INTERPLANETARY
NO-MAN'S-LAND
Though Ajax Calkins was wealthy
enough to buy anything on Earth his heart desired, the one thing he wanted most
was strictly forbidden. That was a world of his own—a planet, however small,
which would be his private kingdom in the sky. The Earth-Mars Space
Administration stood in his path. They would tolerate no such Eighteenth
Century derring-do in the commercial and workaday interplanetary channels of
the Twenty-First Century. Empire-building was out.
But when an offer from a bearded
stranger opened the way to just such an adventure, Ajax leapt at the chance. In
his luxury spacecraft Destiny
he
shot out through the inner planets to the tiny world that waited a king—and,
unwittingly to a monster outer-planet empire that waited a detonator for cosmic
war.
Turn
this book over for second complete novel
CAST
OF CHARACTERS
Ajax Calkins
A man with a destiny and no place
to put it
The Third Least Wuj
This loyal subject put all of his eight hairy arms
to work for his master.
Emily Hackenschmidt
A spunky gal who stuck by her
guns—even when they were taken away from her.
Anton Smallways
Beneath his hard exterior, there beat the heart of a
traitor.
Brother Augustus
An advocate of peaceful repose of
the soul, whose past boasted of disturbing the peace.
DESTINY'S ORBIT
by
DAVID
GRINNELL
ACE
BOOKS, INC. 23 West 47th Street, New York 36, N.Y.
destiny's orbit
Copyright ©, 1961, by David Grinnell
An Ace Book, by arrangement with Thomas Bouregy and Co., Inc.
All Rights Reserved
David Grinnell is the author of
ACROSS TIME (D-286)
EDGE OF TIME (D-362)
THE MARTIAN MISSILE (D-i65)
By order of his majesty, Ajax I, this history is gratefully dedicated to his most
loyal and faithful of Terrestrial advocates:
Elsie W. and Hannes B.
times without number
Copyright ©, 1962, by Ace Books, Inc.
Printed in U.S.A.
CHAPTER ONE
From where he sat, he could look over the wide waters of the
Great Slave Lake, stretching as far as the eye could see like a small estuary.
Any other man so fortunate as to have such an estate and such a view would have
been content to remain there, resting his eyes on the clear untraveled northern
waters during the few months they were free of the chill and ice of the long
Canadian winters. But not Ajax Calkins.
Ajax sat there and his eyes may have roved over the
magnificent view from the wide wall-length window of his study, but his
thoughts were not on the splendors of the known and possessed. He owned many
acres along that distant frigid shore, landscaped, warmed by electronic mirrors
set at discreetly hidden positions among the wide banks of slender young evergreens;
he owned the vast sprawling mansion whose many rooms were his. He owned the
artfully concealed airport, and the water-skimming
fleet of air-cushion boats now hangared in the low plastic building along the
lake front.
He
was just about master of all he surveyed, about as much master as any single
man could be in that year of world peace and prosperity, 2080. He was among the
world's several great billionaires, men whose fortunes had been derived from
the basic discoveries of the space age,
now in its second century, settling
down to routine and commerce and stability. And he was unhappy.
He held a book in his lap and,
glancing down once again at the printed page, let his eyes rove; he shut the
book with an impatient sigh, and reaching out, flicked his hand over a
radiosensitive globe resting beside his wide form-fitting contour chair.
There was a shuffling noise
behind him, a discreet cough, and a voice said, "You rang, sir?"
Ajax looked up, though he was
quite familiar with the butler's bland visage. He looked over the tranquil,
expressionless features, designed to instill confidence and calm. The butler's
countenance had been designed by a master roboticist to duplicate exactly the
basic features of the famous butler types of Queen Victoria's golden reign of
centuries past.
"Jenkins," Ajax said in
a soft, musing voice. "I am bored. I long for more worlds to
conquer."
"Yes, sir," replied the robotic servant in
respectful tones. "Yours is a laudable ambition. If it were in my power, I
should give you the information you need in order to discover and conquer more
worlds."
"True, true," said Ajax, perfectly well
aware that the butler was specifically designed always to agree with him.
Though, in this case, he thought to himself, enthusiastic agreement was the
only course that a truly intelligent mind could possibly take.
"In this book," said Ajax, "I have
been reading once again of the great Pizarro and his courageous followers.
Singlehanded, practically alone, they took for themselves an entire nation, a
mighty empire. Ah, yes, those were the days. Bravery and daring were rewarded.
What is there now for such a man?"
The butler nodded his head, issued the expected
sympathetic sigh.
Ajax went on, stroking his thin mustache
thoughtfully. For a young man of twenty-five, he was fairly good look-
ing, though his pale blue eyes could
have stood some deepening of color and his rather medium brown hair was less
than distinctive. Ajax gritted his teeth, moved his frame-he was something
short of six feet tall—another disappointment to him.
"I tell you, in those days there were rewards
for men of daring. A man could found his own kingdom, raise his own standard.
Thrones were toppled, new thrones' established. I am such a man—and my tragedy
is that I live in the wrong tune."
The butler clicked again sympathetically. "I am
sure you will find your own kingdom, sir. You are brilliant, clever, kind,
wise, daring, courageous. ..."
"Yes, yes," said Ajax
waving a hand. "But such quests are illegal; all the worlds to be taken
are already had. Do you realize how hampered I am? I the Calkins, heir of the Calkans fortunes, benefactor of the whole
space world, and yet held back here by lack of a world. Had I been born fifty
years ago, or a hundred, I could reach out and seize myself a land. But now
..." —
"It's sad, sir, that the Earth-Mars Space
Administration has claimed jurisdiction over all within our borders—and that
there is nothing outside worth the having," said the butler.
"Yes," said Ajax. "Do you realize
what men have done in the past? Think of Captain Cook, who found Australia;
Cortez and the taking of Peru; even the White Rajah of Sarawak— now there was
an adventurer on the old scale. But for me— what island remains to be found?
What new continent to claim? What throne to seize? Nothing, I tell you,
nothing. I have advertised. I have offered support to discoverers and
adventurers, from Mercury clear to the asteroids; no takers.
"I have a first class spaceship at my disposal,
my splendid yacht the Destiny. I have a flag, my own, folded and
stowed away in the cabin, waiting for the day it can be unfurled above that
land which will be mine, the kingdom of Ajax. And here I sit, with the money
and its potential power that a world gives me—tied hand and foot by pointless,
soul killing laws. A lesser man
would have long since despaired, Jenkins."
Ajax jumped up, began to stride back and forth
across the room. As he spoke he orated, recounting the days of centuries past,
when valiant men set sail in little ships to find new islands, to wrest old
empires from primitive hands, to explore and dare, to
trek the frozen Antarctic, to battle the jungles and swamps.
"Rhodesial" shouted Ajax, raising himself to the fine full frenzy of
his dream. "The very name rings of one man's glory. Rhodesia!
"And where is Ajaxia? Where?"
The robot butler, the very figure of a faithful
family retainer, stood silent, unable constitutionally to disagree, but unable
equally to offer any help. As Ajax waved a hand to the window, pointing to the
north, and yelling despairingly, "Where?" there was a discreet
buzzing in the room.
The
butler shuffled over to the paneled cabinet, clicked it open and removed a rolled
sheet of yellow paper which had just materialized in the teleprinter. He
brought it over to the young man, who snatched it from him, thrust one foot
ahead of him, struck a commander's pose, and started to scan the message.
His
eyes suddenly bulged. He gulped. He turned pale, then red. Losing his pose, he
jumped, waved the message, and dashed over to the radio cabinet. "It's cornel" he shouted in a voice strangely
high-pitched from excitement. "Look," he cried. "Read this!"
He waved the message at the butler, but that official merely shook its head. It
was not possible yet to construct a robot that could read and still be portable
or ambulatory.
Ajax read it aloud. One of his ads had been
answered. The message was from an official of the Martian branch offices of Calkans. A person had answered the ad for a new world to
conquer. If Ajax would communicate with him, he would give Calkins all the
details.
Ajax
rang up the official, dialing in the number. There was a wait of several
minutes while the connections were made.
The branch manager's face appeared rather mistily,
blanking out several times, until Ajax wiped out the telecast, realizing that
interplanetary distances made connections of that type unsatisfactory, even on
his top-priced top-range equipment.
But the voice connection
was good.
"There
is a party who has come here," said the branch manager after parrying
Ajax's excited barrage of questions. "He gave his name as one Anton
Smallways and says he represents a group of asteroid prospectors and miners. He
states that they have an airtight claim to the independence of certain areas
under their control and that he wishes to make a deal with you, as they need
funds to assist in the areas' development. His claim seems to be authentic, Mr.
Calkins, though he would not give full details unless he sees you."
"When?"
shouted Ajax. "When can he come to Earth and discuss it with me
here?"
"Sir," said the Martian branch officer,
"he says he cannot undertake that trip. He requests that you come to Mars.
Meet him in Syrtis Major Prime City as soon as you
can and he will prove his point."
"Set
up the date!" said Ajax quickly. "I'll leave at once! I'll be on Mars as soon as the Destiny
can make it—and it's the fastest yacht private money can
buy!"
"Very
good, sir," said the man on Mars, "I'll advise you as quickly as it
can be arranged." His voice faded out as the connection was broken.
Ajax
stood still. His heart was beating. "Butler!" he said. "I think
this is it! Ajaxia . . . you're waiting!"
There
was a faint ring somewhere in the distant halls of the sprawling building. The butler
shuffled rapidly out.
Ajax
eased himself down in his great chair and leaned forward, stared out the
window, his eyes rapt with thought. He heard the shuffling sounds of the butler
coming back. He heard a sharp quick tread behind him, but his thoughts were far
away and he had forgotten that there was someone until the butler coughed.
"There's a lady here to see you, sir," the
butler announced.
"Tell her I can't be
bothered," Ajax said dreamily. "I have more weighty matters on my
mind."
"Exactly," snapped a new voice, sharp,
feminine, and stem. "And that's why I'm here, young man. The Earth-Mars
Space Administration wants to have a talk with you. Right
here and now!"
Ajax dropped his feet to the ground from their
air-cushion rest and the chair wheeled around bringing him face-to-face with
his visitor. Two pairs of determined eyes met.
Somewhere
there ought to have been thunder.
CHAPTER TWO
Like many young men in all ages, Ajax Calkins did not
appreciate the element of good fortune in his situation. His father had married
late in life, and Ajax was the only child of a union which no one had expected
to last long. But the newsmen who had made cynical wagers among themselves at
the time of the Calkins-O'Neill nuptials had underestimated Miss Margaret
O'Neill, orphan and night-club entertainer. Miss O'Neill was not after the
elder Calkins' money.
An
incurably romantic child, Margaret sought both husband and father, and found
both in Ajax's sire. The library of the Calkins estate was crammed with the
sort of books that Margaret had always wanted to read—romantic tales of great
adventurers of history. Ajax was fed this heady diet from the time he was able to
turn the pages of a picture book; and the Calkins fortune made it possible for
him to be educated as his mother desired. Contact with the real world and with
the un-delightful realities behind, or side-by-side with, the glamorous aspects
of Pizzaro, Rhodes, etc., barely existed. Margaret would skim such portions of
the glowing tales which touched upon the crimes of the great heroes and merely
say that sometimes they did bad things, and Ajax should remember that all
human beings were precious and no one should be exploited unfairly. A truly
great conqueror was gentle and considerate to those whom he ruled, though firm
with lawlessness.
After
the death of his parents in a storm which foundered the old-fashioned sailing
craft that Margaret loved, young Ajax Calkins got to read the skimmed-over
parts of his favorite books, and found that his heroes were not entirely
faultless. However, his mother's
teaching preserved him
from too-great shock; he could piece
out the hints she had made and decide that such unpalatable behavior was due to
the lower moral consciousness of bygone days. He would avoid such folly.
It never occurred to him to
wonder what might have happened had there been any other heirs or relatives to
contest the Calkins legacy. The possibility that he might have found himself in
a sanitarium, declared incompetent, also never occurred to him. He knew, of
course, that the times were out of joint—but then, sometimes his idols of the
past had had to suffer from general stupidity and tiresome laws, too. He would perservere.
And now, his dream was about to come true. Destiny
was finally opening the way for him. Whoever this caller was, she would not be
allowed to interfere. He drew himself up and looked at her. Facing Ajax was a
pretty young woman, perhaps his age, but more likely a year or two younger. She
might have presented a pleasant picture to that young man's eyes some other
time or some other place-such as seated across a table at an exotic pleasure
satellite over beakers of delicately scented intoxicants—but right now her deep
blue eyes were lowered in a determined frown, her lips were tightly drawn, and
her arms were jutting outwards from her hips angrily.
He noted subconsciously the details of her face,
which beneath a mop of short black hair arranged in bangs like those of a
poodle dog, he would have enjoyed seeing. But right now he was in a mood to
match hers—which was angry.
"Who are you and who do you
think you are, young lady!" Ajax barked at her. "What do you mean by
. . ."
"Don't bellow at me, Mr. Calkins of Calkans!" she snapped back just as sharply.
"You may be the smart-aleck spoiled young man I've heard of, but even you
can't talk back to the EMSA! And that's who I am! I am Emily Hackenschmidt,
field investigator for the North American sector, and I mean to have a talk
with you!"
Ajax leaned back in his chair,
swallowing the sharp words.
The
EMSA was still nothing to challenge. Now what had he done to deserve this
inquiry?
The
Earth-Mars Space Administration had been set up some fifty years ago by high
treaty between the United Nations of Earth and the United Beings of Mars. The
two inhabited planets agreed to establish law and order over all the territory
covered by the established interplanetary trade routes. The Martians were a compliant group of intelligent types, and none of
them were martial despite their planet's name. They had given up exploration
somewhere in their prehistoric pasts. But they were quite willing to work with
the two-legged humans of Earth, once the Earthlings had made their way out to
the fourth planet's orbit. They were used to co-operating with other
intelligent species, for their world had always harbored more than one such
type.
And
if the bipeds of Terra wanted to poke around in space, that was all right with
the Martians. So there was peaceful co-operation, joint space government, and
harmony among the inner planets. It was the devout wish of every EMSA worker to
continue this.
"My
dear young lady," began Ajax cautiously. "I rather believe you must
be very new to your work. Your enthusiasm for EMSA is very commendable but
really I cannot imagine what is on your mind. You must have the wrong
party."
"Humph!" snorted Emily. "You're Ajax
Calkins, and you're the one whose
been advertising around the planets for adventurers?"
"Well,"
Ajax nodded, "I am that one. There is no other. And I did place a few
advertisements."
The
girl nodded, still standing and staring down at him
with her penetrating eyes. Ajax fidgeted, then
beckoned to his faithful robot butler. Silently the robot brought over a chair, and the girl sat down.
"We
have been investigating your curiosity concerning unclaimed places and new
possibilities for conquest. We do not approve of such ambitions, Mr. Calkins.
This is the Twenty-first Century, and there is no place for such Eighteenth
Century high-jinks. There are no more islands to be discovered, and all the
asteroids are covered by our laws. You are only encouraging charlatans and
frauds." She delivered her lecture with firmness.
Ajax stared back at her. "What I do is none of
your business. And if by any chance I find a place not covered by your laws, that will also be none of your business. I have no
intention of interfering with anyone's peace or trade. I merely insist on
following the precepts of such glorious heroes and benefactors of mankind as
Pizarro, Rhodes, Clive of India, and William Walker."
The girl frowned, shook her head angrily. "You
are a most obstinate person, Ajax Calkins. Let me warn you officially to cease and desist in these efforts. You must be
aware of the danger now looming from the newly contacted Saturnians. Those
creatures represent trouble outside our frontiers, and we don't want anyone
poking into their bailiwick."
"I've
no such plans, miss," said Ajax, crossing one knee over the other. "I
seek only what is still available. It is unthinkable that there remain no new
frontiers. Unthinkable!"
"Then
don't think it!" she snapped back. "Just stay here and enjoy your
riches. You're lucky your grandfather had brains, anyway!"
Ajax
sat bolt upright, almost forgetting he'd crossed his knees and for a moment he
tottered out of balance. He regained his control, while Emily sat back with
the suggestion of a laugh on her face. Inflamed, Ajax burst out:
"My
grandfather was a pioneer in his own way! He knew that the spaceships needed to
conserve shipping room, that space was at a premium in space, and he worked in
new fields to invent the great Calhans process. He forced matter to eliminate the space
between molecules until a square yard could be compressed into a square inch of
space. The weight might be the same but the space saved infinitely benefits
commerce between planets. I might say that your whole EMSA would be an impossibility without the practical use of Calkans for space shipments. And this was his way of finding
new frontiers, of making his mark.
"I expect nothing more than the same privilege
in my own way!"
"Piffle," said Emily.
"Your grandfather was a scientist, and he surely never expected the
fortune he made to end in the control of a young do-nothing like yourself. Your
father's death in that storm was certainly a sad thing for the Calkins
clan."
Ajax jumped to his feet, loomed
over the defiant girl. He waved a finger in her face. "Young ladyl I don't like your way of talking! I am not a child to
be chided and I object to your insults. I am Ajax Calkins, a name that will some day make history, the father of my country—when I find
it— and you can tell your confounded EMSA to go back to their customs offices
and licensing commissions and mind their own business!"
She drew back, grasped her
handbag as if to throw it at him in self-defense.
"And as for you, Miss Hackensmack, or whatever
your name is," he continued, "when I get back from Mars I shall see
to it that your superior knows of your threats. I think you will be sorry to
threaten me!"
She drew herself up. "Are
you through with your dramatic gestures?" she asked with a supercilious
smile. Then she got up. "I repeat my warning. This is official. Keep out
of trouble. Forget your little passion to have a silly little flag of your own.
The EMSA has its eye on you."
She abruptly turned her back on him, and marched off
down the aerocarpeted room, through the automatic
door, head held high, and disappeared with a twitch of her tweedy skirt.
Ajax stared after her, his face drawn in anger. He
launched a kick at the chair she had been sitting in, knocking it across the
room. The butler padded over, silently picked it up and stood it upright.
"Did you hear what she said?" shouted
Ajax. "She dared me to stop!"
"Of course, sir, you are not going to,"
said the butler. "You are right in your course. She must be wrong."
Ajax forgot at the moment that the butler was a
robot with built-in agreement coils. He nodded. "It's good that someone
has sense around here," he said more slowly.
He turned, glanced out the
window, looked at the clock on the wall. "There's no time to lose,"
he said. "Call the Destiny's launching complex. I want to take
off for Mars as soon as possible."
The butler padded away. Ajax
turned, walked rapidly to a wall cabinet, opened it
with a touch of his thumbprint. He took a long pole
from it, and gently unrolled the flag attached to it. On duraloid
dacron, in gorgeous purple,
there was a crown over a crimson "A." Ajax waved it softly back and
forth, admiring its swish through the air.
"Soon,"
he murmured, eyes aglaze, "soon."
The butler shuffled back. "The Destiny is being stocked now; the orbit
is being registered; you may expect to take off at 2230. Five
hours sir. May I suggest an early supper?"
"Yes, yes," said Ajax,
following the butler out. "Anything to take the taste of
that crazy girl out of my mouth."
In the distance, a small blue
single-seater jet slid out of the private rack and
whirling around over the waters of the Great Slave Lake, turned and raced back
towards the headquarters of the North American sector of EMSA.
There was a very determined young woman at its
controls. This was her first assignment as an EMSA operative, and she'd be
blasted if it wasn't going to be carried through to the bitter end.
There was a peal of thunder as
her jet broke the sound barrier on its fast acceleration. There ought to have
been lightning as well
CHAPTER
THREE
The private space yacht Destiny was one of the finest and most
modern spaceships in non-commercial hands. Few were the individuals
who could afford to own a space-going vehicle of their own, but Ajax Calkins
was one of them; into the Destiny he had put everything his money
could buy.
For one thing it was fully automationed; there was no crew. The entire ship could be
and was controlled from one point, and that point itself had only to have
certain coordinates punched to set the entire vessel on its course. The
figures themselves could be obtained by setting up specific destination
requests on the automatic calculators with which the control room was amply
equipped.
So, though the Destiny was no tiny vessel—it could carry
a dozen passengers with ease and in luxury—it was easily driven by a single
person. Ajax, a lonely soul who liked to commune with the stars by himself the better to envision his glorious future, was in
the habit of traveling alone.
Promptly at the set hour, after a good evening meal,
Ajax gave his robot butler specific instructions as to the conduct of his
estate, reverently took the wrapped roll of his personally designed flag from
its case, and strolled down to the outer terrace. There he stepped aboard his
ground carpet, spoke the correct words, and allowed the skimming flat oblong of
the airflow-platform to waft off gently, flow across the several acres of
space, and down along the cleared area beside the lake. It deposited him softly
at the door to his space yacht's hangar.
