"Thanks a lot." He went into the gate room.
The seminar had numbered more than fifty students; there were about twenty waiting to take the examination. He started to look around, was stopped by a gate attendant who called out, "Over here! Draw your number."
The lots were capsules in a bowl. Rod reached in, drew one out, and broke it open. "Number seven."
"Lucky seven! Congratulations. Your name, please."
Rod gave his name and turned away, looking for a seat, since it appeared that he had twenty minutes or so to wait. He walked back, staring with interest at what his schoolmates deemed appropriate for survival, any and all conditions.
Johann Braun was seated with empty seats on each side of him. The reason for the empty seats crouched at his feet- a big, lean, heavily-muscled boxer dog with unfriendly eyes. Slung over Braun's shoulder was a General Electric Thunderbolt, a shoulder model with telescopic sights and cone-of-fire control; its power pack Braun wore as a back pack. At his belt were binoculars, knife, first aid kit, and three pouches.
Rod stopped and admired the gun, wondering how much the lovely thing had cost. The dog raised his head and growled.
Braun put a hand on the dog's head. "Keep your distance," he warned. "Thor is a one-man dog."
Rod gave back a pace. "Yo, you are certainly equipped."
The big blond youth gave a satisfied smile. "Thor and I are going to live off the country."
"You don't need him, with that cannon.
"Oh, yes, I do. Thor's my burglar alarm. With him at my side I can sleep sound. You'd be surprised at the things he can do. Thor's smarter than most people."
"Shouldn't wonder."
"The Deacon gave me some guff that the two of us made a team and should go through separately. I explained to him that Thor would tear the joint apart if they tried to separate us." Braun caressed the dog's ears. "I'd rather team with Thor than with a platoon of Combat Pioneers."
"Say, Yo, how about letting me try that stinger? After we come out, I mean.
"I don't mind. It really is a honey. You can pick off a sparrow in the air as easily as you can drop a moose at a thousand meters. Say, you're making Thor nervous. See you later."
Rod took the hint, moved on and sat down. He looked around, having in mind that he might still arrange a survival team. Near the shuttered arch of the gateway there was a priest with a boy kneeling in front of him, with four others waiting.
The boy who had been receiving the blessing stood up- and Rod stood up hastily. "Hey! Jimmy!"
Jimmy Throxton looked around, caught his eye and grinned, hurried over. "Rod!" he said, "I thought you had ducked out on me. Look, you haven't teamed?"
"Still want to?"
"Huh? Sure."
"Swell! I can declare the team as I go through as long as you don't have number two. You don't, do you?"
"No"
"Good! Because I'm-"
"NUMBER ONE!" the gate attendant called out. "'Throxton, James.'"
Jimmy Throxton looked startled. "Oh, gee!" He hitched at his gun belt and turned quickly away, then called over his shoulder, "See you on the other side!" He trotted toward the gate, now unshuttered.
Rod called out, "Hey, Jimmy! How are we going to find-" But it was too late. Well, if Jimmy had sense enough to drive nails, he would keep an eye on the exit.
"Number two! Mshiyeni, Caroline." Across the room the big Zulu girl who had occurred to Rod as a possible team mate got up and headed for the gate. She was dressed simply in shirt and shorts, with her feet and legs and hands bare. She did not appear to be armed but she was carrying an overnight bag.
Someone called out, "Hey, Carol! What you got in the trunk?"
She threw him a grin. "Rocks."
"Ham sandwiches, I'll bet. Save me one.
"I'll save you a rock, sweetheart."
Too soon the attendant called out, "Number seven- Walker, Roderick L."
Rod went quickly to the gate. The attendant shoved a paper into his hand, then shook hands. "Good luck, kid. Keep your eyes open." He gave Rod a slap on the back that urged him through the opening, dilated to man size.
Rod found himself on the other side and, to his surprise, still indoors. But that shock was not as great as immediate unsteadiness and nausea; the gravity acceleration was much less than earth-normal.
He fought to keep from throwing up and tried to figure things out. Where was he? On Luna? On one of Jupiter's moons? Or somewhere 'way out there?
The Moon, most likely- Luna. Many of the longer jumps were relayed through Luna because of the danger of mixing with a primary, particularly with binaries. But surely they weren't going to leave him here; Matson had promised them no airless test areas.
On the floor lay an open valise; he recognized it absent-mindedly as the one Caroline had been carrying. At last he remembered to look at the paper he had been handed.
It read:
SOLO SURVIVAL TEST-Recall Instructions
1. You must pass through the door ahead in the three minutes allowed you before another candidate is started through. An overlapping delay will disqualify you.
2. Recall will be by standard visual and sound signals. You are warned that the area remains hazardous even after recall is sounded.
3. The exit gate will not be the entrance gate. Exit may be as much as twenty kilometers in the direction of sunrise.
4. There is no truce zone outside the gate. Test starts at once. Watch out for stobor. Good luck!
-B. P.M.
Rod was still gulping at low gravity and staring at the paper when a door opened at the far end of the long, narrow room he was in. A man shouted, "Hurry up! You'll lose your place."
Rod tried to hurry, staggered and then recovered too much and almost fell. He had experienced low gravity on field trips and his family had once vacationed on Luna, but he was not used to it; with difficulty he managed to skate toward the far door.
Beyond the door was another gate room. The attendant glanced at the timer over the gate and said, "Twenty seconds. Give me that instruction sheet."
Rod hung onto it. "I'll use the twenty seconds."-as much as twenty kilometers in the direction of sunrise. A nominal eastward direction-call it "east." But what the deuce was, or were, "stobor"?
"Time! Through you go." The attendant snatched the paper, shutters rolled back, and Rod was shoved through a dilated gate.
He fell to his hands and knees; the gravity beyond was something close to earth-normal and the change had caught him unprepared. But he stayed down, held perfectly still and made no sound while he quickly looked around him. He was in a wide clearing covered with high grass and containing scattered trees and bushes; beyond was dense forest.
He twisted his neck in a hasty survey. Earth-type planet, near normal acceleration, probably a G-type sun in the sky... heavy vegetation, no fauna in sight- but that didn't mean anything; there might be hundreds within hearing. Even a stobor, whatever that was.
The gate was behind him, tall dark-green shutters which were in reality a long way off. They stood unsupported in the tall grass, an anomalism unrelated to the primitive scene. Rod considered wriggling around behind the gate, knowing that the tangency was one-sided and that he would be able to see through the locus from the other side, see anyone who came out without himself being seen.
Which reminded him that he himself could be seen from that exceptional point; he decided to move.
Where was Jimmy? Jimmy ought to be behind the gate, watching for him to come out. .. or watching from some other spy point. The only certain method of rendezvous was for Jimmy to have waited for Rod's appearance; Rod had no way to find him now.
Rod looked around more slowly and tried to spot anything that might give a hint as to Jimmy's whereabouts. Nothing... but when his scanning came back to the gate, the gate was no longer there.