
A sleek interplanetary freighter glides thirty hours out from Mars toward Terra, held on course by invisible “beam‑director” cams that steer it through the void with cold, mathematical precision. The ship’s navigation is flawless, but its communications are a relic—a one‑way whisper that only reaches the home base when the vessel finally lands. This blend of high‑speed travel and stubborn isolation sets the stage for a quiet, tension‑filled voyage.
Onboard is Don Channing, a sharp‑tongued engineer who spends the long haul reading spacegrams that are as cryptic as love notes. He jokes with the crew about the impossibility of answering a message while hurtling through space, yet the problem gnaws at him: how to make a ship that can truly talk back. His banter with the steward and the pilot reveals a mind constantly tinkering, balancing humor with the seriousness of a system that still can’t send a reply.
Meanwhile, the crew’s routine maintenance—switching cathodes, calibrating power tubes—adds a pulse of urgency to the journey. As the Solar Queen nears its destination, the delicate dance of technology and human ingenuity hints at challenges that may finally force a breakthrough in the stubborn silence of interstellar communication.
Language
en
Duration
~1 hours (68K characters)
Series
Venus Equilateral
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Original publisher
United States: Street & Smith Publications, Inc.,1944.
Credits
Greg Weeks, Mary Meehan and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
Release date
2022-05-10
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1911–1981
A mid-century science fiction writer with a knack for engineering-minded ideas, he became known for stories that mixed radio, electronics, and speculative science. His work appeared widely in the pulp magazine era and helped shape the feel of classic American SF.
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