A spaceship wrecked on Earth in the
prehistoric days of the Folsom Man was the bait that drew an American time team
back into the past. Travis Fox, a modern Apache, came along to lend them his
knowledge of the ways of his ancestors against the elements and the savage
beasts.
But,
just when their mission was nearly accomplished, an accident set off the
automatic controls of that mysterious GALACTIC DERELICT and it took off for an
unknown world and an unknown time. Thus began a fantastic and dangerous
adventure into outer space that, before it was over, was to challenge the
courage and ingenuity of Travis to the utmost.
ANDRE
NORTON, who
sometimes writes under the name of Andrew North, is rapidly attaining a very
favored status among the readers of science-fiction. It seems to be
characteristic of the few women who write in this field that as a rule they are
very good at it. And Andre (whose true name is Alice Mary) Norton is one of the
very best. She is a native of Cleveland, Ohio, and an ardent s-f fan and
collector.
GALACTIC DERELICT
by
ANDRE NORTON
ACE
BOOKS, INC. 23 West 47th Street, New York 36, N.Y.
galactic derelict
Copyright ©, 1959, by Andre Norton
An Ace Book, by arrangement with The World
Publishing Company.
All Rights Reserved
Printed in U.S.A.
Hot—it sure was stacking up to be a hot one
today. He'd better check on the spring in the brakes before the sun really
boiled up the country ahead. That was the only water in this whole frying pan
of baking rock—or was it?
Travis
Fox hitched forward in his saddle to study the pinkish yellow of the bare
desert strip between him and that faint, distant line of green juniper against
the buff of sagebrush which marked the cuts of the brakes. This was a barren
land, forbidding to anyone not native to its harshness.
It
was also a land in which time was frozen into one color-streaked mold of
unchanging rock and earth, and in that it was probably now unique upon the
rider's planet. Elsewhere around the world deserts had been flooded, through
man's efforts, with sea water freed of its burden of salt. Ordered farms beat
ancient sand dunes into dim memories. Mankind was fast becoming no longer
subject to the whim of weather or climate. Yet here the free desert remained
unaltered because the nation within which it lay was still rich enough not to
need all of its soil under cultivation.
Someday
this, too, would be swept away, taking with it the heritage of such as Travis
Fox. For five hundred years, or perhaps close to a thousand now—no one could righdy say when the first Apache clan had come questing
into this territory—these canyons and sand wastes, valleys and mesas had been
dominated by a tough, desert-bom breed who could
travel and fight, and live off bleakness no other race dared face without
supplies laboriously transported. His ancestors had waged war which lasted
almost four centuries across this
country. And now the survivors wrested a living from
the same region with a like determination.
That
spring in the brakes . . . Travis' brown fingers began to count off seasons in
taps on his saddle horn. Nineteen . . . twenty . . . This was the twentieth
year after the last big dry, and if Chato was right,
that meant the water which should be there was due for a periodical failure.
And the old man had been correct in his prediction of an unusually arid summer
this year.
If
Travis rode straight there to find the spring dry, he'd lose most of the day,
and time was important. They had to
move the breeding stock to a sure water supply. On the other hand if he cut
back into the Canyon of the Hohokam on just a hunch
and was wrong—then Whelan would have every right to lay into him for being a
fool. Whelan stubbornly refused to follow the Old Ones' knowledge. And in that
his brother was himself a fool.
Travis
laughed softly. The White-eyes—deliberately he used the old warrior's term for
a traditional enemy, saying it aloud, "Pinda-lick-o-yi"—the White-eyes didn't know everything. And a few of them were willing to admit it
once in a while.
Then
he laughed again, this time at himself and his own thoughts. Scratch the
rancher— and the Apache was right under the surface of liis
sun-dried hide. Only there was a bitter note in (hat second laugh and Travis
booted his pinto into n'lope with more force than was
necessary. He didn't care to follow the trail of those particular thoughts.
He'd make for the place of the Hohokam and he'd be
Apache for today; there was nothing to spoil that as his other dreams had been
spoiled.
Whelan thought that if an Apache lived like
the White-eyes, and set aside all the old things, then he would gain all their
advantages. To Whelan there was nothing good in the past,
and even to consider the Old Ones, what they did and why they did it, was a
foolish waste of time. Travis bit again on disappointment, to find it as fresh
and bad-tasting as it had been a year earlier.
The
pinto threaded a way between boulders along the course of a dried stream bed. Odd that a land now so arid could carry so many signs of past
water. There were miles of irrigation ditches used by the Old Ones,
marking the sun-baked pans of open land which had not known the touch of
moisture for centuries. Travis urged his mount up a sharp slope and headed
west, feeling the heat bore into his straight back through the single layer of
faded shirt fabric.
He
doubted if Whelan knew of the Canyon of the Hoho-kam.
That was one of the things from the old days, a story preserved by such as Chato. And there were now two kinds of Apache—Chato and Whelan. Chato denied
the existence of the White-eyes, living his own life behind a shutter which he
dropped between him and the outside world, the world of the whites. And Whelan
denied the existence of the Apache, being all white with an effort.
Once Travis had seen a third way, that of bending the white man's
learning to blend with Apache lore. He thought he had discovered those who
agreed with him. But it had all gone, as quickly as a drop of water poured upon
rock surface here would vanish. Now he tended to agree with Chato—
and, knowing that, Chato had freely given him
information Whelan did not have, facts concerning Whelan's own range land.
Chato's father—again Travis counted, fingertip
against saddle hom—why, Chato's
father would be a hundred and twenty years old if he were alive today! And he
had been bom in the Hohokam's
valley while his family were hiding out from the
blue-coated soldiers.
Chato had
known of the lost canyon, had guided Travis to it when he was so small he could
barely grip a horse's barrel with his short legs. And he had returned there
again and again through the years. The houses of the Hohokam
had intrigued him, and the spring there never failed. There were pifions with a rich harvest of nuts to be gathered in
season, and some stunted fruit trees still yielding a measure of fruit. Once it
had been a garden; now it was a hidden oasis.
Travis
was working his way into the maze of canyons which held the forgotten trail of
the Old Ones when he heard that hum. Out of instinct he drew rein, knowing that
he was in the concealing shadow of a cliff wall, and glanced skyward.
" 'Copter!" He said it aloud in sheer surprise. The ageless desert country
had claimed him so thoroughly during the past few hours that sighting that very
modem mode of travel came almost as a shock.
Could
it be Whelan, checking up on him? Travis' mouth tightened. But when he had left
the ranch house at sunup, Bill Redhorse, Chato's grandson, had been working on the engine of the
ranch bus. Anyway, Whelan couldn't waste fuel on desert coasting. With the big
war scare on again, rationing had tightened up and a man kept his copter for
emergencies, working horses again for daily work.
The
war scare . . . Travis thought about it as he watched the strange machine out
of sight. Ever since he could remember there had been snapping and snarling in
the newspapers, on the radio, on the TV screen. Little
scrimmages bursting out, smoldering, talk and more talk. Then, some
months back, something queer had happened in Europe—a big blast set off in the
north. Though the Reds had not explained what had happened and clamped down
tight all their screen of secrecy, rumor had it that some kind of a new bomb
had gone wrong. All this might be only preliminary to an out-and-out break
between East and West.
And
the VIPs chose to believe that was true. There was a tightening up of
regulations all along the line, a whispering of trouble to come. New fuel
rationing slapped on, a tenseness in the air . . .
Out
here it was easy enough to shove all that stuff out of one's mind. The desert
dried out to nothing the bickering of men. These cliffs had stood the same
before the brown-skinned men of his race had trickled down from the north. They
would probably be standing, though perhaps radioactive, when the White-eyes
blasted both white and brown men out of it again.
The
sight of the 'copter had triggered memories Travis did not like. He continued
to wonder, as the machine disappeared in the direction
he himself was following, what its mission was here.
He
did not sight it again, which strengthened his belief
that the machine carried no local rancher. If the pilot had been hunting herd
strays, he would circle. Prospectors? But there had
been no news of a government expedition, and and
during the past five years prospecting had been rigidly controlled.
Travis
located the concealed tum-off into the hidden canyon.
As the pinto picked a careful way, his rider studied the ground. There was no
sign that any man had passed that way for a long time. He clicked his tongue
and the horse quickened pace. They had gone perhaps two miles along that
snake's path when Travis brought his mount to a halt.
The
warning had been bome by a puff of breeze tickling
his nose. This was no desert wind laden with heat and grit, for it carried the
scent of juniper. The pinto nickered and mouthed its bit—water ahead. But also
the land before them was not empty of men.
Travis
swung out of the saddle, taking his rifle with him. Unless the past year had
seen some changes in the terrain ahead, there was a good cover on the lip of
the hidden canyon's entrance. Without being visible himself, he would be able
to survey the camp therein. For camp smells reached him now—wood smoke, coffee,
frying bacon.
The ascent to his chosen spy post was easy.
From below came the pine scent, heavier now, drawn out by the sun's rays, and
the small, busy twittering of birds about their own concerns. There was a cup
of green lying there, about a spring-fed pool which mirrored the hot blue of
the sky. Between that water and the vast shallow cave which held the block city
of the Old Ones, stood the 'copter. And tending a cooking fire was a man. A
second had gone to the pool for water.
Travis
did not believe they were ranchers. But they wore the sturdy clothing of
outdoor men and moved about the business of making camp with assurance. He
began to inventory what he could see of their supplies and equipment.
