The Second Murray Leinster Megapack

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The Second Murray Leinster Megapack Page 9

by Murray Leinster


  Bell began to paw over maps. The plane had been intended for flight over the vast distances of Brazil, and there was a small supply of condensed food and a sporting rifle and shells included in its equipment. Emergency landing fields are not exactly common in the back country of South America.

  “Here,” said Bell sharply. “Here is where we are. It must be where we are! No towns of any size nearby. No railroad. No boat route. Nothing! Nothing but jungle shown here!”

  He frowned absorbedly over the problem.

  “What is it?” asked Paula.

  “Someone near,” said Bell briefly. “That’s another radio receiver, an old fashioned regenerative set, sensitive enough and reliable enough, but a nuisance to everyone but its owner—except when it’s a godsend, as it is to us.”

  The music ended, and a voice announced in laboriously classic Portuguese, with only a trace of the guttural tonation of the carioca, that the most important news items of the day would be given.

  Paula paled a little, but listened without stirring. The voice read—the rustling of sheets of paper was abnormally loud—a bit of foreign news, and a bit of local news, and then.…

  She was deathly pale when the announcement of her father’s death was finished, and she had heard the official view of the police reported—exactly what Ribiera had told her it would be. When the voice added that a friend of the late Minister of War, the Senhor Ribiera, had offered twenty contos for the capture of the fugitive pair, who had escaped in an airplane stolen from him, she bit her lip until it almost bled.

  “I know,” he said abstractedly. “It’s as you said. But listen to that whistle.”

  The news announcement ceased. Music began again. The whistling abruptly died away.

  “I just found some coils,” said Bell feverishly, “that plug in to take the place of the longer-wave ones. I’m going to try them. It’s a hunch, and it’s crazy, but.…”

  There were sharp clickings. The radio receiver was one of those extraordinarily light and portable ones that are made for aircraft. In seconds it was transformed into a short-wave receiver. Bell began to manipulate the dials feverishly. Two minutes. Three. Four.

  The speaker suddenly began to whine softly and monotonously.

  “Regeneration,” said Bell feverishly, “on a carrier-wave. It can’t be far off, that receiving set.”

  Suddenly a voice spoke. It was blurred and guttural. Infinitely delicate adjustments cleared it up. And then.…

  Bell listened eagerly, at first in triumph, then in amazement, and at last in a grim satisfaction. Reports from Rio on a short-wave band of radio frequencies were passing from Ribiera to some other place apparently inland. It was Ribiera’s own voice, which quivered with rage as he reported Bell’s escape.

  “I do not think,” he snapped in Portuguese, “that full details should be spoken even on beam wireless. I shall come to the fazenda tomorrow and communicate with The Master direct. In the meantime I have warned all sub-deputies in Brazil. I urge that all deputies be informed and instructed as The Master may direct.”

  Another voice replied that The Master would be informed. In the meantime the deputy for Brazil was notified.

  This list of bits of information chilled Bell’s blood. This man, of Venezuela, had been denied the grace of The Master by the deputy in Caracas. He would probably use the passwords and demand the grace of The Master of sub-deputies in the State of Pará. To be seized and Caracas informed. The deputy in Colombia desired that the son of Colonel García—upon a hunting-party with friends in the Amazon basin—should be attached to the service of The Master. His father had been so attached, and it was believed had smuggled a letter into the foreign mail warning his son. If possible, that letter should be intercepted. And from Paraguay the deputy requested that the family of Señor Gomez, visiting relatives in Rio, should be induced to regard the service of The Master as desirable.…

  The orders ceased abruptly. Ribiera acknowledged them. The whining whistle cut off. And Bell turned to Paula very grimly indeed.

  “Pretty, isn’t it?” he asked in a vast calmness. “Apparently every nation on the continent has some devil like Ribiera in charge of the administration of this fiendish poison. Every republic has some fiend at work in it. And they’re organized. My God! They’re organized! The Master seems to supply them with the mixture of poison and its antidote, and they report to him.…”

  Paula nodded.

