The Best of E E 'Doc' Smith

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The Best of E E 'Doc' Smith Page 3

by E E 'Doc' Smith


  "I don't know," indifferently. Then, as both girls started for Perkins' room DuQuesne rapped out, "Sit down, Miss Vaneman. Let them fight it out. Perkins has his orders about you; I'm giving you orders about him. If he oversteps, shoot him. Otherwise, hands off completely-in every respect."

  Dorothy threw up her bead in defiance; but, meeting his cold stare, she paused irresolutely and sat down, while the other girl went on.

  "That's better," DuQuesne said. "Besides, it would be my guess that she doesn't need any help."

  Margaret returned from the search and thrust her pistol back into her pocket. "That ends that," she declared. "Are you going to behave yourself or do I chain you by the neck to a post?"

  "I suppose I'll have to, if the doe's gone back on me," Perkins snarled. "But I'll get you when we get back, you-"

  "Stop it!" Margaret snapped. "Now listen. Call me names any more and I'll start shooting. One name, one shot; two names, two shots; and so on. Each shot in a carefully selected place. Go ahead."

  DuQuesne broke the silence that followed. "Well, now that the battle's over and we're fed and rested, I'll put on some power. Everybody into seats."

  For sixty hours he drove through space, reducing the acceleration only at mealtimes, when they ate and exercised their stiffened, tormented bodies. The power was not cut down for sleep; everyone slept as best he could.

  Dorothy and Margaret were together constantly and a real intimacy grew up between them. Perkins was for the most part sullenly quiet. DuQuesne worked steadily during all his waking hours, except at mealtimes when he talked easily and well. There was no animosity in his bearing or in his words; but his discipline was strict and his reproofs merciless.

  When the power bar was exhausted DuQuesne lifted the sole remaining cylinder into the engine, remarking "Well, we should be approximately stationary, relative to Earth. Now we'll start back."

  He advanced the lever, and for many hours the regular routine of the ship went on. Then DuQuesne, on walking, saw that the engine was no longer perpendicular to the floor, but was inclined slightly. He read the angle of inclination on the great circles, then scanned a sector of space. He reduced the current, whereupon all four felt a lurch as the angle was increased many degrees. He read the new angle hastily and restored touring power. He then sat down at the computer and figured-with that much power on, a tremendous unnerving job.

  "What's the matter, doctor?" Dorothy asked. "We're being deflected a little from our course."

  "Is that bad?"

  "Ordinarily, no. Every time we pass a star its gravity pulls us a little out of line. But the effects are slight, do not last long, and tend to cancel each other out. This is too big and has lasted altogether too long. If it keeps on, we could miss the solar system altogether; and I can't find anything to account for it."

  He watched the bar anxiously, expecting to see it swing back into the vertical, but the angle grew steadily larger. He again reduced the current and searched the heavens for the troublesome body.

  "Do you see it yet?" Dorothy asked, apprehensively. "No ... but this optical system could be improved. I could do better with night-glasses, I think."

  He brought out a pair of grotesque-looking binoculars and stared through them out of an upper window for perhaps five minutes.

  "Good God!" he exclaimed. "It's a dead star and we're almost onto it!"

  Springing to the board, he whirled the bar into and through the vertical, then measured the apparent diameter of the strange object. Then, after cautioning the others, he put on more power than he had been using. After exactly fifteen minutes he slackened off and made another reading. Seeing his expression, Dorothy was about to speak, but he forestalled her.

  "We lost more ground. It must be a lot bigger than anything known to our astronomers. And I'm not trying to pull away from it; just to make an orbit around it. We'll have to put on full power-take seats!"

  He left full power on until the bar was nearly gone and made another series of observations. "Not enough," he said, quietly.

  Perkins screamed and flung himself upon the floor; Margaret clutched at her heart with both hands; Dorothy, though her eyes looked like black holes in her white face, looked at him steadily and asked, "This is the end, then?"

  "Not yet." His voice was calm and level. "It'll take two days, more or less, to fall that far, and we have a little copper left for one last shot. I'm going to figure the angle to make that last shot as effective as possible."

  "Won't the repulsive outer coating do any good?"