The
'copter was of the latest model. And in the shade offered by a small stand of
trees he could make out bedrolls. But he did not sight
any digging tools, any indication that this was a prospecting team. Then the
man walked back from the pool, set his filled bucket down by the fire, and
dropped cross-legged before a big package which he proceeded to free from a
canvas covering. Travis watched him uncover what could only be a portable
communicator of advanced design.
The operator
was patiently inching the antenna rod up into the air, when Travis heard the
pinto nicker. Age-old instinct he was not conscious
of brought him around, still on his knees, with rifle ready. But it was only to
front another weapon with a deadly promise in the open mouth of the barrel
aimed directly and mercilessly at his middle.
Above
that unwavering gunsight, gray eyes watched him with
a chill detachment worse than any vocal threat. Travis Fox considered himself a
worthy descendant of generations of the toughest warriors this stretch of
country had ever seen. Yet he knew that neither he nor any of his kind had ever
before faced a man quite like this one. And this man was young, no older than
himself, so that that subtle menace did not altogether fit with the lithe,
slender body or that calm, boyish face.
"Drop it!" The man delivered his
order with the authority
of one
expecting no resistance. Travis did just that, allowing the rifle to slip from
his hands and slide across his leg to the gravel of the hillside.
"On your feet. Make it snappy. Down there. . . The stream of
orders issued in a gentle voice and even tone, both of which oddly increased
the menace Travis sensed.
He
stood up, turned downslope and walked forward, his
hands up, palms out, at shoulder level. What he had stumbled on here he did not
know, but that it Was important—and dangerous—Travis
did not doubt.
The
man who was cooking and the man at the com set both sat back on their heels to
survey him calmly as he advanced, the high heels of his boots acting as brakes
on the slope. To his eyes they were little different from the white ranchers he
knew in the district. Yet the cook . . .?
Travis
studied him, puzzled, certain that he had seen the man or his likeness before
under very different circumstances.
"Where
did you flush this one, Ross?" asked the man at the com.
"Lying
up on the ridge, getting an eyeful," Travis' captor replied with his usual
economy of words.
The
cook stood up, wiped his hands on a cloth, and started toward them. He was the
eldest of the three strangers, his skin deeply tanned, his eyes a startlingly
bright blue against that brown. He carried with him an authority which did not
suit his present employment but which marked him, for Travis, as the leader of
the party. The Apache guessed his own reception would depend upon this man's
reaction. Only why did some faint twist of memory persist in outlining the
cook's head with a black square?
Since
the stranger seemed to be in no hurry to ask questions, Travis met him eye to
eye, drawing on his own brand of patience. There was danger in this man, too,
the same controlled force which had moved the youngster when he trapped the
Apache on the heights.
"Apache." It was a statement, rather than a question. And it added a bit to
Travis' estimation of the stranger. There were few men nowadays who took the
trouble, or had the real knowledge necessary, to distinguish Apache from Hopi, Navajo,
or Ute in one brief glance.
"Rancher?" That was a question this time and Travis gave it a truthful answer. He
had a growing conviction that to use any evasive tactics with this particular
White-eye would not lead to anything but his own disadvantage.
"Rider
for the Double A."
The
man by the com unit had unrolled a map. Now he ran a forefinger along an uneven
marking and nodded, not at Travis, but to the interrogator.
"Nearest range to the east. But he can't be hunting strays this far into
the desert."
"Good
water." The other nodded at the pool. "The Old Ones used it."
Obliquely
that was another inquiry. And somehow Travis found himself replying to it.
"The
Old Ones knew. Not those only." With his chin he pointed to the ruins in
the great shallow cave. "But the People in turn.
Never dry, even in bad years."
"And
this is a bad year." The stranger rubbed his hand along his jaw, his blue
eyes still holding Travis'. "A complication we didn't forsee.
So Double A runs a herd in here in dry years, son?"
Again
Travis found himself, against his will replying with the exact truth. "Not
yet. Few of the riders know of it now. Not many care to listen to the stories
of the old men." He was still puzzling over the teasing memory of seeing
this man's lean face before. That black border about it—a frame! A picture
frame! And the picture had hung over Dr. Morgan's desk at the university.
"But
you do. . . ." There came another of those measuring stares like the one
which had stripped the rancher's clothing from him to display the Apache
underneath. Now those eyes might be trying to sort out the thoughts in his
head. Dr. Morgan's study—this man's picture—but with a stepped pyramid behind
him.
"It
is so." Absently he used another speech pattern as he tried to remember
more.
"The
problem is, buster"—the man by the com unit stood up, spoke lazily—
"just what are we going to do with you now? How about it, Ashe? Does he go
in cold storage—maybe up there?" He jerked a thumb at the ruins.
Ashe!
Dr. Gordon Ashel He'd put a name to the stranger at
last. And with the name he had a reason for the man's presence there. Ashe was
an archaeologist. Only Travis did not have to look at the com unit or at the
camp to guess that this was no expedition to hunt relics of ancient man. He had
had firsthand knowledge of those. What were Dr. Ashe and his companions doing
in the Canyon of the Dead?
"You
can put down your hands, son," Dr. Ashe said. "And you can make it
easy for yourself if you agree to stay here peaceably for a time."
"For how long?"
countered Travis.
"That depends,"
Ashe hedged.
"I left my horse up
there. He needs water."
"Bring the horse down,
Ross."
Travis
turned his head. The young man holstered his odd-looking weapon and climbed
upslope, to reappear shortly leading the pinto. Travis freed his mount of
saddle and turned the animal loose. He came back to the camp site to find Ashe
awaiting him.
"So not many people
know of this place?"
Travis
shrugged. "One other man on the Double A—he is very old. His father was bom here, long ago when the Apaches were fighting the army.
Nobody else is interested any more."
"Then there was never any digging done
in the ruins?"
"A little—once."
"By
whom?"
Travis
pushed back his hat. "Me." His answer was short, antagonistic.
"Oh?"
Ashe produced a package of cigarettes, offered them. Travis
took one without thinking.
"You came here for a dig?" he counter-questioned.
"In a manner of speaking." But when Ashe glanced at the cliff house,
Travis thought it was as if he saw something far more interesting behind or
beyond those crumbling blocks of sun-dried brick.
"I
thought your main interest was pre-Mayan, Dr. Ashe." Travis squatted on
his heels, brought out a smoldering twig from the fire to light his smoke, and
was inwardly satisfied to note that he had at last startled the archaeologist
with that observation.
"You know me!" He
made a challenge of the words.
Travis shook his head.
"I know Doctor Prentiss Morgan."
"So that's it! You're one of his bright
boys!"
"No."
That was short, a bitten-off warning not to probe. And the other man must have
been sensitive enough to understand at once, for he asked no other question.
"Chow
ready, Ashe?" asked the man with the com. Behind him the youngster Ashe
had called "Ross" came to the fire, reached out for the frying pan.
Travis stared at his hand. The flesh was seamed with scars and once before the
Apache had seen healed wounds like those— from a deep and painful burn. He
looked away hurriedly as the other apportioned food onto plates, and he got his
own lunch from his saddlebags.
They
ate in silence, an oddly companionable silence. The tension of the first
minutes of their meeting eased from the range rider. His interest in these men,
his desire to know more about them and what they were doing here, dampened his
annoyance at the way he had been captured. That young Ross was a slick tracker.
He must have had experience at such games to trap Travis so neatly. The Apache
longed for a closer look at the other's weapon. He was certain it was not a conventional
revolver. And the very fact that Ross wore it ready for use argued that he was
on guard against expected attack.
There
was a difference between Ashe and Ross, and the man operating the com, which
became plainer the longer Travis studied the three covertly. Ashe and Ross
might be of a different breed from the third man. Their alikeness went deeper
than just their heavy tans, their silent walk, their watchfulness and complete
awareness of their surroundings. The more Travis watched them absorbed as they
were in the very natural business of eating and then policing camp, the more sure he was that they had not come to this place to explore cliff ruins, that they were engaged in
some more serious and perhaps deadly action.
He asked no questions, content to let the
others now make the first move. It was the com unit which broke the peace of
the small camp. A warning cackle brought its tender on the run. He snapped on
earphones and then relayed a message.
"Procedure
has to be stepped up. They'll start bringing the stuff in tonightl"
2
"Well?"
Ross's glance swept over Travis, settled on Ashe.
"Anybody
know you were coming here?" the older man asked
the range rider.
"I
came out to check all the springs. IfT don't return
to the ranch within a reasonable time, they'll hunt me up, yes." Travis
saw no reason to enlarge upon that with two other bits of information. One,
that Whelan would not be unduly alarmed if he did not return within twenty-four
hours, and the other that he was supposed to be in the brakes to the south.
"You
say that you know Prentiss Morgan—how well?" "I was in one of his
classes at the U—for a while." "Your name?"
"Fox. Travis Fox."
The
com operator cut in, again consulting his map. "The Double A belongs to a
Fox—"
"My brother. But I work for him, that's all."
"Grant"—Ashe
turned now to the com man—"mark this top priority
and send it to Kelgarries. Ask him to check Fox-all
the way."
"We
can ship him out when the first load comes in, chief. They will store him at
headquarters as long as you want," Ross offered, as if Travis had ceased
to be a person and was now only an annoying problem.
Ashe
shook his head. "Look here. Fox, we don't want to make it hard for you.
