VISA
FOR AN ENIGMA
When
John Carter came to the Horalcah Cluster, it was in the guise of an
interstellar salesman. If anyone there suspected he was more than that, it
would mean his instant execution.
But
Carter's unusual personality made it possible for him to put over the deception
and even gain a visa to the forbidden central planet, an arsenal of space war
factories. Of course, he had to make some special deals to do it, and those
proved his undoing.
For
he found himself caught there between two menaces: the tyrannical militaristic
moguls and a fantastically greater threat from beyond the ends of space.
Turn this book over for second complete novel
CAST
OF CHARACTERS
John Carter
His past was a child's
myth; his future an impossible
fantasy.
Harriet Lafonde
Her greatest deception was
to show she was a little deceiving.
Carson Napier
He almost died of surprise when his galactic search
ended.
Allura Koanga
Her world's intrigues were child's play in a
tangled universe.
Hsien Koanga A little man who played with the life of a planet.
The Moguls
They
gobbled up star clusters until their world caved in.
NO MAN'S WORLD
by
KENNETH BULMER
ACE
BOOKS, INC. 23 West 47th Street, New York 36, N.Y.
no man's world Copyright
©, 1961, by Ace Books, Inc. All Rights Reserved
Other
Ace Novels by Kenneth Bulmer:
CITY
UNDER THE SEA (D-255)
THE
SECRET OF ZI (D-331)
THE
CHANGELING WORLDS (D-369)
THE EARTH GODS ARE COMING (D-453)
BEYOND
THE SILVER SKY (D-507)
mayday orbit
Copyright ©,
1961, by Ace Books, Inc.
Printed in U.S.A.
I
Directly he dumped his single case on the customs
bench, Dave Caradine began telling the old familiar lies. This far into the
Galactic Hub, with stars and planets thicker than pips in a pomegranate, they
took their customs inspections seriously. He wasn't telling his elaborately
calculated lies to cover up smuggling—that was strictly for the small time.
He
opened his case helpfully. The planet's name was Camma-Horakah and Caradine
hadn't wanted to make planetfall here at all. Out on the field a tractor with
an off-key motor was hauling the starship off the pad. Other passengers were
lining up, brightly dressed men and women from a hundred planets. Each
individual person, Caradine knew with a sour little smile of amusement, figured
that his or her own planet was the Golden Peak of civilization and
culture-after Ragnar and the good ol' PLW, of course.
Those two groupings really
were worth a visit
The questions and the lies began.
"Name?"
"John
Carter," Dave Caradine said. Using that name always did give him a kick.
"Occupation?"
He
was too polite, and far too cautious, to point out that all this was in the
green plastic passport lying with his case on the bench. The customs man was
short and running to fat, a little sweaty in the heat of Gamma-Horakah's high
summer. He'd be reasonably polite, too, until Caradine told him where he was
from.
"Oh," he said casually. "I'm a
businessman. Hoping to prospect new markets here. Nice
world you have.. "Where you
from?" "Federation of Shanstar."
"Shanstar?" The customs man made a production
out of his frown. He was a citizen of the powerful Horakah Cluster; he could
afford to be patronizing to lesser breeds. He could afford to be, and he was.
Caradine
had to take it. That was always the problem, knowing just how high to pitch the
planetary cluster you claimed as home. He'd made the mistake, early on, of
claiming a really grade A 1 Plus cluster. They'd unmasked him, tried him,
fined him, tossed him in jail. The next time he'd
swung teo low—he snickered at the thought of the idiocy of claiming to be from
a single planet of a single system— and he'd spent a frustratingly miserable
three months cleaning out toilets. A man without the protection of a strong home was a man to be pushed around unhesitatingly.
But
to get the balance just right, and to pitch it just so that no one would bother
to check up ...
"Shanstar?" The customs man shook his head wonderingly. It was a good act.
Caradine said, "Fifty planets, and
growing every year, friend." He lowered his voice, confidentially.
"There's talk that PLW will be sending a fact-finding mission preparatory
to setting up a consulate."
"The
PLW Embassy on Alpha Horakah," the customs man said off-handedly, "is
one of the oldest establishments in this area of the galaxy."
It was a rebuke.
Caradine smiled.
"I've heard such a lot of Alpha-Horakah, that I'm figuring on paying the planet a
call." "You'll be lucky." Caradine widened his smile.
The
customs man activated his gazeteer and the screen lit up. The robot had no
trouble remembering Shanstar.
"Fifty-two
planets," the customs man said, slightly. impressed
despite the habitual might and glory of Horakah.
"Well,
what do you know!" Caradine thumped the bench
with his fist. "Another couple already!"
The rest of the data were read
out.
"Quite a nice little grouping, Federation of Shanstar. I see you don't yet have much of a
navy."
That had been one snag.
Caradine had had to risk it.
"Well,
you know how it goes. So far we've not bumped into any really hostile entities.
But the yards are all there; the navy could grow overnight."
"Yeah,
and babies grow under oleander trees. Save it. You skimp on defense and one
day, powie! You'll wake up to find Shanstar a province of some other tougher
grouping."
"You
could be right, friend. Horakah ought to know about these things."
At the customs man's quick, undecided glance,
Caradine thanked his luck that he'd tacked the extra words on that clumsy
sentence, He flicked his open case.
"Want to look?"
"Sure. Anything to declare?"
"Only this."
He
slid the blued metal weapon from his shoulder holster and skidded it neady
across the bench so that it halted, shining and slick and oiled, direcdy before
the customs man. The man of Horakah flinched back. The speed of draw had been
entirely reflex and Caradine cursed himself. Idiotl Take it easy. Relax. The old flannel
is getting you into this dump, boy. Don't foul it up.
"You kinda flash that
thing, mister."
"It's nice of you to say. Just personal protection. Don't tell anyone, but I'm a lousy
shot." He laughed.
The
customs man laughed, too, as he picked the gun up. It made him stop laughing.
He stared at Caradine.
"A Beatty one millimeter needle-beam, duration one-hundreth of a
second." He
spoke slowly, thoughtfully. "About a'56, I'd say."
"Fifty-eight."
"Yeah. And made on Ragnar."
"That's
right," said Caradine brighdy. '
The gun was always a chance. "How'd you
get it?"
"No
mystery. Bought it on Shanstar." He opened his
wallet, "Look, here's the receipt." He pushed it across.
"Humph.
Well, looks okay. Shouldn't be any trouble about a license
for the Horakah Cluster."
"Thanks."
Caradine felt an elation; mild, but nonetheless positive.
Here on Gamma-Horakah he was going to pick up a license for the gun which would
be effective in all the other worlds of Horakah. He wanted to get to Alpha ...
And
then his mental alertness sagged. After the big smash, going anywhere with any
purpose had become meaningless. He wanted to go to Alpha merely because that
world was the capital of the cluster. And . . . Dammit all! He had to keep
reminding himself, he was just a peaceful businessman. He was. That was
all—now. And he had to do business in order to live. Going to Alpha was
important; but not important enough to warrant the itchy expectation that,
unaccountably, rode him now.
The
customs man punched the necessary keys for the license, the robot burped the
card out, and Caradine paid. The money was in Galaxos, which simplified things.
Now
came the crucial moment. The passport in its green plastic cover was picked up,
flipped open, photograph compared. There were fingerprints, retinal images,
ear dimensions, sole prints, too. All those were quite in order. The high-class
and fantastically expensive forgery lay in the name of the bearer, John Carter.
If Caradine got through with that, he knew one little old half-blind man on
Shanstar V who was in business. If he didn't. . .
Well, one prison was much like another in the
human section of the galaxy.
The
line waiting was growing restive. One or two children were playing with
increasing violence. And it seemed as though the customs man had flexed his
status-flaunting mental muscles enough. He flicked through the passport,
cocked an eye at Caradine and the photograph, and then pushed the hook into the
franker. The robot selected the right page and firmly imprinted the official
seal of the Horakah Cluster, sub-department of Camma-Horakah.
The
book hadn't been shot into the forgery detector. Caradine tried not to breathe
a gusty sigh of relief. Even had it been subjected to that test, he had a
certain faith in that little old half-blind man and his wizardry with
chemicals, nucleonics and downright forging artistry.
The formalities were amicably concluded.
"Thank you, Mr.
Carter."
Caradine began to repack his
bag. "Good hotel?"
"We—ell. Shanstar, hmm? I'd recommend the Outworld
Arms. Comfortable."
"Thanks."
He'd give it a whirl, anyway. Have to, now, having asked.
As he walked off, the customs man called
after him: "Hope you have a pleasant stay on Gamma-Horakah, Mr.
Carter." He turned, smiling. "Thanks."
The
customs man watched the tall, lean, wide-shouldered figure silhouetted for an
instant against the sunlight. That great mass of black hair gave a ... a leonine look. Yes, that was it,
leonine.
Dave
Caradine walked out to the cab rank. Even he was beginning to believe that
Earth didn't exist.
II
Dave Cahadine finished his meal. Feeling comfortable and at
ease, he walked through into the hotel's smoking room, where he cut himself a
yellow Krono and lit up. He'd have to ration the Kronos. They were not an item
the worlds of Hora-kah imported. Well, there was an interesting lead there,
already.
The
man sitting in the low-slung spring chair watching the local station's evening
TV program was smoking a short, scarlet, pudgy cigar that smelled,
when Caradine deliberately caught a whiff, like boiled and shredded
radiation-burn pads. The TV was running some information program on the latest
increase in rates of pay in the armed forces, and tying it in with a recruiting
campaign. There were dramatic color shots of battleships passing in various
fighting formations before a suitably artistic planetary background. Caradine
had always preferred to review the fleets right out in interstellar space,
where the grim gray battlewagons belonged.
Hell! All that was dead and
gone; dust, along with the Second CST.
He
puffed a contemplative yellow cloud towards the scarlet cigar owner.
The perfume got through.
The man took the cigar from his lips and
half-turned his head from the TV. He was medium-height, with a humorous twirl
to his nostrils, and brown hair, thinning fractionally, neatly brushed into a
cowlick over the forehead. He smiled.
"Nice cigar you have there,
friend."
Caradine
puffed again. "Yes, I like
'em. Kronos. Ever tried 'em?"
"No. Never heard of
them."
Well, it could be looked at in the line of an
investment.
Caradine extended the
transparent pack. "Help yourself."
"Thanks,"
There was no gawky shyness. The man reached out and took one of the slim yellow
cigars. "Mind if I just finish this one? I'm a trifle
addicted."
"Go right ahead."
"I'm Greg Rawson. You
just get in today?"
"John Carter. That's
right. In from Shanstar."
"Really? Nice little setup you people have there. I hear you're expanding fast."
Caradine
put on the fatuous home-boy pride. "Sure are. Just heard
another two planets elected to join up."
"Elected?"
"Yep.
We're expanding through trade and economics." Rawson chuckled. He lifted
the Krono. "Like this?" "Sort of."
"I'm from Ahansic. When
I left on
this trip we'd better than sixty planets in the Confederation.
And—" the same lowered confidential tone Caradine had used on the customs
man"—two smaller combines were dickering to join us."
"Sounds an interesting setup. Maybe we could get together. You on business, too?"
"Sure."
Was that a shade too fast, too pat?"
The
difference in the social scale between a planetary grouping of fifty-plus worlds
and better than sixty worlds was small but definite. Rawson could have been
loftily condescending, had he wished. But he was acting like a human being,
and Caradine wondered why.
The
possible answer to that lay in the common bond between two outworlders on a
planet. Then Caradine remembered that Ahansic was a stellar cluster not so
very far away from the powerful Horakah group. Maybe the two smaller groupings
wishing to join up were also being chased by Horakah? Could
be friction there.
That
could be why Greg Rawson was studying the Horakah Space Navy buildup on the TV
with such interest.
Spy?
Well,
and if so, so what? Dave Caradine was a businessman now, and as he'd never
been a spy he didn't think he'd worry about the problem now. As a problem, it
wasn't his.
That
was the wonderful thing about the freedom after the great smashup. There were
no real problems any more.
Only minor trivia like trying to sell goods, and trying to wangle visas
to visit difficult planets. He'd never wind up on an alienist's couch now, thank God.
It might be an idea to see what Rawson knew
about Alpha.
"Horakah
seems a pretty big-time outfit," he said pleasantly. "Thought
I might try my luck on Alpha."
Rawson laughed moderately. "You'll be
lucky."
"That's what the
customs man said."
"I've
been applying for a travel permit for a year, now. No go."
"What's the
trouble?"
"Closed shop. Preferential treatment. They use their outlying
planets, like this one, Gamma, to dicker with other stellar peoples. Then they
ship the goods themselves. A mere matter of economics.
Keeps the colonial worlds happy."
"Inefficient."
"Not necessarily. A starship line can
trade in and out of the Horakah Cluster on a shoestring. We take the long haul
shipping the goods in here."
"Yes,
I suppose so."
He
was getting no change out of Rawson. And bed called. "Well, I'll be
shoving off. See you in the morning?*' "Sure thing. Good night."
"Good night."
As
he left the smoking room a strikingly attractive girl entered. She had a tumbled
pile of silver-blonde hair that emphasized the slant of her cheekbones and the
glint of mischief in her eyes. She was wearing a white slit-blouse, red
toreador pants and black, gilt-finished slippers. She wore no jewelry. Caradine
stood aside to let her pass. She flashed him a smile and went on.
She
began to talk to Greg Rawson, but Caradine had had enough for one day and he
crossed slowly to the elevator. After all, he didn't have to worry about a
single thing or person on this planet.
Worry,
he'd often surmised, grew into a habit.
And
when he'd broken the habit the release had opened up a new world—new worlds, in
fact. Worrying about finagling a trip to Alpha-Horakah and puzzling over
upping his selling index were mere minor elements that had no power whatsoever
to bother him.
But,
still and all, he missed the great days, the thump and excitement and stirring
wonder of it all...
The following morning at breakfast Rawson
introduced the girl as Sharon Ogilvie. She smiled warmly and shook hands. "From Ahansic, too, Mr. Carter."
"Our meeting was quite by chance,"
Rawson said quickly. "We're not in business together or anything."
"I'm sure," said Caradine politely.
He
wondered what the other two thought he thought was covered by the "or
anything." Well, it seemed pretty open and shut and it certainly wasn't
his business.
That
refreshing feeling of power swept over him. Nothing that he didn't wish to be
was his business, now. The days of sweating out the destinies of . . . Well,
they were all over.
He
finished his second cup of surprisingly good coffee, wiped his lips, tossed the
napkin into the robotic disposal, and smiled at Rawson and Sharon.
"I
think I'll take a stroll down to the travel office. Check up on a visa."
Sharon
laughed and pulled a face. "No soap, Mr. Carter." "Can but
try."
He
decided to walk. The city scarcely meant a thing to him, apart from his normal
orienting interest in any new surroundings. It was a city, clean, bright,
filled with traffic and pedestrians, with flashing traffic lights and
well-filled shop fronts, the usual mixture of old and new buildings and facilities.
He appreciated the sunshine, warm on his shoulders. Gamma-Horakah owned a
rather nice sun. He wondered why Rawson had made such a thing out of denying
any business or other relationship with Sharon Ogilvie.
A
few blocks short of his destination as indicated to him by robotic street
guides, he decided to drop into a restaurant for coffee. The walk had made him
thirsty. His choice was purely random.
He settled on a discreet place with only four neon signs flashing out front and a glass swing door that reflected odd angles of the street and passing
vehicles. He pushed the gilt bar and went round with the door.
The
air-conditioning was well-balanced and caused no sudden shivery shock;
civilized, the people of Horakah. But then they ought to be, considering their
size and importance in the interstellar groupings and their distance from the
final periphery of the Blight.
Checking
the robot with a thousandth of a Galaxo—the little plastic coin was always
called a Joey, no matter where you seemed to go in the galaxy—he crossed over
to a side table and sat down. The delivery slot opened and his cup of coffee
slid out. He stirred sugar, relaxing, feeling fine.
Well,
maybe he wouldn't get to Alpha-Horakah, after all. Sitting quiedy here with the
blood running freely in his veins and arteries after the pleasant morning
stroll, with a friendly sun shining in the windows, a good
cup of coffee and—well why not?—a Rrono to smoke contemplatively, he really
couldn't see any reason for haste and bustle and the chasing after that tiny
extra edge of business so beloved by the high-power salesman. The usual
arrangement here seemed to be to sell your stuff to Gamma—any of the other
satellite planets might have done—and then to take your commission and let the
space fines of Horakah worry about shipping in to Alpha. His business friends
and contacts back in Shanstar would be pleased with any business he could put
their way.
Maybe
the Krono angle was a good one. He knew the smoke to be excellent, well up to
his old Earth brands.
Yes,
he was roughing it out, now. After the fluttery feeling in passing through
customs, the rest of it all was mere routine. Not uninteresting; he still had
contacts to make. Even so, he sometimes wondered why he bothered to go from
stellar grouping to stellar grouping, doing business, when he could be back on
Shanstar, seeing about setting up a new home in the ranch house he had bought
last time through. Shanstar . . . Well, it wasn't Earth, but it was an
acceptable substitute.
One
or two other people had entered and left the restaurant. He took little notice.
Pretty soon he'd finish up the coffee and walk the few blocks to the travel
office. Loud laughter attracted his attention. Over by the counter a group of
young men was horse-trading, swapping jokes, living it up. Clerks, probably,
out for their mid morning break whilst the robots carried on unsupervised.
He
rose to go. He had to pass the group and he was totally unprepared. A foot came
from nowhere and he went sprawling. His automatic reflex caused a hand to
flash out and grasp a chair leg. Then chair and all came crashing
down. The all turned out to be a table, and the table had been' loaded with cookies, plates, knives and
forks, all set for a slap-up meal. That slap-up meal was now a gooey mess on the vinyl flooring.
"Say, mister. Why'n't
you look where you're going?"
Still unprepared, Caradine said:
"Sorry." He scrambled up.
"The man says he's
sorry."
He bent to wipe away berry
pie from his black trousers.
The same voice, hectoring, patronizing, said:
"He says he's sorry when this lady's food is all over the floor."
Caradine remembered the foot. These people
were living on Horakah. They belonged to the planet, and were members of a strong interstellar cluster. Take it easy, boy.
"That's all right." The girl was
speaking in a scared voice. Caradine looked at her. Young, freckled, dressed in
a simple frock of lime green that left her arms and knees showing. Brown eyes,
brown hair. Nice, pleasant, home-loving type-on the surface.
She
was trying to talk out of the bully-boy's racket. Of those there were four, and
Caradine at once selected the leader, the hectoring one.
"Is this lady with you?"
"Wha-at? Say, what's that got to do with you,
mister?"
"I
was merely going to suggest that as it was your foot that tripped me up you
should offer to pay for her meal."
The
reply was unintelligible to Caradine, but the girl colored and looked
embarrassed so it was probably currendy obscene.
"Yon wanting to have
your face pushed in, outworlder?"
"Who
says I'm outworld?" Caradine said pugnaciously. It might work. He might
get out of here without further trouble, but he doubted that. It all made him
feel so weary.
"Look at your
clothes."
Certainly
the four youths were dressed rather remarkably. Each had a dirty brown-mustardy waistcoat, open down the front to show a three-inch gap of hairy—or almost hairy; they were quite young—chest.
The pants puffed at the hips and were slashed to show scarlet tights beneath.
The hose came up high and were yellow. Each boot was a different color.
Caradine
bad grown so used to odd clothes among the people of the galaxy that these he'd
passed over as a retrograde fashion step. He gave a quick glance at his own
clothes, as though in obedience to the bully-boy's command.
A white shirt, short-sleeved, open at the throat and fastened with two
magneclamps. Black trousers with a dark-blue cummerbund. A nice, quiet, sensible and conservative outfit. Evidently,
it jarred upon these four more enlightened denizens of Horakah.
He only hoped that his
shoulder holster wasn't showing.
The
girl stood up and tried to say something about not bothering about the meal,
but she was brutally cut off by the leader.
"Sit,
Tisha, and do as you're told." Perhaps, Caradine wondered critically, he
wasn't supposed to make anything out of that.