The Destiny was trim, neatly streamlined, painted
in gleaming purple trimmed with gold. Ajax went up the incline; the main lock
opened for him, and he stepped through.
He
wasted no time getting ready. Once in his control
room, reclining in a comfortable
form-fitting seat, he punched out the configuration for a direct, highest speed
flight to Mars. The machines clicked, growled a little, hissed steadily for a
few minutes, and then the tapes came out.
Feeding them into his main control panel, Ajax
waited until the lights on his board lit their ready signals. He punched down
the starter and leaned back.
The Destiny slid gently upward, rose in the
air as the hangar roof slid back, and then shot into the evening sky, heading
low and fast for the North Pole.
As it rose into the darkness of the upper
stratosphere, another series of lights lit on the main board and the radio
clicked on. "Calling Destiny. Calling private yacht Destiny," said a mechanical voice.
Ajax
sat up sharply, leaned forward.
"Destiny here," he said. "Who calls?"
This is the traffic control officer at Boothia takeoff
center. We have a routine check to make of you. Please proceed to Earth
Satellite Six, hold, and stand by for boarding."
The voice snapped off. Ajax
furrowed bis brow angrily. That wasn't normal
procedure. His ship had perfect clearance, was A-l in condition. He decided not
to argue with a machine; instead he depressed a lever, thereby clearing his
automatic pilot, and then reset it for the new destination.
Earth Satellite Six was a huge mile-wide platform rotating
around the Earth in sequence with eight other similar platforms. They were
regular clearing posts and loading stations for interplanetary commerce, and
often used for observatories and space hospitals.
The Destiny came alongside in time, matching
its speed with that of the huge flying disc, like a pancake-shaped world moving
through the blackness of airless space. It locked into a magnetic holding crane
and shut off its engines.
Ajax was on the radio at once. "Explain the
meaning of this outrage," he snapped. "What's holding me up? I have
urgent business on Mars."
"Sorry," said a voice. "An inspector
is coming aboard right away."
In a few minutes there was the
click of magnetic clamps, and a small barge snapped alongside. With suction the
airlock opened, and in a moment a man stepped inside. Ajax met him at the lock
door.
The man, a slender balding type with spectacles,
wore the maroon coveralls of the Earth-Mars Space Administration work team. He
was rather apologetic.
"I'm awfully sorry for the delay, sir, but we
have a holding call for you directly from the Ottawa office. The claim is made
that your ship is infested with . . . uh, umm . . . titmice, the report said.
And you must understand, sir, that the importation of rodents of any kind to
Mars is strictly taboo. We must inspect the ship."
"What!" Ajax screamed.
"What in ,heaven's name are you talking about!
How could this ship be infested? How, I ask you?"
"Well, sir," said the
official moving past him with a shrug. "I can't say, sir. The report said
something about this vessel having been kept in wilderness conditions, without
sealed garaging facilities. It will take some time to make the inspections."
"Something's definitely
fishy," grumbled Ajax. "There's no such report. Who could have made
it? Who could say? My hangar area is absolutely clear and my ship is always in
perfectly sterile condition." „
"Yes, sir," said the official. "That
may be right, sir, and so you have nothing to worry about but the delay of
several days while we recheck it. We have to obey orders, you know. There was a
charge. We must hold the ship for the next rodent inspection, and that may take
a while."
Ajax stood a minute, white with consternation, then shoved past the inspector in the passageway, hurried
ahead of him to the control room. The official was about to clamp a lock on the
controls, but Ajax brushed his hand down.
"Now you just wait a minute until I can get to
the bottom of this!" yelled Ajax. "Just wait until I call my
lawyers!"
"Well
. . ." said the inspector, but Ajax pushed him into a seat, and sitting
down at his own controls, shot in a call to the Calkans offices in Toronto.
In a few minutes he was in touch with the director
of the corporation's legal staff in his home territory. That person was equally
puzzled, but announced he would get on the matter without delay.
The next half hour was a period of tension and
annoyance. The two men sat glaring at each other without saying anything. Ajax
was angry, but it was hard to take his fury out on the other who was only a
minor official obeying orders from elsewhere.
Finally the call came in and the legal wizard was
back on. He seemed puzzled now judging from the expression on his plump elderly
features as they phased into the video mirror.
"A charge was put in against the Destiny late this afternoon," he
said. "It was made by an EMSA field operative, a party named
Hackenschmidt. This inspector claimed to have seen nesting titmice in close
proximity to the vessel and to have expressed the belief that in consequence
the craft should be re-inspected. The order was okayed
in view of the rodent prohibition law, which is one of the oldest in our
relations with Mars.
"I'm afraid that you will have to hold up your
trip for the time it will take to have the extermination crew survey your
vessel."
Ajax sat back, fingering his mustache. "Hackenschmidt, eh? I see her game. Delay at all costs.
That woman—she threatened to queer my game. Interfere with me, will she?"
He was thinking aloud.
The face of his legal adviser in
Toronto was also frowning in thought. "I am rather surprised. I am sure
your ship must be in order. This seems a most unusual sort of charge."
The man from the Earth Satellite was also deep in
thought. "Exactly what are titmice like—sir?" he asked. "It
seems to me that someone is in error. I have a feeling there is-a confusion of
definitions here."
Ajax
glanced at him and simultaneously the Toronto lawyer's face changed—both gave
a start.
"She goofed!" shouted Ajax. "The
charge is invalid. Even if there are titmice aboard—and I know there are not—it
is not legal to hold me. Titmice are not rodents; they're birds!"
"Why, so they are!" said the inspector
getting up and looking around. "And I'm sure there are no birds in
evidence around here. Even if there were, there's nothing in the regulations
about them."
"Right!" shouted Ajax
gleefully, "so clear off at once, and I shall be on my way."
"Titmice?" said the
inspector, heading for the airlock. "What a curious mistake . . ."
"Titmice," replied the
Toronto legalist smiling. "That Hackenschmidt must have garbled the
report. Perhaps the complainant meant field mice . . ."
"Hey, whose side are you on?" said Ajax.
"Titmice she said, and that's where it stands. This ship is cleared."
He snapped off the connection with the Canadian office.
The outer lock snicked shut as the inspector left; the; magnetic
clamps clicked loose, and the Destiny found itself adrift in orbit,
alongside the huge platform satellite.
Ajax leaped to his seat, recalculated the
coordinates in accord with his time, direction, velocity, and position, reset
his pilot. In a few minutes, the Destiny came under power, turned, and
headed outward.
Ajax
leaned back, realizing he had lost only an hour.
But that Hackenschmidt, he thought. That was a nasty
trick she pulled, but thank heavens he'd seen the last of her. She could sit
around and stew in her own home office, file all the complaints she wanted from
here on in; he was out of her control.
As the Destiny flashed past the moon's orbit,
Ajax retired for his first sleep of the trip.
But he dreamed uneasily of a black-haired girl with
flashing blue eyes. What was it they said about a woman scorned?
CHAPTER
FOUR
Sex days later Ajax was on Mars, a fast trip for
an automatically directed, non-crew operated, privately
owned space yacht. He went alone, for Ajax wasn't one to depend closely on
others. It had always been a principle of his life, ever since he had read the
romantic volumes in the Calkins library, which indicated that great men, mainly
explorers, almost invariably had pioneered in the face of obstacles and the
skepticism of others.
So he preferred to travel alone. It was hard to
trust other humans, who did not have the advantage of the wealth that was his
by birth, or share his dreams. Most people kept on insisting that kings and
crowns and private flags were out-of-date, childish symbols in a world that had
gone long past them. Needless to say, Ajax did not agree. Space, to him, was
infinite; and in an expanding space frontier, there would always be a fringe
awaiting the hand of a powerful man.
"History passes through phases," Ajax once
explained to his complacent robot butler, "in which the old frontier is
tamed and in which the new frontiers waiting beyond the new horizon are not yet
assaulted. A period of assimilation, of digestion, apparently must ensue before
the new borders are crossed. And today, we are in such a period. We have
expanded up to the orbit of Jupiter. We are trying to organize and utilize
what we have taken and so there is a period of consolidation, of conservatism
in human growth.
"Besides, we have now
encountered evidence of the Saturnians' existence and behavior; and we are
pausing to see what that means. But I say we must redouble our efforts to
attack the frontiers just because of that. For if we do not, the Saturnians
will!"
The robot butler had agreed of
course. In his student days, some of the tutors to whom young Calkins had first
outlined his thesis, did not. They regarded the whole thing as romanticism—a
word which Ajax had come to loathe.
Ajax, on arriving, had gone to the headquarters of
the Calkans company. Here he received the message
waiting for his arrival, and found in strictest confidence the name and address
of the place where Anton Smallways would meet him. And then, after carefully
confusing his trail >to prevent any from following him, Ajax boarded a local
Martian omnibus in order to reach his destination. Earthlings practically
never rode in these unusual Martian contrivances, and that, reasoned Ajax,
would help to throw off any pursuit—not that he had seen any, but a world
conqueror could not afford to take chances.
The Martian idea of an omnibus was a huge and rather
startling vehicle looking for all the world like a
huge single wheel rolling along by itself. The thing, in fact, was a wheel, for the tread ran along
the outside of the carrier, and the omnibus literally rolled along the spidery
walkways that spanned the city. Gyroscopically stabilized, the passengers were
jammed together in a large ball-like area in the hub of the wheel.
Ajax clung to a trapeze-like set of bars, holding
tight as the spherical carriage swayed and vibrated alarmingly in the manner of
all those Martian vehicles. He tried hard to keep from being seasick, and it
took all his attention to hang on to the bars swinging on their pivots. All
around him clung the various citizens of Mars, the
half dozen or so different types of non-vertebrates that made up the ruling
races of the Fourth Planet.
Brushing against him was the back of a large centipedelike creature, holding easily to the trapeze-seat
and reading a book held in one of his hairy forearms. Just beneath him, rolled
a lobsterback sort of thing with oystery
undertones, which was conversing in sharp clicks with a similar creature on the
next trapeze. An old eight-legged giant spider holding a cluster of five or
six unhatched eggs on her back was knitting something
just behind Calkins, and the ends of her needles occasionally poked into Ajax's
spine.
But he was willing to endure it
all for the sake of his crown. Even the curious snail-like being, suctioned up
against the bottom wall, did not disturb him, despite its rather penetrating
odor. Martians themselves have no sense of smell; possibly this goes a long way
to explain how these assorted beings managed to find unity in the first place.
The wheel was rolling along and
Ajax, clinging to his bar, was watching the unreeling narrow roadway over the
shoulder of the spider-type driving the omniwheel, when suddenly he saw
another large wheel rolling swiftly towards them on a crosswise track.
He stared at it, and thought, Surely we will crash! Then he thought, Surely the driver must know. Then he yelled suddenly,
"Look out!"
The spider at the controls jammed on something.
There was a grating, jarring noise, and the two vehicles slid together,
bounced off each other. The omniwheel with Ajax in it skittered off the road;
bounced onto the tops of the flat houses bordering the path; caromed off a
mushroom-topped tower, and plopped into the street alongside the elevated roadway.
It whirled around, the flopped on its side, amid the screams and yowls of the
assorted riders.
"Sabotage!" muttered Ajax, climbing off
the rounded side of the carriage. "It was planned." He had no grounds
for such thoughts, but surely it had to be so. The inside was a scramble of
bodies trying to get out of the rounded portal which had opened in the side.
Ajax was about to shove his own way into the mass of hairy, shelly,
slimy, and spiny bodies when he noticed the driver hunched up over his seat,
unmoving.
He made his way back, got hold of
the Martian's rounded middle part, and heaved. The driver came up—he was surprisingly
light—and as he came to the ground, the Martian's two big compound eyes popped
open.
"Hurt?" Ajax queried
anxiously, feeling somehow that, as his presence was probably responsible for
the accident, he ought to take care of the injured.
The Martian got to his feet, all eight of them, and
limped to the door, with Ajax steadying him by a hand on his round furry
central body, slung on the eight legs. "Easy, boy," said Ajax and the
two of them were the last ones out.
There was a scurrying and worrying around the
wrecked vehicle; but with surprisingly little time, the thing was righted,
worked back on the road by a series of cranelike machines.
The passengers piled back with a different driver and the omniwheel rolled off,
leaving Ajax and the ex-driver alone in the street.
"Come in and get something
to sustain yourself," said Ajax and led the
spidery Martian into a food-dispensary. There Ajax squatted on one of the
mushroom-like stools that dotted the floor while the spider took a grasp of an
overhead bar and hung head down from that, in the manner of his kind.
"Thank you for saving me," said the
spider, "but you might just as well have scrapped me. I have failed in my
first profession. I shall be disowned and my eggs will be addled."
"Oh, no," protested
Ajax. "Don't say that. It wasn't your
fault. I saw that other wheel coming into us. It was then-
fault." s
"It may be," replied
the ex-driver, "but I have lost my web and cannot show my face again in my
family spinnery. There is nothing left for me. And I
was so willing to work and to make my way in the world.",
"Never mind," said Ajax, "perhaps you
can come along with me and assist me. I can use a good adjutant, and I feel
sure that you couldn't be a spy—you are the least. . ."
"Me a spy? What is that? If you really want
such an outcast as I shall be, I will go with you." The spider's curious
face, which resembled that of a Pekinese dog, with unusually large greenish
eyes, set on a rather furry reddish basketball, in turn perched upon eight long
many-jointed legs—he used the front two for hands when not walking-wrinkled in
pleasure. "I have found a new web!"
"Yes," Ajax nodded.
"I can use a faithful follower. Do you have a name?"
"I am the Third Least Wuj, of the Spinnery of
the Northern Panel, and the Eggery of the Silvery Downs," said the spider-being.
"And I am Ajax Calkins, who
has a place in destiny," remarked the young man modestly.
"Good," said the Wuj. "I do not know
the town, but perhaps we should be on our way. I am curious to see it."
Ajax smiled, rose to his feet,
wrapped his electronically
warmed Mars cloak about him, adjusted his oxygen blower
closer to his face, and strode out, followed by the Wuj on
skittering legs.
"We must be close now to my address," he
said, and read it off to the Wuj.
The Martian's nose wrinkled. "We can walk it
easily," was his advice. "Let me show you."
The odd pair walked off down the narrow street.
Martians of assorted types and sizes went about their business; and such is the
courtesy of the United Beings, none stared rudely after the odd couple.
CHAPTER
FIVE
Aeneas had his Achates;
Sherlock Holmes had his Watson; and Ajax Calkins now had his own faithful
follower, he thought, as he and the Third Least Wuj proceeded along the Martian
street. Was it not fitting, he thought, that a man destined to accomplish deeds
beyond the imagining of the greatest conquerors and explorers of olden times
should have a follower unlike that given to any pioneer before?
Yes, destiny was opening the way
for him. If ever he had had any doubts—and he remembered some unpleasant moments
with his tutors during college courses—this sign surely put them to rest, once
and for all. The universe was his oyster, and he would find a way now to open
it. Their destination proved to be a rather third-rate roost in one of those
indefinite comer districts where the indefinable elements of the population
tend to accumulate, like the fuzz in a pocket. On the edge of one of the
spider-folk residential districts, over the line from a centipede factory area,
with a branch of squidge collective housing penetrating nearby,
the roost housed many types, and among them were a scattering of down-and-out
Earthmen, hangers on, the poorer class of asteroid miners.
Anton Smallways, among these people was no odder and
no stranger than any of them. Possibly had Ajax met him on Earth he would have
turned up his nose. But here, the little man—he was under five feet tall and
rather stocky-seemed just another oddball amid oddballs.
Smallways wore a typical asteroid miner's
coverall—metallic, airtight, self-heating, and dirty. His eyes were dark and
red-rimmed; his hair was rather long in the manner of one who hasn't time to
keep up appearances, and it was of a
rather unusual color. As was also the short beard that covered the lower part of his
face.
Specifically they were of a blackish green coloring.
To a man of the Twentieth Century this might have been amusing or strange, but
Ajax recalled the fad of women of his time for dyeing their hair odd colors and
remembered that occasionally their beaux would go along with the show and
escort their lady friends with beards and mustache or hair dyed the latest
fashionable chartreuse or rose-violet. So to Ajax a man with a greenish tint in
his hair wasn't strange-even though on close inspection it appeared that the green
was the true color and the black was—just the result of a space miner's usually
unkempt appearance.
Smallways looked at the Wuj without expression, and
Ajax explained, "This Martian is a loyal follower and personal attendant.
You can talk freely with him.''
The Wuj jumped up, seized an overhanging bar, and
clung to it, listening to their talk upside down. It seemed to disconcert
Smallways but Ajax carried it off with the aplomb due to one to the manner
born.
Smallways, after satisfying himself as to Ajax's
identity— though one could hardly doubt it, seeing the purple cloak and the
expensive space captain's uniform he wore, even though his ship the Destiny was crewless, began to explain
his situation.
"You want to lay claim to a
country not under the rule of any planet or regime? You seek a place never put
beneath another's flag? You want a real guarantee of independence? Then listen
to me."
Ajax leaned forward, eyes agleam,
waiting. The little man looked at him, reaching into his shoulder bag, and
withdrew a few papers, which he spread out.
"The Earth-Mars Space Administration,'' he
began, "lays claim to sovereignty over all the planets from Mercury to
Mars, and also the asteroids. They do not lay claim to Jupiter or its
satellites, because these have never been colonized and because they remain a
buffer between the inner planets and the rest of the universe so far mainly unexplored.
However the Administration bars the raising of banners there
or any colonization.
"The official EMSA definition of an asteroid is
a small planetary mass whose orbit lies between that of Mars and Jupiter. No
matter how lopsided or elongated the orbits of these thousands of bodies, they
all come inside the orbit of Jupiter and outside that of Mars at some point.
That is their reasoning.
"Now ... it so happens that the planetoids that I and my friends
represent are exceptions to this definition. True, absolute,
indisputable exceptions—by definition outside of the bounds of the
asteroids."
He stopped, and Ajax Calkins sucked in his breath.
The Wuj, hanging overhead, said nothing.
Smallways spread out a sheet of paper marked with orbital
lines. "My friends have staked out mining claims in the orbit of Jupiter.
Our asteroids never depart from that orbit, remain
permanently and undeviatingly in the exact track of Jupiter.
They are known in the astronomy books as the Fore-Trojan Asteroids."
Ajax
frowned. "I do not know them, but go on."
"Jupiter, besides being the largest
planet," Smallways continued, "has the largest family of bodies
attracted to it; but two groups of asteroids are unique in their relation to
it. Following Jupiter in its orbit, exactly a third of its orbital distance
behind it, is a group of several asteroid-sized worlds. They revolve around a
common point in the orbit of Jupiter. Traveling ahead of Jupiter, also a third
of the distance ahead, and at the same velocity, is the other group of
asteroids, similarly revolving around a central point in the orbit. Together,
these two sets of asteroids and Jupiter form a practical application of the
famous gravitational problem of the three bodies.
"I represent a group of miners who have
established our base on the group of asteroids which precede Jupiter. There are
valuable mining claims there. The two sets of asteroids are named after the
heroes and warriors of the Trojan War epics. The names of the worlds I offer to
you for your kingdom, are Achilles, Hector, Nestor,
Agamemnon, Odysseus," here the green bearded man paused dramatically,
"and Ajax!"
Ajax Calkins stood up, eyes
gleaming, and pounded the table in excitement. "That's it! I knew destiny
was waiting for me! You're right. Ajax is it!"
Anton Smallways sat back, nodding. The Wuj looked
down at them, and said suddenly, "But what does the man of little ways
want of you? Why does he need Ajax, and what is the price of the crown?"
Ajax glanced up at him and sat down. "Yes, my
faithful follower has put the matter. What will: this cost me, and
why do you make me this offer?"
Smallways folded his hands.
"We need money and aid in building up our claims. We are very short of
supplies; you can obtain them for us. We need the opportunity to buy space
freighters and blasters for mining. In exchange for your financial assistance
and your connections, we offer to make you our king, to supply you with a
throne, and to stand behind you in establishing your own independence."
"Fair enough," stated Ajax firmly,
striking the table dramatically. "It's a deal!"
They discussed the details of their bargain for an
hour; then Ajax and the Wuj took their leave. They returned together to Ajax's
suite in the best Earth hotel in the city. The Wuj suspended himself from the
chandelier and went quietly to sleep, while Ajax got busy on the
communi-channels and began placing the orders which Smallways had turned over
to him. A huge load of food in Calkans; a small mountain of blasting
equipment; a series of housing bubbles, neatly folded and compressed; several
crates of the latest atomiguns and handbomb tossers, and a number of space
scooters.