  "No; it'll be gone long before we hit. I'd strip it and feed it to the engine if I could think of a way of getting it off." He lit a cigarette and sat at ease at the computer. He sat there, smoking and computing, for over an hour. He then changed, very slightly, the angle of the engine. "Now we look for copper," he said. "There isn't any in the ship itself-everything electrical is silver, down to our flashlights and the bases of the lamps. But examine the furnishings and all your personal stuff-anything with copper or brass in it. That includes metallic money-pennies, nickels, and silver."

  They found a few items, but very few. DuQuesne added his watch, his heavy signet ring, his keys, his tie-clasp, and the cartridges from his pistol. He made sure that Perkins did not hold anything out. The girls gave up not only their money and cartridges but their jewelry, including Dorothy's engagement ring.

  "I'd like to keep it, but ... " she said, as she added it to the collection.

  "Everything goes that has any copper in it; and I'm glad Seaton's too much of a scientist to buy platinum jewelry. But, if we get away, I doubt very much if you'll be able to see any difference in your ring. Very little copper in it but we need every milligram we can get."

  He threw all the metal into the power chamber and advanced the lever. It was soon spent; and after the final observation, while the others waited in suspense, he made his curt announcement.

  "Not quite enough."

  Perkins, his mind already weakened, went completely insane. With a wild howl he threw himself at the unmoved scientist, who struck him on the head with the butt of his pistol as he leaped. The force of the blow crushed Perkin's head and drove his body to the other side of the ship. Margaret looked as though she were about to faint. Dorothy and DuQuesne looked at each other. To the girl's amazement the man was as calm as though he were in his own room at home on earth. She made an effort to hold her voice steady. "What next, doctor?"

  "I don't exactly know. I still haven't been able to work out a method of recovering that plating... . It's so thin that there isn't much copper, even on a sphere as big as this one."

  "Even if you could get it, and it were enough, we'd starve anyway, wouldn't we?" Margaret, holding herself together desperately, tried to speak lightly.

  "Not necessarily. That would give me time to figure out something else to do."

  "You wouldn't have to figure anything else," Dorothy declared. "Maybe you won't, anyway. You said we have two days?"

  "My observations were crude, but it's a little over two days-about forty-nine and a half hours now. Why?"

  "Because Dick and Martin Crane will find us before very long. Quite possibly within two days."

  "Not in this life. If they tried to follow us they're both dead now."

  "That's where even you are wrong!" she flashed. "They knew all the time exactly what you were doing to our old Skylark, so they built another one, that you never knew anything about. And they know a lot about this new metal that you never heard of, too, because it wasn't in those plans you stole!"

  DuQuesne went directly to the heart of the matter, paying no attention to her barbs. "Can they follow us in space without seeing us?" he demanded.

  "Yes. At least, I think they can."

  "How do they do it?"

  "I don't know. I wouldn't tell you, if I did!"

  "You think not? I won't argue the point at the moment. If they can find us-which I doubt-I hope they detect this dead star in time to keep away from it-and us."


  "But why?" Dorothy gasped. "You've been trying to kill both of them-wouldn't you be glad to take them with us?"

  "Please try to be logical. Far from it. There's no connection. I tried to kill them, yes, because they stood in the way of my development of this new metal. If, however, I am not going to be the one to do it-I certainly hope Seaton goes ahead with it. It's the greatest discovery ever made, bar none; and if both Seaton and I, the only two men able to develop it properly, get killed it will be lost, perhaps for hundreds of years."

  "If he must go, too, I hope he doesn't find us ... but I don't believe it. I simply know he could get us away from here."

  She continued more slowly, almost speaking to herself, her heart sinking with her voice, "He's following us and he won't stop even if he knows he can't get away."

  "There's no denying the fact that our situation is critical; but as long as I'm alive I can think. I'm going to dope out some way of getting that copper."

  "I hope you do." Dorothy kept her voice from breaking only by a tremendous effort. "I see Peggy's fainted. I wish I could. I'm worn out."

  She drew herself down upon one of the seats and stared at the ceiling, fighting an almost overpowering impulse to scream.

