The co-pilot—pilot now—shouted cheerfully above the din: “Hiya. You couldn’t sleep either? Burns hurt?”
Joe shook his head.
“Bothered,” he shouted in reply. Then he added, “Do I do something to help, or am I along just for the ride?”
“First we take a look,” the pilot called over the motor racket. “Two kilometers due north of the Shed, eh?”
“That’s right.”
“We’ll see what’s there,” the pilot told him.
The small plane went up and up. At five hundred feet—nearly level with the roof of the Shed—it swung away and began to make seemingly erratic dartings out over the spotty desert land, and then back. Actually, it was a search pattern. Joe looked down from his side of the small cockpit. This was a very small plane indeed, and in consequence its motor made much more noise inside its cabin than much more powerful engines in bigger ships.
“Those burns I got,” shouted the pilot, staring down, “kept me awake. So I got up and was just walking around when the call came for somebody to drive one of these things. I took over.”
Back and forth, and back and forth. From five hundred feet in the early morning the desert had a curious appearance. The plane was low enough for each smallest natural feature to be visible, and it was early enough for every shrub or hummock to cast a long, slender shadow. The ground looked streaked, but all the streaks ran the same way, and all were shadows.