It was two Mars days later when
the Destiny took off for the next lap of its course. Ajax
Calkins stood at the helm of his space yacht, setting the orbital directions on
the panel (although they had previously been impressed on the robot tapes which
actually ran the automatic space yacht, Ajax liked to play captain in the
old-fashioned way), watching the sleek, streamlined, glistening yacht leave the
ruddy globe of Mars behind in the black sky to venture on the long jump over the
mass of the asteroids.
It would be a twelve-day flight at fast
acceleration, made a little clumsy by the long train of space barges which they
had picked up in orbit. The cargo to be taken to the Fore-Trojans was packed in
tanklike containers, attached one to the other like a
string of sausages, sent into orbit, and then attached to the Destiny to be pulled like a tug towing
barges. It might not have looked elegant from space, but it was certainly
practical.
Anton Smallways was a strange
man, not at all talkative. He spent most of his time in his cabin, apparently
reading or sleeping. As for the Third Least Wuj, after a momentary spell of
space sickness, he made himself at home aboard the yacht.
Of all the Martian races, it is
only the spider-like one that is able to take to space flight with any
equanimity. The other species all seem to suffer from acute spacesick-ness.
None of the Martian races ever fly or ever had developed flying, and it is
quite an un-Martian thing. Still, Ajax had managed to buy a space suit made for
the Wuj's type, and the Wuj had tried it on with glee.
The Wuj spent most of his time in the control room,
watching the stars; watching the tiny dots of the asteroids move slowly past;
seeing the disc of his native planet diminish in size; reading space manuals,
and listening to Ajax declaim on glory, honor and the grandeur of fame.
They had been out three days when the space radio
began to beep the Destiny's call signal.
Ajax tripped open the general heeding signal but
kept the viewer off. As soon as he had indicated the open transmitter, the
general message came in:
"Calling Destiny. Calling
space-yacht Destiny, Calkins captain. You are requested to return at
once to port on
Mars. This is a general broadcast. If
the Destiny hears this, please call in at once and
confirm."
Ajax stood a moment in thought. At that instant, the
sounds of the transmitter must have reached Smallways for he came
padding into the room. "I wouldn't answer that," he said to Ajax.
"They only want to make trouble."
"I suspect as much,"
said Ajax. "I can't see any legitimate reason."
"Of course," said
Smallways. "You must first establish yourself with us, then
speak to them. Until then, silence is wisdom."
- They ignored the call. After a day, the automatic
transmission from Mars faded out.
On the seventh day, the Wuj was perched as usual in
the control room, this time on one of the walls. He saw a blinking light on the
otherwise unchanging control board. "Ajax," he called. "What's
that?"
Calkins, who had been reading a book about Alexander
the Great, put the volume down and went over. "It's another ship,"
he said, and hastily punched the tracer board analog.
In a few seconds, a series of lights blinked on.
Ajax pursed his lips. "We're apparently being followed," he said at
last.
"No," said Smallways again appearing on
the scene. "I think we're being overtaken." He pointed to the signals
on the board. "That ship is coming up along our orbit and coming faster
than us. It's a pursuit."
"But
who?" said Ajax, "and why?"
Anton Smallways stroked his green beard. "I
greatly fear it is not good," he said slowly. "I believe it must be a
Saturnian raider."
CHAPTER
SIX
"Saturnians!"' exclaimed Ajax,
springing to attention and leaning over the rearward viewer plate. "Coming
from that direction? From inward?"
"Why not?" asked Anton slowly. "It is probably a scouting raider returning
from an espionage expedition. If it overtakes us . . ."
"And why are we worried
about Saturnians?" inquired the Wuj, reaching up with his sixth leg and
scratching his flat pugdog nose thoughtfully.
"Don't you read the papers? Don't you know the
situation in space?" asked Ajax. Then he answered himself, "But of
course you don't. You Martians are most unworldly people—and as a young
apprentice bus driver, I suppose you didn't bother with such great
affairs."
"I leave that to such
leadership types as yourself, dear leader," said
the Wuj.
Ajax threw him a glance, but
could detect no evidence of sarcasm in the comment. "Let's get this ship
moving, first, and 111 explain."
He threw in the full power
switches; and while he was rapidly directing the powerful space yacht by hand,
Anton Smallways worked the computers and redrafted their higher speed orbit to
their goal.
Anxiously, Ajax watched the viewplates and the radar
indicator. The spot which revealed their pursuer was definitely being
outdistanced now. Anton finished his calculations, and they fed the result into
the robot controls. The ship swerved a bit, altered its angle to the stars,
roared a bit closer to the ecliptic, and shot ahead. "More risky,"
said Ajax, "but necessary."
"This is a good ship,"
said Anton slowly. ""I am amazed at the speed."
"The best money could buy," said Ajax
modestly. "I had it secretly fitted out with extras only the EMSA Navy
could afford and a few they couldn't."
He reached over, threw on the radio switch.
Instantly a faint voice could be heard; it was too faint to be audible, but
every now and then they could hear the call signals of their ship, the Destiny, and a word or two strongly
hinting at a demand for them to stop.
"Not on your life," said Ajax, watching
the board with one hand in his chest like a certain conqueror he had read about
in European history.
A half hour later, the pursuer was off the board and
they were flashing on through space, a trim, neady
purring luxury yacht, followed by a long train of container sausages.
"What's wrong with the Saturnians?" asked
the Wuj. "I am just ignorant, but I have a curiosity . . ."
Ajax seated himself in the padded form-fitting
pilot's chair— a conceit for this land of automatic ship—but it looked good.
Anton Smallways grunted, then left the control room and slammed the door of his
own cabin. He evidently wasn't interested.
"When the first manned expedition from Earth
reached Saturn, some thirty years ago, they found that the surface of that
planet harbored a form of life entirely different from those of the inner
planets. Saturn was cold, its gravity greater—though not as much as you might
think when you realize that the solid surface of Saturn is actually only a
small hard core within a huge gaseous globe—and is altogether inimical to the
protoplasmic life as we know it on Earth and Mars and in the jungles of Venus.
"Among the beings on Saturn there was one that
was intelligent, clever, and organized on highly evolved social lines. This
life was highly flexible, rubbery in nature, able to adjust itself to many
shapes and sizes, using temporary pseudopodal limbs when necessary.
"The
Saturnians at first were friendly to us, very curious about us, and bent
themselves to learn all they could from us. We did our best to teach them,
hoping to make them an ally in the exploration of the rest of our system. But
they proved to be too good as students.
"They built spaceships on our models; they
studied our histories; they set up a synthetic culture based on the worst
elements of Terrestrial history—in short after thirty years of careful
imitation, they then announced a Saturnian Empire, claimed it extended to and
included the asteroids, and began to interfere with our shipping.
"The EMSA has tried to avoid open warfare,
while reasoning with these creatures, but such efforts only increased their
cockiness and self-assurance. There have been increasing clashes with the Saturnians.
Raiders, calling themselves Saturn police ships, have attacked asteroid
shipping.
"It
looks as if war might break out at any moment."
The Wuj listened to all this with interest.
"Very strange," he commented. "I don't understand all you say,
and this sort of thing is all very un-Martian. However, I guess it is a happy
thing we did not wait to meet that raider."
He put three legs over his head and proceeded to go
to sleep. Ajax sat staring out at the black starscape,
thinking of glory.
Several days later, with pursuit
a forgotten thing, the Destiny and her cargo circled over the
little group of asteroids which were the Fore-Trojans. Far off in the sky,
Jupiter was a glowing ball accompanied by four of his larger visible moons.
Saturn was a yellowish ringed disc, tiny in the black heavens. The sun was
small, but still brightly glaring, and the six little worldlets were varied discs
of gray and white in the sky about them.
Carefully Ajax Calkins brought the Destiny and its awkward cargo closer and
closer to the rocky airless surface of the asteroid Ajax. Fixing an orbit close
to it, he cut loose the cargo containers to continue the orbit until the miners
could go out and unload them. Then, with a graceful swoop, he brought the Destiny down to the surface of the
asteroid.
Ajax
was a surprisingly level little world. Covered by a layer of rock and cosmic
dust, it had virtually no out-thrusts or precipitous clefts such as usually
marked asteroids. "A fine world for a space colony," said Ajax to the
Wuj who was awake and watching. "Unusually good surface
for spaceships. Someday it shall be a mighty and busy trading center,
the hub of the middle system."
"If
you say so, dear leader," commented the spider.
"And I do," said Ajax, and the ship
touched the surface, glided along, and came to a gentle stop. Whatever Calkins'
pretensions, there was no doubt he was a fine pilot.
"And now . . ." said Ajax, stepping to a
closet and taking from it a furled banner. "Now I shall plant my
flag."
"First you better put on a spacesuit,"
said Anton Small-ways dryly, emerging from his compartment already dressed in
his space clothes.
Ajax nodded, and without wasting more time, he and
the Martian got into their space equipment. While Ajax wore the familiar
spacesuit like a cumbersome suit of clothes, with impervious skin, and
self-contained temperature, humidity, and air-renewal apparatus, the Wuj's
outfit was rather different.
The Wuj's outfit was more in the nature of a robot
Martian, a metal globe into which the Wuj fitted himself, folding his many legs
under him, and sealing it from inside. The globe was mounted on eight
artificial metal limbs, and looked simply like a huge metal spider. The Wuj,
seated inside, worked the legs from buttons, and drove it as if he were driving
a monowheel on his native world.
Then the three of them disembarked. The main portal
of the Destiny was thrown open, and Ajax descended carrying his
banner, limply unwaving in the airless surface of the tiny world. Anton
followed, and the Wuj waddled down after him.
A small group of spacesuited miners stood silently
watching, a safe distance away from the ship. They waved their hands as Ajax
stopped, planted his banner, and announced on his helmet radio:
"I, Ajax the First, proclaim
this planet independent and a
kingdom under my protection, as the
sovereign capital of the worlds of the Fore-Trojan Union!"
He stuck the flag limply into the surface. It hit a
rock and twisted, but he agilely rescued it, poked around until he found a
layer of dust and shoved it in.
"And now to work," he said. Whereupon the
miners simply scattered and walked off again.
"This way," said Anton
Smallways, and led the two others off to a small raised ridge. "Our
headquarters is over here, underground."
And thus Ajax entered into his
kingdom.
CHAPTER
SEVEN
Ajax Calkins had entered his kingdom, small though
it was, and it now seemed to him that destiny had arranged for this moment. He
was not entirely cut off from his fellow men; he had seen that other young men
of fortune had different ideals than he and was tolerant enough to allow them
their opinions so long as they did not try to interfere with him.
For what else could it be but destiny? Wealthy men
often married young women when they were well along in years, and it often
happened that such unions were unfortunate, to say the least. He was aware that
his own father had been much gibed at when he married Miss Margaret O'Neill.
But destiny had decreed that the elder Calkins should choose a young woman with
just the right mixture of charm and romantic idealism to appeal to a wealthy
man who would gratify her every desire about the manner in which their only son
should be raised.
When he compared his mother to Emily Hackenschmidt,
Ajax Calkins shuddered. It is true that Emily did resemble, however faintly,
photographs of Margaret O'Neill—but temperamentally,
she couldn't have been more different. A thoroughly unpleasant young woman, and Ajax wondered why he kept on thinking about her
at odd moments. He had far better things to do. . . .
A low ridge housed the largest of the underground
shelters on Ajax. It had been hollowed out, its sides
airproofed, sealed with voidall fluid, and fitted out
with airtemp controls. Once you passed through the
double airlock, it managed to be fairly comfortable—a low-ceilinged series of
chambers.
Ajax declared it his headquarters, and took over the
largest of the vacant living quarters. Smallways had his bunk
in another chamber, the Wuj
appropriated one, and besides them there were several other miners who stayed
there, though they were absent at work the greater part of the time.
The bulk of the miners—there were about thirty of
them all told, though Ajax never did get to count them all-stayed in a set of
bubble-camp tents spread out for half a mile beyond the central ridge. And at
half a mile, they already dipped below the horizon of this tiny airless world,
where the stars shone perpetually in a black sky and the other five worldlets moved
steadily across the firmament like constant moons.
For the next two Earth-length days—as time was
measured on Ajax—the miners unloaded the cargo Ajax had brought. They scooted
up into the orbit of the satelliting containers in
their small mining rocketships, and brought the contents back to the surface.
There they transported them into supply depots carved out of the rocky surface.
The miners apparently were pleased at the deal their
leader Smallways had made, for Ajax heard no sign of disapproval. In fact, as
he remarked to the Wuj a day later, it was rather remarkable that he heard no
sign of anything from them. They seemed to ignore him, to take their orders
from Smallways—in Ajax's name of course—and Ajax virtually never saw the
greater part of the miners at alt outside of their spacesuits.
The pile of Calkanned food was most welcome, and Ajax
personally supervised the setting up of a dekanning system. This was a rather compact
complex atomic device into which the can of compacted food was inserted. By
adjusting a vibratory note to the proper note of the can, and then feeding in
great quantities of nuclear energy along that note, the cans would slowly swell
and expand, so that in about an hour's time, they would be sometimes as much as
fifty or a hundred times their compacted size. Their contents would thus resume
their normal appearance and density.
There were many other items in the cargo—improved
atomic diggers, smelters, cargo rocket motors, several stubby but powerful
atomic artillery pieces, a crate of handcannon, more bubble-houses and the
apparatus for a very powerful space radio station.
Ajax and the Wuj were sorting out
the crates containing their radio -station parts when Anton Smallways appeared
on the scene in his space suit. Waving violently to Ajax, he called:
"Return at once to the palace, your majesty. There is a strange ship
approaching. It may be the raider that was pursuing us!"
Ajax and the Martian raced back
in the very slight gravity to the ridge, pushed through the airlock as fast as
possible, and gathered around the regional radar and radio detector in their
main living room. Smallways was seated before it, and as they came in, he
pointed to a spot on their radar.
It was the shape of a small spacecraft, a swift
little scout-type ship, and Ajax judged it to be already within their system
and heading for a comedown orbit on Ajax. He tripped the radio switch:
"Calling intruder! Calling intruding ship! Ajax
port requests identification. You are forbidden to land without permission.
Identify please!"
They waited. The little ship continued its orbit,
coming in closer; there was no reply. Ajax twisted in his seat, Smallways
watching him intensely. He repeated his message, adding, "Reply at once or
we fire!" He switched his sender off, turned to Smallways.
"Is any of our-artillery set up?" The
green-bearded man slowly shook his head. "It's still in crates," he
replied.
"Have any miners who are in the vicinity stand
by with hand weapons," he ordered. "I will meet this ship
myself."
Smallways turned on the general area signal, sent a
general order command. Ajax, buckling a hand gun around his suit, fixed his
helmet again, and with the Wuj carrying the flag, left the palace.
The small intruder ship was now visible, coming in
for a landing near the place where the Destiny was resting on the dusty surface.
As
they watched, it swooped lower, then slid along the ground in a cloud of
meteoric dust, and came to a halt next to the Destiny. It was a great many times
smaller— plainly a single passenger craft—and it was not Saturnian. It bore the
red and green circle insignia of EMSA and its code numbers in large letters on
its glistening yellow-painted sides.
"You are under arrest, intruder," called
Ajax sternly on his helmet radio. "This is not EMSA territory. This is the
Fore-Trojan Union, Kingdom of Ajax. Throw down your weapons and emerge I"
The lock door opened and a figure emerged in a
yellow EMSA official space suit. It came towards Ajax with a light bouncy
stride. As it came, the figure spoke:
"Oh, come off it, Ajax Calkins. You've given me
quite a chase and I'm good and fed up with it. Now you listen to me . . ."
"Oh, what in the name of
muddy meteors have I done to deserve this!" blurted Ajax. "It's that
wild woman from EMSA, that Emily Hackensack or something!"
"I heard that, Calkins.
Hackenschmidt is the name, special investigator Emily Hackenschmidt, and the
wild one is you," snapped back the approaching person.
"Who is she?" asked Smallways in a
petulant voice. "Shall I beam her down?"
"No, I'm afraid not," sighed Ajax.
"It wouldn't be gentlemanly. But have one of our men occupy her ship and
seal its control board. She is our prisoner."
"Hmmpf," called
the young lady's voice. "Prisoner or not, you'd better come with me and
have a talk. Besides," she added, "if you're a gentleman, you'll
offer- a lady some refreshments. I've come a long way on ship's rations."
Ajax led their uninvited guest back to his
headquarters in silence, gritting his teeth. The Wuj ambled along behind and
Smallways strode last, perturbed and sullen.
Back in the "palace," divested of their
bulky space suits, Emily plopped herself down in one of the comfortable chairs
Ajax had taken from the Destiny and stared angrily about her. She
was wearing the maroon service uniform of EMSA's woman's division, with the
knee-length culottes of the latest regulation fashion with slit outer seams
displaying tantalizing glimpses of lace-edged satinelle
pettipants whenever she crossed her booted legs. Her
waist was cinched tight with a wide belt; whose attached holster was now empty;
Ajax had snatched the handcannon from it the moment he had spotted it.
She pulled a pouch from her belt, and taking out a
mirror and comb, began to brush her tangled hair and arrange her black bangs.
This was a woman's way of regaining her confidence and breath; and of course it
helped, as ' the EMSA regulations had indicated, to keep your prey distracted.
Ajax had dumped himself angrily in the seat by the
radio. Smallways stood quietly against the wall, and the Wuj curled up in a
comer, folding his eight legs under him like a collapsible chair.
They sat in silence for a while, and then one of the
other miners wheeled in a cart with steaming hot coffee and food on it. The
girl took a cup, Ajax another, but the other two declined.
After she had taken her own good time, Emily looked
at Ajax. "I ordered you not to leave Mars. Why did you disobey?"
"I heard no such orders," Ajax snapped
back, "and I know of no reason why I should heed them in any event."
"I then went after you and tried to call you by
space radio, and you only got away from me on the disguised cruiser you pretend
is a space yacht. Why?"
"The Destiny is not a cruiser, but is a
private yacht, madame," Ajax replied haughtily. "And we pay no attention
to pirates, interlopers, nuisances, or Saturnian raiders."
"I, sir," she snapped back, pausing to bit
a chunk from a piece of cake, "am none of these. I am the representative
of the law of the mother planets. As a Canadian citizen, you are a member of
the United Nations of Earth and a subject to the Earth-Mars Administration.
When I order you-back, you are required by law to heed."
"I, Miss Hackenwhacken, am
the king of a sovereign world outside the spheres of the EMSA or any other
planet. You have no business here and you will remain a prisoner here until I
have determined the proper diplomatic exchange for you. And that will be after
the signing of a treaty between my Fore-Trojan Union and your government,"
Ajax replied calmly, fingering the embroidered crown and emblem on his purple
uniform jacket.
"My name is Hackenschmidt," the girl
replied, her blue eyes sparkling, "and will you stop this pretense! This
is an asteroid and it is part of the asteroid belt and under EMSA!"
Ajax leaned back, smiling. There was something about
this girl that he found highly teasable. "My
dear young lady, whatever your name is, you are in error. You are outside the
asteroid belt and this is not within your province. Let me explain."
Twirling her handcannon, which he had been holding
since he had taken it, he carefully explained the astronomical status of the
Fore-Trojans using a manner one would use to explain to a very backward child.
As he talked, Emily gritted her teeth, grimaced,
shook her head, tried to butt in. Finally, when he stopped, she jumped up and
advanced on him, with her finger shaking. Negligently he righted the
handcannon, having adjusted it to its slightest level of blast, and pointed it
at her.
She stopped short, and waving her
finger under his nose,
she said: ■ '
'
"Now, you listen to me, Ajax Calkins. Don't try
to split legal hairs with the whole of two great planets while the solar system
is in danger. Do you understand that the Saturnians are trying to undermine our
whole system and that your high-jinks are aiding and abetting them? Do you know
that you are diverting important elements of our defense to your nonsense? With
Saturn about to launch a full scale war, you will be snuffed out like a wink,
legalisms or not! Now will you stop this, or will you wait until you become
mincemeat to the Saturnian monsters?"
Ajax
frowned. He sat up straight. "We will set-up our
radio station and announce our
independence. Then let us see which side of space respects law and order."
Emily turned, glanced at
Smallways and the Wuj, and waved her hands angrily in the air. But they merely
returned her unspoken appeal with blank expressions. Wearily, she sank back
into her seat.
Ajax stood up. "Young lady, will you give me
your word of honor not to try to escape, or shall we have to lock you up in one
of our rooms?"