  “That was what my father had written down for you,” she said quietly. “Any man who can be lured to eat or drink anything these men have prepared is lost. He gains no pleasure, as a drug might give. He is entrapped into a lifetime of awful fear, knowing that a moment’s disobedience, a moment’s reluctance to obey whatever command they give, will cause his madness.”

  “I’m trying to think what we can work out of this,” said Bell shortly. “Some things are clear. There’s a radio receiving set nearby, which listened to those short-wave reports. Within five or six miles, at most. We’re going to find that tomorrow. And there’s a central point, a fazenda, where one may talk direct with The Master, whoever and wherever he may be. And—judging by Ribiera—my guess is that The Master has the same hold upon them that they have on their underlings. Ribiera is too arrogant a scoundrel to make obsequious reports if he were not afraid to omit them.” He was silent for a moment, thinking. Then he said abruptly, “Try to get some sleep, if you can. That pistol of Ribiera’s—you have it handy? Keep it where you can reach it in the dark. I’m going to watch, though.”

  Paula settled herself comfortably, and looked queerly across the dimly lit little cabin at him.

  “My friend,” she said with the faintest of quavering smiles, “Please do not reassure me. I have the courage of endurance, at least. And—I do not fear you.”

  It seemed to Bell, listening in the darkness that fell when he turned off the switch, that she stayed awake for a long time. But when she did sleep, she slept heavily.

  Bell had a raft of canes afloat beside the amphibian when she waked. He was sweat-streaked and bitten by many insects. He was tired, and his clothes were rags. But the raft was nearly twenty feet long, it would easily float two persons and what small supplies the plane carried, and it could be handled by a long pole.

  “Hullo,” he said cheerfully when she climbed on top of the waterlogged hull of the plane. “We’re nearly ready to start off. I’m sorry I can’t advise you to try to refresh yourself in the river. There are some fish in it that are fiends. One of them took a slice out of the side of my hand.”

  “Piranhas!” she exclaimed, and was pale. “You should have known!”

  Piranhas are small fresh-water fish of the Brazilian rivers, never more than a foot and a half long, which prove the existence of a devil. Where they swarm in schools they will tear every morsel of flesh from a swimmer’s body as he struggles to reach shore, and leave a clean-stripped skeleton of a mule or horse if an animal should essay to swim a stream.

  “I’ll ask, next time,” said Bell ruefully. “I’d planned a swim. But if you’ll fix some coffee while I finish up this raft, we’ll get going. I don’t think we’re far from some place or other. I heard what sounded suspiciously like a motor boat, about dawn.”

  She looked at him anxiously.

  “Of course,” said Bell, smiling, “if the boat belonged to whoever listened in on the Rio broadcast and the short-wave news, he won’t be especially friendly, though he should be glad to see us. But I’ve been studying the map, and I have a rather hopeful idea. Let’s have coffee.”

  He grinned as long as she was in sight, and when he went into the cabin of the plane he seemed more cheerful still. But the idea of floating down this nameless little jungle stream upon a raft of canes was not one that he would have chosen. It was forced upon him. To travel through the jungle itself was next to impossible with a girl, especially as they were dressed for city streets and not at all for battling with dense and thorn-studded undergrowth. And to stay with the plane was
obviously absurd. Sooner or later they had to abandon it, though the moment they did desert it they would be encountering not only the impersonal menace of the jungle, but the actual enmity of all the human race. The raft was the only possibility.

  * * * *

  It floated smoothly enough when they started off, with Bell working inexpertly with his long pole to keep it in mid-stream. He was, of course, acutely apprehensive. In country like this a rapid could be expected anywhere. The jungle life loomed high above their heads on either side, and the life of the jungle went on undisturbed by their passage. Monkeys gaped at them and exchanged undoubtedly witty comments upon their appearance. Birds flew overhead with raucous and unpleasant cries. Toucans, in particular, made a most discordant din. Once they disturbed a tiny herd of peccaries, drinking, which regarded them pugnaciously and trotted sturdily out of sight as they came abreast.

