Mother and Father sat for a minute as if hit with hammers right behind the left ear.

  At last Father, his face exploding with color, shouted, “Do you mean to say! You sat there, woman, you say; all those men, and you——”

  “You were always hiding,” snapped Grandma. “So you wouldn’t spoil things. If you’d come out in the open you’d have seen the same as I. I never said a word. She’ll simmer down. It’s just her time of life. Every woman goes through it. It’s hard, but they can survive. A new man every day does wonders for a girl’s ego!”

  “You, you, you, you, you!” Father choked on it, eyes wild, throat gorged too big for his collar. He fell back in his chair, exhausted. Mother sat, stunned.

  “Good morning, everyone!” Marianne raced downstairs and popped into a chair. Father stared at her.

  “You, you, you, you, you,” he accused Grandma.

  I shall run down the street shouting, thought Father wildly, and break the fire-alarm window and pull the lever and bring the fire engines and the hoses. Or perhaps there will be a late snowstorm and I shall set Marianne out in it to cool.

  He did neither. The heat in the room being excessive, according to the wall calendar, everyone moved out onto the cool porch while Marianne sat looking at her orange juice.

  The Golden Apples of the Sun

  “South,” said the captain.

  “But,” said his crew, “there simply aren’t any directions out here in space.”

  “When you travel on down toward the sun,” replied the captain, “and everything gets yellow and warm and lazy, then you’re going in one direction only.” He shut his eyes and thought about the smoldering, warm, faraway land, his breath moving gently in his mouth. “South.” He nodded slowly to himself. “South.”

  Their rocket was the Copa de Oro, also named the Prometheus and the Icarus, and their destination in all reality was the blazing noonday sun. In high good spirits they had packed along two thousand sour lemonades and a thousand white-capped beers for this journey to the wide Sahara. And now as the sun boiled up at them they remembered a score of verses and quotations:

  “‘The golden apples of the sun’?”

  “Yeats.”

  “‘Fear no more the heat of the sun’?”

  “Shakespeare, of course!”

  Cup of Gold? Steinbeck. The Crock of Gold? Stephens. And what about the pot of gold at the rainbow’s end? There’s a name for our trajectory, by God. Rainbow!

  “Temperature?”

  “One thousand degrees Fahrenheit!”

  The captain stared from the huge dark-lensed port, and there indeed was the sun, and to go to that sun and touch it and steal part of it forever away was his quiet and single idea. In this ship were combined the coolly delicate and the coldly practical. Through corridors of ice and milk-frost, ammoniated winter and storming snowflakes blew. Any spark from that vast hearth burning out there beyond the callous hull of this ship, any small firebreath that might seep through would find winter, slumbering here like all the coldest hours of February.

  The audio-thermometer murmured in the arctic silence: “Temperature: two thousand degrees!”

  Falling, thought the captain, like a snowflake into the lap of June, warm July, and the sweltering dog-mad days of August.

  “Three thousand degrees Fahrenheit!”

  Under the snow fields engines raced, refrigerants pumped ten thousand miles per hour in rimed boa-constrictor coils.

  “Four thousand degrees Fahrenheit.”

  Noon. Summer. July.

  “Five thousand Fahreheit!”

  And at last the captain spoke with all the quietness of the journey in his voice:

  “Now, we are touching the sun.”

  Their eyes, thinking it, were melted gold.

  “Seven thousand degrees!”

  Strange how a mechanical thermometer could sound excited, though it possessed only an emotionless steel voice.

  “What time is it?” asked someone.

  Everyone had to smile.

  For now there was only the sun and the sun and the sun. It was every horizon, it was every direction. It burned the minutes, the seconds, the hourglasses, the clocks; it burned all time and eternity away. It burned the eyelids and the serum of the dark world behind the lids, the retina, the hidden brain; and it burned sleep and the sweet memories of sleep and cool nightfall.

  “Watch it!”

  “Captain!”

