“Braunek’s coming back,” someone said and Garamond returned his attention to the aircraft. The pilot had not tried, or had been unable, to line up on the runway but was coming in parallel to it, his ship rising and sinking noticeably as it breasted the wind. Garamond estimated the touchdown point and relaxed slightly as he saw it would be well to the north of the buildings and tents which were clustered around the hulk of the Bissendorf. The plane continued its descent, side-slipping a little but holding fairly well to its course.
“I told you there was nothing to worry about,” Litman said in a reproachful voice.
“You’d better be right.” Garamond kept his eyes on Braunek’s ship. The side-slipping was more noticeable now, but each skid brought the plane a little closer to the centreline of the cleared strip and Garamond hoped that Braunek was good enough at his trade to be doing it on purpose. He knew, however, that there had to come a moment, a precise moment, in every air crash when the spectator on the ground was forced to accept that the pilot had lost his struggle against the law of aerial physics, that a disaster had to occur. For Garamond, the moment came when he saw that the starboard propeller was ceasing to spin. The plane pulled to the right, as though the wing on that side had hit an invisible pylon, and it staggered down the perilous sky towards the hillside. Towards, Garamond suddenly realized, the black rectangle of the delton detector. He was unable to breathe during the final few seconds of flight as the doomed ship, see-sawing its wings, became silhouetted against land instead of sky and then flailed its way through the delton screen. And it was not until the sound of the crash reached him that he was freed from his stasis and began to run.
Braunek’s life was saved by the fact that the lightweight frames of the detector screens served as efficient absorbers of kinetic energy. They had accepted the impact, folding almost gently around the ship, stretching and twisting, and then trailing out behind it like vines. By the time Garamond reached the location of the crash Braunek had been helped out of the wreckage and was sitting on the grass. He was surrounded by technicians who had been working in and had run out of the small hut linked to the screens, and one of them was spraying tissue sealant over a gash on his leg.
“I’m glad you made it,” Garamond said, feeling inadequate. “How do you feel?”
Braunek shook his head. “I’m all right, but everything else is screwed up.” He tried to raise himself from the ground.
Garamond pushed him back. “Don’t move. I want the medics to have a proper look at you. What happened anyway?”
“Starboard wing centre panel dropped off.”
“It just dropped off?”
Braunek nodded. “It took the engine control runs with it, otherwise I could have brought the ship in okay.”
Garamond jumped to his feet “Litman! Find that panel and bring it here. Fast!”
Litman, who was just arriving on the scene, looked exasperated but he turned without a word and ran back down the hillside. Garamond stayed talking with Braunek until a medic arrived to check him over, then he surveyed the ruins of the delton screen. Somewhere in the middle of the wreckage a damaged aircraft engine was still releasing gyromagnetic impulses which sent harmless flickers of detuned energy racing over the metalwork like St Elmo’s fire. Where accidental resonances occurred a feeble motive force was conjured up and the broken struts of the framework twitched like the legs of a dying insect. The destruction looked final to Garamond but he checked with O’Hagan and confirmed that the screen had been rendered useless except as a source of raw materials.
“How long till you have another one operational?”
“A week perhaps,” O’Hagan said. “We’ll go for modular construction this time. That means we could have small areas operational in a couple of days, and we could build up to a useful size before your airplanes are ready to take off.”
“Do that.” Garamond left his Chief Science Officer staring gloomily into the wreckage and went down the hillside to meet the group which had retrieved the lost wing section. The men set the plastic panel down in front of him and stood back without speaking. Garamond ran his gaze over it and saw at once that the two longitudinal edges which should have been ridged with welding overlays were square and clean except for small positioning welds which had broken.
Garamond turned to face Litman. “All right — who was responsible for the welding of this panel, and who was supposed to inspect?”
“It’s hard to say,” Litman replied.
“Hard to say?” “That’s what I said.”
“Then check it out on the work cards.” Garamond spoke with insulting gentleness.
“What work cards?” Litman, suddenly tired of being pushed, turned a red, resentful face up to Garamond’s. “Where have you been, Mister Garamond? Did nobody tell you we’ve only got bits of a workshop left? Did nobody tell you that winter’s coming and we just can’t afford all the time and material that’s going into these flying toys of yours?”
“That isn’t in your area of competence.”
“Of course not!” The redness had spread into Litman’s eyes as he glanced around the gathering crowd. “I’m only a production man. I’m just one of the slobs who has to meet your airy-fairy target dates with no bloody equipment. But there’s something you seem to forget, Mister Garamond. Out here a man who knows how to use his hands is worth twenty Starflight commanders who have nothing left to command.”
“What’ll you do if we decide not to finish your planes?” A low, interested murmur arose from the men behind Litman.
Cliff Napier stepped into the arena. “For a so-called production man,” he said, “you seem to do a lot of work with your mouth, Litman. I suggest that you…”
“It’s all right,” Garamond cut in, placing a restraining hand on Napier’s arm. He raised his voice so that he could be heard by everybody in the vicinity. “I know how most of you feel about settling down here and making the best of things. And I know you want to get on with survival work before the weather turns. Furthermore, I can sympathize with your point of view about obsolescent Starflight commanders — but let me assure you of one thing. I’m leaving here with a fleet of airplanes, and the airplanes are going to be built properly, to the very highest standards of which we are capable. If I find they don’t work as well as they ought to I’ll simply turn them around and fly them right back to you.
“So the only way — the only way — you’ll get me out of your hair permanently is by building good airplanes. And don’t come sniffling to me about target dates or shortage of equipment. Don’t forget — I’ve seen how you can work when you feel like it. What sort of a target date did we have when we were getting ready to punch a hole right through the middle of Beachhead City?” Garamond paused and out-stared the man nearest to him.
“A nice finishing touch,” Napier whispered. “If they still have pride.”
“Ah, hell,” somebody growled from several rows back. “We might as well finish the job now we’ve done most of the work.” There was a general rumble of assent and the crowd, after a moment’s hesitation, began to disperse. The response was not as wholehearted as Garamond could have wished for, but he felt a sense of relief at having secured any kind of decision over Litman. The production executive, his face expressionless, was turning away with the others.
“Troy,” Garamond said to him, “we could have talked that one out in private.”
Litman shrugged. “I’m satisfied with the way things went.”