  But for one mile, for two, the stream flowed smoothly. A third.… And Paula pointed ahead in silence. A dug-out projected partly from the shoreline. Bell wielded his long pole cautiously now, and drew closer and ever closer to the stream bank. Paula pointed again. There was even a small dock—luxury unthinkable in these wilds.

  The raft touched bottom. And suddenly from somewhere out of sight there came a horrible and a bestial sound. It was a scream of blood-lust, of madness, of overpowering and unspeakable rage. Following it came cackling laughter.

  Paula went white.

  “The fazenda,” said Bell softly, “of the sub-deputy who was listening in on Ribiera last night. And it sounds as if someone were very much amused. Some poor devil.…”

  Paula shuddered.

  “I’m going ashore,” said Bell, smiling frostily. “There’s nothing else to do.”

  CHAPTER VIII

  Crouched at the edge of the jungle, where the clearing began, Paula heard four shots. Two in quick succession, and a wait of minutes. Then a third, and another long wait, and then the last. Then silence. Paula began to shiver. Bell had helped her ashore from the raft and insisted on her waiting at the edge of the jungle.

  “Not that you’ll be any safer,” he had told her grimly, “but that I may be. One person can move more quickly than two. And if I’m chased I’ll plunge for the place you’re hidden, and you can open fire. Then the two of us might hold them off.”

  “Why?” Paula said slowly.

  And Bell caught at her wrist.

  “Don’t let me hear you talk like that!” he said sharply. “We’re going to beat this thing! We’ve got to! And being desperate helps, but being in despair doesn’t help a bit. Buck up!”

  He frowned at her until she smiled.

  “I will not despair again without your permission,” she told him. “Really. I will not.”

  He found her a hiding-place and went cautiously out into the clearing, still frowning.

  * * * *

  He had been gone five minutes before the first shot sounded, and quite ten before the last rang out dully, and was echoed and re-echoed hollowly by the jungle trees. And Paula lay waiting by the edge of the clearing, Ribiera’s pearl-handled automatic in her hand—Bell had carried the rifle from the plane. Small insects moved all about her, and she heard soft rustlings as the life of the jungle went on over her head and under her feet, and terror welled up in her throat.

  She was trembling almost uncontrollably when Bell came back. He walked openly toward her hiding-place.

  “Paula.”

  She came out, trying to steady her quivering lips.

  “We’re all right,” said Bell grimly. “This is the fazenda of a sub-deputy. I suspect, also, it’s an emergency landing field for Ribiera on the way to that place he talked to last night. There’s a two-place plane here with both wheels and floats, in a filthy little shed. It seems to be all right. We’re going to take off in it and try to make Moradores, where your people are. What’s the matter?”

  Her face was deathly pale.

  “I thought,” she said with some difficulty, “when I heard the shots—I thought you were killed.”

  Bell shook his head.

  “I wasn’t,” he said grimly. “It was four other men who were killed.”

  He led her carefully past the house. It was a fairly typical fazendadwelling, if more substantial than most. It was wholly unpretentious, with whitewashed walls, and the effect of grandeur it would give to natives of this region would come solely from the number of buildings. There were half a dozen or more.

  “I killed four men,” repeated Bell coldly. “And I’m damned glad of it. That scream we heard.… I know pretty well what happened here last night. Remember, Ribiera spoke of using a beam-wireless to make his report. He must have had a short-wave beam set somewhere on the outskirts of Rio, aimed at whatever headquarters he reports to. He’s going up to that headquarters some time today, by plane, of course. He needed emergency landing fields along the route, and here he picked out a native and made him a sub-deputy. Charming.…”

  Moving past the buildings, Paula caught sight of massive wooden bars set in the side of a building. Something crumpled up and limp lay before them.

  “Don’t look over there,” said Bell harshly. “There was a woman in this house and she told me what happened, though I’d guessed it before. The sub-deputy was here last night with a party of friends. Newly enslaved, some of them. He entertained them.… Up at Ribiera’s place a girl told me she and her husband had been shown a Secret Service man. He went mad before their eyes. It was an object-lesson for them, a clear illustration of what would happen to them if they ever disobeyed. I imagine that something of the sort is used by all The Master’s deputies to convince their slaves of the fate that awaits them for disobedience. The local man had brought a party up to watch two men go mad. After that sight they’ll be obedient.”