  Bretton, the first mate, fell flat to the winter deck. His protective suit whistled where, burst open, his warmness, his oxygen, and his life bloomed out in a frosted steam.

  “Quick!”

  Inside Bretton’s plastic face-mask, milk crystals had already gathered in blind patterns. They bent to see.

  “A structural defect in his suit, Captain. Dead.”

  “Frozen.”

  They stared at that other thermometer which showed how winter lived in this snowing ship. One thousand degrees below zero. The captain gazed down upon the frosted statue and the twinkling crystals that iced over it as he watched. Irony of the coolest sort, he thought; a man afraid of fire and killed by frost.

  The captain turned away. “No time. No time. Let him lie.” He felt his tongue move. “Temperature?”

  The dials jumped four thousand degrees.

  “Look. Will you look? Look.”

  Their icicle was melting.

  The captain jerked his head to look at the ceiling.

  As if a motion picture projector had jammed a single clear memory frame in his head, he found his mind focused ridiculously on a scene whipped out of childhood.

  Spring mornings as a boy he had leaned from his bedroom window into the snow-smelling air to see the sun sparkle the last icicle of winter. A dripping of white wine, the blood of cool but warming April fell from that clear crystal blade. Minute by minute, December’s weapon grew less dangerous. And then at last the icicle fell with the sound of a single chime to the graveled walk below.

  “Auxiliary pump’s broken, sir. Refrigeration. We’re losing our ice!”

  A shower of warm rain shivered down upon them. The captain jerked his head right and left. “Can you see the trouble? Christ, don’t stand there, we haven’t time!”

  The men rushed; the captain bent in the warm rain, cursing, felt his hands run over the cold machine, felt them burrow and search, and while he worked he saw a future which was removed from them by the merest breath. He was the skin peel from the rocket beehive, men, thus revealed, running, running, mouths shrieking, soundless. Space was a black mossed well where life drowned its roars and terrors. Scream a big scream, but space snuffed it out before it was half up your throat. Men scurried, ants in a flaming matchbox; the ship was dripping lava, gushing steam, nothing!

  “Captain?”

  The nightmare flicked away.

  “Here.” He worked in the soft warm rain that fell from the upper decks. He fumbled at the auxiliary pump. “Damn it!” He jerked the feed line. When it came, it’d be the quickest death in the history of dying. One moment, yelling; a warm flash later only the billion, billion tons of space-fire would whisper, unheard, in space. Popped like strawberries in a furnace, while their thoughts lingered on the scorched air a long breath after their bodies were charred roast and fluorescent gas.

  “Damn!” He stabbed the auxiliary pump with a screwdriver. “Jesus!” He shuddered. The complete annihilation of it. He clamped his eyes tight, teeth tight. God, he thought, we’re used to more leisurely dyings, measured in minutes and hours. Even twenty seconds now would be a slow death compared to this hungry idiot thing waiting to eat us!

  “Captain, do we pull out or stay?”

  “Get the Cup ready. Take over, finish this. “Now!”

  He turned and put his hand to the working mechanism of the huge Cup; shoved his fingers into the robot Glove. A twitch of his hand here moved a gigantic hand, with gigantic metal fingers, from the bowels of the ship. Now, now, the great metal hand slid out holdi
ng the huge Copa de Oro, breathless, into the iron furnace, the bodiless body and the fleshless flesh of the sun.

  A million years ago, thought the captain, quickly, quickly, as he moved the hand and the Cup, a million years ago a naked man on a lonely northern trail saw lightning strike a tree. And while his clan fled, with bare hands he plucked a limb of fire, broiling the flesh of his fingers, to carry it, running in triumph, shielding it from the rain with his body, to his cave, where he shrieked out a laugh and tossed it full on a mound of leaves and gave his people summer. And the tribe crept at last, trembling, near the fire, and they put out their flinching hands and felt the new season in their cave, this small yellow spot of changing weather, and they, too, at last, nervously, smiled. And the gift of fire was theirs.

  “Captain!”

