetic screens not only contained the ion shell, they
deflected the gouts of charged particles erupting from
Blackworld’s pre-nova sun.
All that technology and still a tractor got godawful hot inside.
Tractor hogs had to encase themselves in life-support suits as
bulky and cumbersome as man’s first primitive spacesuits.
Frog’s heat-exchange systems were energy-expensive,
powerful, and supremely effective—and still inadequate
against direct sunlight for any extended time. Blackworld’s
star-sun was just too close and overpoweringly hot.
Frog warmed his comm laser. Only high-energy beams could punch
through the solar static. He tripped switches. His screens and heat
evacuators powered up. His companion of decades grumbled and
gurgled to itself. It was a soothing mix, a homey vibration, the
wakening from sleep of an old friend. He felt better when it
surrounded him.
In his crawler he was alive, he was real, as much a man as
anyone on Blackworld. More. He had beaten Brightside more often
than any five men alive.
A finger stabbed the comm board. His beam caressed a peak in the
Shadowline, locked on an automatic transponder. “This
here’s Frog. I’m at the jump-off. Give me a shade
crossing, you plastic bastards.” He chuckled.
Signals pulsed along laser beams. Somewhere a machine examined
his credit balance, made a transfer in favor of Blake Mining and
Metals. A green okay flashed across Frog’s comm screen.
“Damned right I be okay,” he muttered.
“Ain’t going to get me that easy.”
The little man would not pay Blake to load his ionization charge
while his old muscles still worked. But he would not skimp on
safety Brightside.
In the old days they had had to make the run from the Edge of
the World to the Shadowline in sunlight. Frog had done it a
thousand times. Then Blake had come up with a way to beat that
strait of devil sun. Frog was not shy about using it. He was cheap
and independent, but not foolhardy.
The tractor idled, grumbling to itself. Frog watched the
sun-seared plain. Slowly, slowly, it darkened. He fed power to his
tracks and cooling systems and eased into the shadow of a dust
cloud being thrown kilometers high by blowers at the Blake
outstation at the foot of the Shadowline. His computer maintained
its communion with the Corporation navigator there, studying
everything other rigs had reported since its last crossing,
continuously reading back data from its own instruments.
The crossing would be a cakewalk. The regular route, highway
hard and smooth with use, was open and safe.
Frog’s little eyes darted. Banks of screens and lights and
gauges surrounded him. He read them as if he were part of the
computer himself.
A few screens showed exterior views in directions away from the
low sun, the light of which was almost unalterable. The rest showed
schematics of information retrieved by laser radar and sonic
sensors in his track units. The big round screen directly before
him represented a view from zenith of his rig and the terrain for a
kilometer around. It was a lively, colorful display. Contour lines
were blue. Inherent heats showed up in shades of red. Metal
deposits came in green, though here, where the deposits were played
out, there was little green to be seen.
The instruments advised him of the health of his slave sections,
his reactor status, his gas stores level, and kept close watch on
his life-support systems.
Frog’s rig was old and relatively simple—yet it was
immensely complex. Corporation rigs carried crews of two or three,
and backup personnel on longer journeys. But there was not a man
alive with whom Frog would have, or could have, stood being sealed
in a crawler.
Once certain his rig would take Brightside this one more time,
Frog indulged in a grumble. “Should have tacked on to a
convoy,” he muttered. “Could have prorated the damned
shade. Only who the hell has time to wait around till Blake decides
to send his suckies out?”
His jointed leviathan grumbled like an earthquake in childbirth.
He put on speed till he reached his maximum twelve kilometers per
hour. The sonics reached out, listening for the return of
ground-sound generated by the crawler’s clawing tracks,
giving the computer a detailed portrait of nearby terrain
conditions. The crossing to the Shadowline was a minimum three-hour
run, and with no atmosphere to hold the shadowing dust aloft every
second of shade cost. He did not dawdle.
It was another eventless crossing. He hit the end of the
Shadowline and instantly messaged Blake to secure shade, then idled
down to rest. “Got away with it again, you old
sumbitch,” he muttered at himself as he leaned back and
closed his eyes.
He had to do some hard thinking about this run.