  Thus time wore on-Perkins dead; Margaret unconscious; Dorothy lying in her seat, her thoughts a formless prayer, buoyed only by her faith in God and in her lover; DuQuesne self-possessed, smoking innumerable cigarettes, his keen mind at grips with its most desperate problem, grimly fighting until the very last instant of life-while the powerless spaceship fell with an appalling velocity, and faster and yet faster, toward that cold and desolate monster of the heavens.

  Seaton and Crane drove the Skylark at high acceleration in the direction indicated by the unwavering compass, each man taking a twelve-hour trick at the board.

  The Skylark justified the faith of her builders, and the two inventors, with an exultant certainty of success, flew out beyond man's wildest imaginings. Had it not been for the haunting fear for Dorothy's safety, the journey would have been one of pure triumph, and even that anxiety did not preclude a profound joy in the enterprise.

  "If that misguided ape thinks he can pull a stunt like that and get away with it he's got another think coming," Seaton declared, after making a reading on the other ship after a few days of flight. "He went off half-cocked for sure this time, and we've got him right where the hair is short. Only about a hundred light-years now. Better we reverse pretty quick, you think?"

  "It's hard to say-very hard. By our dead reckoning he seems to have started back; but dead reckoning is notoriously poor reckoning and we have no reference points."

  "Well, dead reckoning's the only thing we've got, and anyway you can't be a precisionist out here. A light-year plus or minus won't make any difference."

  "No, I suppose not," and Crane read off the settings which, had his data been exact, would put the Skylark in exactly the same spot with, and having exactly the same velocity as, the other spaceship at the point of meeting.

  The big ship spun, with a sickening lurch, through a half circle as the bar was reversed. They knew that they were traveling in a direction that seemed "down," even though they still seemed to be going "up."

  "Mart! C'mere."

  "Here."

  "We're getting a deflection. Too big for a star-unless it's another S-Doradus-and I can't see a thing-theoretically, of course, it could be anywhere to starboard. I want a check, fast, on true course and velocity. Is there any way to measure a gravity field you're falling freely in without knowing any distances? Any kind of an approximation would help."

  Crane observed, computed, and reported that the Skylark was being very strongly attracted by some object almost straight ahead.

  "We'd better break out the big night-glasses and take a good look-as you said, this optical system could have more power. But how far away are they?"

  "A few minutes over ten hours."

  "Ouch! Not good ... veree ungood, in fact. By pouring it on, we could make it three or four hours ... but ... even so ... you... ."

  "Even so. Me. We're in this together, Dick; all the way. Just pour it on."

  As the time of meeting drew near they took readings every minute. Seaton juggled the power until they were very close to the other vessel and riding with it, then killed his engine. Both men hurried to the bottom port with their night-glasses and stared into star-studded blackness.

  "Of course," Seaton argued as he stared, "it is theoretically possible that a body can exist large enough to exert this much force and not show a disc, but I don't believe it. Give me four or five minutes of visual angle and I'll buy it, but --"

  "There!" Crane broke in. "At least half a degree of visual angle. Eleven o'clock, fairly high. Not bright, but dark. Almost invisible."

  "Got it. And that little black spot, just inside the edge at half past four-DuQuesne's job?"

  "I think so. Nothing else in sight."

  "Let's grab it and get out of here while we're all in one piece!"

  In seconds they reduced the distance until they could plainly see the other vessel: a small black circle against the somewhat lighter black of the dead star. Crane turned on the searchlight. Seaton focused their heaviest attractor and gave it everything it would take. Crane loaded a belt of solid ammunition and began to fire peculiarly-spaced bursts.

  After an interminable silence DuQuesne drew himself out of his seat. He took a long drag at his cigarette, deposited the butt carefully in an ashtray, and put on his space-suit; leaving the faceplates open.

  "I'm going after that copper, Miss Vaneman. I don't know exactly how much of it I'll be able to recover, but I hope... ."

  Light flooded in through a port. DuQuesne was thrown flat as the ship was jerked out of free fall. They heard an insistent metallic tapping, which DuQuesne recognized instantly.

  "A machine gun!" be blurted in amazement. "What in ... wait a minute, that's Morse! A-R-bare ... Y-O-U -you ... A-L-I-V-E-alive? ..."