"Lock me up? Ajax Calkins, just you dare put a hand
on me! I have no intention of escaping. My business is you— and after having
come all this distance, if you think you can get rid of me that easily, you
have another think coming. I am here to stay!"
"Very well, madame," said Ajax grimacing.
"In that case you can assist us in assembling Radio Ajax. The crates are
outside. I hope you are handy with a screwdriver and crowbar. Hard work, I am
told, is good for the soul."
CHAPTER
EIGHT
Putting
together Radio Ajax proved a task of hours out on the airless
surface of the worldlet. While the extremely low gravity made moving the crates
light work, there was still the matter of density and judgment of motion to
overcome. There was a good deal of delicate equipment which must not be tipped
too easily nor allowed to float unimpeded into a rock.
Further, working in a spacesuit is not something
that one can simply take to without training. Despite controls of air and
humidity, it still gives a feeling of being encumbered and encased—and work
requires constant breaks if it is not to leave one with muscles aching from
unexpected overstrains and misjudgments.
So the work which might have taken an hour or so on
Earth or Mars took several times as long. Add to that the fact that it was
being done by amateurs—one of them a prisoner, and none too willing—and it was
a wonder that the station was set up at all.
But Radio Ajax was ready for operation in due course
the next day, a sleeping period later. It stood in the open, high on the ridge,
and the generators and wires were open and exposed so that it looked quite odd
to a landbound eye. Its antenna was directional—a large wire basket-shaped
device, many feet in diameter, directed inward towards the solar planets.
"There should be no leakage at all outward
towards the orbits of Saturn. Uranus and the others on the far rim," said
Ajax. "You see, Emily," he went on to the girl as they stood
surveying their finished work, "in spite of our differences I am giving
EMSA the first opportunity to make its peace with me."
"You'd better," she
replied. "And they'll make peace with you—little pieces, you bet."
"Hummph," said Ajax.
"Anyway, let us go inside to the palace, and there I shall formally
initiate the station."
They returned to the ridge chambers and doffed their
spacesuits. The mike and the controls of the huge station had been installed in
the central living room—the throne room, Ajax insisted on calling it.
"Where's
the Wuj?" asked Ajax.
"Your eight-legged henchman
has discovered the delights of exploration," Emily replied. "He has
gone out hunting artifacts with Anton. It seems that the miners found several
bits in the dirt excavated for some of their dugouts. It looks as of broken
clay and some pitted fragments of worked metal, if the Fore-Trojans may be one
of the best sources of the great pre-explosion culture in the whole asteroid
belt."
"If it's my kingdom, it stands to reason that
it will naturally have the lead in everything that's good," replied Ajax dead
seriously. He ignored the sarcastic glance Emily threw at him in answer.
Ajax seated himself before the transmitter. He
opened the switches, listened to the powerful hum of the atomic generator, and
when the dials registered the carrier beam full on, he switched on the mike.
"Radio Ajax calling all stations," he
spoke proudly and clearly. "Radio Ajax now opening
transmission daily from the capital city of the Fore-Trojan Union."
After repeating this three times, he read out a
carefully prepared proclamation of independence, defining his basis for
sovereignty, and offering the inner planets a treaty of peace and commerce on
equal grounds.
Emily sat in a comer of the room, one shapely foot
crossed over the other, shaking her head and making exasperated expressions as
Calkins spoke. When Ajax completed his reading, he switched the transmitter to
automatic sending. It would repeat his taped message regularly for the next
six hours.
There
was no reply the next day. "We may have to wait quite a while,"
decided Ajax on scanning the tape and finding it blank. "Doubtless, they
will have to relay our message to the governments of Earth and Mars, who will
then have to sit in solemn session and decide how to exchange diplomatic
missions."
"Hal" snorted Emily. "You should live
that long. You’ll have a wait before that happens. In fact, it might last a
lifetime—if you don't get blown out of here in the next week."
"That's enough out of you!" snapped Ajax.
He had been hoping for a prompt and cordial answer. "I have work to do. I am planning to draft my laws and regulations
for the kingdom, and I shall have to take consultation with my prime minister,
Anton Smallways. I plan to erect several sealed cities on these worlds, and
begin the creation of a
true
wonder community."
"Well," asked Emily,
"what do yon want me to do-applaud? Or maybe
work out a system of lampposts and sewers? . . . Since you're going to be so
busy, do you mind if I go out and look these worlds over?"
Ajax looked at her. "You may go exploring if
you will, but you must be accompanied by the Wuj. He will keep an eye on you,
and keep you out of mischief. Besides, he wants to go exploring, too."
"Good," said Emily. "It will be a pleasure to get into the company
of something that's sane."
She found her spacesuit and got
into it, while the Wuj climbed into his complex space stroller. Soon the two of
them were outside the ridge, beginning their day of exploration.
The two oddly assorted creatures—the Earth-girl in
her official EMSA outfit and the weird figure of die arachnoid
Martian—moved across the narrow landscape together, and found conversation of
interest.
Emily Hackenschmidt was a recent graduate of the
EMSA training academy. She had studied Martians, but this was the first time
she had ever really met a Martian on speaking terms. There was something that
seemed to spark interest between the two. The Wuj was not without his curiosity
about humanity.
So, as they wandered, they talked
and found much that was quaint between them. The Wuj explained something of the
system of his clan on Mars; and, as he pointed out, "I owe Ajax a debt of
loyalty such as you cannot understand on Earth. Among our people, I am in a
special tribal testing period—a time in which all that I do must be perfect,
and nothing must be' allowed to go wrong. This trial does not allow for
accidents or anything else which may be beyond my control. The terms with which
I must comply are unyielding. This is rigid. This is fact. And if I cannot immediately
find a new commitment upon the occurrence of any disaster, then I become
Webless, and must go back years in my life in order to start again.
"When Ajax rescued me from my failure as a buswheel operator, it gave me the one chance I had. I will
serve out the full term of my trial with him, and when I return it will be with
fulfillment instead of shame. The Web will vibrate for me."
Emily nodded to herself. "As for me," she
said, "I, too, am going through a trial. This is the first assignment in
my career, and my career is devoted to keeping the peace between the worlds,
to serving intelligence and civilization, and to patrolling the spaceways. There
weren't many women in my graduating class at the academy, and most of them were
going on to desk jobs.
"All my life I have dreamed
of space and adventure. EMSA was my path to it. And when they assigned me to
patrol this spoiled young man with too much money, they thought it was just an
easy job—one they could safely pass off on a girl. But
it turned out to be a real poser.
"You know, they wanted to
take it away from me when Ajax actually took off for Mars, but I stood on my
rights. We of the Canadian branch of EMSA have taken for our motto the ancient,
traditional rallying cry: We always get out man! I absolutely refused to turn over
my file to that stuffy branch chief, Pierre MacHeath. And he had to give
in."
The Wuj stopped by a pile of loosely jumbled meteoric
rocks and began to poke around in them with a crowbar. "I understand. You
know, that makes us opponents—for we of Mars never let our man down."
Emily watched the crowbar idly. "I know. It's
too bad in a way. I find you rather interesting, and your loyalty admirable;
but as for that Calkins—he needs a taking down."
She sighed. "But let us be friends for the
moment," she added. "What's this?" She pointed at something the
crowbar had revealed.
The Wuj shot down a spidery implement and picked up
a piece of carved metal out of the rocks. He held it up, and they both looked
at it.
"It's
a synthetic manufacture," the girl said.
"Pre-explosion artifact," decided the Wuj
matter-of-factly. "The asteroid is crawling with them." He shoved the
piece into the pack he was carrying.
In another couple of hours, they had assembled quite
a collection of such items.
The planetoid was not as rugged as most of these
chunks of planetary debris. In fact, they found that it was quite symmetrically
smooth, allowing for the pitmarks of meteor craters
here and there.
Emily remarked, "I wonder whether this world is
a hollow shell. They have found several asteroids with large, shell-like
interiors. They seal these in, fill them with air, and make very satisfactory
habitations out of them. Radio Pallas is established in such a bubble under the
surface of the asteroid."
The Wuj remarked, "I have
heard Anton Smallways say that the miners have radar-probed the interior
briefly and believe it to have a metallic core. But the weight of this asteroid
is not sufficient to be solid metal, so they think that Ajax must have hollow
spaces beneath the surface. My great leader, Ajax, is going to look into the
possibility of establishing a better colony underground."
Emily shrugged.
"The only underground he's going to see is the basement cells in Deimos
Prison. Just wait until the EMSA catches him."
The Wuj made no reply to this. They went on, and the
two commandeered a small mining spaceship at one of the workings. The sullen
miners made no objection to this when they learned that the two planned to
visit a neighboring worldlet that was now passing overhead in the ebon sky.
On Achilles—which was the neighboring world of the
Fore-Trojans they landed on—they found something more like the typical asteroid
formation. Achilles was a chunk of a world, more like a hunk of coal than a
rounded sphere. As they walked over its weird, pitted, burned surface, they
could feel the pull of its gravity altering, for they were never strolling on a
level with the gravitational center. It was uphill against that center—and up
what would look like the sheer cliff of a huge mountain—until suddenly, as they
reached the top, their viewpoint would shift, dip, and they would see
themselves atop a flat and level plain.
The effects of walking on such a non-spherical world
were most odd, and the next few hours went by with great interest to the
explorers.
In one place, they seemed to be perched upon a point
of land with the world dropping out from under them into a towering abyss of
empty space, with the stars reeling almost beneath their feet. At another spot,
near the center of gravity, it was like being in a vast bowl, with curving
walls rising all about them and shutting the stars away from them.
They searched for artifacts, but on this world they
found none.
"This is just as it was when it was ripped
apart by the great explosion," said Emily softly, as they climbed the
edges of that illusory bowl. "This little world was ripped from a chunk of
the inner shell. Well find no artifacts or fragments of them here, for no
living beings ever dwelled here when the planet was whole."
"It's depressing," said the Wuj. "I
like to think that I walk where the ancestors of my race first dwelt."
"Not on Achilles," said
Emily. "This place, named after a famous warrior of Earth, never saw a
war. It's a frightening place."
They returned at last to the spot where they had
left their miner's spaceship, and sent it back to Ajax again. Navigation
between such closely connected worldlets was not difficult. It required no
elaborate data and calculations, and could be done by hand and eye.
The day was done at headquarters on Ajax, and there
had been no reply to Calkins' message. Ajax himself had been busy turning out sheafs of careful notes for laws, and plans for cities. The
next day, Emily did not accompany the spidery Martian outside, but let the Wuj
go exploring alone.
The Wuj came back from his trips
across the surface of the small world elated with discoveries. He had brought
back quite a mass of chunks of things manufactured before the great explosion,
and Ajax thumbed through this junk with a certain amount of interest.
It was known that the thousands of tiny worlds
making up the asteroids were the results of a cosmic calamity that had taken
place for unknown reasons some five or six million years before. A few
artifacts had been found on the main asteroids, but it seemed that Ajax was
indeed one of the most amazing sources of all. The planetoid itself was sort of
egg-shaped—in fact remarkably so—and in the crust of dried dust, meteoric
debris, scaly rock, and cement hard mud, were a multiplicity of remnants.
The Wuj had taken a fancy to one
piece of shiny metal— a sort of triangle of bluish-green alloy with a hole in
its sharp end—and had hung it about its upper first arm as an ornament. This
had occasioned some comment as to the vanity and decoration of the spider-type
Martians.
"Isn't decorating yourself
a rather feminine thing to do?" inquired Emily curiously during one meal.
"I thought only the female of die species did that."
"Not so," said the Wuj.
"In our pre-connubial years we all do it occasionally. Only when we know
positively whether we are eggers or spinners do we specialize."
"And don't you know?" asked Ajax,
surprised. "Why I took it for granted you were a
male—a spinner."
"Why?" For once the Third Least Wuj looked
startled, and its big eyes opened their thousands of tiny eyelids in full
amazement. "Of course I don't know. It doesn't concern me now, and it will
be a dozen years or more before I have achieved status sufficiently to go to
the Main Web and proclaim myself. I haven't the faintest idea of my sexual
status. Personally I don't understand how you Earth people ever got anywhere,
having to know your own sex from the very start. I should think it very
distracting."
"It is," said Ajax,
glancing over at Emily. "It certainly is."
Emily, for once, said nothing, but a faint blush
tinged her face.
Fortunately at that moment a buzz from the board
called their attention away. Ajax went over, flipped on the receiver. There
was a squawking sound, and then a voice came on:
"Radio Juno calling Radio
Ajax. Come in please, we have a message for you."
The three jumped to their feet in excitement. From
another room, Anton Smallways came quietly in also.
Ajax slipped into the seat before the mike, switched
it on. "Radio Ajax acknowledges your call. Come in Radio Juno."
He waited. Radio Juno, the huge station operated by
EMSA on the large planetoid Juno, was one of the four major EMSA control points
in the asteroid belt. The other three stations—Radio Ceres, Radio Vesta, and Radio Pallas-were far away at that time,
probably half an orbit away. There was need for four such stations so that at
almost all times one such major station would be in hearing of any of the
asteroids.
Radio Juno, obviously, was the
one nearest them now. It took about twenty minutes for Radio Juno to return the
call, so great was the distance from Ajax. In that period, the four in the room
said nothing, but waited in tension to see what the reply would be.
There was a buzz, then the call came in. "Radio
Juno calling Radio Ajax. Here is an announcement directed to Ajax Calkins. Here
is an official announcement. Stand by."
They tensed. Then a voice began to speak, a voice of
authority, speaking in a tone of command. The speech was short but to the
point. The Earth-Mars Space Administration could not and would not recognize
any claims to independence. Its authority extended to all asteroids regardless
of orbital quibblings, and Ajax Calkins was ordered
to cease and desist, to turn over his administration to die nearest EMSA
official, and to return at once to headquarters at Juno and account for
himself.
When the voice ceased, Ajax, angry, sat down, and
barked out defiance of the order; he repeated his own declaration, and demanded
recognition. When he shut down the transmitter, he turned around, and banged
his hand down.
"They have their nerve!
They'd better recognize me, or I'll sue 'em through
every court on two planets!"
Emily stood up, looked at Anton
Smallways and the Wuj. "You heard the words of Radio Juno," she said,
"and if you are law-abiding beings you will obey them. As the nearest EMSA
official, I am in command here."
The Wuj looked at her, then
looked at Ajax. Anton merely stroked his green beard, then
shook his head. "Sit down, Hackenschmidt," he said. "Ajax the
First is king here and you are still our prisoner."
Emily began excitedly to argue with them, but she
gave it up after encountering their stony refusals to heed her.
They sat around in silence for a while, Wondering whether Radio Juno would reply to them once again.
An hour passed and still there was no incoming call. Then the buzzer sounded.
The four of them turned once again, and Ajax snapped
on the speaker. There was the whistling sound of a carrier wave. Then a voice
came on, a thin, high-pitched voice carefully sounding out its words:
"Calling Radio Ajax. Calling Radio
Ajax. This is the Imperial Transmitter, Voice of Saturn, speaking. We acknowledge
your broadcast and we welcome you to the family of fraternal nations. We
transmit greetings from the Imperial Collegium of
Saturn and extend our recognition to the free banner of the Fore-Trojan Union.
Hail to King Ajax the First. Hail to the free and independent people of the six
worlds of the Jovian Orbit I
"We are sending an
ambassador and an Imperial escort of honor to your capital to draw up treaties
and cement our friendship. Hail to Ajax! This is the Voice of Saturn speaking.
Your friends on Saturn congratulate you."
Ajax sat, white-faced, as the
curious clipped words rolled out of his speaker. Emily held a hand to her
mouth, wide-eyed in horror. Anton Smallways was inscrutable as usual, and the
Wuj was once again wide-eyed.
"But . . . but . . ." stammered Ajax, for
once caught off base. "How did they know? How could they have heard our
directional broadcast? It was beamed inward. They couldn't, they couldn't have
picked it up!"
"And what are we going to do about that
ambassador and his escort of honor," shrieked Emily. "Ajax Calkins,
what have you done!"
CHAPTER
NINE
There was a heated discussion, and for once
Ajax Calkins was nonplussed. He was quite prepared to be neutral with Saturn
and the EMSA, but he was not prepared as it were to be "neutral on
Saturn's side." He realized suddenly that he was now facing the same
difficulty that had beset many of the famous men he so lionized and hoped to
follow—the position of a small and weak ruler caught between two mighty
empires.
"You must give up your claim
at once, call on our EMSA forces to take over and hold these asteroids!"
urged Emily. "The Fore-Trojans are too important a base and in too
strategic an orbit for them to fall into Saturnian hands!"
The Third Least Wuj asked slowly, "Can you
trust the Saturnians? If you can, then you can play one against the other. Urge
them to keep hands off, or you will call in EMSA."
"That's pretty sound advice," agreed Ajax,
"but can we trust the Saturnians? I am.-told they are very treacherous.
They learned our ways of civilization too fast to know how to temporize or
compromise."
"I think you can trust them," said Anton
Smallways slowly, stroking his green beard. "I have never met any of them
hut I have met miners who know them, and they have always spoken highly of the
Saturnian mind. In my opinion, the things you have heard of them from the EMSA
authorities can be discounted as propaganda."
"There may be something in that," replied
Ajax thoughtfully. "History does indeed show that war and the clash of
interests are always accompanied by one-sided viewpoints."
"I tell you it isn't so." Emily
Hackenschmidt jumped up, and walked back and forth. "I tell you that I
studied the
accounts of our experiences with the
Saturnians back at training school, and the conclusion is indisputable. They're
out for no good. We tried everything to win their confidence and we were dealt
with viciously and dishonestly. You can't trust them. Besides, the Earth people
are your own people!"
"Maybe they are—and maybe I'd be doing them a
service by blocking this war with determined neutrality. Perhaps we can show
both sides the folly of their ways," said Calkins. "Then Ajax the
First will have fairly won the regard of all."
The Wuj nodded slowly, and Anton
Smallways also signified his approval. Emily found herself a shrill and helplessly
indignant minority.
Gravely Ajax sat down to the
transmitter, opened the beam, and called Radio Juno. Carefully he composed and
transmitted a message, repeating his demand for recognition of independence. In
return he would offer to act as a neutral meeting ground for the Saturnians,
whose delegation he said he would welcome only when a similar delegation from
EMSA arrived.
Emily sat disconsolate, watching while he was
transmitting. They sat back, awaiting a reply. But the rest of that day there
was only an ominous radio silence.
They went to bed ill at ease, uncertain. Once more a
transmission came in from Saturn, just before they retired. It was a' short
message saying their ambassador and his escort had set out, and would arrive in
seven days' time. Ajax slept uneasily, lying awake for stretches in his .little
cubby hole, staring up at the plastitight ceiling,
thinking. He dozed a bit, then came awake in the
darkness suddenly; he sat up and listened.
Somewhere there was a faint humming which was not
the sound of the air-conditioners. He got up, opened the door of his cubicle,
and heard a whispering in the main hall, his "throne room-radio
room."
He grabbed a handcannon, dashed the short distance
and rushed in.
Hunched
over the transmitter, whispering, was the figure of
Emily Hackenschmidt, black hair down, in nightgown and slippers, sending a
message. She turned as he came in, stuck her tongue out, and switched off.
"I told Radio Juno to hurry up and get here," she said triumphantly.
"Earth isn't going to take this lying down!"
"You . . ." Ajax was tongue-tied with
rage. He sputtered, trying to remember he was a gentleman and, a king, then sat
down, holding the gun. "From now on we're going to have to lock you up at
night."
"It won't do you a bit of
good," she snapped back. "The dirty work is done; now you've got to
be saved in spite of yourself. Just wait for the acknowledgment." She
switched on the receiver and they waited, glaring at each other.
In a few minutes, the whistling call came in, and a
crisp voice said, "Radio Juno to Agent Hackenschmidt. Very
well done. We are preparing an expeditionary force immediately. Please
urge the immediate evacuation of all personnel on these worlds. We cannot be
responsible for them if a battle follows."
Emily stood, brushed a hand over her hair, a fine
figure of a young girl in a pink nightie, and swayed,
head held high, back to her room. "Don't forget the key, Ajax Calkins.
It's on the inside of the door now. I'll throw it out to you. Or would you
prefer a padlock and chain?"
She slammed the door, and left
Calkins staring after her, his mind seething with furious thoughts.
"She ought to be tied up and
whipped!" he muttered, going back to his own room for a thoroughly restless
night.
When Ajax informed Anton
Smallways, at the next breakfast period, of what the girl had done, the
bearded miner was greatly disturbed. "This is very serious," he said.
