Space Gypsies

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by Murray Leinster


  Karen looked dubious. Her father said blandly:

  “Remember, Karen, civilization is a matter of natural development. On all planets nature invents the equivalent of trees and brushwood and even grass. In the same way savage humans invent clubs, then spears, then bows and arrows. When civilization comes, men invent chemical explosives, then laser weapons, and then blast-weapons in that order. The thing that hit us was a blast-weapon. So the creatures of the slug-shaped ships can’t be too far ahead of us!”

  Karen shook her head. Her father took her arm and led her off to the galley, there to discuss a possible substitute for the dessert that had dropped from his hand and was now impalpable wetted dust in the garbage-disposal.

  Ketch said unpleasantly, “You’re wrong about the slug-ship panicking when it sighted us! When I go hunting, I’m not panicked by the sight of game! I’m hunting! So were they!”

  Howell nodded.

  “Don’t you think that’s occurred to me?”

  “If I’m right,” said Ketch, with an authoritative air, “they’ll turn up here. They won’t need to trail us! If the voice they used to trick us means they’re hunting men, they’ll know where to look for us!”

  Howell looked up sharply. Ketch said, “Hunting deer, you know they’ll head for water. Hunting humans in space, you’d know they’d either high-tail it for home, or else head for the nearest Sol-type solar system to find an Earth-type world to land and bide on.”

  Howell ground his teeth. He wasn’t a hunter. He hadn’t thought from that standpoint. But it added very considerably to the things he had to be disturbed about.

  “I wish you’d said that earlier,” he said. “We could have fooled them on it. But I did pick up the second nearest, not the first solar system. Still—”

  He went over the yacht’s detector systems. One picked up the crackling static which was the short wave broadcast of the sun. Another picked up whisperings that came from the gas-giant world, and peculiar trilling noises from the cloud-planet. All were familiar. But as the time to cut acceleration drew near, Howell became more and more nerve-racked. He had the Marintha aimed and building up velocity to make ninety per cent of her journey to the green world in free fall. She’d float for three days with no drive operating. Then there’d be a quarter hour of manoeuvering—maybe even less—and then the yacht should be safely aground. And if no slug-ship appeared in time to pick up the present solar-system drive whining, and if it went away before the landing operation—why then they could see what could be done in the way of repairs. Which probably wouldn’t be much.

  Presently the acceleration ended. The Marintha floated on on stored-up momentum. But Howell was only partly relieved. He had Karen on his mind, and he felt that he would need to fight in her defence, and he had nothing to fight with. He could see no chance of improvement in the yacht’s situation. The capacitor of the overdrive system seemed hopelessly gone, and without it or a substitute he couldn’t get the Marintha back to the civilization they knew, even without an inimical alien race to hinder him. He was bitterly sure that the slug-ships had detected the yacht in overdrive and trailed it, and if, improbably, he was able to head back for home, they’d trail the yacht and if they shot down the Marintha or simply followed it back to Earth—the tall and glittering cities of resurgent mankind would presently be blasted to rubble-heaps again.

  Breen puttered in the galley. He was a civilized man. He’d made a hobby of cookery and a career of botany, neither of which was an adventurous pursuit. He’d never been in physical danger in his life before, and he couldn’t quite realize the situation now. He seemed to think that there was some sort of emergency existing, but that it would be taken care of by somebody whose duty it was. Probably Howell.

  Karen worried because she saw that Howell did. She was able to be frightened because something might happen to him. Not even civilization can condition a girl not to worry about some man. But it was true that she worried about the state of things that had been developing satisfactorily between herself and Howell. She was only vaguely uneasy about everything else.

  And Ketch reacted according to his type of civilized humanity. He’d hunted big game for sport. Until now he’d had no more serious matter to consider. But now he began to think of this as a sport, with the others and himself as hunted game. He responded with something like elation. It was better sport than he’d ever known before. But of course he couldn’t imagine that he or they could actually be killed.

  Howell came upon him examining his sporting rifles and preparing them for use on something other than four- or six-legged game.

  Howell said abruptly, “When we land, we’ve got to check our overdrive system first thing. Everything depends on our getting it to work.”

  “We’ll see about it,” promised Ketch. Then he said interestedly, “What do you think that slug-ship heaved at us?”

  “It was an over-sized blaster,” said Howell. “It fired a ball-lightning bolt. It moved too fast to be a material object, and it would be slowed up by air just like a bolt from a blast-rifle. There’s simply no limit in space to how fast or how far it can go.”

  Ketch whistled, and then nodded.

  “We could build that,” he said thoughtfully. “The creatures after us may not be so far advanced!”

  “They’ve got overdrives that work,” said Howell. “And maybe other things we don’t know about yet. Anyhow, our first job after landing is to try to tinker the overdrive.”

  Ketch grinned.

  “Do that,” he said,“and you’ll head for home, eh? I’m thinking it would be sport to hunt those creatures.” Then he said suddenly, “Or are you thinking all we can hope for is a safe landing on a habitable planet? That if we find one with a rubble-heap city on it we’ll be extra lucky because there’ll be food-plants for us, by courtesy of our ancestors? Is that your idea?”

