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Travelers of Space - [Adventures in Science Fiction 03]

Page 7

by Edited by Martin Greenburg


  “Looks like it came from a blowgun, Lieutenant. See the plug at the back. It must be poisoned; it’s not big enough to kill him otherwise.”

  Hague grunted assent, and the two moved back trailward.

  “Brian, take over. Crosse, come on. We’ll report this to Clark. Remember, from now on wear your body armor and go in pairs when you leave the trail. Get Bucci’s plates on to him.”

  Bormann and Hurd set down their loads, and were buckling the weakly protesting Bucci into his chest and back plates, as Hague left them.

  ~ * ~

  Commander Chapman stared at the circle of faces. His section commanders lounged about his tiny square office. “Well, then, what are their chances?”

  Bjornson, executive for the technical section, stared at Chapman levelly.

  “I can vouch for Devlin. He’s not precisely a rule-book officer, but that’s why I recommended him for this expedition. He’s at his best in an unusual situation, one where he has to depend on his own wits. He’ll bring them through.”

  Artilleryman Branch spoke in turn. “I don’t know about Hague. He’s young, untried. Seemed a little unsure. He might grow panicky and be useless. I sent him because there was no one else, unless I went myself.”

  The Commander cleared his throat brusquely. “I know you wanted to go, Branch, but we can’t send out our executive officers. Not yet, anyway. What about Clark? Could he take over Devlin’s job?”

  “Clark can handle it,” Captain Rindell of the Science Section, was saying. “He likes to follow the rule book, but he’s sturdy stuff. He’ll bring them through if something happens to Devlin.”

  “Hmmmm—that leaves Hague as the one questionable link in their chain of command. Young man, untried. Of course, he’s only the junior officer. There’s no use stewing over this; but I’ll tell you frankly, that if those men can’t get their records through to us before we send the next courier rocket to earth, I think the U.S. Rocket Service is finished. This attempt will be chalked up as a failure. The project will be abandoned entirely, and we’ll be ordered back to earth to serve as a fighter arm there.”

  Bjornson peered from the space-port window and looked out over the cinder-packed parade a hundred feet below. “What makes you so sure the Rocket Service is in immediate danger of being scrapped?”

  “The last courier rocket contained a confidential memo from Secretary Dougherty. There is considerable war talk, and the other Service Arms are plunging for larger armaments. They want their appropriations of money and stock pile materials expanded at our expense. We’ve got to show that we are doing a good job, show the Government a concrete return in the form of adequate reports on the surface of Venus, and its soils and raw materials.”

  “What about the ‘copters!” Rindell inquired. ‘They brought in some good stuff for the reports.”

  “Yes, but with a crew of only four men, they can’t do enough.”

  Branch cut in dryly. “About all I can see is to look hopeful. The Rocket would have exhausted its fuel long ago. It’s been over ten weeks since they left Base.”

  “Assuming they’re marching overland, God forbid, they’ll have only sonar and radio, right?” Bjornson was saying. “Why not keep our klaxon going? It’s a pretty faint hope, but we’ll have to try everything. My section is keeping the listeners manned continually, we’ve got a sonar beam out, radio messages every thirty minutes, and with the klaxon we’re doing all we can. I doubt if anything living could approach within a twenty-five mile range without hearing that klaxon, or without us hearing them with the listeners.”

  “All right.” Commander Chapman stared hopelessly at a fresh batch of reports burdening his desk. “Send out ground parties within the ten mile limit, but remember we can’t afford to lose men. When the ‘copters’ are back in, send them both West.” West meant merely in a direction west from Meridian O, as the mother rocket’s landing place had been designated. “They can’t do much searching over that rainforest, but it’s a try. They might pick up a radio message.”

  Chapman returned grumpily to his reports, and the others filed out.

