Cautiously sliding down, a minute lifeship less than the size of a freight car came to a landing in the Terran Electric construction yard. Channing emerged, his face white. He bent down and kissed the steel grille of the construction yard fervently.
Someone ran out and gave Channing a brown bottle. Don nodded, and took a draw of monstrous proportions. He gagged, made a face, and smiled in a very wan manner.
"Thanks," he said shakily. He took another drink, of more gentlemanly size.
"What happened?"
"Dunno. Was coming in at three G. About four hundred miles up, the deceleration just quit. Like that! I made it to the skeeter, here, in just enough time to get her away about two miles ago.Whoosh!"
Don dug into his pocket and found cigarettes. He lit up and drew deeply. "Something cock-eyed, here. That stoppage might make me think that my tube failed; but—"
"You suspect that our tube isn't working for the same reason?" finished the project engineer.
"Yes. I'm thinking of the trick, ultra-high powered, concentric beams we have to use to ram a hole through the Heaviside Layer. We start out with three million watts of sheer radio frequency and end up with just enough to make our receivers worth listening to. Suppose this had some sort of Heaviside Layer?"
"In which case, Terran Electric hasn't got solar power," said the project engineer. "Tim, load this bottle into theElectric Lady, and we'll see if we can find this barrier." To Channing, he said: "You look as though you could stand a rest. Check into a hotel in Chicago and we'll call you when we're ready to try it out."
Channing agreed. A shave, a bath, and a good night's sleep did wonders for his nerves, as did a large amount of Scotch. He was at Terran Electric in the morning, once more in command of himself.
Up into the sky went the ship that carried the solar tube. It remained inert until the ship passed above three hundred and forty miles. Then the ammeter needle swung over, and the huge shunt grew warm. The tenuous atmosphere outside of the ship was unchanged, yet the beam drew power of gigantic proportions.
They dropped again. The power ceased.
They spent hours rising and falling, charting this unknown barrier that stopped the unknown radiation from bringing solar power right down to earth. It was there, all right, and impervious. Above, megawatts raced through the giant shunt. Below, not even a micro-ammeter could detect a trace of current.
"O.K., Don," said the project engineer. "We'll have to do some more work on it. It's nothing of your doing."
Mark Kingman's face was green again, but he nodded in agreement. "We seem to have a useless job here, but we'll think of something."
Channing left for Venus Equilateral in two more days. They studied the barrier and established its height as a constant three hundred and thirty-nine, point seven six miles above Terra's mythical sea level. It was almost a perfect sphere, that did not change with the night and day as did the Heaviside Layer. There was no way to find out how thick it was, but thickness was of no importance, since it effectively stopped the beam.
And as Don Channing stepped aboard thePrincess of the Skyto get home again, the project engineer said: "If you don't mind, I think we'll call that one the Channing Layer!"
"Yeah," grinned Don, pleased at the thought, "and forever afterward it will stand as a cinder in the eye of Terran Electric."
"Oh," said the project engineer, "We'll beat the Channing Layer."
The project engineer was a bum prophet—
THE END.