It's pure bad luck that you trailed in here today. Frankly, we can't afford to
attract any attention to our activities at present. But if you'll give me your
word not to try and go over the hill, we'll leave it at that for the
present."
The
last thing Travis wanted to do was leave. His curiosity was thoroughly aroused,
and he had no intention of going unless they removed him bodily. And that, he
promised himself silently, would take a lot of doing.
"It's
a deal."
But Ashe was already on another track.
"You say you did some digging over there. What did you uncover?"
"The
usual stuff—pottery, a few arrowheads. The site is probably pre-Columbian.
These mountains are filled with such ruins."
"What
did you expect, chief?" Ross asked.
"Well,
there was a slim chance," the other returned ambiguously. "This
climate preserves. We've Found baskets, fabrics,
fragile things lasting—"
"111 take the bones and baskets—in place of some other things." Ross
held his scarred hand against his chest and rubbed its seamed flesh with the
other, as if soothing a wound which still ached. "Better get out the
lights if the boys are going to drop in tonight."
The
pinto continued to graze in the center of the meadow while Ross and Ashe paced
out two lines and spaced small plastic canisters at intervals. Travis,
watching, guessed they were marking a landing site. But it was twice the size
needed by a 'copter such as the one now standing beyond. Then Ashe settled with
his back against a tree, reading the leaves of a bulging notebook, while Ross
brought out a roll of felt and opened it.
What he uncovered was a set of five stone
points, beautifully fashioned, too long to be arrowheads. And Travis recognized
their distinctive shape, the pattern of those flaked edgesl
Far better workmanship than the later productions of his own people, yet much
older. He had held their like in his hands, admired the artistry of the
forgotten weapon maker who had patiently chipped them into being. Folsom
points! They were intended to head the throwing spears of men who went up so
equipped against mammoth, giant bison, cave bear, and Alaskan lion.
"Folsom man here?" He saw Ross glance toward him, Ashe's
attention lift from the notebook.
Ross
picked up the last point in that row, held it out to Travis. He took it
carefully. The head was perfect, fine. He turned it over between his fingers
and then paused—not sure of what he knew, or why.
"Fake."
Yet
was it? He had handled Folsom points and some, in spite of their great age, had
been as perfectly preserved as this one. Only—this did not feel right. He could give no better reason
for his judgment than that.
"What makes you think
so?" Ashe wanted to know.
"That
one was certified by Stefferds." Ross took up
the second point from the line. But Travis, instead of being confounded by that
certification from the authority on prehistoric American remains, remained
sure of his own appraisal.
"Not the right feel
to it."
Ashe
nodded to Ross, who picked up a third stone head, offering it in exchange for
the one Travis still held. The new point was, to all examination by eye, a copy
of the first. Yet, as he ran a forefinger along the fine serrations of the
flaked edge, Travis knew that this was the real thing, and he said so.
"Well,
well." Ross studied his store of points. "Something new had been
added," he informed the empty space before him.
"It's been done before," Ashe said.
"Give him your gun."
For
a moment it seemed as if Ross might refuse, and he frowned as he drew the weapon.
The Apache, putting down the Folsom point with care, took the weapon and
examined it closely. Though its general shape was that of a revolver, there
were enough differences to make it totally new to Travis. He sighted it at a
tree trunk and found that when it was held correctly for firing, the grip was
not altogether comfortable, as if the hand for which it had been fashioned was
not quite like his own.
There
was another difference growing in his mind the longer he held the weapon. He
did not like that odd sensation.
Travis laid the gun down beside the flint
point, regarding them both with wide and astonished eyes. From them he had
gained a common impression of age—a wide expanse of time separating him from
the makers of those two very dissimilar weapons. For the Folsom point that
feeling was correct. But why did the gun give him that same answer? He had come
GALACTIC DE
RE-L I C T
to
rely on that queer unnamed sense of his—its apparent failure now was
disconcerting.
"How old is the
gun?" asked Ashe.
"It
can't be—" Travis protested against the verdict of his sense. "I
won't believe that it is as old—or older—than the spearhead!"
"Brother"—Ross
regarded him with an odd expression— "you can call 'em!"
He reholstered the gun. "So now we have a time guesser, chief."
"Such
a gift is not too uncommon," Ashe
commented absently. "I've seen it in operation before."
"But
a gun can't be that old!" Travis still objected. Ross's
left eyebrow raised in a sardonic arc as he gave a half-smile.
"That's
all you know about it, brother," he observed. "New
recruit?" That was addressed to Ashe. The latter was frowning, but
at Ross's inquiry he smiled with a warmth which for a
second or two made Travis uncomfortable. It so patently advertised that those
two were a long-established team, shutting him outside.
"Don't
rush things, boy." Ashe stood up and went over to the com unit. "Any news from the front?"
"Cackle-cackle,
yacketty-yak," snorted the operator. "Soon
as I tune out one band interference, we hit another. Someday maybe they'll make
these walkie-talkies so they'll really operate without overloading a guy's eardrums. No, nothing for us yet."
Travis
wanted to ask questions, a lot of them. But he was also sure that most would
receive evasive answers. He tried to fit the gun into the rest of his jigsaw of
surmises, hints, and guesses, and found it wouldn't. But he forgot that when
Ashe sat down once more and began to talk archaeologist's shop. At first Travis
only listened, then he realized he was being drawn
more and more into answering, into giving opinions and once or twice daring to
contradict the other. Apache lore, cliff ruins, Folsom man—Ashe's conversation
ranged widely. It was only after Travis had been
led to talking freely with the pent-up eagerness of one who has been denied
expression for too long, that he understood the other man must have been
testing his knowledge in the field.
"Sounds
rugged, the way they lived then," Ross observed at the conclusion of
Travis' story of the use of their present camp site by Apache holdouts in the
old days.
"That,
from you, is good," Grant said, laughing, and then snapped on his earphones
once more as the com came to life. With one hand he steadied a pad on his knee
and wrote in quick dashes.
Travis
studied the shadows on the cliffs. It wasn't far from sundown now, and he was
growing impatient. This was like being in a theater waiting for the curtain to
go up—or lying in wait for trouble to come pounding around some bend when you
had a rifle in hand.
Ashe
took the scribbled page from Grant, checked it against more scribbles in his
notebook. Ross was chewing on a long stem of grass, relaxed, outwardly almost
sleepy. Yet Travis suspected that if he were to make a wrong move, Ross would
come very wide awake in an instant.
"You
know this country must have been popping once," Ross commented lazily.
"That looks like a regular apartment house over there—with maybe a
hundred, two hundred people living in it. How did they live, anyway? This is a small valley."
"There's
another valley to the northwest with irrigation ditches still marked,"
Travis replied. "And they hunted— turkey, deer, antelope, even buffalo—if
they were lucky."
"Now
if a man had some way to look back into history he could learn a lot—"
"You
mean by using an infra-red Vis-Tex?" Travis asked with careful casualness,
and had the satisfaction of seeing the other's calm crack. Then he laughed,
with an edge on his humor. "We Indians don't wear blankets or feathers in
our hair any more, and some of us read and watch TV, and actually go to school.
But the Vis-Tex I saw in action wasn't too successful." He decided on a
guess. "Planning to test a new model here?" "In
a way—yes."
Travis
had not expected a serious answer like that. And it was Ashe who had made it,
plainly to the surprise of Ross. But the possibilities opened up by that assent
were startling.
Photographing
the past, beginning with a few hours past, by the infra-red waves, had succeded in experimentation as far back as twenty years
previously—during the late fifties. The process had been perfected to a point
where objects would appear on films exposed a week after the disappearance of
those objects from a given point. And Travis had been present on one occasion
when an experimental Vis-Tex had been demonstrated by Dr. Morgan. But if they did have a new model which could produce a real reach back into history—1 He
drew a deep breath and stared at the cave-enclosed ruins before him. What would
it mean to bring the past to visual life againl Then he grinned.
"A
lot of history will have to be rewritten in a hurry if you have one that
works."
"Not
history as we know it." Ashe drew out cigarettes and passed them.
"Son, you're a part of this now, whether or no. We can't afford to let you
go, the situation is too critical. So— you'll be offered a chance to
enlist."
"In what?"
countered Travis warily.
"In Project Folsom One." Ashe lit his cigarette. "Headquarters
checked you out all along the line. I'm inclined to think that providence had a
hand in your turning up here today. It all fits."
"Too well?" There was a frown line between Ross's brows.
"No,"
Ashe replied. "He's just what he said he is. Our man reported from the
Double A and from Morgan. He can't be a plant."
What kind of a plant? wondered
Travis. Apparently he was being drafted, but he wanted to know more about why
and for what. He said so with determination and then believed he wasn't hearing
correcdy when Ashe answered.
"We're here to see the
Folsom hunters' world."
"That's
a tall order, Doctor Ashe. You've a super Vis-Tex if you can take a peek ten
thousand years back."
"More
likely farther than that," Ashe corrected him. "We aren't sure
yet."
"Why the hush-hush? A look at some roaming primitive tribe should bring out the TV and the
newsmen—"
"We're
more interested in other things than primitive tribesmen."
"Such
as where that gun came from," agreed Ross. He was again rubbing his
scarred hand, and there was that in the bleakness of his eyes which Travis
recognized from their first meeting on the rim of the canyon. It was the look
of a fighter moving in to give battle.
"You'll
have to take us on faith for a while," Ashe cut in. "This is a queer
business and a necessarily top-secret one, to use the patter of our
times."
