Illustrated by Kelly Freas
Why did NASA fire Sam Gunn? It’d be better to ask why we didn’t fire the little S.O.B. out of a cannon and get rid of him once and for all. Would’ve been a service to the human race.
I’m no detective, but I smelled a rat when Sam put in a formal request for a three-month leave of absence. I just stared at my desktop screen. Sam Gunn, going through regular channels? Something was fishy. I mean, Sam never did things according to regulations. Give him a road map with a route on the interstates plotted out by AAA and he’d go down every dirt road and crooked alley he could find, just to drive my blood pressure up to the bursting point.
Trouble was, the sawed-off little runt was a damned good astronaut. About as good as they come, as a flyer and ingenious troubleshooter. Like the time he saved the lunar mission by jury-rigging a still and getting all the stranded astronauts plastered so they’d be unconscious most of the time and use up less oxygen.
That was typical of Sam Gunn. A hero who left the rules and regulations in a shambles every time.
He had just come off his most notorious stunt of all—getting the first skipper of space station Freedom to punch the abandon ship alarm and then riding back down to Earth in an emergency escape capsule with some young woman from a movie studio. He had to be hospitalized after they landed; he claimed it was from stress during re-entry, but everybody at the Cape was wondering who was re-entering what.
Anyway, there was his formal request for a three-month leave of absence, all filled out just as neat and precise as I would have done it myself. He was certainly entitled to the leave. But I knew Sam. Something underhanded was going on.
I called him into my office and asked him point-blank what he was doing. A waste of time.
“I need a rest,” he said. Then he added, “Sir.”
Sam’s face was as round and plain as a penny, and his wiry hair was kind of coppery color, come to think of it. Little snub of a nose with a scattering of freckles. His teeth had enough spaces between them so that he reminded me of a Jack-o-lantern when he grinned.
He wasn’t grinning as he sat in front of my desk. He was all perfectly polite earnestness, dressed in a tie and a real suit, like an honest-to-Pete straight-arrow citizen. His eyes gave him away, though: they were as crafty as ever, glittering with visions that he wanted to keep secret from me.
“Going anyplace special?” I asked, trying to make it sound nonchalant.
Sam nonchalanted me right back. “No, not really. I just need to get away from it all for a while.”
Yeah, sure. Like Genghis Khan just wanted to take a little pony ride.
I had no choice except to approve his request. But I had no intention of letting the sneaky little sumbitch pull one over on me. Sam was up to something; I knew it, and the glitter in his eyes told me that he knew I knew it.
As I said, I’m no detective. So I hired one. Well, she really wasn’t a detective. My niece, Ramona Perkins, was an agent with the Drug Enforcement Agency—a damned stupid name, if you ask me. Makes it sound like the government is forcing people to do drugs.
Well, anyway, Ramona wasn’t too thrilled with the idea of trailing a furloughed astronaut for a few weeks.
“Yes, Uncle Griff, I have three weeks of vacation time coming, but I was going to wait until December and go to Alaska.”
That was Ramona, as impractical as they come. She was pretty, in a youngish, girl-next-door way. Nice sandy-blonde hair that she always kept pinned up; made her look even younger than she was. And there was no doubt about her courage. Anybody who makes a career out of posing as an innocent kid and infiltrating drug gangs has more guts than brains, if you ask me.
She had just gone through a pretty rough divorce. No children, thank Pete, but her ex-husband made a big to-do about their house and cars. Seemed to me he cared more about their damned stereo and satellite TV set-up than he did about my niece.
I made myself smile at her image in my phone screen. “Suppose I could get you three weeks of detached duty, assigned to my office. Then you wouldn’t use up any of your vacation time.”
“I don’t know…” She sort of scrunched up her perky face. I figured she was trying to bury herself in her work and forget about her ex.
“It’d do you good to get away from everything for a while,” I said.
Ramona’s cornflower-blue eyes went curious. “What’s so important about this one astronaut that you’d go to all this trouble?”
What could I tell her? That Sam Gunn had been driving me nuts for years and I was certain he was up to no good? That I was afraid Sam would pull some stunt that would reflect dishonorably on the space agency? That if and when he got himself in trouble the agency management would inevitably dump the blame on me, since I was in charge of his division?
I wasn’t going to have Sam botch up my record, dammit! I was too close to retirement to let him ruin me. And don’t think the little S.O.B. wasn’t trying to do me dirt. He’d slit my throat and laugh about it, if I let him.
But to my sweet young niece, I merely said, “Ramona, this is a matter of considerable importance. I wouldn’t be asking your help if it weren’t. I really can’t tell you any more than that.”
Her image in my phone screen grew serious. “Does it involve narcotics, then?”
I took a deep breath and nodded. “That’s a possibility.” It was a lie, of course; Sam was as straight as they come about drugs. Wasn’t even much of a drinker. His major vice was women.
“All right,” she said, completely business-like. “If you can arrange the reassignment, I’ll trail your astronaut for you.”
“That’s my girl!” I said, really happy with her. She’d always been my favorite niece. At that point in time it never occurred to me that sending her after Sam might put her in more danger than the entire Colombian cartel could throw at her.
The three weeks passed. No report from her. I began to worry. Called her supervisor at DEA and he assured me she’d been phoning him once a week, just to tell him she was OK. I complained that she should’ve been phoning me, so a few days later I got an e-mail message: EVERYTHING IS FINE BUT THIS IS GOING TO TAKE LONGER THAN WE THOUGHT.
It took just about the whole three damned months. It wasn’t until then that Ramona popped into my office, sunburnt and weary-looking, and told me what Sam had been up to. This is what she told me:
I know this investigation took a lot longer than you thought it would, Uncle Griff. It was a lot more complicated than either one of thought it’d be. Nothing that Sam Gunn does is simple!
To begin with, by the time I started after him, Sam had already gone to Panama to set up the world’s first space tourist line.
That’s right, Uncle Griff. A tourist company. In Panama.
He called his organization Space Adventure Tours and registered it as a corporation in Panama. All perfectly legal, but it started alarm bells ringing in my head right from the start. I knew that Panama was a major drug-transshipment area, and a tourist company could be a perfect front for narcotics smuggling.
By the time I arrived in Colon, on the Caribbean side of the Panama Canal, Sam had established himself in a set of offices he rented on the top floor of one of the three-story stucco commercial buildings just off the international airport.
As I said, my first thought was that he was running a smuggling operation, probably narcotics, and his wild-sounding company name was only a front. I spent a week watching his office, seeing who was coming and going. Nobody but Sam himself and a couple of young Panamanian office workers. Now and then an elderly guy in casual vacation clothes or a silver-haired couple. Once in a while a bluehaired matronly type would show up. Seldom the same people twice. No sleazebags in five-hundred-dollar suits. No Uzi-toting maniacs of enforcers.
I dropped in at the office myself to look the place over. It seemed normal enough. An anteroom with a couple of tacky couches and armchairs, divided by a chest-high counter. Water stains on the ceiling tiles. On the other side of the counter sat the two young locals, a male and a female, both working at desktop computers. Beyond them was a single door prominently marked S. GUNN, PRESIDENT AND CEO.
Most smuggling operators don’t put their own names on doors.
The young woman glanced up from her display screen and saw me standing at the counter. Immediately she came out from behind her desk, smiling brightly, and asked in local-accented English, “Can I help you?”
I put on my best Dorothy-from-Kansas look and said, “What kind of tours do you offer?”
“An adventure in space,” she said, still smiling.
“In space?”
“Yes. Like the astronauts.”
“For tourists?”
“Sí—Yes. Our company is the very first in the world to offer a space flight adventure.”
“In space?” I repeated.
She nodded and said, “Perhaps Mr. Gunn himself should explain it to you.”
“Oh, no, I wouldn’t want to bother him.”
“No bother,” she said sweetly. “He enjoys speaking to the customers.”
She must have pressed a buzzer, because the S. GUNN door popped open and out walked Sam, smiling like a used-car salesman.
The first thing about him to strike me was how short he was. I mean, I’m barely five-five in my flats and Sam was a good two inches shorter than I. He seemed solidly built, though, beneath the colorful flowered short-sleeve shirt and sky blue slacks he was wearing. Good shoulders, a little thick in the midsection.
His face was, well… cute. I thought I saw boyish enthusiasm and charm in his eyes. He certainly didn’t look like your typical drug lord.
“I’m Sam Gunn,” he said to me, sticking his hand out over the counter. “At your service.”
I got the impression he had to stand on tiptoe to get his arm over the counter.
“Ramona Perkins,” I said taking his hand in mine. He had a firm, friendly grip. With my free hand I activated the microcassette recorder in my shoulder bag.
“You’re interested in a space adventure?” Sam asked, opening the little gate at the end of the counter and ushering me through.
“I really don’t know,” I said, as if I were taking the first step on the Yellow Brick Road. “It all seems so new and different.”
“Come into my office and let me explain it to you.”
Sam’s office was much more posh than the outer room. He had a big modernistic desk, all polished walnut and chrome, and two chairs in front of it that looked like reclinable astronaut’s seats. I learned soon enough that they were reclinable, and Sam liked to recline in them with female companions.
No windows, but the walls were lined with photographs of astronauts hovering in space, with the big blue curving Earth as a backdrop. Behind Sam’s desk, on a wide walnut bookcase, there were dozens of photos of Sam in astronaut uniform, in a spacesuit, even one with him in scuba gear with his arm around a gorgeous video starlet in the skimpiest bikini I’ve ever seen.
He sat me in one of the cushioned, contoured recliners and went around behind his desk. I realized there was a platform back there, because when Sam sat down he was almost taller than he had been standing up in front of the desk.
“Ms. Perkins… may I call you Ramona?”
“Sure,” I said, in a valley-girl accent.
“That’s a beautiful name.”
“Thank you.”
“Ramona, until now the thrill of flying in space has been reserved to a handful of professional astronauts like myself—”
“Haven’t some politicians and video stars gone into orbit?” I asked, with wide eyed innocence.
“Yes indeed they certainly have,” Sam answered. “And if they’ve flown in space there’s no good reason why you shouldn’t have the experience, too. You, and anyone else who wants the adventure of a lifetime!”
“How much does it cost?” I asked.
Sam hiked his rust red eyebrows at me. And launched into a nonstop spiel about the beauties and glories and excitement of space travel. He wasn’t really eloquent, that wasn’t Sam’s style. But he was persistent and energetic. He talked so fast and so long that it seemed as if he didn’t take a breath for half an hour. I remember thinking that he could probably go out for an EVA space walk without oxygen if he put his mind to it.