  “We’ll need a lot of luck to get even that,” said Howell dourly. “But we’ve had some. We could be out in between-the-stars with a completely smashed overdrive. We’re not. Or that blaster-bolt could have hit us a fiftieth of a second before it did. And it didn’t. So we’re here.”

  Surprisingly, Ketch grinned more widely.

  “Ah! Look on the bright side!” he said approvingly. “But what might seem to you the bright side mightn’t appeal to me.”

  Howell frowned.

  “What do you mean by that?”

  “I’ve done a lot of hunting,” said Ketch, “but I never had to depend on killing meat for food. It ought to be exciting. I might like it.”

  “I don’t know what you’re talking about,” said Howell.

  “You wouldn’t,” said Ketch amiably. “I’m just saying that it would be sporting to try to kill some of these creatures that tried to kill us. Like a drama-tape story in reality. Do you watch drama-tapes?”

  “No.”

  “There’s some good hunting stuff on some of them,” said Ketch. He regarded Howell amusedly. It was singularly like the air of a younger man treating an older man with kindly tolerance because the older man thinks foolish things he’s learned instead of the wise things one invents.

  Howell shrugged his shoulders and went back into the control room. And almost immediately he heard the whine of a ship’s solar-system drive. It was what he’d heard at the beginning of the encounter with the slug-ships with which this present situation had begun. It wouldn’t be a human ship. It was a slug-shaped craft, past question, and if Ketch were right, it would be heading for the green world which was the only planet in this system of any possible use to humans. Presently he heard another and fainter whine. That would be the consort of the scout-ship, hanging in the background in case the first ship ran into trouble.

  Grimly, Howell cut off all his detection devices. They might reveal the position of the Marintha. They might also fail to give warning if she was discovered, but in that case there was nothing they could do, so it wouldn’t matter.

  Pessimism filled him. The vision-screens wouldn’t
either broadcast or resonate, so they could be left on. It occurred to him that by cutting down the sensitivity of the all-wave receiver he might make that non-resonant. He did so. Then he could see the universe around him, and he could hear communications between the two slug-ships. He found himself hoping absurdly that when they heard no drive and their detectors found nothing—the Marintha might well be out of their range—they’d simply go away to hunt in a more probable place. But he didn’t believe it. Anyhow, to change the Marintha’s destination from the green world to one—of the other planets would be a blatant advertisement of the yacht’s existence and course.

  He tried to think of other matters than purely pessimistic envisionings of disaster. There was the inferred existence of enemies the slug-ships hunted. A recorded human voice from the slug-ship suggested that those enemies were human beings, separated from Earth-humans by light-centuries and by forty thousand years of isolation. If slug-ship scouts travelled in pairs, for one to be sure to escape contact with enemy craft and bring a stronger force to avenge the other—why perhaps the whining he’d heard here wasn’t a slug-ship at all, but a ship of the slug-ship creatures’ antagonists in a war that went on hereabouts in space.

  Such feverish attempts to find reason for even the most unlikely hopes kept Howell busy. There was no more profitable thing for him to do. The Marintha floated effortlessly upon the long curved course which should bring her to rendezvous with the green planet. Howell listened for communications between the two slug-ships. Their drives were silent now. He stayed beside the control-board, listening and watching and listening again, until from sheer exhaustion he fell into nerve-racked sleep.

  Karen waked him, her eyes anxious.

  “I know you need sleep,” she said unhappily, “but there’s something coming in and we don’t know what to make of it.”

  He was instantly wide awake. He stared at the screens. The now-familiar pattern of the stars was unchanged. The all-wave receiver gave out only the tiny cracklings of the sun and small other sounds perfectly natural in a planetary system.

  “What is it?” he demanded.

  “It just stopped. It’ll come back. It—it sounds like words.”

  He shook himself. He stood up and moved himself. He ached from the hours of uneasy partial slumber he’d had.

  Then there were new sounds. They weren’t whinings. They weren’t the beast-howl, beast-mooing noises with which the Marintha had once been challenged. These new sounds began faintly, and strengthened faintly, and died away again. Karen parted her lips to speak, but he waved her to silence. The sounds came again.

  Howell risked raising the sensitivity of the all-wave receiver by a trifle. The sounds came once more, and louder.

  “They’re words,” said Howell.

  He wanted to rejoice. He wanted to feel that something was breaking for the four of them in the Marintha. He wanted desperately to credit fate or chance or destiny with some sense of fairness—which would result in Karen’s safety. But there’d been too many bad breaks.

  “If,” he said deliberately, after a long time, “if that isn’t another decoy-call like the one you answered, Karen, this may be what we haven’t really hoped for. But I’m not going to answer it. Not yet!”

  He settled down to listen to it. Hours after the first hearing, he believed he recognized certain sequences in the sounds. They came again and again. The sounds came at intervals of about a quarter of an hour. They continued for a minute or more. Then they faded out. Presently they came back, and he recognized the same sequences of syllables.

