STAR-CURSED!
In
the field of interstellar commerce, where trade was pretty well sewn up by the
giant companies, tramp-freighter spaceships like the Solar Queen were up against it. Their only tools were
ingenuity and personal fearlessness, the qualities that had gained the Solar Queen exclusive trading rights to Sargol and its
fabulous gems.
But those qualities were to be strained to
the breaking point to meet Sargol's three challenges. First was the enigmatic
obstinacy of the catlike natives. Second was the ruthless incursion of an
illegal competitor.
But the third and worst was
to be the invisible, in-detectable stowaway that would brand the Solar Queen anathema to all inhabited worlds.
Turn this book over for second complete novel
ANDREW NORTH happens
to be the same as the writer better known to Ace Books readers as Andre Norton.
Both pen-names, as it happens, are slightly misleading, for the actual sex of
this talented writer is female, and her true name Alice Mary Norton. She is a native of Cleveland, Ohio, and an ardent science-fiction fan and collector.
Ace
Books has had the pleasure of publishing a number
of her novels and they have been rated among our fastest selling
science-fiction titles. For the benefit of those who may have overlooked some
of them, here is a list of the Norton books still available in
Ace editions: THE STARS ARE OURS (D-121) THE CROSSROADS OF TIME (D-164) STAR
GUARD (D-199) SARGASSO OF SPACE (D-249) STAR BORN (D-299)
PLAGUE SHIP
by
ANDREW NORTH
ACE
BOOKS, INC. 23 West 47th Street, New York 36, N. Y.
plague ship
Copyright ©, 1956, by Andrew
North An Ace Book, by arrangement with Gnome Press, Inc. All Rights Reserved
voodoo planet
Copyright ©, 1959, by Ace Books, Inc.
Printed
in U. S. A.
Chapter I
PERFUMED PLANET
Dane Thobson, Cargo-master-apprentice of the Solar Queen,
Galactic Free Trader spacer, Terra registry, stood in the middle of the ship's
cramped bather while Rip Shannon, assistant Astrogator and his senior in the
Service of Trade by some four years, applied gobs of highly scented paste to
the skin between Dane's rather prominent shoulder blades. The small cabin was
thickly redolent with spicy odors and Rip sniffed appreciatively.
"You're
sure going to be about the best smelling Terran who ever set boot on Sargol's
soil," his soft slur of speech ended in a rich chuckle.
Dane
snorted and tried to estimate progress, over one shoulder.
"The
things we have to do for Trade!" his comment carried a hint of present
embarrassment. "Get it well in—this stuff's supposed to hold for hours.
It'd better. According to Van those Salariki can talk your ears right off your
head and say nothing worth hearing. And we have to sit and listen until we get
a straight answer out of them. Phew!" He shook his head. In such close
quarters the scent, pleasing as it was, was also overpowering. "We would
have to pick a world such as this—"
Rip's
dark fingers halted their circular motion. "Dane," he warned,
"don't you go talking against this venture. We got it soft and we're going
to be credit-happy—if it works out—"
But,
perversely, Dane held to a gloomier view of the immediate future. "If," he repeated. "There's a galaxy of 'ifs'
in this Sargol proposition. All very well for you to rest easy on your fins—you
don't have to run about smelling like a spice works before you can get the time
of day from one of the natives!"
Rip put down the jar of cream.
"Different worlds, different customs," he iterated the old tag of
the Service. "Be glad this one is so easy to conform to. There are some I
can think of—There," he ended his message with a
stinging slap, "You're all evenly greased. Good thing you don't have Van's
bulk to cover. It takes him a good hour to get his cream on-even with Frank
helping to spread. Your clothes ought to be steamed up and ready, too, by
now—"
He
opened a tight wall cabinet, originally intended to sterilize clothing which
might be contaminated by contact with organisms inimical to Terrans. A cloud of
steam fragrant with the same spicy scent poured out.
Dane
gingerly rugged loose his Trade uniform, its brown silky fabric damp on his
skin as he dressed. Luckily Sargol was warm. When he stepped out on its ruby tinted
soil this morning no lingering taint off his off-world orgin must remain to
disgust the sensitive nostrils of the Salariki. He supposed he would get used
to this process. After all this was the first time he had undergone the ritual.
But he couldn't lose the secret conviction that it was all very silly. Only
what Rip had pointed out was the truth—one adjusted to the customs of aliens or
one didn't trade and there were other things he might have had to do on other
worlds which would have been far more upsetting to that core of private
fastidiousness which few would have suspected existed in his tall, lanky frame.
"Whew—out
in the open with you—I" Ali Kamil, apprentice Engineer, screwed his too
regular features into an expression of extreme distaste and waved Dane by him
in the corridor.
For
the sake of his shipmates' olfactory nerves, Dane hurried on to the port which
gave on the ramp now tying the Queen to Sargol's crust. But there he lingered,
waiting for Van Rycke, the Cargo-master of the spacer and his immediate
superior. It was early morning and now that he was out of the confinement of
the ship the fresh morning winds cut about him, rippling through the blue-green
grass forest beyond, to take much of his momentary-irritation with them.
There
were no mountains in this section of Sargol—the highest elevations being
rounded hills tightly clothed with the same ten-foot grass which covered the
plains. From the Queen's observation ports, one could watch the constant ripple
of the grass so that the planet appeared to be largely clothed in a shimmering,
flowing carpet. To the west were the seas—stretches of shallow water so cut up
by strings of islands that they more resembled a series of salty lakes. And it
was what was to be found in those seas which had lured the Solar Queen to
Sargol.
Though,
by rights, the discovery was that of another Trader—Traxt Cam—who had bid for
trading rights to Sargol, hoping to make a comfortable fortune—or at least
expenses with a slight profit—in the perfume trade, exporting from the scented
planet some of its most fragrant products. But once on Sargol he had discovered
the Koros stones-gems of a new type—a handful of which offered across the board
in one of the inner planet trading marts had nearly caused a riot among bidding
gem merchants. And Cam had been well on the way to becoming one of the princes
of Trade when he had been drawn into the vicious net of the Limbian pirates and
finished off.
Because
they, too, had stumbled into the trap which was Limbo, and had had a very
definite part in breaking up that devilish installation, the crew of the Solar
Queen had claimed as their reward the trading rights of Traxt Cam in default of
legal heirs. And so here they were on Sargol with the notes left by Cam as
their guide, and as much lore concerning the Salariki as was known crammed into
their minds.
Dane
sat down on the end of the ramp, his feet on Sargo-lian soil, thin, red soil
with glittering bits of gold flake in it. He did not doubt that he was under
observation from hidden eyes, but he tried to show no sign that he guessed it.
The adult Salariki maintained at all times an attitude of aloof and complete
indifference toward the Traders, but the juvenile population
were as curious as their elders were contemptuous. Perhaps there was a
method of approach in that. Dane considered the idea.
Van
Rycke and Captain Jellico had handled the first negotiations—and the process
had taken most of a day—the result totaling exactly nothing. In their contacts
with the off world men the feline ancestered Salariki were ceremonious, wary,
and completely detached. But Cam had gotten to them somehow—or he would not
have returned from his first trip with that pouch of Koros stones. Only, among
his records, salvaged on Limbo, he had left absolutely no clue as-to how he had
beaten down native sales resistance. It was baffling. But patience had to be
the middle name of every Trader and Dane had complete faith in Van. Sooner or
later the Cargo-master would find a key to unlock the Salariki.
As
if the thought of Dane's chief had summoned him, Van Rycke, his scented tunic
sealed to his bull's neck in unaccustomed trimness, his cap on his blond head,
strode down the ramp, broadcasting waves of fragrance as he moved. He sniffed
vigorously as he approached his assistant and then nodded in approval.
"So you're all greased
and ready—"
"Is the Captain coming
too, sir?"
Van
Rycke shook his head. "This is our headache. Patience, my boy,
patience—" He led the way through a thin screen of the grass on the other
side of the scorched landing field to a well-packed earth road.
Again
Dane felt eyes, knew that they were being watched. But no Salarik stepped out
of concealment. At least they had nothing to fear in the way of attack. Traders
were immune, taboo, and the trading stations were set up under the white
diamond shield of peace, a peace guaranteed on blood oath by every clan
chieftain in the district. Even in the midst of interclan feuding deadly
enemies met in amity under that shield and would not turn claw knife against
each other within a two mile radius of its protection.
The
grass forests rustled betrayingly, but the Terrans displayed no interest in
those who spied upon them. An insect with wings of brilliant green gauze
detached itself from the stalk of a grass tree and fluttered ahead of the
Traders as if it were an official herald. From the red soil crushed by their
boots arose a pungent odor which fought with the scent they carried with them.
Dane swallowed three or four times and hoped that his superior officer had not
noted that sign of discomfort. Though Van Rycke, in spite of his general air of
sleepy benevolence and careless goodwill, noticed everything, no matter how
trivial, which might have a bearing on the delicate
negotiations of Galactic Trade. He had not climbed to his present status
of expert Cargo-master by overlooking anything at all. Now he gave an order:
"Take an equalizer—"
Dane
reached for his belt pouch, flushing, fiercely determined inside himself, that
no matter how smells warred about him that day, he was not going to let it
bother him. He swallowed the tiny pellet Medic Tau had prepared for just such
trials and tried to occupy his mind with the work to come. If there would be
any work—or would another long day be wasted in futile speeches of mutual
esteem which gave formal lip service to Trade and its manifest benefits?
"Houuuu—"The
cry which was half wail, half arrogant warning, sounded along the road behind
them.
Van
Rycke's stride did not vary. He did not turn his head,
show any sign he had heard that heralding fanfare for a clan chieftain. And he
continued to keep to the exact center of the road, Dane the regulation one pace
to the rear and left as befitted his lower rank.
"Houuu—"
that blast from the throat of a Salarik especially chosen for his lung power
was accompanied now by the hollow drum of many feet. The Terrans neither looked
around nor withdrew from the center, nor did their pace quicken.
That,
too, was in order, Dane knew. To the rank conscious Salariki clansmen you did
not yield precedence unless you wanted at once to acknowledge your
inferiority—and if you did that by some slip of admission or omission, there
was no use in trying to treat face to face with their chieftains again.
"Houuu—1"
The blast behind was a scream as the retinue it announced swept around the bend
in the road to catch sight of the two Traders oblivious of it. Dane longed to
be able to turn his head, just enough to see which one of the local lordlings
they blocked.
"Houu—"
there was a questioning note in the cry now and the heavy thud-thud of feet was
slacking. The clan party had seen them, were hesitant about the wisdom of
trying to shove them aside.
Van
Rycke marched steadily onward and Dane matched his pace. They might not possess
a leather-lunged herald to clear their road, but they gave every indication of
having the right to occupy as much of it as they wished. And that unruffled
poise had its affect upon those behind. The pound of feet slowed to a walk, a
walk which would keep a careful distance behind the two Terrans. It had
worked—the Salariki —or these Salariki—were accepting
them at their own valuation—a good omen for the day's business. Dane's spirits
rose, but he schooled his features into a mask as wooden as his superior's.
After all this was a very minor victory and they had ten or twelve hours of
polite, and hidden, maneuvering before them.
The
Solar Queen had set down as closely as possible to the trading center marked on
Traxt Cam's private map and the Terrans now had another five minutes march, in
the middle of the road, ahead of the chieftain who must be inwardly boiling at
their presence, before they came out in the clearing containing the roofless,
circular erection which served the Salariki of the district as a market place
and a common meeting ground for truce talks and the mending of private clan
alliances. Erect on a pole in the middle, towering well above the nodding
fronds of the grass trees, was the pole bearing the trade shield which promised
not only peace to those under it, but a three day sanctuary to any feuder or
duelist who managed to win to it and lay hands upon its weathered standard.
They were not the first to arrive, which was
also a good thing. Gathered in small groups about the walls of the council
place were the personal attendants, liege warriors, and younger relatives of at
least four or five clan chieftains. But, Dane noted at once, there was not a
single curtained litter or riding orgel to be seen. None of the feminine part
of the Salariki species had arrived. Nor would they until the
final trade treaty was concluded and established by their fathers, husbands, or
sons.
With the assurance of one who was master in
his own clan, Van Rycke, displaying no interest at all in the shifting mass of
lower rank Salariki, marched straight on to the door of the enclosure. Two or
three of the younger warriors got to their feet, their brilliant cloaks
flicking out like spreading wings. But when Van Rycke did not even lift an
eyelid in their direction, they made no move to block his path.
As
fighting men, Dane thought, trying to study the specimens before him with a
totally impersonal stare, the Salariki were an impressive lot. Their average
height was close to six feet, their distant feline ancestry apparent only in
small vestiges. A Salarik's nails on both hands and feet were retractile, his
skin was gray, his thick hair, close to the texture of plushy fur, extended
down his backbone and along the outside of his well muscled arms and legs, and
was tawny-yellow, blue-gray or white. To Terran eyes the broad faces, now all
turned in their direction, lacked readable expression. The eyes were large and
set slightly aslant in the skull, being startlingly orange-red or a brilliant
turquoise green-blue. They wore loin clothes of brightly dyed fabrics with wide
sashes forming corselets about their slender middles, from which gleamed the
gem-set hilts of their claw knives, the possession of which proved their adulthood.
Cloaks as flamboyant as their other garments hung in bat
wing folds from their shoulders and each and every one moved in an invisible
cloud of perfume.
Brilliant as the assemblage of liege men
without had been, the gathering of clan leaders and their upper officers within
the council place was a riot of color—and odor. The chieftains were installed
on the wooden stools, each with a small table before him on which rested a
goblet bearing his own clan sign, a folded strip of patterned cloth—his
"trade shield" —and a gemmed box containing the scented paste he
would use for refreshment during the ordeal of conference.
A breeze flutterd sash ends and tugged at
cloaks, otherwise the assembly was motionless and awesomely quiet. Still
making no overtures Van Rycke crossed to a stool and table which stood a little
apart and seated himself. Dane went into the action
required of him. Before his superior he set out a plastic pocket flask, its
color as alive in the sunlight as the crudely cut gems which the Salariki
sported, a fine silk handkerchief, and, last of all, a bottle of Terran
smelling salts provided by Medic Tau as a necessary restorative after some
hours combination of Salariki oratory and Salariki perfumes. Having thus done
the duty of liege man, Dane was at liberty to seat himself, cross-legged on the
ground behind his chief, as the other sons, heirs, and advisors had gathered
behind their lords.
The chieftain whose arrival they had in a
manner delayed came in after them and Dane saw that it was Fashdor— another
piece of luck—since that clan was a small one and the chieftain had little
influence. Had they so slowed Halfer or Paft it might be a different matter
altogether.
Fashdor
was established at his seat, his belongings spread out, and Dane, counting
unobtrusively, was certain that the council was now complete. Seven clans Traxt
Cam had recorded divided the sea coast territory and there were seven
chieftains here—indicative of the importance of this meeting since some of
these clans, beyond the radius of the shield peace, must be fighting a vicious
blood feud at that very moment. Yes, seven were here. Yet there still remained
a single stool, directly across the circle from Van Rycke. An empty stool—who
was the late comer?
That question was answered almost as it
flashed into Dane's mind. But no Salariki lordling came through the door.
Dane's self-control kept him in his place, even after he caught the meaning of
the insignia emblazoned across the newcomer's tunic. Trader—and not only a
Trader but a Company man! But why—and how? The
Companies only went after big game —this was a planet thrown open to Free
Traders, the independents of the star lanes. By law and right no Company man
had any place here. Unless—behind a face Dane strove to keep as impassive as
Van's his thoughts raced. Traxt Cam as a Free Trader had bid for the right to
exploit Sargol when its sole exportable product was deemed to be perfume—a small, unimportant trade as far as the Companies were concerned.
And then the Koros stones had been found and the importance of Sargol must have
boomed as far as the big boys could see. They probably knew of Traxt Cam's
death as soon as the Patrol report on Limbo had been sent to Headquarters. The
Companies all maintained their private information and espionage services. And, with Traxt "Cam dead without an heir, they had seen their
chance and moved in. Only, Dane's teeth set firmly, they didn't have the
ghost of a chance now. Legally there was only one Trader on Sargol and that was
the Solar Queen, Captain Jellico had his records signed by the Patrol to prove
that. And all this Inter-Solar man could do now was to bow out and try poaching
elsewhere.
But
the I-S man appeared to be in no haste to follow that only possible course. He
was searing himself with arrogant dignity on that unoccupied stool, and a
younger man in I-S uniform was putting before him the same type of equipment
Dane had produced for Van Rycke. The Cargo-master of the Solar Queen showed no
surprise, if the Eysies' appearance had been such to him.
One of the younger warriors in Paft's train
got to his feet and brought his hands together with a clap which echoed across
the silent gathering with the force of an archaic solid projectal shot. A
Salarik, wearing the rich dress of the upper ranks, but also the collar forced
upon a captive taken in combat, came into the enclosure carrying a jug in both
hands. Preceded by Paft's son he made the rounds of
the assembly pouring a purple liquid from his jug into the goblet before each
chieftain, a goblet which Paft's heirs tasted ceremoniously before it was
presented to the visiting clan leader. When they paused before Van Rycke the
Salarik nobleman touched the side of the plasta flask in token. It was recognized
that off world men must be cautious over the sampling of local products and
that when they joined in the Taking of the First Cup of Peace, they did so
symbolically.
Paft raised his cup, his gesture copied by
everyone around the circle. In the harsh tongue of his race he repeated a
formula so archaic that few of the Salariki could now translate the sing-song
words. They drank and the meeting was formally opened.
But
it was an elderly Salarik seated to the right of Halfer, a man who wore no claw
knife and whose dusky yellow cloak and sash made a subdued note amid the
splendor of his fellows, who spoke first, using the click-clack of the Trade
Lingo his nation had learned from Cam.
"Under
the white," he pointed to the shield aloft, "we assemble to hear many
things. But now come two tongues to speak where once there was but one father
of a clan. Tell us, outlanders, which of you must we now hark to in
truth?" He looked from Van Rycke to the I-S representative.
The Cargo-master from the Queen did not
reply. He stared across the circle at the Company man. Dane waited eagerly.
What was the I-S going to say to that?
But
the fellow did have an answer, ready and waiting. "It is true, fathers of clans, that here are two voices, where by
right and custom there should only be one. But this is a matter which can be
decided between us. Give us leave to withdraw from your sight and speak
privately together. Then he who returns to you will be the true voice and there
shall be no more division—"
It was Paft who broke in before Halfer's
spokesman could reply.
"It would have been better to have
spoken together before you came to us. Go then until the shadow of the shield
is not, then return hither and speak truly. We do not wait upon the pleasure of
oudanders—"
A
murmur approved that tart comment. "Until the shadow of
the shield is not." They had until noon. Van Rycke arose and Dane
gathered up his chief's possessions. With the same superiority to his
surroundings he had shown upon entering, the Cargo-master left the enclosure,
the Eysies following. But they were away from the clearing, out upon the road
back to the Queen before the two from the Company caught up with them.
"Captain
Grange will see you right away—"the Eysie Cargo-master was beginning when
Van Rycke met him with a quelling stare.
"If you poachers have anything to
say—you say it at the Queen and to Captain Jellico," he stated flatiy and
started on.
Above
his tight tunic collar the other's face flushed, his teeth flashed as he caught
his lower lip between them as if to forcibly restrain an answer he longed to
make. For a second he hesitated and then he vanished down a side path with his
assistant. Van Rycke had gone a quarter of the distance back to the ship before
he spoke.
"I
thought it was too easy," he muttered. "Now we're in for it—maybe
right up the rockets! By the Spiked Tail of Exol, this is certainly not our lucky day!" He quickened pace until they were close to
trotting.
Chapter II
RIVALS
"That's far enough,
Eysie!"
Although
Traders by law and tradition carried no more potent personal weapons—except in
times of great crisis— than hand sleep rods, the resultant shot from the latter
was just as unpleasant for temporary periods as a more forceful beam—and the
threat of it was enough to halt the three men who had come to the foot of the
Queen's ramp and who could see the rod held rather negligently by Ali. All's
eyes were anything but negligent, however, and Free Traders had reputations to
be respected by their rivals of the Companies. The very nature of their roving
lives taught them savage lessons—which they either learned or died.
Dane,
glancing down over the Engineer-apprentice's shoulder, saw that Van Rycke's
assumption of confidence had indeed paid off. They had left the trade enclosure
of the Salariki barely three-quarters of an hour ago. But below now stood the
bebadged Captain of the I-S ship and his Cargo-master.
"I want to speak to your Captain—"
snarled the Eysie officer.
Ali registered
faint amusement, an expression
which tended to rouse the worst in the spectator, as Dane knew old when
that same mocking appraisal had been turned on him as the rawest of the Queen's
crew.
"But does he wish to speak to you?" countered Kamil.
"Just stay where you are, Eysie, until we are sure about that fact."
That
was his cue to act as messenger. Dane retreated into the ship and swung up the
ladder to the command section. As he passed Captain Jellico's private cabin he
heard the muffled squall of the commander's unpleasant pet—Queex, the Hoobat—a
nightmare combination of crab, parrot and toad, wearing a blue feather coating
and inclined to scream and spit at all comers. Since Queex would not be howling
in that fashion if its master was present, Dane kept on to the control cabin
where he blundered in upon an executive level conference of Captain,
Cargo-master and Astrogator.
"Well?"
Jellico's blaster scarred left cheek twitched as he snapped that impatient
inquiry at the messenger.
"Eysie Captain below, sir. With his Cargo-master.
They want to see you—"
Jellico's
mouth was a straight line, his eyes very hard. By instinct Dane's hand went to
the grip of the sleep rod slung at his belt. When the Old Man put on his
fighting face-look outl Here we go again, he told
himself, speculating as to just what type of action lay before them now.
"Oh,
they do, do they!" Jellico began and then throttled down the temper he
could put under iron control when and if it were necessary. "Very well,
tell them to stay where they are. Van, well go down—"
For
a moment the Cargo-master hesitated, his heavy-lidded eyes looked sleepy, he seemed almost disinterested in the suggestion.
And when he nodded it was with the air of someone about to perform some boring
duty.
"Right, sir." He wriggled his heavy body from behind the small table, resealed his
tunic, and settled his cap with as much precision as if he were about to
represent the Queen before the assembled nobility of Sargol.
Dane
hurried down the ladders, coming to a halt beside Ali. It was the turn of the
man at the foot of the ramp to bark an impatient demand:
"Well?"
(Was that the theme word of every Captain's vocabulary?)
"You wait," Dane replied with no
inclination to give the Eysie officer any courtesy address. Close to a Terran
year aboard the Solar Queen had inoculated him with pride in his own section of
Service. A Free Trader was answerable to his own officers and to no one else on
earth—or among the stars —no matter how much discipline and official etiquette
the Companies used to enhance their power.
He
half expected the I-S officers to leave after an answer such as that. For a
Company Captain to be forced to wait upon the convenience of a Free Trader must
be galling in the extreme. And the fact that this one was doing just that was
an indication that the Queen's crew did, perhaps, have the edge of advantage in
any coming bargain. In the meantime the Eysie contingent fumed below while Ali
lounged whistling against the exit port, playing with his sleep rod and Dane
studied the grass forest. His boot nudged a packet just inside the port casing
and he glanced inquiringly from it to Ali.
"Cat ransom," the other answered his
unspoken question. So that was it—the fee for Sinbad's return. "What is it
today?"
"Sugar—about a tablespoon full," the Engineer-assistant
returned, "and two colored steelos. So far they haven't run up the price on us.
I think they're sharing out the spoil evenly, a new cub brings him back every
night."
As
did all Terran ships, the Solar Queen carried a cat as an important member of
her regular crew. And the portly Sinbad, before their landing on Sargol, had
never presented any problem. He had done his duty of ridding the ship of
unusual and usual pests and cargo despoilers with dispatch, neatness and
energy. And when in port on alien worlds' had never shown any inclination to go
a-roving.
But
the scents of Sargol had apparently intoxicated him, shearing away his solid
dignity and middle-aged dependability. Now Sinbad flashed out of the Queen at
the opening of her port in the early morning and was brought back, protesting
with both voice and claws, at the end of the day by that member of the juvenile
population whose turn it was to collect the standing reward for his forceful
delivery. Within three days it had become an accepted business transaction
which satisfied everyone but Sinbad.
The
scrape of metal boot soles on ladder rungs warned of the arrival of their
officers. Ali and Dane withdrew down the corridor, leaving the entrance open
for Jellico and Van Rycke. Then they drifted back to witness the meeting with
the Eysies.
There
were no prolonged greetings between the two parties, no offer of hospitality as
might have been expected between Terrans on an alien planet a quarter of the
Galaxy away from the earth which had given them a common heritage.
Jellico,
with Van Rycke at his shoulder, halted before he stepped from the ramp so that
the three Inter-Solar men, Captain, Cargo-master and escort, whether they
wished or no, were put in the disadvantageous position of having to look up to
a Captain whom they, as members of one of the powerful Companies, affected to
despise. The lean, well muscled, trim figure of the Queen's commander gave the
impression of hard bitten force held in check by will control, just as his face
under its thick layer of space bum was that of an adventurer accustomed to make
split second decisions— an estimate underlined by that seam of blaster burn
across one flat cheek.
Van
Rycke, with a slight change of dress, could have been a Company man in the
higher ranks—or so the casual observer would have placed him, until such an
observer marked the eyes behind those sleepy drooping lids, or caught a certain
note in the calm, unhurried drawl of his voice. To look at the two senior
officers of the Free Trading spacer were the antithesis of each other—in action
they were each half of a powerful, steamroller whole—as a good many men in the
Service—scattered over a half dozen or so planets—had discovered to their cost
in the past.
Now
Jellico brought the heels of his space boots together with an extravagant click
and his hand flourished at the fore of his helmet in a gesture which was better
suited to the Patrol hero of a slightly out-of-date Video serial.
"Jellico, Solar Queen, Free
Trader," he identified himself brusquely, and added, "This is Van
Rycke, our Cargo-master."
Not all the flush had faded from the face of
the I-S Captain.
"Grange
of the Dart," he did not even sketch a salute. "Inter-Solar.
Kallee, Cargo-master—" And he did not name the hovering third member of
his party.
Jellico stood waiting and after a long moment
of silence Grange was forced to state his business. "We have until noon—"
Jellico,
his fingers hooked in his belt, simply waited. And under his level gaze the
Eysie Captain began to find the going hard.
"They
have given us until noon," he started once more, "to get
together—"
Jellico's
voice came, coldly remote. "There is no reason for any 'getting together,'
Grange. By rights I can have you up before the Trade Board for poaching. The
Solar Queen has sole trading rights here. If you up-ship within a reasonable
amount of time, 111 be inclined to let it pass. After all I've no desire to run
all the way to the nearest Patrol post to report you—"
"You
can't expect to buck Inter-Solar. Well make you an offer—" That was
Kallee's contribution, made probably because his commanding officer couldn't
find words explosive enough.
Jellico,
whose forte was more direct action, took an excursion into heavy-handed
sarcasm. "You Eysies have certainly been given excellent briefing. I would
advise a little closer study of the Code—and not the sections in small symbols
at the end of the tape, eitherl We're not bucking
anyone. You'll find our registration for Sargol down on tapes at the Center.
And I suggest that the sooner you withdraw the better-before we cite you for
illegal planeting."
Grange had gained control of his emotions.
"We're pretty far from Center here," he remarked. It was a statement
of fact, but it carried over-tones which they were able to assess correctly.
The Solar Queen was a Free Trader, alone on an alien world. But the I-S ship
might be cruising in company, ready to summon aid, men and supplies. Dane drew
a deep breath, the Eysies must be
sure of themselves, not only that, but they must want what Sargol had to offer
to the point of being willing to step outside the law to get it.
The I-S Captain took a step forward. "I
think we understand each other now," he said, his confidence restored.
Van Rycke answered him, his deep voice
cutting across the sighing of the wind in the grass forest.
"Your
proposition?"
Perhaps
this return to their implied threat bolstered their belief in the infallibility
of the Company, their conviction that no independent dared stand up against the
might and power of Inter-Solar. Kallee replied:
"We'll
take up your contract, at a profit to you, and you up-ship before the Salariki
are confused over whom they are to deal with—"
"And the amount of
profit?" Van
Rycke bored in.
"Oh," Kallee shrugged, "say
ten percent of Cam's last shipment—"
Jellico laughed. "Generous, aren't you,
Eysie? Ten percent of a cargo which can't be assessed—the gang on Limbo kept no
records of what they plundered."
"We
don't know what he was carrying when he crashed on Limbo," countered
Kallee swiftly. "We'll base our offer on what he carried to Axal."
Now
Van Rycke chuckled. "I wonder who figured that one out?" he inquired
of the scented winds. "He must save the Company a fair amount of credits
one way or another. Interesting offer—"
By the bland satisfaction to be read on the
three faces below the I-S men were assured of their victory. The Solar Queen
would be paid off with a pittance, under the vague threat of Company
retaliation she would up-ship from Sar-gol, and they would be left in
possession of the rich Koros trade—to be commended and rewarded by their
superiors. Had they, Dane speculated, ever had any dealings with Free Traders
before—at least with the brand of independent adventurers such as manned the
Solar Queen?
Van Rycke burrowed in his belt pouch and then
held out his hand. On the broad palm lay a flat disc of metal. "Very
interesting—" he repeated. "I shall treasure this recording—"
The
sight of that disc wiped all satisfaction from the Eysie faces. Grange's
purplish flush spread up from his tight tunic collar, Kallee blinked, and the
unknown third's hand dropped to his sleep rod. An action
which was not overlooked by either Dane or Ali.
"A
smooth set down to you," Jellico gave the conventional leave taking of the
Service.
"You'd
better—" the Eysie Captain began hotly, and then seeing the disc Van Rycke
held—that sensitive bit of metal and plastic which was recording this interview
for future reference, he shut his mouth tight.
"Yes?" the Queen's Cargo-master
prompted politely. But Kallee had taken his Captain's arm and was urging Grange
away from the spacer.
"You
have until noon to lift," was Jellico's parting shot as the three in Company livery started toward the road.
"I don't think that they will," he
added to Van Rycke.
The
Cargo-master nodded. "You wouldn't in their place," he pointed out
reasonably. "On the other hand they've had a bit of a blast they weren't expecting. It's been a long time since
Grange heard anyone say 'no.'"
"A
shock which is going to wear off," Jellico's habitual distrust of the future gathered force.
"This,"
Van Rycke tucked the disc back into his pouch, "sent them off vector a
parsec or two. Grange is not one of the strong arm blaster boys. Suppose Tang Ya does a little listening in—and maybe we can rig
another surprise if Grange does try to ask advice of someone off world. In the
meantime I don't think they are going to meddle with the Salarild. They don't
want to have to answer awkward questions if we turn up a Patrol ship to ask them. So—" he stretched and beckoned
to Dane, "we shall go to work once more."
Again
two paces behind Van Rycke Dane tramped to the trade circle of the Salarild
clansmen. They might have walked out only five or six minutes of ship time
before, and the natives betrayed no particular interest in their return. But,
Dane noted, there was only one empty stool, one ceremonial table in evidence.
The Salariki had expected only one Terran Trader to join them.
What followed was a dreary round of ceremony,
an exchange of platitudes and empty good wishes and greetings. No one mentioned
Koros stones—or even perfume bark—that he was willing
to offer the off-world traders. None lifted so much as a comer of his trade
cloth, under which, if he were ready to deal seriously, his hidden hand would
meet that of the buyer, so that by finger pressure alone they could agree or
disagree on price. But such boring sessions were part of Trade and Dane,
keeping a fraction of attention on the speeches and
"drinkings-together," watched those around him with an eye which
tried to assess and classify what he saw.
The
keynote of the Salariki character was a wary independence. The only form of
government they would tolerate was a family-clan organization. Feuds and deadly
duels between individuals and clans were the accepted way of life and every
male who reached adulthood went armed and ready for combat until he became a
"Speaker for the past"— too old to bear arms in the field. Due to the
nature of their battling lives, relatively few of the Salariki ever reached
that retirement. Short-lived alliances between families sometimes occurred,
usually when they were to face a common enemy greater than either. But a
quarrel between chieftains, a fancied insult would rip that open in an
instant. Only under the Trade Shield could seven clans sit this way without
their warriors being at one another's furred throats.
An hour before sunset Paft turned his goblet
upside down on his table, a move followed speedily by every chieftain in the
circle. The conference was at an end for that day. And as far as Dane could see
it had accomplished exactly nothing-except to bring the Eysies into the open.
What had Traxt Cam discovered which had given him the
trading contact with these suspicious aliens? Unless the men from the Queen
learned it, they could go on talking until the contract ran out and get no
farther than they had today.
From his training Dane knew that ofttimes
contact with an alien race did require long and patient handling. But between
study and experiencing the situation himself there was a gulf, and he thought
somewhat ruefully that he had much to learn before he could meet such a
situation with Van Rycke's unfailing patience and aplomb. The Cargo-master
seemed in nowise tired by his wasted day and Dane knew that Van would probably
sit up half the night, going over for the hundredth time Traxt Cam's sketchy
recordings in another painstaking attempt to discover why and how the other
Free Trader had succeeded where the Queen's men were up against a stone wall.
The
harvesting of Koros stones was, as Dane and all those who had been briefed from
Cam's records knew, a perilous job. Though the rule of
the Salariki was undisputed on the land masses of Sargol, it was another matter
in the watery world of the shallow seas. There the Gorp were in command of the
territory and one had to be constantly alert for attack from that sly,
reptilian intelligence, so alien to the thinking processes of both Salariki and
Terran that there was, or seemed to be, no point of possible contact. One went
gathering Koros gems after balancing life against gain. And perhaps the
Salariki did not see any profit in that operation. Yet Traxt Cam had brought back
his bag of gems—somehow he had managed to secure them in trade.
Van
Rycke climbed the ramp, hurrying on into the Queen as if he could not get back
to his records soon enough. But Dane paused and looked back at the grass jungle
a little wistfully. To his mind these early evening hours were the best time on
Sargol. The light was golden, the night winds had not
yet arisen. He disliked exchanging the freedom of the open for the confinement
of the spacer.
And,
as he hesitated there, two of the juvenile population of Sargol came out of the
forest. Between them they carried one of their hunting nets, a net which now
enclosed a quiet but baneful eyed captive—Sinbad being delivered for nightly
ransom. Dane was reaching for the pay to give the captors when, to his real
astonishment, one of them advanced and pointed with an extended forefinger claw
to the open port.
"Go
in," he formed the Trade Lingo words with care. And Dane's surprise must
have been plain to read for the cub followed his speech with a vigorous nod and
set one foot on the ramp to underline his desire.
For
one of the Salariki, who had continually manifested their belief that Terrans
and their ship were an offence to the nostrils of all right living
"men," to wish to enter the spacer was an astonishing about-face. But
any advantage no matter how small, which might bring about a closer understanding,
must be seized at once.
Dane
accepted the growling Sinbad and beckoned, knowing better than to touch the
boy. "Come—"
Only
one of the junior clansmen obeyed that invitation. The other watched, big-eyed,
and then scuttled back to the forest when his fellow called out some
suggestion. He was not going to be trapped.
Dane
led the way up the ramp, paying no visible attention to the young Salarik, nor
did he urge the other on when he lingered for a long moment or two at the port.