  ~ * ~

  III

  At night, on guard, Hague saw a thousand horrors peopling the Stygian forest murk; but when he flashed his lightpak into darkness there was nothing. He wondered how long he could stand the waiting, when he would crack as Supply Sergeant Didrickson had, and his comrades would blast him down with explosive bullets. He should be like Brian, hard and sure, and always doing the right thing, he decided. He’d come out of OCS Gunnery School, trained briefly in the newly-formed U.S. Rocket Service. Then the expedition to Venus—it was a fifty-fifty chance they said, and out of all the volunteers he’d been picked. And when the first expedition was ready to blast off from the Base Camp on Venus, he’d been picked again. Why, he cursed despairingly? Sure, he wanted to come, but how could his commanders have had faith in him, when he didn’t know himself if he could continue to hold out.

  Sounds on the trail sent his carbine automatically to ready, and he called a strained, “Halt.”

  “Okay, Hague. It’s Clark and Arndt.”

  The wiry little navigation officer, and lean, scraggy Geologist Arndt, the latter’s arm still in a sling, came into the glow of Hague’s lightpak.

  “Any more horns or arrows?” Clark’s voice sounded tight, and repressed; Hague reflected that perhaps the strain was getting him too.

  “No, but Bucci is getting worse. Can’t you carry him on the cart?”

  “Hague, I’ve told you twenty times. That cart is full and breaking down now. Get it through your head that it’s no longer individual men we can think of now, but the entire party. If they can’t march, they must be left, or all of us may die!” His voice was savage, and when he tried to light a cigarette his hand shook. “All right. It’s murder, and I don’t like it any better than you do.”

  “How are we doing? What’s the over-all picture?” Both of the officers tried to smile a little at the memory of that pompous little phrase, favorite of a windbag they’d served under.

  “Not good. Twenty-two of us now.”

  “Hirooka thinks we may be within radio range of Base soon,” he continued more hopefully. “With this interference, we can’t tell, though.”

  They talked a little longer, Arndt gave the gunnery officer a food-and-medical supply packet, and Hague’s visitors became two bobbing glows of light that vanished down the trail.

  A soul crushing weight of days passed while they strained forward through mud and green gloom, like men walking on a forest sea bottom. Then it was a cool dawn, and a tugging at his boot awoke the Lieutenant. Hurd, his face a strained mask, was peering into the officer’s small shelter tent and jerking at his leg.

  “Get awake, Lieutenant. I think they’re here.”

  Hague struggled hard to blink off the exhausted sleep he’d been in.

  “Listen, Lieutenant, one of them horns has been blowing. It’s right here. Between us and the main party.”

  “Okay.” Hague rolled swiftly from the tent as Hurd awoke the men. Hague moved swiftly to each.

  “Brian, you handle the gun. Bucci, loader. Crosse, charger. Bormann, cover our right; Hurd the left. I’ll watch the trail ahead.”

  Brian and Crosse worked swiftly and quietly with the lethal efficiency that had made them crack gunners at Fort Fisher, North Carolina. Bucci lay motionless at the ammunition box, but his eyes were bright, and he didn’t seem to mind his feverish, swollen leg. The Sergeant and Crosse slewed the pneumatic gun to cover their back trail, and fell into position beside the gleaming grey tube. Hague, Bormann and Hurd moved quickly at striking tents and rolling packs, their rifles ready at hand.

  Hague had forgotten his fears and the self-doubt, the feeling that he had no business ordering men like Sergeant Brian, and Hurd and Bormann. They were swallowed in intense expectancy as he lay watching the dawn fog that obscured like thick smoke the trail that led to Clark’s party and the whippet tank.

  He p
eered back over his shoulder for a moment. Brian, Bucci, and Crosse, mud-stained backs toward him, were checking the gun and murmuring soft comments. Bormann looked at the officer, grinned tightly, and pointed at Helen perched on his shoulder. His lips carefully framed the words, “Be a pushover, Helen brings luck.”

  The little bird peered up into Bormann’s old-young face, and Hague, trying to grin back, hoped he looked confident. Hurd lay on the other side of the trail, his back to Bormann, peering over his rifle barrel, bearded jaws rhythmically working a cud of tobacco he’d salvaged somewhere, and Hague suddenly thought he must have been saving it for the finish.