  It was a taped message, transmitted without a pause by an automatic transmitter. But the way it faded in and out again was proof that it was a beamed message, sweeping back and forth so that a large volume of space would receive a reasonably strong signal at the cost of its being audible only at intervals. It was like a position-indicator on a seacoast. It was like a traffic-lane marker for atmospheric fliers. It was like the lighthouses—of ancient days, at least identifying themselves and possibly telling more than their own identity. It could even be a distress signal.

  Or it could be a trick of the slug-ship’s crew.

  Howell doubted everything except the most undesirable of interpretations. But even he had to admit that if it were a human broadcast, it could mean that this was an area and a solar system where slug-ships did not come. Otherwise the human-voiced people would not have dared—No! It might mean that here humans were not afraid of the slug-ships! It could be a matter-of-fact announcement of the location of a city the slug-ships dared not attack. It could be a combat-base ,I of enemies of the slug-ship creatures. It could have a fighting force strong enough to give battle to any force brought against it.

  It could be almost anything. Those were the encouraging ideas which Howell regarded with pessimistic suspicion. There was the possibility that the Marintha actually neared safety, but that one slug-ship dared make a foray here, and that it would rush upon and destroy the Marintha before help could come from the green world.

  In any case, if there were humans aground on the green planet, it should be possible to communicate with them and make friends with them and have Karen at least in no such danger as she was in now.

  But there was the slug-ship! Howell wouldn’t risk a call to the planet ahead. Not until the Marintha was much nearer. Not until he began to pick up the radiation-signals that fill all space near a centre of civilization. The most he would risk—so great was his distrust of all things that might harm Karen—the utmost he’d risk was the energizing of the beam-locator. And it indicated that the beamed broadcast came from the green planet toward which the Marintha floated. More, it pointed to one spot where now-visible continents almost divided a muddy-coloured sea.

  The electron telescope told more and more about the planet as the Marintha floated nearer. It was a good world. There were seas and islands and continents between two ice-caps of which one was larger than the other. There was an area which was probably desert, and there were mountain-ranges which said that there should be rain-forests. But he saw no sign of agriculture. At that, though, foodstuff on this world might grow mainly on trees, and there would be no need for vast clearings and seasonally planted crops.

  But there were no signs of cities. Not one. The beam-direction locator, tuned to pin-point the source of the monotonous, fading-in-and-fading-out broadcast, said that it came from a peninsula jutting out into a world-girdling sea, just where two continents almost came together. There was a small circular area here which looked different from its surroundings. But the most painstaking search showed no sign of civilized development.

  Howell, having yielded to faint and desperate hopes, now felt himself sinking back into complete discouragement.

  “The worst I can imagine,” he told Karen gloomily, “is that either it’s a trick of the slug-ship creatures, or else instead of being help for us, it’s a call for help for someone else. It could be a distress-call from a human ship, in a part of space the slug-ships usually stay away from. Even that could be a break—maybe! It wouldn’t be too good, but we need anything good we can get. But I’m not sure! I’m suspicious of I-don’t-know-what. Yet I can’t bring myself to believe that we shouldn’t give it a good close look.”

  “I think you’re exactly right,” said Karen. She looked at him with a certain anxiety. “My father thinks so too.”

  Breen said comfortably, “Ketch thinks the same. He was telling Karen so.”

  At just this moment Ketch appeared and said amiably, “What was I telling Karen? It was probably a lie.”

  Howell said doggedly, doubting his own wisdom but with thoughts of the slug-ship haunting him, “I’m going to make one orbit low down, swinging over the peninsula the beam-cast comes from. We’ll all use our eyes, and there’ll be the cameras. We’ll be moving too fast to use the electron telescope. If we’re not shot down—we’ll be going fast, and even artillery-sized blasters have a limited velocity in air—if we’re not shot down and there’s
no attempt at it, we’ll land on the second orbiting. Right?”

  Ketch said, “There’s nothing else to do, is there?”

  Breen agreed complacently. “You’re the skipper,” he said.

  He beamed, and Howell felt a certain astonished annoyance that any man could be so blithely and blindly confident that everything would come out all right in the end. Howell was acutely aware that he might be making a decision that would doom all of them. But in his best judgment they were already doomed. And neither of the others offered to take charge. They didn’t even object to what he proposed. It threw all the responsibility on his shoulders.

  It was a heavy load. He took observations. He listened with straining ears to the small crackling sounds from the nearby sun. He re-computed: his rendezvous with the green planet while the Marintha floated on, losing momentum ever so gradually to the gravitational field of the sun, changing velocity hour by hour, yet always moving toward that imaginary point in space where she would fall into orbit around the green world, at the very limit of its atmosphere.

  Then would come the moment of decision. Absolutely anything could be waiting for the yacht. It was already certain that a slug-ship floated on as the Marintha did, with the same ice-capped planet as its destination. But it had broken out of overdrive on the far side of the sun. It would not arrive before the Marintha had either made contact with a human civilization on the planet, or with a wrecked ship of the presumably human race—or possibly had run into a trap from which there was no escape.

  Howell tried to fit the pieces of the Marintha’s situation into a pattern from which predictions could be made. But he failed completely. There was simply no alternative to the action he was taking. It offered only the remotest of favourable possibilities, but all other actions than this offered no favourable chances at all.

 

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