In his mind the Cargo-master apprentice was feverishly running over the list of
general trade goods. What did they
carry which would make a suitable and intriguing gift for a small alien with
such a promising bump of curiosity? If he had only time to get Van Ryckel
The Salarik was inside the corridor now, his
nostrils spread, assaying each and every odor in this strange place. Suddenly
his head jerked as if tugged by one of his own net ropes. His interest had been
riveted by some scent his sensitive senses had detected. His eyes met Dane's
in appeal. Swiftly the Terran nodded and then followed with a lengthened
stride as the Salarik sped down into the lower reaches of the Queen, obviously
in quest of something of great importance.
Chapter III
CONTACT AT LAST
"What in"—Frank Mura, steward, storekeeper, and
cook of the Queen, retreated into the nearest cabin doorway as the young
Salarik flashed down the ladder into his section.
Dane,
with the now resigned Sinbad in the crook of his arm, had tailed his guest and
arrived just in time to see the native come to an abrupt halt before one of the
most important doors in the spacer—the portal of the hydro garden which renewed
the ship's oxygen and supplied them with fresh fruit and vegetables to vary
their diet of concentrates.
The Salarik laid one hand on the smooth
surface of the sealed compartment and looked back over his shoulder at Dane
with an inquiry to which was added something of a plea. Guided by his instinct—that this was important to them all—Dane
spoke to Mura:
"Can you let him in
there, Frank?"
It
was not sensible, it might even be dangerous. But every member of the crew knew
the necessity for making some sort of contact with the natives. Mura did not
even nod, but squeezed by the Salarik and pressed the lock. There was a sigh of air, and the crisp smell of growing things, lacking the
languorous perfumes of the world outside, puffed into the faces.
The
cub remained where he was, his head up, his wide nostrils visibly drinking in
that smell. Then he moved with the silent, uncanny speed which was the heritage
of his race, darting down the narrow aisle toward a mass of greenery at the far end.
Sinbad
kicked and growled. This was his private hunting ground—the preserve he kept
free of invaders. Dane put the cat down. The Salarik had found what he was seeking.
He stood on tiptoe to sniff at a plant, his yellow eyes half closed,
his
whole stance spelling ecstasy. Dane looked to the steward for enlightenment.
"What's he so
interested in, Frank?"
"Catnip."
"Catnip?" Dane repeated. The word meant nothing to
him, but Mura had a habit of picking up strange plants and cultivating them
for study. "What is it?"
"One of the Terran mints—an herb,"
Mura gave a short explanation as he moved down the aisle toward the alien. He
broke off a leaf and crushed it between his fingers.
Dane, his sense of smell largely deadened by
the pungency with which he had been surrounded by most of that day, could
distinguish no new odor. But the young Salarik swung around to face the steward
his eyes wide, his nose questing. And Sinbad gave a whining yowl and made a
spring to push his head against the steward's now aromatic hand.
So—now they had it—an
opening wedge. Dane came up to the three.
"All right to take a leaf or two?"
he asked Mura.
"Why not? I grow it for Sinbad. To a cat it is like heemel smoke or a tankard of
lackibod."
And by Sinbad's actions Dane guessed that the
plant did hold for the cat the same attraction those stimulants produced in
human beings. He carefully broke off a small stem supporting three leaves and
presented it to the Salarik, who stared at him and then, snatching the twig,
raced from the hydro garden as if pursued by feuding clansmen.
Dane
heard the pad of his feet on the ladder—apparently the cub was making sure of
escape with his precious find. But the Cargo-master apprentice was frowning. As
far as he could see there were only five of the plants.
"That's all the catnip you have?"
Mura
tucked Sinbad under his arm and shooed Dane before him out of the hydro.
"There was no need to grow more. A small portion of the herb goes a long
way with this one," he put the cat down in the corridor. "The leaves
may be preserved by drying. I believe that there is a small box of them in the
galley."
A strictly limited supply. Suppose this was the key which would unlock the Koros trade? And yet it
was to be summed up in five plants and a few dried leavesl However, Van Rycke
must know of this as soon as possible.
But to Dane's growing discomfiture the Cargo-master showed no elation as
his junior poured out the particulars of his discovery. Instead there were definite signs of
displeasure to be read by those who knew Van Rycke well. He heard Dane out and
then got to his feet. Tolling the younger man with him by a crooked finger, he
went out of his combined office-living quarters to the domain of Medic Craig
Tau.
"Problem for you, Craig." Van Rycke seated his bulk on the wall jump
seat Tau pulled down for him. Dane was left standing just within the door, very
sure now that instead of being commended for his discovery of a few minutes
before, he was about to suffer some reprimand. And the reason for it still
eluded him.
"What do you know about that plant Mura
grows in the hydro—the one called 'catnip?"
Tau did not appear surprised at that
demand—the Medic of a Free Trading spacer was never surprised at anything. He
had his surfeit of shocks during his first years of service and after that
accepted any occurrence, no matter how weird, as matter-of-fact. In addition
Tan's hobby was "magic," the hidden knowledge possessed and used by
witch doctors and medicine men on alien worlds. He had a library of recordings,
of odd scraps of information, of certified results of certain very peculiar
experiments. Now and then he wrote a report which was sent into Central
Service, read with raised eyebrows by perhaps half a dozen incredulous desk
warmers, and filed away to be safely forgotten. But even that had ceased to
frustrate him.
"It's an herb of the mint family from
Terra," he replied. "Mura grows it for Sinbad—has quite a marked
influence on cats. Frank's been trying to keep him anchored to the ship by
allowing him to roll in fresh leaves. He does it—then continues to sneak out
whenever he can—"
That explained something for Dane—why the
Salariki cub wished to enter the Queen tonight. Some of the scent of the plant
had clung to Sinbad's fur, had been detected, and the Salarik had wanted to
trace it to its source.
"Is it a drug?" Van Rycke prodded.
"In the way that all herbs are drugs. Human beings have dosed themselves in the
past with a tea made of the dried leaves. It has no great medicinal properties.
To felines it is a stimulation—and they get the same
satisfaction from rolling in and eating the leaves as we do from
drinking—"
"The Salariki are, in a manner of
speaking, felines—" Van Rycke mused.
Tau
straightened. "The Salariki have discovered catnip, I take it?"
Van
Rycke nodded at Dane and for the second time the Cargo-master apprentice made
his report. When he was done Van Rycke asked a direct question of the medical
officer:
"What affect would catnip have on a
Salarik?"
It
was only then that Dane grasped the enormity of what he had done. They had no
way of gauging the influence of an off-world plant on alien metabolism. What if
he had introduced to the natives of Sargol a dangerous drug—started that cub on
some path of addiction. He was cold inside. Why, he might even have poisoned
the child!
Tau
picked up his cap, and after a second's hesitation, his emergency medical kit.
He had only one question for Dane.
"Any idea of who the cub is—what clan he belongs to?"
And
Dane, chill with real fear, was forced to answer in the negative. What had he done!
"Can
you find him?" Van Rycke, ignoring Dane, spoke to Tau.
The
Medic shrugged. "I can try. I was out scouting this morning—met one of the
storm priests who handles their medical work. But I
wasn't welcomed. However, under the circumstances, we have to try
something—"
In
the corridor Van Rycke had an order for Dane. "I suggest that you keep to
quarters, Thorson, until we know how matters stand."
Dane saluted. That note in his superior's
voice was like a whip lash—much worse to take than the abuse of a lesser man.
He swallowed as he shut himself into his own cramped cubby. This might be the
end of their venture. And they would be lucky if their charter was not
withdrawn. Let I-S get an inkling of his rash action and the Company would have
them up before the Board to be stripped of all their rights in the Service. Just because of his own stupidity—his pride in being able to break
through where Van Rycke and the Captain had faced a stone wall. And,
worse than the future which could face the Queen, was the thought that he might
have introduced some dangerous drug into Sargol with his gift of those few
leaves. When would he leam? He threw himself face down on his bunk and
despondently pictured the string of calamities which could and maybe would stem
from his thoughtless and hasty action.
Within
the Queen night and day were mechanical—the lighting in the cabins did not vary
much. Dane did not know how long he lay there forcing his mind to consider his
stupid action, making himself face that in the Service there were no short cuts
which endangered others—not unless those taking the risks were Terrans.
"Dane—!" Rip Shannon's voice cut through his self-imposed nightmare. But he
refused to answer. "Dane—Van wants you on the double!"
Why? To bring him up before
Jellico probably. Dane schooled his expression, got up, pulling his
tunic straight, still unable to meet Rip's eyes. Shannon was just one of those
he had let down so badly. But the other did not notice his mood. "Wait
'til you see them.—! Half Sargol must be here yelling for trade!"
That comment was so far from what he had been
expecting that Dane was startled out of his own gloomy thoughts.
Rip's
brown face was one wide smile, his black eyes danced —it was plain he was
honestly elated.
"Get a move on, fire rockets," he
urged, "or Van will blast you for fair!"
Dane did move, up the ladder to the next
level and out on the port ramp. What he saw below brought him up short. Evening
had come to Sargol but the scene immediately below was not in darkness. Blazing
torches advanced in lines from the grass forest and the portable flood light of
the spacer added to the general glare, turning night into noonday.
Van Rycke and Jellico sat on stools facing at
least five of the seven major chieftains with whom they had conferred to no
purpose earlier. And behind these leaders milled a throng of
lesser Salariki. Yes, there was at least one carrying chair— and also an
orgel from the back of which a veiled noblewoman was being assisted to
dismount by two retainers. The women of the clans were coming—which could mean
only that trade was at last in progress. But trade for what?
Dane
strode down the ramp. He saw Paft, his hand carefully covered by his trade
cloth, advance to Van Rycke, whose own fingers were decently veiled by a
handkerchief. Under the folds of fabric their hands touched. The bargaining
was in the first stages. And it was important enough for the clan leaders to
conduct themselves. Where, according to Cam's records, it had been usual to
delegate that power to a favored leige man.
Catching
the light from the ship's beam and from the softer flares of the Salariki
torches was a small pile of stones resting on a stool to one side. Dane drew a
deep breath. He had heard the Koros stones described, had seen the tri-dee
print of one found among Cam's recordings but the reality was beyond his
expectations. He knew the technical analysis of the gems—that they were, as the
amber of Terra, the fossilized resin exuded by ancient plants (maybe the
ancestors of the grass trees) long buried in the saline deposits of the shallow
seas where chemical changes had taken place to produce the wonder jewels. In
color they shaded from a rosy apricot to a rich mauve, but in their depths
other colors, silver, fiery gold, spun sparks which seemed to move as the gem
was turned. And—which was what first endeared them to the Salariki—when worn
against the skin and warmed by body heat they gave off a perfume which
enchanted not only the Sargolian natives but all in the Galaxy wealthy enough
to own one.
On another stool placed at Van Rycke's right
hand, as that bearing the Koros stones was at Paft's, was a transparent plastic
box containing some wrinkled brownish leaves. Dane moved as unobtrusively as he
could to his proper place at such a trading session, behind Van Rycke. More
Salariki were tramping out of the forest, torch bearing retainers and cloaked
warriors. A little to one side was a third party Dane had not seen before.
They
were clustered about a staff which had been driven into the ground, a staff
topped with a white streamer marking a temporary trading ground. These were
Salariki right enough but they did not wear the colorful garb of those about
them, instead they were all clad alike in muffling, sleeved robes of a drab
green—the storm priests—their robes denoting the color of the Sargolian sky
just before the onslaught of their worst tempests. Cam had not left many clues
concerning the religion of the Salariki, but the storm priests had, in narrowly
defined limits, power, and their recognition of the Terran Traders would add to
good feeling.
In
the knot of storm priests a Terran stood—Medic Tau— and he was talking
earnestly with the leader of the religious party. Dane would have given much to
have been free to cross and ask Tau a question or two. Was all this assembly
the result of the discovery in the hydro? But even as he asked himself that,
the trade cloths were shaken from the hands of the bargainers and Van Rycke
gave an order over his shoulder.
"Measure
out two spoonsful of the dried leaves into a box —" he pointed to a tiny
plastic container.
With painstaking care Dane
followed directions. At the same time a servant of the Salarik chief swept the
handful of gems from the other stool and dropped them in a heap before Van
Rycke, who transferred them to a strong box resting between his feet. Paft
arose—but he had hardly quitted the trading seat before one of the lesser clan
leaders had taken his place, the bargaining cloth ready looped loosely about
his wrist.
It was at that point that the proceedings
were interrupted. A new party came into the open, their utilitarian Trade
tunics making a drab blot as they threaded their way in a compact group through
the throng of Salariki. I-S men! So they had not lifted from Sargol.
They
showed no signs of uneasiness—it was as if their rights were being infringed by the Free Traders. And Kallee, their
Cargo-master, swaggered straight to the bargaining point. The chatter of
Salariki voices was stilled, the Sargoli-ans withdrew
a little, letting one party of Terrans face the other, sensing drama to come.
Neither Van Rycke nor Jellico spoke, it was left to Kallee to state his case.
"You've crooked your orbit this time,
bright boys," his jeer was a pean of triumph. "Code Three—Article
six—or can't you absorb rules tapes with you thick heads?"
Code
Three—Article six, Dane searched his memory for that law of the Service. The
words flashed into his mind as the auto-learner had planted them during his
first year of training back in the Pool.
"To
no alien race shall any Trader introduce any drug, food, or drink from off
world, until such a substance has been certified as nonharmful to the
aliens.'"
There
it was! I-S had them and it was all his fault. But if
he had been so wrong, why in the world did Van Rycke sit there trading,
condoning the error and making it into a crime for which they could be summoned
before the Board and struck off the rolls of the Service?
Van Rycke smiled gently. "Code Four—Article two," he quoted with the genial air of one
playing gift-giver at a Forkidan feasting.
Code Four, Article two: Any organic substance
offered for trade must be examined by a committee of trained medical experts,
an equal representation of Ten-ans and aliens.
Kallee's sneering smile did not vanish.
"Well," he challenged, "where's your board of experts?"
"Taul" Van Rycke called to the
Medic with the storm priests. "Will you ask your colleague to be so kind
as to allow the Cargo-master Kallee to be presented?"
The
tall, dark young Terran Medic spoke to the priest beside him and together they
came across the clearing. Van Rycke and Jellico both arose and inclined their
heads in honor to the priests, as did the chief with whom they had been about
to deal.
"Reader of clouds and master of many
winds," Tau's voice flowed with the many voweled titles of the Sargolian,
"may I bring before your face Cargo-master Kallee, a servant of
Inter-Solar in the realm of Trade?"
The storm priest's shaven skull and body gleamed steel gray in the light. His eyes, of that startling
blue-green, regarded the I-S party with cynical detachment.
"You wish of me?" Plainly he was
one who believed in getting down to essentials at once.
Kallee could not be overawed. "These
Free Traders have introduced among your people a powerful drug which will bring
much evil," he spoke slowly in simple words as if he were addressing a
cub.
"You
have evidence of such evil?" countered the storm priest. "In what
manner is this new plant evil?"
For
a moment Kallee was disconcerted. But he rallied quickly. "It has not been
tested—you do not know how it will affect your people—"
The storm priest shook his head impatiently.
"We are not lacking in intelligence, Trader. This plant has been tested, both by your master of life secrets and ours. There is no
harm in it—rather it is a good thing, to be highly prized—so highly that we
shall give thanks that it was brought unto us.
This
speech-together is finished." He pulled the loose folds of his robe closer
about him and walked away.
"Now,"
Van Rycke addressed the I-S party, "I must ask you to withdraw. Under the
rules of Trade your presence here can be actively resented—"
But Kallee had lost little of his assurance.
"You haven't heard the last of this. A tape of the whole proceedings goes
to the Board-"
"As you wish. But in the meantime—" Van Rycke gestured to the waiting Salariki
who were beginning to mutter impatiently. Kallee glanced around, heard those
mutters, and made the only move possible, away from the Queen. He was not quite
so cocky, but neither had he surrendered.
Dane
caught at Tau's sleeve and asked the question which had been burning in him
since he had come upon the scene.
"What happened—about the catnip?"
There
was lightening of the serious expression on Tau's face.
"Fortunately
for you that child took the leaves to the storm priest. They tested and
approved it. And I can't see that it has any ill effects. But you were just
lucky, Thorson—it might have gone another way."
Dane
sighed. "I know that, sir," he confessed. "I'm not trying to
rocket out—"
Tau gave a half-smile. "We all off-fire
our tubes at times," he conceded. "Only next time—"
He
did not need to complete that warning as Dane caught him up:
"There
isn't going to be a next time like this, sir—ever!" Chapter IV GORP HUNT
But the interruption had disturbed the tenor of trading. The small
chief who had so eagerly taken Paft's place had only two Koros stones to offer
and even to Dane's inexperienced eyes they were inferior in size and color to
those the other clan leader had tendered. The Terrans were aware that Koros
mining was a dangerous business but they had not known that the stock of
available stones was so very small. Within ten minutes the last of the serious bargaining
was concluded and the clansmen were drifting away from the burned over space
about the Queen's standing fins.
Dane
folded up the bargain cloth, glad for a task. He sensed that he was far from
being back in Van Rycke's good graces. The fact that his superior did not
discuss any of the aspects of the deals with him was a bad sign.
Captain
Jellico stretched. Although his was not, or never, what might be termed a
good-humored face, he was at peace with his world. "That would seem to be
all. What's thé haul, Van?"
"Ten first class stones, about fifty
second grade, and twenty or so of third. The chiefs will go to the fisheries
tomorrow. Then
we'll be in to see the
really good stuff."
"And
how's the herbs holding out?" That interested
Dane too. Surely the few plants in the hydro and the dried leaves could not be
stretched too far.
"As well as we could expect." Van
Rycke frowned. "But Craig thinks he's on the trail of something to
help—"
The
storm priests had uprooted the staff marking the trading station and were
wrapping the white streamer about it. Their leader had already gone and now Tau
came up to the group by the ramp.
"Van says you have an idea," the
Captain hailed him.
"We haven't tried it yet. And we can't
unless the priests give it a clear lane—"
"That goes without saying—" Jellico
agreed.
The Captain had not addressed that remark to
him personally, but Dane was sure it had been directed at him. Well, they
needn't worry—never again was he going to make that mistake, they could be very
sure of that.
He was part of the conference which followed
in the mess cabin only because he was a member of the crew. How far the reason
for his disgrace had spread he had no way of telling, but he made no
overtures, even to Rip.
Tau
had the floor with Mura as an efficient lieutenant. He discussed the properties
of catnip and gave information on the limited supply the Queen carried. Then he
launched into a new suggestion.
"Felines
of Terra, in fact a great many other of our native mammals, have a similar
affinity for this."
Mura
produced a small flask and Tau opened it, passing it to Captain Jellico and so
from hand to hand about the room. Each crewman sniffed at the strong aroma. It
was a heavier scent than that given off by the crushed catnip—Dane was not sure
he liked it. But a moment later Sinbad streaked in from the corridor and
committed the unpardonable sin of leaping to the table top just before Mura who
had taken the flask from Dane. He miaowed plantively and clawed at the
steward's cuff. Mura stoppered the flask and put the cat down on the floor.
"What is it?" Jellico wanted to
know.
"Anisette,
a liquor made from the oil of anise—from seeds of the
anise plant. It is a stimulant, but we use it mainly as a condiment. If it is
harmless for the Salariki it ought to be a bigger bargaining point than any
perfumes or spices, I-S can import. And remember, with their unlimited capital,
they can flood the market with products we can't touch, selling at a loss if
need be to cut us out. Because their ship is not going to
lift from Sargol just because she has no legal right here."
"There's this point," Van Rycke
added to the lecture. "The Eysies are trading or want to trade perfumes.
But they stock only manufactured products, exotic stuff, but synthetic."
He took from his belt pouch two tiny boxes.
Before
he caught the rich scent of the paste inside them Dane had already identified
each as luxury items from Casper —chemical products which sold well and at high
prices in the civilized ports of the Galaxy. The Cargo-master turned the boxes
over, exposing the symbol on their undersides—the mark of I-S.
"These were offered to me in trade by a
Salarik. I took them, just to have proof that the Eysies are operating here.
But—note—they were offered to me in trade, along with two top Koros for what?
One spoonful of dried catnip leaves. Does that suggest anything?"
Mura
answered first. "The Salariki prefer natural products to synthetic."
"I think so."
"D'you
suppose that was Cam's secret?" speculated
Astro-gator Steen Wilcox.
"If
it was," Jellico cut in, "he certainly kept itl If
we had only known this earlier—"
They
were all thinking of that, of their storage space carefully packed with useless
trade goods. Where, if they had known, the same space could have carried herbs
with five or twenty-five times as much buying power.
"Maybe
now that their sales' resistance is broken, we can switch to some of the other stuff," Tang Ya, torn away from his
beloved communicators for the conference, said wistfully. "They like
color—how about breaking out some rolls of Harlinian moth silk?"
Van
Rycke sighed wearily. "Oh, well try. Well bring out everything and
anything. But we could have done so much better—"he brooded over the
tricks of fate which had landed them on a planet wild for trade with no proper
trade goods in either of their holds.
There was a nervous little sound of a throat
being apologetically cleared. Jasper Weeks, the small wiper from the engine
room detail, the third generation Venusian colonist whom the more vocal members
of the Queen's compliment were apt to forget upon occasion, seeing all eyes
upon him, spoke though his voice was hardly above a hoarse whisper.
"Cedar—lacquel bark—forsh weed—"
"Cinnamon,"
Mura added to the fist. "Imported in small quantities—"
"Naturally! Only the problem now is—how much cedar,
lacquel bark, forsh weed, cinnamon do we have on board?" demanded Van
Rycke.
His
sarcasm did not register with Weeks for the little man pushed by Dane and left
the cabin to their surprise. In the quiet which followed they could hear the
clatter of his boots on ladder rungs as he descended to the quarters of the
engine room staff. Tang turned to his neighbor, Johan Stotz, the Queen's
Engineer.
"What's he going for?"
Stotz
shrugged. Weeks was a self-effacing man—so much so that even in the cramped
quarters of the spacer very little about him as an individual impressed his
mates—a fact which was slowly dawning on them all now. Then they heard the
scramble of feet hurrying back and Weeks burst in with energy which carried him
across to the table behind which the Captain and Van Rycke now sat.
In the wiper's hands was a plasta-steel
box—the treasure chest of a spaceman. Its tough exterior was guaranteed to
protect the contents against everything but outright disintegration. Weeks put
it down on the table and snapped up the lid.
A
new aroma, or aromas, was added to the scents now at war in the cabin. Weeks
pulled out a handful of fluffy white stuff which frothed up about his fingers
like soap lather. Then with more care he lifted up a tray divided into many
small compartments, each with a separate sealing lid of its own. The men of the
Queen moved in, their curiosity aroused, until they were jostling one another.
Being
tall Dane had an advantage, though Van Rycke's bulk and the wide shoulders of
the Captain were between him and the object they were so intent upon. In each
division of the tray, easily seen through the transparent lids, was a carved
figure. The weird denizens of the Venusian polar swamps were there, along with
life-like effigies of Terran animals, a Martian sand-mouse in all its monstrous
ferocity, and the native animal and reptile life of half a hundred different
worlds. Weeks put down a second tray beside the first, again displaying a
menagerie of strange life forms. But when he clicked open one of the
compartments and handed the figurine it contained to the Captain, Dane
understood the reason for now bringing forward the carvings.
The majority of them were fashioned from a
dull blue-gray wood and Dane knew that if he picked one up he would discover that
it weighed close to nothing in his hand. That was lacquel bark—the aromatic
product of a Venusian vine. And each little animal or reptile lay encased in a
soft dab of frothy white—frosh weed—the perfumed seed casing of the Martian
canal plants. One or two figures on the second tray were of a red-brown wood
and these Van Rycke sniffed at appreciatively.
"Cedar—Terran cedar," he murmured.
Weeks
nodded eagerly, his eyes alight. "I am waiting now for sandlewood—it is
also good for carving—"
Jellico stared at the array in puzzled
wonder. "You have made these?"
Being
an amateur xenobiologist of no small standing himself, the shapes of the
carvings more than the material from which they fashioned held his attention.
All those on board the Queen had their own hobbies.
The monotony of voyaging through hyper-space had long ago impressed upon men
the need for occupying both hands and mind during the sterile days while they
were forced into close companionship with few duties to keep them alert.
Jellico's cabin was papered with tri-dee pictures of the rare animals and alien
creatures he had studied in their native haunts or of which he kept careful and
painstaking records. Tau had his magic, Mura not only his plants but the
delicate miniature landscapes he fashioned, to be imprisoned forever in the
hearts of protecting plasta balls. But Weeks had never shown his work before
and now he had an artist's supreme pleasure of completely confounding his
shipmates. The Cargo-master returned to the business on hand first. "You're
willing to transfer these to 'cargo'?" he asked briskly. "How many do
you have?"
Weeks,
now lifting a third and then a fourth tray from the box, replied
without-looking up.
"Two hundred. Yes, I'll transfer, sir."
The
Captain was turning about in his fingers the beautifully shaped figure of an
Astran duocorn. "Pity to trade these here," he mused aloud.
"Will Paft or Halfner appreciate more than just their scent?"
Weeks
smiled shyly. "I've filled this case, sir. I was going to offer them to
Mr. Van Rycke on a venture. I can always make another set. And right now—well,
maybe they'll be worth more to the Queen, seeing as how they're made out of
aromatic woods, then they'd be elsewhere. Leastwise the Eysies aren't going to
have anything like them to showl" he ended in a burst of honest pride.
"Indeed
they aren't!" Van Rycke gave honor where it was due.
So
they made plans and then separated to sleep out the rest of the night. Dane
knew that his lapse was not forgotten nor forgiven, but now he was honestly too
tired to care and slept as well as if his conscience were clear.
But
morning brought only a trickle of lower class clansmen for trading and none of
them had much but news to offer. The storm priests, as neutral arbitrators, had
divided up the Koros grounds. And the clansmen, under the personal supervision
of their chieftains were busy hunting the stones. The Terrans gathered from
scraps of information that gem seeking on such a large scale had never been attempted before.
Before
night there came other news, and much more chilling. Paft, one of the two
major chieftains of this section of Sargol—while supervising the efforts of his
leige men on a newly discovered and richly strewn length of
shoal water-had been attacked and killed by gorp. The unusual activity of the
Salariki in the shallows had in turn drawn to the spot battalions of the
intelligent, malignant reptiles who had struck in strength, slaying and
escaping before the Salariki could form an adequate defense, having killed the
land dwellers' sentries silently and effectively before advancing on the
laboring main bodies of gem hunters.
A
loss of a certain number of miners or fishers had been foreseen as the price
one paid for Koros in quantity. But the death of a chieftain was another thing
altogether, having repercussions which carried far beyond the fact of his
death. When the news reached the Salariki about the Queen they melted away into
the grass forest and for the first time the Terrans felt free of spying eyes.
"What
happens now?" Ali inquired. "Do they declare all deals off?"
"That
might just be the unfortunate answer," agreed Van Rycke.
"Could
be," Rip commented to Dane, "that they'd think we were in someway
responsible—"
But
Dane's conscience, sensitive over the whole matter of Salariki trade, had
already reached that conclusion.
The Terran party, unsure of what were the
best tactics, wisely decided to do nothing at all for the time being. But, when
the Salariki seemed to have completely vanished on the morning of the second
day, the men were restless. Had Paft's death resulted in some inter-clan
quarrel over the heirship and the other clans withdrawn to let the various
contendents for that honor fight it out? Or—what was more probable and
dangerous—had the aliens come to the point of view that the Queen was in the
main responsible for the catastrophe and were engaged in preparing too warm a
welcome for any Traders who dared to visit them?
With
the latter idea in mind they did not stray far from the ship. And the limit of
their traveling was the edge of the forest from which they could be covered and
so they did not learn much.
It was well into the morning before they were
dramatically appraised that, far from being considered in any way an enemy,
they were about to be accepted in a tie as close as clan to clan during one of
the temporary but binding truces.
The messenger came in state, a young Salarik
warrior, his splendid cloak rent and hanging in tattered pieces from his
shoulders as a sign of his official grief. He carried in one hand a burned out
torch, and in the other an unsheathed claw knife, its blade reflecting the
sunlight with a wicked glitter. Behind him trotted three couples of retainers,
their cloaks also ragged fringes, their knives drawn.
Standing
up on the ramp to receive what could only be a formal deputation were Captain,
Astrogator, Cargo-master and Engineer, the senior officers of the spacer.
In the rolling periods of the Trade Lingo the
torch bearer identified himself as Groft, son and heir of the late lamented
Paft. Until his chieftain father was avenged in blood he could not assume the
high seat of his clan nor the leadership of the
family. And now, following custom, he was inviting the friends and sometime
allies of the dead Paft to a gorp hunt. Such a gorp hunt, Dane gathered from
amidst the flowers of ceremonial Salariki speech, as had never been planned before
on the face of Sargol. Salariki without number in the past had died beneath
the ripping talons of the water reptiles, but it was seldom that a chieftain
had so fallen and his clan were firm in their
determination to take a full blood price from the killers.
"—and
so, sky lords," Groft brought his oration to a close, "we come to ask
that you send your young men to this hunting so that they may know the joy of
plunging knives into the scaled death and see the horned ones die bathed in
their own vile blood!"
Dane
needed no hint from the Queen's officers that this invitation was a sharp
departure from custom. By joining with the natives in such a foray the Terrans
were being admitted to kinship of a sort, cementing relations by a tie which
the I-S, or any other interloper from off-world, would find hard to break. It
was a piece of such excellent good fortune as they would not have dreamed of
three days earlier.
Van Rycke replied, his voice properly
sonorous, sounding out the rounded periods of the rolling tongue which they had
all been taught during the voyage, using Cam's recordings. Yes, the Terrans
would join with pleasure in so good and great a cause. They would lend the
force of their arms to the defeat of all gorp they had the good fortune to
meet. Groft need only name the hour for them to join him—
It
was not needful, the young Salariki chieftain-to-be hastened to tell the
Cargo-master, that the senior sky lords concern themselves in this matter. In
fact it would be against custom, for it was meet that such a hunt be left to
warriors of few years, that they might earn glory and
be able to stand before the fires at the Naming as men. Therefore—the thumb
claw of Groft was extended to its greatest length as he used it to single out
the Terrans he had been eyeing—let this one, and that, and that, and the fourth
be ready to join with the Salariki party an hour after nooning on this very day
and they would indeed teach the slimy, treacherous lurkers in the depths a well
needed lesson.
The Salarik's choice with one exception had
unerringly fallen upon the youngest members of the crew, Ali, Rip, and Dane in
that order. But his fourth addition had been Jasper Weeks. Perhaps because of
his native pallor of skin and slightness of body the oiler had seemed, to the
alien, to be younger than his years. At any rate Groft had made it very plain
that he chose these men and Dane knew that the Queen's officers would raise no
objection which might upset the delicate balance of favorable relations.
Van Rycke did ask for one concession which
was reluctantly granted. He received permission for the spacer's men to carry
their sleep rods. Though the Salariki, apparently for some
reason of binding and hoary custom, were totally opposed to hunting their
age-old enemy with anything other than their duelists' weapons of net and claw
knife.
"Go along with them," Captain
Jellico gave his final orders to the four, "as long as it doesn't mean
your own necks-understand? On the other hand dead heroes have never helped to
lift a ship. And these gorp are tough from all
accounts. You'll just have to use your own judgment about springing your rods
on them—" He looked distinctly unhappy at that thought.
Ali
was grinning and little Weeks tightened his weapon belt with a touch of swagger
he had never shown before. Rip was his usual soft voiced self, dependable as a
rock and a good base for the rest of them—taking command without question as
they marched off to join Groft's company.
Chapter V
THE PERILOUS SEAS
The gorp hunters straggled through the grass forest in family
groups, and the Terrans saw that the enterprise had forced another uneasy truce
upon the district, for there were representatives from more than just Paft's
own clan. All the Salariki were young and the parties babbled together in
excitement. It was plain that this hunt, staged upon a large scale, was not
only a means of revenge upon a hated enemy but, also, a sporting event of
outstanding prestige.
Now
the grass trees began to show ragged gaps, open spaces between their clumps,
until the forest was only scattered groups and the party the Terrans had
joined walked along a trail cloaked in knee-high, yellow-red fern growth. Most
of the Salariki carried unlit torches, some having four or five bundled
together, as if gorp hunting must be done after nightfall. And it was fairly late in the afternoon before they topped a rise of ground and
looked out upon one of Sargol's seas.
The water was a dull, metallic gray, broken
by great swaths of purple as if an artist had slapped a brush of color across
it in a hit or miss fashion. Sand of the red grit, lightened by the golden
flecks which glittered in the sun, stretched to the edge of the wavelets
breaking with oily languor on the curve of earth. The bulk of islands arose in serried
ranks farther out—crowned with grass trees all rippling under the sea wind.
They came out upon the beach where one of the
purple patches touched the shore and Dane noted that it left a scummy deposit
there. The Terrans went on to the water's edge. Where it was clear of the
purple stuff they could get a murky glimpse of the bottom, but the scum hid
long stretches of shoreline and outer wave, and Dane wondered if the gorp used
it as a protective covering.
For the moment the Salariki made no move
toward the sea which was to be their hunting ground. Instead the youngest
members of the party, some of whom were adolescents not yet entitled to wear
the claw knife of manhood, spread out along the shore and set industriously to
gathering driftwood, which they brought back to heap on the sand. Dane,
watching that harvest, caught sight of a smoothly polished length. He called
Weeks' attention to the water rounded cylinder.
The oiler's eyes lighted and he stooped to
pick it up. Where the other sticks were from grass trees this was something
else. And among the bleached pile it had the vividness of flame. For it was a
strident scarlet. Weeks turned it over in his hands, miming his fingers
lovingly across its perfect grain. Even in this crude state it had beauty. He
stopped the Salarik who had just brought in another armload of wood.
"This is what?" he spoke the Trade
Lingo haltingly.
The
native gazed somewhat indifferently at the branch. "Tansil," he
answered. "It grows on the islands—" He made a vague gesture to include
a good section of the western sea before he hurried away.
Weeks
now went along the tide line on his own quest, Dane trailing him. At the end of
a quarter hour when a hail summoned them back to the site of the now lighted
fire, they had some ten pieces of the tansil wood between them. The finds
ranged from a three foot section some four inches in diameter, to some slender
twigs no larger than a writing steelo—but all with high polish, the warm flame
coloring. Weeks lashed them together before he joined the group where
Groft
was outlining the technique of gorp hunting for the benefit of the Terrans.
Some
two hundred feet away a reef, often awash and stained with the purple scum,
angled out into the sea in a long curve which formed a natural breakwater. This
was the point of attack. But first the purple film must be removed so that land
and sea dwellers could meet on common terms.
The fire blazed up, eating hungrily into the
driftwood. And from it ran the young Salariki with lighted brands, which at the
water's edge they whirled about their heads and then hurled out onto the purple
patches. Fire arose from the water and ran with frantic speed across the crests
of the low waves, while the Salariki coughed and buried their noses in their
perfume boxes, for the wind drove shoreward an overpowering stench.
Where the cleansing fire had run on the water
there was now only the natural metallic gray of the liquid, the cover was gone.