"All
right, lads," he said. "You've had your fun. Now disappear, scram, flitter. I've an appointment."
"Outworlder poof." The leader put a hand into the pocket
concealed in the puffed pants. Something came out that gleamed. The others
followed the leader.
"Get himl" On the words the four
thugs bore down on Caradine, their eyes hard and hating, their lips drawn back
involuntarily in a rictus of unthinking alien hate.
HI
Cahadine felt immeasurably old, then. He could sense
all the alien antagonisms, the feral undefined fury of one species for another,
all the insane hatred that had flowed out from culture to culture through the
bloody years of the past. These flashy kids were merely carrying to one logical
extreme the current status theories: if my planetary grouping is more powerful
and influential than yours, I can push you about, buster, and you just grin and
like it The girl screamed.
Caradine's fleeting impression of age
vanished. He was still mentally young, alert and vigorous, and the years before
the smashup had maintained his body in perfect fighting trim. So these punks
wanted to show how high and mighty their planet was? Well, his own experience
and the regret he felt did not extend to letting himself be
beaten up.
His
extended left arm, bent at the elbow, stopped the downwards sweep of the sap.
He pushed two fingers forward, hard, and that was the leader out of the fight.
The
second and third youths swung wildly. Caradine stepped outside the arc of the
blows, let them follow through, stepped in close and let two short blows rip
out. Three down and one to go. No, the fourth had
thought better of it. His parti-colored shoes clattered on the vinyl as he ran
out.
The leader was writhing and screaming on the
floor.
The restaurant's single human attendant
rushed up, face distorted, shouting.
Caradine said, "Shut up. These four
hoodlums tried to beat me up in your restaurant. Call the police, will
you."
The man, probably the manager, regained his
senses fast He made placating motions with his hands.
Other
diners were standing up, craning to look. One or two more responsible looking
men began to walk over.
"It
was no responsibility of mine, mister." The manager was more scared even
than the circumstances warranted. "The police don't have to be bothered.
You're not hurt?"
"No.
This lady's meal was ruined by these punks. Charge them." Carradine didn't
want to push the affair. He'd made his point, now he wanted to have done with
it.
He
walked quickly to the exit. A man half-tumed to let him go
by. He had a dark, secretive face with thick but firm lips, and a deep
cleft in his chin. Caradine gave him a brief glance and a short "Excuse
me" as he went by.
Then
he was out around the revolving doors and onto the sun-splashed sidewalk. Young
punks! Just because their
planet was powerful, they thought—oh, the hell with it all.
Throughout
the quick flurry of blows he'd kept his cigar firmly clamped in his mouth. He
smiled reflectively. That was just one of the tricks.
The travel office was surprisingly
inconspicuous. A small, brown metal door let him through into a stone-flagged
patio where extraordinarily pale green trees spread wide and flat leaves above
an open-air counter. The few robots in attendance were inconclusively
puttering about, pruning and trimming and shaving lawns. Water tinkled
refreshingly from the middle-distance and exotic flowers bedazzled a mellow
brick wall. It was all very soothing and very relaxing.
So that made Caradine that much more wary. He had by this time accepted the fact that
he would not secure a visa to visit Alpha. He was now merely going through the
motions. At the same time he was making contacts, and for a businessman
contacts were the life blood of his work.
He
sat in the restful plastic chair indicated by the robot and waited. Presendy a
serene-looking, smiling, eminendy comfortable woman walked across and sat down
beside him. Her gray hair was piled artfully and she wore an emerald-green gown
and discreet jewelry.
"Mr. Carter? Mr. John
Carter?"
"That's right."
"I'm
Harriet Lafonde." She pushed a button on the arm of her chair and a robot
brought tall glasses, dewed, with an amber liquid tinkling with ice.
"Try
a Pomcrush," she said, lifting a glass. "It's a Horakah
speciality."
"Thanks,
Mrs. Lafonde." Carradine sipped. "Mm. Very
good."
"Glad
you like it. Oh, and call me Harriet. I'm the travel permit official for
Gamma."
He
did not allow that to surprise him. He just sipped again at the drink and
waited for the woman to speak again.
After a time, she said: "Why do you want
to go to Alpha, Mr. Carterr
"Business reasons. I sell goods wherever there is a good market and I believe that an
exceptionally fine market exists on Alpha-Horakah. I'd like to go there and
talk to a few of the importers, get their ideas, find out what they want, what
goods they're most interested in."
Even
as he spoke he was aware of the commercial banality of it all, but the old
alarm-signals were trilling in his mind. He sounded just like a textbook businessman covering up an interstellar espionage agent. Damn his own suspicious character, anyway. That set-to with the
young thugs in the restaurant had started a lot of the old gray cells in his
mind functioning again, bringing up thoughts and memories he had imagined dead
and forgotten. He smiled at Harriet Lafonde, there in the sunny patio under
the wide-spreading trees.
"I think Alpha-Horakah as well as Gamma
will profit from a visit."
"And yourself, Mr. Carter?"
"Of course." This was very civilized and very intelligent
and very man-of-the-galaxy. Underneath the sound of knives being sharpened
reached Caradine very clearly.
Harriet
Lafonde said lazily, "You'll pardon me if I say so, Mr. Carter, but you
don't at all look like the sort of man a commercial
traveler should be."
"Is there any
type?"
"Oh, I think so. You're far too brutal,
too tough, too edgy."
Caradine for the moment
didn't know what to say.
"We're
not children any more," Harriet Lafonde said in her lazy, husky voice.
"So you're a businessman. But you've been used to giving orders, to
bossing men about."
"Please."
He had to grimace to keep his anger from showing. "Maybe what you say is
right, maybe not. I'm not flattered. At the moment, and as far as our relationship
is in the balance, I'm merely a businessman. I assure you of that with every
fiber of meaning in me." He stopped. Wrong. The wrong
way. She'd pierced through with her damned womanly intuition and all
the denials in the universe wouldn't alter her opinion now. Perhaps he ought to
have had that facial, after all. Perhaps he should have turned himself into a
faceless anonymous one among billions.
His
own spark of individuality had rebelled at that. He was David Caradine, and
damn the galaxy!
He stood
up, bowing slightly. "Thank you for the drink, Mrs. Lafonde. It was most
pleasant. And the chat here in this pleasant patio
garden—very enjoyable. I think I'll stroll back to my hotel for
lunch."
"Stop babbling and sit
down."
Caradine sat.
"You
want to go to Alpha. If I thought you were a spy I would not have sat out here with you and had
this conversation which was deliberately slanted so that it would not be
enjoyable. But you lied handsomely. Any woman likes a man who lies well."
"Do I take that as a compliment?"
He was smiling now.
Maybe, just maybe, it might be all right.
"Take
it how you like. I cannot guarantee a visa for our central world. It must be
quite obvious to you that we have things going on there that we do not wish
rumored about. But I think that under the circumstances—circumstances of which
you do not have the slightest inkling—we might be able to help. I'd have to
have your word as a gen-tleman that you'd abide by the bargain we might
make."
"Could you explain that?"
"Simply that you cany
on your business there. You make no attempt to pry into government affairs. You'd just be
caugbt and executed, anyway."
Caradine laughed. He began
to feel good again.
"You can have my word on that easily
enough. As of now I'm what I told you, a plain businessman. I leave the spy
stuff for those who like it." He stopped smiling for an instant.
"Unless, that is, you were deliberately plotting against my home world.
That might alter affairs."
It was Harriet Lafonde's
turn to laugh.
"We plan nothing
against Shanstar. Rest assured on that."
Almost,
but not quite, he said: "I was not thinking of Shanstar." He didn't
on two counts. And the first was that he had no wish to be incarcerated in a
lunatic asylum, or whatever euphemistic word they called them here.
"I
can't promise anything, remember. Ill ring you at your
hotel tomorrow."
"Thank
you, Mrs. Lafonde. I appreciate your help, anyway."
When he left he paused at the brown metal
door and glanced back. The picture was nearly perfect: the dignified woman in
her green dress, sitting under the pale green leaves of the trees, backed by
masses of brilliant flowers, with the gentle sounds of birds and falling water
and the hum of drowsy insects. It was all so peaceful and restful. It all
aroused yearnings in him that now could never be fulfilled.
He
shut the door carefully. When he walked away he wasn't seeing so clearly, and
his hands were trembling very slighdy.
IV
The ■whimsical-looking man with the face that through years of labor
had grown an indrawn, secretive look, was waiting for
Caradine as he walked back to the Outworld Arms. Caradine remembered him from
the fracas in the restaurant. The man lounged against the wall, idle in the
sunshine. When Caradine was half a block along, the man pushed himself up with a shrugging motion from the wall, and
sauntered after the outworlder.
So he was being tailed,
then.
So he'd have felt naked if he wasn't.
Harriet
Lafonde would no doubt sort that little problem out when she reported in to her
superiors. If he could persuade them he had no ulterior motive in visiting
Alpha, they might lay off. Only then did the startling
and rather funny thought occur to him that he'd gone to see the visa official
with the more or less resigned acceptance that he wouldn't get a permit. And
that he'd rationalized that out. Oh, well. Times change and men have to change
with them.
He
made a good lunch at the hotel—a red, succulent fish not unlike salmon and
heaps of fresh, crisp salad followed by a golden jelly and a generous pouring
of rich double cream—and decided he'd better try one of the local cigars before
he smoked through his stock of Kronos.
He
stroDed out into the foyer and stopped by the tobacco robot. Now here was one
instance where a robot wasn't in the same class as a human assistant. You could
ask a robot what it recommended in the way of a smoke, and it would reply with
great politeness and sauvity just as it had been programed by the
concessionaires of the booth. Oh, well. Try one of those red blunderbusses Greg
Rawson had been fuming.
He dialed his requirements and added his room
number. Sliding open the transparent pack, he was
about to light one when a voice from somewhere down by his stomach said:
"If you're used to Kronos, friend, I'd strongly advise against those
firecrackers you've just bought."
He
looked down. The man was small and chirpy and wizened. He had crows' feet
radiating from the comers of his eyes and his mouth slit his face in half like
a melon-man. Caradine felt a sudden warmth of affection, stemming, he supposed,
from the instinctive liking in him for the small and cheerful.
"I appreciate your advice, friend. But
I've bought them now. So I'm stuck with them."
"Run out of Kronos?" The little
fellow clucked his tongue. "Pity. Oh, well, try
one of mine, they're Western Ocean Kronos, and they'll smoke differendy from
yours."
"True," Caradine said peaceably.
"Mine are Southern Jubilee."
"Nice
brand." The little fellow tiptoed up and extended a light. Caradine
sucked. That was one nice thing about Kronos; they hadn't got around to fitting
self-igniting tips yet. They hadn't destroyed the artistry in smoking so far.
"Name's Hsien Koanga. From Four."
"John Carter. Five. Well, this calls for a little celebration.
On business?"
"Surely." Koanga's monkey-wizened face never seemed to
be without that wide, quizzical smile. There was shrewdness there, masked, but
plain to Caradine's character-experienced eye. "Mind you," Koanga went rattling on. "Gamma-Horakah isn't
so bad, compared with some planets I've horse-traded on. There was a dump out
by the Barron Cluster— whew, boy, steer clear of there if you want your
nostrils to function at all properly again."
Caradine laughed.
"Primitive?"
They
were walking through to the bar of the Outworld Arms.
"Primitive?
They still used internal combustion engines in their vehicles. The place stank.
Incidence of lung cancer was staggering." He shook his head. "I cut
out smoking altogether whilst I was there. That would have been too
much."
They
reached the bar and sat in a booth, opposite each other. The conversation
flowed on over cool drinks, Caradine finding pleasure in introducing Koanga to
the Pomcrush recommended by Harriet Lafonde. It was a nice drink. They, had a third and a fourth. By that time they'd dredged
up two mutual acquaintances and were working over Shanstar Eight.
The
sight and sound of a man from Shanstar reinvigorated Caradine. He'd been
forgetting just how much Shanster had meant to him in the rush and scurry of
Horakah and all the incidents, meaningless in themselves, that had happened. He
mentioned the fracas in the restaurant and Koanga's lined face frowned angrily.
"That's
a damned shame! All these worlds think they have to be one up on all the
others. Just because those kids' home worlds own a sizeable space fleet doesn't
give them the right to insult and maltreat a citizen from a planet that maybe
doesn't feel it necessary to maintain a gigantic space armada. It makes you
sick."
"It's the way they think. I guess even
we'd feel a little impatient with a man from a planet that was a single and
owned perhaps only a couple hundred space battlewagons."
"Well."
Koanga sipped his drink. "Perhaps I must own the truth of that. But
anyway, a planet that is still a single with a space fleet as minuscule as that
can't be much good; can it? And the men from such a world must be
pretty slack bums."
Caradine thought wearily, And that's the mentality all right, brother. You the same as all the rest.
The conversation naturally worked around to
their line of business and Caradine was told that Koanga was here on
Gamma-Horakah selling spice-woods and precious-gem cabinets, one of Shanstar
Four's specialities. So far he had filled a bulky order book. Caradine was told
all this. He reserved judgement. That was his inherently suspicious nature, he
supposed; but nothing was what it appeared on the surface and he was too wise
a hand to be caught believing the first things he was told.
Oh,
sure, Koanga probably was selling Shanstar Four's renowned spice-woods and he
very likely did have a fat order book. But Caradine wondered cynically if that
was all.
Kbanga stood up, smiling. He was looking over
Caradine's shoulder. Caradine did not look around.
He smelled the
perfume—heady, exciting, promising.
"Oh,
Mr. Carter, this is my niece, Allura Koanga. Allura, this is Mr. John Carter.
He's from Five."
Caradine rose, turning, and
putting out his hand.
"How nice—" the girl smiled warmly "—to meet someone from
home." She
shook hands with a firm, cool clasp.
Caradine
looked at her. He'd thought that Sharon Ogilvie, Greg Rawson's girlfriend from
Ahansic, was a beauty. Now he notched up another credit to his choice of
Shanstar as a home planetary system. Allura was nothing less than beautiful and
yet, with that beauty, there was a warmness and an
aliveness that sheer beauty so often lacked.
Her
aubum hair was softly tumbled about a classically perfect face and her eyes
sparkled in the bar's many concealed lights with a freshness and vivacity that
charmed as well as excited. She wore a wide-sleeved blouse of some shim-mery
material that changed sheen as she moved, and tight black pants that on her
looked good. A single pearl drop glowed miliary from her left ear.
Watch
it! Caradine said to
himself. This
woman is dangerous.
She
sat down with a graceful motion and the robot dispensed a third Pomcrush.
"Mm," she said.
"Good. What is itr"
Caradine told her. "Recommended by Harriet Lafonde."
Both
the Koangas' faces remained polite and smiling and friendly. But the
expressions were frozen in those smiles.
Caradine perked up. Perhaps here might be the
key . . . P
"She's the permit visa official for
Gamma," he said casually. "There appears some chance, odd though it
may be, that I may be allowed to visit Alpha."
"But
no outworlder goes there," Allura said quickly. Too
quickly.
"So I'm told." Caradine drank
thoughtfully. "I'd more or less decided not to bother about Alpha. The
usual system seems to be to sell to Gamma and let them worry after that. But,
of course, if they really do let me visit Alpha, then I'll g°L"
"Of course." Koanga set his drink down carefully. His expression, so overlaid with
fine wrinkles, was hard to read. "I think you are very privileged, Mr.
Carter."
"Well, if I am I have
no knowledge why."
"Perhaps
Mr. Carter has connections of which we are completely unaware," Allura
said gaily, with a toss of her head.
She didn't fool Caradine a single little bit.
"Sorry, Miss Koanga. I can't claim a single contact on this planet yet."
"You sound as though you and the Lafonde
woman got on well?"
"Oh, yes, in a purely formal way. The
people of Horakah are mighty proud of their stellar grouping. They talk to us
out of charity, I'd say."
"One day—" Koanga started to say,
in an ugly tone. His niece cut his words off with a fight laugh.
"One day well also have better than a
thousand suns, is that it, Uncle? Well, so maybe we will."
"No reason why we
shouldn't," Caradine said. "One thing, you can't run too many solar
systems efficiently. Sheer size eventually breaks down the best of modern
administration."
Greg
Rawson and Sharon Ogilvie walked into the bar and sat in a booth. They saw
Caradine and waved across as the robot brought their order.
"You know them?" Koanga asked.
"Met them casually. That's Greg Rawson. I was
introduced to the girl at breakfast. Sharon Ogilvie."
"Interesting
people," Allura said, a trifle sharply.
Oh,
well, Caradine chuckled to himself. One beautiful woman saw another and the
sparks flew for a bit. They'd sort it out eventually. Might be interesting to
see who came out on top. At the moment, on current performance, it would be
Allura by a parsec.
The heat of the afternoon wore on. Allura
suggested a swim and they set off in a cab for the pool,
situated about six miles out of town. The day was perfect for swimming and for
lazing about on the edge, under a striped umbrella, while the busy robots
scurried with cooling drinks. The sun was throwing long shadows when at last
Allura was persuaded to leave the water, dress and head back to town for
dinner.
Caradine
had spent a lazily instructive afternoon watching a perfect female form in a brief bathing costume, and he felt quite
confident that the swim and briefness of the bathing costume and the warmth of
her smile had all been laid on for his particular benefit.
Wondering why was amusing. Not
very profitable, but amusing.
V
The robot made no announcement. Caradine was sitting in
his dressing gown before the window of his room, smoking a last contemplative
cigar and admiring the lights of the night time city. Strange
how the culture of a race could be derived from their use of light. Gamma-Horakah
went in for gaudy displays and clumps of light where they could be seen for
miles. He had heard from Koanga of the miles of badly lit streets sprawling and
festering on the outskirts of town.
The
robot must have been shorted out. The door opened silently and Allura Koanga
walked swiftly in, shutting the door firmly behind her.
Caradine said, "Wrong
room, Miss Koanga?"
"No.
Very much the right room, Mr. Carter. Well, we might
as well make it John and Allura. We have plenty of work to do together."
She
was wearing a transparent negligee that showed most of the
tilings a man might want to see. As Caradine had seen them all before, many
times, he could ignore them—with a slight
struggle—and concentrate on the reason for their flaunting.
"What can I do for you?"
"First of all, listen." Obligingly,
he remained silent.
She
walked with her graceful swaying motion over to the bed and sank down upon it.
Caradine swiveled in his chair but remained by the windows. He blew a careful puff of smoke.
"We are from Shanstar," Allura
Koanga said with an emphasis on the from. "We are here upon another planet, a planet that as a member of a thousand-strong confederation of worlds,
considers itself so high and mighty that it denies to peaceful citizens of the
galaxy free ingress to the central world. Well, enough of that. Harriet Lafonde
will grant you that permit, John."
"What makes you so certain?"
Allura
laughed, a little embarrassedly, a litde unsteadily. Her large dark eyes
fastened on Caradine, sitting there by the window, smiling across at her. His
very poise in face of her intrusion and her negligee must, he thought with dry
humor, have unsetded her a trifle. Her eyes told what she thought of his last remark.
"I'm certain. Women know about these
things."
"All
right, I'll accept that women know and therefore, that you know too. But what
do you want? I'm tired. I need sleep."
The situation and the hour, he felt, had
warranted excision of the word bed.
"Once you are on Alpha, there is much
you can do for Shanstar, John. There are many things we need to know. I'm sure
you understand."
Caradine said with heavy emphasis, "No.
Sorry, Allura, but that sort of stupidity is not for me. I am a plain businessman. I know nothing of, and I care even less, if that is
possible, for military matters now. You'll have to find someone else to do your
spying for you."
She
rose from the bed and crossed to him, the negligee pressing against her figure.
She was intense, on fire, demanding.
"You are of Shanstar, John Carter.
Surely that means something to you?"
"It
does. I like Shanstar. I don't want to get myself caught and executed as a spy
and put Shanstar in an embarrassing political situation. Oh, yes. I'd be
caught."
"But—" she
protested fiercely.
