The Saturn is no sleek passenger liner. She’s an aging space lugger hauling freight between Venus and Earth, running on reputation, fuel margins, and the patience of Captain Hanson. When a politically protected third mate named Lancelot Biggs joins the crew, trouble arrives before the ship even clears orbit. A misjudged maneuver bruises half the crew. A misguided experiment in climate control turns a valuable shipment of Venusian produce into a rotting disaster. By the time the smell reaches the bridge, the damage is already done.
Then comes worse news. Back on Earth, the Corporation’s stock is collapsing. Investors are watching this shipment, counting on it. The Saturn’s cargo was supposed to steady the books. Instead, it’s worthless. Captain Hanson faces not only humiliation but the real possibility that his ship will be scrapped and his crew dismissed. The only hope is to stall long enough for the panic to pass. But the Board is waiting at the dock, appraisers in hand. The airlock opens. The inspection begins. And what stands beneath a tarpaulin in the corridor may decide everything.
Nelson S. Bond was one of the most versatile voices in American science fiction and fantasy. Beginning in the 1930s, he sold stories to Astounding Science Fiction, Blue Book, Weird Tales, and Planet Stories. He created the popular Lancelot Biggs series for Blue Book magazine, blending space travel with sharp humor and technical speculation. Bond’s fiction often balanced breezy character work with bold scientific ideas, and his work was later recognized with honors from the World Fantasy Convention and the First Fandom Hall of Fame. In “F.O.B. Venus,” he brings together corporate politics, cosmic radiation, and one disastrously optimistic junior officer in a story that proves even a blunder can change the balance sheet of the solar system.