For the better part of an hour Sam worked up and down the subject.
“And why shouldn’t ordinary people, people just like you, be allowed to share in the excitement of space flight? The once-in-a-lifetime adventure of them all! Why do government agencies and big, powerful corporations refuse to allow ordinary men and women the chance to fly in space?”
I batted my baby blues at him and asked, in a breathless whisper, “Why?”
Sam heaved a big sigh. “I’ll tell you why. They’re all big bureaucracies, run by petty minded bureaucrats who don’t care about the little guy. Big corporations like Rockledge could be running tourists into orbit right now, but their bean counting bureaucrats won’t let that happen for fear that some tourist might get a little nauseous in zero gravity and sue the corporation when he comes back to Earth.”
“Maybe they’re afraid of an accident,” I said, still trying to sound naive. “I mean, people have been killed in rocket launches, haven’t they?”
“Not in years,” Sam countered, waggling a hand in the air. “Besides, the launch system we’re gonna use is super-safe. And gentle. We take off like an airplane and land like an airplane. No problems.”
“But what about space sickness?” I asked.
“Likewise, no problem. We’ve developed special equipment that eliminates space sickness just about completely. In fact, you feel just as comfortable as you would in your own living room for just about the entire flight.”
“Really?”
“Really,” he said, with a trust me nod of his head.
“Wouldn’t you be better off operating in the States?” I probed. “I mean, like, I just ran across your office kind of by accident while I was checking on my flight back home.”
Sam scowled at me. “The U.S. government is wrapped up with bureaucrats and—worse—lawyers. You can’t do anything new there anymore. If I tried to start a space tourist company in the States I’d have sixteen zillion bozos from NASA, OSHA, the Department of Transportation, the Commerce Department, the State Department, the National Institutes of Health and St. Francis of Assisi knows who-else coming down on my head. I’d be filling out forms and talking to lawyers until I was old and gray!”
“It’s easier to get started in Panama, then.”
“Much easier.”
I sat there, gazing at Sam, pretending to think it all over.
Then I asked again, “How much does it cost?”
Sam looked at his wristwatch and said, “Hey! It’s just about time for our first space cruiser to land! Let’s go out and see it come in!”
I felt a little like the first time I went out to buy a car on my own, without Daddy or any of my big brothers with me. But I let Sam take me by the hand to his own car—a leased fire-engine red BMW convertible—and drive me out to an immense empty hangar with a newly-painted SPACE ADVENTURE TOURS sign painted across its curved roof.
“Used to be a blimp hangar,” Sam said over the rushing wind as we drove up to the hangar. “U.S. Navy used ’em for anti-submarine patrol. It was falling apart from neglect. I got it for a song.”
The DEA had considered asking the Navy to use blimps to patrol the sea lanes that drug smugglers used, I remembered.
“You’re going into space in a blimp?” I asked as we braked to a gravel-spitting stop.
“No no no,” Sam said, jumping out of the convertible and running over to my side to help me out. “Blimps wouldn’t work. We’re using… well, look! Here it comes now!”
I turned to look where he was pointing and saw a huge, lumbering Boeing 747 coming down slowly, with ponderous grace, at the far end of the long concrete runway. And attached to its back was a space shuttle orbiter.
“That’s one of the old shuttles!” I cried, surprised.
“Right,” said Sam. “That’s what we ride into space in.”
“Gosh.” I was truly impressed.
The immense piggy-back pair taxied right up to us, the 747’s four jet engines howling so loud I clapped my hands over my ears. Then it cut power and loomed over us, with the shuttle orbiter riding high atop it. It was certainly impressive.
“NASA sold off its shuttle fleet, so I got a group of investors together and bought one of ’em,” Sam said, rather proudly, I noticed. “Bought the piggyback plane to go with it, too.”
While the ground crew attached a little tractor to the 747’s nose wheel and towed it slowly into the old blimp hangar, Sam explained that he and his technical staff had worked out a new launch system: the 747 carries the orbiter up to more than fifty thousand feet, and then the orbiter disconnects and lights up its main engines to go off into space.
“The 747 does the job that the old solid rocket boosters used to do when NASA launched shuttles from Cape Canaveral,” Sam explained to me. “Our system is cheaper and safer.”
The word cheaper reminded me. “How much does a tour cost?” I asked still again, determined this time to get an answer.
We had walked into the hangar by now. Technicians were setting up ladders and platforms up and down the length of the plane. The huge shadowy hangar echoed with the clang of metal equipment and the clatter of their voices, yelling back and forth in Spanish.
“Want to go aboard?” Sam asked, with a sly grin.
I sure did, but I answered, “Not until you tell me how much a flight costs.”
“Ten thousand dollars,” he said, without flicking an eyelash.
“Ten thou…” I thought I recalled that the shuttle cost ten thousand dollars a pound when NASA was operating it. Even the new Clipperships, which were entirely reusable, cost several hundred dollars per pound.
“You can put it on your credit card,” Sam suggested.
“Ten thousand dollars?” I repeated. “For a flight into orbit?”
He nodded solemnly. “You experience two orbits and then we land back here. The whole flight will last a little more than four hours.”
“How can you do it so cheap?” I blurted.
Sam spread his arms. “I’m not a big, bloated government agency. I keep a very low overhead. I don’t have ten zillion lawyers looking over my shoulder. My insurance costs are much lower here in Panama than they’d be in the States. And…” He hesitated.
“And?” I prompted.
With a grin that was almost bashful, Sam told me, “I want to do good for the people who’ll never be able to afford space flight otherwise. I don’t give a damn if I make a fortune or not: I just want to help ordinary people like you to experience the thrill and the wonder of flying in space.”
I almost believed him.
In fact, right then and there I really wanted to believe Sam Gunn. Even though I had a pretty good notion that he was laying it on with a trowel.
I told Sam that even though ten thousand was a bargain for orbital flight it was an awfully steep price for me to pay. He agreed and invited me to dinner. I expected him to keep up the pressure on me to buy a ticket, but Sam actually had other things in mind. One thing, at least.
He was charming. He was funny. He kept me laughing all through the dinner we had at a little shack on the waterfront that served the best fish in onion sauce I’ve ever tasted. He told me the story of his life, several times, and each time was completely different. I couldn’t help but like him. More than like him.
Sam drove me back to my hotel and rode up the creaking elevator with me to my floor. I intended to say goodnight at the door to my room but somehow it didn’t work out that way. I never said goodnight to him at all. What I said, much later, was good morning.
Now, Uncle Griff, don’t go getting so red in the face! It was the first time I’d let anybody get close to me since the divorce. Sam made me feel attractive, wanted. I needed that. It was like… well, like I’d run away from the human race. Sam brought me back, made me alive again. He was thoughtful and gentle and somehow at the same time terrifically energetic. He was great fun.
And besides, by the time we were having breakfast together in the hotel’s dining room he had offered to let me fly on his space cruiser for free.
“Oh no, Sam, I couldn’t do that. I’ll pay my own way,” I said.
He protested faintly, but I had no intention of letting him think I was in his debt. Going to bed with Sam once was fun. Letting him think I owed him was not.
So I phoned Washington and told my boss to expect a ten-grand charge to come through—which you, Uncle Griff, will be billed for. Then I got into a taxi and drove out to the offices of Space Adventure Tours and plunked down my credit card.
Sam took me to lunch.
But not to dinner. He explained over lunch that he had a business conference that evening.
“This space tour business is brand new, you gotta understand,” he told me, “and that means I have to spend most of my time wining and dining possible customers.”
“Like me,” I said.
He laughed, but it was bitter. “No, honey, not like you. Old folks, mostly. Little old widows trying to find something interesting to do with what’s left of their lives. Retired CEOs who want to think that they’re still on the cutting edge of things. They’re the ones with the money, and I’ve got to talk forty of ’em out of some of it.”
“Forty?”
“That’s our orbiter’s passenger capacity. Forty is our magic number. For the next forty days and forty nights I’m gonna be chasing little old ladies and retired old farts. I’d rather be with you, but I’ve gotta sell those seats.”
I looked rueful and told him I understood. After he left me back at my hotel, I realized with something of a shock that I really was rueful. I missed Sam!
So I trailed him, telling myself that it was stupid to get emotionally involved with the guy I’m supposed to be investigating. Sam’s business conference turned out to be a dinner and show at one of Colon’s seamier night clubs. I didn’t go in, but the club’s garish neon sign. The Black Hole, was enough for me to figure out what kind of a place it was. Sam went in with two elderly gentlemen from the States. To me they looked like middle-class retired businessmen on a spree without their wives.
Sure enough, they were two more customers, I found out later.
Sam was busy most evenings, doing his sales pitch to potential customers over dinners and night club shows. He squired blue-haired widows and played tour guide for honeymooning couples. He romanced three middle-aged woman on vacation from their husbands, juggling things so well that the first time they saw one another was at the one-day training seminar in Sam’s rented hangar.
It didn’t quite take forty days and forty nights, but Sam gave each of his potential customers the full blaze of his personal attention. As far as I know, each and every one of them signed on the dotted line.
And then he had time for me again.
I had extended my stay in Colon, waiting for the flight that Sam promised. Once he had signed up a full load of paying customers, he brought us all out to the hangar for what he called an “orientation.”
So there we were, forty tourists standing on the concrete floor of the hangar with the big piggy-back airplane cum orbiter looming in front of us like a freshly-painted aluminum mountain. Sam stood on a rusty, rickety metal platform scrounged from the maintenance equipment.
“Congratulations,” he said to us, his voice booming through the echo chamber of a hangar. “You are the very first space tourists in the history of the world.”
Sam didn’t need a megaphone. His voice carried through to our last row with no problem at all. He started off by telling us how great our flight was going to be, pumping up our expectations. Then he went on to what he said were the two most important factors.
“Safety and comfort,” he told us. “We’ve worked very hard to make absolutely certain that you are perfectly safe and comfortable throughout your space adventure.”
Sam explained that for safety’s sake we were all going to have to wear a full space suit for the whole four-hour flight. Helmet and all.
“So you can come in your most comfortable clothes,” he said, grinning at us. “Shorts, T-shirts, whatever you feel happiest in. We’ll all put on our space suits right here in the hangar before we board the orbiter.”
He explained, rather delicately, that each suit was equipped with a waste disposal system, a sort of high-tech version of the pilot’s old relief tube, which worked just as well for women as it did for men.
“Since our flight will be no more than four hours long, we won’t need the FCS—fecal containment system—that NASA’s brainiest scientists have developed for astronauts to use.” And Sam held up a pair of large-sized diapers.
Everybody laughed.