  Hague looked back into the green light beginning to penetrate the trail fog, changing it into a glowing mass—then thought he saw a movement. Up the trail, the whippet tank’s motor caught with a roar, and he heard Whittaker traversing the battered tank’s turret. The turret gun boomed flatly, and a shell burst somewhere in the forest darkness to Hague’s right.

  Then there was a gobbling yell and gray man-like figures poured out onto the trail. Hague set his sights on them, the black sight-blade silhouetting sharply in the glowing fog. He set them on a running figure, and squeezed his trigger, then again, and again, as new targets came. Sharp reports ran crackling among the great trees. Sharp screams came, and a whistling sound overhead that he knew were blowgun arrows. The pneumatic gun sputtered behind him, and Bormann’s and Hurd’s rifles thudded in the growing roar.

  Blue flashes and explosive bullets made fantastic flares back in the forest shadows; and suddenly a knot of man-shapes were running toward him through the fog. Hague picked out one in the glowing mist, fired, another, fired. Gobbling yells were around him, and he shot toward them through the fog, at point-blank range. A thing rose up beside him, and Hague yelled with murderous fury, and drove his belt-knife up into grey leather skin. Something burned his shoulder as he rolled aside and fired at the dark form standing over him with a poised, barbed spear. The blue-white flash was blinding, and he cursed and leaped up.

  There was nothing more. Scattered shots, and the forest lay quiet again. After that shot at point-blank range, Hague’s vision had blacked out.

  “Anyone else need first aid?” he called, and tried to keep his voice firm. When there was silence, he said, “Hurd, lead me to the tank.”

  He heard the rat-faced man choke, “My God, he’s blind.”

  “Just flash blindness, Hurd. Only temporary.” Hague kept his face stiff, and hoped frantically that he was right, that it was just temporary blindness, temporary optic shock.

  Sergeant Brian’s icy voice cut in. “Gun’s all right, Lieutenant. Nobody hurt. We fired twenty-eight rounds of H.E. No APX. Get going with him, Hurd.”

  He felt Hurd’s tug at his elbow, and they made their way up the trail.

  “What do they look like, Hurd?”

  ‘These men-things? They’re grey, about my size, skin looks like leather, and their heads are flattish. Eyes on the side of their heads, like a lizard. Not a stitch of clothes. Just a belt with a knife and arrow holder. And they got webbed claws for feet. They’re ugly-looking things, sir. Here’s the tank.”

  Clark’s voice came, hard and clear. “That you, Hague?” Silence for a moment. “What’s wrong? You’re not blinded?”

  Sewell had dropped his irascibility, and his voice was steady and kindly.

  “Just flash blindness, isn’t it, sir? This salve will fix you up. You’ve got a cut on your shoulder. I’ll take care of that too.”

  “How are your men, Hague?” Clark sounded as though he were standing beside Hague.

  “Not a scratch. We’re ready to march.”

  “Five hurt here, three with the advance party, and two at the tank. We got ‘em good, though. They hit the trail between our units and got fire from both sides. Must be twenty of them dead.”

  Hague grimaced at the sting of something Sewell had squeezed into his eyes. “Who was hurt?”

  “Arndt, the geologist; his buddy, Galut, the botanist; lab technician Harker, Crewman Harker, and Szachek, the meteorologist man. How’s your pneumatic ammunition?”

  “We fired twenty-eight rounds of H.E.”

  Cartographer Hirooka’s voice burst in excitedly.

  “That gun crew of yours! Your gun crew got twenty-one of these—these lizard men. A bunch came up our back trail, and the pneumatic cut them to pieces.”

  “Good going, Hague. We’ll leave you extended back there. I’m pulling in the advance party, and there’ll be just two groups. We’ll be at point, and you continue at afterguard.” Clark was silent for a moment, then his voice came bitterly, “We’re down to seventeen men, you know.”