"We must take steps to foil both sides, to prevent any landings by either
side until we can secure our position."
Ajax nodded. "And I have an idea,"
Smallways continued. "Come outside."
The two donned spacesuits, emerged from the ridge,
and stood under the black sky of airless space, on the surface of the close-horizoned little world, and Smallways pointed up at the stars.
"Do you see," he said, "where now moves our
companion worlds? You can see Nestor and Achilles now, two half moons,
moving swiftly across our sky. In a moment another of our worlds will appear.
"These six worlds are forever swinging back and
forth from a central point. They perform an eternal dance, complex and
wonderful to chart, as they swing back and forth, twining in and out of each
other's paths. To land a space fleet here is not easy. But if we can make it
even harder, then it might be impossible for either fleet to ever land."
"And
how do we do this?" asked Ajax.
"If we have enough
explosives, or atomic rocket engines, to mount on each world a source of
energy, so that at our command, each worldlet would speed up on its swings outward,
then we will radically change the pattern of their rotations. They will swing
wider and farther, perform more complex routines, until no fleet can chart them
without endless delay and endless risk."
Ajax narrowed his eyes; yes, he could see it.
"But how do we do this? Surely we do not have enough such sources of
power, nor supplies to keep such blasts going?"
Anton Smallways did not reply.
Instead he spread his hands in a negative gesture. This was it. Ajax pondered
it, watching the parade of the stars as he did so. His eyes fell on a stack of
concentrated food and water, in Calkans. For a moment, he looked at the
storage depot, then gave a start.
"I have it," he said.
"I have it. The secret of the Calkans! We can use them for explosives,
for rocket fuels!"
The green-bearded man looked at him through the glas-sine of his helmet. "How?
These things do not explode."
Ajax shook his head violently. "It's a secret of my grandfather. When
he first managed to compress elements molecu-larly,
his problem was how to decompress them. We do this by means of slow injection
of energy. But there was an alternate way my grandfather discovered, the
knowledge of which he immediately made a top secret. By an adjustment of the
decompressor machines, these cans can be made to reestablish their normal
molecular space instantaneously! The result is a terrific explosion, of nearly
atomic magnitude. I can adjust the decompressor for that—using it on the cans
and setting a time for the sudden rapid transition."
"You mean," said
Anton Smallways, "that if we dig a pit on each worldlet, set up our pile
of treated Calkans, and await the time, that they
will go off, one after another, in a chain atomic reaction, that will act as a
powerful rocket jet capable of moving an asteroid?"
- "Precisely!" said Ajax. "And we
have seven days to do it!"
Anton Smallways pressed a stud on his suit.
Immediately an emergency call was sent out to all the miners of his group. Men
came from everywhere, and hastily the work was started.
Ajax, his purple cloak swinging
limply from the shoulders of his spacesuit, was directing the process of
energizing the Calkans. Speedy rocket sleds went out to
the other Fore-Trojans, and under Smallways' direction, the launching pits were
being dug.
Day after day went by, the radio
continuing to carry ominous news of the oncoming fleets of ultimatums, and
"greetings from your friends of Saturn."
The Wuj was delegated to guard Emily, who was released
from her room, but not allowed to go anywhere without the spidery Martian accompanying
her. She was chastened now, seeing the wild activity, realizing that her words
had gone unheeded. She and die Wuj spent their time wandering the surface of
Ajax, looking for artifacts.
Ajax had ordered her small yellow EMSA scout ship to
be taken into the Destiny's cargo hold, so that she could not
steal it for a getaway.
Then came the final day. They gathered once more in the
"palace" and there Ajax gave the command to fire the Calkans.
They listened, while from Achilles and Nestor,
Hector and Agamemnon, Odysseus and the north pole of Ajax itself,
came the toneless voices of the miners announcing the blasting of the first of
the long chain of Calkans.
They felt the shock as the ones
on Ajax started off. The room shook and quivered in the repeated hammerblows, and the stars as seen through the thick
transparent windows reeled and swirled.
"We are taking a bad
pounding," said Ajax, "but we shall win."
The Wuj and Emily sat silent.
They clung to their posts as the tiny world vibrated to a series of tremendous
earthquakes.
"Where is Smallways?" asked Emily. The
little man was missing. She got up, started down ihe
long hallway that ran down beneath the ridge; the Wuj silently followed her.
She looked into their rooms, but Smallways was not
there. She went on, past the kitchen, past the conditioner room, through a
storage chamber, and into the long darkish hallway beyond, where other miners
had their quarters. She stopped; there was a clicking and whispering sound somewhere
in the deserted ridge.
The Wuj listened, pointed to a closed door marked
"Storage." Emily ran quickly to it and threw it open.
CHAPTER
TEN
Anton Smallways was seated at a narrow table in
the small room, hunched over a radio transmitter, speaking rapidly in a curious
series of squeaks, grunts, and whistling sounds. He threw them a quick glance,
and then slammed a hand down on his switch, and twisted his directional dials
wildly. Curiously, his face retained its usual impassivity.
Emily shouted excitedly,
"He's the one tipping off the Sarumiansl That's the transmitter he's been using!"
Smallways wheeled around, jumped up, but the room
was narrow and Emily blocked it. He hit her, pushed her outside, and turned
toward the long dark hallways leading into the farther end of the ridge. But he
found the Wuj blocking his way and before he could push by the huge creature's
waving legs, Emily got a grip on his arm and twisted.
Smallways gave an odd yelp,
twisted around and tried to push past her. "Oh no, you don't," she
gasped. "You're dealing with a trained judo expert, bud!" Still
grasping his arm she swung sharply in a twist that should have brought the
little man headlong into the wall. But there was a click, and somehow he was
not carried with her; instead, he was still on his feet, running madly
down the hall now in the direction of the throne-radio room.
Emily stood there a second, still holding Anton's
arm. She looked at it; she looked at the fleeing little man, running armless
down the hall, and she shook her head in bewilderment. The Wuj peered over her
shoulder, arched his eyes, and said, "How curious. I didn't know you Earth
types came apart so easily."
"We . . . don't . . Emily gasped,
looked at the
arm, turning it and looking at the
tom-off shoulder end. "He's . . . he's a fake! The thing's a hollow shell!"
The arm she was holding was a synthetic creation, a
carefully simulated shell of plastic, inside of which could be seen neat
little mechanisms for working the surface muscles. With a gasp of disgust, she
dropped it, and then gasped, "Hurry, Wuj; get him before he gets to
Ajax!"
Together the two raced after the figure of
Smallways, charging as fast as they could to catch up with him. Emily ran and
the Wuj scooted even faster, passed her, by rising to the ceiling and running
along it. He closed in on Small-ways just as the little man entered the main
radio room.
Ajax was rising to his feet, wondering at the sudden
clamor, when the Wuj shot in overhead, dropped on the little prime minister and
bore him to the floor, imprisoning him with his eight strong lets.
Ajax was peering down at Smallways when Emily came
running in. "He's a fake!" she cried. "He's a Saturnian!"
And poising herself over the recumbent little man, she demanded, "Come out
of there, you, and let's see your real self!"
Ajax stepped back, drew his handcannon and pointed
it at the staring face of Anton Smallways. "Go ahead," he said.
"Come out or 111 shoot."
Now the body of the little man split down the middle
and out of the hollow shell emerged a curious thing not quite like anything
seen on the inner worlds. It was like a snail removed from its shell, something
like an oyster, and also like a rather pulpy caterpillar.
It was slippery and it was grayish-white; it was
cold, and it had two oily eyes and a sucking mouthlike vent in one end of its
not quite substantial body. The thing stood up, on a short set of pseudopod
masses and out of its sucking mouth came the voice of
Smallways. "You're too late my friends. The Saturnian fleet will arrive
here tomorrow, but by that time your asteroids will have gone their separate
ways. Operation Swing is a success, but not for you."
"What do you mean?" Ajax asked, an unpleasant suspicion in his mind. "Operation
Swing will prevent landings."
Another earthquake series rocked
the room for a moment. The thing from Saturn went on, "Operation Swing
will shatter the Fore-Trojans totally. Most of the asteroids will swing off,
will fly away from their old orbits, fly away from their
old balancing points
outward where the Saturnians
can use them for advanced bases.
Thank you for giving us the means of doing this."
Several sharp jolts rocked the room then. The humans
grabbed at things to hold their balance, and in the confusion the Saturnian
slithered quickly toward the door. Ajax shouted; and as it was going out in a
desperate effort to escape, he brought up his weapon and fired.
There was a blast and where the thing had been there
was a splash of grayish juices and a chunk torn out of the wall. They felt a
rush of air about them, and a whistling sound penetrated their ears.
"Spacesuits!" shouted Ajax and the three ran
to the lock and hastily dressed for outer space, even as the air was escaping
through the hole in the wall, widening now as cracks radiated from it, from the
weakened structure of the quake-racked ridge.
The three got out of the space lock in time. Outside
they faced a scene of chaos. There there had been
structures, the vibrations had collapsed them. There were several of the miners
in sight, heading for the ridge and when these saw the three emerge they started
to run toward them.
"They must all be Saturnian agents!" cried
Emily. "We've got to escape."
,
"To the Destiny shouted Ajax and the three ran
across the landscape to where his trim space yacht was berthed.
The miners seemed at first directionless, for there
was no pursuit as their spacesuited figures poked into the ridge. The three had
almost reached the Destiny
when
the miners began to boil our of the ridge and charge
after them. By that time, Ajax had opened the outer lock and the three pushed
in.
The
lock slammed shut, and the inner lock activated by the time the miners had
reached the Destiny. They could hear pounding on the
door.
Ajax ran into the control room, hastily punched the
buttons. Emily slid to a stop, found herself sitting
on the floor suddenly as the beautifully automatic spacecraft lifted swiftly
arid shot upwards into the airless sky. The Wuj had hold of a bar and wasn't
disturbed.
The ship shot on, and Ajax staggered over to a
viewing port. "Look," he gasped and Emily got to her feet, rubbing
her posterior, and got over to look too.
Below them the planetoid Ajax was breaking up. Its
surface of dried mud and rock was cracking wide; huge crevices and gaping
wounds were appearing from pole to pole.
"It's leaving its orbit; it's falling apart
from the strain," murmured Ajax tearfully. "It was mine, all mine, and now it's gone. I'm Ajax the First and Last."
Even Emily felt constrained to silence as they
watched the tiny world begin to disintegrate. A glance showed that the other
six worldlets had already vanished, presumably hurtling off on outward trails
that would take them eventually into new orbits farther out between Saturn and
Jupiter. But Ajax was the one destined to go the other way; it was heading
sunward, shedding huge megaton blocks of rock and dirt as it was going.
They followed it, trailing it through space, Ajax
watching, wondering where among the asteroids it would now establish a new
orbit—if any part of it survived.
"There may be a hard core," said the Wuj
suddenly. "If so, there will still be a world for you."
Emily grunted. "A
world among the asteroids inside the orbit of Jupiter definitely. Even
legally you'll have no case now."
The little world was a shining
disc in the distance of the star strewn depths of space, a disc marked by a
thin tail like •that of a comet as it shredded apart. And just then there was a
burst of blazing light like a tiny sun off to another part of the sky.
"What's that?" said
Emily, pointing. Ajax followed her finger, stared at it.
"We're under fire!" he yelled. "It's
the Saturnians! Their escort fleet is here!"
He jumped back to the controls,
while Emily and the Wuj watched tensely at the viewplates. Another little sun
flared, seemingly closer.
Then the Destiny darted forward, a sharp
acceleration that had the two viewers grasping for aid. Again Emily
Hackenschmidt came down on the floor with a thump. "Oww!"
she gasped. "Oh, I'm going to be black and blue."
"Serves you right,"
said Ajax. "Only got what was coming to you for butting in." He sat
at the board, manually directing the speedy yacht.
The Wuj scrambled to his feet,
looked again outside. "They're not firing at us any longer," he said.
"There seems to be a battle going on."
Emily got to her feet, limped over for a look.
"Yes," she said, "EMSA has arrived and they're taking on the Saturnians."
"Good," muttered Ajax. "Gives us a
chance to get away and follow the destiny of my kingdom."
He took the space yacht out of the vicinity in a
flash and set out to follow the last charted orbit of the dislocated worldlet.
In seconds they had left the scene of the battle behind.
"You know, this is the first
actual battle in what is likely to prove a terrible war," said Emily.
"And in a way it's all your fault."
"Nonsense," said Ajax,
peering through the front port. "It would have started some other way,
anyway. Besides, I'm a neutral."
Emily threw him a look of scorn, then winced again
as she reached for a seat. "See the silly world yet? What's left of it,
that is?"
Ajax was silent for a while, then
uttered a whistle. "I've got it back on course, and I see Ajax again. It's
different; it's strange."
The Wuj at the viewplate said slowly, "It had a
hard core after all."
"Yes," said Ajax,
"a hard core—in fact, a polished, tooled metal core. What
is left of Ajax is a huge metallic construction, almost as big as the original
planetoid. The surface, the mud and rock, were debris or camouflage. Ajax underneath
was an artificial world. Look at it. I'm going to try for a landing."
Even Emily forgot her aching rump
to get up and look.
In their forward viewplates they
could see the former world of the now dissolved Fore-Trojan Union. It shone brighdy in the sky as they neared it—a gleaming, metallic
surface like a huge oval egg, several miles in length along its longitudinal
axis. The rocky outer shell had vanished, shredded into dust and scattered into
space.
They were corning to a landing on a new Ajax, a
metal-shelled Pandora's Box containing no one knew what wonders of a lost
pre-asteroid civilization.
"And
it's all mine," said Ajax complacently.
CHAPTER
ELEVEN
Deftly Ajax Calkins slid the Destiny across the surface of the newly
revealed metallic world. Here and there dirty streaks of mud and rock still
clung to the surface, but they could clearly see the seams that marked the
construction of the ancient shell. Amazingly it seemed to be in perfect shape,
possibly because the protective layer of surface had sheltered it from the
damage of cosmic dust and meteors throughout the aeons
that had passed.
Now the Destiny slid to a stop on the shining
surface, at a point where there seemed to be. a large
circular line of demarcation. "It may be an opening, a lock of some
sort," said Emily as she watched.
"Well see," said
Ajax as the space yacht came to a stop. He threw a switch which magnetized pads
on the underside of the vessel and which would make it cling firmly to the
metal surface. Such pads were standard equipment for small craft and for
asteroid operations, since many of the smaller asteroids were chunks of
meteoric metal or seamed with metal.
They got into their spacesuits and emerged from the
yacht. They found themselves standing on a plain of shining metal, sloping off
onto a close horizon. "Its tremendous," said
Emily after a moment's silence. "It's like the biggest space liner ever
dreamed of."
Ajax started forward toward the circular marking.
"It may have been intended as such, but I suspect it was a refuge. Perhaps
the people of the lost planet had some warning of coming destruction and built
it underground as a treasure house and refuge."
They came to the suspect area,
walked around it studying
it. "It surely was an en
byway," said Ajax. "Large enough to admit small
aircraft or landcraft. But how does it open?"
The Third Least Wuj scuttled across it, began to
track around the circle. "There are indentations here," the Martian
said.
They crossed to the spot, and saw a series of indentations
alongside the tight crack. Ajax waved them to stand clear, and bent down and
began to probe the indentations. His fingers definitely pushed something down.
Something clicked in their feet,
a vibration as sound did not travel through space. They felt a grinding tremor;
then the area within ,the circular crack began slowly
to rise, unscrewing steadily. It turned, creakily, stopping, starting, fighting at invisible clogging elements. The three stood and
watched it. Finally about a foot of the surface was risen above it, and then
this detached itself and began to slide aside.
Now a wide opening was revealed to
them; and as they looked into it, they saw a short series of ledges, and saw
that another surface of metal could be reached about thirty feet below.
Gingerly they descended the ledges, as if they were
stairs. At the bottom, were several indentations in the floor similar to those above. "Do you think we should chance . . ." began
Emily, but Ajax simply bent down and pressed into those.
The surface began to sink under their feet, carrying
them with it, and above them the cover began to slide back over their heads.
"Like an air lock," said Ajax.
"We're taking an awful chance," said
Emily, holding on, but gritting her teeth.
Ajax shrugged. They descended farther, and now found
themselves in open space; the disc beneath them swung to one side and they
stepped out onto a wide bakony-like ledge.
"What's holding us up?" asked Emily.
"I feel light-headed; there must be no gravity here, yet we're
sticking."
"Our magnetized shoes are
holding us to the metal surfaces," said Ajax. "This place is without
gravity."
The only light was the built-in beams in their
suits. They stood, a little group of three lights, and looked into an area of
darkness. But as they watched, there was a humming sound, then a whistling
sound, and they felt movement rush past their helmets.
"What's
that?" whispered Emily.
"It's air," said
the Wuj. "The place is filling up with air from somewhere. And see—there
are lights coming on."
They stood and watched as the interior of the
mysterious world came to life. Here and there faint blue lights came into being
like stars breaking through clouds. More and more lights, some blue, some
reddish, now a few yellow and whites appeared. Gradually the view was cleared
as the lights cut through the interior. They stood silent with wonder and awe
as their view extended.
Now it was ablaze with lights; the air was beginning
to be thick about them, and they could feel the first faint hummings
of warmth ascending from the surface. They stood on a narrow balcony and
overlooked a huge floor of a great many layers that must have filled the huge
egg.
From floor to curved ceiling the height may have
been fifty feet. And this mighty floor was banked with long rows of cylinders,
each resting in its own cradle, each marked in cabalistic symbols. And there
were other enclosed objects, suggesting crates, and areas of plain floor. This
huge storeroom ran as far as they could see. Around the wall ran the balcony
on which they stood, and there were doors breaking the walls regularly.
They stood near one, so they went over and looked
into it. It was a small chamber, with what might have been a sleeping pallet,
circular and a little off balance for a human form. "This place was built
for habitation," said Emily, "but where are the inhabitants?"
"Gone," said Ajax, "millions of years
gone. They may never have had time to man this vault. Or they may have tired of
hiding out and left it. Or . .
"Who
knows?" said the Wuj. "They may even have gone to Mars and become the
ancestors of one of our beings." "True," said Ajax. "Let's
explore."
They spent several hours wandering around the
balcony, descending to the floor to examine the cylinders, looking into other
crates, studying the unusual shapes of the things in receptacles aligned along
the wall.
Finally they found, not too far from the entry port,
a large chamber which gave the appearance of being a command headquarters. It
was large, and lined with what seemed like a form of viewplate; there were
controls, indicators marked in esoteric calibrations, large cushions scattered
around, and other elements indicative of it's
nature.
They sat around in there, their helmets open, and
talked it over. Ajax summed up. "Plainly, on our entry on the disc,
automatic relays started the air and heating systems. The lighting system
followed. We may assume that the entire world is now warm, habitable, and
waiting for use. Somewhere below us there must be a kitchen
setup and food storage, though whether that will prove of any use is unlikely.
"The cylinders on this upper floor, nearest the
surface and the presumable surface ports, are obviously rocket craft-small,
robotically directed rocket missiles. The Wuj thought they would be message
carriers. In my opinion they were ships of war: robot miniature rockets with
some land of armament built in.
"This place was built to sustain a fight, but
what and why it did not we shall never know. The question is: How do we
motivate anything?''
"There must be robot machines. There must be
walking devices, floor cars. Probably cookers and dishwashers and driers and
sewers and manufacturing devices," said Emily, "but we can't seem to
find any way to start them running. I believe they must have been motivated
from some central point, like this room. But how to start it
all off. . . . Nothing responds here."
Ajax looked around, his brow in
thought. "I'd say it needs a key, like any central plant. It's locked,
that's all; nothing will operate until we unlock the main control."
"And
how do we find the key?" said the Wuj.
"Search," said Ajax. "We will simply
have to set up shop here, near the Destiny up on the surface, where our
supplies are, and institute a search. My world will live again and my flag will
fly triumphantly."
"Anyway," said the Wuj, "hadn't we
better set up our bedding places? Personally I'm ready to sleep."
"Yes," said Ajax. "Who's going up to
the surface and bring down some sleeping equipment and some cans of food?"
"I'll go," said Emily Hackenschmidt. She
got up, fastened her space helmet on, adjusted her air flow, and went down the
balcony to the disc. The two others stood in the doorway and watched her.
She got on the disc, and pressed
the indentations. They saw it slowly swing back, rise up carrying her like an
elevator and plug itself back into the ceiling, until she had disappeared.
They wandered about the main control hall for what
may have been an hour, looking at the banks of controls and indicators and
wondering what they would master. After a while, the Wuj squatted down and
simply watched Ajax.