"I've said no; I mean no. I want to hear
nothing more about it." He flicked ash into the disposal in the arm of the
chair. "Have you thought that this room is almost certainly tapped?"
She laughed. "It
was."
"I see. Well, then,
the answer is still no."
She
was kneeling by the chair now, clutching the arm. Her face was inches from his own. He wondered when she'd moved into phase two of
the operation.
Well,
it was a temptation all right. A
hellish temptation. But as he had no intention of spying whilst on
Alpha, assuming he reached there, he couldn't take the payment and default on
delivering the goods.
My
God I Even in this he was starting to think like a businessman!
She
gave him a long, hard, calculating look. He endured it emotionlessly, knowing
the crucial moment was here.
Then she sat back on her
heels. Her face showed weariness and defeat. Slowly she stood up and put one
hand through her aubum hair.
"Sorry
to have troubled you, John. I see that I am wasting my time. I just thought
that with Shanstar being lined up by Horakah as their next victim, their next
conquest, you'd want to help fight back. Evidently I was wrong."
She went limply to the door.
"Allural"
She turned. "Yes?"
"I've given my word that I won't spy on
Alpha." "Oh."
"And
I thought that there were smaller combines lying between Horakah and Ahansic
next on the list of aggression."
She laughed, a hurting, bitter laugh. "So you've been fed
the propaganda, too? No, John. Shanstar is the next."
"Give me proof.
"We'll speak to my uncle in the
morning."
"Very well. Just remember that I promise nothing. I've given my word once. I don't
toss that around lightly."
"No, John. No, I don't believe you
do."
She
went out and closed the door gently behind her. When Caradine tried it next the
robot did the work so she must have cut him back into the circuit. He rubbed
his chin and smiled. Quite a girl. . ..
The next morning Harriet Lafonde phoned. It
was okay. He could drop by the office any time and pick up his permit.
Later,
Sharon Ogilvie called to him as he was leaving the hotel's dining room after a
pleasant lunch. Sunshine splashed across her silver hair and turned it into a
spinning whirl of sparks. She was wearing diamond-patterned pants, tightly cut
as usual, in red and green and screaming blue. Her yellow blouse was daringly
cut.
Caradine
stopped politely and took the cigar from his mouth.
"Oh, Mr. Carter, Greg and I arq taking a run out to the Painted
Caves this afternoon." She spoke in a low, confidential tone. "Perhaps you'd care to come
along. It should be a lovely drive and the Caves are famous throughout almost
all the galaxy."
Caradine had heard of them.
He was interested.
"That is, if you have
no other engagements," she added.
"No.
I'd love to, Miss Ogilvie. I have certainly heard of the Caves. A previous
civilization, aren't they? Before humanity set up house here?"
"Yes."
They fell into step. "The beings who painted the Caves must have all died
out many thousands of years ago." She laughed a burble of sound in the hot
afternoon stillness. "And that's a long time ago by any of the years that
men use to measure time."
"Yes."
Sharon Ogilvie, walking at his side with her
tight pants and her silver hair, and Allura Koanga, with her auburn hair and
transparent negligee—were they both after the same thing? And was that one
thing what he thought, or was Horakah after neither Ahansic nor Shanstar? So many names to remember. Well, that part of it was easy.
Any man who had to deal with dangerous men and dangerous women in his life
remembered names. They were the stock in trade of the successful man.
Rawson
had the hired car ready. It was a no-nonsense runabout, dark-green with plenty
of chrome trim, and the antigrav unit was probably five years old and good for
another five before an overhaul. The drive tubes looked a little pitted, but
they'd give the car a safe top speed of just under Mach One, which on this
planet would probably be fairly high, especially at this time of year.
Caradine allowed Rawson to slide behind the
wheel and with Sharon in the center of the four-seater front bench, he had
plenty of space to stretch himself and lean his elbow on the armrest. Rawson
took off with a nicely sedate swoop that took them into the east-bound traffic
lanes smoothly. Caradine passed one of the red stogies across to Rawson and sat
back to enjoy the ride.
Blue
and purple hills passed beneath, then a river on which pleasure boats dotted
the silvered current with scraps of color. Farther on they received a detour
signal over the traffic radio and Rawson obediently angled the car onto a
southeasterly swing. Away to the north, banks of black smoke crept up against
the horizon.
"One of their
industrial plants," Rawson said laconically.
"Mostly automated, though, I
suppose?"
"Oh, sure. And turning out kettles and electric stoves and
refrigerators. The plants turning out megaton warheads and destructor-ray
projectors will all be on Alpha. Mostly, anyway."
"Do you think Horakah
means business?"
Rawson
was not shaken by the remark. He took it as Caradine had meant it. There had
always been an out if Rawson didn't want to play. "Of course they do. Any
and everybody is meat for their grinders."
"Your folk on
Ahansic getting worried?"
"What do you think?
Same as Shanstar, I expect.
"Shanstar's a good way off."
"Yes,"
Sharon said with an edge to her voice. "And Ahansic has about three small
groupings between us and the Horakah monster."
Caradine
decided to needle a little. "You know," he said equably, "I'd
kinda figure that those little groups would prefer to join up with the big
boy. If they joined up with the little 'un they'd be swallowed up in their turn
and receive no thanks. The other way they'd come in for some of the pickings."
Rawson
laughed nastily. "We can't fight Horakah," he said. "Only Ragnar
and the good ol' PLW could do that."
"True, maybe, but debatable. You could make it uncomfortable for them.
Not a good proposition."
"We'd
go down fighting. We'd mess up a lot of Horakah battleships and maybe a planet
or so. But we'd go down. And Horakah would have the pickings. They'd recover.
We wouldn't."
"Much the same for Shanstar." Caradine glanced idly over the side at the
distant fine of forest and hint of far-off mountains. "Pity Ahansic and
Shanstar are so far away in the galaxy. We could get together."
"But are we so far
away?" asked Sharon softly.
"Three months aboard a
fast starship."
"There
are other groupings. Around Horakah. If they all
pooled their resources . . ."
"And who'd take orders from whom?"
Caradine made it light. He laughed as he spoke. But it was the stumbling block.
Anyone
who'd tried to organize people, to run a stellar grouping, knew that.
The others said nothing to that. Caradine
felt a flush of deviltry, of scatter-brain couldn't-care-less stirring rise in
him. Speaking quite casually, yet watching the others from shrewd eyes, he
said, "According to the stories, look what happened along those lines back
on Earth."
Sharon laughed. "Mr. Carter! Don't tell
me you still believe in the fairy stories? Why, that's strictly for the
kids!"
"Well . . ." began Caradine.
"I met a man once, who said he believed
that a place called Earth really did exist," said Rawson, musingly.
"He spoke quite rationally, too. Had a good job.
Then he refused to use ball-point pens because he said they were symbols for
spaceships and all spaceships were evil. He got worse. He ended up claiming
that Earth had really existed—did still-somewhere beyond the Blight area. They
had to dig so deep into his brain to cure him he never rose above moron grade
again. Shame."
"Some folks have pretty convincing
theories—" "We're sane, grownup people, Mr. Carter," Sharon said
positively. "Everybody knows that Earth is just a fairy story. Earth just
doesn't exist."
VI
The car lurched and Rawson had to uncouple the robot
and bring it back onto course manually. They were over open country and no
traffic lanes operated.
"Damn!"
Rawson said without heat. "Car's packed up on us. Control's shot to
hell."
"Can
you put it down?" asked Sharon. She half rose from her seat.
"Take it easy, Miss Ogilvie. Mr. Rawson
can handle this car in his sleep." Caradine felt that to be true. It was
true of most adults. The car banked and swept down, and the whisper of air on
the hull penetrated as a distant drumming.
"No
official landing space. Have to put down where we can.
"There's
a promising-looking field over there." Caradine pointed. He felt no alarm.
There were always the ejector capsules; personalized parachute packs with an
enclosed seat and wind-breaks. He wondered at Sharon. She hadn't seemed the
girl to panic.
Rawson
brought the car round again, cautiously heading into the wind. He lowered the
undercart and flaps and lined the car up on the rapidly growing field.
That
told Caradine that his estimate of another five years active work from the
antigrav unit had been out by four years, three hundred and sixty-four days and
twenty-two and a half hours.
Then he checked himself. A remark like that
would bring up a casual, "Whose year's that, then?"
And some fumbling answer that might brand him as a single-planet
man. And an unknown planet, at that. Shanstar —he had
to remember the fiddling littlest things. Shanstar's year was four hundred and
ten of Earth's days. You had to remember so much . . . And yet, he'd been
quietly boasting to himself that he was in the business of remembering details.
Correction. Had been in the business.
Trees
flickered past below. Rawson's grip on the controls was relaxed and confident.
He lifted the nose of the car. Caradine took a firm grip on the armrest.
Sharon, sitting in the middle, put one hand on the rail under the fascia. Caradine
reached his right hand out, slid it about her waist
and drew her to him. She responded at once, put her left arm around his waist.
They waited, then, consciously relaxing.
"Coming up .
.."
The
field was not as smooth as it had appeared from the air. The wheels hit, one
burst, and the car slewed. Rawson applied"the brakes frantically. The car
rolled. It went over three times, finished up on its side.
Sharon
said, quite distinctly, "Oaf."
Then
Caradine had the door open and was hanging one-handed, hauling her out. She
dropped with a kick of multicolored tights, and jumped onto the grass.
Caradine followed and reached back for Rawson, pulled
him up the seating and over the canted side. The three of them stood in a row,
their hands on their hips, surveying the wreck.
"Well," Sharon said with a tight
look on her face. "What now, Greg?"
She was very put out.
"That damn tire," Rawson said.
"I didn't bargain for that."
Caradine
said peacefully, "The radio should be okay. We'll have to call a
cab."
Rawson
shinned up the side without speaking. He bent down over the fascia, out of
Caradine's view. He was some time. Sharon had wrinkled up her forehead.
Caradine didn't speak to her, since it was evident she
was in deep thought.
Caradine, too, began to have thoughts about
this accident. Sharon had been upset only when a crash seemed imminent. He
didn't believe her panicky start from the seat. People just didn't behave like
that in an age of safe and rapid robotic transport. But, when the robots
failed, a certain amount of flap might be justified. But Sharon had reacted as
he would have expected her to do only after the tire burst.
So
he was not at all surprised when Rawson reappeared and reported that the radio
was out. That sort of fitted the pattern. And just what that pattern was,
Caradine, although he had no idea whatsoever, just didn't like the whole sight
and smell of it. He put his hands in his pockets and smiled around on them.
"Well, children, it
seems we walk."
Sharon
swung on Rawson. They began wrangling violendy. Only semi-surprised at such
infantile behaviour, Caradine leaned up against the wreck, soaking up the
sunshine, letting them get it out of their system, and wondering how far they
had to go before they found civilization. Gamma-Horakah was
very much of a show, a garden, planet.
A high, muted whine drifted down to them.
Sharon and Rawson stopped slanging each other and stared up. Caradine cocked a
lazy eyebrow.
The car was handled superbly. It swooped wide
and low, swinging across them at an angle so that the occupant could give them
a good long look. Then it veered up, flopped over on its back, fell vertically,
turning as it did so, and its extended wheels touched the grass in the same
instant as the car reached an upright position. The canopy flipped open.
Allura
Koanga stepped out in a flurry of white petticoat and scarlet skirt.
Caradine sat back to enjoy what might come.
He was a gravely
disappointed man.
The
two girls were as sweet as processed honey to each other.
And just as synthetic.
"My dear, I'm so glad I was passing."
"Darling,
so sweet of you to rescue us."
"You must have itched when the car went wrong."
"You drive so well,
darling."
"And you don't look
the teeniest bit upset."
Caradine
killed his smile. Sweet as honey, yes. But the barbs
were there all right, jabbing with remorseless female viciousness.
Two
of a kind, he supposed, would always hurt each other most.
That
was the trouble with the galaxy, and the planetary groupings that were so much
alike. Men always fought best— or worst—when he fought other Men.
That was the black tragedy that a million
years hadn't managed to obliterate from his heritage.
He roused himself. "Well, Allura. Are
you going to give us a lift back to town or do we begin to walk?"
"Please get in, Mr.
Carter. I shall be happy to assist you."
Smiling to himself, Caradine entered the car.
It was new, bright red, and a Mach One-plus job. He sat in the back seats. He
particularly didn't want to sit between Sharon Ogilvie and Allura Koanga.
He valued his eardrums.
All the way back Greg Rawson sat in a
tight-lipped silence that he broke in monosyllables that were barely this side
of rudeness. Something had evidently gone wrong for him. Caradine suspected
that it was not the crack-up of a hired car. Machinery was so much mankind's
servant these days that any wreck could be written off, almost, without a
second thought.
It
would be nice, Caradine decided, very nice, to know just what was bothering
Greg Rawson.
Allura was vivacious, full of the joys of living, and exuding a faint
air of triumph that equally baffled Caradine.
Sharon
rallied to that mood of gaiety, and was as hectic and scatter-brained in her
jollity as Allura. Caradine was too wise a hand to think the outward facade
meant anything, and he was equally sure that these
three people knew that he must suspect all was not as it seemed. He wondered
just how far they were prepared to push their hand.
And was it all merely because he had a visa
to visit Alpha tucked away down at the office in the care of Harriet Lafonde?
One thing—they'd have to do better than they
had so far to persuade him to start spying.
The
red car swooped in over the city and Allura put it down in the park of the
Outworld Arms. They all got out and the robot trundled the car off to the
garage.
Caradine spoke first.
"I need a drink.
Anyone interested?"
They
all were. They went through into the lounge and Caradine dialed four
Pomcrushes, adding his room number.
Greg
Rawson reached down to the personal TV control inset in the arm of each of the
lounging chairs. The TV came on and he selected a channel showing a
fifteen-piece dance band just rounding off a number. The music was barbaric
stuff from some outworld planet with jerky and nerve-pounding overtones.
Caradine was glad when it had finished and the band leader let the robot music
dispenser take over and begin to pump out canned stuff that dripped like syrup
through the consciousness. The screen rippled and cleared and a human announcer began to read the news.
Mosdy,
it was about the Horakah space navy buildup. Young men who craved excitement
and adventure should rush down to their nearest recruiting depot and sign up
for a man's life, out there in the deeps between
the stars, etc, blah, blah, blah.
It made Caradine a little sick.
With
a beautiful world like Gamma-Horakah, men were still anxious to go off into
space shooting and killing like maniacs. He'd had his gutful a long time ago.
So he supposed he couldn't blame the youngsters now. But it was all such a
criminal and lunatic waste.
Local news followed. A bond
issue. Results of racing and other sports. A
couple of gang fights. A couple of murders. A couple of new buildings going up. Caradine checked an
involuntary start as news of one murder came over.
A young lad, one of the gang members who wore
flashy clothes and carried himself proudly as a member of Harakah, had been
shot in an alley. His
corpse had been found by his friends going to their afternoon swim on their day
off. It was all pathetic, unnecessary, and a sample of human passions tied up
to the extent that murder seemed the only way out.
Greg Rawson devoured the
item.
No
shots of the body were shown. The boy's mother appeared briefly. She was a
widow. Lack of parental control, surmised Caradine, had led her son to this.
The
lad's name had been Tommy Gorse. They were already calling it the Gorse Murder.
Caradine
stood up, excusing himself, and went to his room. He needed to freshen up
before dinner. The afternoon hadn't been wasted. He'd had a pleasant drive out
and although he hadn't seen the Painted Caves, he'd witnessed the edifying
spectacle of two beautiful women clawing each other like cats.
Hiff intercom beeped and he
answered.
"Mr.
John Carter? There are two gendemen to see you. On the way
up." The robot switched off before he could question it.
His
door chime gonged. He reached a hand up and touched his white shirt. The Beatty
was snugged down in the shoulder holster. He activated the door catch, the same
one that Allura had shorted out the previous night, and the two men walked in.
"Mr. John Carter?" One was
grizzled, tough, dour and full of familiar confidence that at once put
Caradine's nerve on a tingling alert. The other was younger, brash, and
learning the tricks of the trade from the old hand.
"Yes?"
he said courteously. "Come in. Sit down. What can I do for you?"
"We're police officers, Mr. Carter. We'd
like to ask you a few routine questions." "Please go
ahead."
"You were in the Nebula Restaurant
yesterday?" "Is that the place—"
"You had a fight with
four youths. You agree?"
"I
remember. They tried to beat me up for no reason." Caradine was getting
the picture now. And it stank. He was a member of a stellar grouping of about fifty-two planets. These policemen represented
a grouping of a thousand or more worlds. They'd treat him with contemptuous
severity. One of their citizens had been murdered. Caradine reckoned he knew
who Tommy Gorse was.
"This
afternoon, in an alley in the city, Tommy Gorse, the leader of the group with
whom you fought, was brutally murdered. We'd like to hear your movements this
afternoon, Mr. Carter."
"That's
simple enough. I went with friends to visit the Painted
Caves."
"Anyone vouch for
that?"
"Well,
we didn't actually reach the Caves. The car broke down and we had to force
land. Mr. Greg Rawson and Miss Sharon Ogilvie were with me. They can
corroborate that."
"Are they from
Shanstar, too?"
There it was. The savage
minority-group hate. "No. They're from Ahansic."
"Ahansic." The younger of the two policemen said it. He made it a spitting curse.
There
was Allura Koanga, too. But she was from Shanstar. They just wouldn't believe
her. But perhaps with the four of them all giving the same story, a story that,
as it was true, would hold up under questioning, he might be believed.
"After
we had to put down," he said, still in that polite, matter-of-fact voice,
"we were picked up and given a ride back into town."
"Yes?"
"A Miss Allura Koanga picked us
up."
"Koanga? She's with Hsien Koanga. Staying here?"
"Yes."
"I see. Well, that shouldn't bother us
overmuch."
Caradine
didn't like the way the policeman had picked that up so fast. Maybe the Koangas
were down in the police records as spies. Maybe he'd only made his case worse.
"Well,
Mr. Carter. Well check with these people. But I'd advise you to stay in the
city. You will be under surveillance. Well call on you again." He turned
to go and the younger cop went to the door. "You see, Mr. Carter, young
Tommy Gorse was shot with a one millimeter needle-beam. A one millimeter
needle-beam that was almost certainly a Beatty. Just
like the one you have under your arm."
VII
Well, they hadn't arrested him.
Not
that that meant a great deal. There would be no trouble picking him up. And all
the nuclear artillery in this city wouldn't save him once they opened up. His
own little popgun had been left him as a contemptuous matter of indifference.
He
was condemned already and as good as executed. Or brain-cleared or whatever
type of corrective punishment they favored here. As he was an outworlder they'd
probably take the easiest and cheapest way out.
The
door chimes went. With a resigned grunt he opened the door and Greg Rawson and
Sharon Ogilvie came in. They were not smiling.
"Didn't waste much time, Mr. Carter, did they?"
"No. They'll be seeing
you next."
"I expect they will. I
understand they work fast here."
Sharon moved across and put a hand on
Caradine's arm. The hand shook. She stared at him full in the face and her eyes
flicked sideways. Caradine caught on. They knew this room was tapped. They
wanted to talk and they didn't want eavesdroppers.
He said evenly, "I was about to go down
to dinner."
"Yes." Rawson said meaningfully.
"A day tramping around museums does make you peckish."
On the way out Caradine digested that
It was just one more smell to add to the
rest.
And he'd walked right into it like a newborn
babel
They
all went out into the open-air patio for a few moments before going in to
dinner. Caradine paused by an arch where crimson flowers not unlike a rose
bloomed gorgeously.
"You
don't have to spell it out," he said harshly. "What's your
price?"
"Now,
Mr. Carter!" said Sharon, lifting her eyebrows in mock surprise.
Rawson
said, "We discussed the designs Horakah have on both Ahansic and Shanstar.
You have a visa to go to Alpha—"
"I doubt that that
will stay in force now."
Sharon
said, "I believe we can trust your word, Carter. If you promise to help
us, we will go along purely on the strength of that."
"And suppose AHura Koanga also
testifies?"