Older Salariki warriors were choosing torches from those they had brought,
doing it with care. Groft approached the Terrans carrying four.
"These you use now—"
What for? Dane wondered. The sky was still
sunlit. He held the torch watching to see how the Salariki made use of them.
Groft
led the advance—running lightly out along the reef with agile and graceful
leaps to cross the breaks where the sea hurled in over the rock. And after him
followed the other natives, each with a lighted torch in hand—the torch they
hunkered down to plant firmly in some crevice of the rock before taking a stand
beside that beacon.
The
Terrans, less surefooted in the space boots, picked their way along the same
path, wet with spray, wrinkling their noses against the lingering puffs of the
stench from the water.
Following
the example of the Salariki they faced seaward —but Dane did not know what to
watch for. Cam had left only the vaguest general descriptions of gorp and
beyond the fact that they were reptilian, intelligent and dangerous,
the Terrans had not been briefed.
Once
the warriors had taken up their stand along the reef, the younger Salariki went
into action once more. Lighting more torches at the fire, they ran out along
the line of their elders and flung their torches as far as they could hurl them
into the sea outside the reef.
The
gray steel of the water was now yellow with the reflection of the sinking sun.
But that ocher and gold became more brilliant yet as the torches of the
Salariki set blazing up far floating patches of scum. Dane shielded his eyes
against the glare and tried to watch the water, with some idea that this move
must be provocation and what they hunted would so be driven into view.
He
held his sleep rod ready, just as the Salarik on his right had claw knife in
one hand and in the other, open and waiting, the net
intended to entangle and hold fast a victim, binding him for the kill.
But it was at the far tip of the barrier—the
post of greatest honor which Groft had jealously claimed as his, that the gorp
struck first. At a wild shout of defiance Dane half turned to see the Salarik
noble cast his net at sea level and then stab viciously with a well practiced
blow. When he raised his arm for a second thrust, greenish ichor ran from the
blade down his wrist.
"Dane!"
Thorson's
head jerked around. He saw the vee of ripples headed straight for the rocks
where he balanced. But he'd have to wait for a better target than a moving
wedge of water. Instinctively he half crouched in the stance of an embattled
spaceman, wishing now that he did have a blaster.
Neither
of the Salariki stationed on either side of him made any move and he guessed
that that was hunt etiquette. Each man was supposed to face and kill the
monster that challenged him—without assistance. And upon his skill during the
next few minutes might rest the reputation of all Terrans as far as the natives
were concerned.
There
was a shadow outline beneath the surface of the
metallic water now, but he could not see well because of the distortion of the
murky waves. He must wait until he was sure.
Then the thing gave a spurt and, only inches
beyond the toes of his boots, a nightmare creature sprang half-way out of the
water, pincher claws as long as his own arms snapping at him. Without being
conscious of his act, he pressed the stud of the sleep rod, aiming in the
general direction of that horror from the sea.
But
to his utter amazement the creature did not fall supinely back into watery
world from which it had emerged. Instead those claws snapped again, this time
scrapping across the top of Dane's foot, leaving a furrow in material the
keenest of knives could not have scored.
"Give
it to him!" That was Rip shouting encouragement
from his own place farther along the reef.
Dane
pressed the firing stud again and again. The claws waved as the monstrosity
slavered from a gaping frog's mouth, a mouth which was fanged with a shark's
vicious teeth. It was almost wholly out of the water, creeping on a crab's many legs, with the clawed upper limbs reaching for him, when
suddenly it stopped, its huge head turning from side to side in the sheltering
carapace of scaled natural armor. It settled back as if crouching for a final spring—a spring which would push Dane into the ocean.
But
that attack never came. Instead the gorp drew in upon itself until it resembled
an unwieldy ball of indestructible armor and there it remained.
The
Salariki on either side of Dane let out cries of triumph and edged closer. One
of them twirled his net suggestively, seeing that the Terran lacked what was to
him an essential piece of hunting equipment. Dane nodded vigorously in
agreement and the tough strands swung out in a skillful cast which engulfed the
motionless creature on the reef. But it was so protected by its scales that
there was no opening for the claw knife. They had made a capture but they could not make a kill.
However, the Salariki were highly delighted.
And several abandoned their posts to help the boys drag the monster ashore
where it was pinned down to the beach by stakes driven through the edges of the
net.
But the hunting party was given little time
to gloat over this stroke of fortune. The gorp killed by Groft and the one
stunned by Dane were only the van of an army and within moments the hunters on
the reef were confronted by trouble armed with slashing claws and diabolic
fighting ability.
The battle was anything but one-sided. Dane
whirled, as the air was rent by a shriek of agony, just in time to see one of
the Salariki, already torn by the claws of a gorp, being drawn under the water. It was too late to save the hunter,
though Dane, balanced on the very edge of the reef, aimed a beam into the bloody waves. If the gorp was affected by this attack he
could not tell, for both attacker and victim could no longer be seen.
But Ali had better luck in rescuing the
Salarik who shared his particular section of reef, and the native, gashed and
spurting blood from a wound in his thigh, was hauled to safety. While the gorp, coiling too slowly under the Terran ray, was
literally hewn to pieces by the revengeful knives of the hunter's kin.
The
fight broke into a series of individual duels carried on now by the light of
the torches as the evening closed in. The last of the purple patches had burned
away to nothing. Dane crouched by his standard torch, his eyes fastened on the
sea, watching for an ominous vee of ripples betraying another gorp on its way
to launch against the rock barrier.
There
was such wild confusion along that line of water sprayed rocks that he had no
idea of how the engagement was going. But so far the gorp showed no signs of
having had enough.
Dane
was shaken out of his absorption by another scream. One, he was sure, which had
not come from any Salariki throat. He got to his feet. Rip was stationed four
men beyond him. Yes, the tall Astrogator-apprentice was there, outlined against
torch flare. Ali? No—there was the assistant Engineer. Weeks?
But Weeks was picking his way back along the reef toward the shore, haste
expressed in every line of his figure. The scream sounded for a second time,
freezing the Terrans.
"Come
back—I" That was Weeks gesturing violently at the shore and something
floundering in the protecting circle of the reef. The younger Salariki who had
been feeding the fire were now clustered at the water's edge.
Ali ran and with a leap covered the last few
feet, landing recklessly knee deep in the waves. Dane saw light strike on his
rod as he swung it in a wide arc to center on the struggle churning the water
into foam. A third scream died to a moan and then the Salariki dashed into the
sea, their nets spread, drawing back with them through the surf a dark and now
quiet mass.
The fact that at least one gorp had managed
to get on the inner side of the reef made an impression on the rest of the
native hunters. After an uncertain minute or two Groft gave
the signal to withdraw—which they did with grisly trophies. Dane counted
seven gorp bodies—which did not include the prisoner ashore. And more might
have slid into the sea to die. On the other hand two Salariki were dead—one had
been drawn into the sea before Dane's eyes—and at least one was badly wounded.
But who had been pulled down in the shallows—some one sent out from the Queen
with a message?
Dane
raced back along the reef, not waiting to pull up his torch, and before he
reached the shore Rip was overtaking him. But the man who lay groaning on the
sand was not from the Queen. The torn and bloodstained tunic covering his
lacerated shoulders had the I-S badge. Ah was already at work on his wounds,
giving temporary first aid from his belt kit. To all their questions he was
stubbornly silent—either he couldn't or wouldn't answer.
In the end they helped the
Salariki rig three stretchers.
On
one, the largest, the captive gorp, still curled in a round carapace protected
ball, was bound with the net. The second supported the wounded Salarik clansman
and onto the third the Terrans lifted the I-S man.
"We'll
deliver him to his own ship," Rip decided. "He must have tailed us
here as a spy—" He asked a passing Salarik as to where they could find the
Company spacer.
"They might just think we are
responsible," Ali pointed out. "But I see your point. If we do pack
him back to the Queen and he doesn't make it, they might say that we fired his
rockets for him. All right, boys, let's up-ship—he doesn't look too good to
me."
With a torch-bearing Salarik boy as a guide,
they hurried along a path taking in rums the burden of the stretcher. Luckily
the I-S ship was even closer to the sea than the Queen and as they crossed the
slagged ground, congealed by the break fire, they were trotting.
Though
the Company ship was probably one of the smallest Inter-Solar carried on her
rosters, it was a third again as large as the Queen—with part of that third
undoubtedly dedicated to extra cargo space. Beside her their
own spacer would seem not only smaller, but battered and worn. But no
Free Trader would have willingly assumed the badges of a Company nan, not even for the command of such a ship fresh from the
cradles of a builder.
When a man went up from the training Pool for
his first assignment, he was sent to the ship where his temperament, training
and abilities best fitted. And those who were designated as Free Traders could
never fit into the pattern of Company men. Of late years the breech between
those who lived under the strict parental control of one of the five great
galaxy wide organizations and those still too much of an individual to live any
life but that of the half-explorer-half-pioneer which was the Free Trader's,
had widened alarmingly. Antagonism flared, rivalry was strong. But as yet the
great Companies themselves were at polite cold war with one another for the big
plums of the scattered systems. The Free
Traders
took the crumbs and there was not much disputing— save in cases such as had
arisen on Sargol, when suddenly crumbs assumed the guise of very rich cake,
rich and large enough to attract a giant.
The
party from the Queen was given a peremptory challenge as they reached the
other ship's ramp. Rip demanded to see the officer of the watch and then told
the story of the wounded man as far as they knew it. The Eysie was hurried aboard—nor did his shipmates give a word of thanks.
"That's that." Rip shrugged.
"Let's go before they slam the hatch so hard they'll rock their ship off
her fins!"
"Polite, aren't they?" asked Weeks
mildly.
"What
do you expect of Eysies?" Ali wanted to know. "To them Free Traders are just rim planet trash. Let's report back where we are
appreciated."
They
took a short cut which brought them back to the Queen and they filed up her
ramp to make their report to the Captain.
But
they were not yet satisfied with Groft and his gorp slayers. No Salarik
appeared for trade in the morning—surprising the Terrans. Instead a second
delegation, this time of older men and a storm priest, visited the spacer with an
invitation to attend Paft's funeral feast, a rite which would be followed by
the formal elevation of Groft to his father's position, now that he had
revenged that parent. And from remarks dropped by members of the delegation it
was plain that the bearing of the Terrans who had joined the hunting party was
esteemed to have been in highest accord with Salariki tradition.
They drew lots to decide which two must
remain with the ship and the rest perfumed themselves
so as to give no offense which might upset their now cordial relations. Again
it was mid-aftemoon when the Salariki escort sent to do them honor waited at
the edge of the wood and Mura and Tang saw them off. With a herald booming
before them, they traveled the beaten earth road in the opposite direction
from the trading center, off through the forest until they came to a wide
section of several miles which had been rigorously cleared of any vegetation
which might give cover to a lurking enemy. In the center of this was a
twelve-foot-high stockade of the bright red, burnished wood which had attracted
Weeks on the shore. Each paling was the trunk of a tree and it had been
sharpened at the top to a wicked point. On the field side was a wide ditch,
crossed at the gate by a bridge, the planking of which might be removed at
will. And as Dane passed over he looked down into a moat that was dry. The
Salariki did not depend upon water for a defense—but on something else which
his experience of the previous night had taught him to respect. There was no
mistaking that shade of purple. The highly inflammable scum the hunters had
burnt from the top of the waves had been brought inland and lay
a greasy blanket some eight feet below. It would only be necessary to toss a
torch on that and the defenders of the stockade would create a wall of fire to
baffle any attacker. The Salariki knew how to make the most of their world's
natural resources.
Chapter VI
DUELIST'S CHALLENGE
Inside the hed stockade there was a crowded community. The
Salariki demanded privacy of a kind, and even the unmarried warriors did not
share barracks, but each had a small cubicle of his own. So that the mud brick
and timber erections of one of their clan cities resembled nothing so much as
the comb cells of a busy beehive. Although Paft's was considered a large clan,
it numbered only about two hundred fighting men and their numerous wives,
children and captive servants. Not all of them normally lived at this center, but
for the funeral feasting they had assembled— which meant a lot of doubling up
and tenting out under makeshift cover between the regular buildings of the
town.
So that the Terrans were glad to be guided through this crowded maze to
the Great Hall which was its heart.
As
the trading center had been, the hall was a circular enclosure open to the sky
above but divided in wheel-spoke fashion with posts of the red wood, each
supporting a metal basket filled with inflammable material. Here were no lowly
stools or trading tables. One vast circular board, broken only by a gap at the
foot, ran completely around the wall. At the end opposite the entrance was the
high chair of the chieftain, set on a two step dais. Though the feast had not
yet officially begun, the Terrans saw that the majority of the places were
already occupied.
They
were led around the perimeter of the enclosure to places not far from the high
seat. Van Rycke settled down with a grunt of satisfaction. It was plain that
the Free Traders were numbered among the nobility. They could be sure of good
trade in the days to come.
Delegations from neighboring clans arrived in
close companies of ten or twelve and were granted seats, as had been the
Terrans, in groups. Dane noted that there was no intermingling of clan with
clan. And, as they were to understand later that night, there was a very good
reason for that precaution.
"Hope
all our adaption shots work," Ali murmured, eyeing with no pleasure at all
the succession of platters now being borne through the inner opening of the
table.
While
the Traders had learned long ago that the wisest part of valor was not to
sample alien strong drinks, ceremony often required that they break bread (or
its other world equivalent) on strange planets. And so science served expediency
and now a Trader bound for any Galactic banquet was immunized, as far as was
medically possible, against the evil consequences of consuming food not
originally intended for Terran stomachs. One of the results being that Traders
acquired a far flung reputation of possessing bird-like appetites—since it was
always better to nibble and live, than to gorge and die.
Groft had not yet taken his place in the
vacant chieftain's chair. For the present he stood in the center of the table
circle, directing the captive slaves who circulated with the food. Until the
magic moment when the clan themselves would proclaim him their overlord, he
remained merely the eldest son of the house, relatively without power.
As
the endless rows of platters made their way about the table the basket lights
on the tops of the pillars were ignited, dispelling the dusk of evening. And
there was an attendant stationed by each to throw on handsful of aromatic bark
which burned with puffs of lavender smoke, adding to the many warring scents.
The Terrans had recourse at intervals to their own pungent smelling bottles,
merely to clear their heads of the drugging fumes.
Luckily,
Dane thought as the feast proceeded, that smoke from the braziers went straight
up. Had they been in a roofed space they might have been overcome. As it
was—were they entirely conscious of all that was going on around them?
His
reason for that speculation was the dance now being performed in the center of
the hall—their fight with the gorp being enacted in a series of bounds and
stabbings. He was sure that he could no longer trust his eyes when the claw
knife of the victorious dancer-hunter apparently passed completely through the
chest of another wearing a grotesque monster mask.
As a fitting climax to their horrific
display, three of the men who had been with them on the reef entered, dragging
behind them—still enmeshed in the hunting net—the gorp which Dane had stunned.
It was uncurled now and very much alive, but the pincer claws which might have
cut its way to safety were encased in balls of hard substance.
Freed from the net, suspended by its sealed
claws, the gorp swung back and forth from a standard set up before the high
seat. Its murderous jaws snapped futilely, and from it came an enraged snake's
vicious hissing. Though totally in the power of its enemies
it gave an impression of terrifying strength and menace.
The
sight of their ancient foe aroused the Salariki, inflaming warriors who leaned
across the table to hurl tongue-twisting invective at the captive monster. Dane
gathered that seldom had a living gorp been delivered helpless into their hands
and they proposed to make the most of this wonderful opportunity. And the
Terran suddenly wished that the'monstrosity had fallen back into the sea. He
had no soft thoughts for the gorp after what he had seen at the reef and the
tales he had heard, but neither did he like what he saw now expressed in
gestures, heard in the tones of voices about them.
A storm priest put an end to the outcries.
His dun cloak making a spot of darkness amid all the flashing color, he came
straight to the place where the gorp swung. As he took his stand before the
wriggling creature the din gradually faded, the warriors settled back into
their seats, a pool of quiet spread through the enclosure.
Groft
came up to take his position beside the priest. With both hands he carried a
two handled cup. It was not the ornamented goblet which stood before each
diner, but a manifestly older artifact, fashioned of some dull black substance
and having the appearance of being even older than the hall or town.
One
of the warriors who had helped to bring in the gorp now made a quick and
accurate cast with a looped rope, snaring the monster's head and pulling back
almost at a right angle. With deliberation the storm priest produced a knife—
the first straight bladed weapon Dane had seen on Sargol. He made a single
thrust in the soft underpart of the gorp's throat, catching in the cup he took
from Groft some of the ichor which spurted from the wound.
The
gorp thrashed madly, spattering table and surrounding Salariki with its life
fluid, but the attention of the crowd was riveted elsewhere. Into the old cup
the priest poured another substance from a flask brought by an underling. He
shook the cup back and forth, as if to mix its contents thoroughly and then
handed it to Groft.
Holding
it before him the young chieftain leaped to the table top and so to a stand
before the high seat. There was a hush throughout the enclosure. Now even the
gorp had ceased its wild struggles and hung limp in its bonds.
Groft
raised the cup above his head and gave a loud shout in the archaic language of
his clan. He was answered by a chant from the warriors who would in battle
follow his banner, a chant punctuated with the clinking slap of knife blades
brought down forcibly on the board.
Three
times he recited some formula and was answered by the others. Then, in another
period of sudden quiet, he raised the cup to his lips and drank off its
contents in a single draught, turning the goblet upside down when he had done
to prove that not a drop remained within. A shout tore through the great hall.
The Salariki were all on their feet, waving their knives over their heads in
honor to their new ruler. And Groft for the first time seated himself in the
high seat. The clan was no longer without a chieftain, Groft held his father's
place.
"Show over?" Dane heard Stotz
murmur and Van Rycke's disappointing reply:
"Not yet. They'll probably make a night
of it. Here comes another round of drinks—"
"And
trouble with them," that was Captain Jellico being prophetic.
"By the Coalsack's Ripcord!" That exclamation had been jolted out of Rip
and Dane turned to see what had so jarred the usually serene
Astrogator-apprentice. He was just in time to witness an important piece of
Sargolian social practice.
A
young warrior, surely only within a year or so of receiving his knife, was
facing an older Salarik, both on their feet. The head and shoulder fur of the
older fighter was dripping wet and an empty goblet rolled across the table to
bump to the floor. A hush had fallen on the immediate neighbors of the pair,
and there was an air of expectancy about the company.
"Threw his drink all over the other
fellow," Rip's soft whisper explained. "That means a duel—"
"Here
and now?" Dane had heard of the personal combat proclivities of the
Salariki.
"Should be to the death for an insult
such as that," Ali remarked, as usual surveying the scene from his chosen
role as bystander. As a child he had survived the unspeakable massacres of the
Crater War, nothing had been able to crack his surface armor since.
"The
young fool!" that was Steen Wilcox sizing up the situation from the angle
of a naturally cautious nature and some fifteen years of experience on a great
many different worlds. "He'll be mustered out for good before he knows what
happened to him!"
The
younger Salarik had barked a question at his elder and had been promptly
answered by that dripping warrior. Now their neighbors came to life with an
efficiency which suggested that they had been waiting for such a move, it had
happened so many times that every man knew just the right procedure from that
point on.
In
order for a Sargolian feast to be a success, the Terrans gathered from overhead
remarks, at least one duel must be staged sometime during the festivities. And
those not actively engaged did a lost of brisk betting in the background.
"Look
there—at that fellow in the violet cloak," Rip
directed Dane. "See what he just laid down?"
The nobleman in the violet cloak was not one
of Croft's liege men, but a member of the delegation from another clan. And
what he had laid down on the table—indicating as he did so his choice as winner
in the coming combat, the elder warrior—was a small piece of white material on
which reposed a slightly withered but familiar leaf. The neighbor he wagered
with, eyed the stake narrowly, bending over to sniff at it, before he piled up
two gem set armlets, a personal scent box and a thumb ring to balance.
At
this practical indication of just how much the Terran herb was esteemed Dane
regretted anew their earlier ignoranee. He glanced along the board and saw
that Van Rycke had noted that stake and was calling their Captain's attention
to it.
But
such side issues were forgotten as the duelists vaulted into the circle rimmed
by the table, a space now vacated for their action. They were stripped to their
loin cloths, their cloaks thrown aside. Each carried his net in his right hand,
his claw knife ready in his left. As yet the Traders had not seen Salarik
against Salarik in action and in spite of themselves they edged forward in
their seats, as intent as the natives upon what was to come. The finer points
of the combat were lost on them, and they did not understand the drilled casts
of the net, which had become as formalized through the centuries as the ancient
and now almost forgotten sword play of their own world. The young Salarik had
greater agility and speed, but the veteran who faced him had the experience.
To Terran eyes the duel had some of the weaving,
sweeping movements of the earlier ritual dance. The swift evasions of the nets
were graceful and so timed that many times the meshes grazed the skin of the
fighter who fled entrapment.
Dane believed that the elder man was tiring,
and the youngster must have shared that opinion. There was a leap to the right,
a sudden flurry of dart and retreat, and then a net curled high and fell,
enfolding flailing arms and kicking legs. When the clutch rope was jerked
tight, the captured youth was thrown off balance. He rolled frenziedly, but
there was no escaping the imprisoning strands.
A
shout applauded the victor. He stood now above his captive who lay supine, his throat or breast ready for either stroke of
the knife his captor wished to deliver. But it appeared that the winner was not
minded to end the encounter with blood. Instead he reached out a long,
be-furred arm, took up a filled goblet from the table and with serious deliberation,
poured its contents onto the upturned face of the loser.
For a moment
there was a dead silence around the feast board and then
a second roar, to which the honestly relieved Terrans added spurts of laughter.
The sputtering youth was shaken free of the net and went down on his knees,
tendering his opponent his knife, which the other thrust along with his own
into his sash belt. Dane gathered from overheard remarks that the younger man
was, for a period of time, to be determined by clan council, now the
servant-slave of his over-thrower and that since they were closely united by blood
ties, this solution was considered eminently suitable—though had the elder
killed his opponent, no one would have thought the worse of him for that deed.
It
was the Queen's men who were to provide the next center of attraction. Groft
climbed down from his high seat and came to face across the board those who had
accompanied him on the hunt. This time there was no escaping the sipping of
the potent drink which the new chieftain slopped from his own goblet into each
of theirs.
The
fiery mouthful almost gagged Dane, but he swallowed manfully and hoped for the
best as it bumed like acid down his throat into his middle, there to mix
uncomfortably with the viands he had eaten. Weeks' thin face looked very white,
and Dane noticed with malicious enjoyment, that Ali had an unobtrusive grip on
the table which made his knuckles stand out in polished knobs—proving that
there were things which could upset the imperturbable
Kamil.
Fortunately
they were not required to empty that flowing bowl in one
gulp as Groft had done. The ceremonial mouthful was deemed enough and Dane sat
down thankfully—but with uneasy fears for the future.
Groft
had started back to his high seat when there was an interruption which had not
been foreseen. A messenger threaded his way among the serving men and spoke to
the chieftain, who glanced at the Terrans and then nodded.
Dane,
his queasiness growing every second, was not attending imtil he heard a bitten
off word from Rip's direction and looked up to see a party of I-S men coming
into the open space before the high seat. The men from the Queen stiffened—there
was something in the attitude of the newcomers which hinted at trouble.
"What do you wish, sky lords?" That
was Groft using the Trade Lingo, his eyes half closed as he lolled in his chair
of state, almost as if he were about to witness some
entertainment provided for his pleasure.
"We
wish to offer you the good fortune desires of our hearts—" That was
Kallee, the flowery words rolling with the proper accent from his tongue.
"And that you shall not forget us—we also offer gifts—"
At a gesture from their Cargo-master, the I-S
men set down a small chest. Groft, his chin resting on a clenched fist, lost
none of his lazy air.
"They are received," he retorted
with the formal acceptance. "And no one can have too much good fortune.
The Howlers of the Black Winds know that." But he tendered no invitation
to join the feast.
Kallee
did not appear to be disconcerted. His next move was one which took his rivals
by surprise, in spite of their suspicions.
"Under the laws of the Fellowship, O,
Groft," he clung to the formal speech, "I claim redress—"
Ali's hand moved. Through his growing
distress Dane saw Van Rycke's jaw tighten, the fighting mask snap back on
Captain Jellico's face. Whatever came now was real trouble.
Groft's
eyes flickered over the party from the Queen. Though he had just pledged cup
friendship with four of them, he had the malicious humor of his race. He would
make no move to head off what might be coming.
"By the right of the knife and the
net," he intoned, "you have the power to claim personal satisfaction.
Where is your enemy?"
Kallee turned to face the Free Traders.
"I hereby challenge a champion to be set out from these off-worlders to
meet by the blood and by the water my champion—"
The
Salariki were getting excited. This was superb entertainment, an engagement
such as they had never hoped to see
—alien
against alien. The rising murmur of their voices was like the growl of a
hunting beast.
Groft
smiled and the pleasure that expression displayed was neither Terran—nor human.
But then the clan leader was not either, Dane reminded himself.
"Four
of these warriors are clan-bound," he said. "But the others may
produce a champion—"
Dane
looked along the line of his comrades—Ali, Rip, Weeks and himself
had just been ruled out. That left Jellico, Van Rycke, Karl
Kosti, the giant jetman whose strength they had to rely upon before, Stotz the
Engineer, Medic Tau and Steen Wilcox. If it were strength alone he would have
chosen Kosti, but the big man was not too quick a thinker—
Jellico
got to his feet, the embodiment of a star lane fighting man. In the flickering
light the scar on his cheek seemed to ripple. "Who's your champion?"
he asked Kallee.
The
Eysie Cargo-master was grinning. He was confident he had pushed them into a
position from which they could not extricate themselves.
"You accept
challenge?" he countered.
Jellico
merely repeated his question and Kallee beckoned forward one of his men.
The
Eysie who stepped up was no match for Kosti. He was a slender, almost wand-slim
young man, whose pleased smirk said that he, too, was about to put something
over on the notorious Free Traders. Jellico studied him for a couple of long
seconds during which the hum of Salariki voices was the threatening buzz of a
disturbed wasps' nest. There was no way out of this—to refuse conflict was to
lose all they had won with the clansmen. And they did not doubt that KaOee had,
in some way, triggered the scales against them.
Jellico made the best of it. "We accept
challenge," his voice was level. "We, being guesting in Groft's
holding, will fight after the manner of the Salariki who are proven
warriors—" He paused as roars of pleased acknowledgment arose around the
board.
"Therefore let us follow the custom of
warriors and take up the net and the knife—"
Was there a shade of dismay on Kallee's face?
"And the time?" Groft leaned forward to ask—but his satisfaction at such a fine ending
for his feast was apparent. This would be talked over by every Sargolian for
many storm seasons to come!
Jellico glanced up at the sky. "Say an
hour after dawn, chieftain. With your leave, we shall confer concerning a
champion."
"My council room is yours," Groft
signed for a liege man to guide them.
Chapter
VII
BARRING
ACCIDENT
The morning winds rustled through the grass forest and, closer
to hand, it pulled at the cloaks of the Salariki. Clan
nobles sat on stools, lesser folk squatted on the trampled stubble of the
cleared ground outside the stockade. In their many colored splendor the drab
tunics of the Terrans were a blot of darkness at either end of the makeshift
arena which had been marked out for them.
At the conclusion of their conference the
Queen's men had been forced into a course Jellico had urged from the first. He, and he alone, would represent the Free Traders in the
coming duel. And now he stood there in the early morning, stripped down to
shorts and boots, wearing nothing on which a net could catch and so trap him.
The Free Traders were certain that the I-S men having any advantage would press
it to the ultimate limit and the death of Captain Jellico would make a great
impression on the Salariki.
Jellico
was taller than the Eysie who faced him, but almost as lean. Hard muscles moved
under his skin, pale where space tan had not burned in the years of his star
voyaging. And his every movement was with the liquid grace of a man who, in his
time, had been a master of the force blade. Now he gripped in his left hand the
claw knife given him by Groft himself and in the other he looped the throwing
rope of the net.
At
the other end of the field, the Eysie man was industriously moving his
bootsoles back and forth across the ground, intent upon coating them with as
much of the gritty sand as would adhere. And he displayed the supreme
confidence in himself which he had shown at the moment of challenge in the
Great Hall.
None of the Free Trading party made the
mistake of trying to give Jellico advice. The Captain had not risen to his command
without learning his duties. And the duties of a Free Trader covered a wide
range of knowledge and practice. One had to be equally expert with a blaster
and a slingshot when the occasion demanded. Though Jellico had not fought a
Salariki duel with net and knife before, he had a deep memory of other
weapons, other tactics which could be drawn upon and adapted to his present
need.
There was none of the casual atmosphere which
had surrounded the affair between the Salariki clansmen in the hall. Here was
ceremony. The storm priests invoked their own particular grim Providence, and
there was an oath taken over the weapons of battle. When the actual engagement
began the betting among the spectators had reached, Dane decided, epic
proportions. Large sections of Sargolian personal property were due to change
hands as a result of this encounter.
As the chief priest gave the order to engage
both Terrans advanced from their respective ends of the fighting space with the
half crouching, light footed tread of spacemen. Jellico had pulled his net
into as close a resemblance to rope as its bulk would allow. The very type of
weapon, so far removed from any the Traders knew, made it a disadvantage rather
than an asset.
But it was when the Eysie
moved out to meet the Captain that Rip's fingers closed about Dane's upper arm
in an almost paralyzing grip. "He knows—"
Dane had not needed that bad news to be made
vocal. Having seen the exploits of the Salariki duelists earlier, he had
already caught the significance of that glide, of the way the I-S champion
carried his net. The Eysie had not had any last minute instruction in the use
of Sargolian weapons—he had practiced and, by his stance, knew enough to make
him a formidable menace. The clamor about the Queen's party rose as the
battle-wise eyes of the clansmen noted that and the odds against Jellico
reached fantastic heights while the hearts of his crew sank.
Only
Van Rycke was not disturbed. Now and then he raised his smelling bottle to his
nose with an elegant gesture which matched those of the befurred nobility
around him, as if not a thought of care ruffled his mind.
The
Eysie feinted in an opening which was a rather ragged copy of the young
Salarik's more fluid moves some hours before. But, when the net settled,
Jellico was simply not there, his quick drop to one
knee had sent the mesh flailing in an arc over his bowed shoulders with a good six inches to spare. And a cry of approval came not only from his
comrades, but from those natives who had been gamblers enough to venture their
wagers on his performance.
Dane
watched the field and the fighters through a watery film. The discomfort he had experienced since downing that
mouthful of the cup of friendship had tightened into a fist of pain clutching
his middle in a torturing grip. But he knew he must stick it out until
Jellico's ordeal was over. Someone stumbled against him and he glanced up to
see Ali's face, a horrible gray-green under the tan, close to his own. For a moment the
Engineer-apprentice caught at his arm for support and then with a visible
effort straightened up. So he wasn't the only one— He looked for Rip and Weeks
and saw that they, too, were ill.
But for the moment all that
mattered was the stretch of trampled earth and the two men facing each other.
The Eysie made another cast and this time, although Jellico was not caught, the
slap of the mesh raised a red welt on his forearm. So far the Captain had been
content to play the defensive role of retreat, studying his enemy, planning
ahead.
The
Eysie plainly thought the game his, that he had only to wait for a favorable
moment and cinch the victory. Dane began to think it had gone on for weary
hours. And he was dimly aware that the Salariki were also restless. One or two
shouted angrily at Jellico in- their own tongue.
The end came suddenly. Jellico lost his
footing, stumbled, and went down. But before his men could move, the Eysie
champion bounded forward, his net whirling out. Only he never reached the
Captain. In the very act of falling Jellico had pulled his legs under him so
that he was not supine but crouched, and his net swept out at ground level,
clipping the I-S man about the shins, entangling his feet so that he crashed
heavily to the sod and lay still.
"The
whip—that Lalox whip trickl" Wilcox's voice rose triumphantly above the
babble of the crowd. Using his net as if it had been a thong, Jellico had
brought down the Eysie with a move the other had not foreseen.
Breathing hard, sweat running down his
shoulders and making tracks through the powdery red dust which streaked him,
Jellico got to his feet and walked over to the I-S champion who had not moved
or made a sound since his fall. The Captain went down on one knee to examine
him.
"Killl
Kill!" That was the Salariki, all their instinctive savagery aroused.
But Jellico spoke to Groft. "By our
customs we do not kill the conquered. Let his friends bear him hence." He
took the claw knife the Eysie still clutched in his hand and thrust it into his
own belt. Then he faced the I-S party and Kallee.
"Take your man and get out!" The
rein he had kept on his temper these past days was, growing very thin.
"You've made your last play here."
Kallee's thick lips drew back in something
close to a Salarik snarl. But neither he nor his men made any reply. They
bundled up their unconscious fighter and disappeared.
Of their own return to the sanctuary of the Queen Dane had only the
dimmest of memories afterwards. He had made the privacy of the forest road before he yielded to the
demands of his outraged interior. And after that he had stumbled along with Van
Rycke's hand under his arm, knowing from other miserable sounds that he was
not alone in his torment.
It was some time later, months he thought
when he first roused, that he found himself lying in his bunk, feeling very
weak and empty as if a large section of his iriiddle had been removed, but also
at peace with his world. As he levered himself up the cabin had a nasty
tendency to move slowly to the right as if he were a pivot on which it swung,
and he had all the sensations of being in free fall though the Queen was still
firmly planeted. But that was only a minor discomfort compared to the
disturbance he remembered.
Fed
the semi-liquid diet prescribed by Tau and served up by Mura to him and his
fellow sufferers, he speedily got back his strength. But it had been a close call, he did not need Tau's explanation to underline that.
Weeks had suffered the least of the four, he the. most—though
none of them had had an easy time. And they had been out of circulation three
days.
"The Eysie blasted last night," Rip
informed him as they lounged in the sun on the ramp, sharing the blessed lazy
hours of invalidism.
But
somehow that news gave Dane no lift of spirit. "I didn't think they'd give
up—"
Rip shrugged. "They may be off to make a
dust-off before the Board. Only, thanks to Van and the Old Man, we're covered
all along the line. There's nothing they can use against us to break our
contract. And now we're in so solid they can't cut us out
with the Salariki. Groft asked the Captain to teach him that trick with
the net. I didn't know the Old Man knew Lalox whip fighting—it's about one of
the nastiest ways to get cut to pieces in this universe—"
"How's trade going?"
Rip's
sunniness clouded. "Supplies have given out. Weeks had an idea—but it
won't bring in Koros. That red wood he's so mad about, he's persuaded Van to
stow some in the cargo holds since we have enough Koros stones to cover the
voyage. Luckily the clansmen will take ordinary trade goods in exchange for
that and Weeks thinks it will sell on Terra. It's tough enough to turn a steel
knife blade and yet it is light and easy to handle when it's cured. Queer stuff
and the color's interesting. That stockade of it
planted around Groft's town has been up close to a hundred years and not a sign
of rot in a log of it I"
"Where is Van?"
"The
storm priests sent for him. Some kind of a gabble-fest on the star-star level, I
gather. Otherwise we're almost ready to blast. And we know what kind of cargo
to bring next time."