They
ate supper and Travis moved the pinto to the narrow lower end of the canyon,
well away from the improvised landing field. Dusk had hardly closed in before
the first of the cargo 'copters touched down. Soon he found himself making one
of a line of men passing packages and boxes from the machine back to the
shelter of the small grove of trees. They worked without any waste motion at a
speed which suggested that time was of the hightest
importance, and Travis found that he had caught that need for haste from them.
The first machine was stripped of its load, rose, and was gone only minutes
before a second one came in to take its place. Again an
unloading chain formed, this time for heavier boxes which required two men to
handle them.
Travis'
back ached, his hands were raw by the time the fourth 'copter was freed and
left. Four more men had joined their party, one coming in with eaoh load, but there was little talk. All were
concentrating on the unloading and storing of the material. In a period of lull
after the departure of the fourth machine, Ashe came up to Travis accompanied
by another man.
"Here
he is." Ashe's hand closed on Travis' shoulder, drawing him out to face
the newcomer.
He
was taller than Dr. Ashe, and there was no mistaking the air of command, or the
power of those eyes which looked straight into the Apache. But after a long
moment the big man smiled briefly.
"You're quite a
problem for us, Fox."
"Or
the missing ingredient," corrected Ashe. "Fox, this is Major Kelgarries, at present our commanding officer."
"Well
have a talk later," Kelgarries promised.
"Tonight's rather busy."
"Clear
the field!" called someone from the flare line. "Setting
down."
They
plunged out of the path of the fifth 'copter and work started again. The Major,
Travis noted, was right in line with the others when it came to tossing boxes
around, nor was there any more time for talking.
Seven
or eight loads, which was it? Travis tried to count them up, wriggling stiff
fingers. It was still night but the flares had been extinguished. The men who
had worked together now sat around the fire drinking coffee and wolfing
sandwiches which had been delivered with the last cargo. They did not talk much
and Travis knew they were as tired as he was.
"Bedtime, brother. And am I glad to hit the sack!" Ross said between yawns.
"Need the makings—blankets—anything?"
Half
stupid with fatigue, Travis shook his head. "Got my
bedroll with m'saddle." And he was asleep
almost before he was fully stretched out on that limited comfort.
In the day light of morning the camp looked
disorganized.
But men were already at work sorting out the
material, working as if this was a task they had often done before. Travis,
helping to shift a large crate, looked up to see the Major.
"Spare
me a moment, Fox." He led the way from the scene of activity.
"You've
got yourself—and us—in a muddle, young man. Frankly, we can't turn you loose—for your own sake, as well as ours. This project has
to be kept under wraps and there are some very tough boys who would like to
pick you up and learn what they could from you. So, we either take you all the
way in—or put you on ice. It's up to you which it is going to be. You've been
vouched for by Doctor Morgan."
Travis
tensed. What had they raked up now? Memories pinched as might a too-tight cinch
about the belly. But if they'd been asking questions of Prentiss Morgan, they
must know what happened last year—and why. Apparentiy
they did, for Kelgarries continued:
"Fox,
the time when anyone can afford prejudices is past-way past. I know about
Hewitt's offer to the University and what happened when he pressured to have
you fired from the expedition staff. But prejudices can stretch both ways—you
didn't stand up to him very long, did you?"
Travis
shrugged. "Maybe you've heard the term 'second-class citizen,' Major. How
do you suppose Indians rate with some people in this country? To that crowd we
are and we'll always be dirty, ignorant savages. You can't fight when the other
fellow has all the weapons himself. Hewitt gave that grant to the University to
do some important work. When he wanted me off, that was that. If I'd let Doctor
Morgan fight to keep me on his staff, Hewitt would have snatched his check away
again so fast the friction would have burnt the paper. I know Hewitt and what
makes him tick. And Doctor Morgan's work was more important—" Travis
stopped short. Why in the world had he told the Major all that? It was none of Kelgarries' business why he had .quit and come back to the
ranch.
"There
aren't many like Hewitt left—fortunately. And I assure you we do not follow his
methods. If you choose to join us after Ashe briefs you, you're one of a team.
Lord, man" —the Major slapped his hand vigorously against his dusty
breeches—"I don't care if a man is a blue Martian with two heads and four
mouths—if he can keep those mouths shut and do his jobl
It's the job which counts here, and, according to Morgan, you have something uselful to contribute. Make up your mind and let me know.
If you don't want to play—we'll ship you out tonight, tell your brother that
you're on government work, and keep you quiet for a while. Sorry, but that's
the way it will have to be."
Travis
smiled at that promise. He thought he could get out of here safely on his own
if he really wanted to. But now he prodded the Major a little.
"Expedition
back to catch a Folsom man—" But Kelgarries
might not have heard, for he had already turned away. Travis followed, to come
upon Ashe.
The
latter was engaged in assembling a tripod of slender rods with the care of one
handling brittle and precious objects. He glanced up as Travis' shadow fell
across his work.
"Decided to join us
for a look-see into the past?"
"Do you really mean
you can do that?"
"We've done more than look." Ashe
adjusted a screw delicately. "We've been there."
Travis stared. He could accept the fact of a
new and greatly improved Vis-Tex to provide a peephole into history and
prehistory. But time travel was something else.
"It's
perfectly true," Ashe finished with the screw. His attention passed from
the tripod to Travis. And there was that in his manner which carried
conviction.
"And we're going back again."
"After a Folsom man?" demanded the
Apache incredulously.
"After a
spaceship."
3
This
was no dream, not even a
very realistic one. There was Ashe, his fingers busy, his brown face outlined
against the red and yellow walls of the cliff and the crumbling ruins they
enclosed. This was here and now—yet what Ashe was saying, soberly, and in
detail, was the wildest fantasy.
"... so we discovered the Reds had time, travel and were
prospecting back into the past. What they dredged up there couldn't be
explained by any logic based on the history we knew and the prehistory we had
pieced out. What we didn't know then was that they had found the remains—badly
smashed—of a spaceship. It was encased in the ice of Siberia, along with
preserved mammoth bodies and a few other pertinent clues to suggest the proper
era for them to explore. They muddied the trail as well as they could by
establishing way stations in other periods of time. Then we chanced on one of
those middle points. And the Reds themselves, by capturing our time agents,
showed us the ship they were plundering some thousands of years earlier."
The
story made sense—in a crazy kind of way. Travis mechanically handed Ashe the
small tool he was groping for in the tangled grass.
"But
how did the ship get there?" he asked. "Was there an early
civilization on earth which had space travel?"
"That
was what we thought—until we found the ship. No, it was from the outside—a
cargo freighter lost from some galactic run. Either this world was an astrogation menace of the same type as a reef at sea, or
there -was some other reason to cause forced landings here. We brought film
from the Red time station pinpointing about a dozen such wrecks. And some of
those were on this side of the Atlantic."
"You're planning to
dig for one of those here?"
Ashe
laughed. "What d'you think we'd find after about
fifteen thousand years and a lot of land upheaval, even local volcanic
activity? We want our ship in as good condition as possible."
"To
study?"
"With caution. If you'd check with Ross Murdock he'd give you a good reason for the
caution. He was one of our agents who was actually
aboard the ship the Reds were plundering. When they cornered him injthe control cabin, he accidentally activated the com
system and called in the real owners. They weren't too pleased with the
Reds—came down and destroyed their time base on that level and then followed
them through the other way stations, destroying each. Remember that hush-hush
bang in the Baltic early this year? That was the 'space patrol,' or whatever
they call themselves, putting finis to the Red project. So far as we know they
didn't discover that we were and are interested in the same thing. So if we
find our ship here, we walk softly along its corridors."
"You want the
cargo?"
"In part. But mostly we want the knowledge—what its designers had—the key to
space."
The
thrill of that touched Travis. Mankind had reached for the stars for almost two
generations. Men had had small successes, many searing failures. Now—what was a
satisfactory flight to the barren moon compared to star flight and what lay
far out?
Ashe,
reading his expression, smiled. "You feel it too, don't you?"
The Apache nodded absently, gazing down the
canyon, trying to believe that somewhere about here, trapped in the solid wall
of time, there lay a wrecked star ship waiting for them. But he could not even
visualize this country as it must have been in pluvial times. When rain fell
most of the year, it must have made a morass of the lands outside the encroaching
arms of the shrinking glaciers lying not too far northward.
"But why the Folsom points?" Out of the welter of facts and half facts he
picked that as a starting point.
"We've
sent back agents disguised as pre-Celts, as Tartars— or their remoter
ancestors—as Bronze Age Beaker Traders, and in half a hundred other character
parts. Now there's a ohance
we may have to produce a few Folsom spearmen. One of the first and most important
rules of this game, Fox, is that one does not interfere with time by
introducing any modernisms. There must be no hint of our agents' real identity.
We have no idea what might happen if one meddled with the stream of history as
we know it, and we trust we'll never have to find out the hard way."
"Hunters,"
Travis said slowly, hardly aware at that moment that he spoke at all. "Mammoth—mastodon—camels—the
dire wolf—sabertooth—"
"Why do all those
interest you?"
"Why?" Travis echoed and then
stopped to examine his reasons. Why had his
reaction to Ashe's picture of the drifting prehistoric hunters in disguise been
his own quick inner vision of a land peopled with strange beasts his own race
had never hunted? Or had they? Had the Folsom hunters been his remote
ancestors, as the pre-Celt and Beaker Trader Ashe mentioned been the other's
fore-fathers? He only knew that he had experienced a sudden thrust of
excitement which lingered with him. There built up in him a desire to see that
world which his own age knew only by the dim and often contradictory evidence
of rocks, a handful of flint points, broken bones, the ancient smears of
vanished cooking fires.