Rawson
laughed. "Let her. She can't get you out of this, Carter. Only Sharon and
I can. And even then it'll be touch and go. We can swing a few heavier weapons
than you suspect. If we corroborate your story, then youll go free. And to Alpha. If we merely say that we were in museums this
afternoon, and can prove it, you'll bum."
"And
the wrecked car out there in that field?"
Sharon
flashed Rawson a nasty look. He said equably, "Hired in the name of Brown,
by a robot agency. And it will be disposed of by this time, anyway. Of course,
that cost plenty of Galaxos."
"So it seems you have
me."
"Yes. You'll go along
with us, Carter, or you'll bum."
"I've given my word
already. You mentioned that just now.
I've
promised that I won't spy for anyone on Alpha. So where do we go from
here?"
Rawson smiled his ugly smile again.
"You misunderstand me, Carter. We're not
asking you to spy on Alpha for us. Oh, no."
"What then?"
"You
will arrange for us to go with you to Alpha, Carter. Simply
that."
After lunch Caradine had looked forward to an
interesting afternoon excursion. Then he was going to pick up his visa and take
the next ship out to Alpha.
After dinner he felt that the whole galaxy
had fallen in on him.
He had to keep remembering that he had no
rights on this world. If Rawson and Sharon denied his story, then he would be
condemned out of hand. Oh, sure, there'd be a trial. But it would be robotic,
open and shut. There would be no he-detector tests. Why bother? He'd claim an
alibi, and that alibi had been proved to be a clumsy He.
He'dfry
all right.
Unless by some miracle the Gamma police
believed Allura's story.
He went to find her. How long he had before
Rawson wanted his answer he wasn't sure. The police were bound to pick up the
couple from Ahansic as soon as they could, and that perhaps explained why they
hadn't gone in to dinner with Caradine. He had made a good meal. Danger never
had bothered his appetite; which was useful. In his previous career had it done
so he'd have starved.
His previous career! Hell,
that was a laugh. Here he'd thought himself finished with all this sort
of nonsense and able to setde down to being an urbane businessman, and he was
caught up in trouble to his neck again. Only this time he was on the receiving
end. The sensation was most unpleasant.
Allura
Koanga wasn't in the hotel and he didn't remember seeing her in the dining
room. Hsien, her uncle, wasn't about, either. Caradine strolled out onto the
terrace, looking in on the patio on his way. Empty. The patio reminded him
vividly of Harriet Lafonde and of the visa that might or might not be awaiting
him there.
He
rather badly wanted to talk to her before Rawson returned for his answer.
Allura might just be able to tip the scales. All these people were so much more
than they seemed. Posing as businessmen with nieces and casual acquaintances
tagging along, they might fool all but the important five percent of
officialdom. At first, they'd certainly fooled him.
It
seemed pretty clear that Rawson had fixed the murder. Then with Caradine out of
the way on an alibi the key to which was firmly held in Rawson's hands, he had
him just where he wanted him. With his nose in the dirt.
Caradine forced his anger down. Temper wouldn't be the slightest use now.
Maybe
Rawson could swing the alibi if he wanted. That he was an Outworlder from
Ahansic would normally tell against him and his word; but maybe, just maybe,
there were other factors at work. Caradine paced up and down the terrace,
smoking a red stogie and trying to think a way through the mess.
If Rawson had stagemanaged the murder, then
he had others working for him on Gamma-Horakah. Caradine recalled the man with
the dark secretive face and the cleft chin. He'd automatically assumed the man
to be a secret policeman working for Gamma-Horakah. Now he wasn't so sure. It
was possible for Rawson to have bribed a Horakah official. That way he'd know
about the Beatty one millimeter. The pieces of the puzzle kept jumping about in
Caradine's brain. But the pieces by themselves had only limited importance; the
main picture held the threat.
The
sky began to darken and a news bulletin broadcast a warning of the weather
bureau's next ten-minute shower for cleansing purposes.
Control of the weather was kid's stuff
compared with trying to control the emotions in men and women.
For
a few extra planets, a little more prestige, men would fight and kill and destroy.
It didn't really make sense. It added up to a black question mark against the
name of Homo sapiens in the galaxy. Was Man fitted to five in an interstellar
civilization? There were plenty of other races of non-humans who lived on their
own planets, totally unfit for comfortable human habitation, who managed to
five amicably. Fighting, it seemed, having been bred into humanity, took a darn
sight longer to be bred out.
Colored lights were going on all along the
terrace and were twinkling merrily over the city. The rain had begun to fall,
straight glinting lances in the lamplight. Allura and her uncle returned. They
stepped from a black car which drove off fast.
Allura's
face was drawn and strained as she came face to face with Caradine.
NO MAN'S WORLD
"So
giving you a lift brings all this," she said bitterly. "Police?"
Hsien
Koanga said, "Of course. They took Allura in for questioning. I am
surprised to see you still at large, Mr. Carter."
"They've seen me. I'm under
surveillance. They know where to pick me up."
He
waited for Allura to tell him. The police had got to her first. Well, that was
to be expected.
"They
say," she said, visibly bringing herself under control, "that you
shot a boy in an alley this afternoon."
He
inclined his head gravely.
"Well, we know you didn't. But they
don't believe me." She was holding the anger, the humiliating, almost
hysterical anger, in very well. "That, of course, is because we wouldn't
he to save one of our own people."
"And
there," Hsien Koanga said with great bitterness, "lies
the irony."
"Irony?"
"Why,
yes, Mr. Carter. Or whatever your name is. I received intelligence from
Shanstar today. You have bought a ranch on Five. You
are well-known there, well-liked, too, I'm told."
Caradine
kept that grave, polite smile on his face. But he was feeling that any more
blows under the belt would put him down forever.
"The irony is, Mr.
What's-your-name, that you're not one of us. You don't belong to
Shanstar at all."
VIII
Standing there with the rain falling in pencil-thin
streaks of color against the lights, Caradine took his chance.
"So
I'm not one of you. So I wasn't born on Shanstar. But I come from Shanstar. I
am a member of your planetary group. I am one
of you!"
Slowly,
Hsien Koanga shook his head. He stood back and stared up at Caradine and all
the perkiness had gone from him.
"We
asked you to do a job for Shanstar. Had you been one of us you would have
complied. I should have wondered, then."
"So what are you going to do?"
"Do?"
Allura swung a slender hand pettishly in the lamplight. "What is there to
do? I'll say my piece, I won't be believed, and if you are condemned then I'll
suffer for perjury. A nice position you've worked me into, Mr.
What's-your-namel"
"I'm
sorry, Allura. But I didn't work you into it. I was rigged into this mess, too,
remember. I was framed like this because I'm from Shanstar."
"No."
Koanga spoke sharply. "That won't wash. Because you have
a visa to visit Alpha. That's why."
Caradine couldn't argue.
"Rawson framed me. He's putting
pressure on me to get him and the girl onto Alpha on
the strength of my visa. Just how he expects me to do that, I don't know. But
if he can get me off the hook of this false charge, then I figure I'll go along
with him. I value my skin." "He could be taken care of."
"That
would be rather stupid. He and Sharon are the only two people who can help. I'd
appreciate it if you left them alone." Caradine mustered a smile.
"Anyway, Allura, if I agree to their proposal and they say they were out
in the car today, that let's you out. They can't charge you with perjury."
"That's true,"
said Allura. She didn't sound hopeful.
Koanga rocked back on his heels and cocked his head up, as though
summing up Caradine for the first time. He moistened his lips. Then he said
distinctly, "Tell me. Where are you from?"
Caradine
had already made up his mind that when this inevitable question came he would
tell the truth. But now it was here, he couldn't face the problem; it took more
courage than he had at his disposal at that disillusioned moment. "What is
truth?" he said. "I don't know. Truth is, I suppose, what a man wants
to hear. I am from Shanstar. That is my home. What I was before, where I was
born, they don't matter any more."
"You are wrong. They do matter."
"But
only to intolerant people. Men and women who cannot accept
the new, who shut their minds to anything outside their normal comfortable
horizons. Your ancestry, Hsien Koanga, is told to me in your name. But
you don't know that. You don't understand race relations at all. You only know a man is a man. You cannot conceive of there being men of different
color, can you?"
He
hadn't meant to say that. It had leaped out in the angry bitterness seething in
him.
"Different-colored men?" Koanga stepped back. "Are you crazy,
Carter?"
"No.
Only that I have had access to older records than any of you know of. All men
are the same beautiful golden tan now. All over the human sections of the
galaxy men are all alike. Rapid transport has seen to that, despite the artificial
barriers we erect. It was not always so."
Allura
said softly, "You remember, Uncle, the stories you used to tell me when I
was a baby? About lost and forgotten civilizations? About
the strange discoveries of new planets where men had once tried to make a
civilization and failed. And of how some had succeeded and when they
were found again, living on worlds they thought of center of the universe, some
peoples were ..." she hesitated.
Koanga
finished for her. "I remember the fairy stories. Some of the people were
white and some yellow and some brown. The pigments in their skins had gone
wrong. Something had happened to them. Something strange and
eerie under alien suns."
Caradine
shook his head. "No, Koanga. Nothing had happened to them. That was their
tragedy. Nothing had happened to them. It is we who changed. This wonderful
golden tan we all take for granted is an amalgam of all those old colored men
and women."
"Impossible!"
Koanga sat down abruptly.
Allura was staring at Caradine now with
burning intensity.
aMy
uncle also told me stories of old worlds and forgotten planets. Fairy-stories of make-believe. One planet was mentioned
many times. One world where the legends say we all came from. A single tiny
planet orbiting an insignificant sun, somewhere behind the Blight"
"Earth," said
Caradine.
The way he said it made it
a benediction.
Koanga
looked up from where he was sitting. "AD this talk—it is nonsense. What do
old fairy stories matter now? We have to face the realities of the present,
tempting though it is to slip away into the fantasies of childhood." He
scowled at Caradine. "Well, Carter, since you won't tell us where you are
from—and I must admit I expected nothing else—we must part company. Shanstar is
in too great peril from Horakah to waste time on a shyster like you."
"Part company? How do you mean?"
"You're
in serious trouble, with Rawson's help or without it. We are suspected here,
already. Further contact with you would be inadvisable. To keep our records
clean I shall inform the Horakah police that you are not from Shanstar. That
way—"
"But
you wouldn't do thatl" Caradine was horrified. "Why, I'd be—I
wouldn't stand a dog's chance."
"You
mean the real world of your birth is some ramshackle little hole, broken-down
and decadent, and you go out into the galaxy and try to gain prestige by
claiming you are from Shanstar. Rather despicable, don't you think?"
"It isn't like that at all. A man is
proud of his home—"
"Not
if it is a stinkhole and he has seen what better worlds are like."
"Mine isn't a stinkhole!" Caradine
shouted, exasperated. If this little wizened Koanga denied him, he'd really be
in trouble. When it had happened before he'd skipped planet with no reputation
but with skin and wallet intact. This time he was under close surveillance from
the local planetary police and just wouldn't get away. He began to feel
closed-in, suffocated, imprisoned.
For the first time the hideous reality of his
predicament sank in. Hell! Whichever way he turned he was sunk.
"Well," he said boldly, "what
do you intend to do about it?"
"Allura
and I want no part of it. You're too dangerous, Carter. You're carrying death
about with you."
"Look, you don't have to inform on me.
Just let it lie. If Rawson gets me off the hook, I'll simply go off and you can
forget all about me."
"That won't be
easy," Allura said, not looking at him.
Koanga said slowly, "As a citizen of the
galaxy it is my duty to reveal deceptions of this kind. If any man is allowed
to he about his home planet and claim just where he
wishes, the organization we have would break down. It is my duty to turn you
in; Carter."
Caradine mentally sat back
and let out a sigh of relief.
Koanga
was offering a bargain. And that bargain seemed pretty obvious.
He
said heavily, "I've given my word that I will not spy on Alpha. If I fall
in with Rawson's wishes, and smuggle him and Sharon to Alpha, I shall not have
broken my word. I also told Harriet Lafonde that I would consider my word
invalidated if I found that my home world was being threatened by
Horakah—"
"Your home worldl" The sneer was
quite cutting.
"By
that I meant Shanstar," Caradine said evenly. "If you can show me
that Horakah is planning aggression against Shanstar, then I can operate for
you as you wish, you need not reveal my secret, and we're all straight."
Koanga was not in the least perturbed that
his offer had been presented before he himself had made it. It had been so
obviously in his mind that his thoughts merely ran on in that groove.
"Shanstar
needs a man on Alpha-Horakah," he said. The rain was ceasing now, the
ten-minute period closing out. The world smelled fresh and wonderful, full of
growing things. "Horakah means to take over this entire area of the
galaxy. Ragnar and the good ol' PLW will not move yet. They are so big, so
powerful, that until a grouping reaches ten thousand planets they just don't
notice it. Horakah can swallow up Shanstar, Ahansic, Belmont,
Delavue, a hundred smaller groups.
"On Alpha is their Central Agency. They
have an entire planet working on one project and one alone: the manufacture of
space fleets to smash with ease any opposition they may encounter. This is so.
We have to know the composition of those fleets; the way in which they have
organized scout ships, spotters, screens, heavies and battlewagons. If we knew
that, we could so position our own smaller fleets that we might be able to—we
would just have to—slip in and do enough damage to deter them."
"How
do you deter a thousand starships with weapons enough to annihilate a planet,
when you don't have a tenth of that strength, Koanga?"
"By knowing how the enemy is organized.
Everything depends on that. You will not be the first to land on Alpha for us.
The others may still be there. They may be finished. But we must have that
information before Horakah moves."
Fighting, war and sudden death amongst the sprawling stars of the galaxy. The old familiar pattern
being repeated. Caradine had seen enough—too much—of interstellar
politics to relish reentering the arena, especially at this- low level. But he
was held, caught, transfixed. He was strung up, raw and ready for the knife, on
the carefully contrived hooks of Rawson and Sharon Ogilvie.
"Rawson
arranged for that stupid kid Gorse to be killed. He and his girlfriend planned
to have me out of the way, with only themselves as witnesses. They could then
deny I was with them. No wonder Sharon was livid when you rescued us, Allura.
But—" he gestured wearily "—it made no difference in the end to their
plans. It could be even that the fight in the restaurant was a put-up-job. What
would a girl be doing eating a big meal like that at midmoming break? Maybe
they had this thing figured the moment I landed."
"They
have some in with the local officials." Koanga nodded slowly. "They
must have known about this famous weapon of yours, Carter. And they must be
able to swing some weight in having their word taken against their Ahansic
outworld origin."
Allura
said, "But they have no power with Harriet Lafonde. Horakah is subdivided
into so many self-important departments that a big fish in one is kicked
around in another."
"I am familiar with that organizational
setup, if organization it can be called," said Caradine. "Carry on
calling me
John
Carter. It will serve. And I rather
like the name. Now, what do we do?"
Both Allura and her uncle spoke at once. They
stopped. Caradine said, "And, of course, don't forget that I'll be taking
along Greg Rawson and Sharon Ogilvie."
Hsien
Koanga said, "That must be your affair and theirs. What happens to them
once they land on Alpha is no concern of ours. You, Carter, are working for the
official but never-recognized espionage agency of Shanstar now. I will brief
you at a more suitable time—after you know for certain that you are going to
Alpha-Horakah. But don't let those two from Ahansic trip you up again." He
paused and his wrinkles creased around his eyes. "It might be politic to
allow them to be caught early on. That I leave with you and your honor."
"Fat lot of honor I've
left now," Caradine said sourly.
"Oh,
I don't know." Allura smiled at him. "I'd say you'd done a good job
of retaining your manly virtue intact."
"If
only—" Caradine burst out. "If only Shanstar and Ahansic and all the
others could get togetherl Then, we'd be able to talk
sense to Horakah."
"That'll
be the day," grunted Koanga, rising from his chair. "Now find Rawson
and his woman before the police do."
Rawson and Sharon found Caradine walking
about in front of the garages. He had an idea they'd come that way. He kept it
brief. Yes, he'd go along with their plans. They parted and the smile of
triumph on the pair from Ahansic was so alike
as to make Caradine begin to wonder.
Harriet
Lafonde smiled too, as she looked up with the greeting lighting her face. She
rose gracefully from the chair under the wide-spreading trees with the
curiously flat pale-green leaves. The chair moved back silendy on the stone
patio flags.
"Well, Mr. Carter. So you have come to
collect your visa."
He
smiled unaffectedly at her. No doubt about it; she was charming. Her perfectly
styled gray hair caught a vagrant beam of green-tinted sunshine and for a
moment gleamed with a pure golden light. A trick, an optical illusion, but it
transformed her into an exciting woman ten years younger.
"If it is still available. You know that I was for a time suspected of
murder?"
"Yes,
I know. So tiresome. But mistakes made by other
departments do not affect me yet, I trust. As far as my travel department is
involved, Mr. Carter, your visa is here, ready for you." She held out her
hand.
The
plastic-covered case was warm from her grasp, warm from the warmth of the blood
running in her veins. Caradine took it, feeling that warmth. He smiled.
"Thank
you . . . Harriet." He swallowed. "I'll probably be leaving tomorrow.
May I . . . that is, would you care to do me the honor of dining with me
tonight?"
She tilted back her head and looked at him
through long eyelashes. Then she laughed, a mellow
golden gong-note amid the tinkling sounds of falling water and bird song and
insect hum. Her eyes were a soul-drowning gray.
"I would be delighted,
John."
IX
Emotionless robots handled the luggage with superhuman
skill and expertise. Handbags, grips, suitcases, duffelbags, packing cases,
crates, shining alloy cylinders—all were smoothly operated by the robotic team
of loaders. The starship stood straddle-finned on the pad, the early sun
sending a gleam to strike and bounce in reflected glory from her needle nose.
The passengers rode upwards smoothly in elevators that dropped them off at the
decks specified on their tickets.
Men
and women from Ragnar and the good ol' PLW were last to leave the elevator,
entering the ship through the first-class airlocks immediately in rear of the
command sections.
Because
this was a ship belonging to Horakah, nationals of that stellar grouping also
traveled first-class.
Dave Caradine entered the starship through a
narrow port situated just where the fins sprang from the hull.
He
went straight to his cabin, a two-berth place with cramped accommodation for
the week's run. Earth week, that was. Five days, Horakah standard. Have to
remember that. Especially since that night of rain when Koanga had told hmi that he knew Shanstar was not the planet of
his birth.
To hell with that now. And don't—particularly don't— worry about
the silvery alloy crate that had made planetfall on Gamma-Horakah containing
samples of Shanstar wares and was leaving that planet with a man and woman of
Ahansic cocooned snugly within its innocent metal shell. He wondered how
they'd stand out the journey. They were provisioned, had a good air supply,
sanitary arrangements—a sort of miniature spaceship in which to ride within the
larger compass of the starship.
They'd done it all in that hectic week since
he had agreed and that last night when he'd spent an evening and night with
Harriet Lafonde such as he had imagined denied to him forever.
She
was no dignified, old and majestic lady. No, sir! Not when the Pomcrush had a
sweetener added, and the lights had shone in her eyes and her gray hair had
been rearranged to reveal the genuine golden strands hidden beneath. She'd
said, laughing, that the gray camouflage made her feel more up to the job of
travel official for an entire planet.
And,
for the third particular thing in the thoughts thronging his brain, when she'd
discarded that demurely severe green dress and sallied forth in a silver sheath
that revealed maturity that both Sharon and Allura would not come by until they
had experienced a great deal more of the galaxy.
Yes. A great girl Harriet
Lafonde.
A pity that her planetary grouping and his might very soon he at war.
Of
course, a girl could spray her hair any color she wished for a night's
enjoyment, and foundation garments could turn a plug-ugly marine sergeant into
a TV starlet at the tightening of a magneclamp. But Harriet had used those
tricks to age and mature herself instead of the other
way around. The girl with whom he'd lived it up along the great white way
around the entertainment belt of Gamma had been the real
Harriet.
That, in due time, he'd found out. It had been real nice.
Yes, quite a girl.