  It took all of four seconds for the huge hand to push the empty Cup to the fire. So here we are again, today, on another trail, he thought, reaching for a cup of precious gas and vacuum, a handful of different fire with which to run back up cold space, lighting our way, and take to Earth a gift of fire that might burn forever. Why?

  He knew the answer before the question.

  Because the atoms we work with our hands, on Earth, are pitiful; the atomic bomb is pitiful and small and our knowledge is pitiful and small, and only the sun really knows what we want to know, and only the sun has the secret. And besides, it’s fun, it’s a chance, it’s a great thing coming here, playing tag, hitting and running. There is no reason, really, except the pride and vanity of little insect men hoping to sting the lion and escape the maw. My God, we’ll say, we did it! And here is our cup of energy, fire, vibration, call it what you will, that may well power our cities and sail our ships and light our libraries and tan our children and bake our daily breads and simmer the knowledge of our universe for us for a thousand years until it is well done. Here, from this cup, all good men of science and religion: drink! Warm yourselves against the night of ignorance, the long snows of superstition, the cold winds of disbelief, and from the great fear of darkness in each man. So: we stretch our hand with the beggar’s cup....

  “Ah.”

  The Cup dipped into the sun. It scooped up a bit of the flesh of God, the blood of the universe, the blazing thought, the blinding philosophy that set out and mothered a galaxy, that idled and swept planets in their fields and summoned or laid to rest lives and livelihoods.

  “Now, slow,” whispered the captain.

  “What’ll happen when we pull it inside? That extra heat now, at this time, Captain?”

  “God knows.”

  “Auxiliary pump all repaired, sir.”

  “Start it!”

  The pump leaped on.

  “Close the lid of the Cup and inside now, slow, slow.”

  The beautiful hand outside the ship trembled, a tremendous image of his own gesture, sank with oiled silence into the ship body. The Cup, lid shut, dripped yellow flowers and white stars, slid deep. The audiothermometer screamed. The refrigerator system kicked; ammoniated fluids banged the walls like blood in the head of a shrieking idiot.

  He shut the outer air-lock door.

  “Now.”

  They waited. The ship’s pulse ran. The heart of the ship rushed, beat, rushed, the Cup of Gold in it. The cold blood raced around about down through, around about down through.

  The captain exhaled slowly.

  The ice stopped dripping from the ceiling. It froze again.

  “Let’s get out of here.”

  The ship turned and ran.

  “Listen!”

  The heart of the ship was slowing, slowing. The dials spun on down through the thousands; the needles whirred, invisible. The thermometer voice chanted the change of seasons. They were all thinking now, together: Pull away and away from the fire and the flame, the heat and the melting, the yellow and the white. Go on out now to cool and dark. In twenty hours perhaps they might even dismantle some refrigerators, let winter die. Soon they would move in night so cold it might be necessary to use the ship’s new furnace, draw heat from the shielded fire they carried now like an unborn child.

  They were going home.

  They were going home and there was some little time, even as he tended to the body of Bretton lying in a bank of white winter snow, for the captain to remember a poem he had written many years before:

  Sometimes I see the sun a burning Tree,

  Its golden fruit swung bright in airless air,

  Its apples wormed with man and gravity,

  Their worship breathing from them everywhere,

  As man sees Sun as burning Tree …

  The captain sat for a long while by the body, feeling many separate things. I feel sad, he thought, and I feel good, and I feel like a boy coming home from school with a handful of dandelions.

  “Well,” said the captain, sitting, eyes shut, sighing. “Well, where do we go now, eh, where are we going?” He felt his men sitting or standing all about him, the terror dead in them, their breathing quiet. “When you’ve gone a long, long way down to the sun and touched it and lingered and jumped around and streaked away from it, where are you going then? When you go away from the heat and the noonday light and the laziness, where do you go?”

  His men waited for him to say it out. They waited for him to gather all of the coolness and the whiteness and the welcome and refreshing climate of the word in his mind, and they saw him settle the word, like a bit of ice cream, in his mouth, rolling it gently.

