PATCH
Episode #505 · Written by William Shedenhelm · Narrated by Scott Miller
The ships are bigger now. The systems are smarter. The pilots mostly sit back and monitor panels that promise precision. But when a meteor tears a ten-foot hole through a fully loaded liner, no circuit can improvise its way out of vacuum.
“Patch” places us inside the control tower at Venusport just as a distress call slices through the static. An All-Planetary liner has been crippled in space. It cannot land without air in the control room, and it cannot hold air with a gaping breach in its hull. The pressure difference alone would blast any temporary seal into orbit. The solution must be permanent, immediate, and executed in open space.
Enter Pop Gillette. He is lean, sun-darkened, and impossible to date. He distrusts automated cruising systems and once walked away from a prestigious liner route rather than let machines fly his ship. He lands his battered vessel, the Lorelei, in ways that make tower crews sweat. When the liner calls Mayday, Pop has every reason to stay seated and let the corporation face the consequences of its own overconfidence. Instead, he demands cargo figures, grabs a roll of tape, and heads for his ship.
The rescue that follows is bold, practical, and rooted in physics. The stakes are measured in tons, temperature, and atmospheric pressure. Hundreds of passengers are depending on a man who refuses to believe that computers have replaced skill. The question is not whether the math works. The question is whether Pop can act fast enough to turn theory into something that will hold.
“Patch” blends sharp humor with genuine suspense. It celebrates hands-on knowledge without ever ignoring the danger of the void. At its heart is one test: when a crisis exposes the limits of automation, who steps forward to take control?
ABOUT THE AUTHOR
William Shedenhelm is known for a single published science fiction story, “Patch,” which appeared in 1953. Beyond this story, no additional verified works or reliable biographical information have been documented.
LISTEN TO THE STORY
Listen to Patch by William Shedenhelm — a vintage science fiction short story where a crippled liner and one stubborn pilot collide in deep space.
RELATED STORIES
Venus has always been science fiction’s most tempting lie.
For decades, writers looked at that bright point in the twilight sky and imagined a world hidden under cloud—steaming jungles, poisonous swamps, strange ruins, and creatures built for heat and pressure. Then the real data arrived. The romance didn’t die. It evolved. Venus became a test of nerve, a place where humans bargain with an environment that never bargains back.
In these stories, Venus can be a destination that breaks crews, a route that turns routine hauling into a trap, or a rumor that follows you home. Sometimes “Venusian” means a living species with rules of its own. Sometimes it means a human scheme stamped with a glamorous label and sold as destiny. Either way, once Venus enters the story, the air gets heavier.
You’ll find explorers stepping into landscapes no Earth-born body was meant to endure. You’ll find salvage crews and pilots learning that the shortest path can be the cruelest one. You’ll find satire that uses Venus as a mirror, then tilts the mirror until the joke turns sharp.
Start anywhere below. If you want the pure “planetary Venus” mood, go for the swamp-world classics. If you want Venus on the shipping lanes, pick the cargo runs. If you want a grin with teeth, try the Venus comedies.
- The Guest Rites by Robert Silverberg
- The Moon That Vanished by Leigh Brackett
- The Queen of Space by Joseph Slotkin
- The Venus Evil by Chester S. Geier
- F.O.B. Venus by Nelson S. Bond
- The Yes Men of Venus by Ron Goulart
- The Flight of the Eagle by Alfred Coppel
- Before Eden by Arthur C. Clarke
- Savage Galahad by Bryce Walton
- In the Walls of Eryx by H. P. Lovecraft and Kenneth Sterling
- First Landing by Roger D. Aycock
- Flowering Evil by Margaret St. Clair
- Quarantined Species by J. F. Bone
- Short Snorter by Charles Einstein
- Patch by William Shedenhelm
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