“Now I’m sure you’ve heard a great deal about space sickness,” Sam went on, once the laughter died away. “I want to assure you that you won’t be bothered by the effects of zero gravity on this flight. Your space suits include a special anti-sickness system that will protect you from the nausea and giddiness that usually hits first-time astronauts.”
“What kind of a system is it?” asked one of the elderly men. He looked like a retired engineer to me: shirt pocket bristling with ball-point pens.
Sam gave him a sly grin. “Mr. Artumian, I’m afraid I can’t give you any details about that. It’s a new system, and it’s proprietary information. Space Adventure Tours has developed this equipment, and as soon as the major corporations learn how well it works they’re going to want to buy, lease, or steal it from us.”
Another laugh, a little thinner than before.
“But how do we know it’ll work?” Artumian insisted.
Very seriously, Sam replied, “It’s been thoroughly tested, I assure you.”
“But we’re the first customers you’re trying it on.”
Sam’s grin returned. “You’re the first customers we’ve had!”
Before Artumian could turn this briefing into a dialogue, I spoke up. “Could you tell us what we’ll feel when we’re in zero gravity? Give us an idea of what to expect?”
Sam beamed at me. “Certainly, Ms. Perkins. When we first reach orbit and attain zero g, you’ll feel a moment or two of free-fall. You know, that stomach-dropping sensation you get when an elevator starts going down. But it’ll only last a couple of seconds, max. Then our proprietary anti-disequilibrium system kicks in and you’ll feel perfectly normal.”
Artumian muttered “Ah-hah!” when Sam used the term anti-disequilibrium system, as if that meant something to his engineer’s brain.
“Throughout the flight,” Sam went on, “you may feel a moment now and then of free-fall, kind of like floating. But our equipment will quickly get your body’s sensory systems back to normal.”
“Sensory systems,” Artumian muttered knowingly.
Sam and two people in flight attendants’ uniforms showed us through the orbiter’s passenger cabin. The attendants were both really attractive: a curvaceous little blonde with a megawatt smile and a handsome brute of a Latino guy with real bed-roomy eyes.
We had to climb a pretty shaky metal ladder to get up there because the orbiter was still perched on top of the 747. The plane and the orbiter were gleaming with a fresh coat of white paint and big blue SPACE ADVENTURE TOURS running along their sides. But the ladder was flaking with rust.
It made me wonder just what kind of shoestring Sam was operating on: this big airplane with a NASA surplus space shuttle orbiter perched atop it, and we all had to clamber up this rusty, clattery ladder. Some of Sam’s customers were pretty slow and feeble; old, you know. I heard plenty of wheezing going up that ladder.
The orbiter’s cabin, though, was really very nice. Like a first-class section aboard an airliner, except that the seats were even bigger and more plush. Two seats on either side of the one central aisle. I saw windows at each row, but they were covered over.
“The windows are protected by individual opaque heat shields,” Sam explained. “They’ll slide back once we’re in orbit so you can see the glories and beauties of Earth and space.”
There were no toilets in the cabin, and no galley. The passengers would remain strapped into their seats at all times, Sam told us. “That’s for your own safety and comfort,” he assured us.
“You mean we won’t get to float around in zero gravity like they do in the videos?” asked one of the elderly women.
“ ’Fraid not,” Sam answered cheerfully. “Frankly, if you tried that, you’d most likely get so sick you’d want to upchuck. Even our very sophisticated anti-disequilibrium equipment has its limitations.”
I wasn’t close enough to hear him, but I saw Artumian’s lips mouth the word, “Limitations.”
That evening all forty of us, plus Sam, had a festive dinner together on the rooftop of the local Hyatt Hotel. It was a splendid night, clear and filled with stars. A crescent Moon rose and glittered on the Caribbean for us.
Sam flitted from table to table all through the dinner; I doubt that he got to swallow more than a few bites of food. But he ended the evening at my table and drove me to my hotel himself, while all the other customers rode to their hotels in a rattletrap gear-grinding, soot-puffing big yellow school bus that Sam had rented.
“Tomorrow’s the big day,” Sam said happily as we drove through the dark streets. “Space Adventure’s first flight.”
My romantic interest in Sam took a back seat to my professional curiosity.
“Sam,” I asked over the rush of the night wind, “how can you make a profit if you’re only charging ten thousand per passenger? This flight must cost a lot more than four hundred thousand dollars.”
“Profit isn’t everything, my blueeyed space beauty,” he said, keeping his eyes on his driving.
“But if it costs more to fly than you make from ticket sales you’ll go out of business pretty quickly, won’t you?”
He shot a glance at me. “My pricing schedule is pretty flexible. You got the bargain rate. Others are paying more; a lot more.”
“Really?”
“Uh-huh. That’s another reason I’m operating here in Panama. Let the fat cats open their wallets wider than ordinary folks. If I tried that in the States I’d have a ton of lawyers hitting me with discrimination suits.”
I thought about that as we pulled up in front of my hotel.
“Then how much will you make from this flight?” I asked, noticing that Sam kept the motor running.
“Gross? About a million-two.”
“Is that enough to cover your costs?”
Sam grinned at me. “I won’t go bankrupt. It’s like the old story of the tailor who claims that he sells his clothing at prices below his own costs. ‘On each and every individual sale we lose money,’ he tells a customer. ‘But on the volume we make a modest profit.’ ”
I didn’t see anything funny in it. It didn’t make sense.
Suddenly Sam shook me out of my musing. He grabbed me by the shoulders, kissed me on the lips, and then announced, “I’d love to go up to your room and make mad, passionate love to you, Ramona, but I’ve got an awful lot to do between now and takeoff tomorrow morning. See you at the hangar!”
He leaned past me and opened my door. Kind of befuddled, I got out of the car and waved good-bye to him as he roared off in a cloud of exhaust smoke.
Alone in my room, I started to wonder if our one night of passion had merely been Sam’s way of closing the sale.
The next day, Space Adventure Tours’s first flight was just about everything Sam had promised.
All forty of us gathered at the hangar bright and early. It took nearly two hours to get each of us safely sealed up inside a space suit. Some of the older tourists were almost too arthritic to get their creaky arms and legs into the suits, but somehow—with Sam and his two flight attendants pushing and pulling—they all managed.
Instead of that rickety ladder Sam drove a cherry picker across the hangar floor and lifted us in our spacesuits, two by two like Noah’s passengers, up to the hatch of the orbiter. The male attendant went up first and was there at the hatch to help us step inside the passenger cabin and clomp down the aisle to our assigned seats.
Sam and I were the last couple hoisted up. With the visor of my suit helmet open, I could smell the faint odor of bananas in the cherry picker’s cab. It made me wonder where Sam had gotten the machine, and how soon he had to return it.
After we were all strapped in, Sam came striding down the cabin, crackling with energy and enthusiasm. He stood up at the hatch to the flight deck and grinned ear-to-ear at us.
“You folks are about to make history. I’m proud of you,” he said. Then he opened the hatch and stepped into the cockpit.
Three things struck me, as I sat strapped into my seat, encased in my spacesuit. One: Sam didn’t have to duck his head to get through that low hatch. Two: he wasn’t wearing a spacesuit. Three: he was probably going to pilot the orbiter himself.
Was there a co-pilot already in the cockpit with him? Surely Sam didn’t intend to fly the orbiter into space entirely by himself. And why wasn’t he wearing a spacesuit, when he insisted that all the rest of us did?
No time for puzzling over it all. The flight attendants came down the aisle, checking to see that we were all firmly strapped in. They were in spacesuits, just as were we. I felt motion: the 747 beneath us was being towed out of the hangar. The windows were sealed shut, so we couldn’t see what was happening outside.
Then we heard the jet engines start up; actually we felt their vibrations more than heard their sound. Our cabin was very well insulated.
“Please pull down the visors on your helmets,” the blonde flight attendant sing-songed. “We will be taking off momentarily.”
I confess I got a lump in my throat as I felt the engines whine up to full thrust, pressing me back in my seat. With our helmet visors down I couldn’t see the face of the elderly woman sitting beside me, but we automatically clasped our gloved hands together, like mother and daughter. My heart was racing.
I wished we could see out the windows! As it was, I had to depend on my sense of balance, sort of flying by the seat of my pants, while the 747 raced down the runway, rotated its nose wheel off the concrete, and then rose majestically into the air—with us on top of her. Ridiculously, I remembered a line from an old poem: With a sleighful of toys and St. Nicholas, too.
“We’re in the air,” came Sam’s cheerful voice over our helmet earphones. “In half an hour we’ll separate from our carrier plane and light up our main rocket engines.”
We sat in anticipatory silence. I don’t know about the others—it was impossible to see their faces or tell what was going through their minds—but I twitched every time the ship jounced or swayed.
“Separation in two minutes,” Sam’s voice warned us.
I gripped my seat’s armrests. I couldn’t see my hands through the thick spacesuit gloves, but I could feel how white my knuckles were.
“You’re going to hear a banging noise,” Sam warned us. “Don’t be alarmed; it’s just the explosive bolts separating the struts that’re clamping us to the carrier plane.”
Explosive bolts. All of a sudden I didn’t like that word explosive.
The bang scared me even though I knew it was coming. It was a really loud, sharp noise. But the cabin didn’t seem to shake or shudder at all, thank goodness.
Almost immediately we felt more thrust pushing us back into our seats again.
“Main rocket engines have ignited on schedule,” Sam said evenly. “Next stop, LEO!”
I knew that he meant Low Earth Orbit, but I wondered how many of the tourists were wondering who this person Leo might be.
The male flight attendants’ voice cut in on my earphones. “As we enter Earth orbit you will experience a few moments of free-fall before our antidisequilibrium equipment balances out your inner sensory systems. Don’t let those few moments of a felling sensation worry you; they’ll be over almost before you realize it.”
I nodded to myself inside my helmet. Zero g. My mouth suddenly felt dry.
And then I was falling! Dropping into nothingness. My stomach floated up into my throat. I heard moans and gasps from my fellow tourists.
And just like that it was over. A normal feeling of weight returned and my stomach settled back to where it belonged. Sam’s equipment really worked!
“We are now in low Earth orbit,” Sam’s voice said, low, almost reverent. “I’m going to open the viewport shutters now.”
Since I had paid the lowest price for my ride, I had an aisle seat. I leaned forward in my seat harness and twisted my shoulders sideways as far as I could so that I could peer through my helmet visor and look through the window.
The Earth floated below us, huge and curving and so brightly blue it almost hurt my eyes. I could see swirls of beautiful white clouds and the sun gleaming off the ocean and swatches of green ground and little brown wrinkles that must have been mountains and out near the curving sweep of the horizon a broad open swath of reddish tan that stretched as far as I could see.
