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The Seventh Golden Age of Science Fiction Megapack

Page 29

by H. B. Fyfe


  Hardly had he climbed half a dozen rungs, however, than he saw he was outdistanced. Truesdale’s feet were already disappearing beyond the hatchway. Phillips waited for the airtight door to slam shut. It remained open.…

  Then a thrill of instinctive fear shot through him as he thought of what Truesdale might do—probably was doing at that very instant!

  * * * *

  Throwing his feet clear of the rungs, he plunged back toward the deck, guided only by his hands brushing the sides of the ladder. As Phillips reached the junction of the passages, he kicked desperately away from the ladder. He landed with a thump that would have hurt had he been in a calmer state.

  Rolling over toward the control room, he came to his feet in time to glimpse Donna looking out the doorway before a jarring shock floored him again.

  The deafening roar of an explosion resounded in the corridor as a brilliant light was luridly reflected from somewhere behind him. The bewildering force hurled him at the deck; he saw he could not prevent his head from striking—

  Phillips found himself on hands and knees, staring stupidly at the deck a few inches past his nose. As in a nightmare, he seemed to spend an eternity pushing himself painfully to his feet. Clutching a handrail, he finally made it.

  He saw Donna kneeling in the doorway, hand to head. As he watched, the girl looked at her hand, and dazedly pulled out a handkerchief to wipe off the blood.

  Then Phillips became aware of a high breeze in his face. Behind him, the sound of rushing air rose to a moan, then to a shriek. That shocked him to his senses.

  “Button up!” he screamed above the noise, bringing his hands together in an urgent gesture understood by all spacemen.

  As the girl staggered to her feet, he whirled and leaped toward the junction of the cross corridors. He wasted no time in a vain glance upwards—he knew what Truesdale had done. Only setting off the torpedoes’ rockets in the enclosed turret compartment would have caused an explosion just severe enough to rupture the ship’s skin; if the warheads had gone off, he never would have known it.

  Diving headlong through the opening in the deck, he experienced a dizzying shift of gravity as he passed through the plane of the main deck. When he had his bearings again, he scrambled “up” the ladder toward the belly turret. By the time he got the airtight hatch open, he was beginning to pant in the thinning air. He pulled himself through at last, and sealed the compartment.

  Phillips sucked in a deep, luxurious breath while he glanced about. This turret, he saw, was a duplicate of the other. He immediately located the intercom screen and called the control room. Donna’s worried face appeared. “Where are you?” was her relieved inquiry.

  Phillips explained what had happened. “The only thing,” he concluded, “is to try it from here.”

  “I think they must have spotted the flash,” Donna told him. “The instruments show a shift in their course.”

  “Blast right at them!” said Phillips. “We might get away with it if we’re quick.”

  He turned away, leaving the intercom on. A few quick steps took him to the control panels in the bulkhead. Guided by his lessons in the other turret, and by faded memories of space school on Earth, he brought up two of the torpedoes. He checked the radio controls and ran the missiles into their launching tubes. As he worked, with nervous sweat running down into his eyes, he was aware of the intermittent jar of rocket blasts.

  “Run ’em down!” he muttered, trying to steady his hand on the controls.

  He had a hand at each panel, with the torpedoes poised viciously in the tubes, when he heard Donna’s shout, shrill with excitement, over the intercom.

  Instantly, he launched the missiles. He started the rockets by remote control, and scanned the screens for a sight of the other vessel.

  For a moment, his view was confused by the expanding puff of air; then that froze, and drifted back to the hull, and he could see the stars.

  * * * *

  Donna’s voice, strained but coldly controlled, came over the intercom with readings from her instruments. He corrected his courses accordingly.

  Then he saw the image of their target centered on one screen, so he concentrated on steering the other missile. He made the nose yaw, but was unable to locate anything on its screen.

  “You’re sending one of them too far above, I think,” Donna reported.

