About This Book
The narrator encounters a young spaceman marked by broken veins and radiation-scarred eyes and escorts him through dive bars where veterans exchange tall tales and injuries. Conversation reveals the physical toll of the Bowman Drive and decompression work—redlines, ruined sight, amputations—and the economic pressure that keeps men risking further harm. The young spacer oscillates between pride in pay and fear of degeneration while patrons cope with alcoholism, gallows humor, and nostalgia. The story portrays a community of damaged laborers and probes the tension between technological progress framed as public good and the private suffering it imposes on individual workers.
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