“That’s the coast of Africa coming up. You can see the Sahara a little to our north,” Sam said.
The cabin was filled with gasps and moans again, but this time they were joyous, awestruck. I didn’t care how much the ticket price was; I would have paid my own way to see this.
I could see the horn of Africa and the great rift valley where the first proto-humans made their camps. Sinbad’s Arabian Sea glittered like an ocean of jewels before my eyes.
Completely around the world we went, not in eighty days but a little over ninety minutes. The Arabian peninsula was easy to spot, not a wisp of a cloud anywhere near it. India was half blotted out by monsoon storms but we swung over the Himalayas and across China. It was night on that side of the world, but the Japanese islands were outlined by the lights of their cities and highways.
“Mt. Everest’s down there under the clouds,” Sam told us. “Doesn’t look so tall from up here.”
Japan, Alaska, and then down over the heartland of America. It was an unusually clear day in the Midwest; we could see the Mississippi snaking through the nation’s middle like a coiling blood vessel.
Twice we coasted completely around the world. It was glorious, fascinating, an endless vision of delights. When Sam asked us how we were enjoying the flight the cabin echoed with cheers. I didn’t want the flight to end. I could have stayed hunched over in that cumbersome space suit and stared out that little window for the rest of my days. Gladly.
But at last Sam’s sad voice told us, “I’m sorry, folks, but that’s it. Time to head back to the barn.”
I could feel the disappointment that filled the cabin.
As the window shutters slowly slid shut Sam announced casually, “Now comes the tricky part. Re-entry and rendezvous with the carrier plane.”
Rendezvous with the carrier plane? He hadn’t mentioned that before. I heard several attendant call buttons chiming. Some of the other tourists were alarmed by Sam’s news, too.
In a few minutes he came back on the intercom. In my earphones I heard Sam explain, “Our flight plan is to rendezvous with the carrier plane and reconnect with her so she can bring us back to the airport under the power of her jet engines. That’s much safer than trying to land this orbiter by herself.
“However,” he went on, “if we miss rendezvous we’ll land the orbiter just the way we did it for NASA, no sweat. I’ve put this ninety-nine ton glider down on runways at Kennedy and Edwards, no reason why I can’t land her back at Colon just as light as a feather.”
A ninety-nine ton feather, I thought, can’t be all that easy to land. But reconnecting to the carrier plane? I’d never heard of that even being tried before.
Yet Sam did it, smooth as pie. We hardly felt a jolt or rattle. Sam kept up a running commentary for us, since our window shutters had been closed tight for re-entry into the atmosphere. There were a few tense moments, but only a few.
“Done!” Sam announced. “We’re now connected again to the carrier plane. We’ll be landing at Colon in twenty-seven minutes.”
And that was it. I felt the thud and bounce of the 747’s wheels hitting the concrete runway, and then we taxied back to the hangar. Once we stopped and the engines whined down, the flight attendants opened the hatch and we went down to the ground in the same banana-smelling cherry picker.
The plane had stopped outside the hangar. There were a couple of photographers at the base of the cherry picker taking each couple’s picture as they stood on terra firma once again, grinning out from their space suit helmets. The first tourists in space.
Sam popped out of the cockpit and personally escorted me to the hatch and went down the cherry picker with me and my seat companion. He posed for the photographer between us, his arms on our shoulders, standing on tip-toe.
The thirty-nine other tourists went their separate ways that afternoon, clutching their photographs and smiling with their memories of space flight the way a new saint smiles at the revelation of heaven. They were converts, sure enough. They would go back home and tell everyone they knew about their space adventure. They were going to be Sam’s best sales force.
I had a decision to make. I had started out investigating Sam for you, Uncle Griff, with the probability that his so-called tourist operation was a front for narcotics smuggling. But it sure didn’t look that way to me.
Besides, I really liked the little guy. He was a combination of Huckleberry Finn and Long John Silver, with a bit of Chuck Yeager thrown in.
Yet I had come on to Sam as a wide-eyed tourist. If I hung around Colon, sooner or later he’d realize that I hadn’t told him the exact truth about myself. I discovered, to my own surprise—shock, really—that I didn’t want to hurt Sam’s feelings. Worse, I didn’t want him to know that I had been spying on him. I didn’t want Sam Gunn to hate me.
So I had to leave. Unless Sam asked me to stay.
Like a fool, I decided to get him to ask me.
He invited me to dinner that evening. “A farewell dinner,” he called it. I spent the afternoon shopping for the slinkiest, sexiest black lace drop-dead dress I could find. Then I had my hair done: I usually wore it pinned up or in a ponytail, part of my sweet-sixteen pose. Now I had it sweeping down to my bare shoulders, soft and alluring.
I hoped.
Sam’s eyes bugged out a bit when he saw me. That was good.
“My god, Ramona, you’re…” he fished around for a compliment, “… you’re beautiful!”
“Thank you,” I said, and swept past him to settle myself in his convertible, showing plenty of thigh in the process.
Don’t growl, Uncle Griff. I was emotionally involved with Sam. I know I shouldn’t have been, but at the time there wasn’t much I could do about it.
Sam was bouncing with enthusiasm about his first flight, of course.
“It worked!” he shouted, exultant, as he screeched the convertible out of my hotel’s driveway. “Everything worked like a mother-loving charm! Nothing went wrong. Not one thing! Not a transistor or a data bit out of place. Perfect! One thousand batting average. Murphy’s Law sleeps with the fishes.”
He was so excited about the successful flight that he really wasn’t paying much attention to me. And the breeze as we drove through the twilight was pulling my carefully-done coiffure apart.
Sam took me to a quiet little restaurant out in a suburban shopping mall, of all places. The food was wonderful, but our conversation—over candlelight and wine—continued to deal with business instead of romance.
“If we start the flights at seven in the morning instead of nine, we can get in an afternoon flight, too,” Sam was musing, grinning like an elf on amphetamines. “Double our income.”
“Will your customers be able to get up that early?” I heard myself asking, intrigued by his visions of success despite myself. “Some of them are pretty old and creaky.”
Sam waved a hand in the air. “We’ll schedule the oldest ones for afternoon flights. Take the spryer ones in the morning. Maybe give ’em a slight break in the price for getting up so early.”
I wanted Sam to pay attention to me, but his head was filled with plans for the future of Space Adventure Tours. Feeling a little downhearted, I decided that if I couldn’t beat him I might as well join him.
“It was a great flight,” I assured him. Not that he needed it; I did. “I’d love to go again, if only I could afford it.”
Either Sam didn’t hear me or he paid me no attention.
“I was worried something would go wrong,” he rattled on. “You know, something always gets away from you on a mission as tricky as this one. But it all worked fine. Better than fine. Terrific!”
It took a while before Sam drew enough of a breath for me to jump into his monologue. But at last I said: “Sam, I’ve been thinking. Your antidisequilibrium system—”
“What about it?” he snapped, suddenly looking wary.
“It worked so well…”
His expression eased. His elfin grin returned. “Sure it did.”
“Why don’t you license it to NASA or some of the corporations that are building space stations in orbit? It could be a steady source of income for you.”
“No,” he said. Flat and final.
“Why not? You could make good money from it—”
“And let Masterson or one of the other big corporations compete with Space Adventure Tours? They’d drive us out of business in two months.”
“How could they do that?” I really was naive, I guess.
Sam explained patiently, “If I let them get their foot in the door they’ll just price tours so far below cost that I’ll either lose all my customers or go bankrupt trying to compete with ’em.”
“Oh.”
“Besides,” he added, his eyes avoiding mine, “if they ever got their hands on my system they’d just duplicate it and stop paying me.”
“But you’ve patented the system, haven’t you?”
His eyes became really evasive. “Not yet. Patents take time.”
Suddenly our celebration dinner had turned glum. The mood had been broken, the charm lost, the en#hantment gone. Maybe we were both tired from the excitement of the day and our adrenaline rush had petered out. Whatever the reason, we finished dinner and Sam drove me back to my hotel.
“I guess you’re going back to the States,” he said, once he stopped the convertible at the hotel’s front entrance.
“I guess,” I said.
“It’s been fun knowing you, Ramona. You’ve been a good-luck charm for me.”
I sighed. “Wish I didn’t have to leave.”
“Me too.”
“Maybe I could find a job here,” I hinted.
Sam didn’t reply. He could have said he’d find a position for me in his company, but it’s probably better that he didn’t, the way things worked out.
The hotel doorman came grudgingly up to the car and opened my door with a murmured, “Buenas noches.”
I went up to my room, feeling miserable. I couldn’t sleep. I tossed in the bed, wide awake, unhappy, trying to sort out my feelings and take some control of them. Didn’t do me one bit of good. After hours of lying there in the same bed Sam and I had made love in, I tried pacing the floor.
Finally, in desperation, I went back to bed and turned on the TV. Most of the channels were in Spanish, of course, but I flicked through to find some English-speaking movie or something else that would hypnotize me to sleep.
And ran across the weather channel.
I almost missed it, surfing through the channels the way I was. But I heard the commentator say something about a hurricane as I surfed through. It took a couple of seconds for the words to make an impression on my conscious mind.
Then I clicked back to the weather. Sure enough, there was a monster hurricane roaring through the Caribbean. It was too far north to threaten Panama, but it was heading toward Cuba and maybe eventually Florida.
When we orbited over the region, not much more than twelve hours ago, the Caribbean had been clear as crystal. I remember staring out at Cuba; I could even see the little tail of the keys extending out from Florida’s southern tip. No hurricane in sight.
I punched up my pillows and sat up in bed, watching the weather. The American Midwest was cut in half by a cold front that spread early-season snow in Minnesota and rain southward all the way to Louisiana. The whole Mississippi valley was covered with clouds.
But the Mississippi was clearly visible for its entire length when we’d been up in orbit that morning.
Could the weather change that fast?
I fell asleep with the weather channel bleating at me. And dreamed weird, convoluted dreams about Sam and hurricanes and watching television.
The next morning I packed and left Colon, but only flew as far as Panama City, on the Pacific side of the canal. I was determined to find out how Sam had tricked me. Deceived all forty of us. But I was taking no chances on bumping into Sam in Colon.
Within a week Sam was doing a roaring business in space tours. He hadn’t gotten to the point where he was flying two trips per day, but a telephone call to his company revealed that Space Adventure Tours was completely booked for the next four months. The smiling young woman who took my call cheerfully informed me that she could take a reservation for early in February, if I liked.