They certainly did, Dane agreed. But he was
not to idle away his moming. An hour later a caravan came out of the forest, a
line of complaining, burdened orgels, their tiny heads hanging low as they
moaned their woes, the hard life which sent them on their sluggish way with
piles of red logs lashed to their broad toads' backs. Weeks was in charge of
the procession and Dane went to work with the cargo plan Van had left, seeing
that the brilliant scarlet lengths were hoist into the lower cargo hatch and
stacked according to the science of stowage. He discovered that Rip had been right, the wood for all its incredible hardness was light of
weight. Weak as he still was he could lift and stow a full sized log with no
great difficulty. And he thought Weeks was correct in thinking that it would
sell on their home world. The color was novel, the durability an asset it would
not make fortunes as the Koros stones might, but every bit of profit helped and
this cargo might cover their fielding fees on Terra.
Sinbad was in the cargo space when the first
of the logs came in. With his usual curiosity the striped torn cat prowled
along the wood, sniffing industriously. Suddenly he stopped short, spat and
backed away, his. spine fur a roughened crest.
Having
backed as far as the inner door he turned and slunk out. Puzzled, Dane gave the
wood a swift inspection. There were no cracks or crevices in the smooth
surfaces, but as he stopped over the logs he became conscious of a sharp odor.
So this was one scent of the perfumed planet Sinbad did not like. Dane laughed.
Maybe they had better have Weeks make a gate of the stuff and slip it across
the ramp, keeping Sin-bad on ship board. Odd—it wasn't an unpleasant odor—at
least to him- it wasn't—just sharp and pungent. He sniffed again and was
vaguely surprised to discover that it was less noticeable now. Perhaps the wood
when taken out of the sunlight lost its scent.
They packed the lower hold solid in
accordance with the rules of stowage and locked the hatch before Van Rycke
returned from his meeting with the storm priests. When the Cargo-master came
back he was followed by two servants bearing between them a chest.
But
there was something in Van Rycke's attitude, apparent to those who knew him
best, that proclaimed he was not too well pleased with his morning's work.
Sparing the feelings of the accompanying storm priests about the offensiveness
of the spacer Captain Jellico and Steen Wilcox went out to receive them in the
open. .Dane watched from the hatch, aware that in his present pariah-hood it
would not be wise to venture closer.
The
Terran Traders were protesting some course of action that the Salariki were
firmly insistent upon. In the end the natives won and Kosri was summoned to
carry on board the chest which the servants had brought. Having seen it carried
safely inside the spacer, the aliens departed, but Van Rycke was frowning and
Jellico's fingers were beating a tattoo on his belt as they came up the ramp.
"I don't like
it," Jellico stated as he entered.
"It
was none of my doing," Van Rycke snapped. "Ill take risks if I have
to—but there's something about this one—" he broke off, two deep lines
showing between his thick brows.
"Well,
you can't teach a sasseral to spit," he ended philosophically.
"We'll have to do the best we can."
But
Jellico did not look at all happy as he climbed to the control section. And
before the hour was out the reason for the Captain's uneasiness was common
property throughout the ship.
Having
sampled the delights'of off-world herbs, the Sala-riki were determined to not
be cut off from their source of supply. Six Terran months from the present
Sargo}ian date would come the great yearly feast of
the Fifty Storms, and the priests were agreed that this year their influence
and power would be doubled if they could offer the devout certain privileges
in the form of Terran plants. Consequently they had produced and forced upon
the reluctant Van Rycke the Koros collection of their order, with instructions
that it be sold on Terra and the price returned to them in the precious seeds
and plants. In vain the Cargo-master and Captain had pointed out that Galactic
trade was a chancy thing at the best, that accident might prevent return of the
Queen to Sar-gol. But the priests had remained adamant and saw in all such
arguments only a devious attempt to raise prices. They quoted in their rum the
information they had levered out of the Company men—that Traders had their code
and that once pay had been given in advance the contract must be fulfilled. They, and they alone, wanted the full cargo of the Queen
on her next voyage, and they were taking the one way they were sure of
achieving that result.
So a
fortune in Koros stones which as yet did not rightfully belong to the Traders
was now in the Queen's strong-room and her crew were
pledged by the strongest possible tie known in their Service to set down on
Sargol once more before the allotted time had passed. The Free Traders did not
like ft, there was even a vaguely superstitious feeling that such a bargain
would inevitably draw ill luck to them. But they were left with no choice if
they wanted to retain their influence with the Salariki.
"Cutting orbit pretty fine, aren't
we?" Ali asked Rip across the mess table. "I saw your two star man sweating it out before he came down to shoot the breeze
with us rocket monkeys—"
Rip nodded. "Steen's double checked
every computation and some he's done four times." He ran his hands over
his close cropped head with a weary gesture. As a semi-invalid he had been
herded down with his fellows to swallow the builder Mura had concocted and Tau
insisted that they take, but he had been doing half a night's work on the
plotter under his chief's exacting eye before he came. "The latest news is
that, barring accident, we can make it with about three weeks' grace, give or
take a day or two—"
"Barring accident—" the words rang
in the air. Here on the frontiers of the star lanes there were so many accidents,
so many delays which could put a ship behind schedule. Only on the main star
trails did the huge liners or Company ships attempt to keep on regularly timed
trips. A Free Trader "did not really dare to have an inelastic contract.
"What does Stotz say?" Dane asked
Ali.
"He says he can deliver. We don't have
the headache about setting a course—you point the nose and we only give her the
boost to send her along."
Rip sighed. "Yes—point her nose."
He inspected his nails. "Goodbye," he added gravely. "These
won't be here by the time we planet here again. I'll have my fingers gnawed off
to the first knuckle. Well, we lift at six hours. Pleasant
strap down." He drank the last of the stuff in his mug, made a face
at the flavor, and got to his feet, due back at his post in control.
Dane( free of duty until the ship earthed, drifted
back to his own cabin, sure of part of a night's undisturbed rest before they
blasted off. Sinbad was curled on his bunk. For some reason the cat had not
been prowling the ship before take-off as he usually did. First he had sat on
Van's desk and now he was here, almost as if he wanted human company. Dane
picked him up and Sinbad rumbled a purr, arching his head so that it rubbed
against the young man's chin in an extremely uncharacteristic show of
affection. Smoothing the fur along the cat's jaw line Dane carried him back to
the Cargo-master's cabin.
With some hesitation he knocked at the panel
and did not step in until he had Van Rycke's muffled invitation. The
Cargo-master was stretched on the bunk, two of the take off straps already
fastened across his bulk as if he intended to sleep through the blast-off.
"Sinbad, sir. Shall I stow him?"
Van
Rycke grunted an assent and Dane dropped the cat in the small hammock which was
his particular station, fastening the safety cords. For once Sinbad made no
protest but rolled into a ball and was promptly fast asleep. For a moment or
two Dane thought about this unnatural behavior and wondered if he should call
it to the Cargo-master's attention. Perhaps on Sargol Sinbad had had his equivalent of a friendship cup and needed a check-up by Tau.
"Stowage
correct?" the question, coming from Van Rycke, was also unusual. The seal
would not have been put across the hold lock had its contents not been checked
and re-checked.
"Yes, sir," Dane replied woodenly,
knowing he was still in the outer darkness. "There was just the wood—we
stowed it according to chart."
Van Rycke grunted once more. "Feeling
top layer again?"
"Yes, sir. Any orders, sir?"
"No. Blast-off's at six."
"Yes, sir." Dane left the cabin, closing the panel carefully behind him. Would
he—or could he—he thought drearily, get back in Van Rycke's profit column
again? Sargol had been unlucky as far as he was concerned. First he had made
that stupid mistake and then he got sick and now—And
now—what was the matter? Was it just the general attack of
nerves over their voyage and the commitments which forced their haste, or was
it something else? He could not rid himself of a vague sense that the Queen was
about to take off into real trouble. And he did not like the sensation at alll
Chapter VIII
HEADACHES
They lifted from Sargol on scheduled and went into Hyper also
on schedule. From that point on there was nothing to do but wait out-the usual
dull time of flight between systems and hope that Steen Wilcox had plotted a
course which would cut that flight time, to a minimum. But this voyage there
was little relaxation once they were in Hyper. No matter when Dane dropped
into the mess cabin, which was the common meeting place of the spacer, he was
apt to find others there before him, usually with a mug of one of Mura's
special brews close at hand, speculating about their landing date.
Dane,
himself, once he had thrown off the lingering effects of his Sargolian illness,
applied time to his studies. When he had first joined the Queen as a recruit
straight out of the training Pool, he had speedily learned that all the ten
years of intensive study then behind him had only been an introduction to the
amount he still had to absorb before he could take his place as an equal with
^such a trader as Van Rycke— if he had the stuff which would raise him in time
to that exalted level. While he had still had his superior's favor he had dared
to treat him as an instructor, going to him with perplexing problems of stowage
or barter. But now he had no desire to intrude upon' the Cargo-master, and
doggedly wrestled with the microtapes of old records on his own, painfully
working out the why and wherefor for any departure from the regular procedure.
He had no inkling of his own future status—whether the return to Terra would
find him permanently earthed. And he would ask no questions.
They
had been four days of ship's time in Hyper when Dane walked into the mess
cabin, tired after his work with old records, to discover no Mura busy in the
galley beyond,
no
brew steaming on the heat coil. Rip sat at the table, his long legs stuck out, his usually happy face very sober.
"What's
wrong?" Dane reached for a mug, then seeing no pot of drink, put it back
in place.
"Frank's sick—"
"What!" Dane turned. Illness such
as they had run into on Sargol had a logical base. But illness on board ship
was something else.
"Tau
has him isolated. He has a bad headache and he blacked out when he tried to sit
up. Tau's running tests."
Dane sat down. "Could be something he
ate—"
Rip
shook his head. "He wasn't at the feast—remember?
And he didn't eat anything from outside, he swore that to Tau. In fact he
didn't go dirt much,while we were down—"
That
was only too true as Dane could now recall. And ,the fact that the steward had
not been at the feast, had not sampled native food products, wiped out the
simplest and most comforting reasons for his present collapse.
"What's
this about Frank?" Ali stood in the doorway. "He said yesterday that
he had a headache. But now Tau has him shut off—"
"He blacked out. Tau's running
tests," Rip repeated.
"But he wasn't at that feast." Ali
stopped short as the implications of that struck him. "How's Tang
feeling?"
"Fine—why?" The Com-tech had come
up behind Kamil and was answering for himself. "Why this
interest in the state of my health?"
"Frank's
down with something—in isolation," Rip replied bluntly. "Did he do
anything out of the ordinary when we were off ship?"
For
a long moment the other stared at Shannon and then he shook his head. "No.
And he wasn't dirt-side to any extent either. So Tau's running tests—" He
lapsed into silence. None of them wished to put their thoughts into words.
Dane picked up the microtape he had brought
with him and went on down the corridor to return it. The panel of the cargo
office was ajar and to his relief he found Van Rycke out. He shoved the tape
back in its case and pulled out the next one. Sinbad was there, not in his own
private hammock, but sprawled out on the Cargo-master's bunk. He watched Dane
lazily, mouthing a silent mew of welcome. For some reason since they had
blasted from Sargol the cat had been lazy—as if his adventures afield there had
sapped much of his vitality.
"Why aren't you out working?" Dane
asked as he leaned over to scratch under a furry chin raised for the benefit of
such a caress. "You inspected the hold lately, boy?"
Sinbad merely blinked and after the manner of
his species looked infinitely bored. As Dane turned to go the
Cargo-master came in. He showed no surprise at Dane's presence. Instead
he reached out and fingered the label of the tape Dane had just chosen. After a
glance at the identifying symbol he took it out of his assistant's hand,
plopped it back in its case, and stood for a moment eyeing the selection of
past voyage records. With a tongue-click of satisfaction he pulled out another
and tossed it across the desk to Dane
"See
what you can make out of this tangle," he ordered. But Dane's shoulders
went back as if some weight had been lifted from them. The old easiness was
still lacking, but he was no longer exiled to the outer darkness of Van Rycke's
displeasure.
Holding the microtape as if it were a first
grade Koros stone Dane went back to his own cabin, snapped the tape into his
reader, adjusted thé ear buttons and lay back on his bunk to listen.
He
was deep in the intricacy of a deal so complicated that he was lost after the
first two moves, when he opened his eyes to see Ali at the door panel. The
Engineer-apprentice made an emphatic beckoning wave and Dane slipped off the
ear buttons.
"What is it?" His question lacked a
cordial note. "I've got to have help." Ali was terse. "Kosti's
blacked putl" "What!" Dane sat up and dropped his feet to the
deck in almost one movement.
"I can't shift him alone," Ali
stated the obvious. The giant jetman was almost double his size. "We must
get him to his quarters. And I won't ask Stotz—"
For a perfectly good reason Dane knew. An
assistant—two of the apprentices—could go sick, but their officers continued
good health meant the most to the Queen. If some infection were aboard it would
be better for Ali and himself to be exposed, than to have Johan Stotz with all
his encyclopedic knowledge of the ship's engines contract any disease..
They found the jetman half sitting, half
lying in the short foot or so of corridor which led to his
own cubby. He had been making for his quarters when the seizure had
taken him. And by the time the two reached his side, he was beginning to come
around, moaning, his hands going to his head.
Together
they got him on his feet and guided him to his bunk where he collapsed again, a
dead weight they had to push into place. Dane looked at Ali—
"Tau?"
"Haven't had time
to call him yet." Ali was jerking at the thigh straps which fastened
Kosti's space boots.
"I'll
go." Glad for the task Dane sped up the ladder to the next section and
threaded the narrow side hall to the Medic's cabin where he knocked on the
panel.
There
was a pause before Craig Tau looked out, deep lines of weariness bracketing his
mouth, etched between his eyes.
"Kosti,
sir," Dane gave his bad news quickly. "He's collapsed. We got him to
his cabin—"
Tau
showed no sign of surprise. His hand shot out for his kit.
"You touched him?" At the other's-
nod he added an order. "Stay in your quarters until I have a chance to
look you over —understand?"
Dane had no chance to answer,
the Medic was already on his way. He went to his own cabin, understanding the
reason for his imprisonment, but inwardly rebelling against it. Rather than sit
idle he snapped on the reader—but, although facts and figures were dunned into
his ears—he really heard very little. He couldn't apply himself—not with a new
specter leering at him from the bulkhead.
The dangers of the space lanes were not to be
numbered, death walked among the stars a familiar
companion of all spacemen. And to the Free Trader it was the extra and invisible
crewman on every ship that raised. But there were
deaths and deaths— And Dane could not forget the gruesome legends Van Rycke
collected avidly as his hobby—had recorded in his private library of the folk
lore of space.
Stories
such as that of the ghostly "New Hope" carrying refugees from the
first Martian Rebellion—the ship which had lifted for the stars but had never
arrived, which wandered for a timeless eternity, a derelict in free fall, its
port closed but the warning "dead" lights on at its nose—a ship which
through five centuries had been sighted only by a spacer in similar distress.
Such stories were numerous. There.were other tales of "plague" ships
wandering free with their dead crews, or discovered and shot into some sun by a
Patrol cruiser so that they might not carry their infection farther. Plague—the
nebulous "worst" the Traders had to face. Dane screwed his eyes shut,
tried to concentrate upon the droning voice in his ears, but he could not
control his thoughts nor— his fears.
At a touch on his arm he started so wildly
that he jerked the cord loose from the reader and sat Up, somewhat shame-'
faced, to greet Tau. At the Medic's orders he stripped for one of the most
complete examinations he had ever undergone outside a quarantine port. It
included an almost microscopic inspection of the skin on his neck and
shoulders, but when Tau had done he gave a sigh of relief.
"Well,
you haven't got it—at least you don't show any signs yet," he amended his
first statement almost before the words were out of his mouth.
"What were you looking for?"
Tau took time out to explain.
"Here," his fingers touched the small hollow at the base of Dane's
throat arid then swung him around and indicated two places on the back of his
neck and under his shoulder blades. "Kosti and Mura both have red
eruptions here. It's as if they have been given an injection of some
narcotic." Tau sat down on the jump seat while Dane dressed. "Kosti
was dirt-side—he might have picked up something—" "But Mura—"
"That's it!" Tau brought his fist
down on the edge of the bunk. "Frank hardly left the ship—yet he showed
the first signs. On the other hand you are all right so far and you were off
ship. And All's clean and he was with you oh the hunt.
We'll just have to wait and see." He got up wearily. "If your head
begins to ache," he told Dane, "you get back here in a hurry and stay
put—understand?"
As Dane learned all the other members of the
crew were given the same type of inspection. But none of them showed the
characteristic marks which meant trouble. They were on course for Terra—but—and
that but must have loomed large in all their minds—once there would they be
allowed to land? Could they even hope for a hearing? Plague ship—Tau must find
the answer before they came into normal space about their own solar system or
they were in for such trouble as made a broken contract seem the simplest of
mishaps.
Kosti and Mura were in isolation. There were
volunteers for nursing and Tau, unable to be in two places at once, finally
picked Weeks to look after his crewmate in the engineering section.
There
was doubling up of duties. Tau could no longer share with Mura the care of the
hydro garden so Van Rycke took over. While Dane found himself in charge of the
galley and, while he did not have Mura's deft hand at disguising the monotonous
concentrates to the point they resembled ftesh food, after a day or two he
began to experiment cautiously and produced a stew which brought some short
words of appreciation from Captain Jellico.
They
all breathed a sigh of relief when, after three days, no more signs of the
mysterious illness showed on new members of the crew. It became routine to
parade before Tau stripped to the waist each morning for the inspection of the
danger points, and the Medic's vigilance did not relax.
In the meantime neither Mura nor Kosti
appeared to suffer. Once the initial stages of headaches and blackouts were
passed, the patients lapsed into a semi-conscious state as if they were under sedation
of some type. They would eat, if the food was placed in their mouths, but they
did not seem to know what was going on about them, nor did they answer when
spoken to.
Tau, between visits to them, worked
feverishly in his tiny lab, analyzing blood samples, reading the records of
obscure diseases, trying to find the reason for their attacks. But as yet his
discoveries were exactly nothing. He had come out of his quarters and sat in
limp exhaustion at the mess table while Dane placed before him a mug of
stimulating caf-hag.
"I don't get it!" The Medic
addressed the table top rather than the amateur cook. "It's a poison of
some kind. Kosti went dirt-side—Mura didn't. Yet Mura came down with it first.
And we didn't ship any food from Sargol. Neither did he eat any while we were
there. Unless he did and we didn't know about it. If I could just bring him to long enough to answer a couple of
questions!" Sighing he dropped his weary head on his folded arms
and within seconds was asleep.
Dane put the mug back on the heating unit and
sat down at the other end of the table. He did not have the heart to shake Tau
into wakefulness—let the poor devil get a slice of bunk time,
he certainly needed it after the fatigues of the past four days.
Van Rycke passed along the corridor on his
way to the hydro, Sinbad at his heels. But in a moment the cat was back,
leaping up on Dane's knee. He did not curl up, but rubbed against the young
man's arm, finally reaching up with a paw to touch Dane's chin, uttering one of
the soundless, mews which were his bid for attention.
"What's the matter, boy?" Dane
fondled the cat's ears. "You haven't got a headache—have you?" In
that second a wild surmise came into his mind. Sinbad had been planetside on
Sargol as much as he could, and on ship board he was equally at home in all
their cabins—could he be the carrier of the disease?
A
good idea—only if it were true, then logically the second victim should have
been Van, or Dane—where as Sinbad lingered most of the time in their cabins—not
Kosti. The cat, as far as he knew, had never shown any particular fondness for
the jetman and certainly did not sleep in Karl's quarters. No—that point did
not fit. But he would mention it to Tau— no use overlooking anything—no matter
how wild.
It
was the sequence of victims which puzzled them all. As far as Tau had been able
to discover Mura and Kosti had nothing much in common except that they were
crewmates on the same spacer. They did not bunk in the same section, their
fields of labor were totally different, they had no special food or drink
tastes in common, they were not even of the same race.
Frank Mura was one of the few descendants of a mysterious (or now mysterious)
people who had had their home on a series of islands in one of Terra's seas,
islands which almost a hundred years before had been swallowed up in a series
of world-rending quakes—Japan was the ancient name of that nation. While Karl
Kosti had come from the once thickly populated land masses half the planet away
which had bome the geographical name of "Europe."
No, all the way along the two victims had only very general meeting points—they
both shipped on the Solar Queen and they were both of Terran birth.
Tau stirred and sat up, blinking bemusedly at
Dane, then pushed back his wiry black hair and assumed a measure of alertness.
Dane dropped the now purring cat in the Medic's lap and in a few sentences
outlined his suspicion. Tau's hands closed about Sinbad.
"There's
a chance in that—" He looked a little less beat and he drank thirstily
from the mug Dane gave him for the second time. Then he hurried out with
Sinbad under one arm-bound for his lab.
Dane slicked up the
galley, trying to put things away as neatly as Mura kept them. He didn't have
much~ faith in the Sinbad lead, but in this case everything must be checked
out.
When the Medic did not appear during the rest
of the ship's day Dane was not gready concerned. But he was alerted to trouble
when Ali came in with an inquiry and a complaint.
"Seen anything of Craig?"
"He's in the lab," Dane answered.
"He didn't answer my knock," Ali
protested. "And Weeks says he hasn't been in to see Karl all day—"
That did catch Dane's attention. Had his half
hunch been right? Was Tau on the trail of a discovery which had kept him
chained to the lab? But it wasn't like the Medic not to look in on his
patients.
"You're sure he isn't in the lab?"
"I
told you that he didn't answer my knock. I didn't open the panel—" But now
Ali was already in the corridor heading back the way he had come, with Dane on
his heels, an unwelcome explanation for that silence in both their minds. And
their fears were reinforced by what they heard as they approached the panel—a
low moan wrung out of unbearable pain. Dane thrust the sliding door open.
Tau
had slipped from his stool to the floor. His hands were at his head which
rolled from side to side as if he were trying to quiet some agony. Dane
stripped down the Medic's under tunic. There was no need to make a careful examination, in the hollow of Craig Tau's throat was the
tell-tale red blotch.
"Sinbad!" Dane glanced about the cabin. "Did
Sinbad get out past you?" he demanded of the puzzled Ali.
"No—I haven't seen him
all day—"
Yet
the cat was nowhere in the tiny cabin and it had no concealed hiding place. To
make doubly sure Dane secured the panel before they carried Tau to his bunk.
The Medic had blacked out again, passed into the lethargic second stage of the
malady. At least he was out of the pain which appeared to be the worst symptom
of the disease.
"It must be Sinbad!" Dane said as
he made his report directiy to Captain Jellico. "And yet—"
"Yes,
he's been staying in Van's cabin," the Captain mused. "And you've
handled him, he slept on your bunk. Yet you and Van
are all right. I don't understand that. Anyway—to be on the safe side—we'd
better find and isolate him before—"
He
didn't, have to underline any words for the grim-faced men who listened. With
Tau—their one hope of fighting the disease gone—they had a black future facing
them.
They
did not have to search for Sinbad. Dane coming down to his own section found
the cat crouched before the panel of Van Rycke's cabin, his eyes glued to the
thin crack of the door. Dane scooped him up and took him to the small cargo
space intended for the safeguarding of choice items of commerce. To his vast
surprise Sinbad began fighting wildly as he opened the hatch, kicking and then
slashing with ready claws. The cat seemed to go mad and Dane had all he could
do to shut him in. When he snapped the panel he heard Sinbad launch himself
against the barrier as if to batter his way out. Dane, blood welling in several
deep scratches, went in search of first aid. But some suspicion led him to
pause as he passed Van Rycke's door. And when his knock brought no answer he
pushed the panel open.
Van Rycke lay on his hunk, his eyes half
closed in a way which had become only too familiar to the crew of the Solar
Queen. And Dane knew that when he looked for it he would find the mark of the
strange plague on the Cargo-master's body.
Chapter IX PLAGUE!
Jellico and Steen Wileox poured over the few notes Tau
had made before he was stricken. But apparently the Medic had found nothing to
indicate that Sinbad was the carrier of any disease. Meanwhile the Captain gave
orders for the cat to be confined. A difficult task—since
Sinbad crouched close to the door of the storage cabin and was ready to dart
out when food was taken in for him. Once he got a good way down the
corridor before Dane was able to corner and return him to keeping.
Dane,
Ali and Weeks took on the full care of the four sick men, leaving the few
regular duties of the ship to the senior officers, while Rip was installed in
charge of the hydro garden.
Mura,
the first to be taken ill, showed no change. He was semi-conscious, he
swallowed food if it were put in his mouth, he responded to nothing around him.
And Kosti, Tau, and Van Rycke followed the same pattern. They still held morning
inspection of those on their feet for signs of a new outbreak, but when no one
else went down during the next two days, they regained a faint spark of hope.
Hope
which was snapped out when Ah brought the news that
Stotz could not be roused and'must have taken ill during a sleep period. One
more inert patient was added to the list— and nothing learned about how he was
infected. Except that they oould eliminate Sinbad, since the cat had been in
custody during the time Stotz had apparently contracted the disease.
Weeks, Ali and Dane, though they were in
constant contact with the sick men, and though Dane had repeatedly handled
Sinbad, continued to be immune. A fact, Dane thought more than once, which must
have significance—if someone with Tau's medical knowledge had been able to
study it. By all rights they should be the most susceptible— but the opposite
seemed true. And Wilcox duly noted that fact among the data they had recorded.
It
became a matter of watching each other, waiting for another collapse. And they
were not surprised when Tang Ya reeled into the mess, his face livid and drawn
with pain. Rip and Dane got him to his cabin before he blacked out. But all
they could leam from him during the interval before he lost consciousness was
that his head was bursting and he couldn't stand it. Over his limp body they
stared at one another bleakly.
"Six down," Ali
observed, "and six to go. How do you feel?"
"Tired,
that's all. What I don't understand is that once they go into this stupor they
just stay. They don't get any worse, they have no rise in temperature—it's as
if they are in a modified form of cold sleep!"
"How is Tang?" Rip asked from the
corridor.
"Usual pattern," Ah answered.
"He's sleeping. Got a pain, Fella?"
Rip' shook his head. "Right
as a Corn-unit. I don't get it. Why does it strike Tang who didn't,even hit dirt much—and yet you keep on—?"
Dane
grimaced. "If we had an answer to that, maybe we'd know what caused the
whole thing—"
Ali's eyes narrowed. He was staring straight
at the unconscious Com-tech as if he did not see that supine body at all;
"I wonder if we've been salted—" he said slowly.
"We've been what?" Dane demanded.
"Look
here, we three—with Weeks—drank that brew of the Salariki, didn't we? And
we—"
"Were as sick as Venusian gobblers
afterwards," agreed Rip.
Light dawned. "Do you mean—" began
Dane. "So that's it!" flashed Rip.
"It
might just be," Ali said. "Do you remember how the settlers on
Camblyne brought their Terran cattle through the first year? They fed them salt
mixed with fansel grass. The result .was that the herds
didn't take the fansel grass fever when they turned them out to pasture in the
dry season. All right, maybe we had our 'salt' in that drink. The
fansel-salt makes the cattle fikhy sick when it's forced down their throats,
but after they recover they're immune to the fever. And nobody on Camblyne buys
unsalted cattle now."
"It
sounds logical," admitted Rip. "But how are we going to prove
it?"
Ali's face was black once more.
"Probably by elimination," he said morosely. "If we keep our
feet and all the rest go down—that's our proof."
"But we ought to be. able
to do something—" protested Shannon.
"Just how?" Ali's slender brows arched. "Do you
have a gallon of that Salariki brew on board you can serve out? We don't know
what was in it. Nor are we sure that this whole idea has any value."
All
of them had had first aid and basic preventive medicine as part of their
training, but the more advanced laboratory experimentation was beyond their
knowledge and skill. Had Tau still been on his feet perhaps he could have
traced that lead and brought order out of the chaos which was closing in upon
the Solar Queen. But, though they reported their suggestion to the Captain,
Jellied was powerless to do anything about it. If the four who had shared that-
upsetting friendship cup were immune to the doom which now overhung the ship,
there was no possible way for them to discover why or how.
Ship's
time came to have little meaning. And they were not surprised when Steen Wilcox
slipped from his seat before the computer—to be stowed away with what had
become a familiar procedure. , Only Jellico withstood the contagion apart from
the younger four, taking his turn at caring for the helpless men. There was no
change in their condition. They neither roused nor grew worse as the -hours and
then the days sped by. But each of those units of time in passing brought them
nearer to greater danger. Sooner or later they must make the transition out of
Hyper into system space, and the jump out of warp was something not even a
veteran took lightly. Rip's round face thinned while they watched. Jellico was
still functioning. But if the Captain collapsed the whole responsibility for
the snapout would fall directly on Shannon. An infinitesimal error would
condemn them to almost hopeless wandering—perhaps for ever.
Dane and Ali relieved Rip
of all duty but that which kept him chained in Wilcox's chair before the
computers. He went over and over the data of the course the Astrogator had set.
And Captain Jellico, his eyes sunk in dark pits, checked and rechecked.
When
the fatal moment came Ali manned the engine room with Weeks at his elbow to
tend the controls the acting-Engineer could not reach. And Dane, having seen
the sick all safely stowed in crash webbing, came up to the control cabin,
riding out the transfer in Tang Ya's place.
Rip's
voice hoarsened into a croak, calling out the data. Dane, though he had had
basic theory, was completely lost before Shannon had finished the first set of
co-ordinates. But Jellico replied, hjinds playing across the pilot's board.
"Stand-by
for snap-out—"the croak went down to the engines where Ali now held
Stotz's post.
"Engines ready!" The voice came
back, thinned by its journey from the Queen's interior.
"Ought-five-nine—"
That was Jellico.
Dane found himself
suddenly unable to watch. He shut his eyes and braced himself against the
vertigo of snap-out. It came and he whirled sickeningly through unstable space.
Then he was sitting in the laced Com-tech's seat looking at Rip.
Runnels
of sweat streaked Shannon's brown face. There was a damp patch darkening his
tunic between his shoulder blades, a patch which it would take both of Dane's
hands to cover.
For a moment he did not raise his head to
look at the vision plate which would tell him whether or not they had made it.
But when he did familiar constellations made the patterns they knew. They were
out—and they couldn't be too far off the course Wilcox had plotted. There was
still the system run to make—but snap-out was behind them. Rip gave a deep sigh
and buried his head in his hands.
With
a throb of fear Dane unhooked his safety belt and hurried over to him. When he
clutched at Shannon's shoulder the Astrogator-apprentice's head rolled limply.
Was Rip down with the illness too? But the other
muttered and opened his eyes.
"Does your head ache?" Dane shook
him. "Head? No—" Rip's words came drowsily.
"Jus' sleepy—so sleepy—"
He
did not seem to be in pain. But Dane's hands were shaking as he hoisted the
other out of his seat and half carried-half led him to his cabin, praying as he
went that it was only fatigue and not the disease. The ship was on auto now
until Jellico as pilot set a course—
Dane
got Rip down on the bunk and stripped off his tunic. The fine-drawn face of the
sleeper looked wan against the foam rest, and he snuggled into the softness
like a child as he turned over and curled up. But his skin was clear—it was real
sleep and not the plague which had claimed him.
Impulse sent Dane back to the control cabin.
He was not an experienced pilot officer, but there might be some assistance he could offer the Captain now that Rip was washed out,
perhaps for hours.
Jellico hunched before the smaller computer,
feeding pilot tape into its slot. His face was a skull under a thin coating of
skin, the bones marking it sharply at jaw, nose and eye socket.
"Shannon down?"' His voice was a mere whisper of .its
powerful self, he did not turn his head.
"He's
just worn out, sir," Dane hastened to give reassurance. "The marks
aren't on him."
"When
he comes around tell him the co-ords are in," Jellico murmured. "See
he checks course in ten hours—"
"But, sir—" Dane's protest failed
as he watched the Cap-•tain struggle to his feet, pulling himself up with
shaking hands. As Thorson reached forward to steady the other, one of those
hands tore at tunic collar, ripping loose, the sealing—
There
was no need for explanation—the red splotch signaled from Jellico's sweating
throat. He kept his feet, holding out against the waves of pain by sheer will
power. Then Dane had a grip on him, got him away from the computer, hoping he
could keep him going until they reached Jellico's cabin.
Somehow they made that journey, being greeted
with raucous screams from the Hoobat. Furiously Dane slapped the cage, setting
it to swinging and so silencing the creature which stared at him with round,
malignant eyes as he got the Captain to bed.
Only four of them on their feet now, Dane
thought bleakly as he left the cabin. If Rip came out of it in time they could
land—Dane's breath caught as he made himself face up to the fact that Shannon
might be ill, that it might be up to him to
bring the Queen in for a landing. And in where? The Terra quarantine was Luna
City on the Moon. But let them signal for a set-down there—let them describe
what had happened and they might face death as a plague ship.
Wearily
he climbed down to the mess cabin to discover Weeks and Ali there before him.
They did not look up as he entered.
"Old
Man's got it," he reported. "Rip?" was All's crossing question.
"Asleep. He passed out—" "What!" Weeks swung around.
"Worn
out," Dane amended. "Captain fed in a pilot tape before he gave
up."
"So—now
we are three," was Ali's comment. "Where do we set down—Luna
City?"
"If they let us," Dane hinted at
the worst.
"But
they've got to let us!" Weeks exclaimed. "We can't just wander around
out here—"
"It's
been done," Ali reminded them brutally and- that silenced Weeks.
"Did the Old Man set Luna?" After a
long pause Ali inquired.
"I didn't check," Dane confessed.
"He was giving out and I had to get him to his bunk."
"It might be well to know." The
Engineer-apprentice got up, his movements lacking much of the elastic spring
which was normally his. When he climbed to control both the others followed
him.
Ali's slender fingers played across a set of
keys and in the small screen mounting on the computer a set of figures
appeared. Dane took up-the master course book, read the connotation and
blinked.
"Not Luna?" Ali
asked.
"No. But I don't understand. This must
be for somewhere in the asteroid belt."
Ali's
lips stretched into a pale caricature of a smile. "Good for the Old Man,
he still had his wits about him, even after the bug bit him!"
"But
why are we going to the" asteroids?" Weeks asked reasonably enough.
"There're Medics at Luna City—they can help us—"
"They
can handle known diseases," Ali pointed out. "But
what of the Code?"
Weeks
dropped into the Com-tech's place as if some of the stiffening had vanished
from his thin but sturdy legs. "They wouldn't do that—" he protested,
but his eyes said that he knew that they might—they well might.
"Oh, no? Face the facts, man," Ali sounded almost savage. "We come
from a frontier planet, we're a plague ship—"
He did not have to underline that. They all
knew too well the danger in which they now stood.
"Nobody's died yet," Weeks tried to
find an opening in the net being drawn about them.
"And nobody's recovered," Ali
crushed that thread of hope. "We don't know what it is, how it is
contracted—anything about it. Let us make a report saying that and you know
what will happen—don't you?"
They weren't sure of the details, but they
could guess.
"So
I say," Ali continued, "the Old Man was right when he set us on an
evasion course. If we can stay out until we really know what
is the matter we'll have some chance of talking over the high brass at Luna
when we do planet—"
In the end they decided not
to interfere with the course the Captain had set. It would take them into the
fringes of solar civilization, but give them a fighting chance at solving their
problem before they had to report to the authorities. In the meantime they
tended their charges, let Rip sleep, and watched each other with desperate but
hidden intentness, ready for another to be stricken. However, they remained,
although almost stupid with fatigue at times, reasonably healthy. Time was
proving that their guess had been correct —they had been somehow inoculated
against the germ or virus which had struck the ship.