"My people were hunters—long after yours
followed another way of life," he said, making the best answer he could.
"Right." Ashe's tone held a note of satisfaction. "Now-just reach me that
rod." He went back to the job at hand and Travis settled down as his
somewhat bewildered assistant. The Apache knew that he had made the choice Kelgarries wanted—that he was going to be a part of this
whole unbelievable adventure.
The
one thing he was sure of during the next two crowded days was that they were
indeed working under pressure and against time. Whether the unexplained threat
which seemed to overhang the whole project came from outside the country or
from fear of a policy change here at home, no one bothered to make clear. But
Travis was willing not to inquire about that. It was far more interesting and
absorbing to work with Ross Murdock. They set the proper kind of shafts to the
pseudo-Folsom spear points and then experimented with the spear thrower. This
made the efficient weapons they finally turned out twice as powerful. A
seven-foot javelin could be hurled a good hundred and fifty
yards or more by the use of that two-foot shaft of the thrower, and
Travis knew that in close infighting it would add tremendous thrusting power.
No wonder a party of hunters so armed dared to go against the mammoth and the
other giant mammals of the period.
In
addition to the spears they had flint knives, the counterparts of those found
in the debris of Folsom camp sites across most of western America. Travis did
not know why he was so sure that he was actually going to use knife and spears
and play the role of a wandering prehistoric hunter. Still, he was sure. He
learned from Ross that the rest of the time agents' equipment would not be
assembled at the base until the experts had taped film reports out of the past
to use as samples.
On
the third day Kelgarries and Ashe took a three-man
expedition, loading one 'copter to its limit, out of the canyon. They were gone
for almost a week, and upon their return some reels of film were sent out in a
hurry. Ashe joined Travis and Ross that same night and lay down beside the fire
with a sigh of weary pleasure.
"Hit pay dirt?"
Ross wanted to know.
His
chief nodded. There were dark smudges under his eyes, a fine, drawn look to his
features. "The wreck is there, all right. And we located hunters on the fringe
of the territory. But I think we can follow Plan One. The tribe is small and
there doesn't appear to be more than one. Our guess that the district was
thinly populated must be correct. It won't be necessary to really establish our
scouts with the tribe—just let them keep track of wandering hunters."
"And
the transfer?"
Ashe
glanced at the watch on his wrist. "Harvey and Logwood are assembling the
new one. I give them about forty-eight hours. H.Q. will fly in the extra power
packs tonight. Then our men go through. We haven't the time to spend on finer
points now. A working crew follows as soon as the scouts give the 'all clear.'
H.Q. is analyzing the film reports. They'll have the rest of the equipment to
us as soon as possible."
Travis
stirred. Who was going to be part of that scouting team into the far past? He
wanted to ask that—to hope that he might be one. But what had happened a year
ago to smash other plans, kept him tongue-tied now. Ross voiced that
all-important question.
"Who makes the first
jump, chief?"
"You—me—we're
on the spot. Our friend here, if he wants to."
"You mean that?"
Travis asked slowly.
Ashe
reached for the waiting coffeepot. "Fox, as long as you don't go loping
off on your own to test that flint-tipped armory you've been constructing on
the first available mammoth, you can come along. Mainly
because you look the part, or will when we get through with you. And
maybe you can adapt better than we can. Briefing for a time run used to take
weeks. Ask Ross here; he can tell you what a cram course in our work is like.
But today we haven't weeks to spare. We've only days and they grow fewer with
each sunrise. So we're gambling on you, on Ross, on me. But get this—I'm your
section leader, the orders come from me. And the main rule is —the job comes
first! We keep away from the natives, we don't get
involved in any happenings back there. Our only reason for going through is to
make as sure as we can that the technical boys are not going to be distrubed while they work on that wreck. And that may not
be an easy job." "Why?" Ross asked.
"Because this ship didn't make as good a
landing as the one you saw the Reds stripping. According to the films we took
through the peeper there was a bad smash when it hit dirt. We may have to let
it go altogether and track down Number Two on our list. Only, if we can come up with just one good find on board this one, we can stave off the
objections of the Committee and get the appropriation for future
exploration."
"Might
do to run one of the Committee through," Ross remarked.
Ashe
grinned. "Want to lose your job, boy? Give 'em a
good look around in some of the spots we've prospected and they'd turn up their
toes—quick."
Just
three days later a bright shaft of sunlight illuminated a small side pocket of
the canyon spotlighting the three as they worked. They were under the highly
critical eyes of a small, neat man who regarded them intently through the upper
half of his bifocals and made terse suggestions in a dry, precise voice.
Stripping, they rubbed into their skins inch by inch the cream their instructor
had provided. And under that oiling their tanned, or naturally dark, skins took
on the leathery, uniform brownness of men who wore very litde
clothing in any kind of weather.
Ashe
and Ross had been provided with contact lenses so that their eyes were now as
dark brown as Travis'. And their closely cropped hair was hidden under finely
made wigs of straggling, coarse black locks which fell shoulder-length at the
sides and descended as a pony's mane between their shoulder blades.
Then
each took his turn flat on his back while the makeup artist, working from film
charts, proceeded to supply his victims with elaborate patterns of simulated tatoos, marking chests, upper arms, chins, and upper
cheekbones. Travis, undergoing the process, studied Ashe, who now represented
the finished product. Had he not seen all the steps in that transformation, he
would not have guessed that under that savage shell now existed
Dr. Gordon Ashe.
"Glad
we're allowed sandals," the same savage commented as he tightened the
thongs which held about him a combination loincloth-kilt of crudely dressed hide.
Ross
had just thrust his bare feet into a pair of such primitive footwear.
"Let's hope they'll stay on if we have to scramble, chief," he said,
eying them dubiously.
Finished
at last, the three stood in line to be checked by the make-up man and Kelgarries. The Major carried some furred skins over his
arm, and now he tossed one to each of the disguised men.
"Better
hold on to those. It gets cold where you're going. All right—the 'copter's
waiting."
Travis
slung a hide pouch over his shoulder and gathered up the three spears he had
headed with pseudo-Folsom points. All the men were armed with the same weapons
and there was a supply bag for each man.
The
'copter took them up and out, swinging away from the Canyon of the Hohokam into a wide sweep of desert land, bringing them
down again before a carefully camouflaged installation. Kelgarries
gave Ashe his last instructions.
"Take
a day—two if you have to. Make a circle about five miles out, if you can. The
rest is up to you."
Ashe
nodded. "Can do. We'll signal in as soon as we
can give an 'all clear.' "
The concealed structure housed a pile of
material and an inner erection of four walls, one floor, no
roof. Together the three agents crowded into that, watched the panel slide to
behind them, while a radiance streamed up around their
bodies. Travis felt a tingling through bone and muscle, and then a stab which
was half panic as the breath was squeezed from his lungs by a weird wrenching
that twisted his insides. But he kept his feet, held on to his spears. There
was a second or two of blackness. Then once again he gulped air, shook himself
as he might have done climbing out of strong river current. Ross's dot-bordered
lips curved in a smile and he signaled "thumbs up" with his scarred
hand.
"End of run—here we
go. . . ."
As
far as Travis could see they were still in the box. But when Ashe pushed open
the door panel, they looked out not on the piled boxes which had lain there
before but upon an untidy heap of rocks. And clambering over those in the wake
of his companions, the Apache did find a very different world before him.
Gone
was the desert with its burden of sun-heated rock. A plain of coarse grass,
thigh-, even waist-high, rolled away to some hills. And that
grassy plain was cut by the end of a lake which stretched northward beyond the
horizon. Travis saw brush and small trees dotting in clumps. And, too
distant for him to distinguish their species, he could make out slowly moving
lumps which could only be grazing animals.
There
was a sun overhead, but a cold, harassing wind whipped with an ice-tipped lash
around Travis' three-quarters-bare body. He pulled the hide robe about his
shoulders, and saw that his companions had copied that move. The air was not
only chilly, it was dank with a wealth of moisture.
And there were new, rank smells, which his
nostrils could not identify, carried by each puff of breeze. This world was as
harsh and grim as his own, but in a very different fashion.
Ashe
stooped and rolled aside one of the nearby rocks to disclose a small box. From
his supply bag he produced three small buttons, giving one to each of the
younger men.
"Plant
that in your left ear," he ordered, and did so with his own. Then he
pushed a key on the side of the box. Instantly a low chirruping sound was audible.
"This is our homing signal. It acts as radar to bring you back here."
"What's that?"
A
plume of smoke, whipped by the wind into a long trail of gray-white vapor,
bannered to the north. From the shape Travis could not believe that it marked a
forest fire, yet it surely signalized a conflagration of some size.
Ashe
glanced up casually. "Volcano," he returned. "This part of the
world hasn't settled down too stably yet. We head northwest, around the lake
tip, and we should strike the wreck." He started off at a steady lope
which told Travis that this was not the first time the time agent had played
the role of primitive hunter.
The
grass brushed against them, leaving drops of cold moisture on their bare legs
and thighs. Travis concluded that there must have been rain very shortly before
their arrival. And from the look of the massing clouds to the east, a second
storm might catch them soon.