  “I have something wrong,” he shouted. “I can’t spot them at all for that one. The jets must be out of line and shooting it in a curve.”

  Nevertheless, he fired a corrective blast on the weight of the guess, before returning his attention to the first torpedo.

  This one was right on the curve. He could see the massive hull of the cruiser plainly now. It was almost featureless until, as he watched, several sections seemed to slide aside.

  The screen showed him a momentary glimpse of a swarm of small, flame-tailed objects spewing forth from one of the openings. Then the view went dark. “Interceptor rockets with proximity fuses,” he muttered. “They’ll be after us next, crazy-mean and frantic!”

  Over the intercom, he heard Donna exclaim in dismay. He caught a fleeting sight of her face and realized that the situation must be torture for the girl, as for himself or any normal person of their civilization.

  Cursing himself for an optimist, he raised two more of the missiles from the magazine. Hopping about like a jet-checker five minutes before take-off time, he made them ready. It seemed like hours before he got them into the launching tubes and blew them out into the void.

  Again, he watched the other vessel appear ahead of his torpedoes, this time on both screens. Before the gap narrowed, he had a better opportunity to see the defenses of the cruiser in action.

  A whitish cloud of gas was expelled from his target’s hull, bearing a myriad of small objects which promptly acquired a life of their own. Both screens were filled with flashing, diverging trails of flame. Then—nothing.

  “They’re heading at us!” called Donna. “Hang on!”

  Phillips had already pulled the switches to bring up a new pair of torpedoes. Hearing the urgency in Donna’s tone, he leaped toward a rack of spacesuits and grabbed.

  * * * *

  THE NEXT INSTANT, HE was pinned forcibly against the rack by acceleration, as Donna made the ship dodge aside. From one side, he heard a screech of grating metal. The fresh missiles must have jammed halfway out of the storage compartment.

  It gave him a weird feeling of unreality; as he hung there helplessly, to see one of the screens on the bulkhead pick up something moving, gleaming, metallic.

  “Donna!” he shouted hoarsely. “Let up!”

  “I don’t dare,” she gasped over the intercom. “I lost them, but they were starting after us!”

  “Let up!” repeated Phillips. “They’re dead ahead of that wild shot of ours. Let me get to the controls!”

  He dropped abruptly to the deck as the acceleration vanished. One leap carried him to the radio controls.

  The metallic gleam had swelled into a huge spaceship. The cruiser was angling slightly away from the point from which he seemed to be viewing it. How soon, he wondered, would they detect the presence of his torpedo? Or would they neglect this direction, being intent upon the destruction of those who were attempting to frustrate their mad dash for Mars?

  Phillips stood before the screen, clenching his fists. There was, after all, nothing for him to do but watch. The gleaming hull expanded with a swelling rush. Details of construction, hitherto invisible, leaped out at him. A crack finally appeared as a section began to slide back.

  This time, however, there was no blinding flare of small rockets. The blacking out of the screen coincided with Donna’s scream. “It hit!”

  In the silence that followed, he thought he heard a sob.

  “Oh, Phillips,” she said, recovering, “we did it. They’re—” />
  “Hang on,” said Phillips. “I’ll climb into a spacesuit and come forward.”

  He switched off the intercom and dragged a suit from the rack. It took him a good fifteen minutes to get the helmet screwed on properly and to check everything else. He realized that he was very tired.

  He opened the exit hatch, seized the top of the ladder in his gauntlets as the air exploded out of the turret, and climbed back to the main deck.

  Clumping forward through the airless corridor, he stopped to look into the compartment where he had left Brecken. He quickly slid the door shut again.

  He found that Donna had sealed off the corridor just short of the control room by closing a double emergency door that must have been designed to form an airlock in just such a situation. He hammered upon it, and she slid it open from the control desk.

  It closed again behind him, and he entered the control room through the usual door. The girl helped him to remove the suit and motioned him toward the screen.

  Phillips regarded the scene without enthusiasm. The sight of the dead man had reminded him of what the compartments of that other vessel must look like by now. Its parts were beginning to scatter slowly.