Rip
slept for twenty-four hours, ship time, and then came into the mess cabin
ravenously hungry, to catch up on both food and news. And he refused to join
with the prevailing pessimistic view of the future. Instead he was sure that their own immunity having been proven, they had a talking
point to use with the medical officials at Luna and he was eager to alter
course directly for the quarantine station. Only the combined "arguments
of the other three made him, unwillingly, agree to a short delay.
And
how grateful they should be for Captain Jellico's foresight they learned within
the next day. Ali was at the corn-unit, trying to pick up Solarian news
reports. When the red alert flashed on throughout the ship it
brought the others hurrying to the control cabin. The code squeaks were
magnified as Ali switched on the receiver full strength, to be translated as
he pressed a second button.
"Repeat, repeat, repeat. Free Trader, Solar Queen, Terra Registry
65-724910-Jk,"suspected plague ship—took off from infected planet. Warn
off—warn off—report such ship to Luna Station. Solar Queen
from infected planet—to be warned off and reported." The same
message was repeated three times before going off ether.
The four in the control
cabin-looked at each other blankly.
"But,"
Dane broke the silence, "how did they know? We haven't reported in—"
"The Eysies!" Ali had the answer ready. "That I-S
ship must be having the same sort of trouble and reported to her
Company.
They would include us in their report and believe that we were infected too—or
it would be easy to convince the authorities that we were."
"I
wonder," Rip's eyes were narrowed slits as he leaned back against the
wall. "Look at the facts. The Survey ship which charted Sargol—they were
dirt-side there about three —four months. Yet they gave it a clean bill of
health and-put it up for trading rights auction. Then Cam bought those
rights—he made at least two trips in and out before he was blasted on Limbo. No
infection bothered him or Survey—"
"But you've got to admit it hit
us," Weeks protested.
"Yes, and the
Eysie ship was able to foresee it—report us before we snapped out of Hyper.
Sounds almost as if they expected us to carry plague, doesn't it?" Shannon
wanted to know.
'Planted?"
Ali frowned at the banks of controls. "But how —no Eysie
came on board—no Salarik either, except for the cub who showed us what
they thought of catnip."
Rip shrugged. "How would I know how they
did—" he was beginning when Dane cut in:
"If
they didn't know about our immunity the Queen might stay in Hyper and never
come out—there wouldn't be anyone to set the snap-out."
"Right enough. But on the chance that somebody did keep
on his feet and bring her home, they were ready with a
cover. If no one raises a howl Sargol will be written off the
charts as infected. I-S sits on her tail fins a year or so and
then she promotes an investigation before the Board. The
Survey records are trotted out—no infection recorded. So
they send in a Patrol Probe. Everything is all right—so it
wasn't the planet after all—it was that dirty old Free Trader.
And she's out of the way. I-S gets the Koros trade all square
and legal and we're no longer around to worry about! Neat
as a Salariki net cast—and right around our collective throats,
my friends!" ,
"So what do we do now?" Weeks
wanted to know.
"We keep on the Old Man's course, get
lost in the aster-
Olds until
we can do some heavy thinking and see a way out. But if I-S give us
this prize package, some trace of its origin is still aboard. And if we can
find that—why, then we have something to start from."
"Mura
went down first—and then Karl. Nothing in common," the old problem faced
Dane for the hundredth time.
"No.
But," Ah arose from his place at the corn-unit. "I'd suggest a real
search of first Frank's and then Karl's quarters. A regular
turn out down to the bare walls of their cabins. Are you with me?"
"Fly boy, we're ahead of you!" Rip
contributed, already at the door panel. "Down to the bare walls it
is."
Chapter X
E-STAT LANDING
Since Mura was in the isolation of ship sick bay the stripping
of his cabin was a relatively simple job. But, though Rip and Dane went over it
literally by inches, they found nothing unusual—in fact nothing from Sargol
except a small twig of the red wood which' lay on the steward's worktable where
he had been fashioning something to incorporate in one of his miniature fairy
landscapes, to be imprisoned for all time in a plasta-bubble. Dane turned this
around in his fingers. Because it was the only link with the perfumed planet he
couldn't help but feel that it had some importance.
But
Kosti had not shown any interest in the wood. And he, himself, and Weeks had
handled it freely before they
had tasted Croft's friendship cup and had no ill effects—so it couldn't be the
wood. Dane put the twig back on the work table and snapped the protecting cover
over the delicate tools—never realizing until days later how very close he had
been in that moment to the solutidn of their problem.
After
two hours of shifting every one of the steward's belongings, of crawling on
hands and knees about the deck and climbing to inspect perfectly bare walls,
they had found exactly nothing. Rip sat down on the end of the denuded bunk.
"There's the hydro—Frank spent a lot of
rime in there— and the storeroom," he told the places off on his fingers. "The galley and the mess cabin."
Those
had been the extent of Mura's world. They could search the storeroom, the
galley and the mess cabin—but to interfere with the hydro would endanger their
air supply. It was for that very reason that they now looked at each other in
startled surmise.
"The perfect place to
plant something!" Dane spoke first.
Rip's
teeth caught his underlip. The hydro—something planted there could not be
routed out unless they made a landing on a port field and had the whole section
stripped.
"Devilish—"
Rip's mobile lips drew tight. "But how could they do it?"
Dane didn't see how it could have been done
either. No one but the Queen's own crew had been on board the ship during their
entire stay on Sargol, except for the young Sala-rik. Could that cub have
brought something? But he and Mura had been with the youngster every minute
that he had been in the hydro. To the best of Dane's memory the cub had touched
nothing and had been there only for a few moments. That had been before the feast
also—
Rip got to his feet. "We can't strip the
hydro in space," he pointed out the obvious quietly.
Dane had the answer. "Then we've got to
earth!"
"You heard that warn-off. If we try
it—"
"What about an
Emergency station?"
Rip
stood very still, his big hands locked about the buckle of his arms belt. Then,
without another word, he went out of the cabin and at a pounding pace up the
ladder, bound for the Captain's cabin and the records Jellico kept there. It
was such a slim chance—but it was better than none at all.
Dane
shouldered into the small space in his wake, to find Rip making a selection
from the astrogation tapes. There were E-Stats among the asteroids—points prospectors or small traders in sudden difficulties
might contact for supplies or repairs. The big Companies maintained their own—the Patrol had several for independents. "No
Patrol one—"
Rip managed a smile. "I haven't gone
space whirly yet," was his comment. He was feeding a tape into the reader
on the Captain's desk. In the cage over his head the blue Hoo-bat squatted
watching him intently—for the first time since Dane could remember showing no
sign of resentment by weird screams or wild spitting.
"Patrol
E-Stat A-54—" the reader squeaked. Rip hit a key and the wire clicked to
the next entry. "Combine E-Stat—" Another punch and click. "Patrol E-Stat A-55—" punch-click.
"Inter-Solar—" this time Rip's hand did not hit the key and the
squeak continued—"Co-ordinates—" Rip reached for a steelo and jotted
down the list of figures. 4
"Got to compare this with our present
course—"
"But
that's an I-S Stat," began Dane and then he laughed as the justice of such
a move struck him. They did not dare set the Queen down at any Patrol Station.
But a Company one which would be manned by only two or three men and not
expecting any but their own people—and I-S owed them help nowl
"There may be trouble," he said,
not that he would have
any regrets if there was. If the Eysies were responsible for
the present plight of the Queen he would welcome trouble,
the kind which would plant his fists on some sneering Eysie
face. '
"We'll
see about that when we come to it," Rip went on to the control cabin with
his figures. Carefully he punched the combination on the plotter and watched it
be compared with the course Jellico had set before his collapse.
"Good
enough," he commented as the result flashed on. "We can make it
without using too much fuel—"
"Make what?" That was Ali up from
the search of Kosti's quarters. "Nothing," he gave his report of what
he had found there and then returned to the earlier question. "Make
what?"
Swiftly Dane outlined their suspicions—that
the seat of the trouble lay in the hydro and that they should clean out that
section, drawing upon emergency materials at the I-S E-Stat.
"Sounds all right. But you know what they do to pirates?" inquired the
Engineer-apprentice.
Space
law came into Dane's field, he needed no prompting. "Any ship in
emergency," he recited automatically, "may claim supplies from the
nearest E-Stat—paying for them when the voyage is completed."
"That
means any Patrol E-Stat. The Companies' are private property."
"But,"
Dane pointed out triumphantly, "the law doesn't say so—there is nothing
about any difference between Company and Patrol E-Stat in the law—"
"He's right," Rip agreed. 'That law
was framed when only the Patrol had such stations. Companies put them in later
to save tax—remember? Legally we're all right."
"Unless the agents on duty raise a
howl," Ali amended. "Oh, don't give me that look, Rip. I'm not
sounding any warn-off on this, but I just want you to be prepared to find a cruiser riding our fins and giving us the hot
flash as bandits. If you want to .spoil the Eysies, I'm all for it. Got a stat of theirs pinpointed?"
Rip
pointed to the figures on the computer. "There she is. We can set down in
about five hours' ship time. How long will it take to strip the hydro and
re-install?"
"How
can I tell?" Ali sounded irritable. "I can give you oxgy for quarters
for about two hours. Depends upon how fast we can move. No telling until we
make a start."
He started for the corridor and then added
over his shoulder: "You'll have to answer a com challenge—thought about
that?"
"Why?"
Rip asked. "It might be com repairs bringing us in. They won't be
expecting trouble and we will—we'll have the advantage."
But Ali was not to be shaken out of his usual
dim view of the future. "All right—so we land, blaster in hand, and take
the place. And they get off one little squeak to the Patrol. Well, a short life
but an interesting one. And we'll make all the Video channels for sure when we
go out with rockets blasting. Nothing like having a little
excitement to break the dull routine of a voyage."
"We
aren't going to, are we—" Dane protested, "land
armed, I mean?"
Ali stared at him and Rip, to Dane's
surprise, did not immediately repudiate that thought.
"Sleep rods, certainly," the
Astrogator-apprentice said after a pause. "We'll have to be prepared for
the moment when they find out who we are. And you can't re-set a hydro in a few
minutes, not when we have to keep oxgy on for the others. If we were able to
turn that off and work in suits it'd be a quicker job—we could dump before we
set down and then pile it in at once. But this way it's going to be piece work.
And it all depends on the agents at the Stat whether we have trouble or
not."
"We
had better break out the suits now," Ali added to Rip's estimate of the
situation. "If we set down and pile out wearing suits at once it will
build up our tale of being poor wrecked spacemen—"
Sleep
rods or not, Dane thought to himself, the whole plan was one born of
desperation. It would depend upon who manned the E-Stat and how fast the Free
Traders could move once the Queen touched her fins to earth.
"Knock
out their corns," that was Ali continuing to plan. "Do that first and
then we don't have to worry about someone calling in the Patrol."
Rip
stretched. For the first time in hours he seemed to have returned to his visual
placid self. "Good thing somebody in this spacer watches Video
serials—Ali, you can brief us on all the latest tricks of space-'pirates.
Nothing is so wildly improbable that you can't make use of it sometime during a
checkered career."
He glanced over the board before he brought
his hand down on a single key set a distance apart from the other controls.
"Put some local color into it," was his comment.
Dane
understood. Rip had turned on the distress signal at the Queen's nose. When she
set down on the Stat field she would be flaming a banner of trouble. Next to
the wan dead lights, set only when ~a ship had no hope of ever reaching port at
all, that signal was one every spacer dreaded having to flash. But it was not the dead lights—not yet for the Queen.
Working
together they brought out, the space suits and readied them at the hatch. Then
Weeks and Dane took up the task of tending their unconscious charges while Rip
and Ali prepared for landing.
There was no change in the sleepers. And in
Jellico's cabin even Queex appeared to be influenced by the plight of its
master, for instead of greeting Dane with its normal aspect of rage, the Hoobat
stayed quiescent on the floor of its cage, its top claws hoGked about two of
the wires, its protruding eyes staring out into the room with what seemed
closed to a malignant intelligence. It did not even spit as Dane passed under
its' abode to pour thin soup into his patient.
As for Sinbad, the cat had retreated to
Dane's cabin and steadily refused to leave the quarters he had chosen,
resisting with tooth and claw the one time Dane had tried to take him back to
Van Rycke's office and his own hammock there. Afterwards the Cargo-apprentice
did not try to evict him— there was comfort in seeing that plump gray body
curled on the bunk he had little chance to use.
His nursing duties performed for the moment,
Dane ventured into the hydro. He was practiced in tending this vital heart of
the ship's air supply. But outfitting a hydro was something else again. In his
cadet years he had aided in such a program at least twice as a matter of
learning the basic training of the Service. But then they had had unlimited
supplies to draw on and the action had taken place under no more pressure than
that exerted" by the instructors. Now it was going to be a far more tricky job-He went slowly down the aisle between the
banks of green things. Plants from all over the Galaxy, grown for their contribution
to the air renewal—as well as side products such as fresh fruit and vegetables,
were banked there. The sweet odor of their verdant life was strong. But how
could any of the four now on duty tell what was rightfully there and what might
have been brought in? And could they be sure anything had been introduced?
Dane stood there, his eyes searching those
lines of greens —such a mixture of greens from the familiar shade of Terra's
fields to greens tinged with shades first bestowed by other suns on other
worlds—looking for one which was alien enough to be noticeable. Only Mura, who
knew this garden as he knew his own cabin, could have differentiated between
them. They would just dump everything and trust to luck-He was suddenly aware
of a slight movement in the banks —a shivering of stem, quiver of leaf. The
mere act of his passing had set some sensitive plant to register his presence.
A lacy, fern-like thing was contracting its fronds-into balls. He should not
stay—disturbing the peace of the hydro. But it made little difference
now—within a matter of hours all this luxuriance would be thrust out to die and
they would have to depend upon canned oxgy and algae tanks. Too bad —the hydro
represented much time and labor on Mura's part and Tau had medical plants
growing there he had been observing for a long time.
As
Dane closed the door behind him, seeing the line of balled fern which had
marked his passage, he heard a faint rustling, a sound as if a wind had swept
across the green room within. That imagination which was a Trader's asset (when
it was kept within bounds) suggested that the plants inside guessed—With a frown
for his own sentimentality, Dane strode down the corridor and climbed to check
with Rip in control.
The
Astrogator-apprentice had his own problems. To bring the Queen down on the
circumscribed field of an E-Stat— without a guide beam to ride in—since if they
contacted the Stat they must reveal their own com was working and they would have to answer questions—was the sort of
test even a seasoned pilot would tense over. Yet Rip was sitting now in the
Captain's place, his broad hands spread out on the edge of the control board
waiting. And below in the engine room Ali was in Stotz's place ready to fire
and cut rockets at order. Of course they were both several years ahead of him
in Service, Dane knew. But he wondered at their quick assumption of responsibility
and whether he himself could ever reach that point of self-confidence—his
memory turning to the bad mistake he had made on Sargol.
There was the sharp note of a warning gong,
the flash of red light on the control board. They were off automatic,
from here on in it was all Rip's work. Dane strapped down at the silent
corn-unit and was startled a moment later when it spat words at him, translated
from space code.
"Identify—identify—I-S
E-Stat calling spacer—identify—"
So
compelling was that demand that Dane's fingers went to the answer key before he
remembered and snatched them back, to fold his hands in his lap.
"Identify—"
the expressionless voice of the translator, droned over their heads.
Rip's hands were on the control board,
playing the buttons there with the precision of a musician creating some symphonic
masterpiece. And the Queen was alive, now quivering through her stout plates,
coming into a landing.
Dane
watched the visa plate. The E-Stat asteroid was of a reasonable size, but in
their eyes it was a bleak, torn mote of stuff swimming through vast emptiness.
"Identify—" the
drone heightened in pitch.
Rip's
lips were compressed, he made quick calculations. And Dane saw that, though
Jellico was the master, Rip was fully fit to follow in the Captain's boot
prints.
There
was a sudden silence in the cabin—the demand had stopped. The agents below must
now have realized that the ship with the distress signals blazing on her nose
was not going to reply. Dane found he could not watch the visa plate now, Rip's
hands about their task filled his whole range of sight.
He
knew that Shannon was using every bit of his skill and knowledge to jockey them
into the position where they could ride their tail rockets down to the scorched
rock of the E-Stat field. Perhaps it wasn't as smooth a landing as Jellico
could have made. But they did it. Rip's hands were quiet,
again that patch of darkness showed on the back of his tunic. He made no
move from his seat.
"Secure—" Ali's
voice floated up to them.
Dane
unbuckled his safety webbing and got up, looking to Shannon for orders. This
was Rip's plan they were to carry through. Then something moved him to give
honor where it was due. He touched that bowed shoulder before him.
"Fin landing, brother!
Four points and down!"
Rip
glanced up, a grin made him look his old self. "Ought to
have a recording of that for the Board when I go up for my pass-through."
Dane
matched his smile. "Too bad we didn't have someone out there with a
tri-dee machine."
"More
likely it'd be evidence at our trial for piracy—" their words must have
reached Ali on the ship's inter-com, for his deflating reply came back, to
remind them of why they had made that particular landing. "Do we move
now?"
"Check first,"
Rip said into the mike.
Dane
looked at the visa-plate. Against a background of jagged rock teeth was the
bubble of the E-Stat housing—more than three-quarters of it being in the
hollowed out sections below the surface of the miniature world which supported
it, as Dane knew. But a beam of light shown from the
dome to center on the grounded Queen. They had not caught the Stat agents
napping.
They
made the rounds of the spacer, checking on each of the semi-conscious men. Ali
had ready the artificial oxgy tanks—they must move fast once they began the
actual task of clearing and restocking the hydro.
"Hope you have a good story ready,"
he commented as the other three joined him by the hatch to don the suits which
would enable them to cross the airless, heatless surface of the asteroid.
"We have a poisoned
hydro," Dane said.
"One
look at the plants we dump will give you the lie. They won't accept our story
without investigation."
Dane
was aroused. Did Ali think he was a stupid as all that? "If you'd take a
look in there now you'd believe me," he snapped.
".What did you
do?" Ali sounded genuinely interested.
"Chucked a heated can of lacoil over a good section. It's wilting down fast in big patches."
Rip
snorted. "Good old lacoil. You drink it, you wash in it, and now you kill
off the Hydro with it. Maybe we can give the company an extra testimonial for
the official jabber and collect when we hit Terra. All right—Weeks," he
spoke to the little man, "you listen in on the com—it's tuned to our
helmet units. We'll climb into these pipe suits and see how many tears we can
wring out of the Eysies with our sad, sad tale."
They
got into the awkward, bulky suits and squeezed into the hatch while Weeks
slammed the lock door at their backs and operated the outer opening. Then they
were looking out across the ground, still showing signs of the heat of their
landing, and lighted by the dome beam.
"Nobody
hurrying out with an aid and comfort kit," Rip's voice sounded in Dane's
earphones. "A little slack aren't they?"
Slack—or
was it that the Eysies had recognized the Queen and was preparing the sort of
welcome the remnant of her crew could not withstand? Dane,
wanting very much in his heart to be elsewhere, climbed down the ladder in
Rip's wake, both of them spotlighted by the immovable beam from the Stat dome.
Chapter XI
DESPERATE MEASURES
Measured in distance and time that rough walk in the ponderous
suits across the broken terrain of the asteroid was a short one, measured by
the beating of his own heart, Dane thought it much too long.
There was no sign of life by the air lock of the bubble—no move on the part of
the men stationed there to come to their assistance.
"D'you
suppose we're invisible?" Ali's disembodied voice
clicked in the helmet earphones.
"Maybe
we'll wish we were," Dane could not forego that return.
Rip
was almost to the air_ lock door now. His massively suited arm was outstretched
toward the control bar when the corn-unit in all three helmets caught the same
demand:
"Identify!"
The crisp order had enough snap to warn them that an answer was the best
policy.
"Shannon—A-A
of the Polestar," Rip gave the required information. "We claim E
rights—"
But
would they get them? Dane wondered. There was a click loud in his ears, The metal door was yielding to Rip's hand. At least
those on the inside had taken off the lock. Dane quickened pace to join his
leader.
Together
the three from the Queen crowded through the lock door, saw that swing shut and
seal behind them, as they stood waiting for the moment they could discard the
suits and enter the dome. The odds against them could not be too high, this was
a small Stat. It would not house more than four agents at the most. And they
were familiar enough with the basic architecture of such stations to know just
what move to make. Ali was to go to the com room where he could take over if
they did meet with trouble. Dane and Rip would have to handle any dissenters in
the main section. But they still hoped that luck might ride their fins and they
could put over
a
story which would keep them out of active conflict with the Eysies.
The
gauge on the wall registered safety and they unfastened the protective clasps
of the suits. Standing the cumbersome things against the wall as the inner
door to the lock rolled back, they walked into Eysie territory.
As
Free Traders they had the advantage of being uniformly tunicked—with no Company
badge to betray their ship or status. So that could well be the "Polestar" standing needle slim
behind them—and not the notorious "Solar Queen." But each, as he
passed through the inner lock, gave a hitch to his belt which brought the butt
of his sleep rod closer to hand. Innocuous as that weapon was, in close
quarters its affect, if only temporary, was to some purpose. And since they
were prepared for trouble, they might have a slight edge over the Eysies in
attack.
A
Company man, his tunic shabby and open in a negligent fashion at his thick
throat, stood waiting for them. His unhel-meted head was grizzled, his coarse,
tanned face with heavy jowls bristly enough to suggest he had not bothered to
use smooth-cream for some days. An under officer of some spacer, retired to
finish out the few years before pension in this nominal duty—fast letting down
the standards of personal regime he had had to maintain on ship board. But he
wasn't all fat and soft living, the glance with which he measured them was
shrewdly appraising.
"What's
your trouble?" he demanded without greeting. "You didn't I-dent
coming in."
"Corns
are out," Rip replied as shortly. "We need E-Hydrc—"
"First
time I ever heard it that the corns were wired in with the grass," the
Eysies's hands were on his hips—in close proximity to something which made
Dane's eyes narrow. The fellow was wearing a flare-blaster! That might be
regulation equipment for an E-Stat agent on a lonely asteroid—but he didn't
quite believe it.-And probably the other was quick on
the draw too.
"The corns are something else," Rip
answered readily. "Our tech is working on them. But the hydro's bad all
through. We'll have to dump and restock. Give you a voucher on Terra for the
stuff."
The Eysie agent continued to block the
doorway into the station. "This is private—I-S property. You should hit
the Patrol post—they -cater to you F-Ts."
"We hit the nearest E-Stat when we,
discovered that we were contaminated," Rip spoke with an assumption of
patience. "That's the law, and you know it. You have to supply us and
take a voucher—"
"How
do I know that your voucher is worth the film it's recorded on?" asked the
agent reasonably.
"All right," Rip shrugged. "If we have to do it the hard way, well cargo dump to cover
your bill."
"Not
on this field." The other shook his head. "Ill
flash in your voucher first."
He
had them, Dane thought bitterly. Their luck had run out. Because what he was
going to do was a move they dared not protest. It was one any canny agent would
make in the present situation. And if they were what they said they were, they
must readily agree to let him flash their voucher of payment to I-S
headquarters, to be checked and okayed before they
took the hydro stock.
But Rip merely registered a mild resignation.
"You the Com-tech? Where's your unit? I'll indit
at once if you want it that way."
Whether their readiness to co-operate allayed
some of the agent's suspicion or not, he relaxed some, giving them one more
stare all around before he turned on his heel. "This
way."
They
followed him down the narrow hall, Rip on his heels, the others behind.
"Lonely post," Rip commented.
"I'd think you boys'd get space-whirly out here."
The other snorted. "We're not star
lovers. And the pay's worth a three month stretch. They take us down for Terra
leave before we start talking to the Whisperers."
"How
many of you here at a time?" Rip edged the question in casually.
But
the other might have been expecting it by the way he avoided giving a direct answer.
"Enough to run the place— and not enough to help you clean out your
wagon," he was short about it. "Any dumping you do is strictly on
your own. You've enough hands on a spacer that size to manage—"
Rip
laughed. "Far be it from me to ask an Eysie to do any real work," was
his counter. "We know all about you Company men—"
But the agent did not take fire at that jib.
Instead he pushed back a panel and they were looking into corn-unit room where
another man in the tunic of the I-S lounged on what was by law twenty-four hour
duty, divided into three watches.
"These F-Ts want to flash a voucher
request through," their guide informed the tech. The other, interested,
gave them a searching once-over before he pushed a small scriber toward Rip.
"It's all yours—clear ether," he
reported.
Ah
stood with his back to the wall and Dane still lingered in the portal. Both of
them fixed their attention on Rip's left hand. If he gave the agreed upon
signal! Their fingers were linked loosely in their belts only an inch or so
from their sleep rods.
With
his right hand Rip scooped up the scribbler while the Com-tech half turned to
make adjustments to the controls, picking up a speaker to call the I-S
headquarters.
Rip's
left index finger snapped across his thumb to form a circle. Ali's rod did not
even leave his belt, it tilted up and the invisible deadening stream from it
centered upon the seated tech. At the same instant Dane shot at the agent who
had guided them there. The latter had time for a surprised grunt and his hand
was at his blaster as he sagged to his knees and then relaxed on the floor. The
Tech slumped across the call board as if sleep had overtaken him at his post.
Rip
crossed the room and snapped off the switch which opened the wire for
broadcasting. While Ali, with Dane's help, quietly and
effectively immobilized the Eysies with their own belts.
"There
should be at least three men here," Rip waited by the door. "We have
to get them all under control before we start work."
However,
the interior of the bubble, extending as it did on levels beneath the outer
crust of the asteroid, was not an easy place to search. An enemy, warned of the
invasion, could easily keep ahead of the party from the Queen, spying on them
at his leisure or preparing traps for them. In the end, afraid of wasting time,
they contented themselves with locking the doors of the corridor leading to
the'lower levels, making ready to raid the storeroom they had discovered during
their search.
Emergency hydro supplies consisted mainly of
algae which could be stored in tanks and hastily put to use—as the plants now
in the Queen took much longer to grow even under forcing methods. Dane
volunteered to remain inside the E-Stat and assemble the necessary containers
at the air lock while the other two, having had more experience, went baclc to
the spacer to strip the hydro and prepare to switch contents.
But,
when Rip and Ali left, the younger Cargo-apprentice began to find the bubble a
haunted place. He took the sealed containers out of their storage racks, stood
them on a small hand truck, and pushed them to the foot of the stairs, up which
he then climbed carrying two of the cylinders at a time.
The swish of the air current through the
narrow corridors made a constant murmur of sound, but he found himself
listening for something else, for a footfall other than his own, for the
betraying rasp of clothing against a wall—for even a whisper of voice. And time
and time again he paused suddenly to listen—sure that the faintest hint of
such a sound had reached his ears. He had a dozen containers lined up when the
welcome signal reache_d him by the con-unit of his field helmet. To transfer
the cylinders to the lock, get out, and then open the outer door, did not take
long. But as he waited he still listened for a sound which did not come— the
notice that someone besides himself was free to move about the Stat.
Not
knowing just how many of the supply tins were needed, he worked on
transferring all there were in the storage racks to the upper corridor and the
lock. But he still had half a dozen left to pass through when Rip sent a message
that he was coming in.
Out
of his pressure suit, the Astrogator-apprentice stepped lightly into the
corridor, loolced at the array of containers and shook his head.
"We don't need all those. No, leave
them—" he added as Dane, with a sigh, started to pick up two for a return
trip. "There's something more important just now—" He turned into the
side hall which led to the com room.
Both
the I-S men had awakened. The Com-tech appeared to accept his bonds
philosophically. He was quiet and flat on his back, staring pensively at the
ceiling. But the other agent had made a worm's progress half across the room
and Rip had to halt in haste to prevent stepping on him.
Shannon
stooped and, hooking his fingers in the other's tunic, heaved him back while
the helpless man favored them with some of the ripest speech—and NOT Trade
Lingo—Dane had ever heard. Rip waited until the man began to run down and then
he broke in with his pleasant soft drawl.
"Oh,
sure, we're all that. But time runs on, Eysie, and I'd like a couple of answers
which may mean something to you. First—when do you expect your relief?"
That
set the agent off again. And his remarks—edited— were that no something,
something F-T was going'to get any something,
something information out of him!
But
it was his companion in misfortune—the Com-tech— who guessed the reason behind
Rip's question.
"Cut jetsl" he advised the other.
"They're just being softhearted. I take it," he spoke over the other
agent's sputtering to Rip, "that you're worried about leaving us fin down—That's it, isn't it?"
Rip
nodded. "In spite of what you think about us," he replied,
"We're not Patrol Posted outlaws—"
"No, you're just from a plague
ship," the Com-tech remarked calmly. And his words struck his comrade
dumb; "Solar Queen?"
"You got the wam-off then?"
"Who
didn't? You really have plague on board?" The
thought did not appear to alarm the Com-tech unduly. But his fellow suddenly
heaved his bound body some distance away from the Free Traders and his face
displayed mixed emotions—most of them fearful.
"We have something—probably
supplied," Rip straightened. "Might pass along to
your bosses that we know that. Now suppose you tell me about your
relief. When is it due?"
"Not
until after we take off on the Long Orbit if you leave us like this. On the
other hand," the other added coolly, "I don't see how you can do
otherwise. We've still got those—" with his chin he pointed to the
corn-unit.
"After a few alterations," Rip
amended. The bulk of the com was in a tightly sealed case which they would need
a flamer to open. But he could and did wreck havoc with the exposed portions.
The tech watching this destruction spouted at least two expressions his
companion had not used. But when Rip finished he was his unruffled self again.
.
"Now,"
Rip drew his sleep rod. "A little rest and when you wake it will all be a
bad dream.". He carefully beamed each man into
slumber and helped Dane strip off their bonds. But before he left the room he
placed on 4he recorder the voucher for the supplies they had taken. The Queen
was not stealing—under~the law she still had some shadow of rights.
Suited they crossed the rough rock to the
ship. And there about the fins, already frozen into brittle spikes was a tangle
of plants—the rich result of years of collecting.
"Did
you find anything?" Dane asked as they rounded that mess on their way to
the ladder.
Rip's
voice came back through the helmet com. "Nothing we know how to interpret.
I wish Frank or Craig had had a chance to check. We took tri-dees of everything
before we dumped. Maybe they can learn something from these when—"
His voice trailed off leaving that
"when" to ring in both their minds. It was such an important
"when." When would
either the steward or the
Medic recover enough to view those tri-dee shots? Or was that "when"
really an ominous "if?"
Back
in the Queen, sealed once more for blast-off, they took their stations. Dane
speculated as to the course Rip had set—were they just going to wander about
the system hoping to escape notice until they had somehow solved their problem?
Or did Shannon have some definite port in mind? He did not have time to ask
before they lifted. But once they were space borne again he voiced his
question.
Rip's face was serious. "Frankly—"
he began and then hesitated for a long moment before he added, "I don't
know. If we can only get the Captain or Craig on their feet again—"
"One thing," Ali materialized to
join them, "Sinbad's back in the hydro. And this, morning you couldn't get
him inside the door. It's not a very good piece of evidence—"
No,
it wasn't but they clung to it as backing for their actions of the past few
hours. The cat that had shown such a marked distaste for the company of the
stricken, and then for the hydro, was now content to visit the latter as if
some evil he has sensed there had been cleansed with the dumping of the garden.
They had not yet solved their mystery but another clue had come into their
hands.
But now the care of the sick occupied hours
and Rip insisted that a watch be maintained by the com—listening in for news
which might concern the Queen. They had done a good job at silencing the
E-Stat, for they had been almost six hours in space before the news of their
raid was beamed to the nearest Patrol post.
Ali laughed. "Told you
we'd be pirates," he said when he listened to that account of their
descent upon the I-S station. "Though I didn't see all that blaster work
they're now raving about. You'd think we fought a major battle there!"
Weeks
growled. "The Eysies are trying to make it look good. Make us into
outiaws—"
But Rip did not share in the general
amusement at the wild extravagation of the report from the ether. "I
notice they didn't say anything about the voucher we left."
Ali's cynical smile curled. "Did you
expect them to? The Eysies think they have us by the tail fins now—why should
they give us any benefit of the doubt? We junked all our boosters behind us on
this take-off, and don't forget that, my friends."
Weeks looked confused. "But I thought
you said we could do this legal," he appealed to Rip. "If we're
Patrol Posted as oudaws—"
"They can't do any more to us than they
can for running in a plague ship," Ali pointed out. "Either will get
us blasted if we happen into the wrong vector now. So—what do we do?"
"We
find out what the plague really is," Dane said and meant every word of it.
"How?" Ali inquired. "Through
some of Craig's magic?"
Dane
was forced to answer with the truth. "I don't know yet—but it's our only
chance."
Rip
rubbed his eyes wearily. "Don't think I'm disagreeing —but just where do
we start? We've already combed Frank's quarters and Kosti's—we cleaned out the
hydro—"
"Those
tri-dee shots of the hydro—have you checked them yet?" Dane countered.
Without a word Ali arose and left the cabin.
He came back with a microfilm roll. Fitting it into the large projector he
focused it on the wall and snapped the button.
They
were looking at the hydro—down the length of space so accurately recorded that
it seemed they might walk straight into it. The greenery of the plants was so
vivid and alive Dane felt that he could reach out and
pluck a leaf. Inch by inch he examined those ranks, looking for something which
was not in order, had no right to be there.
The
long shot of the hydro as it had been merged into a series of sectional groupings. In silence
they studied it intently, using all their field lore in an attempt to spot
what each one was certain must be there somewhere. But they were all
handicapped by their lack of intimate, knowledge of the garden.
"Wait!"
Weeks' voice scaled up. "Left hand comer— therel" His pointing hand
broke and shadowed the portion he was calling to their attention. Ali jumped to
the projector and made a quick adjustment.
Plants
four and five times life size glowed green on the wall. What Weeks had caught
they all saw now—ragged leaves, stripped stems.
"Chewed!" Dane supplied the answer.
It was only one species of plant which had
been so mangled. Other varieties in the same bank showed no signs of
disturbance. But all of that one type had at least one stripped branch and two
were virtual skeletons.
"A pestl" said Rip.
"But Sinbad," Dane began a protest before the memory of the cat's peculiar actions of the past
weeks stopped him. Sinbad had slipped up, the hunter who had kept the Queen
free of the outre alien life which came aboard from time to time with cargo,
had not attacked that which had ravaged the hydro plants. Or if he had done so,
he had not, after his usual custom, presented the bodies of the slain to any
crew member.
"It looks as if we have something at
last," Ali observed and someone echoed that with a sigh of heartdeep
relief.
Chapter XII
STRANGE BEHAVIOR OF A
HOOBAT
"All bight,
so we think we know a
little more," Ali added
a moment later. "Just what are we going to do? We can't
stay in space forever—there're the small items of fuel and
supplies and—" -
Rip had come to a decision. "We're not
going to remain space borne," he stated with the confidence of one who now
saw an open road before him.
"Luna—" Weeks was
plainly doubtful.
"No. Not after that warn-off.