The warning signal sounded and the starship
was cleared of visitors. Caradine stepped out of his cabin and found his way to
the observation lounge where he ordered a Pomcrush. Around him his fellow
passengers for the journey, drifting into this automatic central point on the
time of departure, were talking and laughing, all in subdued voices, waiting
for the moment when the starship would lift jets and hoist for interstellar
space. The robot bartender sounded brash, dispensing drinks, smokes and
sedative pills.
The
faintest of thrillings through the ship's fabric coincided with the last
warning. Four minutes later the ship leaped from Camma-Horakah and was outward
bound.
Well, that was it. There was no going back
now.
The
sight of the planet, just before they made transition and went into
interstellar drive, affected Caradine oddly.
If some of the people surrounding him had
their way, their machinations came to fruition, then
the next time he saw that planet might be its last—when it was disintegrating
in a sleeting storm of ruptured atoms. He shuddered at the thought. Planetary
destruction, although nowadays merely a part of the appurtenances of war, was
still a horrible concept, no matter how it was rationalized out. It existed.
That alone was enough to account for deviations from the norm, like those
fantastically dressed kid gangs back there.
Tommy Gorse. Well, he wasn't sorry he'd
knocked him down. But he felt pity for the stupid kid for getting mixed up in
an affair that had resulted in his murder. They'd caught the murderer all right.
Caradine had realized, then, the depths of ambition and deviltry in Rawson.
On
the TV the murderer, walking bowed to his trial, had only once lifted his face
to the maliciously watching cameras.
A whimsical face, with a dark, secretive look
and a strongly cleft chin ...
Rawson
had used his instrument and obtained what he wanted. The instrument, once used,
could be tossed aside.
Well,
Caradine had had to discard unwanted tools in the past. He thanked God that
he'd never stooped to letting them hang or burn or be brain-probed on a charge
that really should have been laid at his door. He finished his drink and went
to his cabin.
His
two-berth cabin had been allotted him as a matter of routine and he had
considered himself fortunate that he had no roommate.
He opened the door—robots were a luxury these low-down quarters did not extend
to—and a hearty voice said:
"Welcome to our litde palace, friend.
Step right in." Caradine did so.
"Who
the hell are you?" he said. Then he smiled. "Sorry. Reflex action.
Take no notice. They told me I was having this cabin to myself."
"Oh really? Sorry. Ill check, see if there's another. I only managed to get a
booking at the last moment."
Caradine
looked at him. Medium height, broad, a toughly pugnacious face with two strong
grooves running down from his nose to the comers of his mouth. Firm hps and uneven teeth. A quiet
dark-green shirt and slacks. The suspicion of a bulge
under the armpit, just by that easily unfastened mag-neclamp.
Just like his own
magneclamp on his white shirt, in fact
"I'm Carson Napier. From the Belmont group."
Caradine extended his hand.
"John Carter. Shanstar."
Carson
Napier's hand faltered, then he recovered, and when he shook hands Caradine
felt the violent tremble in the man's hand. He had lost all the color from his
face and great drops of sweat started out on his brow like rain dripping off
the eaves of an old, slanted-roof house.
"John Carter? You did
say John Carter?"
"Yes.
Is anything the matter. Are you all right?"
Caradine, still holding Napier's hand, turned him to sit on the edge of the
bunk.
"I'm
all right. It was just something unexpected, that's all." He looked up and
Caradine released the trembling hand. "I suppose the name Carson Napier means nothing
to you?"
Caradine
laughed. "As a matter of fact, it does. But it's something that you can
know nothing of. Just an amusing, faraway memory, shall we say."
Napier was recovering. He still sat hunched
up, looking at Caradine. And there was something in that look, some familiar
image that brought Caradine up, wondering, surmising, remembering.
Once men had looked at him like that, in the long ago ...
"You say I can know nothing of it—"
Then Napier sat up straight, forced himself to laugh, and stood up. "And
you're right, of course. I need a drink. Would you care to join me?"
"Thank
you, but not right now. I've just come from the lounge. Before
dinner?"
"Delighted. Now, if you'll excuse me—" and Napier
went out fast. The door slammed shut.
Caradine sat down and began to think hard. It
wasn't impossible; just— Then he brushed the notion
away as absurd. Just because two names had come from the same stable didn't
mean a thing. Names were universal property, now that all men were equal. Only,
of course, men from a larger stellar grouping were more equal than men from a
smaller. Oh, well.
That was present-day life in this our galaxy.
Even
so, if the fantastically impossible had become fact, then Carson Napier had
acted much as Caradine might expect him to act. After all, John Carter was one
of his favorite cover names. Hmm. Carson Napier would bear watching.
"The toughest job of being an
interstellar businessman is finding out just what a particular stellar grouping
does not have or produce. Then you shop around your own group, or an allied
friendly cluster, and ship in the goods. But in almost any planetary group you
can find almost any type of goods. You have to develop specialties."
Caradine
wasn't talking. He was listening to the large, jovial, beefy-faced man with the
alcohol breath and the wilting flower in his buttonhole. And he'd made a
success of it. He knew what he was talking about. The others in the lounge,
sitting about sipping drinks, smoking, sometimes lending half an ear to the
music in the background, knew that he knew what he was talking about.
"But don't you find it
a rat race, Mr. Lobengu?" asked
Carson Napier. He and Caradine were sitting at the same table. There was a curious
sort of prickly truce between them.
"If you let your nerves get you down,
Napier, you're finished. You new to the fame?"
Napier
laughed self-consciously. "More or less. I have a lot to learn."
"Well,
I'm your man." Lobengu took the fat cigar from his mouth and used it to
threaten Napier. "It took me just three weeks to secure a visa to Alpha.
I'm told that's a pretty good record. But I'd had it figured from the other
Horakah planets just what Horakah was missing. I have samples of it safely
stowed away iirthe holds." He smiled quite charmingly. "Of course,
you don't expect me to tell you what that something is? No,
of course not. But that's the way to operate, young Napier. Find
yourself a toe hold, and then go in punching."
A
woman giggled and her husband nudged her. They were clerks, going home after a
holiday on Gamma, too poor to afford the first-class travel to which they were
entitled. But they'd had a good holiday. Caradine liked them both.
They
had their kid with them, a girl about six or seven, with a bright crop of
golden curls, and wearing a simple, pretty little white dress that fell in
straight, charming lines. Caradine had won a shiplong friendship with a smile
and a bar of local confectionary. Just how the conversation began, Caradine
couldn't afterwards remember; he thought it must have been Jinny. But straight
from the self-confident Lobengu they were talking about fairy stories and Jinny
was perched on Carson Napier's knee, and a thin woman with overbright eyes and
a bead necklace was telling the child about Father Christmas.
"Mummy's
told me about him," Jinny said firmly. "I want to hear that other
story about the man with the white face."
Jinny's
mother and father laughed self-consciously, glancing at each other. Lobengu
laughed heartily. Napier said, "Which story was that, Jinny?"
"You know. About the
man who blew up the Earth."
Everyone
chuckled, thinking back to the bedtime stories of their own childhood.
Everyone, that is, except Caradine. Oh, sure, he chuckled. That was camouflage.
But he wasn't thinking back over the billions of miles to a never-never land as
were the others. As the others—except, perhaps, Napier?
"But
how do you know he blew the Earth up?" asked Napier.
"Daddy
said so. Everyone was very wicked. There was a war. That's nasty." She
made a face and everyone smiled sympathetically. "All the worlds were
blown up all over the place."
"Well," Lobengu said heavily.
"That's true enough." "Have you been there, Mr. Lobengu?"
asked Caradine politely.
Lobengu faced him. "As a matter of fact,
Mr. Carter, I have. I did a field trip out to the edge of the
Blight only last year. A planet out there with the most
amazing, well, trade secrets and all, y'know. But I
looked through the scopes and I saw the area—black, sunless,
dead." He wiped a hand across his forehead. "After the normal
stars of home, it was upsetting. Most upsetting."
"D'you think,"
Napier said carefully, "that anyone's ever ventured into the Blight?"
Lobengu snorted. Jinny's father, Harold
Jiloa, said, "But why would anyone want to do that? There's nothing there,
is there? It was all destroyed."
"It must have been terrible," said
Rita Jiloa in a whisper.
Jinny
pouted. "You said all the worlds were blown up. And you said you saw where
they weren't," she looked at Lobengu. "So that part
of it's true. But why isn't the part about
Earth and the man with the white face true? Why is that a fairy story?"
Everyone looked about in surprise.
"Well, Jinny," said her father slowly. "Just because there is
the Blight doesn't mean that all the stories about it are true. There never was
any planet called Earth. It's just a, well, a fable, a legend. A fairy story to
make you laugh."
Caradine
said, "How does one laugh over blowing up a million suns and their planets?"
"I
think it's time for bed, young lady," said Rita Jiloa firmly. She stood
up. Jinny put both arms around Napier's neck.
"Don't wanna go to bed. I want to hear about
Earth."
"Well,
five minutes, then." Her mother glanced at Harold Jiloa, sighed, and sat
down. Jinny snuggled closer to Napier.
"Well,
as I remember it," Napier said, "there were a lot of bad men in those
days. And they were all different colors. They had this terrible and wicked
war. And they were so blind to all the things that matter that they went about
blowing up each other's worlds." He paused. A quietness
had fallen in the lounge.
"Like we're going to do to Ahansic if
they don't behave?" chirped Jinny innocently.
"Lord,
what these kids pick up off the TV," said her father, embarrassed.
"Well,
I'm from Erinmore," said Lobengu puffily. "And we have better than
seven hundred suns."
Oddly,
the most burning topic in introductions hadn't come up before this. Napier
said, "Belmont." Caradine said, "Shanstar." The thin woman
with the eyes and beads said, "Delavue."
Napier
went on with the old story of how the war had raged throughout the explored
galaxy, and then had burnt itself out and men had broken through to this
section, near the center, leaving behind the legacy of hate and broken suns,
and leaving behind, too, their own home world called the Earth, which was still
there, spinning around its little sun. Earth's sons and daughters had gone into
fresh pastures, and the best had survived. But only the best, only those with a fresh golden tan. All
the others, the wicked, depraved, the white and black and yellow and brown and
red, had died out. And in the end, a man with a white face had blown up the
Earth.
"Why?" asked Jinny.
"No
one knows, my dear. But, as there never was an Earth, it doesn't really matter."
"Daddy
said he did it out of a broken heart. And he had a funny name to go with his funny white face, too." She shut her
eyes, trying to remember.
Napier
said quickly, "No one wanted to bother about what was behind the Blight,
Jinny. All that was cleaned away, and we all started
off afresh. And no one ever goes into the Blight and nothing ever comes out of
it."
Lobengu
stirred. "Now there's a funny thing. When I was on the Blight perimeter
last year there was a story current that a ship had come out of the
Blight."
"No!" You're kidding!"
"Well,"
Lobengu said. "It takes some believing, I know. But the story was going
the rounds. A ship had come in out of the Blight and disappeared in our portion
of the galaxy."
"Last year?"
Caradine said. "Whose year, Mr. Lobengu?"
"Why,
Erinmore's of course. Let me see, about five hundred days of Horakah's, I'd
say." Caradine did the sum.
Jinny
was bouncing about, not interested in this. "That man who blew up the
Earth a million years ago," she said. "That man with the funny white
face. What was his name?"
Napier
held the little girl close to him, so that Caradine couldn't see his face. But
he heard what he said.
"His name, Jinny, was
Caradine."
X
Dave Carradine sat on the edge of his bunk. The Beatty one
millimeter needle-beam, duration one-hundredth of a second, model of
Fifty-eight, made on Ragnar, lay on an oiled piece of plastic cloth, in pieces.
He methodically cleaned every part, with the sensitive-fingered touch that
might have been better suited in playing some musical instrument than in making
very sure that a weapon of destruction would not fail in time of need. He
whistled soundlessly through his teeth as he worked.
He
had excused himself from the little group in the lounge, retiring under cover
of the almost-tearful operation of packing Jinny Jiloa off to bed. Now he was
trying to sort out a few facts, to put alongside the mountain of speculation.
How far back into the mists of time the name
Caradine went, he had no idea. He wasn't even sure that the Caradine who had
spread the report that the Earth had been blown up was in reality an ancestor.
It was a nice thought, no more.
One
thing, though, would have pleased that long-dead holder of his name. The Earth,
instead of being merely reported through the new empires of mankind in the
galaxy as being destroyed, had achieved the status of a legend, a fable, a fairy story for children. No one believed that Earth had
even existed.
Which, at the time, would have made that old Caradine chuckle with
pleasure. His
ploy had worked better than he could have imagined.
The trouble was that now, in the present
time, the ghosts of that dead Earth were rising to haunt the modern Caradine.
He finished putting the Beatty together, clicked the safety on and slid it
under the white shirt. He did not fasten that convenient magneclamp.
When Carson Napier came in, Caradine said,
"Were you the only one, Napier? Or did they send a David Innes and a
Greystoke, too?"
Napier
shut the door carefully. His broad, powerful figure moved in the little cabin
like some caged animal. He sat down.
"Nope, Caradine. They sent me. You'll notice I call you
merely that. Without the frills." "So you
found me. Now what?"
Napier
leaned back. The man who had paled and sweated when he had been told that his
search was over had gone; in his place was a cool, confident, calculating
operative.
"I like you, Cara—"
"You've been listening to too many fairy
stories, Napier. Caradine was the name of the man who blew up the Earth in the
old legends of a million years ago. I'm plain Mr. John Carter. Don't forget
that."
Napier
understood. Tapping was probably well in his line, too.
"As I was saying. I like you, Carter. Sorry about the name. That little
girl—mischievous, lovable little monster. She'll twist some man around
her fingers one day."
"I
dare say. I'm tired. You can curse your luck you weren't born thirty years
later. Me, I'm for bed."
The
hesitation was minuscule. Then Napier grunted and bent down, began to pull off
his shoes.
"You're
right. We can talk tomorrow. We're going to have our work cut out to amuse that
kiddie for a week."
They
both prepared for bed. Turning and plumping to make himself
comfortable, Caradine snapped the photocell and turned off the cabin lights.
Well, they could probably find someplace to talk, somewhere on this confounded
Hor-akah ship that was tapped to the gills.
Unless
Napier had been sent to kill him.
That made sense; too much sense.
A
lot depended on the type of man Napier was. If he was the fanatical type, then
he might kill Caradine here and now and to hell with the consequences. A brawl
between passengers of different stellar groupings aboard a Horakah ship would
arouse little interest in the breasts of die Horakah officials; they might
boredly take the matter into their own hands and try and condemn the murderer
in their own courts or they might send him back to his home group for their
justice. Either way, justice being what it was, Napier wouldn't get away with
it.
So
he might wait until a better opportunity afforded itself On AIpha-Horakah.
Or, he might arrange it to look like murder
by someone else, or an accident.
Caradine closed his eyes
and went to sleep.
Napier
was under orders. Somehow, Caradine thought those orders would include talking
to the putative victim before the execution.
The situation did not improve. Two men, sharing a cramped cabin aboard a starship, one man
believing that the other might kill him. The unknown obviously nervy and
jumpy; probably he, too, had visions of being killed first. And the final
frustrating tightening of the screw—they were unable to talk freely. They felt
strongly, yet could not prove, that they were under surveillance. Every room,
every cubbyhole was tapped. What they said in their cabin, in the lounge, along
the corridors, was piped up to the control sections aloft, there to be mechanically
and electronically taped down, ready for the intent perusal of the Horakah
security officer. No, they couldn't talk. And that made them both bad-tempered.
Napier
tried to short cut the tap in the toilet, bungled it somehow, and had to make a
run for it. He burst into the cabin, flung himself on the bunk, and pretended
to be reading a tape that had steadily been projecting onto the ceiling screen.
Everyone
in this passenger flat was questioned. Napier got away with it. But the alert
had been given, and now Cara-dine grimly knew that the security people would
have proof that a spy or someone with a secret was aboard.
He
made a fierce face at Napier, and then both men burst out laughing. The bond
between them, this far from home, was strong.
But Caradine had seen a
laughing man kill another.
Whatever Caradine had expected Alpha-Horakah
to be like, when he at last made planetfall on the forbidden world he found
that he had had no preconceptions. The name Alpha-Horakah had swollen grossly
into a symbol. He'd just been thinking of the name, as a man thinks of an
operation, and the name serves to cloak the actuality, the actuality of
physical things.
First
off, on landing, he might have been back on Gamma or on any other of the
alphabetically-named Horakah planets. The spaceport was bright and fresh, with
spring flowers everywhere and new paint glistening. The customs officials were
charming and obliging. Caradine, his gun and his samples, were routed through
with a minimum of fuss. He was recommended a hotel that would be used by all
the outworld passengers from the starship.
He drove to the Blue Dragon in some
expectancy.
The
whole landing procedure had been too smooth, too pat, too entirely handsome and
un-Horakah, to please him.
He could sense the spring-loaded trap behind
all this delightful smelling cheese bait.
Once in his room, mellow and comfortable, he
unpacked and then, ducking Carson Napier in the lounge, went to find his
samples. They had been stored in the hotel's big box room and he looked with
some awe upon the brilliant Hor-akah custom stamps branding them as cleared.
Well, Rawson and Sharon had been right. He wondered, not without a grim sense
of foreboding, if they had survived the journey.
How
unpleasant to open the alloy cylinder and discover two corpses—their disposal
would present problems.
His
key snapped the lock and his fingers lifted the seals. Rawson and Sharon stared
up at him.
"You
fooH" Rawson said, cross and terrified. "I told you not to come near
us until we were there! Shut the lid down, fast!"
"Simmer down, friend.
We're there."
They took some time to convince themselves
that their ordeal was over. When he checked the layout of the cylinder,
Caradine found some understanding of that. As they'd told him, the canister had
been fitted up like a miniature space ship. They could have lasted comfortably
another week.
Caradine reached in and helped himself to a
biscuit from an open locker. Munching thoughtfully, he stared at his two
smuggled accomplices. Well, hell, that's what they were.
"Where are you two
going now? No papers, no nothing."
Rawson
flexed his muscles. "Bit cramped. Apart from that, I'm fine. You okay,
Sharon?"
She
stretched one elegantly clad leg. The tight scarlet pants were like a second
skin.
"Fine, when I've had a
permanent—"
"But you won't last an
hour outside," protested Caradine.
"We didn't come here without thought,
friend. I've a gun and I've plenty of Galaxos. That is a pretty potent combination.
And I have some knowledge—limited, I admit—of conditions on Alpha-Horakah. And
those conditions, friend Carter, are totally unlike anything you may
imagine."
Caradine
said experimentally, "It all looks pretty much like Gamma so far."
Rawson
laughed. "Sure. That's the setup for the suckers. They have a nice welcome
mat. Beyond the mat lies—well, you'll find out. Sharon and I stand over a
hundred percent better chance of survival than you, Carter. And I say over a
hundred, because your chances are precisely nil."
Almost—almost but not
quite—Caradine fell into the trap.
"You
mean they'll catch up with me after you're caught. Is that it?"
Rawson looked annoyed.
"No. We won't be
caught, Carter."
"Well,
then. If you're not caught, why should I be in trouble?"
Sharon
was applying makeup. The box room was quiet and empty save for themselves and
the newly-arrived passengers' larger items of baggage. Caradine felt no great
desire to rush off yet; he felt safe and he wanted to know as much as he could
before these two flitted. Sharon lowered her mirror.
"Don't
bandy about with meaningless trivia, Carter. We know you're here spying,
too."
"You
know nothing of the sort. And have you considered that this box room may be
tapped?"
"We have and it
isn't."
Both
Sharon and Allura seemed to know a great deal about tapping devices. A great
deal more than Carson Napier had. But then, he hadn't had their opportunities
for studying the current models on the market.
"Well,"
Caradine said, warming up, "if this room isn't tapped, and I believe that
from the way you're talking, I'd just like to say that I consider you two to be
a couple of low-down, murdering, double-crossing bastards." He smiled genially.
Sharon colored and half-raised her hand.
Because of that, Caradine supposed, Rawson had to show he was a hairy-chested
he-man. He swung on Caradine.