  He cursed, and Hague heard the wiry little navigator slosh away through the mud and begin shouting orders. He and Hurd started back with Whittaker and Sergeant Sample yelling wild instructions from the tank as to what the rear guard might do with the next batch of lizard-men who came sneaking up.

  Hague’s vision was clearing, and he saw Balistierri and the photographer Whitcomb through a milky haze, measuring, photographing, and even dissecting several of the lizard-men. The back trail, swept by pneumatic gunfire was a wreck of wood splinters and smashed trees, smashed bodies, and cratered earth.

  They broke down the gun, harnessed the equipment, and swung off at the sound of Clark’s whistle. Bucci had to be supported between two of the others, and they took turnabout at the job, sloshing through the water and mud, with Bucci’s one swollen leg dragging uselessly between them. It was punishing work as the heat veils shimmered and thickened, but no one seemed to consider leaving him behind, Hague noticed; and he determined to say nothing about Clark’s orders that the sick must be abandoned.

  Days and nights flashed by in a dreary monotony of mud, heat, insects and thinning rations. Then one morning the giant trees began to thin, and they passed from rainforest into jungle.

  The change was too late for Bucci. They carved a neat marker beside the trail, and set the dead youth’s helmet atop it. Lieutenant Hague carried ahead a smudged letter in his shirt, with instructions to forward it to Wilma, the gunner’s young wife.

  Hague and his four gunners followed the rattling whippet tank’s trail higher, the jungle fell behind, and their protesting legs carried them over the rim of a high, cloudswept plateau, that swept on to the limit of vision on both sides and ahead.

  ~ * ~

  The city’s black walls squatted secretively; foursquare, black, glassy walls with a blocky tower set sturdily at each of the four corners, enclosing what appeared to be a square mile of low buildings. Grey fog whipped coldly across the flat bleakness and rustled through dark grass.

  Balistierri, plodding beside Hague at the rear, stared at it wearily, muttering, “And Childe Roland to the dark tower came.”

  Sampler’s tank ground along the base of the twelve-foot wall, turned at a sharp right angle, and the party filed through a square cut opening that once had been a gate. The black city looked tenantless. There was dark-hued grass growing in the misted streets and squares, and across the lintels of cube-shaped, neatly aligned dwellings, fashioned of thick, black blocks. Hague could hear nothing but whipping wind, the tank’s clatter, and the quiet clink of equipment as men shuffled ahead through the knee-high grass, peering watchfully into dark doorways.

  Clark’s whistle shrilled, the tank motor died, and they waited.

  “Hague, come ahead.”

  The gunnery officer nodded at Sergeant Brian, and walked swiftly to Clark, who was leaning against the tank’s mudcaked side.

  “Sampler says we’ve got to make repairs on the tank. Well shelter here. Set your gun on a roof top commanding the street —or, better yet, set it on the wall. I’ll want two of your gunners to go hunting food animals.”

  “What do you think this place is, Bob?”

  “Beats me,” and the navigator’s windburned face twisted in a perplexed expression. “Lenkranz knows more about metals, but he thinks this stone is volcanic, like obsidian
. Those lizard-men couldn’t have built it.”

  “We passed some kind of bas-relief or murals inside the gate.”

  “Whitcomb is going to photograph them. Blake, Lenkranz, Johnston, and Hirooka are going to explore the place. Your two gunners, and Crewman Swenson and Balistierri will form the two hunting parties.”

  For five days, Hague and Crosse walked over the sullen plateau beneath scudding, leaden clouds, hunting little lizards that resembled dinosaurs and ran in coveys like grey chickens. The meat was good, and Sewell dropped his role of medical technician to achieve glowing accolades as an expert cook. Balistierri was in a zoologist’s paradise, and he hunted over the windy plain with Swenson, the big white-haired Swede, for ten and twelve hours at a stretch. Balistierri would sit in the cook’s unit glow at night, his thin face ecstatic as he described the weird life forms he and Swenson had tracked down during the day; or alternately he’d bemoan the necessity of eating what were to him priceless zoological specimens.

 

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