As
they came away from the hill whose foot sheltered the time transfer, that
chirruping in his ear grew fainter, varying in intensity as Ashe twisted and
turned about the hooked end of the lake. The wide reach of lush grass continued
and this was truly game country. As yet, though they had not passed close
enough to any of the grazers to see what type of animals they were.
About
a half mile from the curving shore of the lake rested an object which was not
natural. Pushed deep into the earth,
GALACTIC DE R^e'l I C T
its
rounded side showing two jagged rents, lay a half globe of metallic material. Around
it was a wide patch of blackened earth only raggedly striped with new grass.
But what impressed Travis chiefly was the object's size. He deduced that
perhaps only half of the thing was visible—if its form had originally been a
true globe. Yet that half now above the earth was at least six stories tall.
The complete vessel must have been a veritable monster, more equal to an ocean
liner than the largest sky transport he knew of in
.his own time.
"She
certainly got it!" observed Ross. "Bad crack up at landing—"
"Or else she had it before
landing." Ashe leaned on a spear to survey the hulk. "What-?"
"Those
holes might have been caused by shell fire. We'll leave that to the experts to
determine. But this could be a wreck
from a space battle. That storm's coming fast. I say we'd better circle west
ahead of it and find some shelter in the hills. If the first reports are
correct, we'll be caught in a kind of rain we know nothing about!"
Ashe's
lope lengthened into a trot, and the trot into a space-covering run. He was heading away from the wrecked ship to the
distant hills, and to reach them they had to round the narrow end of the lake.
They
were carefully threading their way through the edge of a marshy spot when a
scream halted them. Travis knew that it was a death cry, but the sound was
followed by an appalling, yowling squall which could come from no throat,
animal or human, of his own time. It sounded from directly before them. The
squall was answered in turn by a grunting, such a grunting as might have issued
from the deep chest of a giant pig. And that grunting was echoed on a higher
note almost directly behind them!
"Down!" Travis obeyed the order from Ashe, throwing himself flat on the muddy
ground, wriggling to the left. A moment later all three scouts huddled in a
growth of tough brush. They paid no attention to the torment inflicted by its
brambles on their arms and shoulders, for they had front-row seats on a wild
drama which held them enthralled.
Crumpled
on the ground was a mound of heaving flesh, plainly in the death throes, its
long, shaggy yellow hair sodden with blood. Crouched at bay behind that body
was another animal. Travis could classify it when he caught sight of those
long, curved fangs: sabertooth. It was slightly
shorter than a lion of Travis' own day, and its muscular legs and powerful
shoulders displayed a threat of force which would daunt a larger beast. But now
it was facing a giant. . . .
The
opponent, whose cub had been killed, was a mountain of flesh, rearing almost
eighteen feet above the ground. Balanced on large-boned hind feet and thick
tail, it fronted sabertooth with powerful forearms,
each tipped with a gigantic single claw. The narrow head twisted and turned
above the slender forebody, the thick brown hair
covering it in constant movement.
There
was a rank smell of animal blown to the men in the brush as a second monstrous
ground sloth moved in to give battle. And the sabertooth
spat like the enraged cat it was.
4
A hand
closed on Travis' arm,
jerking his attention from the shaping battle. Ashe pointed westward and pulled
again. Ross was already creeping in that direction. The wind was at their back
so that they caught the fetor of the beasts without danger of their being
scented in turn.
"Get
to it!" Ashe ordered. "We don't want that cat on our trail. It can't
take on two adult sloths and it'll be one mighty disappointed diner—out looking
for another meal pretty soon now."
They
wormed their way forward, trying to gauge from the squalls of the cat, the
grunting of the sloths, whether batde had yet reached
the stage of actual blows. If the cat was smart, Travis knew, it would let
itself be driven off. And knowing the tactics of mountain lions of his southwest, he believed that that was what would happen.
"Okay—run!"
Ashe scrambled to his feet and set a good pace across the open lands, the other
two thudding behind him. The sun had completely disappeared now, and the gray-ness under those lowering clouds approached twilight. The
thin chirrup of their homing device sounded very lonely and far away.
Brown-gray
lumps swung up heads with wide stretches of homs. Save that those horns were straight and not curved, the animals might have been the bison of the
historic plains. Catching the scent of the scouts, they tossed those horned
heads, set off northward down the open land at a lumbering gallop. Among them
ran with speed and far more grace large-headed horses equipped with the
spectacularly striped coats of zebras. This was plainly a hunter's paradise.
The rain came from behind the men, making a
visible curtain of water. When that enfolded them, Travis gasped, choked,
fought for breath under the flood which beat and pounded him. But his legs kept
the striding pace Ashe had set, and the three continued to head for the hills
which were now only vaguely visible through the downpour.
A
rising slope slowed them, and twice they had to leap runnels of streams carrying
away the excess of water being dumped on the heights above them. Lightning
cracked with a lashing viciousness, bringing a scrap of illumination with it.
A
hand caught at Travis to the left, and so into partial shelter from the storm.
He
was crowded together with Ashe and Ross, half crouching in the lee of some
rocks. It was not quite a cave, but the crevice was better than the open slope.
"How long will this
last?" Ross growled.
Ashe returned without much hope,
"Anywhere from an hour to a couple of days. Let's hope we're lucky."
They
squatted, drawing their hide robes about them, pressing together for the warmth
of body contact in thé midst of that damp cold.
Perhaps they dozed, for Travis became aware of his surroundings with a jerk of
his head which hurt neck and shoulder. He knew that the rain had stopped, though there was night outside their inadequate shelter. He
asked:
"Do we move on?"
But
the reply to that came from the world outside their hiding place, with a roar
loud enough to split eardrums. Travis, his nails digging into the wooden shaft
of his spear, could not control the shudder which shook him at that menacing
blast.
"We
do if we want to provide a midnight snack for our friend out there," Ashe
commented. "The rain probably spoiled hunting for somebody. Hereabouts we
have sabertooth, the Alaskan lion, the cave bear, and
a few other assorted carnivores I don't want to meet without, say, a tank in
reserve support."
"Cheery
spot," Ross remarked. "I'd say our playmate up-ridge hasn't had much
luck tonight. Any chance of his coming down to scoop us out—or try for
taste?"
"If
he, she or it does, hell get a pawful of spear
points." Ashe replied. "One advantage of this hole, nothing can get
in if we're firm in saying No!"
There
was a second roar, from farther away, Travis noted with relief. Whatever meat
hunter on the hoof prowled the hills, it would not
have followed their trail. The rain must have cleansed their scent from grass
and earth. But they continued to huddle there, stiff and cold, endeavoring now
and then to change position of arms or legs so that morning would not find them
too cramped to move. They remained until the sky did lighten with the first
sign of dawn.
Travis
crawled out, straightened up painfully, and bit back a stinging word or two, as
a morning breeze with the crisp-ness of about three
below zero cut in under the flap of his cloak blanket. He decided that to be
properly prepared to roam the Pleistocene world in the garb of its rightful inhabitants, one should practice beforehand by spending a
month or so in a deep freeze stripped to one's shorts. And he was pleased to
see that neither Ashe nor Ross was any more agile when he emerged from the hole
of refuge.
They
mouthed food-concentrate tablets from their storage bags. Travis, though
knowing the energy-building uses of those small pellets, longed for real meat,
hot, yet still juicy, taken straight from the searing
of the fire. There was no taste to these pill things.
"Up
we go." Ashe wiped the back of his hand across his mouth and slung his bag
over his shoulder. He studied the way before them to pick out the best ascent.
But Travis had already started, winding in and out between boulders which
marked the debris of a landslide.
When
the scouts at last reached the summit, they turned to look back into the valley
of the lake. That smooth sheet of water occupied perhaps half of the basin. And
it seemed to Travis that the mirror surface reached closer to the wrecked ship
today than it had when they passed it the afternoon before. He said as much,
and Ashe agreed.
"Water
has to go somewhere and these rains feed all the streams heading down there. Another reason why we must make this a fast job. So—let's
get moving."
But when they turned again to follow the line
of the heights,
Travis
halted. A very thin and watery sunlight broke through the clouds, carrying with
it little or no warmth as yet, but providing more light. And—he peered intendy westward and downslope on the other side of the hills. . . . No, he had
not been mistaken! That sunlight, feeble as it was, reflected
from some point in the second valley. From water?
He doubted that, the answering spark was too brilliant.
Ashe and Ross, following
his direction, saw it too.
"Second
ship?"
Ross suggested.
"If so, it is not marked on our charts. But we'll take a look. I agree that's too
bright to be sun on water."
Had
there been survivors from the other crash? Travis wondered. If so, had they
established a camp down there? He had heard enough during the past few days to
judge that any contact with the original owners of the galactic ships could be
highly dangerous. Ross had been pursued by one of their patrols across miles of
wilderness, and had escaped from a form of mind compulsion they exerted only by
deliberately burning his hand irr a fire and using
pain to counter their mental demand for surrender. They were not human, those
ship people, and what powers or weapons they did possess were so alien as to
defy Terran understanding so far.
So the three took to cover, making expert use of every bit of brush,
every boulder, as they advanced to locate that source of reflection. Again Travis was amazed by the skill of his
companions. He had hunted lion, and Hon in the beast's native mountains is very
wary game. And he could read trail with all the skill imparted to him by Chato who knew the ways of the old raiding warriors. But
these two were equal to him at what he always considered a red man's rather than a white man's game.