People
who did that to Caradine usually found out their mistake from a prone position
on the floor, with a cracking headache and a lump on the jaw and, if they were
exceptionally unlucky, a bruise on the back of the head.
Rawson was no exception.
He was unlucky, too.
Caradine
watched him stand up, swaying, pulling his shirt
straight. The man from Ahansic put a hand to the back of his head and the other
to his jaw.
"Now get out of here," Caradine
said. "And don't let me run across you again."
As
they moved to the door his right hand was held deceptively low. The magneclamp
on his white shirt had come undone—that was his left hand—and Rawson knew
enough not to try to outshoot him. Maybe that surly customs man on Gamma had
talked, at that.
When
they had gone, Caradine turned and kicked the alloy canister. "Bums,"
he said, and philosophically set about setting fire to the box room.
XI
"They certainly took their time getting here!"
"You'd
think the fire helicopters would be garaged more conveniendy."
"They're
useless! Nothing but a load of inefficient bunglers!"
Lobengu was livid. He strode up and down on the lawn, clad only in violent
mauve pyjamas, his face as red through the tan as the bright spring flowers
lining the plastic-gravel walks. The evening nip in the air wasn't pleasing
him, either.
"Oh,
I don't know," protested Carson Napier mildly. "They saved the
kitchen quarters."
"My samples! All my special lines! Gone! Vanished!"
"Well,"
Caradine said, feeling remorse, "that's one fallacy in dealing only in one
particular line. My samples went up in smoke too. But I have others to offer."
Lobengu couldn't speak. He staggered off,
almost frothing, swearing eternal damnation to the Horakah fire brigade and
their slackness and bungling and sheer inefficiency and downright numbskull
ineptness.
The
incendiary capsule provided by Rawson as part of the bargain had done its duty
only too well.
The
hotel, the Blue Dragon, was no more. In its place smouldered a sagging heap of
blackened beams and the charred remnants of the kitchen quarters.
Caradine
felt quite unhappy about it. He hadn't intended to be so drastic..
However,
the canister in which Rawson and Sharon had been smuggled onto this world had
been destroyed, and the job done by the incendiary capsule insured that probing
investigators would not piece together its existence or the true purpose of
Caradine's sample case. At least, so he hoped.
Walking
up and down with the others—they were all dressed as they had been except for
Lobengu, who had retired early and disastrously—Caradine mulled over Rawson's
cocky confidence. The tardy arrival of the fire brigade was a pointer to this tiny
portion of Alpha being a showcase. They'd probably never envisaged any
occurrence like this, and the fire helicopters had had to be brought in from
outside. Caradine wondered what that outside was going to be like.
Carson
Napier walked up across the grass, with the shadows stretching longer and
longer, and they began to stroll up and down together, to all appearances just
two evicted guests speculating on their night's accommodation.
"Well, Carter. We can
talk now."
"I think it's safe. If
a spy eye is on us—"
"I've
a gadget to take care of those, and a bug if they use
one." He didn't specify where the gadget was kept about his person.
"You
called me Caradine. You said you were omitting the frills. All
right. That's okay, the Second CST is no more and that means that the
frills are now meaningless."
"I've come a long way
to find you."
"You've
stepped straight out of a fairy story if you asked these people." Jinny
Jiloa had gone home with her parents. Caradine wondered briefly if he would
ever see them again. "But I think I should make it quite clear to you that
my home is now Shanstar. You mentioned Belmont. I assume you are using that
only as a cover. I'm not using Shanstar. I belong to Shanstar. Oh, and if you
want to kill me you'll have to shoot me in the back."
"Yes,
I know of your prowess with a gun." - "I'm not proud of it. Well,
come on then, what do you want?"
"That depends rather on whether you are
still the David Caradine of ten years ago."
"Those were the days . . . Hell, you don't start the old tear ducts going. I washed my
hands of the whole filthy business when the Second CST was sabotaged. I'd
sweated blood to build that; I'd put everything I'd got into it. And then some
lousy nit-ridden effeminate so-called militarists stepped in and tried to take
over." Caradine was getting mad.
"I know," Napier said
sympathetically. "It was bad. I was a simple lieutenant of the Terran
Space Navy then. I remember as though it was yesterday your final broadcast to
the Commonwealth."
"And only four years ago—no, five, now—I
lit out for space and went clear through the Blight. I guess you had a rugged
trip, following me."
"Some. Your renunciation of supreme
power rather took the thrust from the tubes of the gentry you so aptly described.
They formed a Third Commonwealth Suns of Terra, you know!"
"Did they now!"
"It didn't last. When they were
overthrown the Fourth and Fifth rose and fell. When I left they were trying to
knock into shape the Third Republic. I guess their numbering in either
Commonwealths or Republics is along into double figures by now."
"You
don't appear to have a high regard for these new groupings."
"No."
"Aren't you forgetting that they are the
governments of the whole family of suns centering on Earth? Over one million
it was, last count. All outwards in the opposite directions
from the Blight. Someone must exercise a sort of general direction to
keep the harmony, otherwise you'll have the parochial
bickerings they have here."
"You
always did that well. Very well. The little men who
try to run things now tremble when your name is mentioned."
"And some did not. Some men have been
known to acknowledge a liking for me . . ."
Caradine
remembered Napier's early remark and the look on his face. He hadn't misjudged
that look, then. And he very much cared for the youngster's direct and natural
way of conversation, without a hint of a kowtow in parsecs. That was a good
feeling to have.
"Those
men who are now in command know that whilst you are not reported as dead,
absolutely and finally, their authority is a mere shadow."
"Ah!"
Well, then, this might be it. Napier could
have been sent to dispose of the wispy, far-off, but still potent threat that
one day, one dreamlike day, David Caradine would return to Earth and her million
suns and resume his old, voluntarily renunciated cloak of power.
"You're
in for a big disappointment, Napier. Either way, you lose. If you've come to
ask me to return, sent by a caucus of my old government friends, I've finished
with it all, as I said the day I resigned. If you come
to kill me, you have a man-sized job. And even if you do kill me, I don't care.
I'll have less problems when dead—"
"John
Carter!" The imperious voice rang across the darkening lawn. Both men
turned.
A man hurried towards them over the grass.
Caradine gained an impression of haste, a motded face with large dark eyes, a
fleshy nose and a weak mouth. But his thoughts were still back on Earth, back
when he was running the Second Commonwealth Suns of Terra. That position of supreme
power had not come overnight; he'd had to use every artifice to weld those
million suns into some semblance of law and order. He could scarcely claim,
even, that he ruled them. Such a task with orders of that magnitude was
well-nigh impossible, even with all the wonders of robotic speed and
organization. But the CST formed a single unit; there were no wars within its
boundaries, no tariffs, no barriers. Men moved freely within the Second CST,
and united solidly to fight any hostile alien attacks from without.
"Mr.
John Carter? My name's Baksi." He spoke confidentially so that Napier
could not hear. "No doubt Hsien Koanga mentioned me to you?"
"Yes, he did." Baksi was one of the
agents previously sent by Koanga. Caradine's mental hackles rose.
"Koanga
sent me a gram. Coded, of course, under the guise of shipping
instructions. I need to talk to you, privately."
"Of course." Caradine turned to Napier. "Will you
excuse me? I must, be about my business. It has been a pleasant Chat."
Napier
smiled. "I didn't come to kill you, and I have formed my opinions already.
My mission is accomplished. I'll be seeing you around, Mr. John Carter."
"Please hurry,
Carter," Baksi said nervously.
"Goodbye, Carson Napier. The Second CST is one with Atlantis,
Pergamum and the Martian Empire."
Caradine
moved away: What was so urisetthng, so strange, about that smile on Napier's
face?
A
breeze frisked across the evening sky and Caradine changed direction to the
pathetic pile of personal belongings of the dispossessed hotel guests. "Half a minute, Baksi. Think I'll put my coat on. That,
at least, was saved." "Hurry then."
Caradine
found his coat, a black hip-length weatherproof, and
supposed someone searching for their own belongings had tossed it down so
casually. He put it on and it dragged. He allowed no expression on his face,
but followed Baksi as the frightened man hurried towards a ground car parked in the lengthening shadows.
Right-hand pocket, a familiar shape. So familiar that it brought a pang of
memory. Left-hand pocket, a round metal object with a strap.
Wristwatch? Caradine pulled it out and casually
slipped it onto his wrist, placing his own watch back in the pocket. No watch.
This must be the gadget Napier had mentioned. Spy eyes and bugs, huh? Well, he
wasn't so naked as before. It looked like a watch, though, which was useful.
They entered the ground car.
"I'm taking you outside, Carter. All
this pretty-pretty setup is stricdy for the tourists and salesmen and others
the moguls have to let onto Alpha. If the moguls had their way no one apart
from their techs and work people would set foot on Alpha. The whole planet is
one immense arsenal."
"So I'm learning. How have you been
getting on?"
Baksi
hunched over the wheel. They turned off the hotel driveway and began to ride,
fast and silendy, through lighted streets with imposing buildings flanking both
sides. A light rain began to drift down and the pavements sheened in reflected
color. Other ground traffic and air cars riding strict lanes above thickened.
"Not so good. Horakah is a tough nut,
Carter. I was
detailed to uncover as many items as I could of their new FaZcon-class
batdeships. So far I've seen the outside of the perimeter wall." He had a
nervous tic that dragged down the side of his face from time to time. Caradine
found the feeling of impotent waiting in him hurting.
Rain
pelted the windscreen. There had been no warning that Caradine knew of, but now
the skies were emptying of the held-up rain Weather Control had ordained for
this spring evening. The tires began to sussurate on the macadam.
"A flier car would have been
useless," Baksi said. His knuckles on the wheel gripped like knots.
He
was peering ahead now, trying to penetrate the curtain of rain. "Ah . .
."The car slowed, stopped.
The
rear door opened, and closed, the newcomer flopped back on the upholstery.
"Rotten night.- Caught me without a coat."
"Got
the passes?" Baksi was looking into the rearview TV screen.
"Sure." A damp shirt-sleeved arm
stretched forward between Baksi and Caradine. "Here." ^Take 'em,
Carter. One each."
Caradine
accepted the slips of flexible red plastic. A number was deeply stamped on
each, and, from his own experience, he guessed that
the cards were molecularly stressed. Any attempt by amateurs to alter a single
dot on the card would cause its molecular lattices to collapse. Result, no card.
"These are to get
outside, I suppose?"
"Yes. Horakah keeps it close to the
chest."
"Howd' you get 'em?"
"Channels. Our concern. Damn
this rain!"
The car was going faster than Caradine cared
for, considering the circumstances. Tires squealed loudly as Baksi took a
comer. Now they were out in open country, with only darkness about, rushing
wind, slanting shards of rain and a single distant red light, like a beckoning
finger.
Caradine
didn't like it that Hoe, the newcomer, sat in the hack where there was room for
him up front.
The
car worked up a good speed. The lance of crimson light neared. Minutes later
Baksi was pressing the brake. The car slowed its headlong rush. It stopped,
bathed all in a crimson flood of fight. Helmeted heads and uniforms crowded.
"Passes?"
"Here."
The three passengers showed the red, heavily stamped cards. A
wait. Then the passes came back through the rolled-down window.
"Okay. Scram."
Baksi's
fumbling hand missed the starter twice, and Caradine
bent over and pressed the button. The mill growled to life and the car moved
forward. Baksi was shaking like a leaf in a storm—like a leaf on that tree
above Harriet La-fonde's head, in the storm this would cause back on Gamma.
That, suddenly, Caradine saw and realized. He felt a severe pang of horror at what he
had let Harriet in for. And then he tried to console himself that she, whatever
her merits as a woman, represented a culture full of aggrandizement and war
fever. It didn't work very well. Poor Harriet
He
had a severe tussle, there in the darkness of the hurtling car in the rushing
night, to prevent himself from turning around and going back.
These two wouldn't stop
him, of course.
Those passes—tricky things
to meddle with ...
A
ground car, straight out of the tourist trap and into the true Alpha-Horakah,
filled with unnameable wonders and horrors.
Hmm. The
feeling in him that Baksi wasn't what he should be. And would Hsien Koanga have
sent a gram? Hadn't he said that he didn't know if his agents were still free?
"Much farther?" he asked, easing
his shoulder in the seat upholstery.
"No. I don't know what particular mission you have been assigned by Koanga, but
whatever it is you'll need a base outside. We're going there. People can walk
about pretty freely outside providing they have the correct
identifications."
"What do you do? Knock
a man over for his?"
"Something
like that. It's all manufacturing plants and
spacefields and testing sites. I doubt there's a single blade of grass."
"Grass is tough stuff. Grows on a bald man's head."
"Yeah." Baksi tried to laugh. And Hoe, from the back seat, raised a guffaw.
Caradine
made up his mind. Even if he was wrong, even if these two were still working in
some bona fide fashion for Koanga, he wanted no truck with frightened men. They
were ready for the chopper. That was only too evident. And those so-convenient passes .. .
Trap. Caradine smelled it, sniffed around it,
came to the same inescapable conclusion: Trap.
"Do you and your pal
Hoe have much exercise?" he asked.
"Huh?"
Baksi flashed him a glance spared from his continual manual driving. "Exercise?"
"That's what I said. Y'know, walking
sets up a man's muscles like nothing else. Expands his chest.
Gives him a bounce to his stride."
"I don't follow
you."
"I
don't want you to." The Beaty was in Caradine's hand. "I also don't
care if you make me use this." He flicked the cut-switch and the engine
died in a dwindling sigh of wind and tires. "Out.
Both of you."
"You can't do this! Baksi was shaking
and yelling.
Hoe
had backed up in his seat. But the Beatty could cut him down before he moved
three inches. He knew it.
"How
did you find out?" Baksi was yelling. His weak face was contorted with the
fear freezing his guts. "Did Koanga know? I had to do itl They forced me. They made me turn you over."
"Cut
it, you idiot!" That was Hoe, lividly violent, cursing foully.
"Out," said Caradine.
The
two doors opened and slammed. If they had guns they didn't dare use them under
the threat of the Beatty.
"Now start walking.
I'll drop you if you turn around."
The
two walked off, into the darkness, back along the road. When the blackness had
swallowed them up, Caradine started the car and left at more than a hundred
miles an hour.
He was on the outside. He
was on his own.
XII
There had probably been a better way of dealing with them. But all
that was now in the past. Ahead lay dangers that were all the more ominous
because they were unknown. If all this planet, as
rumored, was workshop and factory and spacefield, then how come this road,
winding through the country darkness?
Dawn
was not far off. A lot of miles and a lot of country separated Caradine from
the point where he had turned Baksi and Hoe off, and he needed to find a hole
for the car and himself to hide out during the day. Days here were about thirty
Earth hours and, the spring solstice being at hand, were divided up pretty
evenly between day and night.
Baksi
had pretty clearly been taken by the authorities, forced to work with them, and
had no doubt been testing and turning over all the agents Koanga had managed to
smuggle into Alpha. Normally, there would have been no reason to suspect hini;
a fresh man, coming to this planet would welcome a friend and an outstretched
hand. But those passes had been the tip-off. Baksi had overreached himself with
those.
Caradine snapped to alertness. A car passed
overhead in
the darkness with a low grumble of power. It
turned, angled down. A black shape momentarily flitted before the stars.
The reputed crack efficiency of Alpha-Horakah
had broken down in the matter of the fire brigade; Caradine had fully expected
to have been challenged before this. He wondered if they'd sent a boy to do a
man's job.
The
car landed, badike, on the road ahead. Caradine kept his headlights on with the
dome light off, pushed himself away from the wheel across the seat, and then
since the car ahead lay fairly across the road, cut the engine and let the car
roll. His nose bumped the fascia and his eyes just peered over it, through the
dusty windscreen. The rain had died hours back, and the road had been lousy.
A hint of colossal buildings lay ahead. Perhaps
they hadn't picked him up at all as a wanted man but were merely the final
checkpoint to the last entry onto the true Alpha-Horakah. The countryside he
had been traversing could well be a wide and camouflaging belt around the
tourist center and spaceport.
The
windscreen above his head shattered, melted, flowed down in molten puddles of
white-hot glassite. The back of the car disappeared. Scorching heat battered at
his head. His fumbling hand managed to reach the door. The next shot might rake
down, onto the front seats, crisp him as he sprawled.
They'd
said nothing. They hadn't challenged. They'd just stopped in front of him and
burned right through where a driver would be sitting.
Caradine felt the anger burn in sympathy
along his veins.
There was no second shot.
The
door was jammed, the intense heat must have convected
along the frame and warped it. He was trapped inside. Heat was dying around
him, now, and his eyes were readjusting after the intolerable brilliance of the
flash.
Inexplicably,
in the way of cars, his headlights were still burning. He cocked a cautious eye
over the fascia and peered along the path of illumination. Pinned
in that light the side of the air car glowed. The faces of two men
looked out, one slighdy echeloned behind the other as he lifted and turned to
look over his comrade's shoulder.
The
Beatty took them, one after the other, neady, delicately, completely lacking
the monstrous wash of fire that had destroyed his car.
Without emotion, Caradine put his foot
against the door, bashed it open, jumped out and walked across to the air car.
-Their identifications told him that they
were special field operatives, counter-espionage. There was no secrecy; counterespionage,
that's what their smart black-covered ident wallets proclaimed. Well, then.
Caradine went about the business methodically and quickly, conscious of the
probable alarm the fire had caused and aware of the pressing shadows of those
monstrous buildings.
By
the time he had finished, the buildings had resolved in dawn light into tall
towers, multi-windowed, patch-painted in miserly maintenance so that they
looked scabrous. He was feeling very tired, with a soreness about his eyes.
The
larger of the two dead men's clothing fitted well. The one millimeter aperture
of the Beatty and its ravening, destructive cauterizing power made no mess.
The two bodies, together with one uniform, were placed in Baksi's ground car.
Caradine sprayed the counter-espionage man's handgun over the car and the
splurge of fire sloughed everything into an orange holocaust and final,
collapsing gray embers.
Then
he sent the air car up and away in a long slant, not caring what blip he was
sending across watching radar screens.
The drunk was not a providential stroke of
good fortune.
What
was fortunate and beyond Caradine's calculations was the drunk's insistence on
committing suicide. It was an odd combination and by the time Caradine reached
the body the man was not only dead, he was past recognition.
Philosophically,
Caradine removed all the items he required and pushed the twisted dead body
further into the antigrav stilt. The awful power of a planetary mass crushed
down on the body and removed it forever from the ken of humanity. Caradine
headed for the first cheap lodging house patronized by the workers along the
badly lit alleyway.
He'd
dumped the official air car long since. With controls set on auto and engine
let out at full speed, it rose into the sky heading out and up. It was a
powerful model. It would brush the fringes of space before it failed and
plunged back. Somewhere serious scientific men might record a new meteor.
Then
he'd known well enough what sort of locality to head for. In the tangle of
streets huddled outside the gates of the factory site—a hiving
twenty-square-mile complex of machine shops, gantries, testing rigs and admin
blocks—he'd found the local equivalents of the beer hall, the night club, the
pub, the doss house. Horakah demanded work and more work from its all but slave
work people; it could not, through sheer matter-of-fact psychological
considerations, refuse to provide amusement. That amusement was of the lowest
and rawest kind. Caradine didn't care. He'd waited for the drunk he knew to be
inevitable, dodging with deceptive casualness the uniformed police who stalked
always in pairs, and had followed him. He had intended only to steal the man's
papers.
But
the man had stubbornly in his drunken state wanted to argue with an antigrav
stilt supporting a fifty-story air platform. The platform floated half a mile
high and no doubt acted as a focal point for freights. The drunk had ignored
the warning barriers, had clambered over and had of course had his head crushed
by the antigrav stilt. The stilt supported the platform and pressed against the
ground—in a very real sense it contained the weight of the planet balanced on
its foot.
And
now, armed with the name of Constantin Chad, freighter licensed to operate
between factories, Caradine was heading dog-tired for the nearest flophouse.