  He looked at Donna, and found her regarding him soberly. “What will they do with us now?” she asked.

  She looked exhausted. He extended an arm, and she leaned against him. “You heard what Varret said,” he told her.

  “Yes, but will he keep his word? They might be…ashamed of us, now that it’s done. Even if they’re not, I can’t bear the thought of going back to Earth and having them stare at me!”

  Phillips nodded. He remembered the morbid curiosity during his own trial, the crowds who had watched him with a kind of shrinking horror—and he had actually been responsible for saving a spaceship and its crew, had they cared to look on that side of the affair.

  But he had killed. That was no longer the action of a normal human being, according to popular thinking.

  “I guess you and I are the only ones who will understand one another from now on,” he shrugged.

  Donna smiled faintly, just as the signal sounded on the communication screen.

  It was Varret, looking pale and strained. He listened to Phillips’ account, including the deaths of Truesdale and Brecken, and apologized for his appearance. He had, he informed them, been unpleasantly ill when he had seen the explosion. “It was a terrible thing,” Varret continued sadly, “but necessary. They were beyond reasoning with, and a deadly menace.”

  He pulled himself together and tried to hide his agitation by reminding them of his promise. He suggested that they consider their requests while his ship attempted to tow them in to Deimos.

  Phillips glanced speculatively at Donna. They would be two outcasts, however much their deed might be respected abstractly, however much official expressions of gratitude were employed to gloss over the fact. He might as well take one chance more. “We have already decided,” he said boldly. “I hear you are building a new space station on Deimos.”

  The old man nodded, surprised.

  “We will ask for a deed to that moon, and a contract to operate the beacon and radio relay station,” Phillips stated flatly.

  Varret blinked, then smiled slightly in a sort of understanding admiration.

  “Reasonable and astute,” he murmured after a moment’s hesitation. “I think I appreciate the motive. Perhaps, if that ship can be repaired and remodeled, we can include it so that you may make short visits to Mars.”

  He warned them to watch for the emergency crew he would send to their aid, and switched off.

  Phillips then dared finally to turn and look inquiringly at Donna. Her smile was relaxed for the first time since they had met. “Nice bargaining,” she said, and Phillips felt like the king of something larger than a tiny Martian satellite.

  THE TALKATIVE TREE

  All things considered—the obscure star, the undetermined damage to the stellar drive and the way the small planet’s murky atmosphere defied precision scanners—the pilot made a reasonably good landing. Despite sour feelings for the space service of Haurtoz, steward Peter Kolin had to admit that casualties might have been far worse.

  Chief Steward Slichow led his little command, less two third-class ration keepers thought to have been trapped in the lower hold, to a point two hundred meters from the steaming hull of the Peace State. He lined them up as if on parade. Kolin made himself inconspicuous.

  “Since the crew will be on emergency watches repairing the damage,” announced the Chief in clipped, aggressive tones, “I have volunteered my section for preliminary scouting, as is suitable. It may be useful to discover temporary sources in this area of natural foods.”

  Volunteered HIS section! thought Kolin rebelliously.

  Like the Supreme Director of Haurtoz! Being conscripted into this idiotic space fleet that never fights is bad enough without a tin god on jets like Slichow!

  Prudently, he did not express this resentment overtly.

  His well-schooled features revealed no trace of the idea—or of any other idea. The Planetary State of Haurtoz had been organized some fifteen light-years from old Earth, but many of the home world’s less kindly techniques had been employed. Lack of complete loyalty to the state was likely to result in a siege of treatment that left the subject suitably “re-personalized.” Kolin had heard of instances wherein mere unenthusiastic posture had betrayed intentions to harbor treasonable thoughts.

  “You will scout in five details of three persons each,” Chief Slichow said. “Every hour, each detail will send one person in to report, and he will be replaced by one of the five I shall keep here to issue rations.”