They
came at last to lie in a fringe of trees, parting the grass cautiously to look
out on an expanse of open land. In the middle of it rested another globe ship,
but this one was entirely above ground and it was small, a pygmy compared to
the giant in the other valley. At first superficial examination it looked to
have been landed normally, not crashed. Halfway up, the curve facing them
showed the dark hole of an open entrance port, and from it dangled a ladder.
Someone had survived this landing, come to earth herel
"Lifeboat?" Ashe's voice was the slightest of whispers.
"It
is not shaped like the one I saw
before," Ross hissed. "That was like a rocket."
Wind
sang across the clearing. Under its push the ladder clanged against the side of
the globe. And from the foot of the strange ship some birds tried to rise. But
they moved sluggishly, flopping their wings with an
awkward heaviness. And the wind brought to the three in hiding that sweetish,
stomach-turning odor which could never be mistaken by those who had ever
smelled it. Something lay dead there, very dead.
Ashe
stood up, watching those birds narrowly. Then he walked forward. A snarl came
from close to ground level. Travis' spear came up. It sang through the air and
a brown-coated, four-footed beast yelped, leaped pawing in the air, to crash
back into the grass. More of the gorged carrion birds fluttered and hopped away
from their feast.
What
lay about the foot of that ladder was not a pretty sight. Nor could the scouts
tell at first glance how many bodies there had been. Ashe attempted to make a
closer examination and came away, white-faced and gagging. Ross picked up a tatter of blue-green material.
"Baldies' uniforms, all right," he
identified it. "This is one thing I'll never forget. What happened here? A fight?"
"What ever it was, it happened some time ago," Ashe,
livid under tan and skin stain, got out the words carefully. "Since there
was no burial, I'd say the crew must all have been finished."
"Do we go in?" Travis laid a hand
on the ladder.
"Yes. But don't touch anything. Especially any of the instruments or installations."
Ross
laughed on a slightly hysterical high note. "That you do not need to
underline for me, chief. After you, sir, after you."
Thus,
Ashe leading the way, they climbed the ladder, entered the gaping hole of the
port. There was a second door a short distance inside, doubly thick and with
heavy braces, but it, too, was ajar. Ashe pushed it back and then they were in
a well from which another ladder-like stair arose.
Somehow
Travis had expected darkness, since there were no windows or wall outlets in
the outer skin of the globe. But a blue light seeped from the walls about them,
and not only light, but a warmth which was comforting.
"The
ship's still alive," Ross commented. "And if she is intact—"
"Then,"
Ashe finished softly for him, "we've made the big find, boys. We never hoped for luck like this." He started to climb
the inner ladder.
They
came to a landing, or rather a platform from which opened three oval doors, all
closed. Ross pushed against each, but they all held.
"Locked?" Travis
asked.
"Might
be—or else we don't know how to turn the right buttons. Going
on up, chief? If this follows the pattern of that other one, the control
cabin is on top."
"We'll take a look.
But no experiments, remember?"
Ross stroked his scarred
hand. "I'm not forgetting that."
A
second ladder section brought them through a manhole in the floor of a
hemisphere chamber occupying the whole top of the ship. And, before they were
through that entrance, they knew that death had come that way before them.
There
was one body only, crumpled forward against the straps of a seat which hung on
springs and cords from the roof. In front of that rigid corpse, which was clad
in the bluegreen material, was a board crowded with dials, buttons, levers.
"Pilot—died
at his post." Ashe walked forward, stooped over the body. "I don't
see any sign of a wound. Could be an epidemic
which attacked all the crew. Well let the doctors figure it out."
They
did not linger to explore farther, for this find was too important. It was too
necessary that the news of this second ship be relayed to Kelgarries
and his superiors. But Ashe took the precaution of drawing the ladder into the
globe's port after his two younger companions had descended. He made his way
down by rope.
"Who
do you think is going to snoop?" Ross wanted to know.
"Just a little insurance. We know there are primitives in the northern
end of this country. They may be the type to whom everything strange is taboo.
Or they may be inquisitive enough to explore. And I don't fancy someone
touching off a com again and calling in the galactic patrol
or whoever those chaps wearing blue are. Now, let's get to the transfer on the
double!"
The
weak sunlight of the early morning had increased in strength. The air was
growing noticeably warmer, and danker, too, as the moisture-laden grass about
them gave up its burden of last night's rain. The process of travel resembled
running through a river choked with slimy, slapping reeds, save that the ground
underfoot was firm. The men panted up the heights, down past their refuge of
the stormy night, to the plain of the lake, skirting the glade where scavengers
were busy with the remains of the sabertooth's kill.
As
they came out into the open Ashe broke astride and swept one hand down in an
emphatic order to take cover. That herd of mixed bison and horses which they
had startled the night before was in movement once more, cutting diagonally
across their path. And the animals were plainly in flight from some
menace. Sabertooth again? The bison,
though, tons of heavy bone and meat not to be faced down with ease, appeared
able to take care of themselves with those sweeping horns.
Only
when the wind bore to Travis those high, far-off sounds which his ears
translated into shouts from what must be human throats, did he understand that
the hunters were out in force. The primitive tribesmen had in some manner stampeded
the herd in order to cut down the weaker stragglers.
The
scouts were pinned down, as an ever-thickening stream of animals cut across the
road they must take in order to reach the time transport. Before they had
reached their present position, the main body of the herd had caught up, headed
by the fleeter horses which whirled ahead of the heavier bison in skimming
flight. Now the men caught sight of other harriers, using the general disturbance
to their own advantage. Five dark shapes broke cover a hundred yards or so
away, weaving in to cut around a lumbering, half-grown calf on the edge of the
running bison herd.
"Dire wolves,"
Ashe identified.
They
were stocky, large-headed animals, running without giving tongue, but with a
workmanlike weaving which displayed their familiarity with this game. Two
darted in to snap at the calf's head, while the others rushed to try to deliver
that crippling tendon slash of the hind legs which would make the bison easy
prey.
"Oooooo-yahhh!"
That
small drama so near to them had absorbed Travis almost to the point of his
forgetting what must lie beyond. There was no chance yet of sighting those who
called and made the stragglers their targets. But at that moment a horse
staggered on past the bison which was fighting off the attentions of the
wolves. Its large head had sunk close to knee level and a rope of bloody foam
hung from muzzle to trampled grass. Driven deeply into its barrel was a spear.
And even as the animal came fully into sight it tried to lift its head,
faltered, and crashed to earth.
One
of the wolves straightway turned attention to this new prey. It trotted away
from the battle with the calf to sniff inquiringly at the still-breathing
horse and then, with a growl, to launch itself at the animal's throat. The wolf
was feeding when the hunter of that kill made a swift answer to such brazen
theft.
Another
spear, lighter, but as deadly and well aimed, sped through the air, caught the dire wolf behind the right shoulder. The wolf
gave a convulsive leap and collapsed just beyond the body of the horse. At the
same time other spears flashed, bringing down its pack mates and, last of all,
the young bison they had been worrying.
Most
of the fleeing herd had passed by now. There were other animals lying on the
flattened grass of the back trail. The three scouts crouched low, unable to
withdraw lest they attract the notice of the hunters now coming in to collect
their booty.
There
were twenty or more males, medium-sized brown-skinned men with ragged heads of
black hair like the wigs provided the scouts. Their clothing consisted of the
same hide loincloth-kilts fastened about their sweating bodies with string
belts and lacings of thongs. Travis, studying them, could see how well their
own make-up matched the general appearance of the Folsom hunters.
Behind
the men trudged the women and children, stopping to butcher the kill. And there
were more of these than of the hunters. Whether those they saw represented the
full strength of a small tribe, there was no telling. The men shouted to each
other hoarsely, and the two who had accounted for the wolves seemed especially
pleased. One of them squatted on his heels, pried open the mouth of the wolf
which had killed the horse, and inspected its fangs with a critical eye. Since
a necklace of just such trophies strung on a thong thumped across his broad
chest with every movement of his body, it was plain he was considering a new addidon to his adornment.
Ashe's
hand fell on Travis' shoulder. "Back," he breathed into the Apache's
ear. They retreated, wriggling out of the grass into the edge of the morass at
the end of the lake. Here with the muck covering their bodies, and flies and
other stinging insects greeting them with avid appetites, they made their way
on. They moved away from the scene of the hunt with every bit of stalker's
skill they possessed, glad there was a wealth of meat to occupy the tribesmen.
Clumps
of willow-like trees began to offer better screening, and behind these they
achieved a hunched run until Ashe subsided, panting, into a convenient pile of
brush. Travis, his chest an arch of hot pain which cut with every stabbing
breath, threw himself face down, and Ross collapsed between the two.
"That
was nearly it," Ross got out between rasping intakes of air. "Never a
dull moment in this business. . . ."
Travis
raised his head from his bent arm and tried to locate landmarks. They had been
headed for the rockmasked time transport when the
hunt cut across their path. But they had had to swing north to aviod the butchering parties. So their goal must now lie
southeast.
Ashe
was on his knees, peering northward to where the bulk of wrecked ship was
embedded in the plain.
"Look!"
They
drew up beside him to watch a party of the hunters patter around the wreckage.
One of them raised a spear and clanged it against the side of the spaceship.
"They
didn't avoid it." Travis got the significance of the casual assault.
"Which means—we'll have to move fast with the smaller one! If
they discover it, they may try to explore. Time's growing shorter."
"Only open country between us and the
transfer now."