Terral"
For a second or two the other three stared at
Rip agape. The audacity and danger of what he suggested was a little stunning.
Since men had taken regularly to space no ship had made a direct landing on
their home planet—all had passed through the quarantine on Luna. It was not
only risky —it was so- unheard of that for some minutes they did not understand
him.
"We
try to set down at Terraport," Dane found his tongue first, "and they
flame us out—"
Rip was smiling. "The trouble with
you," he addressed them all, "is that you think of earth only in
terms of Terra-port—"
"Well, there is the Patrol field at
Stella," Weeks agreed doubtfully. "But we'd be right in the middle of
trouble there—"
"Did
we have a regular port on Sargol—on Limbo—on fifty others I can name out of our
log?" Rip wanted to know.
Ali voiced a new objection. "So—we have
the luck of Jones and we set down somewhere out of sight. Then what do we
do?"
"We seal ship until we find the
pest—then we bring in a Medic and get to the bottom of the whole thing,"
Rip's con-
fidence was
contagious. Dane almost believed that it could be
done that way.
"Did
you ever think," Ali cut in, "what would happen if we were wrong—if
the Queen really is a plague carrier?"
"I
said—we seal the ship—tight," countered Shannon. "And when we earth
itll be where we won't have visitors to infect—"
"And that is where?" Ali, who knew
the deserts of Mars better than he did the greener planet from which his stock
had sprung, pursued the question.
"Right in the middle of the Big
Burn!"
Dane, Terra bom and bred, realized first what
Rip was planning and what it meant. Sealed off was right—the Queen would be
amply protected from investigation. Whether her crew would survive was another
matter—whether she could even make a landing there was also to be considered.
The
Big Bum was the horrible scar left by the last of the Atomic Wars—a section of
radiation poisoned land comprising hundreds of square miles—land which
generations had never dared to penetrate. Originally the survivors of that war
had shunned the whole continent which it disfigured. It had been close to two
centuries before men had gone into the still wholesome land laying to the far
west and the south. And, through the years, the avoidance of the Big Bum had
become part of their racial instinct so they shrank from it. It was a symbol of
something no Terran wanted to remember.
But Ali now had only one question to ask.
"Can we do it?"
"We'll never know until we try,"
was Rip's reply.
"The
PatrolTl be watching—" that was Weeks. With his Venusian background he had
less respect for the dangers of the Big Bum than he did for the forces of Law
and order which ranged the star lanes.
"They'll be watching the routine
lanes," Rip pointed out. "They won't expect a ship to come in on that
vector, steering1 away from the ports. Why should they? As far as I
know it's never been tried since Terraport was laid out. It'll be tricky—"
And he himself would have to bear most of the responsibility for it. "But
I believe that it can be done. And we can't just roam around out here. With I-S
out for our blood and a Patrol warn-off it won't do us any good to head for
Luna—"
None
of his listeners could argue with that. And, Dane's spirits began to rise,
after all they knew so little about the Big Bum—it might afford them just the
temporary sanctuary they needed. In the end they agreed to try it, mainly
because none of them could see any alternative, except the too dangerous one
of trying to contact the authorities and being summarily treated as a plague
ship before they could defend themselves.
And their decision was ably endorsed not long
afterwards by a sardonic warning on the com—a warning which AH who had been
tending the machine passed along to them.
"Greetings, pirates—"
"What
do you mean?" Dane was heating broth to feed to Captain Jellieo.
"The
word has gone out—our raid on the E-Stat is now a. matter of history and Patrol record—we've
been Posted!"
Dane felt a cold finger drawn along his
backbone. Now they were fair game for the whole system. Any Patrol ship that
wanted could shoot them down with no questions asked. Of course that had always
been a possibility from the first after their raid on the E-Stat. But to
realize that it was now true was a different matter altogether. This was one
occasion when realization was worse than anticipation. He tried to keep his
voice level as he answered:
"Let us hope we can pull off Rip's
plan—"
"We'd
better. What about the Big Bum anyway, Thorson? Is it as tough as the stories
say?"
"We don't know what it's like. It's
never been explored— or at least those who tried to explore its interior never
reported in afterwards. As far as I know it's left strictly alone."
"Is it still all 'hot'?"
"Parts of it must be. But all—we don't
know." ' With the bottle of
soup in his hand Dane climbed to Jellico's cabin. And he was so occupied with
the problem at hand that at first he did not see what was happening in the '
small room. He had braced the Captain up into a half-sitting position and was
patiently ladling the liquid into his mouth a spoonful at a time when a thin
squeak drew his attention to the top of Jellico's desk.
From the half open fid of a microtape
compartment something long and dark projected, beating the air feebly. Dane,
easing the Captain back on the bunk, was going to investigate when the Hoobat
broke its unnatural quiet of the past few days with an ear-splitting screech of
fury. Dane struck at the bottom of its cage—the move its master always used to
silence it— But this time the results were spectacular.
The cage bounced up and down on the spring
which secured it to the ceiling of the cabin and the blue feathered horror
slammed against the wires. Either its clawing had weakened them, or some fault
had developed, for they parted and the Hoobat came through them to land with a
sullen plop on the desk. Its screams stopped as suddenly as they had begun and
it scuttled on its spider-toad legs to the microtape compartment, acting with
purposeful dispatch and paying no attention to Dane.
Its claws shot out and with ease it extracted
from the compartment a creature as Weird as itself—one which came fighting and
of which Dane could not get a very clear idea. Struggling they battled across
the surface of the desk and flopped to the floor. There the hunted broke loose
from the hunter and fled with fantastic speed into, the corridor. And before
Dane could move the Hoobat was after it.
He gained the passage just in time to see
Queex disappear down the ladder, climbing with the aid of its pincher claws,
apparently grimly determined to catch up with the thing it pursued. And Dane
went after them.
There
was. no sign of the creature who fled on the next
level. But Dane made no move to recapture the blue hunter who squatted at the
foot of the ladder staring unblinkingly into space. Dane waited, afraid to
disturb the Hoobat. He had not had a good look at the thing which had run from
Queex—but he knew that it was something which had no business aboard the Queen.
And it might be the disturbing factor they were searching for. If the Hoobat
would only lead him to it—
The
Hoobat moved, rearing up on the tips of its six legs, its neckless head slowly
revolving on its puffy shoulders. Along the ridge of its backbone its blue
feathers were rising into a crest much as Sinbad's fur rose when the cat was
afraid or angry. Then, without any sign of haste, it crawled over and began descending
the ladder once more, heading toward the lower section which housed the Hydro.
Dane
remained where he was until it had almost reached the deck of the next level
and then he followed, one step at a time. He was sure
that the Hoobat's peculiar construction of body prevented it from looking
up—unless it turned upon its back—but he did not want to do anything which
would alarm it or deter Queex from what he was sure was a methodical chase.
Queex stopped again at the foot of the second
descent and sat in its toad stance, apparently brooding, a
round blue blot. Dane clung to the ladder and prayed that no one would happen
along to frighten it. Then, just as he was beginning to wonder if it had lost
contact with its prey, once more it arose and with the same speed it had
displayed in the Captain's cabin it shot along the corridor to the hydro.
To Dane's knowledge the door of the garden
was not only shut but sealed. And how either the stranger or Queex could get
through it he did not see.
"What the—?" Ali clattered down the ladder to halt abruptly as Dane waved at him.
"Queex," the Cargo-apprentice kept
his voice to a half whisper, "it got loose and chased something out of the
Old Man's cabin down here."
"Queex—I" Ali began and then shut
his mouth, moving noiselessly up to join Dane. '
The short corridor ended at the hydro
entrance. And Dane had been right, there they found the Hoobat, crouched at the
closed panel, its claws clicking against the metal as it picked away uselessly
at the portal which would not admit it.
"What ever it's after must be in
there," Dane said softly.
And the hydro, stripped of its luxuriance of
plant life, occupied now by the tanks of green scum, would not afford too many
hiding places. They had only to let Queex in and keep watch.
As
they came up the Hoobat flattened to the floor and shrilled its war cry,
spitting at their boots and then flashing claws against the stout metal
enforced hide. However, though it was prepared to fight them, it showed no signs of wishing to retreat, and for that Dane was thankful.
He quickly pressed the release and tugged open the panel.
At the first crack of its opening Queex
turned with one of those bursts of astounding speed and clawed for admittance,, its protest against the men forgotten. And it squeezed
through a space Dane would have thought too narrow to accommodate its bloated
body. Both men slipped around the door behind it and closed the panel tight.
The
air was not as fresh as it had been when the plants were there. And the vats
which had taken the places of the banked greenery were certainly nothing to
look at. Queex humped itself into a clod of blue, immovable, halfway down the
aisle.
Dane tried to subdue his breathing, to
listen. The Hoobat's actions certainly argued that the alien thing had taken
refuge here, though how it had gotten through—? But if it were in the hydro it
was well hidden.
He
had just begun to wonder how long they must wait when Queex again went into
action. Its clawed front legs upraised, it brought the pinchers deliberately
together and sawed one across the other, producing a rasping sound which was
almost a vibration in the air. Back and forth, back and
forth, moved the claws. Watching them produced almost a hypnotic affect,
and the reason for such a maneuver was totally beyond the human watchers.
But Queex knew what it was doing all right,
Ali's fingers closed on Dane's arm in a pincher grip as painful as if he had
been equipped with the homy armament of the Hoobat.
Something,
a flitting shadow, had rounded one vat and was that much closer to the
industrious fiddler on the floor. By some weird magic of its own the Hoobat was
calling its prey to it.
Scrape,
scrape—the unmusical performance continued with monotonous regularity. Again
the shadow flashed—one vat closer. The Hoobat now presented the appearance of
one charmed by its own art—sunk in a lethargy of weird
music making.
At last the enchanted came into full view,
though lingering at the round side of a container, very apparently longing to
flee again, but under some compulsion to approach its enchanter. Dane blinked,
not quite sure that his eyes were not playing tricks on him. He had seen the
almost transparent globe "bogies" of Limbo, had been fascinated by
the weird and ugly pictures in Captain Jellico's collection of tri-dee prints.
But this creature was as impossible in its way as the horrific blue thing
dragging it out of concealment.
It walked erect on two threads of legs, with
four knobby joints easily detected. A bulging abdomen sheathed in the horny
substance of a beetle's shell ended in a sharp point. Two pairs of small legs,
folded close to the much smaller upper portion of its body, were equipped with
thorn sharp terminations. The head, which constantly turned back and forth on
the armor plated shoulders, was long and narrow and split for half its length
by a mouth above which were deep pits which must harbor eyes, though actual
organs were not visible to the watching men. It was a palish "gray in
color—which surprised Dane a little. His memory of the few seconds he had seen
it on the Captain's desk had suggested that it was much darker. And erect as
it was, it stood about eighteen inches high.
With head turning rapidly, it still hesitated
by the side of the vat, so nearly the color of the metal that unless it moved
it was difficult to distinguish. As far as Dane could see the Hoobat was paying
it no attention. Queex might be lost in a happy dream, the result of its own
fiddling. Nor did the rhythm of that scrapping vary.
The nightmare thing made the last foot in a
rush of speed which reduced it to a blur, coming to a halt before the Hoobat.
Its front legs whipped out to strike at its enemy. But Queex was no longer
dreaming. This was the moment the Hoobat had been awaiting. One.of^the
sawing claws opened and closed, separating the head of the lurker from its
body. And before either of the men could interfere
Queex had dismembered the prey with dispatch.
"Look there!"
Dane pointed.
The Hoobat held close the body of the
stranger and where the ashy corpse came into contact with Queex's blue feathered
skin it was slowly changing hue—as if some of the color of its hunter had
rubbed off on it.
"Chameleon!" Ali went down on one knee the better to view
the grisly feast now in progress. "Watch out!" he added sharply as
Dane came to join him.
One of the thin upper limbs lay where Queex
had discarded it. And from the needle tip was oozing some colorless drops of
fluid. Poison?
Dane
looked around for something which he could use to pick up the still jerking
appendage. But before he could find anything Queex had appropriated it. And in
the end they had to allow the Hoobat its victim in its entirety. But once Queex
had consumed its prey it lapsed into its usual hunched immobility. Dane went
for the cage and working gingerly he and Ali got the creature back in
captivity. But all the evidence now left were some smears on the floor of the
hydro, smears which Ali blotted up for future research in the lab.
An
hour later the four who now comprised the crew of the Queen gathered in the
mess for a conference. Queex was in its cage on the table before them, asleep
after all its untoward activity.
PLAGUE
SHIP
121
"There must be more than just one,"
Weeks said. "But how are we going to hunt them down? With
Sinbad?"
Dane shook his head. Once the Hoobat had been
caged and the more prominent evidence of the batde scrapped from the floor, he
had brought the cat into the hydro and forced him to sniff at the site of the
engagement. The result was that Sinbad had gone raving mad and Dane's hands
were now covered with claw tears which ran viciously deep. It was plain that
the ship's cat was having none of the intruders, alive or dead. He had fled to
Dane's cabin where he had taken refuge on the bunk and snarled wild eyed when
anyone looked in from the corridor.
"Queex has to do it," Rip said.
"But will it hunt unless it is hungry?"
He
surveyed the now comatose creature skeptically. They had never seen the
Captain's pet eat anything except some pellets which Jellico kept in his desk,
and they were aware that the intervals between such feedings were quite
lengthy. If they had to wait the usual time for Queex to feel hunger pangs once
more, they might have' to wait a long time.
"We
should catch one alive," AH remarked thoughtfully. "If we could get
Queex to fiddle it out to where we could net it—"
Weeks nodded eagerly. "A small net like
those the Sala-riki use. Drop it over the thing—"
While Queex still drowsed in its cage, Weeks
went to work with fine cord. Holding the color changing abilities of the enemy
in mind they could not tell how many of the creatures might be roaming the
ship. It could only be proved where they weren't by
where Sinbad would consent to stay. So they made plans which included both the
cat and the Hoobat.
Sinbad, much against his will, was buckled
into an improvised harness by which he could be controlled without the handler
losing too much valuable skin.
And then the hunt started at the top of the
ship, proceeding downward section by section. Sinbad raised no protest
in the
control cabin, nor in the private cabins of the officers' thereabouts. If they
could interpret his reactions the center section was free of the invaders. So
with Dane in control of the cat and Ali carrying the caged Hoobat, they
descended once more to the level which housed the hydro galley, steward's
quarters and ship's sick bay.
Sinbad
proceeded on his own four feet into the galley and the mess. He was not uneasy
in the sick bay, nor in Mura's cabin, and this time he even paced the hydro
without being dragged—much to their surprise as they had thought that the
headquarters of the stowaways.
"Could
there only have been one?" Weeks wanted to know as he stood by ready with
the net in his hands.
"Either
that—or else we're wrong about the hydro being their main hideout. If they're
afraid of Queex now they may have withdrawn to the place they feel the
safest," Rip said.
It was when they were on the ladder leading
to the cargo level that Sinbad balked. He planted himself firmly and yowled
against further progress until Dane, with the harness, pulled him along.
"Look at Queex!"
They followed Weeks' order. The Hoobat was no
longer lethargic. It was raising itself, leaning forward to clasp the bars of
its cage, and now it uttered one of its screams of rage. And as Ali went on
down the ladder it rattled the bars in a determined effort for freedom. Sinbad,
spitting and yowling refused to walk.,Rip nodded to
Ali.
"Let it out."
Tipped out of its cage the Hoobat scuttled
forward, straight for the panel which opened on the large cargo space and . there waited, as if for them to open the portal and admit
the hunter to its hunting territory.
Chapter XIII
OFF THE MAP
Across the lock of the panel was the seal set in place by Van
Rycke before the spacer had lifted from Sargol. Under Dane's inspection it
showed no crack. To all evidences the hatch had not been opened since they left
the perfumed planet. And yet the hunting Hoobat was sure that the invading
pests were within.
It
took only a second for Dane to commit an act which, if he could not defend it
later, would blacklist him out of space. He twisted off the official seal which
should remain there while the freighter was space borne.
With
Ali's help he shouldered aside the heavy sliding panel and they looked into the
cargo space, now filled with the red wood from Sarbol. The red wood! When he
saw it Dane was struck with their stupidity. Aside from the Koros stones in the
stone box, only the wood had come from the Salariki world. What if the pests
had not been planted by I-S agents, but were natives of Sargol being brought in
with the wood?
The
men remained at the hatch to allow the Hoobat freedom in its hunt. And Sinbad
crouched behind them, snarling and giving voice to a rumbling growl which was
his negative opinion of the proceedings.
They
were conscious of an odor—the sharp, unidentifiable-scent Dane had noticed
during the loading of the wood. It was not unpleasant—merely different. And
it—or something-had, an electrifying effect upon
Queex. The blue hunter climbed-with the aid of its claws to the top of the
nearest pile of wood and there settled down. For a space it was apparently
contemplating the area about it.
Then
it raised its claws and began the scrapping fiddle which once before had drawn
its prey out of hiding. Oddly enough that dry rasp of sound had a quieting
effect upon
Sinbad
and Dane felt the drag of the harness lessen as the cat moved, not toward
escape, but to the scene of action, humping himself at last in the open panel,
his round eyes fixed upon the Hoobat with a fascinated stare.
Scrape-scrape—the
monotonous noise bit into the ears of the men, gnawed at their nerves.
"Ahhh—"
Ali kept his voice to a whisper, but his hand jerked to draw their attention to
the right at deck level. Dane saw that flicker along a log. The stowaway pest
was now the same brilliant color as the wood, indistinguishable until it .moved,
which probably explained how it had come on board.
But that was only the first arrival. A second flash of move-
ment and a third followed. Then the hunted remained sta-
tionary, able to resist for a period the insidious summoning
of Queex. The Hoobat maintained an attitude of indiffer-
ence, of being so wrapped in its music that nothing else
existed. Rip whispered to Weeks: ,
"There's
one to the left—on the very end of that log. Can you net it?"
The
small oiler slipped the coiled mesh through his calloused hands. He edged
around Ali, keeping his eyes on the protruding bump of red upon red which was
his quarry.
"—two—three—four—five—"
Ali was counting under his breath but Dane could not see that many. He was sure
of only four, and those because he had seen them move.
The
things were ringing in the pile of wood where the Hoobat fiddled, and two had
ascended the first logs toward their doom. Weeks went down on one knee, ready
to cast his net, when Dane had his first inspiration. He drew his sleep rod,
easing it out of its holster, set the lever on "spray" and beamed it
at three of those humps.
Rip
seeing what he was doing, dropped a hand on Weeks' shoulder, holding the oiler
in check. A hump moved, slide down the rounded side of the log into the narrow
aisle of deck between two piles of wood. It lay quiet, a bright scarlet blot
against the gray.
Then Weeks did move, throwing his net over it
and jerking the draw string tight, at the same time pulling the captive toward
him over the deck. But, even as it came, the scarlet of the thing's body was
fast fading to an ashy pink and at last taking on a gray as dull as the metal
on which it lay— the complete camouflage. Had they not
had it enmeshed they might have lost it altogether, so well did it now blend
with the surface.
The other two in the path of the ray had not
lost their grip upon the logs, and the men could not advance to scoop them up.
Not while there were others not affected, free to flee back into hiding. Weeks
bound the net about the captive and looked to Rip for
orders.
"Deep freeze," the acting-commander
of the Queen said succinctly. "Let me see it get out of thatl"
Surely
the cold of the deep freeze, united to the sleep ray, would keep the creature
under control until they had a chance to study it. But, as Weeks passed Sinbad
on his errand, the cat was so frantic to avoid him, that
he reared up on his hind legs, almost turning a somersault, snarling and
spitting until Weeks was up the ladder to the next level. It was very evident
that the ship's cat was having none of this pest;
They might have been invisible and their actions nonexistent as far as Queex was concerned. For the
Hoobat continued its siren concert. The lured became more reckless, mounting
the logs to Queex's post in sudden darts. Dane wondered haw the Hoobat proposed
handling four of the creatures at once. For, although the other two which had
been in the path of the ray had not moved, he now counted four climbing.
"Stand by to
ray—" that was Rip.
But it would have been interesting to see how
Queex was
prepared to handle the
four. And, though Rip had given the order to stand by, he had not ordered the
ray to be used. Was he, too, interested in'that?
The
first red projection was within a foot of the Hoobat now and its fellows had
frozen as if to allow it the honor of battle with the feathered enemy. To all
appearances Queex did not see it, but when it sprang with a whir of speed which
would baffle a human, the Hoobat was ready and its claws, halting their rasp,
met around the wasp-thin waist of the pest, speedily cutting it in two. Only
this time the Hoobat made no move to unjoint and consume the victim. Instead it
squatted in utter silence, as motionless as a tri-dee print.
The heavy lower half of the creature rolled
down the pile of logs to the deck and there paled to the gray of its background. None of its kind appeared to be interested
in its fate. The two which had been in the path of the ray, continued to be
humps on the wood, the others faced the Hoobat.
But
Rip was ready to waste no more time. "Ray them!" he snapped.
All
three of their sleep rods sprayed the pile, catching in passing the Hoobat.
Queex's pop eyes closed, but it showed no other sign of falling under the spell
of the beam.
Certain that all the creatures in sight were now relatively harmless,
the three approached the logs. But it was necessary to get into touching distance before they could
even make out the outlines of the nightmare things, so well did their
protective coloring conceal them. Wearing gloves Ali detached the little
monsters from their holds on the wood and put them for temporary
safekeeping—during a transfer to the deep freeze—into the Hoobat's cage. Queex,
they decided to leave where it was for a space, to awaken and trap any survivor
which had been too wary to emerge at the first siren song. As far as they could
tell the Hoobat was their only possible protection against the pest and to
leave it in the center of infection was the wisest course.
Having dumped the now metal colored catch
into the freeze, they held a conference.
"No plague—" Weeks breathed a sigh
of relief.
"No proof of that yet," Ali caught
him up short. "We have to prove it past any reasonable doubt." -
"And how are we going to do—?" Dane began when he saw what the other
had brought in from Tau's stores. A lancet and the upper half of the creature
Queex had killed in the cargo hold.
The
needle pointed front feet of the thing were curled ud
in its death throes and it
was now a dirty white shade as if the ability to change color had been lost
before it matched the cotton on which it lay. With the lancet Ali forced a claw
away from the body. It was oozing the watery liquid which they had seen on the
one in the hydro.
"I
have an idea," he said slowly, his eyes on the mangled creature rather
than on his shipmates, "that we might have escaped being attacked because
they sheered off from us. But if we were clawed we might take it too. Remember
those marks on the throats and backs of the rest? That might be the entry point
of this poison—if poison it is—"
Dane
could see the end of that line of reasoning. Rip and Ali—they couldn't be
spared. The knowledge they had would bring the Queen to earth. But a
Cargo-master was excess baggage when there was no reason for trade. It was his
place to try out the truth of Ali's surmise.
But while he thought another acted. Weeks leaned over and twitched the lancet
out of Ali's fingers. Then, before any of them could move, he thrust its
contaminated point into the back of his hand.
"Don't!"
Both Dane's cry and Rip's hand came too late.
It had been done. And Weeks sat there, looking alone and frightened, studying
the droop of blood which marked the dig of the surgeon's keen knife. But when
he spoke his voice sounded perfectly natural.
"Headache first, isn't it?"
Only Ali was outwardly unaffected by what the
little man had just done. "Just be sure you have a real one," he
warned with what Dane privately considered real callousness.
Weeks nodded. "Don't let my imagination
work," he answered shrewdly. "I know. It has to be real. How long do
you suppose?"
"We don't know," Rip sounded tired,
beaten. "Meanwhile," he got to his feet, "we'd better set a
course home—"
"Home,"
Weeks repeated. To him Terra was not his own home—he had been bom in the polar
swamps of Venus. But to all Solarians—no matter which planet had nurtured them
—Terra was home.
"You,"
Rip's big hand fell gently on the little, oiler's shoulder, "stay here
with Thorson—"
"No," Weeks shook his head.
"Unless I black out, I'm riding station in the engine room. Maybe the bug
won't work on me anyway."
And
because he had done what he had done they could not deny him the right to ride
his station as long as he could during the grueling hours to come.
Dane visited the cargo hold once more. To be
greeted by an irate scream which assured him that Queex was again awake and on
guard. Although the Hoobat was ready enough to give tongue, it still squatted
in its chosen position on top of the log stack and he did not try to dislodge
it. Perhaps with Queex planted in the enemies' territory they would have
nothing to fear from any pests not now confined in the deep freeze.
Rip set his course for Terra—for that plague
spot on their native world where they might hide out the Queen until they could
prove their point—that the spacer was not a disease ridden ship to be feared.
He kept to the control cabin, shifting only between the Astrogator's and the
pilot's station. Upon him alone rested the responsibility of bringing in the
ship along a vector which crossed no well traveled space lane where the Patrol
might challenge them. Dane rode out the orbiting in the Com-tech's seat,
listening in for the first warning of danger—that they had been detected.
The
mechanical repetition of their list of crimes was now stale news and largely
off-ether. And from all traces he could pick up, they were lost as far as the
authorities were concerned. On the other hand, the Patrol might indeed be as
far knowing as its. propaganda stated and the Queen was
running headlong into a trap. Only they had no choice in the matter.
It was the ship's inter-com bringing Ali's
voice from the engine room which broke the concentration in the control cabin.
"Weeks' downl"
Rip barked into the mike. "How
bad?"
"He
hasn't blacked out yet. The pains in his head are pretty bad and his hand is
swelling—"
"He's given us our proof. Tell him to
report.off—"
But the disembodied voice which answered that
was Weeks'.
"I haven't got it as
bad as the others. I'll ride this out."
Rip
shook his head. But short-handed as they were he could not argue Weeks away
from his post if the man insisted upon staying. He had other, and for the time
being, more important matters before him.
How
long they sweated out that descent upon their native world Dane could never
afterwards have testified. He only knew that hours must have passed, until he
thought groggily that he could not remember a time he was not glued in the seat
which had been Tang's, the earphones pressing against his sweating skull, his
fatigue-drugged mind being held with difficulty to the duty at hand.
Sometime during that haze they made their
landing. He had a dim memory of Rip sprawled across the pilot's control board
and then utter exhaustion claimed him also and the darkness closed in. When he
roused it was to look about a cabin tilted to one side. Rip was still slumped
in a muscle cramping posture, breathing heavily. Dane bit out a forceful word
born of twinges of his own, and then snapped on the visa-plate.
For a long moment he was sure that he was not
yet awake. And then, as his dazed mind supplied names for what he saw, he knew
that Rip had failed. Far from being in the center—or
at least well within the perimeter of the dread Big Burn—they must have landed
in some civic park or national- forest. For the massed green outside, the
bright flowers, the bird he sighted as a brilliant flash of wind coasting
color—those were not to be found in the twisted horror left by man's last
attempt to impress his will upon his resisting kind.
Well, it had been a good try, but there was
no use expecting luck to ride their fins all the way, and they had had more
than their share in the E-Stat affair. How long would it be before the Law
arrived to collect them? Would they have time to state their case?
The
faint hope that they might aroused him. He reached for the com key and a second
later tore the headphones from his appalled ears. The crackle of static he
knew—and the numerous strange noises which broke in upon the lanes of
communication in space—but this solid, paralyzing roar was something totally
new—new, and frightening.
And
because it was new and he could not account for it, he turned back to regard
the scene on the viewer with a more critical eye. The foliage which grew in
riotous profusion was green right enough, and Terra green into the
bargain—there was no mistaking that. But—Dane caught at the edge of the
Corn-unit for support. But—What was that liver-red
blossom which had just reached out to engulf a small flying thing?
Feverishly
he tried to remember the little natural history he knew. Sure that what he had
just witnessed was unnatural—un-Terran—and to be suspect!
He started the spy lens on its slow
revolution in the Queen's nose, to get a full picture of their immediate
surroundings. It was tilted at an angle—apparently they had not made a fin-point landing this time—and sometimes it merely reflected
slices of sky. But when it swept earthward he saw enough to make him believe
that wherever the spacer had set down it was not on the Terra he knew.
Subconsciously he had expected the Big Bum to
be barren land—curdled rock with rivers of frozen quartz, substances boiled up
through the crust of the planet by the action of the atomic explosives. That
was the way it had been on Limbo— on the other "burned-off" worlds
they had discovered where those who had preceded mankind into the Galaxy—the
mysterious, long vanished "Forerunners"—had fought their grim and
totally annihilating wars.
But
it would seem that the Big Burn was altogether different—at least here it was.
There was no rock sterile of life outside—in fact there would appear to be too
much life. What Dane could sight on his limited field of vision was a teeming
jungle. And the thrill of that discovery almost made him forget their present
circumstances. He was still staring bemused at the screen when Rip muttered,
turned his head on his folded arms and opened his sunken eyes:
"Did we make it?"
he asked dully.
Dane,
not taking his eyes from that fascinating scene without, answered: "You
brought us down. But I don't know where—"
"Unless our instruments were 'way off,
we're near to the heart of the Bum." "Some
heart!"
"What
does it look like?" Rip sounded too tired to cross the cabin and see for
himself. "Barren as Limbo?"
"Hardly! Rip, did you ever see a tomato as big as a melon —At least it looks
like a tomato," Dane halted the spy lens as it focused upon this new phenomena.
"A what?" There was a note of concern in Shannon's voice. "What's the matter
with you, Dane?"
"Come
and see," Dane 'willingly yielded his place to Rip but he did not step out
of range of the screen. Surely that did have the likeness to a good, old
fashioned earthside tomato— but it was melon size and it hung from a bush which
was close to a ten foot tree!
Rip
stumbled across to drop into the Com-tech's place. But his expression of worry
changed to one of simple astonishment as he saw that picture.
"Where are we?"
"You
name it," Dane had had longer to adjust, the excitement of an explorer
sighting virgin territory worked in his veins, banishing fatigue. "It must
be the Big Burn!"
"But," Rip shook his head slowly as
if with that gesture to deny the evidence before his eyes, "that country's
all bare rock. I've seen pictures—"
"Of
the outer rim," Dane corrected, having already solved that problem for
himself. "This must be farther in than any survey ship ever came. Great
Spirit of Outer Space, what has happened here?"
Rip
had enough technical training to know how to get part of the answer. He leaned
halfway across the com, and was able to flick down a lever with the very tip of
his longest finger. Instantly the cabin was filled with a clicking so loud as
to make an almost continuous drone of sound.
Dane
knew that danger signal, he didn't need Rip's words to
underline it for him.
"That's
what's happened. This country is pile "hot' out there I"
Chapter XIV
SPECIAL MISSION
That click, the dial beneath the counter, warned them
that they were as cut off from the luxuriance outside as if they were viewing a
scene on Mars or Sargol from their present position. To go beyond the shielding
walls of the spacer into that riotous green world would sentence them to death
as surely as if the Patrol was without, with a flamer trained on their hatch.
There was no escape from that radiation—it would be in the air one breathed,
strike through one's skin. And yet the wilderness flourished and beckoned.
"Mutations—"
Rip mused. "Space, Tau'd go wild if he could see it!"
And
that mention of the Medic brought them back to the problem which had earthed
them. Dane leaned back against the slanting wall of the cabin.
"We have to have a
Medic—"
Rip nodded without looking
away from the screen.
"Can one of the flitters be
shielded?" The Cargo-apprentice persisted.
"That's a thought! Ali should how—"
Rip reached for the inter-com mike. "Engines!"
"So
you are live?" Ali's voice had a bite in it. "About
time you're contacting. Where are we? Besides being lopsided from a recruit's
scrambled set-down, I mean."
"In the Big Bum. Come top-side. Wait—how's Weeks?"
"He
has a devil's own headache, but he hasn't blacked out yet. Looks
like his immunity holds in part. I've sent him bunkside for a while with
a couple of pain. pills. So we've made it—"
He
must have left to joirf'them for when Rip answered: "After a
fashion," into the mike there was no reply.
And
the clang of his boot plates on the ladder heralded his arrival at their post.
There was an interval for him to view the outer world and accept the verdict of
the counter and then Rip voiced Dane's question:
"Can
we shield one of the flitters well enough to cross that? I can't take the Queen
up and earth her again—"
"I
know you can't!" the acting-engineer cut in. "Maybe you could get her
off world, buf you'll come close to blasting out when you try for another
landing. Fuel doesn't go on forever—though some of you space jockeys seem to
think it does. The flitter? Well, we've some spare
rocket linings. But it's going to be a job and a half to get those beaten out
and reassembled. And, frankly, the space whirly one who flies her had better be
suited and praying loudly when he takes off. We can always try—" He was
frowning, already busied with the problem which was one for his department.
So with intervals of snatched sleep, hurried
meals, and the time which must be given to tending their unconscious charges,
Rip and Dane became only hands to be directed by Ali's brain and garnered
knowledge. Weeks slept off the worst of his pain and, though he complained of
weakness, he tottered back on duty to help.
The flitter—an air sled intended to hold
three men and supplies for exploring trips on strange worlds—was first stripped
of all non-essentials until what remained was not much more than the pilot's
seat and the motor. Then they labored to build up a shielding of the tough
radiation dulling alloy which was used to line rocket tubes. And they could
only praise the foresight of Stotz who carried such a full supply of spare
parts and tools. It was a task over which they often despaired, and Ali
improvised frantically, performing weird adjustments of engineering structure.
He was still unsatisfied when they had done.
"Shell
fly," he admitted. "And she's the best we can do. But it'll depend a
lot on how far she has to go over 'hot' country. Which way do we head her?"
Rip
had been busy with a map of Terra—a small thing he had discovered in one of
the' travel recordings carried for crew entertainment.
"The
Big Burn covers three quarters of this continent. There's no use going north—the
devastated area extends into the arctic regions. I'd say west—there's some fringe settlements on the sea coast and we
need to contact a frontier territory. Now do we have it straight—? I take the
flitter, get a Medic and bring him back—"
Dane
cut in at that point. "Correct course! You stay here. If the Queen has to
lift, you're the only one who can take her off world. And the
same's true fbr Ali. I can't ride out a blast-off in either the pilot's
or the engineer's seat. And Weeks is on the sick list. So I'm elected to do the
Medic hunting—"
They
were forced to agree to that. He was no hero, Dane thought, as he gave a last
glance about his cabin early the next morning. The small cubby, utilitarian and
bare as it was, never looked more inviting or secure. No, no hero, it was
merely a matter of Common sense. And although his imagination—that deeply
hidden imagination with which few of his fellows credited him—shrank from the
ordeal ahead, he had not the slightest intention of allowing that to deter him.
The
space suit, which had been bulky and clumsy enough on the E-Stat asteroid under
limited gravity, was almost twice as poorly adapted to progression on earth.
But he climbed into it with Rip's aid, while Ali lashed a second suit under the
seatAready to encase the man Dane must bring back with him. Before he closed he
helmet, Rip had one last order to give, along with an unexpected piece of
equipment. And, when Dane saw that, he knew just how desperate Shannon
considered their situation to be. For only on life or death terms would the
Astrogator-apprentice have used Jellico's private key, opened.the forbidden
arms cabinet, and withdrawn that blaster.
"If
you need it—use this—" Rip's face was very sober. Ali arose from fastening
the extra suit in place. "It's ready—" He came back into the corridor
and Dane clanked out in his place, settling himself
behind the controls. When they saw him there, the inner hatch closed and he was
alone in the bay.