Finally, Ajax looked at the
spidery creature in impatience. "Shouldn't she be back by now?"
The Wuj nodded. "I hate to
question your wisdom, kind leader," he said softly, "but was it
entirely wise to send Emily instead of going yourself?"
Ajax replied without thinking. "Of
course. She' knows what she needs in change of clothing and nightgowns
and such, and I can't pick it out for her from her little scout cruiser. That's
why . . ."
His face changed, turned white. "Her scout cruiser! She may have made her getaway! Ohmigosh, I've got to get out!"
He ran out the door and down the
balcony. Swiftly he pressed the indentations in the wall that would bring the
disc down. He tightened his helmet, gritting his teeth at the delay. When it
came down, he jumped on, started the as
cent. Down the balcony the Wuj
watched him with big, sad pugdog eyes.
He reached the surface, jumped
out. The Destiny was still there, held tight to
the surface, safe, intact.
He dashed across to it, and then
he saw that the cargo door was open. The yellow EMSA scout ship was gone.
CHAPTER
TWELVE
Cursing silently to himself at his moment of
bone-headedness in allowing his antagonist to get away with such an escape,
Ajax wasted no time in getting into the Destiny. And yet, he thought, who else could have gone?
As king, it would have been beneath my dignity. The Wuj couldn't be expected to
pick out clothes and bedding for humans. Hence . . . it just had to be Emily.
He jumped into the open cargo
door hatch and activated it shut; when it was sealed, he ran air into the
chamber, opened the inner door leading to the cargo section, went through it
and got to the control room that way. Seating himself at the control console,
he punched the buttons that would put all in readiness.
He studied the radar scanner which he had activated
first. Meteors, a shadow or two—obviously distant asteroid shadows—but no sign
of the characteristic blotch that would be a moving spacecraft.
"Damn," he whispered, "she must have almost an hour's
start."
He demagnetized the pads, started
the engines; the trim space yacht slipped easily from the surface of the new
Ajax and spiraled up into space. She'll be heading for Juno,
he
thought. That is the nearest probable EMSA control
station. Til follow her. Surely 1 can catch up with her
little ship. I
outdistanced it easily once.
So he punched out the co-ordinates for the large
planetoid Juno on the robot controls, and sat back, with the indicators set for
maximum practical speed. He watched the radar, hoping to see her craft caught
in its radiation.
But speeding outside the plane of
the ecliptic was one thing, and accelerating in the heart and center of the
crowded asteroid belt was quite another problem. The ship kept slow
ing, twisting, turning to alter its
course as one or another object crossed its projective orbit. An hour went
past; two; then three—and still there was no sign of the vessel he pursued.
Ajax Calkins sat tensely at his controls, wondering
how long he dared pursue, and how close to Juno he dared bring his ship. But
the decision was suddenly taken out of his hands.
He saw a bright flash on his
radar and leaned forward. Was that Emily now? For the flash was ahead of him,
inward to the sun, in the direction where Juno would be, and farther than that
of Mars and Earth and Mercury. But immediately another dot appeared and
another and still another; and they were not traveling away from him—they were
coming toward him and fast.
Some sort of patrol ships, he realized in an instant.
Four of them, in file, coming full tilt for him!
He snapped off the robot controls, grabbed the
manuals and spun the ship. It swung around in a wide swing—not too wide, for
the momentum could not allow a quick twist. In space at space speeds, a quick
turn might encompass thousands of miles.
He didn't attempt a full turn; instead he twisted the
ship off at a
wide
angle, and hoped to slide past the oncoming ships before they could turn after
him. \Once
in a straight race, Ajax Calkins was confident he could outrun them. But the
four foe started turning almost as fast as the Destiny.
He switched his ship's radio on.
At once, he caught commands directed at him.
"Swing to and identify yourself.- Swing about and land at the nearest asteroid. This is
EMSA officia. Swing to or we fire!"
Ajax opened his mike. "This is the space yacht Destiny out of Canada, Earth, on a
pleasure cruise. May we proceed?^
There was a crackling of the radio, and the EMSA
ship's voice came on, harshly, "Destiny, shut down your engines! You're
under arrest for harboring the enemy, and interfering with an EMSA agent. You
are ordered to surrender at once!"
"Oh, no, I don't,"
gritted out Ajax, and switched the radio com off. "You’ll have to catch
me."
He slammed on speed, disregarding the danger in the
crowded space. But the EMSA ships were already closer to him than was
comfortable.
A nova of white fire suddenly came into being close
to his line of movement. Then another on the other side.
"They're firing," muttered Ajax, "at me!"
He pushed his speed throttle down harder, raced past
the two dying bursts of atomic flame. Another one blossomed a little behind
him. "I'D show them."
He reached up on his console,
flipped open a board revealing another set of buttons. He pushed one, glanced
into his rear-view telescreen.
Where there should have been a
blossom of fire from his rear gun, there was nothing. The oncoming EMSA ships,
now falling back as the Destiny pursued its reckless acceleration,
fired in unison.
A blast of blinding flame
obscured Ajax's vision for a moment as the burst flared all over his
telescreen. Close, he thought, close. The mad acceleration continued.
He fired all his other guns—strictly illegal as they
were— and found that none of them worked. "Sabotaged," he muttered.
"That blasted Smallways must have put them all out of commission!"
There was nothing for it but to try to outrun the
four pursuit cruises. He switched on the radio receiver again, and he could
hear the calls of the cruisers to each other.
"Box him in and hurry your fire," said one
voice. And another said, "That so-and-so is a real renegade. I understand
the Saturnians call him friend and ally." "Boy," said a
third voice, "I'd like to get my hands on him!" "You
can't," replied the first voice, "but we can blow him to hell and
gone, and we will!"
Now a veritable curtain of fire blossomed all around
the Destiny as all the ships fired at once. The Destiny suddenly tossed and twisted.
More and more flares blinded
Ajax from every side as the EMSA ships blasted away,
seeing their fast quarry getting farther from them.
There was a sudden crash somewhere and the Destiny's lights blinked out, to be
replaced by a couple of weak auxiliary glimmers. Ajax clung to his seat,
leaning over the controls.
Another sudden slam and the ship seemed to
somersault, then righted itself. But somewhere there
was air escaping; Ajax pulled his helmet down, sealed his spacesuit. He had
hardly done this, when two more shots registered on the ship.
He held on as the Destiny suddenly twirled around like a
kicked soccer ball and the rush of air past his helmet indicated that the ship
was sieved thoroughly. Glancing back, he noticed that he could see the stars
shining where once had been a solid wall of his cabins.
"Time to git,"
he gasped to himself, and stood up. He half ran, half crawled down the main
passageway, avoiding the fearful gap where the stars shone through. He clung to
a stanchion as another terrible blow struck the ship and the last lights went
out. The engine had gone dead and he was alone in silence, nothing but the
stars reeling and whirling as the ship was crumbing about him.
He reached his lifeboat—a tiny
shell of a rocket—slid open the side of it in the light of his helmet lamp,
dropped in prone, slid the top shut, and blasted off.
The little rocket, designed for carrying one man, a
minimum of supplies, attached to a tiny atomic jet, shot out of the wreck like
a lone torpedo. Away into the blackness he drove and hoped the pursuers would
not see his tiny jet in the glares of their shooting.
He twisted back for an instant
and was in time to see a direct hit score on the riddled Destiny. The once fine ship simply
disintegrated; it flew apart in a brilliant, flowerlike fire display. Then
there was darkness in space, and he hurled on, his own jet off, hoping he had
not been detected.
In a few minutes, he knew he had not. There was no
more activity in the void. Nothing moved, save the same slow interchange that
marked a few visible asteroids moving with apparent indolence on their endless
orbits. No sign of ship, no sign of pursuit.
He was alone in space, in a shell of metal as snug
as a coffin, with enough supplies for perhaps seven days, a radio that could
broadcast only a set S. O. S. pattern, and a jet good for about a day's
acceleration at low power.
He was heading sunward. The brilliant sphere of the
sun was ahead of him, wreathed in its fantastic ring of corona and fire. The
ruddy disc of Mars was off to one side, far from the
direction he was headed. Earth was not even in sight.
He rested and stared out at the stars. He could not
turn back, for though he could turn the little shell his power would not be
sufficient to completely overcome the momentum imparted by the Destiny. He would have to keep on heading
inward and hope to sight some rescuing craft before his food ran out.
Unfortunately, if the conversation he overheard was
widespread, any rescuer would probably lock him up and hand him over for trial
and summary execution.
He lay on his stomach, in the thin padded interior
of the shell, and looked silently into the emptiness of space. The tiny rocket
lifeboat raced on, carrying with it the man who would be king.
CHAPTER
THIRTEEN
Fob all the romantic slant of the histories
he had studied and pored over, Ajax Calkins was not entirely unaware that the
men who set out to found their own empires ran certain unpleasant risks. They
were all subjects of particular nations, originally, and their own governments
took dim views of such activities; it was one thing for an enterprising subject
to do mighty deeds which brought new lands and glory to his ruler—it was
another to set himself up as a king in his own right. If he failed to make his
own rule stick, his end could be a rather sticky one.
Calkins thought for a while of some of the heroes
who had failed to bring it off and admitted to himself, for a moment, that this
could be his fate, too. If he were captured by EMSA, he most certainly would
not be given safe conduct back to his kingdom. The best he could hope for was
confinement in some institution from which he might eventually be able to
escape, or eventually be released by convincing them he was "cured."
He decided not to worry about the worst, or, in
fact, any of these contingencies. He was Ajax the First, man of destiny, and he
would play his part as well as he could, come what may. Alone he traveled on
through space, seeing no sign of other life, seeing nothing but the far lights
of distant stars, the glow of the sun, and the almost changeless crescent of
Mars. The vastness of space is so great that though a thousand thousand space ships might be en route, he might travel on forever and
see none of them.
He lay on his stomach, in his
spacesuit, within the tiny shell and pondered on the wisest course to pursue.
There was little choice.
If
he sent out his S.O.S. too soon, while within the mass
of the asteroid belt, his only
chance would be that an EMSA ship would find him—or worse a Saturnian sneak
raider. Either prospect wouldn't be very pleasing.
If he held up his S.O.S. until he was crossing Mars'
orbit, he might then hope to encounter some vessel on peaceful transport duty
between the two inhabited worlds. But the distances then were such that few
ships might be within hearing and those vessels not capable of much interference
with their routes.
Besides, should he cross the
orbit of Mars at his present speed, no such transport would be likely to be
able to stop him. So the thing to do would be to decelerate as much as
possible, so that as he crossed the main interplanetary routes he would be
drifting—or as near to a drifting speed as any object in free space under the
influence of the sun's pull could hope for.
He worked out an approximation of his speed and what
he could do with his slight jet power. He then began tie long wait.
He rested; he slept; he reviewed
his life; he recited to himself all the poems he could remember, and made up
verses. He listened to his ship's tiny radio, but could get nothing; its range
was too limited.
He thought of the Third Least Wuj, stranded alone in
the mysterious metal planetoid, with lifeless machinery, and things
unimaginable. Could the Wuj ever piece together anything? Would he want to?
Ajax reflected on the curious timelessness of the United Beings. They had
established a level of civilization back when on Earth only cavemen and
mammoths roamed the surface; then they had seemed to say, this is good, this is
enough. And there the Martians had stayed: No advance; no
decline; no interest in any further change, and not much curiosity.
Individually they could he moved to investigate, but collectively they seemed content
to stay pat.
Could the Wuj, who often reflected so much the
strange stoicism of his ancient civilization, so change his nature as to master
the machines of that world? For he had better, or else he
would starve to death. How long did it take Martians to starve? Ajax
wasn't sure—he had an idea that the spidery types could hibernate if necessary.
And that Emily Hackenschmidt! He thought about her
with mingled periods of anger and fury and other periods when he found stranger
emotions moving him. She was a pretty girl and a spunky one, too; he could, he
realized, almost learn to like her. She was certainly a girl for an adventurer.
If only she wasn't so blasted obstinate! He wondered what had happened to her.
Had the EMSA given her a medal and a raise in rank?
Time passed. He turned the shell around, fired his
little rocket and watched as the tiny shell slowly retarded its fall sunward.
Past the orbit of Mars now, the crescent having widened out, until now Mars was
an orb, a tiny disc of ruddy color off to his side.
He watched the gauge of his limited fuel supply, and
when it was three-quarters empty, he shut off his engine. The rest might yet
save his life.
Now he watched and scanned the sky. How many days
passed, he couldn't tell. A week, perhaps two weeks. . . . He did not know. He
had cut his food intake, limited his meals to drag out the stores. And he
became slowly worried. Another meal or two left, and then slow starvation.
He switched on his automatic S.O.S. sender
broadcasting a general call. Was anything near?
Slowly the hours passed, and he watched and waited
and saw nothing. He ate his last meal, lingeringly, and it became a memory.
His water supply, constantly renewing itself in a closed cycle would continue
indefinitely. How long could a man go without food? Thirty days, he remembered
from somewhere.
He watched and lay on his stomach and wondered how
weak he would be. He saw the stars, tiny cold points of white in the deep
blackness. He noticed one that seemed to move among the others. It moved
slightly, but it moved.
Was
it a ship?
It had to be, he thought. What
else could move? He knew there were asteroids—like Eros and Anteros,
and Apollo— that cut deep within the orbit of Mars, went on almost to Venus.
But there were also spaceships.
He watched the tiny point of moving light, headed
his shell that way, and started his engine. He began to move across the
thousands of miles of space that separated him from the object between Mars and
Earth.
He watched it slowly grow brighter, and he could see
that it was moving. It was moving in an orbit that would take it outward from
that of Earth into that of Mars. But it moved so slowly, so strangely unlike
the passenger liners and the space yachts, that he
wondered what it could be. It would cut the orbit of Mars . . . but not for a
terribly long time.
It came closer, and he swung his shell towards it,
and drew nearer. Nothing replied to his S.O.S. What spaceship would not answer
such a call at this narrowing distance? What spaceship would not have a robotic
tape, recording all the time, that would sound an
automatic alarm at the receipt of his signal?
The ship took shape, and the answers became clear.
He saw at first not a slim gleaming metal liner, not a familiar tubular craft,
but a wide sweep of white, reflecting starlight and sunlight. He saw emerge a
pattern of four huge expanses of metallic surface, and he saw that they were
paper-thin sails spread out into the void.
He watched as it drew closer, and
he recognized it from his studies. He saw the four huge sails, spreading over
hundreds of square miles of void, and in the center, he saw the tiny doughnut
doting the hub of these four incredibly vast sails. He drew toward it, swung
his ship in the rear and ran up on it, matching his speed with that of the
unusual vessel.
As he drew closer, the vast sails obscured the stars
on all sides, cut out the view of space and left only a curious impression of
flickering opacity across the sky.
He came up to the doughnut and found it even odder.
It was a wheel, the hub of which was a flat disc several hundred feet across.
On the edge of this circular disc, ex-acdy like a
tire fitted on a wheel, was a tube. A metallic tube perhaps thirty feet
in width, fitted onto the rim of the disc, and rotating. It was a tire running
around the edge of the disc steadily, at a fairly fast rate.
He knew what it was. It was a cosmic ion-driven
space freighter. It was literally a sailing vessel of the sky, the cheapest and
most economical means of transportation ever devised between worlds. Put
together in orbit, outside the grasp of Earth's gravity, it was set on its way
by the infinitesimal pressure of the cosmic rays, of the sun's rays, of the
ions generated in little force patches along the frames of the wings. Between
the rocket-like drive of the ions and the steady pressure of the light of the
sun and stars on its tremendous wing surfaces, it moved across space. Its orbit
was a slow, long, leisurely one.
But it was a refuge; it was life and safety. Ajax
swung close to it, circled over the gleaming disc of the central freight
compartment, then seeing the unmistakable hatchway of a loading compartment
right up near the moving tube at the rim, set his shell down.
It clung magnetically to the
surface. Ajax fastened his helmet, swung back the top of his shell, climbed
out.
He swayed dizzily, fell to his
hands and knees for a moment and hung on. He was weak, weaker than he'd
feared. Only the fact that there was no gravity kept him from being entirely
helpless.
He caught his breath, staggered
to his feet, and shuffled across on his magnetic shoes to the hatchway. He
looked for a means of opening it from the outside, but there was none. He clung
to it, pounded with his fist on the outside.
Surely someone must have noticed his arrival. Surely
there must be someone who would hear the pounding on the outer hatch, even in
the cargo nub. Surely there was a crewman detailed to watch the cargo who would
hear.
Time passed. Nothing seemed to stir inside. What
sort of ship was this? Ajax wondered wearily, if he was doomed to die hanging
to the outside of salvation?
He pounded more. Beyond him he
could see the sweep of the vast sails, moored to the body of the cargo hold by
powerful metal stanchions. He could see now and then the tremor and shift of
one of the miles of expanse as the invisible currents of space wafted here and
there against those colossal sails.
Still he clung. Was the ship deserted, dead? Was it
all robot, no crewmen? He pounded again, felt his strength diminishing.
The ionic freighter sailed slowly
on.
CHAPTER
FOURTEEN
Ajax Calkins clung there for what seemed like
hours, but which was more likely minutes in the
timelessness of anxiety, when at long last he felt a tremor in the metal disc
of the loading port. He got to his feet, stepped aside, and waited as the outer
disc slowly unscrewed and then swung open.
He looked into the wide maw of the cargo airlock,
and then stepped inside. He saw the automatic buttons that would close the lock
from inside, punched them, waited. With that built-in
slowness that seems characteristic of cargo holds, the outer disc swung shut,
sealed. There was a hissing of air; gauges on the wall registered the rise of
atmosphere inside the chamber, and when it reached parity, Ajax went over and
unbolted the inner door.
He stepped through to a narrow catwalk which
threaded its way across a vast area of shrouded masses, undoubtedly the payload
of this ship, deposited in the gravityless central hull. A man was standing
before him, lit by the dim glow of the permalites in the hold.
"Calmness, brother," said this individual
in a soft whispering tone. "All is serene in the Retreat of the
Nirvanists. I
am
Brother Augustus. How call you yourself?"
Ajax opened his space helmet, gulped in a few
breaths of air. It tasted fresh to him who had been living in the limited and
not-well-laundered air of the emergency shell, though
doubtless it was stale and oil-laden.
"I am . .
uh . . . Jack Callans ..." he
began, making up a name on the spur of the moment, realizing the danger that
his real name might have been broadcast as a wanted criminal, ". . . uh .
. . my ship was wrecked by disaster ... thanks
for saving me."
Brother Augustus looked at him
from deep eyes, stroked the trim black beard that
decorated the chin of his rather round and plump face, and nodded slowly.
"You look in need of sustenance and rest," he said in his soft,
breathy tones. "Come with me to the rim quarters."
He turned and began to walk the catwalk, and Ajax
followed him, his magnetic shoes clinging to the metal walk, his body floating
free in the weightlessness of the un-rotating hull. They came to a door, which
Brother Augustus opened outwards.
There was a gap of a yard here, and beyond that yard
of space a smooth metal wall moved past rapidly. It was the inner wall of the
rim-tube which rushed past, running, Ajax could see, on an endless series of
ball-bearings and wheels that raced along a track inside the outer edge of the
central hull.
Brother Augustus beckoned to Ajax to come to the
doorway, and when Ajax had done so, the bearded individual deftly stepped
behind him. "When the door comes past, I will push you. Grab for the
handles, and pull yourself into it."
"Whaaa . . ." Ajax. began
to question bewilderedly when suddenly a wide circular opening appeared, with a
plastic door set into it. There was a shove and Ajax flew across the yard of
space and slammed into the moving wall. Clutching out wildly, his hand closed
on a metal handle and he clung to it, being dragged swiftly along the moving
wall. In a second he was in near darkness, clinging to the moving wall, with
only a dim greenish light over the closed door a few feet from him to
show the other wall rushing past in the opposite direction.
Weakly Ajax clung to it; then, as his eyes adjusted,
he saw that there were a series of such handles and he moved himself to the
door by pulling himself along. Once at the door, he pushed on it, and found it
would slide aside. He got it open, pushed himself through, and fell across a
narrow room as the door slid automatically shut over his head.
Over his head? Ajax sat up. Sure enough, from
where he was, the door he had entered by was in the ceiling of a low room.
There was a ladder running down from it, which he presumably should have groped
for.
He sat a moment and then got his
orientation. Of course he should have realized he would have weight; the
purpose of the revolving tube area was to provide an artificial gravity for the
crew of the ship by means of centrifugal force. The rotation exerted a pressure
on the outside of the rim and everything within would feel a sense of
gravitational weight. Ajax groggily stood up, only to sit down as his knees
gave way under him. He was weak from his experiences, from hunger, and from
lack of gravity.