His
tired mind found an explicable tie-up between the
occupation of the drunk on this machine world and his death. A man who pushed
freight trains through the sky at better than Mach Three might very well wish
to argue with an antigrav stilt supporting a freight platform. The deeper complexities
of the human mind were just as contrary here on this planet, in a section of
the galaxy teeming with suns and planets, as they were back beyond the Blight,
where Earth itself was the focal point of a million solar systems.
The
two secret service men he had shot had had plenty of Horakah money on them. The
surly human attendant— the flophouse facilities did not extend to robots—took
the money and showed him into a single. The room was clean and bare, but it had
that indefinable sleazy air that made Caradine's skin crawl. He was too tired
to worry over trifles. He checked the spy eye and bug detector, found it clear,
and lay on the bed.
He
trusted his own reflexes to wake him up swiftly and in deadly silence if anyone
attempted to rob him. He went to sleep.
He did not sleep the clock around, but lay in
bed, meditating, until the long Horakah night waned and he could decently go
out to find breakfast. Caradine was a man who was used to dealing with the
heart of a problem. Koanga had sent him here to spy, to find out the
organization of the Horakah space fleets. The task might seem insuperable to a
man without interstellar administration experience and in all truth it posed a
nice problem to Caradine, who probably better than anyone else in this end of
the galaxy, knew about interstellar admin and organization. After all, he'd
handled or cajoled one million independently-minded solar systems; Horakah
queened it over a bare thousand.
He
washed up and made himself presentable and made for the door. The attendant
stopped him.
"Papers?" Caradine said. He decided to probe a little. "Shouldn't you have
asked for those last night?"
"Yeah. But I don't
bother bums like you normally. The police have been sending out alerts,
though." He picked at a hollow tooth. "Some excitement's stirred up
those official layabouts."
Which
was a lead, and an expected one. The ident papers of
the two agents Caradine kept stowed in his wallet. He showed the Chad license.
As he took it back after the bored scrutiny, he saw again the offiicial's
indecipherable signature and the robotically stamped name: "Horak."
"I suppose they do things differendy
over in Horak?" he said, studying the attendant.
The man creased his whiskery face into a
smile. "Huh! Fine chance you or I'd have in Horak. Capital cities don't
welcome bums like us."
"They sure don't," Caradine said in
mutual self-pity.
"You've never pushed a freight there?"
"Nope. Hoping to, one day.
Any tips?"
"Only one." The hollow tooth sucked ponderously. "Stay clear of anyone in
uniform. But—" the guffaw exhaled bad breath—"they're all in uniform
in Horak. Haw, haw."
Caradine laughed and went out. Horak it was,
then. The scarcity of maps hadn't bothered him when he had a perfectly good
one among the agents' papers. Transport might be a problem, but that would be
solved by guile, bravado— or the gun.
He
bought an inconspicuous suit of dark-gray synthetic twill and took a leisurely
swing on public transport—huge, lumbering four-decked air omnibuses that
ploughed ahead in the air lanes scattering lesser cars like fish before
sharks-making a zig-zag journey into the jumping-off point for Horak.
Everywhere he went the sprawling complexes of vast manufacturing plants covered
the land and he saw the far-off glint of starship noses pointing to the sky.
Nearly
every block had a scanning TV eye and a loudspeaker clump. Authority here kept
a firm and square thumb harshly planted on private life. That, too, merely
followed the pattern. Totalitarian worlds had been known to Caradine and before
he'd cleaned them up he'd done an amount of field research. At the jumping-off
point he felt confident of going right into the capital, a distant cluster of
shining towers.
None
of that confidence was shaken as two brown-uniformed policemen stopped him
leaving the bus terminal and asked for his papers. Without hesitation he handed
across the Chad license. Waiting for the ponderous official scrutiny, he looked
about casually, without a care in the world—or the galaxy.
"Okay, Chad. Where're you goin'?"
"Oh,
I expect to pick up some freight here. Dunno the details yet. You know how it
is."
"No,
fellow, we don't. We're policemen. Not freight bums. See?"
"Oh. Oh, sure.
Sorry."
The
licence was returned. The policemen stalked on, began to stop others and ask
for papers.
The
unfortunate early demise of Constantin Chad had been very, very fortunate.
Entering
a restaurant of the class suitable to his present station, he had a satisfactory
meal. About him people were moving chairs and craning heads to see the
wall-size TV screen across the end of the room. This, too, fitted. On a world
like this, dominated by moguls demanding the last effort from their workers,
regular and fully attended news bulletins formed an essential part of the
structure of control. Conforming, Caradine moved his chair and watched.
It
was like Gamma, only worse. Sheer, blatant, raw and
frenziedly sickening war propaganda. No wonder little Jinny
Jiloa
had talked about blowing Ahansic up; judged on the content of this TV news
coverage, if Horakah did not quickly attack and subjugate most of her
interstellar neighbors, she would be invaded, raped, decimated, enslaved and
forced under the yoke. He kept a face that was as wooden as those about him. Propaganda as unprocessed as this must have been going out for a
long, long time to be accepted without a murmur
or a laugh.
Outside news followed. A gigantic swarm of
alien spaceships had been spotted approaching from a direction in which, as far
as astronomers knew, lay only thinly scattered suns. Therefore this enormous
fleet was either a war maneuver of Rag-nar or was a true alien
force. No one seemed bothered. Cara-dine guessed they considered this just one
more subterfuge in the game of nerves being played out there among the stars.
Once propaganda goes beyond a certain limiting line of credibility, only the
end of the galaxy has impact.
Figures
quoted mentioned a hundred thousand starships. The moral was drawn. Horakah must
speed up production! Even more battleships must be launched! Everyone must work
twice as hard!
It was a relief to turn to the next item.
A
shot came up on the screen of a starship and alighting passengers. The news
reader said: "Direct from Gamma, this starship brings the latest in the
long line of despicable spies to be caught by our brilliant security services.
These underhanded and filthy vermin try to steal our secrets and to blow up
the work of many patient hands. But never fear! They are all caught in the
end."
The screen showed Hsien Koanga and Allura,
pale-faced under their golden tan, handcuffed, stumbling down the ramp and
pushed into a waiting black air car. Allura paused for a moment and brushed
back her heavy aubum hair. She was viciously prodded on. Caradine sat very
still.
The news reader said: "Also on the
starship coming here to answer unnamed charges was the travel official for
Gamma, Harriet Lafonde."
Harriet walked down the ramp, smiling. But
Caradine did not miss the men with her, hard-faced men with their hands in
their pockets.
So Harriet too, was here on Alpha-Horakah,
under arrest.
XIH
This changed the degree, not the quality, of what Caradine
had to do.
Long
ago he had made up his mind that petty pilfering of interstellar secrets was
not for him. Hsien Koanga had wanted the details of the Horakah space fleet
build-up, and the probable way they would plan their tactics in the event of a
space battle. All that was very fine, blood-stirring stuff, but Caradine had
been used to dealing with the nerve-center of a stellar commonwealth, of
himself arranging those details and of indicating the general line of mutual
advancement.
Once
upon a time men had glibly and non-understandingly talked of empires of a million
planets, and of their being a Queen Planet ruling all with a just but heavy
hand. That was nonsense, of course. Men hadn't been able to rule themselves
when compressed onto a single planet, onto a single continent, even. The
complexities and magnitudes involved in interstellar groupings—empire was
rather an outmoded term nowadays—meant inevitably that a cohesion based on more
than mere big-fist obedience must operate. Caradine was well aware that the
inevitable was only what you weren't quick-witted
enough to avoid.
You
might have on file and cybemetically indexed all the details on all the
inhabitants of your stellar grouping. But that didn't stop one farmer on a
planet fifty light years off from trading with a local produce firm. And if the
produce firm dealt with another adjacent grouping that was in bad odor with the
cybernetic index, then the index was going to
have to do a lot of cog-whirring to do anything about it.
To
run an interstellar commonwealth with any semblance of humanity and common
sense you all had to feel friends. If graft and corruption crept in, then those
responsible would be ditched fast. If you were of—well, dammit to hell— if you
were of Earth, then your pride in belonging to the commonwealth with its
advantages outweighed scruples of being the underdog and of being graft-ridden.
Modern men had, at least, evolved from the dawn of civilization.
Caradine
sat watching the rest of the TV news and he wondered. Horakah's days were
numbered, but she didn't know that yet. Hsien Koanga was a very small cog in
all the diiferent wheels, a cog
along with the others of Rawson and Sharon. And now Harriet Lafonde had been
dragged in.
He wondered how many of these people of this
work-ridden planet, sitting around him in this restaurant now, would find their
scruples vanish, and their desires to no longer be the underdogs strong enough
to make them actually think. They weren't quite ready yet. They hadn't been
brought all the way to the boil. Give them time, a few more whirls of their
planet around their sun.
But Caradine didn't have that time.
Three
of his friends—he counted them all his friends on the relationship twining
between them—were being held here in Alpha-Horakah's central city of Horak.
Cunning ploys, machinations, ferreting out of interstellar secrets—all those
would have to wait. His direction of action had been subdy changed, and he
didn't have much time.
He
rose, paid the bill and left. As he walked leisurely away from the restaurant
four black squad cars dropped down and brown-clad police belted in through the
front doors. They smashed a lot of glass going in. Caradine chuckled. All that
drama—and the bird had flown.
They were on to him.
All right.
That meant that now he was technically on the run. His sphere of action had
been widened.
His
alarm detector strapped to his wrist remained dead. He went into another
restaurant, this time choosing a high-class
establishment with tablecloths over the slick plastic, and headed straight for
the men's room. He made a pretense of washing his hands and drying them under
the infrareds.
When the place was empty save for one
other—one that
Caradine
had waited for as being most suitable—he walked across and cut the edge of his
palm across the man's neck. He caught him under the armpits before he fell and
dragged him into a cubicle. It was some crush.
The
man wasn't dead, but he'd be unconscious for an hour. Caradine stripped him,/slowing down when others used the washroom. The clothes
fitted well. That's why Caradine had waited for the right victim. There was
plenty of money, Galaxos as well as local currency. There was a tiny dartgun,
loaded with poisonous darts that could puff silently for fifty feet. Nasty litde thing. But it, too, was a pointer.
The
ident papers showed that Caradine's new name was Jefferson Raoul Logan. He was
a laboratory attendant, first-class. Caradine supposed that that meant he wiped
up the mess when an experiment fouled up. He fastened the last magneclamp on
his cherry-colored shirt, after having weakened it, propped Logan comfortably,
bound and gagged with surplus items of clothing, and left. He dogged the door
and shot the engaged-tab up. He went out whisding.
Logan's
air car was parked in the lot and the robot brought it out at once as soon as
Caradine presented the parking stub. He got in and sent the car up steeply,
heading into the fast traffic lanes, heading straight into Horak.
He was not challenged. He had about forty
minutes left, and as much time after that as it took Logan to attract attention.
He
was not overly confident about the Horak controls. They'd been watchful.
Somehow they knew he was near, and they'd be trigger-happy.
The towers ahead grew,
rising into the sky until they overtopped the traffic lane he was following.
They worried him a little. The moguls might live there, although rumor had it
that they lived stricdy isolated aboard a floating platform half a mile up, supported
on an antigrav stilt. And rumor, circulating in this workers' warren, was
relatively reliable on matters like that.
Now
that he was embarked on the thick ear stuff he could find out where they lived
all right; getting to them might not be so easy.
There
was a floating check point up ahead, a round-bellied flier, all portholes and
gun barrels and aerials. Air cars were hanging on their antigravs lined up
waiting to be checked past. Brown-uniformed police with personal antigrav flier
packs flitted from car to car. If he left the traffic lane now he'd be calling
attention to himself. Brazen it through.
There
were ten minutes of his estimated forty of free time left when the police
checked the car. They glanced at him —he felt thankful that a haircut and a new
way of combing his hair made a difference—glanced at his credentials, glanced
inside the car, and waved him on. He left sedately.
Logan's
home address was a rabbit-warren type of dormitory housing technicians and
laboratory workers. It towered ninety stories and was as exciting as a slab of wormy cheese. Caradine put down near the block and sat in the
car, waiting.
The
ninety-story dormitory crouched in the shadow of those omnipresent towers,
scintillating up there in the sunshine.
Caradine
waited until a prowling policeman on a one-man antigrav
flier pulled in and began the usual rigmarole.
He
put his head in the opened driving-side window. His broad face wore a scowl.
Caradine brought the gun barrel down onto the man's forehead. Then he had opened
the door against the sag of body, pulled the man in, closed the door and
started up. Ten blocks away he pulled into a covered archway leading to a
green-painted gate on a loading platform fifty stories above ground. He pulled
into the side and the shadow, allowing other traffic to pass to and from the
gate.
The policeman groaned and opened a bleary
eye.
The
question was: "Where is the head office, chum? Where do the moguls hang
out?"
After a promise, made with a granite-set
face, that he'd •be killed unpleasantly if he didn't answer, the man told all.
At least, he told all that
a man in his position would know.
There
was a floating platform, anchored in the sky directly above that cluster of
roseate towers. All approaches were guarded so that—and then he went off into
obscenity.
Caradine
hit him again and turned him off. He put the flier at full lift and went up.
His time had run out, now, and he wondered if he could beat the deadline. If he
didn't a bolt of that ferocious energy that had destroyed Baksi's car would
scorch him out of thin air.
Keeping a cool head was becoming harder and
harder.
So
far he'd been dealing with civilians and the lower orders of the police
hierarchy. As he rose into the sky he was rising, too, into a new level of
authority and power. He kept the radar turned on a 360° sweep and was rewarded
by a blip coming onto the screen from ahead and to his left. He carried on as
though unaware. Below, the towers fell, dwindling with distance, until a
drifting thread of cloud blotted them out altogether.
The
approaching flier turned out to be a private job. Two more went past, some way
off. Caradine switched on the small interflier radio.
"Can you help me?" he asked
plaintively. "Something's wrong and I don't seem to get the robot's help.
I think it's failed."
The occupant of the other flier when they
matched courses and doors and he looked through the windows, was young,
square-faced and wore that stamp of authority that is so much more than a mere
physical impression.
"Sure. Just hold
things as they are. I'm coming aboard."
Caradine smiled, and he was still wearing
that smile as he brought the gun down. His new name, then, was Pearsall Adlai
Korunna Swarthout. A Personal Assistant. That was all.
The ident papers told nothing of what or who he was a Personal Assistant to.
Caradine put the new clothes on, finding that they fitted tolerably well,
turned the man—who was wearing Logan's clothes and carrying Logan's ident
papers and riding in Logan's air car—adrift, and put his new vehicle steeply
upwards. If the man was shot up before they questioned him, well, this was not
a case of war is war, but of preventing a war. Caradine was growing more and
more convinced that if he was to succeed he would have to forget the civilized
decencies.
They
must have a pretty fair description of him circulated by now plus photographs
and all the other ident devices. Speed and deception were his two major
weapons. They couldn't stop up every bolthole. The planetary setup was too big
and overbalanced. Horakah was finding out that the hard way.
So
far, apart from the policeman he had questioned, they had had no indication of
his target. He would now be taking his biggest chance to date: approaching the
moguls' flying platform. If he could once step aboard that
floating palace to . . .
And there it was ahead.
The
silver sheen dazzled. Tower after tower, pinnacle after spire
and dome and raking many-windowed block. The whole vast edifice was
contained in his field of vision like a flawless gem. As he approached, the
size of it began to make itself felt; the edges crept away, the tips of the
spires and the lowest landing stages lining the skirt, expanded out. This
single enormous platform was a complete
floating city, half a mile up in the sky.
He'd
have to land aboard a stage and go through into some sort of lock;
air problems had at this height cropped up. He put the car straight at a yellow-painted lock above which a green light cycled on one-second intervals. Two or three other cars were
waiting. Caradine had studied the car controls and when the radio called
harshly for his identification, he merely flipped the right switch and his
robot broadcaster sent out his car registration and his name.
On
his turn the radio said: "Come in, please, P.A. Swarfh-out."
So they were polite to a Personal Assistant. Useful. He was growing
worried over the lack of confusion he had been creating. Slugging a few inoffensive civilians counted for nothing up here. He remembered the
familiar package Napier had slipped into his jacket, and felt comforted.
The
car touched down on the pad and robots seized it and drew it through the
valves. Inside the vaulted lock brilliant lights blazed, white paint was
everywhere, and noises boomed magnified as though in a drum. There was also a
reception committee.
They
were no surprise to Caradine. Good luck did not necessarily extend to his
picking the right airlock for Swarth-out's car out of all the locks available.
The big question mark now hanging over his head was: Would they shoot first and
not bother about the questions?
Up here he was dealing with a different order
of authority from that sprawling on the planetary surface. There were uniformed
men with guns everywhere. They merely waved his car to a lay-by and closed in
on it. Caradine took Napier's little toy out, opened the door, and tossed one
of the grenades. Then he fell flat on the floor of the car, .shut his eyes and
stuffed arms and hands over head and ears.
The
fire, the concussion and the nerve-flash were excruciating.
Even
with the protection afforded his nerves by Napier's pack, from which he had
thrown one grenade, he felt that torturing jolt of
agony. What those poor devils out there were going through—well, that was no
business of his now.
He
jumped briskly out of the car, ran through the swathes of unconscious bodies,
all smartly uniformed, to the exit. Their nerves would be a jangling hell for
twelve hours. After that they could report for duty perfectly fit. Caradine put
a hand down to the nerve-protection pack and
the remaining grenades. They would have to be used sparingly.
So
far he hadn't run across the use of nerve-grenades since leaving Earth; but
anything could be hidden away up here in a floating palace half a mile high.
And in that stilt-supported wonderland he had to do just a little more damage
and create just a little more mayhem, before the moguls would take notice of
him as his merits deserved. Ahead stretched white-painted, brilliandy lit
corridors. He ran fleedy down the first to hand.
At
the end he debouched from an ornate archway into a wide phantasmagoric plaza.
Broad cool lawns stretched on either hand, their borders banked and surrounded
by immense tiers of exotic flowers. A single crystal sweep of dome covered
everything and contained within its artificial environment air and light,
water and heat. Caradine thought he could see the plants growing as he raced
along.
Enormous
statues of every age reared in clumps, lines and avenues. Bright birds flitted,
and furry, long-legged animals with jeweled chains paced among the blooms. The
scent of flowers was heady and betraying.
Perhaps,
one of those weakening and betraying thoughts struck wickedly at Caradine's
ego, perhaps he thought too much of himself? Was he putting too high a premium
on his life and abilities? Would the moguls care at all?
He
had to find people. Crowds were safety. The plaza was deserted.
His
heart was thumping and his breath came faster by now. So near, so terribly
near. He must keep cool. Keep his wits and courage steady, find a crowd, and
everything could go on from there. He ran on, swerving to avoid a wandering
herd of camels, almost collided with a solemnly pacing pair of elephants, and
so came, hot and sticky, into a paved road and the miraculous sight of masses
of men and women, all brighdy clothed, passing and repassing tall-windowed
white buildings lining a boulevard. He slipped in among the crowd, slowed down,
and got his breath back.
Two scarlet-uniformed policemen closed in,
one on each side. They were very polite, smooth, supercilious and yet perfectly
civil. Caradine smiled.
"You
do not appear dressed correctly for today," the taller said. "This is
comedy day, as ordained by the high mogul. Will you please come with us, sir."
No
asking for passes. No brandishing of guns. Just a couple of
quiet men in uniform, the breaking of a law, and the polite request.
Caradine went.
Word
could not yet have been passed through. He still had to hurry, but he had the
saving grace of five minutes.
At
the first intersection Caradine stopped and said: "My comedy clothes are
down here. I just
didn't have time to change."
They
looked. It was natural. Caradine casually began to walk down the intersection.
After a slight pause, the two policemen followed. The nearest doorway just had
to do. Caradine found it, turned in as though he owned the place, gave the
large cool lobby a single swift glance—empty-turned and struck the leading
policeman on the jaw. He caught the second as the riot-call button almost went
down under a frantic finger. Whew! A near one.