I declined. Then I phoned my boss at the DEA in Washington, to get him to find me an Air Force pilot.
“Someone who’s never been anywhere near NASA,” I told my boss. I didn’t want to run the risk of getting a pilot who might have been even a chance acquaintance of Sam’s. “And make sure he’s male,” I added. Sam was just too heart-meltingly charming when he wanted to be. I would take no chances.
What they sent me was Hector Dominguez, a swarthy, broad-shouldered, almost totally silent young pilot fresh from the Air Force Academy. I met him in the lobby of my hotel, the once-elegant old Ritz. It was easy to spot him: he wasn’t in uniform, but he might as well have been, with a starched white shirt, knife-edged creases on his dark blue slacks, and a military buzz cut. He’d never make it as an undercover agent.
I needed him for flying, thank goodness, not spying. I introduced myself and led him to the hotel’s restaurant, where I explained what I wanted over lunch. He nodded in the right places and mumbled an occasional, “Yes, Ma’am.” His longest conversational offering was, “Please pass the bread, Ma’am.”
He made me feel like I was ninety! But he apparently knew his stuff, and the next morning when I drove out to the airport he was standing beside a swept-wing jet trainer, in his flier’s sky-blue coveralls, waiting for me.
He helped me into a pair of coveralls, very gingerly. I got the impression that he was afraid I’d complain of sexual harassment if he actually touched me. Once I had to lean on his shoulder, when I was worming into the parachute harness I had to put on; I thought he’d break the Olympic record for long jump, the way he flinched away from me.
The ground crew helped me clamber up into the cockpit, connected my radio and oxygen lines, buckled my seat harness and showed me how to fasten the oxygen mask to my plastic helmet. Then they got out of the way and the clear bubble of the plane’s canopy clamped down over Hector and me.
Once we were buttoned up in the plane’s narrow cockpit, me up front and him behind me, he changed completely.
“We’ll be following their 747,” Hector’s voice crackled in my helmet earphones, “up to its maximum altitude of fifty thousand feet.”
“That’s where the orbiter is supposed to separate from it,” I said, needlessly.
“Right. We’ll stay within visual contact of the 747 until the orbiter returns.”
If it ever actually leaves the 747, I thought.
Hector was a smooth pilot. He got the little jet trainer off the runway and arrowed us up across the Panama Canal. In less than fifteen minutes we spotted the lumbering 747 and piggybacking orbiter, with their bright blue SPACE ADVENTURE TOURS stenciled across their white fuselages.
For more than three hours we followed them. The orbiter never separated from the 747. The two flew serenely across the Caribbean, locked together like Siamese twins. Far below us, on the fringe of the northern horizon, I could see bands of swirling gray-white clouds: the edge of the hurricane.
Sam’s 747-and-orbiter only went as high as thirty thousand feet, then leveled out.
“He’s out of the main traffic routes,” Hector informed me. “Nobody around for a hundred miles, except us.”
“They can’t see us, can they?”
“Not unless they have rear-looking radar.”
Hector kept us behind and slightly below Sam’s hybrid aircraft. Then I saw the 747’s nose pull up; they started climbing. Hector stayed right on station behind them, as if we were connected by an invisible chain.
Sam’s craft climbed more steeply, then nosed over into a shallow dive. We did the same, and I felt my stomach drop away for a heart-stopping few moments before a feeling of weight returned.
In my earphones I heard Hector chuckling. “That’s how he gave you a feeling of zero-g,” he said. “It’s the old Vomit Comet trick. They use it at Houston to give astronauts-in-training a feeling for zero gravity.”
“What do you mean?” I asked.
“You fly a parabolic arc: up at the top of the arc you get a few seconds of pretty-near zero gravity.”
“That’s when we felt weightless!” I realized.
“Yeah- And when they leveled off you thought his anti-space-sickness equipment was working. All he did was start flying straight and level again.”
Magic tricks are simple when you learn how they’re done.
“What did you say about a vomit something or other?”
Hector laughed again. It was a very pleasant, warm sound. “At Houston, they call the training plane the Vomit Comet. That’s because they fly a couple dozen parabolic arcs each flight. You go from regular gravity to zero-g and back again every few minutes. Makes your stomach go crazy.”
So Sam’s entire space adventure was a total shuck. A sham. A hoax. I had felt disappointed when I’d first suspected Sam. Now that I had the evidence, I felt even worse: bitter, sad, miserable.
I know, Uncle Griff! You told me he was no good. But—well, I still felt awful.
That evening I just couldn’t bear the thought of eating alone, so I invited Hector to have dinner with me. He was staying at the Ritz, too, so we went to the hotel’s shabby old restaurant. It must have once been a splendid place, but it was tacky and rundown and not even half-filled. The waiters were all ancient, and even though the food was really good, the meal left me even more depressed than I had been before.
To make it all worse, Hector reverted to his monosyllabic introversion once we left the airport.
Is it me? I wondered. Is he naturally shy around women? Is he gay? That would’ve been a shame, I thought. He was really handsome, in a dark, smoldering sort of way. Gorgeous big midnight eyes. And I imagined that his hair would grow out curly if he ever allowed it to. His voice was low and dreamy, too—when he chose to say a word or two.
I tried to make conversation with him, but it was like pulling teeth. It took the whole dinner to find out that he was from New Mexico, he wasn’t married, and he intended to make a career of the Air Force.
“I like to fly.” That was his longest sentence of the evening.
I went to bed wanting to cry. I dreamed about Sam; I dreamed that I was a hired assassin and I had to kill him.
Hector and I trailed Sam’s plane again the next day, but this time I brought a video camera and got his entire flight sequence on tape. Evidence.
A job is a job, and no matter how much I hated doing it, I was here to get the goods on Sam Gunn. So he wasn’t smuggling drugs. What he was doing was still wrong: bilking people of their hard-earned money on phony promises to fly them into space. Scamming little old widows and retired couples living on pensions. Swindling honeymoon couples.
And let’s face it, he swindled me, too. In more ways than one.
That afternoon I had Hector fly me over to Colon and, together, we went to the offices of Space Adventure Tours.
Sam seemed truly delighted to see us. He ushered us into his elegant office with a huge grin on his apple-pie face. Then he shook hands with Hector, bussed me on the cheek, and climbed the ramp behind his walnut and chrome desk to sit down in his high-backed leather Swivel chair. Hector and I sat on the two recliners.
“Are you two a thing?” Sam asked, archly.
“A thing?” I asked back.
“Romantically.”
“No!” I was surprised to hear Hector blurt the word out just as forcefully as I did. Stereophonic denial.
“Oh.” Sam looked slightly disappointed, but only for a moment. “I thought maybe you wanted to take a honeymoon flight in space.”
“Sam, you never go higher than thirty-five thousand feet and I have a videotape to prove it.”
He blinked at me. It was the first time I’d ever seen Sam Gunn go silent.
“Your whole scheme is a fake, Sam. A fraud. You’re stealing your customers’ money. That’s theft. Grand larceny, I’m sure.”
The sadness I had felt was giving way to anger: smoldering burning rage at this man who had seemed so wonderful but was really such a scoundrel, such a rat, such a lying, sneaking, thieving bastard. I had trusted Sam! And he had been nothing but deceit.
Sam leaned back in his luxurious desk chair and puckered his lips thoughtfully.
“You’re going to jail, Sam. For a long time.”
“May I point out, oh righteous, wrathful one, that you’re assuming the laws of Panama are the same as the laws of the good old U.S. of A.”
“They have laws against fraud and bunko,” I shot back hotly, “even in Panama.”
“Do you think I’ve defrauded my customers, Ramona?”
“You certainly have!”
Very calmly, Sam asked, “Did you enjoy your flight?”
“What’s that got to do with it?”
“Did you enjoy it?” Sam insisted.
“At the time, yes, I did. But then I found out—”
“You found out that you didn’t actually go into orbit. You found out that we just fly our customers around and make them feel as if they’re in space.”
“Your whole operation is a fake!”
He made an equivocal gesture with his hands. “We don’t take you into orbit, that’s true. The scenes you see through the spacecraft’s windows are videos from real space flights, though. You’re seeing what you’d see if you actually did go into space.”
“You’re telling your customers that you take them into space!” I nearly screamed. “That’s a lie!”
Sam opened a desk drawer and pulled out a slick, multi-color sales brochure. He slid it across the desk toward me.
“Show me where it says we take our customers into orbit.”
I glanced at the brochure’s cover. It showed a picture of an elderly couple smiling so wide their dentures were in danger of falling out. Behind them was a backdrop of the Earth as seen from orbit.
“Nowhere in our promotional literature or video presentations do we promise to take out customers into space,” Sam said evenly.
“But—”
“The contracts our customers sign say that Space Adventure Tours will give them an experience of space flight. Which is what we do. We give our customers a simulation: a carefully designed simulation so that they can have the experience of their lives.”
“You tell them you’re taking them into space!”
“Do not.”
“You do too! You told me you’d fly me into orbit!”
Sam shook his head sadly. “That may be what you heard. What you wanted to hear. But I have never told any of my customers that Space Adventure Tours would actually, physically, transport them into orbit.”
“You did! You did!”
“No I didn’t. If you’d taped our conversations, you’d find that I never told you—or anybody else—that I’d fly you into space.”
I looked at Hector. He sat like a graven idol: silent and unmoving.
“When we were in the orbiter,” I remembered, “you made all this talk about separating from the 747 and going into orbit.”
“That was part of the simulation,” Sam said. “Once you’re on board the orbiter, it’s all an act. It’s all part of the experience. Like an amusement park ride.”
Exasperated, I said, “Sam, your customers are going home and telling their friends and relatives that they’ve really flown in space. They’re sending new customers to you, people who expect to go into orbit for real!”
With a shrug, Sam answered, “Ramona, honey, I’m not responsible for what people think, or say, or do. If they wanna believe they’ve really been in space, that’s their fantasy, their happiness. Who am I to deny them?”
I was beyond fury. My insides felt bitter cold. “All right,” I said icily. “Suppose I go back to the States and let the news media know what you’re doing? How long do you think customers will keep coming?”
Sam’s brows knit slightly. “Gimme two more months,” he said.
“Two more months?”
“Let me operate like this for two more months, and then I’ll close down voluntarily.”
“You’re asking me to allow you to defraud the public for another two months?”
His eyes narrowed. “You know, you’re talking like a lawyer. Or maybe a cop.”
“What and who I am has nothing to do with this,” I snapped.
“A cop,” Sam said, with a heavy sigh.
Out of nowhere, Hector spoke up. “Why do you want two months?”
