It was dark outside. The Shed was alone, for security. It was twenty miles from the town where its work force slept and ate and made merry. That was security too. One shift came off, and went through a security check, and during that time the Shed was empty save for the security officers who roamed it endlessly, looking for trouble. Sometimes they found it. The shift coming on also passed through a security check. Nobody could get into the Shed without being identified past question. The picture-badge stage was long since passed on the Space Platform job. Security was tight!
The long procession of busses rolled through the night. Outside was dark desert. Overhead were many stars. Inside the jammed bus were swaying figures crowded in the aisle, and every seat was filled. There was the smell of sweat, and oil, and tobacco. Somebody still had garlic on his breath from lunch. There was the noise of many voices. There was an argument two seats up the aisle. There was the rumble of the motor, and the peculiar whine of spinning tires. Men had to raise their voices to be heard above the din.
A swaying among the crowded figures more pronounced than that caused by the motion of the bus caught Joe’s eye. Somebody was crowding his way from the back toward the front. The aisle was narrow. Joe clung to his strap, thinking hard and happily about the rebalancing of the gyros. There could be no tolerance. It had to be exact. There had to be no vibration at all....
Figures swayed away from him. A hand on his shoulder.
“Hiya.”
He swung around. It was the lean man, Haney, whom he’d kept from being knocked off the level place two hundred feet up.
Joe said: “Hello.”
“I thought you were big brass,” said Haney, rumbling in his ear. “But big brass don’t ride the busses.”
“I’m going in to try to hunt up the Chief,” said Joe.