With
tantalizing slowness the outer wall of the spacer slid back. His hands,
blundering within the metallic claws of the gloves, Dane buckled two safety
belts about him. Then the skeleton flitter moved to the left—out into the glare
of the early day, a light too bright, even through the shielded view-plates of
his helmet.
For some dangerous moment the machine creaked
out and down on the landing cranes, the warning counter on its control panel
going into a mad whirl of color as it tried to record the radiation. There came
a jar as it touched the scorched earth at the foot of the Queen's fins.
Dane pressed the release and watched the
lines whip up and the hatch above snap shut. Then he opened the controls. He
used too much energy and shot into the air, tearing a wide gap through what was
luckily a thin screen of the matted foliage, before he gained complete
mastery.
Then
he was able to level out and bore westward, the rising sun at his back, the sea
of deadly green beneath him, and somewhere far ahead the faint promise of
clean, radiation free land holding the help they needed.
Mile
after mile of the green jungle swept under the flitter,
and the
flash of the counter's light continued to record a land unfit for mankind. Even
with the equipment used on distant worlds to protect what spacemen had come to
recognize was a reasonably tough human frame, no ground force could hope to
explore that wilderness in person. And flying above it, as well insulated as he
was, Dane knew that he could be dangerously exposed. If the contaminated
territory extended more than a thousand miles, his danger was no longer
problematical—it was an established fact.
He had only the vague directions from the
scrap of map Rip had uncovered. To the west—he had no idea how far away—there
stretched a length of coastline, far enough from the radiation blasted area to
allow small settlements. For generations the population of Terra, decimated by
the atomic wars, and then drained by first system and then Galactic
exploration and colonization, had been decreasing. But within the past hundred
years it was again on the upswing. Men retiring from space were returning to
their native planet to live out their remaining years. The descendants of
far-flung colonists, coming home on visits, found the sparsely populated
mother world appealed to some basic instinct so that they remained. And now the
settlements of mankind were on the march, spreading out from the well
established sections which had not been blighted by ancient wars.
It
was mid-afternoon when Dane noted that the green carpet beneath the flitter
was displaying holes—that small breaks in the vegetation became sizable
stretches of rocky waste. He kept one eye on the counter and what, when he left
the spacer, had been an almost steady beam of warning light was now a well
defined succession of blinks. The land below was cooling off—perhaps he had
passed the worst of the journey. But in that passing how much had he and the
flitter become contaminated? Ali had devised a method of protection for the
empty suit the Medic would wear—had that held? There were an alarming number of
dark ifs in the immediate future.
The mutant growths were now only thin patches
of stunted and yellowish green. Had man penetrated only this far into the Bum,
the knowledge of what lay beyond would be totally false. This effect of dreary
waste might well discourage exploration.
Now
the blink of the counter was deliberate, with whole seconds of pause between
the flashes. Cooling off—? It was getting cold fasti He wished that he had a
com-unit. Because of the interference in the Bum he had left it behind—but with
one he might be able now to locate some settlement. All that remained was to
find the Seashore and, with it as a guide, flit south towards the center of modem civilization.
He
laid no plans of action—this whole exploit must depend upon improvisation. And,
as a Free Trader, spur-of-the-moment action was a necessary way of life. On the
frontier Rim of the Galaxy, where the independent spacers traced the star
trails, fast thinking and the ability to change plans on an instant were as
important as skill in aiming a blaster. And it was very often proven that the
tongue—and the brain behind it—were more deadly than a flamer.
The
sun was in Dane's face now and he caught sight of patches of uncontaminated
earth with honest vegetation—in place of the "hot" jungle now miles
behind. That nighj he camped out on the edge of rough pasturage where the
counter no longer flashed its warning and he was able to shed the suit and
sleep under the stars"with the fresh air of early summer against his cheek
and the smell of honest growing things replacing the dry scent of the spacer
and the languorous perfumes of Sargol.
He lay on his back, flat against the earth of
which he was truly a part, staring up into the dark, inverted bowl of the
heavens. It was so hard to connect those distant points of icy light making the
well remembered patterns overhead with the suns whose rays had added to the
brown stain on his skin. Sargol's sun—the one which gave such limited light to
dead Limbo—the sun under which Naxos, his first Galactic port, grew its food.
He could not pick them out—was not even sure that any could be sighted from
Terra. Strange suns, red, orange, blue, green, white—yet here all looked
alike—points of glitter.
Tomorrow
at dawn he must go on. He turned his head away from the sky and grass, green
Terran grass, was soft beneath his cheek. Yet unless he was successful
tomorrow— or the next day—he might never have the right to feel that grass
again. Resolutely Dane willed that thought out of his mind, tried to fix upon
something more lulling which would bring with it the sleep he must have before
he went on. And in the end he did sleep, deeply, dreamlessly, as if the touch
of Terra's soil was in itself the sedative his tautly strung nerves needed.
It was before sunrise that he awoke, stiff,
and chilled. The grayness of pre-dawn gave partial light and somewhere a bird
was twittering. There had been birds—or things whose far off ancestors had been
birds—in the "hot" forest. Did they also sing to greet the dawn?
Dane went over the flitter with his small
counter and was relieved to find that they had done a good job of shielding
under Ali's supervision. Once the suit he had Worn was
stored, he could sit at the controls without danger and in comfort. And it was
good to be free of that metal prison.
This time he took to the air with ease, the
salt taste of food concentrate on his tongue as he sucked a cube. And his
confidence arose with the flitter. This was the day, somehow he knew it. He was going to find what he sought.
It
was less than two hours after sunrise that he did so. A-village which was a
cluster of perhaps fifty or so house units strung along into the land. He
skimmed across it and brought the- flitter down in a rock cliff walled sand
pocket with surf booming some yards away, where he would be reasonably sure of
safe hiding.
All
right, he had found a village. Now what? A Medic—A stranger appearing on the
lane which served the town, a stranger in a distinctive uniform of Trade, would
only incite conjecture and betrayal. He had to plan now-Dane unsealed his
tunic. He should, by rights, shed his
space
boots too. But perhaps he could use those to color his story. He thrust the
blaster into hiding at his waist. A rip or two in his undertunic, a shallow cut
from his bush knife allowed to bleed messily. He could
not see-himself to judge the general effect, but had to hope it was the right
one.
His
chance to test his acting powers came sooner than he had anticipated. Luckily
he had climbed out of the hidden cove before he was spotted by, the boy who
came whistling along the path, a fishing pole over his shoulder, a basket
swinging from his hand. Dane assumed an. expression which he thought would
suggest fatigue, pain, and bewilderment and lurched forward as if, in sighting
the oncoming boy, he had also sighed hope.
"Help—I" Perhaps it was excitement
which gave his utterance that convincing croak.
Rod and basket fell to the ground as the boy,
after one astounded stare, ran forward.
"What's the matter!"
His eyes were on those space boots and he added a "sir" which had the
ring of hero worship.
"Escape boat—" Dane waved toward
the sea's general direction. "Medic—must get to Medic—"
"Yes,
sir," the boy's basic Terran sounded good. "Can you walk if I help
you?"
Dane managed a weak nod, but contrived that
he did not lean too heavily on his avidly helpful guide.
"The
Medic's my father, sir. We're right down this slope-third house. And father
hasn't left—he's supposed to go on a northern inspection tour today—"
Dane
felt a stab, of distaste for the role being forced upon him. When he had
visualized the Medic he must abduct to serve the Queen in her need, he had not
expected to have to kidnap a family man. Only the knowledge that he did have
the extra suit, and that he had made the outward trip without dangerous
exposure, bolstered up his determination to see the plan through.
When
they came out at the end of the single long lane which tied the houses of the
village together, Dane was puzzled to see the place so deserted. But, since it
was not within his role of dazed sufferer to ask questions, he did not do SO-It was his young guide who volunteered the information he wanted.
"Most
everyone is out with the fleet. There's a run of red-backs—"
Dane understood. Within recent times the
"red-backs" of the north had become a desirable luxury item for
Terran tables. If a school of them were to be found in the vicinity lno
wonder this village was now deserted as its fleet went out to gamer in the
elusive but highly succulent fish.
"In here, sir—" Dane found himself
being led to a house on the right. "Are you in Trade—?"
He
suppressed a start, shedding his uniform tunic had not done much in the way of
disguise. It would be nice, he thought a little bitterly, if he could flash an
I-S badge now to completely confuse the issue. But he answered with the partial
truth and did not enlarge.
"Yes-"
The boy was flushed with excitement.
"I'm trying for Trade Service Medic," he confided. "Passed
the Directive exam last month. But I still have to go up for Prelim
psycho—"
Dane
had a flash of memory. Not too many months before not the Prelim psycho, but
the big machine at the Assignment Center had decided his own future
arbitrarily, fitting him into the crew of7the Solar Queen as the
ship where his abilities, knowledge and potentialities could best work to the
good of the Service. At the time he had resented, had even been slightly ashamed
of being relegated to a Free Trading spacer while Artur Sands and other
classmates from the Pool had walked off wi.th Company assignments. Now he knew
that he would not trade the smallest and most rusty bolt from the Solar Queen
for the newest scout ship in I-S or Combine registry. And this boy from the
frontier village might be himself as he was five years earlier. Though he had never known a real home or family, scrapping into the
Pool, from one of the children's Depots.
"Good luck!" He meant that and the
boy's flush deepened.
"Thank
you, sir. Around here—Father's treatment room has this other door—"
Dane
allowed himself to be helped into the treatment room and sat down in a chair
while the boy hurried off to locate the Medic. The Trader's hand went to the
butt of his concealed blaster. It was a job he had to do—one he had volunteered
for—and there was no backing out. But his mouth had a wry twist as he drew out
the blaster and made ready to point it at the inner door. Or—his mind leaped to
another idea—could he get the Medic safely out of the village? A story about
another man badly injured—perhaps pinned in the wreckage of an escape boat— He
could try it. He thrust the blaster back inside his torn undertunic, hoping-the
bulge would pass unnoticed.
"My son says—"
Dane
looked up. The man who came through the inner door was in early middle age,
thin, wiry, with a hard, fined-down'look about him. He could almost be Tau's
elder brother. He crossed the room with a brisk stride and came to stand over
Dane, his hand reaching to pull aside the bloody cloth covering the Trader's
breast. But Dane fended off that examination.
"My
partner," he said. "Back there—pinned in—" he jerked his hand
southward. "Needs help—"
The
Medic frowned. "Most of the men are out with the fleet. Jorge," he
spoke to the boy who had followed him, "go and get Lex and Hartog.
Here," he tried to push Dane back into the chair as the Trader got up,
"let me look at that cut—"
Dane
shook his head. "No time now, sir. My partner's hurt bad. Can you
come?"
"Certainly." The Medic reached for the emergency kit on the shelf behind him. "You able to make it?"
"Yes,"
Dane was exultant. It was going to work! He could toll the Medic away from the
village. Once put among the rocks on the shoreline he could pull the blaster
and herd the man to the flitter. His luck was going to hold after all!
Chapter XV
MEDIC HOVAN REPORTS
Fortunately the path out of the straggling town was a twisted one and in a very short space they
were hidden from view. Dane paused as if the pace was too much for an injured
man. The Medic put out a steadying hand, only to drop it quickly when he saw
the weapon which had appeared in Dane's grip.
"What—?" His
mouth snapped shut, his jaw tightened.
"You
will march ahead of me," Dane's low voice was steady. "Beyond that
rock spur to the left you'll find a place where it is possible to climb down to
sea level. Do it!"
"I suppose I shouldn't
ask why?"
"Not now. We haven't
much time. Get moving!"
The
Medic mastered his surprise and without further protest obeyed orders. It was
only when they were standing by the flitter and he saw the suits that his eyes
widened and he said:
"The
Big Bum!"
"Yes, and I'm
desperate—"
"You
must be—or mad—" The Medic stared at Dane for a long moment and then shook his head.
"What is it? A plague ship?"
Dane
bit his hp. The other was too astute. But he did not ask why or how he had been
able to guess so shrewdly. Instead he gestured to the suit Ah had lashed
beneath the seat in the flitter. "Get into that and be quick about
it!"
The
Medic rubbed his hand across his jaw. "I think that you might just be
desperate enough to use that thing you're brandishing about so melodramatically
if I don't," he remarked in a calmly conversational tone.
"I won't kill. But a
blaster bum—"
"Can be pretty painful. Yes, I know that, young man. And,"
suddenly he shrugged, put down his kit and started
donning the
suit. "I wouldn't put it past you to knock me out and load me aboard if I
did say no. All right—"
Suited,
he took his place on the seat as Dane directed, and then the Trader followed
the additional precaution of lashing the Medic's metal encased arms to his body
before he climbed into his own protective covering. Now they could only communicate
by sight through thevvision plates of their helmets.
Dane
triggered the controls and they arose out of the sand and rock hollow just as a
party of two men and a boy came hurrying along the top of the cliff—Jorge and
the rescuers arriving too late. The flitter spiraled up into the sunlight and Dane
wondered.how long it would be before this outrage was reported to the nearest
Planet Police base. But would any Police cruiser have the hardihood to follow
him into the Big Burn? He hoped that the radiation would hold them back.
There
was no navigation to be done. The flitter's "memory" should deposit
them at the Queen. Dane wondered at what his silent companion was now thinking.
The Medic had accepted his kidnaping with such docility that the very ease of
their departure began to bother Dane. Was the other expecting a trailer? Had
exploration into the Big Bum from the seaside villages been more extensive than
reported officially?
He
stepped up the power of the flitter to the top notch and saw with some relief
that the ground beneath them was now the rocky waste bordering the devastated
area. The metal encased figure that shared his seat had not moved, but now the
bubble head turned as if the Medic were intent upon the ground flowing beneath
them.
The flicker of the counter began and Dane
realized that nightfall would find them still air borne. But so far he had not
been aware of any pursuit. Again he wished he had the use of a com—only here
the radiation would blanket sound with that continuous roar.
Patches of the radiation vegetation showed
now and something in the lines of the Medic's tense figure suggested that
these were new to him. Afternoon waned as the patches united, spread into the
beginning of the jungle as. the counter was once more
an almost steady light. When evening closed in they were not caught in
darkness—for below trees, looping vines, brush, had a pale, evil glow of their
own, proclaiming their toxicity with bluish halos. Sometimes pockets of these
made a core of light which pulsed, sending warning fingers at the flitter which
sped-across it.
The hour was close on midnight before Dane
sighted the other light, the pink-red of which winked through the ghastly
blue-white with a natural and comforting promise, even though it had been meant
for an entirely different purpose. The Queen had earthed with her distress
lights on and no one had remembered to snap them off. Now they acted as a beacon
to draw the flitter to its berth.
Dane brought the stripped flyer down on-the
fused ground as close to the spot from which he had taken off as he could
remember. Now—if those on the spacer would only move fast enough—I
But
he need not have worried, his arrival had been anticipated. Above, the rounded
side of the spacer .bulged as the hatch opened. Lines swung down to fasten
their magnetic clamps on the flitter. Then once more they were air borne,
swinging up to be warped into the side of the ship. As the outer port of the
flitter berth closed Dane reached over and pulled loose the lashing which
immobilized his companion. The Medic stood up, a litde awkwardly as might any
man who wore space armor the first time.
The inner hatch now opened and Dane waved his
captive into the small section which must serve them as a decontamination
space. Free at last of the suits, they went through one more improvised hatch
to the main corridor of the Queen where Rip and Ali stood waiting, their weary
faces lighting as they saw the Medic.
It was the latter who spoke
first. "This is a plague ship—"
Rip shook his head. "It is not, sir. And you're the one who is going to help us prove that." , The man leaned back against the wall, his face
expressionless. "You take a rather tough way of trying to get help."
"It
was the only way left us. I'll be frank," Rip continued, "we're
Patrol Posted."
The Medic's shrewd eyes went from one drawn
young face to the next. "You don't look like very desperate
criminals," was his comment. "This your full
crew?" .
"All the rest are your concern. That
is—if you will take the job—" Rip's shoulders slumped a little.
"You
haven't left me much choice, have you? If there is illness on board, I'm under
the Oath—whether you are Patrol Posted or not. What's the trouble?"
They
got him down to Tau's laboratory and told him their story. From a slight
incredulity his expression changed to an alert interest and he demanded to see,
first the patients and then the pests now immured in the deep freeze. Sometime
in the middle of this, Dane, overcome by fatigue which was partly relief from
tension, sought his cabin and the bunk from which he wearily disposed Sinbad,
only to have the purring cat crawl back once more when he had lain down.
And
when he awoke, renewed in body and spirit, it was in a new Queen, a ship in
which hope and confidence now ruled.
"Hovan's
already got it!" Rip told him exultantly. "It's that poison from the
little devils' «laws right enough! A narcotic-produces
some of the affects of deep sleep. In fact—it may have a medical use. He's
excited about it—"
"All
right;" Dane waved aside information which under other circumstances,
promising as it did a chance for future trade, would have engrossed him, to ask
a question which at the moment seemed far more to the point. "Can he get
our men back on their feet?"
A
little of Rip's exuberance faded. "Not right away. He's given them all
shots. But he thinks they'll have to sleep it off."
"And
we have no idea how long that is going to take," Ah contributed.
Time—for the first time in days Dane was
struck by that-time! Because of his training a fact he had forgotten in the past
weeks of worry now came to mind—their contract with the storm priests. Even if
they were able to clear themselves of the plague charge, even if the rest of
the crew were speedily restored to health, he was sure that they could not
hope to return to Sargol with the promised cargo, the pay for which was already
on board the Queen. They would have broken their pledge and there could be no
hope of holding to their trading rights on that world—if they were not
blacklisted for breaking contract into the bargain. I-S would be able to move
in and clean up and probably they could never prove that the Company was behind
their misfortunes—though the men of the Queen would always be convinced that
that fact was the truth.
"We're going to break contract—" he
said aloud and that shook the other two, knocked some of their assurance out of
them.
"How
about that?" Rip
asked Ali.
The acting-engineer nodded. "We have
fuel enough to lift from here and maybe set down at Terraport—if we take it
careful and cut vectors. We can't lift from there without refueling—and of
course the Patrol are going to sit on their hands
while we do that—with us Posted! No, put out of your heads any plan for getting
back to Sargol within the time limit. Thorson's right—that way we're flamed
out!"
Rip slumped in his seat. "So the Eysies
can take over after all?"
"As
I see it," Dane cut in, "let's just take one thing at a time. We may
have to argue a broken contract out before the Board. But first we have to get
off the Posted hook with the Patrol. Have you any idea about how we are going
to handle that?"
"Hovan's on our side. In fact if we let
him have the bugs to play with he'll back us all the way. He can swear us a
clean bill of health before the Medic Control Center."
"How
much will that count after we've broken all their regs?" Ali wanted to
know. "If we surrender now we're not going to have much chance, no matter
what Hovan does or does not swear to. Hovan's a frontier Medic—I won't say diat
he's not a member
in good standing of their association—but he doesn't have top star rating. And
with the Eysies and the Patrol on our necks, well need more than one Medic's
word—"
But Rip looked from the pessimistic Kamil to
Dane. Now he asked a questipn which was more than half statement.
"You've thought of something?"
"I've remembered something," the
Cargo-apprentice corrected. "Recall the trick Van pulled on Limbo when
the Patrol was trying to ease us out of our rights there after they took over
the outlaw hold?"
Ali was impatient. "He threatened to
talk to the Video peopkTand broadcast—tell everyone about the ships wrecked by
the Forerunner installation and left lying about full of treasure. But what has
that to do with us now—? We bargained away our rights on Limbo for the rest of
Cam's monopoly on Sargol—not that it's done us much good—"
"The
Video," Dane fastened on the important point, "Van threatened
publicity which would embarrass the Patrol and he was legally within his
rights. We're outside the law now— but publicity might help again. How many
earth-side people know of the unwritten law about open war on plague ships? How
many who aren't spacemen know that we could be legally pushed into the sun and
fried without any chance to prove we're innocent of carrying a new disease? If
we could talk loud and clear to the people at large maybe we'd have a chance for a real hearing—"
"Right from the- Terraport broadcast
station, I suppose?" Ah taunted.
"Why not?"
There
was silence in the cabin as the other two chewed upon that and he broke it
again:
"We set down here when it had never been
done before."
With one brown forefinger Rip traced some
pattern known only to himself on the top of the table.
Ali stared at the opposite wall as if it were a bank of machinery he must
master.
"It just might be whirly enough to
work—" Kamil commented sofdy. "Or maybe we've been spaced too long
and the Whisperers have been chattering into our ears. What about it, Rip,
could you set us down close enough to Center Block there?"
"We
can try anything once. But we might crash the old girl bringing her in. There's
that apron between the Companies' Launching cradles and the Center—. It's
clear there and we could give an E signal coming down which would make them
stay rid' of it. But I won't try it except as a last resort."
Dane
noticed that after thai discouraging statement Rip
made straight for Jellico's record tapes and routed out the one which dealt
with Terraport and the landing instructions for that metropolis of the star
ships. To land unbiddert there would certainly bring them publicity—and to get
to the Video broadcast and tell their story would grant them not only world
wide, but system wide hearing. News from Terraport was broadcast on every
channel every hour of the day and night and not a single viewer could, miss
their appeal.
But
first there was Hovan to be consulted. Would he be willing to back them with
his professional knowledge and assurance? Or would their high-handed method of
recruiting his services operate against them now? They decided to let Rip ask
such questions of the Medic.
"So you're going to set us down in the
center of the big jump-off?" was his first comment, as the acting-Captain
of the Queen stated their case. "Then you want me to fire my rockets to
certify you are harmless. You don't ask for very much, do you, son?"
Rip
spread his hands. "I can understand how its looks to you, sir. We grabbed
you and brought you here by force. We can't make you testify for us if you
decide not to—"
"Can't
you?" The Medic cocked an eyebrow at'him. "What about this bully boy
of yours with his little blaster? He could herd me right up to the telecast,
couldn't he? There's a lot of persuasion in one of those nasty little arms. On
the other hand, I've a son who's set on taking out on one of these tin pots to
go star hunting. If I handed you over to the Patrol he might make some remarks
to me in private. You may be
Posted,
but you don't look like very hardened criminals to me. It seems that you've been
handed a bad situation and handled it as best you know. And I'm willing to ride
along the rest of the way on your tail blast. Let me see how many pieces you
land us in at Terraport and I'll give you my
final answer. If luck holds we may have a couple more of your crew present by
that time, also—"
They had had no indication that the Queen had
been located, that any posse hunting the kidnaped Medic had followed them into
the Big Bum. And they could only hope that they would continue to remain
unsighted as they upped-ship once more and cruised into a regular traffic lane
for earthing at the port. It would be a chancy thing and Ali and Rip spent
hours checking the mechanics of that flight, while Dane and the recovering
Weeks worked with Hovan in an effort to restore the sleeping crew.
After three visits to the hold and the
discovery that the Hoobat had uncovered no more of the pests, Dane caged the
angry blue horror and returned it to its usual stand in Jel-lico's cabin,
certain that the ship was clean for Sinbad now confidendy prowled the corridors
and went into every cabin or storage space Dane opened for him.
And on the morning of the day they had
planned for takeoff, Hovan at last had a definite response to his treatment.
Craig Tau roused, stared dazedly around, and. asked a vague questioh. The fact
that he, immediately relapsed once more into semi-coma did not discourage the
other Medic. Progress had been made and he was now sure that he knew the proper
treatment.
They
strapped down at zero hour and blasted out of the weird green wilderness they
had not dared to explore, fitting into the arch of the sky, depending upon
Rip's knowledge to put them safely down again.
Dane once more rode out the take-off at the corn-unit,
waiting for the blast of radiation bom static to fade so that he
could catch any broadcast. >.
"—turned
back last night. The
high level of radiation makes it almost certain that the outlaws could not have
headed into the dangerous central portion. Search is now spreading north.
Authorities are inclined to believe that, this last outrage may be a clew to
the vanished 'Solar Queen,' a plague ship, warned off and Patrol Posted after
her crew plundered an E-Stat belonging to the Inter-Solar Corporation. Anyone
having any information concerning this ship—or any strange spacer—report at
once to the nearest Terrapolice or Patrol station. Do not take chances—report
any contact at once to the nearest Terrapolice or Patrol station!"
"That's
putting it strongly," Dane commented as he relayed the message. "Good
as giving orders for us to be flamed down at sight—"
"Well,
if we set down in the right spot," Rip replied, "they can't flame us
out without blasting the larger part of Terra-port field with us. And I don't
think they are going to do that in a hurry."
Dane hoped Shannon was correct in that
belief. It would be more chancy than landing at the
E-Staf or in the Big Burn-to gauge it just right and put them down on the
Terraport apron where they could not be flamed out without destroying too much,
where their very position would give thema bargaining point, wasxgoing to be jl
top star job. If Rip could
only pull it offl "
He could not evaluate the niceties of that flight, he did not understand all Rip was doing. But he did
know enough to remain quietly in his place, ask no questions, and await results
with a dry mouth and a wildly beating heart. There came a moment when Rip
glanced up at him, one hand poised over the control board. The pilot's voice
came tersely, thin and queer:
"Pray it out, Dane—here we go!"
Dane
heard the shrill of a ridjng beam, so tearing he had to move his earphones.
They must be almost on top of the control tower to get it like that! Rip was
planning on a set down where the Queen would block things neatly. He brought
his own fingers down on the E-E-Red button to give the last and most powerful
warning. That, to be used only when a ship landing was out of control, should
clear the ground below. They could only pray it would vacate the port they were
still far from seeing.
"Make it a fin-point, Rip," he
couldn't repress that one bit of advice. And was glad he had given it when he
saw a ghost grin tug for a moment at Rip's full hps.
"Good
enough for a check-ride?" They were riding her flaming jets down as they
would on a strange world. Below the port must be wild. Dane counted off the
seconds. Two—three—four—five—just a few more and they would be too low to intercept—without
endangering innocent coasters and groundhuggers. When the last minute during
which they were still vulnerable passed, he gave a sigh of relief. That was one
more point on their side. In the earphones was a crackle of frantic questions,
a gabble of orders screaming at him. Let them rave, they'd, know soon enough
what it was all about.
Chapter XVI
THE BATTLE OF THE VIDEO
Oddly enough,- in spite pf the tension which must have
boiled within him, Rip brought them in with a perfect four fin-point
landing—one which, under the circumstances, must win him the respect of master
star-star pilots from the Rim. Though Dane doubted whether if
they lost, that skill would bring Shannon anything but a long term in the moon
mines. The actual jar of their landing contact was mostly absorbed by
the webbing of their shock seats and they were on their feet, ready to move
almost at once.
The
next operation had been planned. Dane gave a glance at the screen^ Ringed now
about the Queen were the buildings of Terraport. Yes, any attempt to attack
the ship would endanger too much of the permanent structure of the field
itself. Rip had brought them down—not on the rocket scarred outer landing
space—but on the concrete apron between the Assignment Center and the control
tower—a smooth strip usually sacred to the parking of officials' ground
scooters. He speculated as to whether any of the latter had been converted to
molten metal by the exhausts of the Queen's descent.
Like
the team they had come to be the four active members of the crew went into
action. Ali and Weeks were waiting by an inner hatch, Medic Hovan with them.
The Engineer-apprentice was bulky in a space suit, and two more of the unwieldy
body coverings waited beside him for Rip and Dane. With fingers which were
inclined to act like thumbs they were sealed into what would provide some
protection against any blaster or sleep ray. Then with Hovan, conspicuously
wearing no such armor, they climbed into one of the ship's crawlers.
Weeks activated the outer hatch and the crane
lines plucked the small vehicle out of the Queen, swinging it dizzily down to
the blast scored apron.
"Make for the tower—" Rip's voice
was thin in the helmet corns.
Dane
at the controls of the crawler pulled on as Ali cast off the lines which
anchored them to the spacer.
Through the bubble helmet he could see the
frenzied activity in the aroused port. An ant hill into which some idle
investigator had thrust a stick and given it a turn or two was nothing compared
with Terraport after the unorthodox arrival of the Solar Queen.
"Patrol
mobile coming in on southeast vector," Ali announced calmly. "Looks
like she mounts a portable flamer on her nose—"
"So." Dane"changed direction, putting behind him a customs check point,
aware as he ground by that stand, of a line of faces at its vision ports.
Evasive action—and he'd have to get the top speed from the clumsy crawler.
"Police
'copter over us—" that was Rip reporting.
Well, they couldn't very well avoid that. But at the same rime Dane was reasonably sure that its attack would not
be an' overt one—not with the unarmed, unprotected Hovan prominently displayed
in their midst.
But
there he was too sanguine. A muffled exclamation from Rip made him glance at
the Medic beside him. Just in time to see Hovan slump limply
forward, about to tumble from the crawler when Shannon caught him from behind.
Dane was too familiar with the results of sleep rays»to have any doubts as to
what had happened.
The
P-copter had sprayed them with its most harmless weapon. Only the suits,
insulated to the best of their makers' ability against most of the dangers of
space, real and anticipated, had kept the three Traders from being overcome as
well. Dane suspected that his own responses were a trifle sluggish, that while
he had not succumbed to that attack, he had been slowed. But with Rip holding
the unconscious Medic in his seat, Thorson continued to head the crawler for
the tower and its promise of a system wide hearing for their appeal.
"There's a P-mobile coming in
ahead—"
Dane
was irritated by that warning from Rip. He had already sighted that black and
silver ground car himself. And he was only too keenly conscious of the nasty
threat of the snub nosed weapon mounted on its hood, now pointed straight at
the oncoming, too deliberate Traders' crawler. Then he saw what he believed
would be their only chance—to play once more the same type of trick as Rip had
used to earth them safely.
"Get
Hovan under cover," he ordered. "I'm going to crash the tower
door!"
Hasty
movements answered that as the Medic's limp body was thrust under the cover
offered by the upper framework of the crawler. Luckily the machine had been
built for heavy duty on rugged worlds where roadways were unknown. Dane was
sure he could build up the power and speed necessary to take them into the
lower floor of the tower—no matter if its door was now barred against them.
Whether his audacity daunted the P-mobile, or
whether they held off from an all out attack because of Hovan, Dane could not
guess. But he was glad for a few minutes of grace as he raced the protesting
engine of the heavy machine to its last and greatest effort. The treads of the
crawler bit on the steps leading up to the impressive entrance of the tower.
There was a second or two before traction caught and then the driver's heart
snapped back into place as the machine tilted its nose up and headed straight
for the portal.
They
struck the closed doors with a shock which almost hurled them from their seats.
But that engraved bronze expanse had not been cast to withstand a head-on blow
from a heavy duty off-world vehicle and the leaves tore apart letting them
into the wide hall beyond.
"Take
Hovan and make for the riser!" For the second time it was Dane who gave
the orders. "I have a blocking job to do here." He expected every
second to feel the bit of a police blaster somewhere along his shrinking
body—could even a space suit protect him now?
At
the far end of the corridor were the attendants and visitors, trapped in the
building, who had fled in an attempt to find safety at the crashing entrance of
the crawler. These flung themselves flat at the steady advance of the two space
suited Traders who supported the unconscious Medic between them, using the
low-powered anti-grave units on their belts to take most of his weight so each
had one hand free to hold a sleep rod. And they did not hesitate to use those
weapons-spraying the rightful inhabitants of the tower until all lay unmoving.
Having seen that Ali and Rip appeared to have
the situation in hand, Dane turned to his own self-appointed job. He jammed
the machine on reverse, maneuvering it with an ease learned by practice on the
rough terrain of Limbo, until the gate doors were pushed shut again. Then he
swung the machine around so that its bulk would afford an effective bar to keep
the door locked for some very precious moments to come. Short of using a
flarner fuD power to cut their way in, no~one was going to force an entrance
now.
He climbed out of the machine, to discover,
when he turned, that the trio from the Queen had disappeared—leaving all
possible opposition asleep on the floor. They must have taken a riser to the broadcasting
floor. Dane clanked on to join them, carrying in plated fingers their most
important weapon to awake public opinion—an improvised cage in which was housed
one of the pests from the cargo hold—the proof of their plague-free state which
they intended Hovan to present, via the telecast, to the'whole system.
Dane
reached the shaft of the riser—to find the platform' gone. Would either Rip or
Ali have presence of mind enough to send it down to him on automatic?
"Rip—return the riser," he spoke
urgentiy into the throat mike of his helmet com.
-
"Keep your rockets straight," Ali's cool voice was in his earphones,
"It's on its way down. Did you remember
to bring Exhibit A?"
Dane did not answer. For he
was very much occupied with another problem. On the; bronze doors he had
been ait such pains to seal shut there had come into being a round circle of
dull red which was speedily changing into a coruscating incandescence. They had brought a flarner to bear! It would be a very short time now before the
Police could come through. That riser-Afraid of overbalancing in the bulky
suit, Dane did not lean forward to stare up into the shaft. But, as his uncertainty
reached a fever pitch, the platform descended and he took two steps forward
into temporary safety, still clutching the cage. At the first try the thick
fingers of his gloved hand slipped from the lever and he hit it again, harder
than he intended, so that, he found himself being wafted upward with a speed
which did not agree with a stomach, even one long accustomed to space flight.
And he almost lost his balance when it came to a stop many floors above.
But he had not lost his,wits.
Before he stepped from the platform he set the dial on a point which would lift
the riser to the top of the shaft and hold it there. That might trap the
Traders on the' broadcasting floor, but it would also insure them time before
the forces of the law could reach them.
Dane
located the rest of his party in the circular core chamber of the broadcasting
section. He recognized a backdrop he had seen thousands of times behind the
announcer who introduced the news-casts. In one corner Rip, his suit off, was
working over the still relaxed form of the Medic. While Ah,
a grim set to his mouth, was standing with a man who wore the insignia of a Com-tech.
"All set?" Rip
looked up from his. futile ministrations.
Dane
put down the cage and began the business of unhooking his own protective
covering. "They were burning through the outer doors of the entrance hall
when I took off."
"You're
not going to get away with this—" that was the Com-tech.
Ali
smiled wearily, a stretch of hps in' which there was little or no mirth. "Listen, my friend. Since I started to ride rockets
I've been told I wasn't going to get away with this or that. Why not be more
original? Use what is between those outsize ears of yours. We fought our way in
here-^we landed at Terraport against orders—we're Patrol Posted. Do you think
that one man, one lone man, is going to keep us now from doing what we came to
do? And don't look around for any reinforcements. We sprayed both those rooms.
You can run the emergency hook-up singlehanded and you're going to. We're Free
Traders—Ha,"
the man had lost some of
his assurance as he stared from one drawn young face to another, "I see you begin to realize what that means. Out
on the Rim we play rough, and we play for keeps. I know half a hundred ways to
set you screaming in three minutes and at least ten of them will not even leave
a mark on your skin! Now do we get Service—or don't we?"
"You'll go to the Chamber for
this—I" snarled the tech.
"All right. But first we broadcast. Then maybe someday a ship that's run into bad luck'll have a straighter deal than we've had. You get on your post. And well have' the
play back on—remember, that. If you don't give us a clear channel we'll know
it. How about it, Rip—how's Hovan?"
Rip's
face was a mask of worry. "He must have had a full dose. I can't bring him
around."