  "It's Dick!" Dorothy screamed. "He's found us-I knew he would! You couldn't beat Dick and Martin in a thousand years!"

  The two girls locked their arms around each other in a hysterical outburst of relief; Margaret's incoherent words and Dorothy's praises of her lover mingled with their racking sobs.

  DuQuesne had climbed to the upper port; had unshielded it. "S-O-S" he signalled with his flashlight.

  The searchlight died. "W-E K-N-O-W. P-A-R-T-Y O-K?" It was a light this time, not bullets.

  "O-K." DuQuesne knew what "Party" meant-Perkins did not count.

  "S-U-I-T-S?"

  "Y-E-S."

  "W-I-L-L T-O-U-C-H L-O-C-K T-O L-O-C-K B-R-A-C-E S-E-L-V-E-S."

  "O.K."

  DuQuesne reported briefly to the two girls. All three put on space-suits and crowded into the tiny airlock. The lock was pumped down. There was a terrific jar as the two ships of space were brought together and held together. Outer valves opened; residual air screamed out into the interstellar void. Moisture condensed upon glass, rendering sight useless.

  "Blast!" Seaton's voice came tinnily over the helmet radios. "I can't see a foot. Can you, DuQuesne?"

  "No, and these joints don't move more than a couple of inches."

  "These suits need a lot more work. We'll have to go by feel. Pass 'em along."

  DuQuesne grabbed the girl nearest him and shoved her toward the spot where Seaton would have to be. Seaton seized her, straightened her up, and did his heroic best to compress that suit until he could at least feel his sweetbeart's form.

  He was very much astonished to feel motions of resistance and to bear a strange voice cry out, "Don't! It's me! Dottie's next!"

  She was, and she put as much fervor into the reunion as he did. As a lovers' embrace it was unsatisfactory; but it was an eager, if distant, contact.

  DuQuesne dived through the opening; Crane groped for the controls that closed the lock. Pressure and temperature came back up to normal. The clumsy suits were taken off. Seato
n and Dorothy went into each other's arms.

  And this time it was a real lovers' embrace.

  "We'd better start doing something," came DuQuesne's incisive voice. "Every minute counts."

  "One thing first," Crane said. "Dick, what shall we do with this murderer?"

  Seaton, who had temporarily forgotten all about DuQuesne, whirled around.

  "Chuck him back into his own tub and let him go to the devil!" he said, savagely.

  "Oh, no, Dick!" Dorothy protested, seizing his arm. "He treated us very well, and saved my life once. Besides, you can't become a cold-blooded murderer just because he is. You know you can't."

  "Maybe not ... Okay, I won't kill him-unless he gives me about half an excuse ... maybe."

  "Out of the question, Dick," Crane decided. "Perhaps he can earn his way?"

  "Could be." Seaton thought for a moment, his face still grim and hard. "He's smart as Satan and strong as a bull ... and if there's any possible one thing he is not, it's a liar."

  He faced DuQuesne squarely, grey eyes boring into eyes of midnight black. "Will you give us your word to act as one of the party?"

  "Yes." DuQuesne stared back unflinchingly. His expression of cold concern had not changed throughout the conversation: it did not change now. "With the understanding that I reserve the right to leave you at any time-"escape" is a melodramatic world, but fits the facts closely enough - provided I can do so without affecting unfavourably your ship, your project then in work, or your persons collectively or individually."

  "You're the lawyer, Mart. Does that cover it?"

  "Admirably," Crane said. "Fully yet concisely. Also, the fact of the reservation indicates that he means it."

  "You're in, then," Seaton said to DuQuesne, but he did not offer to shake hands. "You've got the dope. What'll we have to put on to get away?"

  "You can't pull straight away-and live-but …"

  "Sure we can. Our power-plant can be doubled in emergencies."

  "I said ‘and live’." Seaton, remembering what one full power was like, kept still.

  "The best you can do is a hyperbolic orbit, and my guess is that it'll take full power to make that. Ten pounds more copper might have given me a graze, but we're a lot closer now. You've got more and larger tools than I had, Crane. Do you want to recompute it now, or give it a good, heavy shot and then figure it?"

 

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