  He reached a shed, huge, but in disrepair. Monster doors were ajar. Bell heaved at them and swung them wide. A small, trim, two-seated plane showed in the shadowy interior.

  “This is for emergency use,” said Bell grimly, “and we face an emergency. I’ll get it out and load it up. There’s a dump of gas and so on here. You might look around outside the door, in case the one man who got away can find someone to help stop me.”

  He set to work checking on fuel and oil. He loaded extra gas in the front cockpit, a huge tin of it. Another would crowd him badly in the pilot’s cockpit in the rear, but he stowed it as carefully as he could.

  “The local sub-deputy,” he added evenly, “has added to the thrill by having the two men put in one cage. He let his guests observe the progress of the madness the damned poison produces. And presently, as the madness grew, the two men fought. They were murder mad. The local sub-deputy gave his guests the thrill of watching maniacs battling to the death. He left early this morning with his party, and I imagine that everyone was suitably submissive to his demands for the future. There were four men and a woman left as caretakers here. I found the four men before the cage, baiting the poor devil who’d killed the other last night. That’s why we heard the scream. When I came up with my rifle they stared at me, and ran.

  “I got one then, and as a matter of mercy I put a bullet through the man who’d gone murder mad. The”—Bell sounded as if he were acutely nauseated—“the man he’d killed was still in the cage. My God!… Then I went looking for the other three men. Wasting time, no doubt, but I found them. I was angry. I got one, and the others ran away again. A little later the third man jumped me with a knife. He slit my sleeve. I killed him. Didn’t find the fourth man.” Bell moved to the front of the plane. “I’ll see if she catches.”

  He swung on the stick. It went over stiffly. Again, and again. With a bellow, the motor caught. Bell shouted in Paula’s ear.

  “We’ll get in. Use the warming-up period to taxi out. We want to get away as soon as we can.”

  He helped her up into the seat, then remembered. He rummaged about and flung a tumbled flying suit up in the cockpit with her.

  “If you get a chance, put
it on!” he shouted. He stepped into a similar outfit, reached up and throttled down the motor, and kicked away the blocks under the wheels. He vaulted up into place. And slowly and clumsily the trim little ship came lurching and rolling out of the shed.

  The landing field was not large, but Bell took the plane to its edge. He faced it about, and bent below the cockpit combing to avoid the slip stream and look at his maps again, brought from the big amphibian. Something caught his eye. Another radio receiving set.

  “Amphibian planes,” he muttered, “for landing on earth or water. And radios. I wonder if he has directional for a guide? It would seem sensible, and if a plane went down the rest of them would know about where to look.”

  Paula reached about and touched his shoulder. She pointed. There was a movement at the edge of the jungle and a puff of smoke. A bullet went through the fusilage of the plane, inches behind Bell. He frowned, grasped the stick, and gave the motor the gun.

  It lifted heavily, like all amphibians, but it soared over the group of buildings some twenty or thirty feet above the top of the wireless mast and went on, rising steadily, to clear even the topmost trees on the farther side of the stream by a hundred feet or more.

  It went on and on, roaring upward, and the jungle receded ever farther below it. The horizon drew back and back. At two thousand feet the earth began to have the appearance of a shallow platter. At three thousand it was a steep sided bowl, and Bell could look down and trace the meandering of the stream on which he had landed the night before. Not too far downstream—some fifteen miles, perhaps—were the squalid, toy sized structures of a town of the far interior of Brazil. He never learned its name, but even in his preoccupation with the management of the plane and a search for landmarks, he wondered very grimly indeed what would be the state of things in that town. If in Rio, where civilization held sway, Ribiera exercised such despotic though secret power, in a squalid and forgotten little village like this the rule of a sub-deputy of The Master could be bestial and horrible beyond belief.

 

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