I whirled on the poor guy. “So he can steal as much money as he can from the poor unsuspecting slobs he calls his customers, why else?”
“Yeah,” Hector said, in that smoky low voice of his, “OK, maybe so. But why two months?”
Before I could think of an answer, Sam popped in. “Because in two months I’ll have proved my point.”
“What point?”
“That there’s a viable market for tourists in space. That people’ll spend a good-sized hunk of change just for the chance to ride into orbit.”
“Which you don’t really do,” I reminded him.
“That doesn’t matter,” Sam said. “The point I’m making is that there really is a market for space tourism. People have been talking about space tourism for years; I’m doing something about it.”
“You’re stealing,” I said. “Swindling.”
“OK, so I’m faking it. Nevertheless, people are plunking down their money for a space adventure.”
“So what?” I sneered.
Hunching forward, leaning his forearms on the gleaming desktop, Sam said, “So with three whole months of this operation behind me, I can go back to the States and raise enough capital to lease a Clippership that’ll really take tourists into orbit.”
I stared at him.
Hector got the point before I did. “You mean the financial people won’t believe there’s a market for space tourism now, but they will after you’ve operated this fake business for three months?”
“Right,” Sam answered. “Those Wall Street types don’t open up their wallets until you’ve got solid numbers to show ’em.”
“What about venture capitalists?” Hector asked. “They back new, untried ideas all the time.”
Sam made a sour face. “Sure they do. I went to some of ’em. First thing they did was ask me why the big boys like Masterson and Global Technologies aren’t doing it. Then they go to the experts’ in the field and ask their opinion of the idea. And who re the experts?”
“Masterson and Global,” I guessed.
Shaking his head, Sam said, “Even worse. They went to NASA. To Clark Griffith IV, my own boss, for crap’s sake! By the time he got done scaring the cojones off them, they wouldn’t even answer my e-mail.”
“NASA shot you down?”
“They didn’t know it was me. They talked to a team that the venture capitalists put together.”
I asked, “But shouldn’t NASA be in favor of space tourism? I mean, they’re the space agency, after all.”
“Some people in NASA are in favor of it, sure,” Sam said. “But the higher you go in the agency the more conservative they get. Up at the top they have nightmares of a spacecraft full of tourists blowing up, like the old Challenger. That’d set back everything we do in space by ten years, at least.”
“So when the venture capitalists asked—”
“The agency bigwigs threw enough cold water on the idea to freeze the Amazon River,” Sam growled.
“And that’s when you started Space Adventure Tours,” I said.
“Right. Set the whole company up while I was still working at the Cape. Then I took a three-month leave to personally run the operation. I’ve got two months left to go.”
Silence. I sat there, not knowing what to say next. Hector looked thoughtful, or maybe puzzled is a better description of the expression on his face. Sam leaned back in his high chair, staring at me like a little boy who’s been caught with his hand in the cookie jar, but is hoping to get a cookie out of it instead of a spanking.
I was in a turmoil of conflicting emotions. I really liked Sam, even though he had quite literally screwed me. But I couldn’t let him continue to swindle people; that was wrong any way you looked at it, legally or morally.
On the other hand, Sam wasn’t really hurting anybody. Was he? Did any of his customers empty their retirement accounts to take his phony ride? Would any of those retired couples spend their declining years in poverty because Sam bilked them out of their life savings?
I shook my head, trying to settle my spinning thoughts into some rational order. Sam was breaking all kinds of laws, and he’d have to stop. Right now.
“All right,” I said, my mind finally made up. “I’m not going to report this back to your superiors at NASA.”
Sam’s face lit up.
“And I’m not going to blow the whistle on you or bring in the authorities,” I continued.
Sam grinned from ear to ear.
“On one condition,” I said firmly.
His rusty eyebrows hiked up. “One condition?”
“You’ve got to shut this operation down, Sam. Either shut down voluntarily, or I’ll be forced to inform the authorities here in Panama and the news media in the States.”
He nodded solemnly. “Fair enough. In two months I’ll close up shop.”
“Not in two months,” I snapped. “Now. Today. You go out of business now and refund whatever monies you’ve collected for future flights.”
I expected Sam to argue. I expected him to rant and holler at me. Or at least plead and wheedle. He did neither. For long, long moments he simply sat there staring at me, saying nothing, his face looking as if I’d just put a bullet through his heart.
I steeled myself and stared right back at him. Hector stirred uneasily in his chair beside me, sensing that there was more going on than we had expressed in words, but saying nothing.
At last Sam heaved an enormous sigh and said, in a tiny little exhausted voice, “OK, if that’s what you want. I’m in no position to fight back.”
I should have known right there and then that he was lying through his crooked teeth.
Hector flew me back to Panama City and we repaired to our separate hotel rooms. I felt totally drained, really out of it, as if I’d spent the day fighting dragons or climbing cliffs by my fingernails.
Then things started to get weird.
I had just flopped on my hotel room bed, not even bothering to take off my clothes, when the phone rang. My boss from DEA headquarters in Washington.
“You’re going to have a visitor,” he told me, looking nettled in the tiny phone screen. “Her name will be Jones. Listen to what she has to tell you and act accordingly.”
“A visitor?” I mumbled, feeling thick-headed, confused. “Who? Why?”
My boss doesn’t nettle easily, but he sure looked ticked off. “She’ll explain it all to you. And this is the last goddamned time I let you or any other of my people go off on detached duty to help some other agency!”
With that, he cut off the connection. I was looking at a blank phone screen, wondering what on earth was going on.
The phone buzzed again. This time it was Hector.
“I just got a phone call from my group commander at Eglin,” he said. “Some really weird shit has hit the fan, Ramona. I’m under orders to stay here in Panama with you until we meet with some woman named Jones.”
“I got the same orders from my boss,” I told him.
Hector’s darkly handsome face went into brooding mode. “I don’t like the sound of this,” he muttered.
“Neither do I,” I confessed.
We didn’t have long to wait. Ms. Jones arrived bright and early the following morning. In fact, Hector and I were having breakfast together in the hotel’s nearly-empty dining room, trying to guess what was going on, when she sauntered in.
She didn’t hesitate a moment, just walked right up to our table and sat down, as if she’d been studying photographs of us for the past week or two.
“Adrienne Jones,” she said, opening her black leather shoulder bag and pulling out a leather-encased laminated ID card. It said she was with the U.S. Department of State.
She didn’t look like a diplomat. Adrienne Jones—if that was really her name—was a tall, sleek, leggy African-American whose skin was the color of polished ebony. She had a fashion model’s figure and face: high cheekbones, almond eyes, and a tousled, careless hairdo that must have cost a fortune. Her clothes were expensive, too.
Hector stared at her, too stunned to speak. I felt dismal and threadbare beside her in my shapeless slacks and blouse, with a belly bag strapped around my middle.
I hated her immediately.
“If you’re really with the State Department.” I said as she snapped her ID closed and put it back in her capacious shoulder bag, “then I’m from Disney World.”
She smiled at me the way a snake does. “That’s the one in Florida, isn’t it?”
Hector found his voice. “CIA, right? You’ve got to be with the CIA.”
Jones ignored his guess. “You both have been informed that you are to cooperate with me, correct?”
“I was told to listen to what you have to say,” I said.
“Me too,” said Hector.
“Very well, then. Here’s what I have to say: Leave Sam Gunn alone. Let him continue to operate. Do not interfere with him in any way.”
What kind of strings had Sam pulled? He had come across to me as the little guy struggling against the big boys, but here was the State Department or the CIA—or some federal agency—ordering me to keep my hands off.
“Why?” I asked.
“You don’t have to know,” said Jones. “Just leave Sam be. No interference with his operation.”
Hector scratched his head and glanced at me. He was an Air Force officer, I realized, and had to follow orders. His career depended on it. Me, I had a career, too. But I wasn’t going to let this fashion-model stranger order me around, no matter what my boss said.
“OK,” I told her, “I’ve listened to what you have to say. That doesn’t mean I’m going to do what you’re asking me to do.”
Jones smiled again, venomously. “I’m not asking you. I’m telling you.”
“You can tell me whatever you like. I’m not going to go along with it unless I know the whys and wherefors.”
Her smile faded into grimness. “Look, Ms. Perkins, your superior at DEA has been briefed and he agreed to cooperate. He’s told you to cooperate, and that’s what you’d better do, if you know what’s good for you.”
“You briefed him? Then brief me.”
She snorted through her finely-chiseled nostrils. “All I can tell you is that this is a high-priority matter, and it has the backing of the highest levels of authority.”
“Highest levels?” I asked. “Like the White House?”
She didn’t answer.
“The Oval Office? The President himself?”
Jones remained as silent and still as the Sphinx.
I heard myself say, “Not good enough, Ms. Jones. Anybody can claim they’re working on orders from the White House. I’ve heard even fancier stories, in my line of work. What’s going on?”
She merely shook her head, just the slightest of motions, but clearly a negative.
“OK then.” I got up from my chair. “I’m catching the next flight to Miami and going straight to the news media. They’ll be really interested to hear that the CIA is backing a fraudulent tourist operation in Panama.”
“I wouldn’t try that if I were you,” Jones said.
Hector stood up beside me. “You threaten her, you’ve got to go through me.”
I gaped at him. “You don’t have to protect me. I can take care of myself.”
“I’m in this, too,” he insisted. “We’re partners.”
Jones threw her head back and laughed. “What you two are,” she said, “is a couple of babes in the woods. And if you don’t start behaving yourselves, you’re going to end up as babes in a swamp, feeding alligators.”
I unzipped my belly bag and pulled out my cellphone. “CNN, Atlanta, USA,” I said to the phone system’s computer. “News desk.”
“Put it down,” Jones said.
I kept the phone pressed against my ear, listening to the computer chatter as the system made the connection.
“Put it down,” she repeated. Her voice was flat, calm, yet menacing. I realized that her black leather shoulder bag was big enough to hold a small arsenal.
“News,” I heard a tired voice answer.
Jones said, “We can cut a deal, if you’re reasonable.”
“News desk,” the voice repeated, a little irked.
I put the phone down and clicked it off. “What kind of a deal?”
Jones gestured with both her hands; she had long, graceful fingers, I noticed. I sat down, then Hector took his seat beside me.
“God spare me the righteous amateurs,” Jones muttered. “You two have no idea of what you’re messing with.”
“Then tell us,” I said.
“I can’t tell you,” she replied. “But if you want to, you can come back to Colon with me and watch it happen.”
I didn’t know what to say.
