Rick grinned mysteriously. "I may have another surprise for you, Chuck."
"I'm talking to Bruce Hyde and Mike Glider. Bruce, you left the rescue party to spring any traps at Sherrine's apartment. I take it that was for misdirection?"
Bruce said, "Sure. At best we'd get the law looking in the wrong direction. At worst, we had the owner's written permission to be there, and a key. We went in through a window anyway, picked up a few of Sherrine's things--still nothing--walked out the front door and boarded Mike's van and drove north."
"Nobody stopped you?"
"No, but they were following us. I guess we could have stopped, but--"
"I wanted to cross the glacier again," Glider said. He held newsprint from the National Enquirer under his chin, for the camera, under a wide toothy smile. The headline said:
ICE NUDES ORGY ON GLACIER!
Bruce said, "We took the same track as before, with the Angels' death beam toned down a little--"
"How many of you?"
"--So we could--Huh?" Bruce laughed. "No, no, just me and Mike, fully dressed. We crossed to Fargo and went straight to the local TV station--"
"Hide in plain sight," Mike said.
"--and told them about joining the mating rituals of a tribe of naked semi-humans with pale blue skin. Don't look so disappointed, Chuck."
"We all got away clean after the launch. Maybe everyone got an extra day or two because of Moorkith," Glen Bailey said. "You remember how it looked when Phoenix went up?"
Harry Czescu nodded briskly. "I kept thinking, 'Ours always blow up. Ours always blow up.' But it was going smooth as silk--"
"Remember the vapor trail, sprawled all over the sky? They used to call that 'frozen lightning,' the Germans did, I mean. It's in Willy Ley's books," Bailey said. "In the thirties they thought their rockets were going wild--"
"It's just stratospheric winds blowing the vapor trail around," Mike Glider said, sticking his head into camera view. Umber scowled.
"Yeah, but it looks like something spun by a spider on LSD. The Green bigshot cop, Moorkith, he saw the frozen lightning and thought the Phoenix must have crashed. He was searching the desert for Phoenix while the whole gang drove away."
"I missed it all," Ann Hudson said. "I was in New York. I tried to follow it on the news, but how much could I trust? Gary didn't try to call me till he was already in orbit."
"But you're going up this time."
"You bet. God help Gary if he already knows how to mate in free fall. Chuck, I want a copy of this tape to take with me."
"That's why I'm hurrying. I want it finished and copied before the ship takes off again."
"No trouble," C.C. Miller said. "We just drove off. We even got the clubhouse cleared out before the Greens came sniffing. But there are tons of it. If the Angels don't want it, I think we'll just leave it in Grenada."
"You mean it's aboard?"
"Oh, yeah. We sold the bull semen, but we've still got the plastic corn and acorns and honeycomb and powdered chlorine and five cartons of earthworms, and there's a package I don't know what's in it but it wants out BAD…"
"Gordon, nobody spotted you?"
"I could walk, even then," Gordon said. He got out of his deck chair and spread his arms and bowed. His head nearly brushed the floor.
C.C. Miller said, "Today I could hide him on a basketball team."
"What have you been doing since, Gordon?"
"Your viewers, they know. I publish Wind Chill in sections. Now Baen Books, they want it. I can publish because I won't be on Earth."
"You're going up?"
"Sure. Alex say my family ready to skin him if he can't produce me, so I go with Annie. Bring a copy of WindChill, tell everyone--"
There was a sharp sound, loud above the wind, and a sharp crack! "Hold it," Chuck said, and he swung the camera around. "It was--got it."
High in the sky over Grenada, a dot, descending.
"Comes down just like a falling safe, only faster," Chuck said rapidly. "Those rockets should be lighting any… any minute now… it's broad daylight so they won't be too conspicuous… shit fire, will you light?"
"Phoenix is slowing," Gordon said. "Rockets must be lit. See? Slowing."
"Yeah. Sorry. Ni… ice."
The cone had settled behind trees.
Umber laughed. "Your faces! The rocket was too far away to show much, but you watching it land, that's something. Okay, Gordon, you published autobiographical material, but there's a novel, too, isn't there?"
"I am working on it. Should finish, how do you say it, Real Soon Now."
"He did a verse for the song, too," Harry said.
"Song?"
"Jenny's song," Harry said. He took out his guitar.
The others gathered around, fifty fans on the deck of a sailing ship, staring across to an island where a spaceship had landed.
"The Angels fell. And rose again," someone said. "And by God we did it!"
Chuck was still filming. Harry began to play. Jenny sang, and the others joined in.
"Wanted fan in Luna City, wanted fan on Dune and Down,
Wanted fan at Ophiuchus, wanted fan in Dydee-town.
All across the sky they want me, am I flattered?
Yes I am!
If I could just reach orbit, then I'd be a wanted fan.
"Wanted fan for mining coal and wanted fan for drilling oil,
I went very fast through Portland, hunted hard like Gully Foyle.
Built reactors in Seattle against every man's advice,
Couldn't do that in Alaska, Fonda says it isn't nice.
"Wanted fan for plain sedition, like the singing of this tune.
If NASA hadn't failed us we’d have cities on the moon.
If it weren't for fucking NASA we'd at least have walked on Mars.
And if I can't make orbit, then I'll never reach the stars.
"Nader's Raiders want my freedom, OSHA wants my scalp and hair,
If I'm wanted in Wisconsin, be damned sure I won't be there!
If the E-P-A still wants me, I'll avoid them if I can.
They're tearing down the cities, so I'll be a wanted fan!
"Wanted fan on Chthon and Sparta and the Hub's ten million stars,
Wanted fan for singing silly in a thousand spaceport bars.
If it's what we really want, we'll build a starship when we can;
If I could just make orbit then I'd be a wanted fan.
"Wanted fan for building spacecraft, wanted fan for dipping air,
Sending microwave transmissions, building habitats up there.
Oh the glacier got us last time, next time we'll try to land!
And when the Ice is conquered, it'll be by wanted fans.
And when the stars are conquered, it'll be by wanted fans!"
The End
Acknowledgments and Other Thuktunthp
Fallen Angels is sold as science fiction, but one could quibble with that: while the book is clearly fiction, the science is it real.
Item: Although the Phoenix spaceship doesn't exist yet, it or something like it could be built today for between $50 and $200 million dollars.
Once built, Phoenix would operate the way airplanes do. It takes about the same amount of fuel to fly a pound from the United States to Australia as it does to put that pound in orbit. Airlines operate at about three times fuel costs, including depreciation on the aircraft. Phoenix wouldn't run much more. The operational costs of any system depend on how much you use, it but given the low-cost regime Phoenix works in, it should be used a lot.