The chance now was whether
to don the scarlet uniform or to carry on in Swarthout's clothes—ordinary
clothes on a day ordained as comedy day. Hmm. The uniform seemed to be the better bet. Caradine
humped the likelier of the two men into the robotically controlled elevator and
went back for the other. On the way up to a randomly selected floor, he
changed. On the way down he dealt with the policemen, binding and gagging them
and then pushing them into an air-conditioning room off the main passage. One
good thing about comedy day: everybody was on the streets.
The next half hour was
rather amusing.
No sooner had he stepped out onto the streets
than a large scarlet car swooped down, an imperious voice ordered him aboard,
and he was sitting with twenty other scarlet-clad policemen, going
hell-for-Ieather to arrest himself.
He
quite enjoyed following orders, going here, standing guard
there, gruffly asking people for passes—the gloves were off now and the
politeness gone—at last being called with very many others to report to
a central point. The car took therh there en masse. He guessed that by this
time Horakah police administration was in a chaotic state, divisions and
authorities hopelessly entangled so that he could pass as just another man from
another section, mixed up with many other sections' detachments. The car landed
on a covered roof and sliding doors closed.
Well,
he'd managed it at last. He quickly found from the men around him that this was
the kingpin building, the lair of the moguls. His opinion of
them had been steadily sinking all during his smoke and dazzle
operations. Even a badly organized planet should have caught him by now. That
these people hadn't had caused him troubles, so that in this instance it
seemed he had to go to them himself.
Harassed
officials scuttered everywhere, shepherding men into guard positions. Caradine
found himself one of a company of ten men detailed off to cordon the entrance
to a long passageway leading deeper into the heart of the building. A tall
window gave a glimpse of a courtyard. In that yard Caradine saw armored flying
tanks taking off from an underground hangar, one after the other, their
dark-green hulls sheening and grim with weapons. Fully armored soldiers poured
from doors and raced away beyond his vision. He stilled the smile on his lips.
All this preparation, all
this chaos, wasn't for him.
No
wonder he hadn't been caught easily. Behind all the gaiety of comedy day and
the exotic flowers and strange animals, lying darkly hidden under the facade
of carefree life on this floating palace platform, the moguls were facing a
threat to their existence. What that threat was, Caradine had an inkling. He had once thought impossible what had happened
very soon afterwards. He no longer thought it amazing that he could comtemplate
the current impossibility and know it in sober truth very likely.
Damn young Carson Napier,
anyway!
But, even so . ..
At
the first opportunity afforded by a slight change of guard position in the
continual fussing that went on, Caradine slipped away, assumed a very
important face and bearing, and strode with firm and heavy footfalls down the
corridors deep into the heart of the building. This was the final payoff. He
was not challenged. All about him he could hear the murmur of machinery.
Worried-looking officers passed him. He was meeting more and more soldiers and
space navy men. Yet still, in ^he security of his scarlet uniform, he was not
stopped. Of course not—he was carrying a private message, wasn't he? How long
that story would last he didn't know.
When
at last he was stopped by a posse of black-clad men, he found the story
wouldn't stand up at all. It gave him just time to pull and toss a
nerve-grenade.
This
far in, the resultant shambles must draw attention. Whatever was happening in
the galaxy couldn't distract all attention from this.
He started to run on. From somewhere a streak
of light passed over his left shoulder making him wince from the heat of it,
struck a far cornice and brought down in thundering destruction and melting
ruin the whole wall and ceiling. Raw metal paneling showed beyond.
Hell!
They were so jumpy they weren't acting as he had expected. The fear that he had
been containing so well boiled in him now. He got a bad attack of the shakes,
running with thumping heart and wheezing lungs away from that deadly gun. Hell
and damnation! If he got out of this alive he'd say something to young Napier.
By hell he would!
He
was approaching a double-valved door whose leaves must have been a good fifty
feet high. The men guarding them looked like midges in a frieze along the
bottom. He flung a nerve-grenade with all his strength, and plunged on after it
too fast so that he felt the searing scorch of its back blast.
But
he cleared the door, one leaf of which sagged from broken hinges after the
blast.
He went through. Another
nerve-grenade cleared the way.
Direcdy
ahead, through a colossal archway soaring up for two hundred feet, he saw a
blaze of illumination. When he went through the arch the size of the room
beyond appalled him. On its tessallated floor men looked like ants. High above,
chandeliers the size of two-story buildings hung from a roof swathed in
convoluted groining. Not a single pillar in the entire expanse supported that
ceiling. Along both sides stood rows of guards, motionless, at attention,
reduced in size by distance to rows of dolls.
The room was so large it was indecent.
A
man's insignificance in this room was thrown up in his face.
Caradine
began the long journey across the marble floor to the group of men and women
clustered around the screens at the far end. No one tried to stop him. The rows
of immobile guards were merely adornment leaving all work of security to
ubiquitous police and plain-clothes men. His footfalls echoed from the marble,
died and were lost in the vastness in a whimper. Ostentatiously, he took his
gun out and let it dangle, gripped by the barrel. He could sense and appreciate
the subtle understanding that now existed between himself
and the moguls; he had beaten their security network, and so now they were
waiting to see what he wanted.
No
other method would have brought him, a mere civilian from an insignificant
stellar grouping, into the inmost sanctum of proud and mighty Horakah.
This he had understood from the beginning.
This he had worked for, and for this he had nearly died. The fear was still in
him, a black tide lapping at the borders of his sanity. But he had to suppress
it now, he had to maintain a brain so calm and cool that he could meet and
match these coldly waiting moguls.
Two
gaudily attired officers approached him and he handed over the Beatty with an
air of condescension. He did not stop walking forward.
On
those sprawling screens covering one end of the chamber he saw star patterns,
etched segments of the galaxy. The men and women looking at the screens turned
as he approached.
They were much as he had expected. Big men,
fleshy, with
powerful, ruthless faces, men cast from the same mold of
power. Men like this had been used by him in the old days,
used as his tools. y
The
shock of seeing Hsien Koanga and Allura was only slight. The moguls would bring
those two here with amusement, interested to see his reactions.
He noticed the guards near them. He looked
for Harriet.
She was there.
His
blood gave an almighty thump through his veins as she stepped forward. She was
looking perfect. A golden sheath covered her glorious body and her hair had
been sprayed into a silver tumble of curls. Her red lips smiled.
"At
last you arrive, John Carter. We have been waiting for you."
Caradine paused. A confusing welter of
dismay, fear, black anger and pitiful self-reproach grew and died in him.
"I thought—" he began.
"Before
we kill you, John Carter," Harriet Lafonde said with stroking feline
savagery, "we would like to know why you have done what you have
done."
XIV
"What I did I did partly
because of you," Caradine said. "I had the crazy and moon-struck
notion that you might be in trouble. You could say I was attempting to rescue
you." It sounded infantile.
Hsien
Koanga started. Allura, standing beside him, looked ill and defeated, her
auburn hair heavy about her shoulders, her face masklike in indifferent hurt.
Looking at her, Caradine made the mental comparisons and thought to ask after
the third of these women so disastrously injected into his life.
"Those?"
The man who spoke was merely one of the moguls; a man habituated to running
the destinies of solar systems. "Watch. It may
amuse you."
Caradine
had been gazing at a tall wall screen where stars showed against blackness. Thinly setded, then. The air of expectant waiting was strong
and he knew that these moguls were toying with him as the greater drama out
there in the galaxy unfolded. Now he had only to turn his head to see the
indicated screen.
Greg Rawson's face showed on the screen. He
was shouting in horror. Then his head disappeared and left only a charred,
blood crisped stump of neck. Caradine could not be moved by crudities like
that.
The
screen shifted focus and he saw Sharon Ogilvie. She was falling. Her mouth was
open but no sound came from it. Her long silvery hair streamed in the wind of
her fall.
"They had been
clumsily trying to enter a starship yard."
Sharon
fell past rows of dark windows, past the upraised jibs of cranes like solemnly
transfixed storks. Caradine was not prepared. Sharon fell on and then,
abruptly, she had struck the hook of a crane which ripped into her stomach and
left her dangling.
Allura gave a choked scream. Harriet turned
to Caradine.
"Are you satisfied
now, John Carter?"
"I
was under duress," he said mildly. The fear was turning into anger.
"I did not break my word to you. I have done no spying on this accursed
planet."
"Koanga says differently."
Caradine felt sorry for the
little man from Shanstar.
"Koanga
is a citizen of a small planetary grouping. He does what he must. All decent
people must stand together against things like you."
A man's voice rapped from a speaker. "Approaching direct now. Nothing stops them. They do
not return our fire."
A mogul answered.
Harriet said, 'Tour petty little groupings
will come running to us when the danger strikes them. Out there—" she
waved a vehement hand at the screens—"is a tremendous space fleet. We have
checked with Ragnar and the Paragon League of Worlds. The fleet is not
theirs." "So it was true then?"
"This
is an alien threat to all humanity, Carter. As a transport expert, I have been
recalled to my home planet. I, too, am a mogul. Please don't forget that."
"I'm not likely to. Do
the aliens answer radio calls?"
"No. They are heading
straight for Alpha-Horakah."
"And nothing you can
do can stop them!" shouted Allura.
Everyone looked at her in astonishment.
"What do you want with
me, then?" Caradine asked.
"Before
we kill you we have to know what you have done. Shanstar is not truly
represented by Koanga and you, just as Ahansic wasn't by Rawson. There are
other factions."
"You
mean that in face of the alien threat, you'll combine with the other
interstellar groupings?"
"Yes."
"Well, at least that's
something."
Koanga
said heavily, "I do speak for Shanstar, Mrs. La-fonde. This man, John
Carter, is not of Shanstar at all—"
"Not
of Shanstar?" Harriet looked at Caradine hard. "Well? Where?"
The
speaker rapped again. "Acceleration has taken them through our screening
forces."
"They're coming
in!" screamed Allura.
Caradine
felt sympathy for her. It was the end of life for her so the end of this planet
held some consolation.
"Take
these people away!" The mogul who had spoken before snapped his fingers.
Guards moved.
"Just a minute." Harriet must carry weight here. "I want to know about this man Carter's antecedents." "Of what use is all this?"
"We can't stop the aliens, can we? So we
spend the remaining time before they land keeping sane." Harriet had this
mogul wrapped around her little finger.
She
turned sharply on Caradine. "Well? Who are you? Where do you come
from?"
Caradine
was tired. He was sick of it all. It hadn't worked out as he'd planned. He was
likely to get himself killed, and Harriet had turned out to be a blasted
Horakah mogul. Very well. To hell
with them all.
"My
name's David Caradine," he said. "And I come from Earth."
"The
man's an idiot," said the mogul. "Harriet, we must do something about
the aliens."
"Such as? They've struck clean through our fleets. They haven't fired a shot. So
they're coming here. We'll talk to them." To Caradine she said,
"Caradine may be your name, hut from Earth—"
The
mogu"l's scowl darkened. "What's your interest in this man,
Harriet?" His voice'lost its smoothness, showed the ruth-lessness beneath.
"Are you in—"
Harriet
laughed with a scorn that Caradine felt overdone. "With
a maniac who claims to be from Earth? A man from a
fairy story? A man who—"
The speaker rapped. "Latest intelligence
reports show a further alien space fleet following in the wake of the first.
There are now five hundred thousand starships on the way
* »
in.
Everyone was quiet. The gravity of the
situation could not be exaggerated. Horakah—even Ragnar and the good ol*
PLW—could between them about muster that number. Cara-dine guessed that Harriet
and her mogul friends had been relying on eventual Ragnar and PLW help; the big
combines would fight off aliens. But now? Now things
were different.
Now half a million aliens
were rampaging in.
Activity
caught up the party by the screens down at the far end of the gigantic room as
a last desperate effort was organized. Caradine, Koanga, and Allura were
shephereded to one side. Frightened guards stood over them. Electric tensions
in the air sparked bad tempers. Harriet and the moguls were arguing. Caradine
heard one of them refer to her, and then turn to the man she had talked most
to.
"Well, Lafonde, it
seems we cannot stop them.''
So that explained thatl
Caradine
looked about the depths of the chamber, trying to compress into these few
dwindling minutes the touch and sight and sensation of a lifetime, through the
barbaric splendor and luxury of this hall to seize on a slice of life that he
had lived through fully and could remember.
For
he knew that he was to die very soon.
The
loftiness of chamber drew a blue-tinted mist among the groinings, and the walls
fell in silver and golden magnificence that caught and reflected the
glittering girl-figure of Harriet Lafonde. Thick drapes of emerald and crimson
and electric blue shrouding secret doorways tossed pools of contrasting color
into the vast hollowness. Everyone was in uniform. Gorgeous,
outrageous, suffocating, splendid in color and pomp and ceremony.
"A
single alien has landed an air boat on Alpha-Horakah. Approaching Horak and
floating palace."
"We're ready for
them," Lafonde said uglily.
His wife said, "We
talk, remember?"
"You can't do anything
else!" shouted AHura savagely.
At
least, considered Caradine, this place should impress whoever the aliens were.
He had lost all hope for himself, now. Whichever side won, he looked to come
out on the sticky end. "Earth!" they'd said, and pushed him aside
like a child or a lunatic.
The
deflation, the sickness, the utter weariness with it all in him blunted his
perceptions, made him physcially and mentally exhausted. Yet Allura looked in
worse shape. He moved slowly, so that he was standing beside her. The guards
did not stop him; everyone else's attention was fixed on the screen which
showed row after row and rank after rank of glittering dots of light, each one
a starship and each one a dreadnought of space. He touched Allura on the
arm."
"Seems I was wrong
about you, Allura."
"And
me, you. Oh, well. These pigs will be finished along with us all. But it's a
pity. I wanted so much from life, there was so much to do and see. And, Carter,
or Caradine, I wanted you, too. There was no trickery."
"I believe you
now." He said. "Now it's too late."
Out
of them all, then, it would have been this girl with the heavy auburn hair and
the alive face and the darting mind that cared not
where it stabbed. He looked at her. She was haggard, heavy-eyed, parchment of
face and slack of limb. Yet she would have been the one.
The speaker rapped. "Air boat touching locks."
"Let them in,"
said Lafonde.
There
was nothing left then for any of them to do hut wait.
Throughout
the barbaric magnificence of that palace chamber men and women in gorgeous
uniforms stood frozen before their mutual terror. What would come stalking in
arrogance and might through the corridors of this floating wonderland, to
challenge them and dictate the terms of an agreement? What would their fate be?
A thousand solar systems' fate hung on the events of the next moments; possibly
the fates of thousands more when the aliens sat back to consider what they
would do with the other solar groupings here in this portion of the galaxy. Men
could await them only with pride, ready to fight to the end knowing that the
fight was doomed.
Caradine felt sorry for Horakah and the
prestige and barbaric pomp of this setting. Without a shot being fired the
aliens had won. Now their emissary was stalking haughtily into the inmost
secret place of this floating kingpin city of Horak to dictate his terms.
The
volume of noise dropped until Caradine could feel and hear the incessant throb
of machinery in the marble beneath his feet.
A fanfare rang out. Brilliant, coruscating
notes that battered at all ears. Through that mammoth archway appeared the
alien envoy.
He was a tiny black figure, there at that enormous
distance away down at the other end of the room.
"Humanoid, at
least," said Harriet in a breath.
The tiny figure approached slowly, the focal
point of every eye. He looked like a man. He wore black shoes and striped
trousers of black and silver and gray, and a tight black coat fitted snugly,
making him look like a beetle. In his left hand, cocked up, he carried a
cylindrical black object with a round
brim. His white shirt was fastened at the throat by a white butterfly-shaped strip of cloth. He walked very slowly because he
was old and fragile and his face was brown and lined,~with
deep-set eyes of gray that pierced forth beneath tufty white eyebrows. His hair
was immaculately silver.
A
very small and very old and very dignified gentleman walked carefully all that
enormous distance across the flamboyant marble floor, between the flanking
rows of guardsmen, beneath the hanging crystal chandeliers.
Harriet
and her husband and all the other moguls tensed up.
This was not what they had
expected.
The
old gentleman stopped at last before them. He bowed very slightly, looking
about, the shadow of puzzlement on his face.
Lafonde,
big and burly and domineering, stepped a pace forward. "Here we are, to
await you," he said. "Can you understand me?"
"Yes."
The envoy was looking about. Then he glanced at his wrist.
"We await your terms.
All the might of our suns, and the power of our allies, will fight you to the
bitter end if we find your terms unnacceptable. You are alive and admitted here
merely because—"
"Because there are half a million
battleships out there, which are the forerunners of the main fleets."
Lafonde,
all of them, accepted that. Lafonde swallowed and tried to speak again.
"Please
be quiet," said the little old man. "I did not come to see you."
He glanced up from his wrist and made a half turn. "All these fancy
uniforms," he grumbled to himself. He walked forward.
He stopped directly before
Caradine.
"Hi, Dave," he
said. "I've come for you."
"Hi, Dick. I might have known you couldn't get on without me."
"Terrible
mess. You
shouldn't have done it. Ready?"
"Yes."
Caradine felt a new man. "Oh, I'm taking a couple of friends back, if
they'll go. One, at least." He smiled at Allura.
"Care to go to Earth with me, Allura?"
She put one hand in his.
Something else settled, then.
The
moguls were staring. They could not speak. All then-might, their pomp, their
barbaric splendor—it had not even been noticed. Just that it was a long walk
for a man from the door. That was all.
Harriet
put a hand to her mouth. "You mean," she
whispered, "there is an Earth? An Earth that can
put' half a million battleships out as a scouting force? My God. My God!"
No one took much notice of
her.
Walking back to the
overpowering doorway with the rulers of Horakah ignored, Caradine said
conversationally, "I suppose young Carson Napier saw through me, Dick?
Figured that I was sick of this aimless wandering, and so he called you inr
"Something like
that. A commonwealth of Suns may not
be ran by one man; but having the right man directing
overall policy is a—well, we just need you back, Dave.
That's all there is to it."
"But why—?" said
Allura holding to his arm.
"Earth
went through a rough time way back. Man called Caradine—remote ancestor, they
tell me—decided she needed to recover without being subjected to
extraterrestrial pressures. So the word was spread that the Earth had been
destroyed, and that developed into the fairy story everyone here believed
implicidy. Now, the Commonwealth Suns of Terra consists
of a million solar systems."
Dick
looked apologetic. "Nearer one and a half, now,
Dave."
"And
that's where we're going. We may come back here beyond the Blight, one day, and
clean up all these little groupings. I've seen the mess they're in. That sort
of pecking-order pseudo-civilization is not for Earth."
They left the palace and the barbarians. The
space-tender took them to the waiting armada. Ahead lay a commonwealth of over
one million stars—and the legendary world of Earth.
Here's a quick checklist of recent releases of
'"^ ACE SCIENCE-FICTION
BOOKS
D-479 TO THE TOMBAUGH STATION by Wilson Tucker and EARTHMAN, GO HOME! by Poul Anderson
D-482 THE WEAPON SHOPS OF ISHER
by
A.E. Van Vogt
D-485 THE PUZZLE PLANET by Robert A.W. Lowndes and THE ANGRY ESPERS by Lloyd Biggie, Jr.
D-490 ADVENTURES ON OTHER PLANETS
Edited
by Donald A. Wollheim
D-491 THE BIG TIME by Fritz Leiber
and THE MIND SPIDER by
Fritz Leiber
D-497 WANDL THE INVADER by Ray Cummings
and I SPEAK FOR EARTH by Keith Woodcott
D-498 GALACTIC DERELICT by Andre Norton
D-504 MASTER OF THE WORLD by Jules Verne
D-507 MEETING AT INFINITY by John Brunner
and BEYOND THE SILVER SKY by Kenneth Bulmer
D-508
MORE MACABRE edited
by Donald A. Wollheim
D-509
THE BEAST MASTER by
Andre Norton and STAR
HUNTER by Andre Norton
D-516 THE SWORDSMAN OF MARS
by
Otis Adelbert Kline
350
If you are missing any of these, they can be
obtained directly from the publisher by sending 35(2 per book (plus 5(f. handling
fee) to Ace Books, Inc. (Sales Dept.), 23 W. 47th St., New York 36, N.Y.