Jones misinterpreted my silence as reluctance, so she went on, “You give me your word you won’t go blowing off to the media or anybody else, and you can come with me and see what this is all about. After it’s over you can go back home, safe and sound. Deal?”
I’d seen enough drug deals to know that she was showing us only the tip of the iceberg. But I was curious, and—to tell the absolute truth—I was wondering how Sam got himself mixed up with the CIA and whether he was in danger or not.
So I glanced at Hector, who remained silent, suspicious. But he looked at me and his expression said that he’d back whatever move I made. So I said, “Deal.”
We couldn’t squeeze a third body into Hector’s training jet, and Jones didn’t trust us out of her sight, so we flew back to Colon again in her plane: a twin-engined executive jet. I was beginning to feel like a Ping-Pong ball, bouncing from Colon to Panama City and back again.
Hector was impressed with the plane’s luxurious interior. “Like a movie,” he said, awed. Instead of sitting beside me, he asked to go up into the cockpit. Jones gave him a friendly smile and said OK. I didn’t see him again until we landed.
An unmarked Mercedes four-door sedan was waiting for us at the runway ramp, the kind of luxury car the drug dealers call a “cocaine Ford.” Two men in dark suits bustled Hector and me into the rear seat. Jones sat up front with the driver. The other man followed us in another unmarked Mercedes. I felt distinctly nervous.
But all we did is drive across the airport to Sam’s converted blimp hangar.
“Mr. Gunn is doing a special flight this afternoon,” Jones told us cryptically, half turned in her seat to face us. “Once it’s finished, you two can go back to the States—if you promise not to blow the whistle on Space Adventure Tours.”
“And if we don’t promise?” I asked. Instead of strong and forceful, my voice came out as a little girl’s squeak, which made me disgusted with myself.
Jones didn’t answer; she merely reverted to her rattler-type smile.
We pulled up outside the hangar. Inside, I could see the big 747 with the orbiter clamped atop it. Technicians were swarming all over it.
“Sam had his regular flight this morning,” I muttered to Hector. “Now they’re getting the plane ready for another flight.”
Hector nodded. “Looks like.”
We sat and watched, while our Mercedes’ engine purred away so the car’s air conditioning could stay on. Sam came out of an office up on the catwalk above the hangar floor, with two slick looking lawyerly types flanking him. He was grinning and gabbing away a mile a minute, happy as a kid in a candy store. Or so it seemed from this distance.
Jones opened her door. “You stay here,” she said—as much to the driver as to us, I thought. “Don’t leave this car.”
So we sat in the car with the afternoon sun beating down on us and the air conditioner laboring to keep the interior cool. Our driver was old enough to be gray at the temples, solidly built, and I guessed that he was carrying a nine-millimeter automatic in a shoulder holster under his dark suit jacket. He looked perfectly comfortable and prepared to sit and watch over us for hours and hours.
I was bursting to find out what was going on. There were more technicians clambering over the ladders and scaffolds surrounding the piggy-back planes than I had ever seen in Sam’s employ. Most of them must be Jones’ people, I thought. Something very special is being cooked up here.
Jones stood out in the blazing sunshine, trying to look cool and relaxed behind a pair of elegantly stylish sunglasses. Yet I sensed she was wired tight with anticipation.
Then a fleet of limousines drove into view, coming slowly across the concrete rampway until they stopped in front of the hangar. Eleven limos, I counted. One of them had stiff little flags attached to its front fenders: blue with some kind of shield or seal in the middle, surrounded by six five-pointed white stars.
Dozens of men jumped out of the limos, about half of them in olive-green army fatigues. They didn’t look like Americans. Each soldier carried a wicked-looking assault rifle with a curved magazine. The rest of the men wore business suits that bulged beneath their armpits and the kind of dark sunglasses that just screamed “bodyguard.”
They spread out, poking their noses—and rifle muzzles—into every corner of the hangar. A couple of the suits came up to our car, where the glamorous Ms. Jones greeted them with a big toothy smile. I couldn’t make out what she was saying to them, but it sounded like she was speaking in Spanish.
Sam came bubbling over, practically drooling once he feasted his eyes on Jones. He didn’t notice us inside the car, behind the heavily-tinted windows.
At last, the leader of the suits turned to the team of soldiers surrounding the limo and gave a curt nod. They opened the rear door and out stepped a little girl, with big dark eyes and long hair that just had to be naturally curly. She couldn’t have been more than ten years old. She smiled at the soldiers, as if she knew them by name. She was very nicely dressed in a one-piece jumpsuit of butter yellow.
She turned back and said something to someone who was still inside the limo. She reached her hand in to whoever it was. A tall, lean man of about fifty came out of the limo and stretched to his full height. He was wearing army fatigues and smoking an immense cigar.
My jaw fell open. “That’s the president of Cuba!” I gasped. “The man who took over when Castro retired.”
“No,” Hector corrected me. “He’s the man who took over after the bloodbath in Havana when Castro retired.”
“That must be his daughter.”
“What’re they doing here?” Hector wondered.
“Taking one of Sam’s phony rides into space,” I said. “I wonder if they know it’s a phony.”
Hector turned to face me. “Maybe it’s not.”
“Not what?”
“Not a phony,” he said grimly. “Maybe they’re going to have an accident up there. On purpose.”
It hit me like a shot of pure heroin. “They’re going to assassinate the president of Cuba!”
“And make it look like an accident.”
“Oh my god!”
The driver turned slightly to tell us, “Don’t get any crazy ideas—”
He never got any further. I jammed my thumbs into his carotids and held on. In a few seconds he was unconscious.
“Where’d you learn that?” Hector asked, his tone somewhere between amazement and admiration.
“South Philadelphia,” I answered as I yanked the nine-millimeter from the driver’s holster. “Come on.”
Hector grasped my shoulder. “You’re not going to get far in a shoot-out.”
He was right, dammit. I had to think fast. Outside, I could see Jones leading the president of Cuba and his daughter toward the plane. Half the Cuban security force walked a respectful distance behind them; the other half was deployed on either side of them.
“Most of those ground crew personnel must be security guys from the States,” Hector pointed out. “Must be enough firepower out there to start World War III.”
My eye lit on Sam. He was still standing in the sunshine of the ramp, outside the hangar, hardly more than ten meters from our car.
“Come on,” I said, leaning past the unconscious driver to pop the door lock.
I stuffed the pistol in my belly bag; kept the bag unzippered so I could grab the gun quickly if I needed to.
Sam turned as we approached him. He looked surprised, then delighted.
“Ramona!” he said with a big grin. “I thought you two had gone back to the States.”
“Not yet,” I said grimly. “We’re taking this flight with you.”
For an instant Sam looked puzzled, but then he said, “Great. Come on, you can ride in the 747 with me.”
“You’re not going aboard the orbiter?”
“Not this flight,” Sam said easily.
Of course not, I thought. On this flight the orbiter’s really going to be released from the 747. Instead of going into space, as Sam promised, it was going to crash into the Caribbean. With the president of Cuba aboard, and his ten-year-old daughter.
“Sam, how could you do this?” I asked as we walked into the hangar.
“Listen, I was just as surprised as you would be when the State Department asked me to do it.”
“With his little daughter, too.”
We reached the ladder. “It was his daughter’s idea,” Sam said. “She wanted to take the space ride. Poppa’s only doing this to please his little girl—and for the international publicity, of course.”
With Sam leading the way we climbed up the ladder into the 747. Its interior was strictly utilitarian; no fancy decor. Most of the cavernous passenger cabin was empty. There were only seats up in the first-class section, below the cockpit. Sam, Hector, and I went up the spiral stairs and entered the cockpit, where a young woman in a pilot’s uniform was already sitting in the right-hand seat.
“Can you fly this plane?” I asked Hector.
He stared at the control panels; the gauges and buttons and keypads seemed to stretch for miles. Looking out the windshield, I saw we were already so high up we might as well have been on oxygen.
“I’ve got a multi-engine license,” Hector muttered.
“But can you fly this plane?” I insisted.
He nodded tightly. “I can fly anything.”
Sam put on a quizzical look. “Why should he have to fly? I’m going to pilot this mission myself and I’ve got a qualified co-pilot here.”
I pulled the pistol from my belly bag and pointed it at the co-pilot. “Get out,” I said. “Hector, you take her place.”
She stared at me, wide-eyed, frozen.
“Vamos,” Sam said, in the most un-Spanish accent I’d ever heard. The woman slipped out of the co-pilot’s chair.
“What’s this all about?” Sam asked, more intrigued than scared. “Why the toy cannon?”
I pointed the gun at him. “Sam, you’re going to fly this plane just the way you would for any of your tourist flights. No more and no less.”
He gave me one of his lopsided grins. “Sure. What else?”
There were two jumpseats behind the pilots’ chairs. I took one and Sam’s erstwhile co-pilot the other. I kept the pistol in my hand as we rolled out of the hangar, lit up the engines, and taxied to the runway.
“What do you think is going on here,” Sam asked, “that makes you need a gun?”
“You know perfectly well what’s going on,” I said.
“Yeah,” he answered ruefully. “But I don’t know what you know.”
“Who’s in the orbiter’s cockpit?” I asked.
“Some guy the State Department insisted on. They wanted their own people up there with el presidente and his daughter.”
“Do they have parachutes?”
“Parachutes? What for?”
“They’re all going down with the president and his daughter?”
“Whither he goest,” Sam replied.
We took off smoothly and headed out over the Caribbean. Is this part of the Bermuda Triangle? I asked myself. Will this fatal accident be chalked up as another mystical happening, or the work of aliens from outer space?
“How could you let them use you like this, Sam?” I blurted.
He glanced over his shoulder at me, saw how miserable I felt, and quickly turned back to the plane’s controls.
“Ramona, honey, when people that high up in the federal government want to make you jump, you really don’t have all that much of a choice.”
“You could have said no.”
“And miss the chance of a lifetime! No way!”
So despite all his blather about hating bureaucracies and wanting to help ordinary people—the little guy, against the big shots of government and industry—Sam sold out when they put the pressure on him. He probably didn’t have much of a choice, at that. Do what they tell you or you’re out of business. Maybe they threatened his life. I’d heard stories about the CIA and how they worked both sides of the street. They’d even been involved in the drug traffic, according to rumors around headquarters.
We flew in dismal silence across a sparkling clear sea. At least, I grew silent. Sam spent the time acquainting Hector with the plane’s controls and particular handling characteristics.
“Gotta remember we’ve got a ninety-nine ton brick on our backs,” he chattered cheerfully, as if he didn’t have a care in the world.
Hector nodded and listened, listened and nodded. Sam jabbered away, one pilot to another, oblivious to everything else except flying.