This ship was obviously based
upon an economy of power. The centrifugal system for spaceship gravity had been
replaced in faster ships by the new techniques of artificial gravity creation;
but those techniques required power. The centrifugal system,
once started, required but little to maintain it in space.
He sat there until, after a few minutes, the door
opened in the little room, and Brother Augustus looked in. "Ah," he
said softly, "I see you are weak."
He came in, and another man came with him. Now Ajax
had the chance to examine the two more closely. Both were garbed alike, in
rough brown smocks, reaching to their ankles. An emblem, that of a script
letter X, was embroidered on the front of each man's smock. Their hair was
long and both wore short beards.
The two lifted Ajax to his feet and helped him to
leave the chamber. He found himself in a long narrow hallway and they walked
him down until they came to a long narrow chamber with bunks lining the wall.
They lifted Ajax into one.
"Rest," said Brother Augustus. "We
will bring you food. You must regain your strength; then we shall talk."
It was perhaps two days later
that Ajax Calkins was strong enough to leave his bed and have the promised-talk
with Brother Augustus. Meantime he had learned a good deal about the vessel he
was on, through conversation with a patient, gray-bearded man who had been
assigned to attend him.
The ship was one of a number of such in service
between Earth and Mars. It utilized the minimum of energy to carry its cargo
back and forth; and sailing as it did, its relation to space flight was
curiously like that of an old sailing ship of the Mayflower class compared to a fast jet
airliner of the Twentieth Century. The Mayflower type took three months to cross
the Atlantic; the jet plane six hours.
This vessel took about three years to cross from
Earth to Mars. It never docked on either planet,
hovering in orbit while its cargo was unloaded by rocket tenders, and then
beginning the slow sail back again. Because of their slowness, because of the
endless tedium of the passage, such ships were given over to very special types
of crews, crews that would devote the idle hours of the passage—and they were
about ninety per cent of the hours involved—into pursuits of the mind and soul.
There were several such ionic freighters that were
true convents—vessels on which the foot of a male had never trod, while saintly
women went about their meditations and prayers in an isolation never achieved
on Earth. There were monasteries. There was one that was an academy of deep
philosophy and abstract mathematics.
This one was the Retreat of the
Nirvanists. It was a sort of cult—a cult run by the man known as Brother
Augustus— and its brotherhood were but temporary devotees, paying a good sum
for the privilege of the long trip away from the tensions and troubles of
Earth. In short it was a retreat of tired businessmen, men who wanted to
overcome their ulcers, get away from nagging wives, escape other mental
problems, or simply get away from it" all for a half-dozen years.
They spent many hours in meditation, and in the contemplation
of music and poetry. They manufactured some items, doing handwork, while not
checking the cargo.
"At least," said Ajax to the man who was
explaining all this, "I didn't land on a convent ship!"
The man smiled and agreed. It would have been a
rather embarrassing predicament all around. "But, still, you are here away
from the world . . ."
Ajax sat up. "I want to talk to Brother
Augustus about getting away from here. Has he a radio? What's happening in the
space war?"
The man shook his head.
"There is no radio here, brother. We are totally isolated from all news.
And none may leave here until we reach Mars. You still have a year to go. Rest,
take it easy, think, delve into your true self."
"What do you mean?" Ajax asked. "I
have to get away. Surely I can borrow a ship's tender. You must have a couple
of fast rocket craft for emergencies and landings."
The man shook his head. "There may be such, but
only Brother Augustus has access to them, and he will never permit it."
"I must speak to him," said Ajax, getting
to the floor. "Right away!"
He slipped into the brown smock that had been given
him while his own clothes were being laundered, and strode along the narrow
passages to find the master of the Nirvanists.
But Brother Augustus, whom he found supervising some
work in a long workroom, where men toiled with hand tools at narrow benches,
merely smiled sadly.
"You must remain our guest," he said. "Until we return to Earth."
"I've got to be here for
four years!" yelped Ajax. "Four blessed, peaceful,
soulful years of unchanging bliss. It's Nirvanal" intoned Brother
Augustus, rolling his eyes. "It's Gehenna!" exclaimed Ajax.
CHAPTER
FIFTEEN
Brother Augustus arched his eyebrows at Ajax and
slowly shook his head. "You will find the peace and calm of our retreat
very beneficial. Soon you will lose the tension of your Earthly desires, and
find the harmonies of our work beneficial."
"Oh, no," said Ajax.
"I've got to get going! Isn't there some way you can lend me an escape
rocket, a landing yacht, or something? Surely I can make it worth your while.
Whatever it costs . . ."
The master of the Nirvanists
merely shook his head. "Absolutely not. Abide
with us, friend Jack, abide with us in patience."
Calkins stamped a foot
impatiently, but held back from another angry retort. He would have to find
some way to get what he wanted. Meanwhile . . . He found himself curious about
what the brothers were doing in that workroom.
In spite of himself, he noticed the odd similarity
of their work to old electrical light bulbs, not quite completed— but surely
that man was twisting tiny filaments; and that one blowing fragile glass bulbs;
and down there, several men were delicately inserting the filaments, twisting and
cleverly winding and binding.
Brother Augustus followed his
eyes, smiled. "Yes, they are indeed making light bulbs. We find that there
is a great demand back on Earth for old-fashioned bulbs, made by the loving
care of devoted hands, and filled with the blessed vacuum of outer space
itself.
"We sell these bulbs to light the altars of
lamaseries in distant Tibet and in modem Shasta. Students of the mystic lore
find them soothing, with their perfect clear vacuum
unspoiled by the contamination of
machinery and planetary atmospheres."
Ajax looked at him, but the deep eyes of the man betrayed
no emotion. Surely he could not be sincere; then vaguely Calkins recalled an ad
here and there in journals for such bulbs as these. Well, he thought, there are
crackpots and there are those who fatten on them.
Which was Brother Augustus? The
answer to his problem might well lie in that question.
For several more days, Ajax found
himself unable to do anything but follow the routine
of the Nirvanists. It was a monotonous one, one designed to lull the mind and
nerves. Several work hours, several hours devoted to quiet meditation, periods
of listening to deep music, or listening to taped lectures on peace of mind.
There was not a hint of the problems of mundane
worlds. No newspaper, no news bulletin, no communication to be found anywhere,
no books dealing with anything more substantial than philosophy. Ajax wandered
the rim of the ionic sailcraft, was allowed everywhere, and learned that the
control room was not in the rim, but in the core of the cargo hub—a locked
area inaccessible to all save Brother Augustus.
He went one morning to talk to Brother Augustus and
found that worthy sitting quietly in his meditation room listening to a tape of
an ancient symphony. As he entered, the bearded master raised a warning finger.
Ajax sat down and listened. The tunes of the old instruments ran on, to Ajax's
ears, monotonously, but the Brother seemed entranced. Suddenly he flicked a
finger in the middle of a bar. The music stopped. Ajax was about to talk, but
the tape was run back, and instantly began again where it had been several
minutes before.
They waited. Then the music switched off. Brother
Augustus looked up. "Did you hear it? The second
violin? It was off, definitely off in the seventh beat of that movement.
I have been suspecting this for many months. Finally I have traced it down. And
now . . ." He looked at Ajax expectantly.
Ajax jumped up and dashed angrily
out How could you argue with such an abstract man? He
stamped down the long hall, past rooms and workchambers, ignoring the disapproving glances of the
brothers.
He came to a series of bedrooms,
and realized suddenly that he was in front of Brother Augustus' own private
sleeping quarters. In a flash of fury, he tried the door, found it open, slipped in.
Maybe he could find out something about that bearded
man who kept him prisoner so efficiently. There must be a means to cajole him
into renting one of the ship's auxiliary rocketcraft!
It was hardly an ethical act to go through his
host's private effects, but Ajax recalled to himself that few of the empire
builders of the past would have worried about such a minor detail. In the
establishment of a crown, these things were excusable.
He glanced around the narrow quarters. The bed, the bureau, no. There was a cabinet. He tried it;
it was locked. He pressed on it, and found that it was not too tight. Taking
his pocketknife out, Ajax went to work with the tip of the blade. In a few
seconds, he had the cabinet open, for the lock was not one of the magnetic
modern ones. Brother Augustus went in for the old-fashioned too often at the
wrong spots.
There were notebooks, ledgers, piles of papers, some
flat boxes. Quickly Ajax thumbed through them. Bills of lading, sailing orders,
ledgers of sales, lists of the brothers on this voyage, profits and losses
(that was an interesting one-Brother Augustus had acquired quite a neat bank
account in the three trips he had already made).
On the bottom of the pile, Ajax
came to a single flat leather folder, worn and old. He slipped it out,
unstrapped it, looked in.
He sat down on the bed with a thud, eyes agleam. Quickly
he took out several clippings, some old photos, a worn
spaceman's notebook. He skimmed through them rapidly and whistled to himself.
Carefully extracting one of the old documents, he put the rest back, replaced
the folder, closed the cabinet, and left the room.
As he walked back to Brother Augustus' music room,
he was whistling. He nodded politely to the various recluses he met, and when
he reached the music room, he knocked, then opened the door and went in.
Augustus was still listening to
tapes. It sounded to Ajax's ears like the same tape, and the same composition.
He sat down and waited.
Augustus was beating time with one hand and leaning
forward. His eyes nickered, he held up a finger, and smiled deeply. He;
shut the tape off. "It's that beat," he said.
"Definitely, absolutely. I've got him now. Oh, what an
article I'll write when I get back to Earth. This’ll be a discovery!"
"Yes, I venture to say it will be," said
Ajax smiling, "and I made a little discovery of my own just now
also."
"Indeed," said the master of Nirvana,
"I am pleased for you."
"Perhaps you won't be so pleased," said
Ajax in a deceptively calm tone. "And I don't think that the tired
businessmen and student philosophers who signed up on this cruise will be too
pleased either, Scat Ward!"
Brother Augustus stopped rubbing
his hands and stared at Ajax, motionless, silent. Then he said slowly,
"What did you say?"
"I said Scat Ward,"
repeated Ajax. "Surely your piratical ears have not lost their keenness
for the delicate nuance so suddenly?"
Brother Augustus lowered his hands to his lap,
stared at him with narrowed eyes. "And what does that mean to me, young
man?" he whispered.
"Perhaps it means the loan
of an auxiliary, rocket, eh, Scat, you old buccaneer?" Ajax pursued his
query.
The man known as Brother Augustus looked at him in
silence. "How do you know?" he said. In answer, Ajax took the old
document from his pocket and passed it in front of the other's eyes. "One
good bit of skullduggery deserves another," he remarked. "I think
the contents of this little 'wanted' notice, issued by the EMSA police, would un-stabilize this heavenly retreat of yours. Shall I post it
on the meditation board, or shall I be leaving shortly by rocket?"
Brother Augustus' eyes flickered. "The space
pirate known as Scat Ward is a thing of the past. I have found true peace in my
work here. There is no need for the introduction of turbulent thoughts in our
serene atmosphere," he said solemnly. "I am now inclined to feel
that your departure from our Retreat would contribute to the general
harmony."
"Ah," said Ajax,
"I felt sure that you would see the light, Captain Scat.
. . uh, Brother Augustus."
Not two hours later, Ajax closed the tiny airlock of
the trim little landing rocket tender, housed in its snug berth in the
gravityless depths of the cargo hub, signaled a grateful farewell to the
spacesuited figure of Augustus Ward, ex-space pirate, captain of the ionic
freighter Nirvana, and Master of the Order of the
Nirvanists, pushed the button for his exiting catapult, shot in his rocket
engines, and headed outwards from the sun towards the asteroid belt.
In a remarkably short time, the huge sailing vessel
of space had dwindled to a spot of white, then finally
vanished. Behind Ajax was the sun, ahead of him the stars, the faint white
spots of larger asteroids, and visible in the clarity of outer space, the
planet Saturn, its rings neatly edgewise.
CHAPTER
SIXTEEN
Designed
as it was
to be used primarily in landing operations from orbit to planet,
the small rocketship was a manually operated vehicle.
It did however have the proper computers for making long distance flights, and
Ajax was able to fit out the coordinates from the standard texts that are operational
equipment on all such craft.
He did not know the exact coordinates for Ajax in
its new orbit, but he did have a clear idea of where it had been when he had
left it; and he was able to set up and work out an approximate new directional
for it on the basis of its previous location and what had happened to it.
This took time, but the trip back would last a
goodly number of days and there would be plenty of time. Once he had set his
directions, he would perforce have to spend a good deal of time at the controls
himself to watch for the close approach of asteroids
not included in his limited
calculations.
The little ship was compact, with
but the one living chamber which doubled as control room. He rigged himself a
hammock from which he could reach out and grasp the
controls should the meteor alarm ring while he was asleep. The ship had a
supply of victuals, though it lacked a Calkans system.
It was therefore about forty or more hours later
before Ajax thought to try the general radio receiver in the craft During the
whole time he had been an involuntary guest aboard the ionic freighter he had
been utterly out of touch with the news of the solar system. If there was a
radio aboard that slow vessel, Scat Ward had it hidden quite thoroughly away.
So now, at last, he tuned in on the news of the
inner planets.
The
news was bad.
The general outlanes system station at the Martian
North Pole was still within range and on it he heard of the open war that was
now raging between the Saturnians and the Earth-Mars coalition.
There was a battle shaping up in
space somewhere just outside the orbit of Jupiter. There had been preliminary
skirmishes of scout ships; there had been some sort of an initial battle
between two small forces which had clashed at a point in the Jovian orbit,
culminating in the destruction of certain asteroids there.
Ajax grimaced at that. Indeed, he had supplied the
spark; that much he had to concede to Emily Hackenschmidt.
But now the main EMSA battle fleet
in the asteroid region, aided by several vessels released from the docks on
Mars, were racing to a rendezvous with what was believed to be the
spearhead of a large flotilla from the Ringed Planet. When they met—and the
meeting was expected soon—that would be the payoff.
But such a meeting is not easily arranged, and it
was still several days before news began to arrive, this time from Radio Juno,
that the two fleets had sighted each other.
The place was now outside the Jovian orbit, a
half-million miles towards Saturn.
By then Ajax was beginning to cross the orbits of
the innermost asteroids. He now spent most of his time seated at the controls,
altering and shifting -course to account for the new tiny discs and globes of
light which were among the thousands of, tiny worlds that made up this vast
belt of planetary wreckage.
What, he wondered, had happened to the Wuj,
abandoned in an artificial world, without power to turn on the full controls?
Had he found food? Somewhere there must be some stores, yet could the Wuj find
them without a major power control over the robotic planetoid? How long could a
Martian spider-type go without food?
And what of Emily, that
trouble-making girl? Ajax scowled at the thought of
how she had put it over on him; yet, at the same time, he found himself
troubled by curious feelings of pleasure about her. Something about that girl .
. . well, dammit, if she wasn't on the opposite side,
he'd take to her. He wondered what she was up to now. If she had returned to
Ajax to find him gone, perhaps that would be the end of it. Her story would go
down in some EMSA file, there to gather dust and be forgotten.
Or
would it?
EMSA had its hands full now, anyway. The two fleets
had clashed. The battle was on, somewhere out there in the blackness of space.
Reports coming "in were sketchy. Propaganda claims from Radio Juno,
indicating victory, muffling details, no damage reports that could be pinned
down specifically. No word from the Saturnians, but that was
not surprising.
The battle apparently raged on. A day, two days
passed, without claims becoming any more definite. It didn't look good,
although Ajax, as a student of history, realized that in outer space it must be
difficult to gather the details of the outcome of a battle that must be fought
over a field which might encompass a million cubic miles of trackless
emptiness. In it ships might pass each other unseen; ships might go to their
doom unnoticed; ships might hunt around looking for an enemy that never could
be found. It was only by dint of a vast radar and radio network that such
fleets could operate—and with scramblers, atomic explosion static, bits of
burst vessels, and so on, the confusion would accumulate tremendously as the
struggle went on.
Ajax bent to his controls as the
time came when he must be drawing closer to the planetoid that was Ajax. He
should now, he thought, be somewhere in the vicinity of it. He ran readings on
the visible planetoids around him, identified them, traced back their orbits to
the time he had left Ajax, and thereby tried to line up the whereabouts of his
own little kingdom.
Now, he clung to the controls,
checking his radar, watching the slowly changing scene of the stars and
worldlets, and tracing down the errant metal world.
The radio blatted in his ear and most of the time he
paid it no attention. The same vagaries, the same guesswork.
A new glint in the heavens, another
asteroid ahead of him. He beamed in on it, and detected
the mirrory color of metal. He closed in, trailed
after it, catching up. Yes, it was a metallic world, a world of polished
silvery metal streaked here and there with traces of black where dirt and rock
had once been.
"Ajax," he whispered, "here I come.
The king returns to his kingdom."
Somewhere inside there, on a metal floor near the
outer skin, must be lying his flag, his royal flag, brought with him from the
old Destiny. And . . . was somewhere there also ... a body? That of his
loyal follower, his first true subject?
He came in for a landing near the point where the
outer lock of the hollow planetoid must be. And as he came in, the radio
shifted.
"Radio Juno, to all asteroid
stations and listeners. Attention! You are immediately
to prepare to abandon all posts and return to regrouping stations previously
assigned. Women and children, if any, are to return/without delay to Mars.
"Radio Juno, calling all
listeners. General emergency. Our
fleet is withdrawing to a new line of defense at the central perimeter of the
asteroids. You are warned, the Saturnians are coming!
The Saturn fleet is coming! The Saturn fleet is coming!"
Ajax almost forgot the landing he
was about to make; he felt himself chill a moment, EMSA had been defeated; the
Earth-Mars forces had been broken, and were fleeing. He could read between the
lines. No such emergency signal would be given if the situation were not the
worst
He twisted the dials, listening; and as he caught a
humming, he brought the little rocket down closer and closer, skimmed the
surface of the all-metal world that had been hidden from the universe for so
long, and finally landed very nearly in the same spot that the Destiny had once occupied.
He let out the magnetic grippers,
secured the ship, and turned again to the radio. The humming increased,
a carrier wave. He put on the power. There was a clicking sound, then, faintly,
distant, a voice. It was a voice surprisingly like that of Anton Smallways,
though it could not be he, but that of some mechanical voice box similar to
what Anton must have used.
"Your friends from Saturn are on their way. Liberty for all. Rejoice, for your friends from Saturn are
coming to>rescue you of the asteroids from your oppressors . . ."
Ajax swore, turned off the receiver. He got up,
found the spacesuit cabinet, took out his old suit, which he had taken with him
when he left Nirvana, and buckled it on. He adjusted
his helmet, then opened the lock.
He set foot once again on the surface of the world
he had called his kingdom. He padded forward, on magnetic grips, to find the
great circular entrance.
He made an entry into the metal world in the same
way that he and his companions had on their first landing. He descended into
the depths, the huge airlock operating as before; but this time when he stood
in the vast area of the highest level inside, it was already lit and filled
with air.
Ajax slid open his helmet, looked around. Nothing
otherwise seemed changed. He saw no sign of life. The Wuj, if he was still
alive, was not in sight and there seemed no evidence of any disturbance in the
shrouded array of cylinders and crates that would indicate his ever having
been there.
"My kingdom," mused
Ajax softly. "Empty, helpless, and awaiting a quick end from the invading Saturnians
before anyone ever knew of it."
He felt sad and lonely. Then, resolutely, he
shrugged his shoulders, and started out to find the door that led to the
inoperative control chamber. He'd make his base there, and set out to explore
the rest of the planetoid Ajax anyway.
"While there's life, there's hope," he
said to himself philosophically.
He trudged along the metal ledge, light-headed, his
shoes sticking to the floor, step by step. He came to the rounded opening of
the doorway to the headquarters chamber.
Bending his head slightly, for it seemed a bit lower
than Terrestrial doors, he stepped through the doorway.
Instantly he felt himself enveloped in something
frighten-ingly strange and sticky. Strands of grayish
cord snapped down from somewhere above and around the doorway, snapping onto
him, clinging with mucilaginous urgency.
He whirled, tried to turn, struck
out, but his arms and legs entangled with the resilient and cohesive strands,
he only managed to entangle himself worse.
"Help!" he shouted involuntarily, and in a
moment was a tangled mass, thrashing about the floor, hands and legs hopelessly
entwined.
CHAPTER
SEVENTEEN
From somewhere in one comer of the ceiling of
the chamber something moved. The thing dropped down to the floor, unfolded a
mass of long arms and legs, and scurried across.