Was this the end to their bold bid? Let each
or all of them go before the screen to plead their case, let them show the
caged pest. But without the professional testimony of the Medic, the weight of
an expert opinion on their side, they were licked. Well, sometimes luck did not
ride a man's fins all the way in.
But
some stubborn core within Dane refused to let him believe that they had lost.
He went over to the Medic huddled in a- chair. To all appearances Hovan was
deeply asleep, sunk in the semi-coma the sleep ray produced. And the frustrating
thing was that the man himself could have supplied the counter to his
condition, given them the instructions how to bring him around. How many hours
away was a natural awaking? Long before that their hold on the station would be
broken—they would be in the custody of either Police or Patrol.
"He's
sunk—" Dane voiced the belief which put an end to their hopes. But Ah did
not seem concerned.
Kamil
was standing with their captive, an odd expression on his handsome face as if
he were striving to recall some dim memory. When he spoke it was to the Com-teclL "You have an HD OS here?"
The other registered surprise. "I think
so—"
Ali made an abrupt gesture. "Make
sure," he ordered, following the man into another room. Dane looked to Rip for enlightenment.
"What in the Great Nebula is an HD
OS?"
"I'm no engineer. It may be some gadget
to get us out of here—"
"Such as a pair of wings?" Dane was inclined to be sarcastic. The
memory of that incandescent circle on the door some twenty floors below stayed
with him. Tempers of Police
158 , PLAGUE SHIP
and
Patrol were not going to be improved by fighting their way around or over the
obstacles the Traders had arranged to delay them. If they caught up to the outlaws
before the latter had their chance for an impartial hearing, the result was not
going to be a happy one as far as the Queen's men were concerned.
Ali appeared in the
doorway. "Bring Hovan in here."
Together
Rip and Dane carried the Medic into a smaller chamber where they found Ali and
the tech busy lashing a small, lightweight tube chair to a machine
which, to their untutored eyes, had the semblance of a collection of bars.
Obeying instructions they seated Hovan in that chair, fastening him in, while
the Medic continued to slumber peacefully. Uncomprehendingly Rip and Dane
stepped back while, under Ali's watchful eye, the Com-tech made adjustments and
finally snapped some hidden switch.
Dane
discovered that he dared not watch too closely what followed. Inured as he
thought he was to the tricks of Hyper-space, to acceleration and anti-gravity,
the oscillation of that swinging seat, the weird swaying of the half-recumbent
figure, did things to his sight and to his sense of balance which seemed
perilous in the extreme. But when a groan broke through the hum of Ali's
mysterious machine, all of them knew that the Engineer-apprentice had found the
answer to their problem, that Hovan was waking.
The
Medic was bleary-eyed and inclined to stagger when they freed him. And for
several minutes he seemed unable to grasp either his surroundings or the train
of events which had brought him there.
Long since the Police must have broken into
the entrance corridor below. Perhaps they had by now secured a riser which
would bring them up. Ali had forced the Com-tech to throw the emergency control
which was designed to seal off from the outer world the entire unit in which
they now were. But whether that protective device would continue to hold now,
none of the three were certain. Time was running out fast.
Supporting
the wobbling Hovan, they went back into the panel room and under Ali's
supervision the Com-tech took his place at the control board. Dane put the cage
with the pest well to the fore on the table of the announcer and waited for Rip
to take his place, there with the trembling Medic. When Shannon did not move
Dane glanced up in surprise— this was no time to hesitate. But he discovered
that the attention of both his shipmates was now centered on him. Rip pointed
to the seat.
"You're the talk merchant, aren't
you?" the acting commander of the Queen asked crisply. "Now's the
time to shout the Lingo—"
They couldn't mean—1 But it was very evident
that they did. Of course, a Cargo-master was supposed to be the spokesman of a
ship. But that was in matters of trade. And how could he stand there and argue the case for the Queen?
He was the newest joined, the greenest member of her crew. Already his mouth
was dry and his nerves tense. But Dane didn't know that none of that was
revealed by his face or manner. The usual impassiveness which had masked his
inner conflicts since his first days at the Pool served him now. And the others
never noted the hesitation with which he approached the announcer's place.
Dane had scarcely seated himself, one hand
resting on the cage of the pest, before Ah brought down two fingers in the
sharp sweep which signaled the Com-tech to duty. Far above them there was a
whisper of sound which signified the opening of the play-back. They would be
able to check on whether the broadcast was going out or not. Although Dane
could see nothing of the system wide audience which he currently faced, he
realized that the room and those -in it were now visible on every tuned-in
video set. Instead of the factual cast, the listeners were about to be treated
to a melodrama which was as wild as their favorite romances. It only needed the
break-in of the Patrol to complete the illusion of action-fiction—crime
variety.
A second finger moved in his direction and
Dane leaned forward. He faced only the folds of a wall wide curtain, but he
must keep in mind that in truth there was a sea of faces before him, the faces
of those whom he and Hovan, working together, must convince if he were to save
the Queen and her crew.
He
found his voice and it was steady and even, he might have been outlining some
stowage problem for Van Rycke's approval.
"People of Terra—"
Martian,
Venusian, Asteroid colonist—inwardly they were still all Terran and on that
point he would rest. He was a Terran appealing to his own kind.
"People
of Terra, we come before you to ask justice—" from somewhere the words
came easily, flowing from his lips to center on a patch of light ahead. And
that "justice" rang with a kind of reassurance.
Chapter
XVII IN CUSTODY
"To
those of tou who do not travel the star trails our case may seem puzzling—"
the words were coming easily. Dane gathered confidence as he spoke, intent on
making those others out there know what it meant to be outlawed.
"We
are Patrol Posted, outlawed as a plague ship," he confessed frankly.
"But this is our true story—"
Swiftly, with a flow pi language he had not known he could command, Dane swung into the story of
Sargol, of the pest they had carried away from that world. And at the proper
moment he thrust a gloved hand into the cage and brought out the wriggling
thing which struck vainly with its poisoned talons, holding it above the dark
table so that those unseen watchers could witness that dramatic change pf color
which made it such a menace. Dane continued the story of the Queen's ill-fated
voyage—of their forced descent upon the E-Stat.
"Ask
the truth of Inter-Solar," he demanded of the audience beyond those
walls. "We were no pirates. They will discover in their records the
vouchers we left." Then Dane described the weird hunt when, led by the
Hoobat, they had finally found and isolated the menace, and their landing in
the heart of the Big Burn. He followed that with his own quest for medical aid
and the kidnaping of Hovan. At that point he turned to the Medic.
"This
is Medic Hovan. He has consented to appear in our behalf and to testify to the
truth—that the Solar Queen has not been stricken by some unknown plague, but
infested with a living organism we now have under control—" For a
sus-penseful second or two he wondered if Hovan was going to make it. The man
looked shaken and sick, as if the drastic awaking they had subjected him to had
left him too dazed to pull himself together.
But
out of some hidden reservoir of strength the Medic summoned the energy he
needed. And his testimony was all they had hoped it would be. Though now and then he strayed into technical terms. But,
Dane thought, their use only enhanced the authority of his description of what
he had discovered on board the spacer and what he had done to counteract the
power of the poison. When he had done Dane added a few last words.
"We
have broken the law," he admitted forthrightly, "but we were fighting
in self-defense. All we ask now is the privilege of an impartial
investigation, a chance to defend ourselves—such as any of you take for
granted on Terra—before the courts of this planet—" But he was not to
finish without interruption.
From
the play-back over their heads another voice blared, breaking across his last
words:
"Surrenderl
This is the Patrol. Surrender or take the consequences!"
And that faint sighing which signaled their open contact with the outer world
was cut off. The Com-tech turned away from the control board, a sneering half
smile on his face.
■
"They've reached the circuit and cut you off. You're done!"
Dane
stared into the cage where the now almost invisible thing sat humped together.
He had done his best—they had all done their best. He felt nothing but a vast
fatigue, an overwhelming weariness, not so much of body, but of nerve and
spirit too.
Rip
broke the silence with a question aimed at the tech, "Can you signal
below?"
"Going
to give up?" The fellow brightened. "Yes, there's an inter-com I can
cut in."
Rip stood up. He unbuckled the belt about his
waist and laid it on the table—disarming himself.
Without words Ali and Dane followed his example. They had played their hand —to
prolong the struggle would mean nothing. The acting Captain of the Queen gave a
last order:
"Tell
them we are coming down—unarmed—to surrender." He paused in front of
Hovan. "You'd better stay here. If there's any trouble—no reason for you
to be caught in the middle."
Hovan
nodded as the three left the room. Dane, remembering the trick he had pulled
with the riser, made a comment:
"We may be marooned here—"
Ah
shrugged. "Then we can just wait and let them collect us." He yawned,
his dark eyes set in smudges. "I don't care if they'll just let us sleep
the clock around afterwards. D'you really think,"
he addressed Rip, "that we've done ourselves any good?"
Rip neither denied nor confirmed. "We
took our only chance. Now it's up to them—" He pointed to the wall and the
teeming world which lay beyond it.
Ali
grinned wryly. "I note you left the what-you-call-it with Hovan."
"He wanted one to experiment with,"
Dane replied. "I thought he'd earned it."
"And now here comes what we've
earned—" Pup cut in as the hum of the riser came to their ears.
"Should
we take to cover?" Ali's mobile eyebrows underlined his demand. "The
forces of law and order may erupt with blasters blazing."
But
Rip did not move. He faced the riser door squarely and, drawn by something in
that stance of his, the other two stepped in on either side so that they
fronted the dubious future as a united group. Whatever came now, the Queen's
men would meet it together.
In a
way Ali was right. The four men who emerged all had their blasters or riot
stun-rifles at ready, and the sights of those weapons were trained at the
middles of the Free Traders. As Dane's empty hands, palm out, went up on a line
with his shoulders, he estimated the opposition. Two were in the silver and
black of the Patrol, two wore the forest green of the Terrapolice. But they all
looked like men with whom it was better not to play games.
And
it was clear they were prepared to take no chances with the outlaws. In spite
of the passiveness of the Queen's men, their hands were locked behind them with
force bars about their wrists. When a quick search revealed that the three were
unarmed, they were- herded onto the riser by two of their captors, while the
other pair remained behind, presumably to uncover any damage they had done to
the Tower installations..
The police did not speak except for a few terse words among themselves and a barked order to march, delivered
to the prisoners. Very shortly they were in the entrance hall facing the
wreckage of the crawler and doors through which a ragged gap had been burned.
Ali viewed the scene with his usual detachment.
"Nice
job," he commended Dane's enterprise. "They'll have a moving—"
"Get
going!" A heavy hand between his shoulder blades urged him on. '
The Engineer-apprentice whirled, his eyes
blazing. "Keep your hands to yourself! We aren't mine fodder yet. I think
that the little matter of a trial comes first—"
"You're Posted," the Patrolman was openly contemptuous.
Dane
was chilled. For the first time that aspect of their predicament really
registered. Posted outlaws might, within reason, be shot on sight without
further recourse to the law. If that label stuck on the crew of the Queen, they
had practically no chance at all. And when he saw that Ali was no longer
inclined to retort, he knew that fact had dawned upon Kamil also. It would all
depend upon how big an impression their broadcast had made. If public opinion
veered to their side—then they could defend themselves legally. Otherwise the
moon mines might be the best sentence they dare hope for.
They
were pushed out into the brilliant sunlight. There stood the Queen, her meteor
scarred sides reflecting the .fight of her native sun. And ringed around her at
a safe distance was what seemed to be a small mechanized army corps. The
authorities were making very sure that no more rebels would burst from her
interior.
Dane
thought that they would be loaded into a mobile or 'copter and taken away. But
instead they were marched down, through the ranks of portable flamers,
scramblers, and other equipment, to an open space where anyone on duty at the
visa-screen within the control cabin of the spacer could see them. An officer
of the Patrol, the sun making an eye-blinding flash of his lightning sword
breast badge, stood behind a loud speaker. When he perceived that the three
prisoners were present, he picked up a hand mike and spoke into it—his voice so
being relayed over the field as clearly as it must be reaching Weeks inside the
sealed freighter.
"You
have five minutes to open hatch. Your men have been taken. Five minutes to open
hatch and surrender."
Ali
chuckled. "And how does he think he's going to enforce that?" he
inquired of the air and incidentally of the guards now forming a square about
the three. "He'll need more than a flamer to unlatch the old girl if she
doesn't care for his offer."
Privately
Dane agreed with that. He hoped that Weeks would decide to hold out—at least
until they had a better idea of what the future would be. No tool or weapon he
saw in the assembly about them was forceful enough to penetrate the shell of
the Queen. And there were sufficient supplies on board to keep Weeks and his
charges going for at least a week. Since Tau had shown signs of coming out of
his coma, it might even be that the crew of the ship would arouse to their own
defense in that time. It all depended upon Weeks' present decision.
No
hatch yawned in the ship's sleek sides. She might have been an inert derelict
for all response to that demand. Dane's confidence began to rise. Weeks had
picked up the challenge, he would continue to baffle
police and Patrol.
Just how long that stalemate would have
lasted they were not to know for another player came on the board. Through the fines of besiegers Hovan, escorted by the Patrolmen,
made his way up to the officer at the mike station. There was something
in his air which suggested that he was about to give battle. And the
conversation at the mike was relayed across the field, a fact of which they
were not at once aware.
"There
are sick men in there—" Hovan's voice boomed out. "I demand the right
to return to duty—"
"If
and when they surrender they shall all be accorded
necessary aid," that was the officer. But he made no impression on the
Medic from the frontier. Dane, by chance, had chosen better support than he had
guessed.
"Pro
Bono Publico—" Hovan invoked the battle cry of his own Service. "For
the Public Good—"
"A
plague ship—" the officer was beginning. Hovan waved that aside impatiendy.
"Nonsense!" His voice scaled up across the field. There Is
no plague aboard. I am willing to certify that before the Council. And if you
refuse these men medical attention— which they need—I shall cite the case all
the way to my Board!"
Dane
drew a deep breath. That was taking
off on their orbit! Not being one of the Queen's crew, in faet having good
reason to be angry over his treatment at their hands, Hovan's present attitude
would or should carry weight.
The
Patrol officer who was not yet ready to concede all points had an answer:
"If you are able to get on board—go."
Hovan
snatched the mike from the astonished officer. "Weeks!"
His voice was imperative. "I'm coming aboard-alone!"
All
eyes were on the ship and for a short period it would seem that Weeks did not
trust the Medic. Then, high in her needle nose, one of the escape ports, not
intended for use except in dire emergency opened and allowed a plastic link
ladder to fall link by fink.
Out
of the comer of his eye Dane caught a flash of movement to his left. Manacled
as he was he threw himself on the policeman who was aiming a stun rifle into
the port. His shoulder struck the fellow waist high and his weight carried them
both with a bruising crash to the concrete pavement as Rip shouted and hands
clutched roughly at the now helpless Cargo-apprentice.
He
was pulled to his feet, tasting the flat sweetness of blood where a flailing
blow from the surprised and frightened policeman had cut his hp against his
teeth. He spat red and glowered at the ring of angry men.
"Why
don't you kick him?" Ah inquired, a vast and blistering
contempt sawtoothing his voice. "He's got his hands cuffed so he's fair
game—"
"What's
going on here?" An officer broke through the ring. The policeman, on his
feet once more, snatched up the rifle Dane's attack had knocked out of his
hold.
"Your
boy here," Ah was ready with an answer, "tried to find a target
inside the hatch. Is this the usual way you conduct xa truce,
sir?"
He was answered by a glare
and the rifleman was abruptly ordered to the rear. Dane, his head clearing,
looked at the Queen. Hovan was climbing the ladder—he was within arm's length
of that half open hatch. The very fact that the Medic had managed to make his
point stick was, in a faint way, encouraging. But the three were not allowed to
enjoy that small victory for long. They were marched from the field, loaded
into a mobile and taken to the city several miles away. It was the Patrol who
held them in custody—not the Terra-police. Dane was not sure whether that was
to be reckoned favorable or not. As a Free Trader he had a grudging respect for
the organization he had seen in action on Limbo.
Sometime
later they found themselves, freed of the force bars, alone in a room which, bare walled as it was, did have a bench on which all three
sank thankfully. Dane caught the warning gesture from Ali—they were under
unseen observation and they must have a listening audience too—located
somewhere in the maze of offices.
"They
can't make up their minds," the Engineer-apprentice settled his shoulders
against the wall. "Either we're desperate ■criminals, or we're
heroes. They're going to let time decide."
"If we're heroes," Dane asked a
little querulously, "what are we doing locked up here? I'd like a few
earth-side comforts—beginning with a full meal—"
"No thumb printing, no psycho
testing," Rip mused. "Yes, they haven't put us through the system
yet."
"And we decidedly aren't the forgotten
men. Wipe your face, child," Ali said to Dane, "you're still
dribbling."
The Cargo-apprentice smeared his hand across
his chin and brought it away red and sticky. Luckily his teeth remained intact.
"We
need Hovan to read them more law," observed Kamil. "You should have
medical attention."
Dane dabbed at his mouth. He didn't need all
that solicitude, but he guessed that Ali was talking for the benefit of those
who now kept them under surveillance.
"Speaking of Hovan—I wonder what became
of that pest he was supposed to have under control. He didn't bring the cage
with him when .he came out of the Tower, did he?" asked Rip.
"If
it gets loose in that building," Dane decided to give the powers who held them in custody something to think about,
"they'll have trouble. Practically invisible and
poisonous. And maybe it can reproduce its kind, too. We don't know
anything about it—"
Ali
laughed. "Such fun and games! Imagine a hundred
of the dear creatures flitting in and out of the broadcasting section. And
Captain Jellico has the only Hoobat on Terra! He can name his own terms for
rounding up the plague. The whole place will be filled with sleepers before
they're through—"
Would
that scrap of information send some Patrolmen hurtling off to the Tower in
search of the caged creature? The thought of such an expedition was, in a small
way, comforting to the captives.
An
hour or so later they were fed, noiselessly and without visible attendants,
when three trays slid through a slit in the wall at floor level. Rip's nose
wrinkled.
"Now
I get the vectorl We're plague-ridden—keep aloof and
watch to see if we break out in purple spots!"
Ah was lifting thermo fids from the
containers and now he suddenly arose and bowed in the direction of the blank
wall. "Many, many thanks," he intoned. "Nothing but the best—a
sub-commander's rations at least! We shall deliver ton star rating to this
thoughtfulness when we are questioned by the powers that shine."
It was good
food. Dane ate cautiously because of his torn hp, but the whole adventure took
on a more rose-colored hue. The lapse of time before they were put through the
usual procedure followed with criminals, this excellent dinner—it was all
promising. The Patrol could not yet be sure how they were to be handled.
"They've fed us," Ali observed as
he clanged the last dish back on a tray. "Now you'd think they'd bed us. I
could do with several days—and nights—of bunk thfie right about now."
But that hint was not taken up and they
continued to sit on the bench as time limped by. According to Dane's watch it
must be nightmow, though the steady light in the window-less room did not vary.
What had Hovan discovered in the Queen? Had he been able to rouse any of the
crew? And was the spacer still inviolate, or had the Terrapalice and the Patrol
managed to take her ■ over?
He was
so very tired, his eyes felt as if hot sand had been
poured beneath the lids, his body ached. And at last he nodded into naps from
which he awoke with jerks of the neck. Rip was frankly asleep, his shoulders
and head resting against the wall, while Ah lounged
with closed eyes. Though the Cargo-apprentice was sure that Kami! was more alert than his comrades, as if he waited for
something he thought was soon to occur.
Dane
dreamed. Once more he trod the reef rising out of Sargol's shallow sea. But he
held no weapon and beneath the surface of the water a gorp lurked. When he
reached the break in the water-washed rock just ahead, the spidery horror
would strike and against its attack he was defenseless. Yet he must march on
for he had no control over his own actions 1
"Wake
up!" Ali's hand was on his shoulder, shaking him back and forth with
something close to gentleness. "Must you give an imitation of a
space-whirly moonbat?"
'The
gorp—" Dane came back to the present and flushed. He dreaded admitting to
a nightmare—especially to Ah whose poise he had always found disconcerting.
"No gorps here.
Nothing but—"
Kamil's
words were lost in the escape of metal against metal as a panel slid back in
the wall. But no guard wearing the black and silver of the Patrol stepped
through to summon them to trial. Van Rycke stood in the opening, half smiling
at them with his customary sleepy benevolence.
"Well,
well, and here's our missing ones," his purring voice was the most
beautiful sound Dane thought he had ever heard.
Chapter XVIII
BARGAIN CONCLUDED
"—and so we landed here, sir," Rip concluded his report in
the matter-of-fact tone he might have used in describing a perfectly ordinary
voyage, say between Terraport and Luna City, a run of no incident and dull
cargo carrying.
The
crew of the Solar Queen, save for Tau, were assembled in a room somewhere in
the vastness of Patrol Headquarters. Since the room seemed a comfortable
conference chamber, Dane thought that their status must now be on a higher
level than that of Patrol Posted outlaws. But he was also sure that if they
attempted to walk out of the building that effort would not be successful.
Van
Rycke sat stolidly in his chosen seat, fingers of both hands laced across his
substantial middle. He had sat as impassively as the Captain while Rip had
outlined their adventures since they had all been stricken. Though the other
listeners had betrayed interest in the story, the senior officers made no
comments. .Now Jellico turned to his Cargo-master.
"How
about it, Van?"
"What's done is
done—"
Dane's
elation vanished as if ripped away by a Sargolian storm wind. The Cargo-master
didn't approve. So there must have been another way to achieve their ends—one
the younger members of the crew had been too inexperiencd or too dense to see—
"If
we blasted off today we might just make cargo contract."
Dane started. That was itl The
point they had lost sight of during their struggles to get aid. There was no
possible chance of upping the ship today—probably not for days to come—or ever,
if the case went against them. So they had broken contract—and the Board would
be down on them for that. Dane shivered inside. He could try to fight back
against the Patrol—there had always been a slight feeling of rivalry
between the
Free Traders and the space police. But you couldn't buck the Board—and keep
your license and so have a means of staying in space. A broken contract could
cut one off from the stars forever. Captain Jellico looked very bleak at that
reminder.
"The
Eysies will be all ready to step in. I'd like to know why they were so sure we
had the plague on board—"
Van
Rycke snorted. "I can supply you five answers to that —for one they may
have known the affinity of those creatures for the wood, and it would be easy
to predict as a result of our taking a load on board—or again they may have
deliberately planted the things on us through the Salariki— But we can't ever
prove it. It remains that they are going to get for themselves the Sargolian
contract unless—" He stopped short, staring straight ahead of him at the
wall between Rip and Dane. And his assistant knew that Van was exploring a fresh
idea. Van's ideas were never to be despised and Jellico did not now disturb the
Cargo-master with questions.
It
was Rip who «poke next and directly to the Captain. "Do
you know what they plan to do about us, sir?"
Captain
Jellico grunted and there was a sardonic twist to his mouth as he replied,
"It's my opinion that they're now busy adding up the fist of crimes you
four have committed— maybe they had to turn the big HG computer loose on the
problem. The tally isn't in yet. We gave them our automat flight record and
that ought to give them more food for thought."
Dane
speculated as to what the experts would make
of the mechanical record of the Queen's past few weeks—the section dealing with
their landing in the Big Burn ought to be a little surprising. Van Rycke got to
his feet and marched to the door of the conference room. It was opened from
without so quickly Dane was sure that they had been under constant
surveillance.
"Trade
business," snapped the Cargo-master, "contract deal.
"Take me to a sealed com booth!"
Contracts might not be as
sacred to the protective Service as they were to Trade, but Trade had its
powers and since Van Rycke, an innocent bystander of the Queen's troubles,
could not legally be charged with any crime, he was escorted out of the room.
But the door panel was sealed behind him, shutting in die rest with the
unspoken warning that they were not free agents. Jellico leaned back in his
chair and stretched. Long years of close friendship had taught him that his
Cargo-master was to be trusted with not only the actual trading and cargo
tending, but could also think them out Of some of the tangles which could not
be solved by his own direct action methods. Direct action had been applied to
their present problem—now the rest was up to Van, and he was willing to
delegate all responsibility.
But they were not left long to themselves.
The door opened once more to admit star rank Patrolmen. None of the Free
Traders arose. As members of another Service they considered themselves
equals. And it was their private boast that the interests of Galactic
civilization, as represented by the black and silver, often followed, not
preceded the brown tunics into new quarters of the universe.
However,
Rip, Ali, Dane, and Weeks answered as fully as they could the flood of
questions which engulfed them. They explained in detail their visit to the
E-Stat, th© landing in the Big Burn, the kidnaping of
Hovan. Dane's stubborn feeling of being in the right grew in opposition to the
questioning. Under the same set of circumstances how would that Commander—that
Wing Officer—that Senior Scout—now all seated there—have acted? And every time
they inferred that his part in the affair had been illegal he stiffened.
Sure, there had to be law and order out on
the Rim—and doubly sure it had to cover and protect life on the softer planets
of the inner systems. He wasn't denying that on Limbo, he, for one, had been
very glad to see the Patrol blast their way into the headquarters of the
pirates holed up on that half-dead world. And he was never contemptuous of the
men in the field. But like all Free Traders he was influenced by a belief that
too often the laws as enforced by the Patrol favored the wealth and might of
the Companies, that law could be twisted and the Patrol sent to push through
actions which, though legal, were inherently unfair to those who had not the
funds to fight it out in the far off Council courts. Just as now he was certain
that the Eysies were bringing all the influence they had to bear here against
the Queen's men. And Inter-Solar had a lot of influence.
At
the end of their ordeal their statements were read back to them from the
recording tape and they thumb signed them. Were these statements or
confessions, Dane mused. Perhaps in their honest reports they had just signed
their way into the moon mines. Only there was no move to lead them out and book
them. And when Weeks pressed his thumb at the bottom of the tape, Captain
Jellico took a hand. He looked at his watch.
"It
is now ten hours," he observed. "My men need rest, and we all want
food. Are you through with us?"
The Commander was spokesman for the other
group. "You are to remain in quarantine, Captain. Your ship has not yet
been passed as port-free. But you will be assigned quarters—"
Once
again they were marched through blank halls to the other section of the
sprawling Patrol Headquarters. No windows looked upon the outer world, but
there were bunks and a small mess alcove. Ah, Dane, and Rip turned in, more
interested in sleep than food. And the last thing the Cargo-apprentice
remembered was seeing Jellico talking eamesdy with Steen Wilcox as they both
sipped steaming mugs of real Terran coffee.
But
with twelve hours of sleep behind them the three were less contented in
confinement. No one had come near them and Van Rycke had not returned. Which fact the crew clung to as a ray of hope. Somewhere the
Cargo-master must be fighting their battle. And all Van's vast store of Trade
knowledge, all his knack of cutting comers and driving a shrewd bargain,
enlisted on their behalf, must win them some concessions.
Medic Tau came in, bringing Hovan with him.
Both looked tired but triumphant. And their report was a shot in the arm for
the now uneasy Traders.
"We've
rammed it down their throats," Tau announced. "They're willing to
admit that it was those poison bugs and not a plague. Incidentally," he
grinned at Jellico and then looked around expectandy, "where's Van? This
comes in his department. We're going to cash in on those the kids dumped in the
deep freeze. Terra-Lab is bidding on them. I said to see Van—he can arrange the
best deal for us. Where is he?"
"Gone
to see about our contract," Jellico reported. "What's the news about
our status now?"
"Well, they've got to wipe out the
plague ship listing. Also —we're big news. There're about twenty video men
rocketing around out in the offices trying to get in and have us do some spot
broadcasts. Seems that the children here," he jerked his
thumb at the three apprentices, "started something. An inter solar invasion couldn't be bigger news! Human interest by the tankful. I've been on Video twice and
they're trying to sign up Hovan almost steady—"
The Medic from the frontier nodded.
"Wanted me to appear on a three week schedule," he chuckled. "I
was asked to come in on 'Our Heroes of the Starlines' and two Quiz programs. As for you, you young criminal," he swung to Dane,
"you're going to be fair game for about" three networks. It
seems you transmit well," he uttered the last as if it were
an accusation and Dane squirmed. "Anyway you did something with your crazy
stunt. And, Captain, three men want to buy your Hoobat. I gather they are
planning a showing of how it captures those pests. So be prepared—"
Dane
tried to visualize a scene in which he shared top billing with Queex and
shuddered. All he wanted now was to get free of Terra for a nice, quiet,
uncomplicated world where problems could be settled with a sleep rod or a
blaster and the Video screen was unknown.
Having
heard of what1 awaited them—without the men of the Queen—were more
content to be incarcerated in the quarantine section. But as time wore on and
the Cargo-master did not return, their anxieties awoke. They were fairly sure
by now that any penalty the Patrol or the Terrapolice would impose would not be
too drastic. But a broken contract was another and more serious affair—a matter
which might ground them more effectively than any rule of the law enforcement
bodies. And Jellico took to pacing the room, while Tang and Wilcox who had
started a game of four dimensional chess made countless errors of move, and
Stotz glared moodily at the wall, apparently too sunk in his own gloomy
thoughts to rise from the mess table in the alcove.
Though
time had ceased to have much meaning for them except as an irritating reminder
of the now sure failure of their Sargolian venture, they marked the hours into
a second full day of detention before Van Rycke finally put in appearance. The
Cargo-master was plainly tired, but he showed no signs of discomposure. In fact
as he came in he was humming what he fondly imagined was a popular tune.
Jellico asked no questions, he merely
regarded his trusted officer with a quizzically raised eyebrow. But the others
drew around. It was so apparent that Van Rycke was pleased with himself. Which could only mean that in
some fantastic way he had managed to bring their venture down in a full fin
landing, that somehow he had argued the Queen out of danger into a position
where he could control the situation.
He halted just within the doorway and eyed
Dane, Ali, and Rip with mock severity. "You're baaaad boys," he told
them with a shake of the head and a drawl of the adjective. "You've been
demoted ten files each on the list."
Which must put him on the bottom rung once more, Dane calculated
swiftly. Or
even below—though he didn't see how he could fall beneath the rank he held at
assignment. However, he found the news heartening instead of discouraging.
Compared to a bleak sentence at the moon mines such demotion was absolutely
nothing and he knew that Van Rycke was breaking the worst news first.
"You
also forfeit all pay for this voyage," the Cargo-master was continuing.
But Jellico broke in.
"Board fine?"
At the Cargo-master's nod,
Jellico added. "Ship pays that."
"So
I told them," Van Rycke agreed. "The Queen's warned off Terra for ten
solar years—"
They could take that, too. Other Free Traders
got back to their home ports perhaps once in a quarter century. It was so much
less than they had expected that the sentence was greeted with a concentrated
sigh of relief.
"No earth-side leave—"
All
right—no leave. They were not, after their late experiences so entranced with
Terraport that they wanted to linger in its environs any longer than they had
to.
"We lose the Sargol
contract—"
That did hurt. But they had resigned
themselves to it since the hour when they had realized that they could not make
it back to the perfumed planet.
"To Inter-Solar?" Wilcox asked the important question.
Van Rycke was smiling broadly, as if the loss
he had just announced was in some way a gain. "No—to
Combine!"
"Combine?" the Captain echoed and
his puzzlement was duplicated around the circle. How did Inter-Solar's
principal rival come into it?"
"We've made a deal with Combine,"
Van Rycke informed them. "I wasn't going to let I-S cash in on our loss.
So I went to Vickers at Combine and told him the situation. He understands
that we were in solid with the Salariki and that the Eysies are not. And a
chance to point a blaster at I-S's tail is just what he has been waiting for.
The shipment will go out to the storm priests tomorrow on a fight cruiser—it'll
make it on time."
Yes, a light cruiser, one of the fast ships
maintained by the big Companies, could make the transition to Sargol with a
slight margin to spare. Stotz nodded his approval at this practical solution.
"I'm going with it—" That did jerk
them all up short. For Van Rycke to leave the Queen—that was as unthinkable as if Captain Jellico' had suddenly announced that he
was about to retire and become a kelp farmer. "Just for the one
trip," the Cargo-master hastened to assure them. "I smooth their
vector with the storm priests and hand over so the Eysies will be frozen
out—"
Captain
Jellico interrupted at that point. "D'you mean
that Combine is buying
us out—not just taking
over? What kind of a deal—"
But
Van Rycke, his smile a brilliant stretch across his plump face, was nodding in
agreement. "They're taking over our contract and our place with the
Salariki."
"In
return for what?" Steen Wilcox asked for them all.
"For twenty-five thousand credits and a mail run between Xecho and
Trewsworld—frontier planets. They're far enough from Terra to get around the exile ruling. The
Patrol will escort us out and see that we get down to work like good little
space men. Well have two years of a nice, quiet run on regular pay. Then, when
all the powers that shine have forgotten about us, we can cut in on the trade
routes again."
"And the pay?" "First or second class mail?"
"When do we start?"
"Standard pay on the completion of each
run—Board rates," he made replies in order. "First, second and third
class mail— anything that bears the government seal and out in those quarters
it is apt to be anything!
And you start as soon as
you can get to Xecho and relieve the Combine scout which has been holding down
the run."
"While you go to
Sargol—" commented Jellico.
"While I make one voyage to Sargol. You can spare me," he dropped one of
his big hands on Dane's shoulder and gave the flesh beneath it a quick squeeze.
"Seeing as how our juniors helped pull us out of this last mix-up we can
trust them about an inch farther than we did before. Anyway— Cargo-master on a
mail run is more or less a thumb-twiddling job at the best. And you can trust
Thorson on stowage—that's one thing he does know."
Which dubious ending left Dane wondering as to whether he had been complimented
or warned. "I'll be on board again before you
know it—the Combine will ship me out to Trewsworld on your second trip across
and I'll join ship there. For once we won't have to worry for awhile. Nothing
can happen on a mail run." He shook his head at the three youngest members
of the crew. "You're in for a very dull time—and it will serve you right.
Give you a chance to learn your jobs so that when you come up for reassignment
you can pick up some of those files you were just demoted. Now," he
started briskly for the door. "Ill tranship to the Combine cruiser. I take
it that you don't want to meet the Video people?"
At
their hasty agreement to that, he laughed. "Well, the Patrol doesn't want
the Video spouting about 'high-handed official news suppression' so about an
hour or so from now you'll be let out the back way. They put the Queen in a
cradle and a field scooter will take you to her. You'll find her serviced for
a take-off to Luna City. You can refit there for deep space. Frankly the sooner
you get off-world the happier all ranks are going to be—both here and on the
Board. It will be better for us to walk softly for a while and let them forget
that the Solar Queen and her crazy crew exists.
Separately •and together you've
managed to break—or at least bend—half the laws in the books and they'd like to
have us out of their minds."
Captain
Jellico stood up. "They aren't any more anxious to see us go than we are
to get out of here. You've pulled it off for us again, Van, and we're lucky to
get out of it this easy—"
Van
Rycke rolled his eyes ceilingward. "You'll never know how luckyl Be glad Combine hates the space I-S blasts through. We were
able to use that to our-advantage. Get the big fellows at each others' throats
and they'll stop annoying us—simple proposition but it works. Anyway we're set
in blessed and peaceful obscurity now. Thank the Spirit of Free Space there's
practically no trouble one can get into on a safe and sane mail route!"
But
Cargo-master Van Rycke, in spite of knowing the Solar Queen, and the temper of
her crew, was exceedingly over-optimistic when he made that emphatic statement.