The young man smiled faintly and left. "I'm a little frightened, Friden; I think I'll go to my cabin. Take charge and have them wait for my orders." Captain Webber saluted tiredly and walked back down the long corridor. He paused as the machines suddenly roared more life, rubbed his cheek and went into the small room. "Cows," said Captain Webber bracing himself. The fiery leg fell into the cool air, heating it, causing it to smoke; it burnt into the green grass and licked a craterous hole. There were fireflags and firesparks, hisses and explosions and the weary groaning sound of a great beast suddenly roused from sleep. The rocket landed. It grumbled and muttered for a while on its finny tripod, then was silent; soon the heat vanished also. "Are you all right, sir?" "Yes. The rest?" "All but Mr. Chitterwick. He broke his glasses and says he can't see." Captain Webber swung himself erect and tested his limbs. "Well then, Lieutenant, has the atmosphere been checked?" "The air is pure and fit to breathe, sir." "Instruct the others to drop the ladder." "Yes sir." A door in the side of the rocket opened laboriously and men began climbing out: "Look!" said Mr. Milton, pointing. "There are trees and grass and—over there, little bridges going over the water." He pointed to a row of small white houses with green gardens and stony paths. Beyond the trees was a brick lodge, extended over a rivulet which foamed and bubbled. Fishing poles protruded from the lodge window. "And there, to the right!" A steel building thirty stories high with a pink cloud near the top. And, separated by a hedge, a brown tent with a barbeque pit before it, smoke rising in a rigid ribbon from the chimney. Mr. Chitterwick blinked and squinted his eyes. "What do you see?"