Me, I was starting to worry about what was going to happen when we returned to Colon with the orbiter still intact and the Cuban president very much alive. Jones and her people would probably put the best face they could on it, like that’s what they had intended all along: a good-will flight to help cement friendly relations between Cuba and the U.S. But I knew that if the CIA didn’t get me, some fanatical old anti-Castro nutcake in Miami would come after me.
And Hector, too, I realized. I’d put his life in danger, when all he wanted was to protect me.
I felt really miserable about that. The poor guy was in as much danger as I was, even though none of this was his fault.
I studied his face as he sat in the copilot’s chair next to Sam. Hector didn’t look worried. Or frightened. Or even tense. He was happy as a clam, behind the controls of this monstrous plane, five miles over the deep blue sea.
“Now comes the tricky part,” Sam was telling him, leaning over toward Hector slightly so he could hear him better.
Sitting on the jumpseat behind Sam, I tightened my grip on the pistol. “You’re not going to separate the orbiter,” I said firmly.
Without even glancing back at me, Sam broke into a cackling laughter. “Couldn’t even if I wanted to, oh masked rider of the plains. The bird’s welded on. You’d need a load of primacord to blast ’er loose.”
“What about the explosive bolts?” I asked.
Sam cackled again. “That’s part of the simulation, kiddo. There aren’t any.”
I saw that Hector was grinning, as if he knew something that I didn’t.
“Then how do you intend to separate the orbiter?” I demanded.
“I don’t,” Sam replied.
“Then how…” The question died in my throat. I had been a fool. A stupendous fool. This wasn’t an assassination plot; Sam was taking the president of Cuba—and his ten-year-old daughter—for a space flight experience, just as he’d taken several hundred other tourists.
I could feel my face burning. Hector, his smile gentle and sweet, turned toward me and said softly, “Maybe you should unload the gun, huh? Just to be on the safe side.”
I clicked on the safety, then popped the magazine out of the pistol’s grip.
I sat in silence for the rest of the flight. There was nothing for me to say. I had been an idiot, jumping to conclusions and suspecting Sam of being a partner in a heinous crime. I felt awful.
After the regular routine over the Caribbean, Sam turned us back to Colon, and we landed at the airport without incident. Sam taxied the plane to his hangar, where a throng of news reporters and photographers were waiting.
With his daughter clinging to his side, the president of Cuba gave a long and smiling speech in Spanish to the news people. Sam squirmed out of his pilot’s chair and rushed down to the hangar floor so he could stand beside the Cuban president and bask in the glow of publicity. Naturally, he grabbed the woman who was supposed to be his co-pilot and took her along with him.
I stayed in the cockpit with Hector, watching the whole thing. I could see Ms. Jones hovering around the edge of the crowd, together with her people; even she was smiling.
El presidente put his arm around Sam’s shoulders and spoke glowingly. It was still in Spanish, but the tone was very warm, very friendly. Cuban-American relations soared almost as high as the president thought he’d flown. Sam signed his autograph for the president’s daughter. She was almost as tall as he, I noticed.
Cameras clicked and whirred, vid-cams buzzed away, reporters shouted questions in English and Spanish. It was a field day—for everybody but me.
Hector shook his head and gave me a rueful grin. “I guess we were a little wrong about all this,” he said, almost in a whisper.
“It’s my fault,” I said. “I got you into this.”
“Don’t look so sad. Everything came out OK. Sam’s a hero.”
All I wanted to do was to stay in that cockpit and hide forever.
At last el presidente and his daughter made their way back to their limousine. The fleet of limos departed and the crowd of media people broke up. Even the American State Department people started to leave. That’s what they were, I reluctantly admitted to myself. Jones and her people really were from the State Department, not the CIA.
Finally Sam came strolling the length of the 747’s cabin and climbed up the spiral staircase to the cockpit, whistling horribly off-key every step of the way.
He popped his head through the hatch, grinning like a Jack-o-lantern. “You want me to send some pizzas up here or are you gonna come out and have dinner with me?”
Hector took me by the hand, gently, and got to his feet. He had to bend over slightly in the low-ceilinged cockpit, a problem that Sam didn’t have to worry about.
“We’re coming out,” he said. I let him lead me, like a docile little lamb.
We went straight to Sam’s favorite restaurant, the waterfront shack that served such good fish. Jones was already there, sipping at a deadly-looking rum concoction and smiling happily.
“I ought to be angry with you two,” she said, once we sat at the little round table with her.
“It’s my fault,” I said immediately. “I’m the one to blame.”
Hector started to say something, but Jones shushed him with a gesture of her long, graceful hand. “No harm, no foul. The flight went beautifully, and I’m not going to screw up my report by even mentioning your names.”
Sam was aglow. He ordered drinks for all of us, and as the waiter left our table, he looked over at the bar.
“Lookit that!” Sam said, pointing to the TV over the joint’s fake-bamboo bar.
We saw the president of Cuba smiling toothily, his daughter on one side of him and Sam Gunn on the other.
“World-wide publicity!” Sam crowed. “I’m a made man!”
Hector shook his head. “If anybody ever finds out that your orbiter never left the 747, Sam, the publicity won’t be so good.”
For Hector, that was a marathon speech.
Sam grinned at him. “Now who’s going to tell on me? The Department of State?”
Jones shook her head. “Not us.”
“NASA?” Sam asked rhetorically. “You think some rocket expert in NASA’s gonna stand up and declare that you can’t re-mate the orbiter with its carrier plane once it’s been separated?”
Before any of us could reply, Sam answered his own question. “In a pig’s eye! The word’s going through the agency now, from top to bottom: no comment on Space Adventure Tours. Zip. Nada. Zilch. The lid is on and it’s on tight.”
“What about you two?” Jones asked, arching a perfect brow.
Hector glanced at me, then shrugged. “I’m in the Air Force. If I’m ordered to keep quiet, I’ll keep quiet.”
“And you, Ms. Perkins?” Jones asked me.
I focused on Sam. “You promised to end this bogus business in two months, Sam.”
“Yeah, that’s right, I did.”
“Did you tell the president of Cuba that all he got was a simulation?” I asked.
Sam screwed up his face and admitted, “Not exactly.”
“What happens to Cuban-American relations when he finds out?”
Jones’s smile had evaporated. “Which brings us back to the vital question: are you going to try to blow the whistle?”
I didn’t like the sound of that try to.
“No, she’s not,” Sam said. “Ramona’s a good American citizen and this is a matter of international relations now.”
The gall of the man! He had elevated his scam into an integral part of the State Department’s efforts to end the generations-old split between Cuba and the U.S. I wondered who in Washington had been crazy enough to hang our foreign policy on Sam Gunn’s trickery and deceit. Probably the same kind of desk-bound lunkheads who had once dickered with the Mafia to assassinate Castro with a poisoned cigar.
“I want to hear what you have to say, Ms. Perkins,” Jones said, her voice low but hard as steel.
What could I say? What did I want to say? I really didn’t know.
But I heard my own voice tell them, “Sam promised to close down Space Adventure Tours in two more months. I think that would be a good idea.”
Sam nodded slowly. “Sure. By that time I oughtta be able to raise enough capital to buy a Clippership and take tourists into orbit for real.”
Jones looked from me to Sam and back again.
Sam added, “Of course, it would help if the State Department ponied up some funding for me.”
She snapped her attention to Sam. “Now wait a minute…”
“Not a lot,” Sam said. “Ten or twenty million, that’s all.”
Jones’s mouth dropped open. Then she yelped, “That’s extortion!”
Sam placed both hands on his flowered shirt in a gesture of aggrieved innocence. “Extortion? Me?”
“And that’s just about the whole story, Uncle Griff,” Ramona said to me.
I leaned back in my desk chair and stared at her. “That business with the president of Cuba happened two months ago. What kept you down there in Panama until now?”
She blushed. Even beneath her deep suntan I could see her cheeks reddening.
“Uh… well, I wanted to stay on Sam’s tail and make certain he closed up his operation when he promised he would.”
Sam hadn’t closed Space Adventure Tours, I knew. He had suspended operations in Panama and returned to the agency. Gone back on duty. He was scheduled for a classified Air Force mission, of all things. I had talked myself blue in the face, trying to get the astronaut office in Houston to replace him with somebody else, but they kept insisting Sam was the best man they had for the mission. Lord knows who he bribed, and with what.
“You didn’t have to stay in Panama all that time,” I pointed out to my niece. “You could have kept tabs on him from here in Washington.”
She blushed even more deeply. “Well, Uncle Griff, to tell the truth… it was sort of like a, you know, kind of like a honeymoon.”
I snorted. Couldn’t help it. The thought of my own little niece shacked up with…
“You were living with him?” I bellowed.
She just smiled at me. “Yes,” she said, dreamily.
I was furious. “You let Sam Gunn—”
“Not Sam!” Ramona said quickly. Then she grinned at me. “You thought I was living with Sam?” She laughed at me.
Before I could ask, she told me, “Hector! We fell in love, Uncle Griff! We’re going to get married.”
That was different. Sort of. “Oh. Congratulations, I suppose. When?”
“Next year,” my niece answered. “When Sam starts real flights into orbit, Hector and I are going to spend our official honeymoon in space!”
I wanted to puke.
So that’s why we had to fire Sam Gunn. Government regulations specifically state that you can’t be running a business of your own while you’re on the federal payroll. Besides, the little S.O.B. made a shambles of everything he touched.
It wasn’t easy, though. Actually firing somebody from a government job is never easy, and Sam played every delaying trick in the book. Just to see if he could give me apoplexy, I’m sure.
The little conniving sneak was even working out an arrangement to rent a section of a new space station and turn it into an orbiting honeymoon hotel before I finally got all the paperwork I needed to fire his butt out of the agency.
And he didn’t leave quietly. Not Sam. Know what his final masterstroke was? He left me a prepaid ticket to ride his goddamned Clippership into orbit and spend a full week in his orbiting hotel.
He knew damned well I’d never give him the satisfaction! Probably the little bastard thinks I’m too old to enjoy sex. Or maybe he expects me to bust a blood vessel while I’m making love in weightlessness.
But I’ll fool him. Good and proper. I’m growing a beard. I’m getting hair implants. He’ll never recognize me.
Who knows? If it’s really as good in zero-g as Sam claims it is, maybe I’ll even retire up there in orbit. Then I can drive Sam nuts, for a change.
That’s something worth living for!
(Editor’s Note: Sam Gunn appeared here earlier in “Sam’s War,” July 1994 and “Nursery Sam,” January 1996.)