  “There’s only one direction in space from here on out,” he said at last.

  They waited. They waited as the ship moved swiftly into cold darkness away from the light.

  “North,” murmured the captain. “North.”

  And they all smiled, as if a wind had come up suddenly in the middle of a hot afternoon.

  When I was a boy in the Midwest I used to go out and look at the stars at night and wonder about them.

  I guess every boy has done that.

  When I wasn’t looking at the stars, I was running in my old or my brand-new tennis shoes, on my way to swing in a tree, swim in a lake, or delve in the town library to read about dinosaurs or Time Machines.

  I guess every boy has done that, too.

  This is a book about those stars and those tennis shoes. Mainly about the stars, because that is the way I grew up, getting more and more involved with rockets and space as I moved toward my twelfth, thirteenth, and fourteenth years.

  Not that I have forgotten the tennis shoes and their powerful magic, as you will see in the last story here, which I have included not because it concerns the Future, but because it gives you some sort of idea of the kind of boy I was when I was looking at the stars and thinking of the Years Ahead.

  Nor have I forgotten the dinosaurs that all boys love; they are here, too, along with a Machine that travels back in Time to step on a butterfly.

  This is a book then by a boy who grew up in a small Illinois town and lived to see the Space Age arrive, as he hoped and dreamt it would.

  I dedicate these stories to all boys who wonder about the Past, run swiftly in the Present, and have high hopes for our Future.

  The stars are yours, if you have the head, the hands, and the heart for them.

  RAY BRADBURY

  Los Angeles

  March 28, 1962

  R Is for Rocket

  There was this fence where we pressed our faces and felt the wind turn warm and held to the fence and forgot who we were or where we came from but dreamed of who we might be and where we might go....

  Yet we were boys and liked being boys and lived in a Florida town and liked the town and went to school and fairly liked the school and climbed trees and played football and liked our mothers and fathers....

  But some time every hour of every day of every week for a minute or a second when we thought on fire and stars and the fence beyond which they waited … we liked the rockets more.

  The fence. The rockets.

  Every Saturday morning ??
?

  The guys met at my house …

  With the sun hardly up, they yelled until the neighbors were moved to brandish paralysis guns out their ventilators commanding me guys to shut up or they’d be frozen statues for the next hour and then where would they be?

  Aw, climb a rocket, stick your head in the main-jet! the kids always yelled back, but yelled this safe behind our garden fence. Old Man Wickard, next door, is a great shot with the para-gun.

  This one dim cool Saturday morning I was lying in bed thinking about how I had flunked my semantics exam the day before at formula-school, when I heard the gang yelling below. It was hardly 7 A.M. and there was still a lot of fog roaming in off the Atlantic, and only now were the weather-control vibrators at each corner starting to hum and shoot out rays to get rid of the stuff; I heard them moaning soft and nice.

  I padded to the window and stuck my head out.

  “Okay, space-pirates! Motors off!”

  “Hey!” shouted Ralph Priory. “We just heard, there’s a new schedule today! The Moon Job, the one with the new XL3motor, is cutting gravity in an hour!”

  “Buddha, Muhammad, Allah, and other real and semimythological figures,” I said, and went away from the window so fast the concussion laid all the boys out on my lawn.

  I zippered myself into a jumper, yanked on my boots, clipped my food-capsules to my hip-pocket, for I knew there’d be no food or even thought of food today, we’d just stuff with pills when our stomachs barked, and fell down the two-story vacuum elevator.

  On the lawn, all five of the guys were chewing their lips, bouncing around, scowling.

  “Last one,” said I, passing them at 5000 mph, “to the monorail is a bug-eyed Martian!”

  On the monorail, with the cylinder hissing us along to Rocket Port, twenty miles from town—a few minutes’ ride—I had bugs in my stomach. A guy fifteen doesn’t get to see the big stuff often enough, mostly every week it was the small continental cargo rockets coming and going on schedule. But this was big, among the biggest … the Moon and beyond....