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The sunlight was as powerful as a slap in the face. It covered the two completely, an almost physical force that gathered them up in a fiery embrace, planting suffocating kisses on them. Its breath was hot, and it invaded their helmets with the unleashed ferocity of a blowtorch. The ice-covered face plate seemed like something from another world. They had stepped into a roaring blast furnace, a furnace alive with the fires of Hades. Heat licked at them from everywhere. The ground was hot, and their suits were hot, and their helmets were sizzling. Ted longed for a cloud to obscure the Sun, knowing there were no clouds on the Moon. He longed for a rainstorm to cool the baking ground, to ease the stifling pressure of the heat. There could be no rain on the Moon.

Forbes suddenly slumped over the wheel of the tractor, his helmet collapsing onto the spokes. Ted reached for him, trying desperately to keep him erect as the tractor swerved violently to one side. He threw his arm around Forbes, grasping the wheel with his free hand, trying to keep the tractor on a steady course.

He opened his mouth, sucking in great gulps of air. The sweat poured down his face, saturated his clothing. He suddenly remembered that he was wearing several layers of woolen clothing. The thought made him feel hotter.

The steering wheel suddenly became three steering wheels, and Ted blinked his eyes, wondering which one he should grab. The ground sloped over to the left and then hurled itself over in the opposite direction. Ted’s mouth was dry, as if a caterpillar had crawled into it and made a nest there. He blinked his eyes once more, shook his head within the helmet. Everything was a bright yellow. There was no color but yellow. It seared his eyeballs and scorched his brain, and then it burst like a star shell and he knew he was groping for the wheel, knew he was falling, knew his hands were trembling, knew the tractor was spinning out of control, but there was nothing he could do about it.

He was almost relieved when the yellow was replaced by a blackness as deep as space.

Something cool was on his forehead.

It felt good. It felt like a tall glass of lemonade on a sweltering day. It felt very good. Like the breeze from the ocean, like the spray against an upturned face, like a spring shower. Ahhh, it felt wonderful.

Ted opened his eyes.

The first color he saw was cool gray. He took in a deep breath and closed his eyes again. After a little while, he opened them once more and studied the gray color. It curved above him in a clean, sweeping arc, and it was studded with little mounds of metal. Rivets. Gray metal with rivets. Like a rocket ship, Ted thought. Just like a rocket ship. He closed his eyes and drifted off to sleep.

“Now all three of them are unconscious,” the voice said. “I told George he couldn’t leave that couch. I warned him about what might happen. No, he wouldn’t listen.”

“He was nearly frantic with worry,” another voice said. It had a strange accent. German, perhaps. Yes, German. Ted kept his eyes closed and listened to the voices.

“Forbes and Baker should be around soon,” the first voice said. “I hope so.”

“What about Merola?”

“I don’t know. If he’d only have stayed put, as I told him to. There was no reason for him to go running out there. No reason at all. We could have gone, you and I!”

“Yes,” the second voice agreed. “Yes. But there was no holding him. And he did save them. He did bring them back.”

The first voice was solemn. “He’s a good man, Fred. One of the best. I hope...”

“He’ll be all right. Don’t worry.”

“That heat, on top of his wound. I don’t know. I just don’t know.”

Ted opened his eyes. “Dr. Phelps,” he called.

The physician was alongside his couch immediately. “Baker, are you all right? How do you feel?”

“What happened?” Ted asked.

“Heat prostration. You’re lucky that you and Dan weren’t fried out there.”

Ted managed a grin. “It felt as if we were, Doctor.”

“I can imagine. How do you feel now, Baker?”

“All right, I guess. How did we get back?”

“Merola went out the minute he got your radio call. He said you’d need help. He drove the tractor back about ten minutes after he’d left the ship. You couldn’t have been very far away.”

“Is he all right?”

“He’s unconscious. He collapsed right after he carried you and Forbes aboard.”

Ted shook his head, and then sat up, swinging his legs over the side of the couch. “What now?” he asked.

“We’ve got to get out of here, Baker,” Dr. Phelps said, his eyes serious. “Our batteries are just about gone, not to mention food and water. It’s the batteries that count, though. If they go, we won’t be able to start the engines.”

“Dan — is he all right?”

“He should be coming around soon.” Dr. Phelps passed an anxious hand over his wide mouth. “Look, Baker, we’ve got to get started fast. That tractor down there, is it carrying fuel?”

“Yes.”

“Good. Do you know how to load our tanks?”

“I think so.”

“And can you take us to the fuel and supply dump?”

“I don’t know.”

“You’ll have to try. We’ve got to blast off and get to the supply dump. It’s now or never, Baker. Our batteries aren’t going to wait much longer.”

Ted exhaled. “I tried to bring the ship down once, and I got us in this jam. Suppose I did it again?”

“You won’t make the same mistake twice,” Dr. Gehardt assured him.

“I don’t know. I just don’t know. Couldn’t we wait for Dan to come around? Dan knows more about...”

“Dan doesn’t know more, and we can’t afford to wait for him to gain consciousness.” Dr. Phelps seized Ted’s shoulders, and Ted could feel the bony pressure of his strong fingers. “Look, Baker, maybe you didn’t understand me. The batteries are beginning to weaken already. Once they die, we’re through. We’re stuck in Mare Crisium. Not just for today, and not just for a week. We’ll be here forever, Baker — or for as long as we can last. Do you understand? We’ve got to get out of here fast. We’ve got to get over to the supply dump.”

“I understand,” Ted said.

“Then you’ll do it?”

“I don’t know if I can.”

“Baker,” Dr. Phelps said softly, “many men make mistakes. Not very many men get a chance to rectify those errors, though, no matter how much they would like it. You’re getting a second chance, Baker, a chance to get us to the supply dump and save this expedition.” He paused and cleared his throat. “We need you, Ted. We need you more than we’ve ever needed anyone before.”

Ted sat silently with his hands folded in his lap.

After a long while, he said, “Maybe we’d better start loading the fuel tanks.”

Chapter 17

New Outpost

Fueling the ship was a simple matter. They took turns out in the Sun, no man staying out longer than five minutes. In addition, they had replaced the suit’s heating units with small refrigerator units that helped ward off the penetrating heat.

The mobile tanks were practically self-unloading. All one had to do was place the long hose into the lip of the ship’s tank and then press the button on the side of the smaller tank. The liquid fuel started to flow then, and an indicator showed when the tank was empty.

In less than three hours they had the ship fueled and ready to go. That was when Ted sat down to figure out their orbit, blasting time, turnover point, and braking time.

Dr. Phelps stayed out of his way, hovering over Forbes and Merola like a mother hen over her brood. Forbes’s foot was badly frostbitten, and the doctor seemed worried about it. Merola, however, was his chief worry. The captain had not stirred since he’d come back to the ship. He lay on the couch with his arms and legs outstretched, his mouth agape, his eyes closed tightly. His breathing was weak, and his skin was pale.