Ajax, twisting to face it, saw what it was and
gasped out, "Wuj! Get me out of this!"
The Third Least Wuj, for that was the being's
identity, came to a halt over Ajax. "Oh, great leader," he said
softly, "I am glad to see you back. And I'm sorry you got caught in my
trap."
"Well,
get me clear," answered Ajax. "What's all this?"
The spidery Martian set to work to clear away the
thick strands. Exuding some kind of liquid from his mouth, he brushed his arms
across the strands and they parted and broke easily. "I set a trap, my
king," said the Wuj as he worked. "I spun a web to catch our foe. I
thought when it worked that you were she."
Ajax sat up, trying to brush away the last messy
strings of the web. "You spun this stuff, yourself," he exclaimed.
"I didn't know you could do that except when building an eggweb."
"Oh, it is an art we practice in school,"
said the Wuj. "Of course we haven't hunted in this fashion since before
the dawn of civilization, but we still do it."
Ajax got to his feet. "But who's the foe?
Emily? Is she back?"
The Wuj walked slowly around the spacesuited figure
and flicked off a few hanging particles. "Yes, your majesty, she came
back. She returned a few days after you left, and she brought some supplies, of
which I have still my share. She announced that she has been appointed EMS A
governor of
this planetoid until the regular
surveyors and authorities can arrive.
"Naturally," said the Wuj modestly,
"I took steps to counter her claim. I knew you would not agree to it, for
this is your kingdom and you are my king. So I trapped her and tied her up, but
she got away during one of my sleeps. She is forted up somewhere among the lower levels and we are in a state of
siege."
"EMSA governor!" exclaimed Ajax.
"Man, what a nerve!" He walked around the control chamber again,
looking at the inactive instruments.
The Wuj squatted down, listening and watching him.
One of his hands was absently twirling and turning the green metallic ornament
he had picked up on the dirt surface of the old Ajax. He was still wearing the
adornment.
"Do you know where she is
now, or could you find her?" asked Ajax.
"Oh, yes, I could track her," said the
Wuj, "but she is armed. She hasn't got her ship, because the EMSA cruiser
that dropped her off, took it with them for some quick
repairs. But they never returned."
"That follows," said Ajax. "She's in
a bit of a spot, too, you know. You see, the Saturnians . . ."
Quickly he outlined to the Wuj what had been going
on in the space war. "So I think that cruiser has been
called to active duty and it may never return. Emily is stranded here."
"Perhaps," said the
Wuj, "if we pointed it out to her, she might be reasonable and accept your
leadership."
"Emily reasonable!" snorted Ajax. "I
can
see you don't know much about women and men!"
He sat down on one of the cushions scattered around
the chamber and talked the situation over. It wasn't very hopeful.
From somewhere in the space outside they heard a
voice. They both stood up, went to the door. "Hello . . ." the voice
called, from far away.
Ajax
raised his voice in reply. "Who's there?"
There was silence, and then he saw a figure in a
metal spacesuit far away, across the great floor of shrouded objects, hundreds
of yards distance. The voice came faint but clear across the chamber.
"It's I, governor of this place," came Emily's voice. "Ajax, are you ready to quit your
wild claims and act sensibly?"
Ajax Calkins drew himself up. "Give up,"
he called back. "Accede to me or you'll never get away from here alive.
The EMSA fleet is in retreat. They've forgotten about you!"
There was a period of silence, then Emily's voice.
"I'm armed and I have most of the food," she called back. "I can
hold out here longer. You give up!"
Ajax shook his head. "I order you to surrender!
You're under arrest in the name of the Independent Kingdom of Ajax," he
called back.
The sound that came in reply wasn't the sort of
thing ladies are supposed to say in polite society. Ajax stomped a foot, turned
and went back into the control chamber.
The Wuj squatted down again. "I have spun a
number of webs in various spots," he said. "Sooner or later she'll
stumble into one."
"Yes, and blast her way out again," said
Ajax. "We can't afford to wait."
He wandered around lost in thought. "What this
place needs is some way to activate the whole robotic set-up. There must be
controls here for everything. This is a headquarters room, but the trouble is
that it's locked and we don't have a key. There must be keys around; now the
question is where would they have hidden them?"
The spider-type Martian clucked in agreement.
"I found some spots that might be the keyholes or locks," he said
softly. Rising to his many feet, he scurried over and pointed out several
triangular panels set under each of the major banks of indicators. "You
see, something would fit over here, slide into this panel, and this projecting
point would fit into the object."
Ajax examined the spot. It seemed reasonable.
"Maybe we could fabricate a key," he said.
The Wuj nodded. The two prowled around looking for
something that might do, but loose objects didn't exist around the control
room, and their own impedimenta didn't seem suitable. Ajax's eyes fell on the
ornament dangling from the Wuj's wrist like a charm bracelet. "Maybe we
can work that into shape," he said. "Let's see it."
A little reluctantly, the Wuj unwound the object and
handed it to him. Ajax looked at the bluish-green bit of worked metal with
interest. "It's triangular," he remarked, "and it even has a
hole in it in the right place. It's too much to believe . . ."
He walked over to one of the panels, looked at it.
"It could be a pretty amazing coincidence," he began to mutter
excitedly. "It certainly looks right."
"We found it on the surface of this
world," said the Wuj quickly. "It could have been dropped by one of
the original inhabitants when making their exit."
"Hramm," said Ajax, trembling a little bit, "here
goes."
He reached out with the
triangular ornament. It seemed to fit. It did fit. It closed into the panel as
if it had been tooled for it, and the projection and the indentation slid together
with a definite click.
The ornament clung to the panel now, tightly, like a
key in a keyhole. Ajax and the Wuj looked at each other, and then the man
reached out again, turned the ancient key.
The dials on the wall jumped; a
series of colored panels lit up, and there was a humming noise in the wall and
floor. A blank white panel suddenly darkened, flickered, and cleared and Ajax
saw that he was looking out on a wide space, from a point somewhere high in the
ceiling.
"It's a television viewplate
panel, and it overlooks the storage cavern outside," he said excitedly.
"Look, I can see all the crates and cylinders." He reached out,
touched one of the great series of tiny squares. Instantly one of the shrouds
on one of the cylinders snapped off, and the cylinder itself rose into the air,
hung suspended.
"It controls the
things," said the Wuj. Their eyes were caught at once by another motion in
the viewplate. Something was running across the far end of the cavern, racing
for the dark opening of what was probably a door.
"It's Emily," said
Ajax. He pressed on the square, twisting it unconsciously. The hanging
cylinder, swung around, pointed at Emily and darted across the chamber.
"Look
out!" said the Wuj.
Ajax changed his pressure and the cylinder which had
almost caught the running girl and seemed about to smash into her like a deadly
projectile swung aside and whooshed away. Ajax deftly manipulated the square.
Again the cylinder turned, raced
back to where the tiny figure of the girl could be seen trying to take refuge
behind one of the crates.
This time Ajax brought the thing
to a stop just before her.
She turned and ran back into the
center of the vast area.
CHAPTER
EIGHTEEN
The man
and
the Martian went to work to obtain full mastery of the many controls in that
great headquarters room. It was evident that the systems were a very advanced
type, for they responded most remarkably—almost with a correctness that hinted
somewhere of some sort of telepathic control. Almost as if, thought Ajax, the
squares acted as a continuation of the nerve current from brain to fingertip. I
press, I push, I twist, I will that which I am watching to do something, and it
seems to follow my will exactly.
As a result of this, it was
perhaps a matter of an hour or two before both of them had acquired an amazing
skill at manipulating the scene. They could, from the visual plates that opened
before them, cause doors to close and open; cause lights to go higher or
darker; cause the long cylinders to rise, to move singly or in packs, to stand
guard at openings. They caused other crates to open, saw many unusual devices
come, briefly into action—though what purposes lay behind them could not at
once be ascertained.
Through it all, Emily
Hackenschmidt remained corralled in the center of the chamber, her efforts to
flee to a doorway always countered agilely.
Other panels opened onto vistas of lower levels in
the egg-shaped metal asteroid. Here were many things that would require
exploration, but one among them clearly seemed a commissary. Whether it could
still supply anything edible would have to be looked into later.
One among the many controls proved to open an
auditory channel to the outside chamber, and by its means, Ajax called out,
"Emily! Come in and surrender!" They heard her reply clearly over
their communications channel. "Never!"
Then ensued a little game of cat
and mouse as Ajax worked
to drive her out of her hiding
place and into their hands. Cylinders darted down at her, forcing her to jump
from their1 frightening onrush. Several low cartlike
vehicles were activated and began to chase her, always hedging her away from
escape vents and always closer to the central headquarters chamber. It took
about fifteen minutes of artful dodging before finally a bedraggled and panting
girl popped through their open doorway, the pointed nose of a hovering
cylinder a few inches behind her. The Wuj dropped on her from the ceiling as
she entered and grasping her hands, quickly withdrew her handcannon from its
holster.
"Let me go!" she yelled trying to pull her
hands free, and kicking futilely. At a nod from Ajax,
the spidery creature freed her.
"You . . . beasts! she
gasped, sinking onto a nearby cushion and rubbing her hands. "You might
have killed me!"
"Sorry," said Ajax, "but you wouldn't
come peacefully. Hungry? he added, offering her some
rations from an opened can from the small stock of the Wuj.
She shook her head angrily, so Ajax sat down
opposite her and began eating. While he was doing so, he explained what he had
heard of the space war.
Emily, after staring at him
coldly for a while, finally agreed to join in a little lunch. She spooned the
stuff down and listened. Finally putting the can aside, she said, "I knew
the battle was going against us, but I hadn't heard how badly. No wonder they
didn't return for me."
Ajax nodded. "And of course they have no
authority here anyway. This is my own realm, independent of Earth and Mars.
You, at the moment, are my prisoner."
Emily shrugged. "The Saturnians
will make short shrift of you too. This planetoid is a treasure trove of
inventions. Those cylinders you used—they're plainly some kind of robot space
vehicles. If they fall into the wrong hands, they could do great damage to our
fleet."
Ajax considered that. "It
seems to me," he said, "that this whole planetoid was an armory and a
fortress in some combat the ancient inhabitants of the shattered planet were
engaged in. If so, these cylinders are weapons—space weapons.
I had the feeling when handling them that I could make them explode
on contact if I had so willed it."
The girl shuddered. "Thanks . . . and you were
using me as your target!"
Ajax nodded, then went on, "But if that is so,
then let me make a suggestion to you, officially, as the king of Ajax to a
representative of EMSA." He paused, but Emily merely arched her eyes and
said nothing.
"The Saturnian fleet is approaching. I will
utilize the hundreds and probably thousands of space cylinders stored here to
fight them. I believe they can be launched into space, can be directed through
space, and can be used to
attack
the Imperial Fleet. If I agree to use Ajax's resources, will EMSA agree to
accept me as an ally and as a sovereign power?"
Emily leaned forward, eyes
suddenly asparkle, a trim figure in her maroon blouse
and culottes, even though ruffled and smudged.
"That's a bargain that EMSA may be willing to make now that the situation
is so urgent. I can't speak for the top authorities, but if I were you, I'd
take the chance. I'll speak up for it, if you do it."
She jumped to her feet, clapped her hands, as the
idea grew in her mind. "Ajax," she said, "that's a great thing.
Do it, do it anyway! It may save the day!"
Ajax got up, held out his hand. "Friends,
Emily, for the truce?"
She flushed suddenly, a little embarrassed at her
outbreak. Then she reached out and gravely shook hands. "Truce, Ajax
Calkins."
The Wuj, who had been testing
more of the innumerable panels, now unstuck himself from the wall where he had
been pushing squares, and announced, "I've found what seems to be a radio
sender and television spotter. Perhaps we can raise Radio Juno."
At the nods of assent, the Wuj began to flick his
manual digits over the squares in that sector. It was becoming apparent that
the builders of the planetoid must have had some resemblance to the Wuj's kind,
for it was clear that four digits could achieve some far more accurate results
along certain lines than two.
There was a humming; the panel showed the black of
space, then was quartered on one sector, and the
humming broke to let in the routine voice of the Radio Juno announcer. Ajax
motioned to the Wuj to connect him, and let him open two-way communications.
When the recognition was achieved,
though Radio Juno was plainly piqued at being bothered, Ajax announced himself:
"This is Radio Ajax, broadcasting from the Independent Kingdom of Ajax,
with an offer of alliance and assistance to EMSA in their moment of peril. We
are prepared to place our military resources onto the field of combat to meet
and destroy the Saturnians. We ask for confirmation of our role as equal and
ally."
Radio Juno wasted no words. "Get off the air,
Radio Ajax. We have top-rated priority military and evacuation communications.
Get off the air. You are ordered to evacuate at once. We will not send a second
order. Keep out of our line of fire!"
Ajax fumed, but at a look from Emily, patiently
repeated his broadcast. Radio Juno refused to answer or to acknowledge further
communications.
"Damn!" Ajax shouted in anger. "I'm
blasted if 111 do anything. Ill make a deal with the
Saturnians, I will!"
"Don't forget what Smallways did to you,"
said Emily softly. "You can't deal with them. Go ahead, launch your space
cylinders. The EMSA will recognize you after the event. You'll be the hero of
the day!"
Ajax looked at her. It was true that Anton Smallways and his
fellow Saturnian agents had managed to make something of a fool out of him. He
remembered what Smallways had looked like outside of his humanoid shell and
shuddered.
"How do we get the space
cylinders into space?" he asked finally.
The three set to work to find
out. In another hour, they had solved that, and, shortly afterward, the three
were watch
ing through telepanels
the assembling of a fabulous miniature fleet in space hanging alongside the
planetoid Ajax.
There must have been ten thousand space cylinders in
all before the seven upper layers where they had been stored were exhausted.
Now, all of them shining in the distant rays of the sun like a vast swarm of
silvery bees in the blackness of space, Ajax found the master fleet-commander
square. Manipulating it, he drew the cloud of deadly cylinders up, sent it
around in orbit, and shot it off outward, away from the sun, in the direction
of the ringed world.
CHAPTER
NINETEEN
Space being vast and time being mundane, it was
some three Terrestrial days before the fleet of robotic war-splinters met the
oncoming Saturnian fleet. If the flight had been made by manned craft it would
have taken two or three times as long; but the cylinders, utilizing nobody as
yet knew what source of power, apparently could accelerate indefinitely. „
Ajax Calkins did not try to do that, for then he might
have his weapons moving so fast he could not stop them in time. So it was a
matter of watching their flight (each of the splinters registered on the
central dial), estimating their reaching a halfway mark, and decelerating them
so that when they made their target, they would be going slow enough to be
directed.
For three days, therefore, the three inhabitants of
the planetoid remained together in the central headquarters chamber. Emily
Hackenschmidt and the Third Least Wuj went down to the level below where she
had been hiding, and with the aid of the many machines now available brought
back the rest of the food supply and her other equipment.
Emily made her bed in one of the side chambers,
which had been used in ancient times for such a purpose. Ajax bedded down in
the control room so as to watch the progress of his fleet at all times. The Wuj
resumed his usual course.
The man and the girl maintained a wary casualness,
bantering with each other, avoiding treading on each other's diplomatic toes,
although Ajax was sorely tired. He said to the Wuj at one time, while Emily was
sleeping, "You know I wish I had met her back on Earth before she joined
EM SA. There's something about that girl I find
really . . . well, exciting."
The Wuj looked at him solemnly.
"It must be hard to have to beat down sex-polarity impulses while trying
to do serious work," he announced sibilantly. "You
Earth
people are poorly constructed."
Ajax flushed guiltily. "Now . . . you're
jumping to conclusions, Wuj. It's clear to see that you don't
understand."
The Wuj stared back. "Poorly constructed in
some ways just the same," he said, and hastened to add, "Meaning
nothing personal, your majesty."
At last came the moment when the Ajaxian
splinter fleet came into contact with the Saturnians. They could see the flecks
on their screen, radar apparently, that marked the enemy. It was indeed a large
fleet, for manned spaceships. There may have been a couple of hundred craft there,
victors of the first battle with EMSA, and probably outnumbering all EMSA
battlecraft clear back to the atmospheric rim of Mars.
Approaching it, the little swarm
of splinters hardly seemed to register on the visual plate.
Some of the Saturnians' ships seemed to be altering
course slightly, doubtless to avoid what they would be assuming to be a cloud
of meteors. Now Ajax and the Wuj were at the panel, fingers and digits pressed
against the squares.
"Ready,"
said Ajax. "Let's go!"
Emily
stood by, calling off the standing of the fleets.
They pressed, they directed. The swarm of splinters
spread out, became a
cloudlike
mass, then a
shell.
Deftly the bulk of the robotic splinters passed between the first ships of the
Saturnians, avoiding contact, until the swarm of splinters occupied the same
space as the huge fleet of battlecraft. They infiltrated from the first ships
to the last ships, whirling alongside each great Saturnian battleship.
Then, at a call, the splinters closed contact. They
hurled themselves suicidally at the nearest target;
and as they hit, they exploded.
Within a matter of seconds, where the flecks of
radar points had filled the visual screen, there were only flares of light,
exploding clouds of atomic energy newly released.
The Saturnian fleet dissolved into fire and fury.
Then but minutes later there was a small violently brilliant nebula hanging out
there, on the edge of the asteroid belt. The invading fleet from Saturn was no
more.
The three in the headquarters room on Ajax uttered a
concerted gasp. They drew away from the panels, stared at each other, sat down.
"It's
over," said Ajax. "We licked 'em."
Emily nodded, her eyes shining. "You've done
it, Ajax, you've done it!"
"Yes," said the Wuj, in his whispering
voice, "but where do we go from here, great leader?"
Ajax slowly stroked his jaw. "I don't
know," he said slowly. "I expect the EMSA to recognize me now."
"And if they don't," said the Wuj,
"what then? What will you fight them with? You have nothing left."
Emily went to the radio, brought in the voice of
Radio Juno. The announcer was excitedly exclaiming over the destruction of the
Saturnians. He described rather accurately what had happened, and as he was
speaking, he was being interrupted by bulletins. One came in that traced back
the path of the mysterious meteor cloud to the new orbit of the planetoid Ajax.
"An announcement has just come in," said
Radio Juno excitedly. "The swarm came from Ajax, where our agent, Emily
Hackenschmidt is in possession. We are trying to contact Agent Hackenschmidt
now."
Ajax groaned. "I have exhausted my means of
defense. I guess you win, Emily. I shall have to seek my kingdom
elsewhere."
Emily looked at him, then
went to the radio panel. "Calling Radio Juno," she said. "This
is Agent Hackenschmidt on Ajax."
The contact was made. Emily asked
for transmission of an official message to EMSA asteroid headquarters. When it
was announced as open, she glanced once again at Ajax, and catching that young
man's despondent eye, she unexpectedly winked.
"Agent Hackenschmidt on the Kingdom of
Ajax," she started. "I must advise the Earth-Mars Space
Administration that the weapons that destroyed the Saturnians were under the
orders and banner of King Ajax the First of this planet. I must advise all in
authority that King Ajax has many such weapons in reserve and will use them to
assert and defend his sovereignty.
"I have the honor to transmit a message from
his sovereign majesty. He offers the governments of Earth and Mars a pact of
alliance and mutual respect, in exchange for which he will place the scientific
treasures of his world at the disposal of the scientific minds of both major
planets.
"As the sole official agent and emissary for
Earth and Mars on Ajax, I urge you to agree to his offer
and to consolidate a pact of trade and mutual defense along with the
recognition of independence and sovereignty." '
She
switched off.
Ajax was on his feet, staring at her with beaming
smile and wide eyes. She turned, caught his admiring glance, and suddenly
blushed. She put a hand to her lips. "Wait," she said softly.
They waited in silence, staring at each other as if
they had never seen each other before and could not take their eyes away.
It took thirty minutes, and to them it was like a
second, before Radio Juno replied. They heard it but vaguely through the
turmoil of their heartbeats. "Offer accepted . . . trade and mutual
alliance . . . congratulations to his majesty . .. welcome to the
community of worlds . . ."
Then Ajax stood up and Emily stood up too. The Wuj
scurried to a corner of the room, jumped to the ceiling and hung there, staring
at them in round-eyed wonder.
The
two touched, and then they were in each other's arms.
"The Earth-Mars Space Administration confirms
the appointment of Emily Hackenschmidt as Ambassador
Plenipotentiary
to the King and Kingdom of Ajax . .
came the crisp tones of the radio .announcer.
"My envoy," said Ajax, breaking off a kiss
to catch his breath.
"My sovereign," said Emily, gluing her
lips to his once again.
"My stars I" said the Wuj, closing his
eyes to the horrid sight.
ACE
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