  Kolin permitted himself to wonder when anyone might get some rest, but assumed a mildly willing look. (Too eager an attitude could arouse suspicion of disguising an improper viewpoint.) The maintenance of a proper viewpoint was a necessity if the Planetary State were to survive the hostile plots of Earth and the latter’s decadent colonies. That, at least, was the official line.

  Kolin found himself in a group with Jak Ammet, a third cook, and Eva Yrtok, powdered foods storekeeper. Since the crew would be eating packaged rations during repairs, Yrtok could be spared to command a scout detail.

  Each scout was issued a rocket pistol and a plastic water tube. Chief Slichow emphasized that the keepers of rations could hardly, in an emergency, give even the appearance of favoring themselves in regard to food. They would go without. Kolin maintained a standard expression as the Chief’s sharp stare measured them.

  Yrtok, a dark, lean-faced girl, led the way with a quiet monosyllable. She carried the small radio they would be permitted to use for messages of utmost urgency. Ammet followed, and Kolin brought up the rear.

  * * * *

  To reach their assigned sector, they had to climb a forbidding ridge of rock within half a kilometer. Only a sparse creeper grew along their way, its elongated leaves shimmering with bronze-green reflections against a stony surface; but when they topped the ridge a thick forest was in sight.

  Yrtok and Ammet paused momentarily before descending.

  Kolin shared their sense of isolation. They would be out of sight of authority and responsible for their own actions. It was a strange sensation.

  They marched down into the valley at a brisk pace, becoming more aware of the clouds and atmospheric haze. Distant objects seemed blurred by the mist, taking on a somber, brooding grayness. For all Kolin could tell, he and the others were isolated in a world bounded by the rocky ridge behind them and a semi-circle of damp trees and bushes several hundred meters away. He suspected that the hills rising mistily ahead were part of a continuous slope, but could not be sure.

  Yrtok led the way along the most nearly level ground. Low creepers became more plentiful, interspersed with scrubby thickets of tangled, spike-armored bushes. Occasionally, small flying things flicke
red among the foliage. Once, a shrub puffed out an enormous cloud of tiny spores.

  “Be a job to find anything edible here,” grunted Ammet, and Kolin agreed.

  Finally, after a longer hike than he had anticipated, they approached the edge of the deceptively distant forest. Yrtok paused to examine some purple berries glistening dangerously on a low shrub. Kolin regarded the trees with misgiving.

  “Looks as tough to get through as a tropical jungle,” he remarked.

  “I think the stuff puts out shoots that grow back into the ground to root as they spread,” said the woman. “Maybe we can find a way through.”

  In two or three minutes, they reached the abrupt border of the odd-looking trees.

  Except for one thick trunked giant, all of them were about the same height. They craned their necks to estimate the altitude of the monster, but the top was hidden by the wide spread of branches. The depths behind it looked dark and impenetrable.

  “We’d better explore along the edge,” decided Yrtok. “Ammet, now is the time to go back and tell the Chief which way we’re—Ammet!”

  Kolin looked over his shoulder. Fifty meters away, Ammet sat beside the bush with the purple berries, utterly relaxed.

  “He must have tasted some!” exclaimed Kolin. “I’ll see how he is.”

  He ran back to the cook and shook him by the shoulder. Ammet’s head lolled loosely to one side. His rather heavy features were vacant, lending him a doped appearance. Kolin straightened up and beckoned to Yrtok.

  For some reason, he had trouble attracting her attention. Then he noticed that she was kneeling.

  “Hope she didn’t eat some stupid thing too!” he grumbled, trotting back.

  As he reached her, whatever Yrtok was examining came to life and scooted into the underbrush with a flash of greenish fur. All Kolin saw was that it had several legs too many.

  He pulled Yrtok to her feet. She pawed at him weakly, eyes as vacant as Ammet’s. When he let go in sudden horror, she folded gently to the ground. She lay comfortably on her side, twitching one hand as if to brush something away.

 

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