"There are two points in our favor," Colin continued. "No official funds are involved, so we can't be criticized for using government money. And let's have no false modesty — Earth will expect a Makenzie.
It might even be regarded as an insult if one of us didn't go. And as Duncan is the only possibility, that settles the matter."
"You're perfectly correct, of course. But not everyone will see it that way. All the families will want to send their younger sons and daughters."
"There's nothing to stop them," Duncan interjected.
"How many could afford it? We couldn't."
"We could if we didn't have some expensive extras in mind. So can the Tanaka-Smiths, the
Mohadeens, the Schwartzes, the Deweys..."
"But not, I believe, the Helmers."
Colin spoke lightly, but without humor, and there was a long silence while all three Makenzies shared
a single thought. Then Malcolm said slowly: "Don't underrate Karl. We have only power and brains.
But he has genius, and that's always unpredictable."
"But he's crazy," protested Duncan. "The last time we met, he tried to convince me that there's intelligent life on Saturn."
"Did he succeed?"
"Almost."
"If he's crazy — which I doubt, despite that famous breakdown — then he's even more dangerous.
Especially to you, Duncan."
Duncan made no attempt to answer. His wiser and older twins understood his feelings, even if they
could never fully share them.
"There is one other point," said Malcolm thoughtfully, "and it may be the most important of all. We may have only ten years in which to change the whole basis of our economy. If you can find an answer to this problem on your trip — even a hint of an answer! — you'll be a hero when you come home. No one
will criticize any of your other activities, public or private."
"That's a tall order. I'm not a magician."
"Then perhaps you'd better start taking lessons. If the Asymptotic Drive isn't pure magic, I don't know what is."
"Just a minute!" said Colin. "Isn't the first A-Drive ship going to be here in just a few weeks?"
"The second. There was that freighter, Fomalhaut. I went aboard, but they wouldn't let me see
anything. Sirius is the first passenger liner — she enters parking orbit — oh — in about thirty days."
"Could you be ready by then, Duncan?"
"I very much doubt it."
"Of course you can."
"I mean physiologically. Even on a crash program, it takes months to prepare for Earth gravity."
"Um.. But this is far too good an opportunity to miss — everything is falling into place beautifully.
After all, you were born on Earth."
"So were you. And how long did you take to get ready when you went back?"
Colin sighed.
"It seemed like ages, but by now they must have improved the techniques. Don't they have
neuroprogramming while you sleep?"
"It's supposed to give you horrible dreams, and I'll need all the sleep I can get. Still, what's good for Titan..."
He had no need to complete the quotation, which had been coined by some unknown cynic half a
century ago. In thirty years, Duncan had never really doubted this old cliché — once intended to wound, now virtually adopted as a family motto.
What was good for the Makenzies was indeed good for Titan.
4
The Red Moon
Of the eighty-five known natural satellites, only Ganymede, lord of the Jovian system, exceeds Titan
in size — and that by a narrow margin. But in another respect Titan has no rivals; no other moon of any planet has more than a trace of atmosphere. Titan's is so dense that if it were made of oxygen, it would be easy for man to breathe.
When this fact was discovered, late in the twentieth century, it presented the astronomers with a first-class mystery. Why should a world not much larger than the Earth's totally airless Moon be able to hold onto any atmosphere — particularly one rich in hydrogen, lightest of all gases? It should long ago have leaked away into space.
Nor was that the only enigma. Like the Moon, almost all other satellites are virtually colorless,
covered with rock and dust shattered by ages of meteoric bombardment. But Titan is red — as red as
Mars, whose baleful glare reminded men in ancient times of bloodshed and of war.
The first robot probes solved some of Titan's mysteries, but, as is always the case, raised a host of new problems. The red color came from a layer of low, thick clouds, made from much the same bewildering
mixture of organic compounds as the Great Red Spot of Jupiter. Beneath those clouds was a world more
than a hundred degrees hotter than it had any right to be; indeed, there were regions of Titan where a man needed little more than an oxygen mask and a simple thermofoil suit to move around in the open. To
everyone's great surprise, Titan had turned out to be the most hospitable place in the Solar System, next to Earth itself.
Part of the unexpected warmth came from the greenhouse effect, as the hydrogenous atmosphere
trapped the feeble rays of the distant sun. But a good deal more was due to internal sources; the