Travis
pointed out the obvious. To cut directly across to that distant cluster of
masking rocks would put them in the open, to be instantly sighted by any
tribesman looking in the right direction.
Ashe
gazed at him thoughtfully. "Do you think you could make it without being
spotted?"
Travis
measured distances, tried to pick out any scrap of cover lying along the
shortest route. "I can try," was all he could say in return.
5.
He
made for the rise at the
southern point of which stood the pile of rocks masking the installation. A
brindled shape slunk out of his path, showing fangs. Then the dire wolf trotted
on to the nearest carcass, where the women had stripped only the choicest meat,
to investigate food for which it would not have to fight.
Travis worked his way along the foot of the
rise. The main path of the stampede was to the west and he believed himself in
the clear, when there was a snorting before him. A bulk heaved through small
bushes and he found himself fronting a bison cow. Too high on
her shoulder to cause a disabling wound, a broken spear shaft protruded.
And the pain had enraged her to a dangerous state.
In
such a situation even a range cow would be perilous for a man on foot, and the
bison was a third again as big as the animals he knew. Only the bushes around
them saved Travis from death at that first meeting. The cow bellowed and
charged, bearing down on him at a speed which he would have believed impossible
for her weight. He hurled himself to the left in a wild scramble to escape and
found himself in a thorny tangle. The cow, meanwhile, burst past him close
enough for the coarse mat of her hair to rasp against one out-flung arm.
Travis'
head rang with the sound of her bellowing as he squirmed around in the bush to
bring up his heaviest spear. The cow had skidded to a stop, tearing up matted grass and turf with her hoofs as she wheeled.
Then the spear haft in her shoulder caught in one of the springy half-trees.
She bellowed again, lurching forward to fight that drag until the broken spear
ripped loose and a great gout of blood broke, to be sopped up in the
heavy tangle of shoulder hair.
That
slowed her. Travis had time to get on his feet, ready his spear. There was no
good target in that wide head confronting him. He jerked off his supply bag,
swung it by its carrying thong, and flung it at the cow's dripping muzzle. His
trick worked. The bison charged, not for him, but after the thing which had
teased her. And Travis thrust home behind the shoulder with all the force he
had.
The
weight of the bison and the impetus of the animal's charge tore the shaft from
his hold. Then the cow went to her knees, coughing, and the big body rolled on
one side. He hurdled the mount of her hindquarters,
fearing that the noise of battle might attract the hunters.
Forcing
a way through the brush, he made most of the remainder of his journey on hands
and knees. At last he crouched in the shelter of the rock pile, his ribs
heaving, careless of the bleeding scratches which laced his arms and shoulders,
stung on cheek and chin.
Watching
his back trail, his body pressed to earth, Travis saw that he had been wise to
leave the scene of battle quickly. Three of the hunters were running across the
plain toward, the brush, trailing spears. But they went with caution enough to
suggest that this was not the first time they had had to deal with wounded
stragglers from a stampeded herd.
Having
scouted the bush, the brown men ventured into its cover. And seconds later a
surprised shout informed Travis his kill had been located. Then that shout was
answered by a long eerie wail from some point up the hill above the rocks.
Travis stirred uneasily.
The
spear he had been forced to leave in the body of the cow resembled their
own—but did it look enough like theirs for them to believe the kill had been
made by a tribesman? Had these people some system of individual markings for
personal weapons, such as his own race had developed
in their roving days? Would they try to track him down?
He
snaked his way into the crevice of the rocks. The alerting signal was there, a
second box set in beside the radar guide which now hummed its signal in his
ear. He plunged down the lever set in its lid, then moved the tiny bit of metal
rapidly up and down in the pattern he had been drilled in using only the day
before. In the desert of the late twentieth century that call
would register on another recording device, relaying to Kelgarries
the need for a hasty conference.
Travis
edged out from the rocks and looked about him warily. He flattened against a
boulder taller than his wiry body and listened, not only with his ears but with
every wilderness-trained sense he possessed. His flint knife was in his fist as
he caught that click of warning. And his other hand went out to grab at an
upraised forearm as brown and well muscled as his own. The smell of blood and
grease hit his nostrils as they came together breast to breast, and the
stranger spat a torrent of unintelligible words at him. Travis brought up the
fist with the knife, not to strike into the other's flesh, but in a sharp blow
against a thick jawbone. It was a blow that rocked the round black head back on
the slightly hunched shoulders.
Pain
scored along his own ribs as the two men broke apart.
He aimed another blow at the jaw, brought up his knee as the native sprang in,
knife ready. It was dirty fighting according to the rules of civilization, but
Travis wanted a quick knockout with no knife work. He staggered the hunter, and
was going in for a last telling blow when another figure darted around the
rocks and struck at the back of the tribesman's head, sending him limp and
unconscious to the ground.
Ross
Murdock wasted no time in explanations. "Come on. Help me get him under
cover!"
Somehow
they crowded into the shelter of the transfer, the Folsom man between them. And
Ross, with quick efficiency, tied the wrists and ankles of their captive and
inserted a strip of hide for a gag between his slack jaws.
Travis
inspected a dripping cut across his own ribs, decided it was relatively
unimportant, and then faced about as Ashe joined them.
"Looks as if you've been elected target for today." Ashe pushed aside Travis' hands to inspect
the cut critically. "You'll live," he added, as he rummaged in his
supply bag for a small box of pills. One he crushed on his palm, to smear the
resulting powder along the bloody scratch, the other he ordered his patient to
swallow. "What did you do to touch this off?"
Travis sketched his
adventure with the bison cow.
Ashe
shrugged. "Just one of those unlucky foul-ups we have to expect now and
then. Now we have this fellow to worry about." He surveyed the captive
bleakly.
"What
do we do?" Ross's nose wrinkled. "Start a zoo with this exhibit
one?"
"You got the message
through?" Ashe asked.
Travis nodded.
"Then
we'll sit it out. As soon as it gets dark well carry him out, cut the cords,
and leave him near one of their camps. That's the best we can do. Unfortunately
the tribe seems to be heading west—"
"West!" Travis thought of that other ship.
"What
if they try to board that spacer?" Ross seemed to share his concern.
"I've a feeling this isn't going to be a lucky run. We've had trouble
breathing down our necks right from the start. But we should keep watch on that
other ship—"
"And
what could we do to prevent their exploring it?"
Travis wanted to know. He was in a deflated mood, willing to agree with any
forebodings.
"Well
hope that they will follow the herd," Ashe answered. "Food is a major
preoccupation with such a tribe and they'll keep near to a good supply as long
as they can. But it does make sense to watch the ship. I'll have to wait here
to report to Kelgarries. Suppose you two take our
friend here for his walk and then keep on going to that ridge between the
valleys. Then you can let us know in time to keep our men under cover if the
tribe drifts that way."
Ross sighed. "All right, chief. When do we start?"
"At dusk. No use courting trouble. There will be prowlers out there after
nightfall."
"Prowlers!" Ross grinned without much humor. "That's a mild way of putting it.
I don't intend to meet up with any eleven-foot lion in the dark!"
"Moon
tonight," corrected Travis mildly, and settled himself for what rest he
could get before they ventured to leave.
Not
only the moon gave light that night. The dusky sky was
riven by the distant sullen fire of the volcano—or
volcanoes. Travis now believed that there was more than one burning mountain
to the north. And there was a distinct metallic taste in the air, which Ashe
ascribed to an active eruption miles away.
Somehow,
between them they got their captive on his feet and marched him along. He
seemed to be in a dazed state, slumping again to the ground while Travis went
ahead to scout out a group about a fire.
The
Folsom men—and women—were gorging on meat lightly seared by the flames of the
fire. The odor of it reached Travis and Billed him
with an urge to dart into that company and seize a sizzling rib or two for
himself. Concentrates might provide the scientific balance of energy and
nourishment which his body needed, but they were no substitute, as far as his
personal tastes were concerned, for the materials of the feast he was watching.
Fearing
to linger lest his appetite over power his caution, he flitted back to Ross and
reported that there were no sentries out to spoil their simple plan. So they
hauled their charge to the edge of the firelight, removed his bonds and gag,
and gave him a light push. Then they took to their heels in a spurt of speed
designed to carry them out of range.
If
any natives did follow, they did not find the right trail, and the two made the
ridge without any more bad luck.
"We're
the stupid ones," Ross observed as they drew up the last incline and found
a reasonably sheltered spot under an overhand. It was not quite a cave, but had
only one open side to defend. "Nobody in his right senses is going to
gallop around in the dark."
"Dark?"
protested Travis, clasping his arms about the knees pulled tightly to his
chest, and staring northward. His suspicions about the volcanic activity there
was borne out now by the redness of the sky, the presence of fumes in the wind.
It was a spectacular display, but one which did not give confidence to the
viewer. His only satisfaction lay in the miles which must stretch between that
angry mountain and the ridge on which he was not stationed.
Ross
made no answer. Since Travis had the first watch, his companion had rolled in
his hide cloak and was already asleep.
It
was a broken night and when Travis arose in the dawn he discovered a thin skim
of gray dust on his skin and the rocks about. At the same time a sulphuric blast in his face made him cough raggedly.
"Anything doing
below?" he croaked.
Ross shook his head and
offered the gourd water bottle.
GALACTIC DE
R E-L I C T
The
small spaceship rested peacefully below and the only change in the picture from
the day previous was that there was not so much activity among the scavengers
below the open port.
"What
are they like—those men from space?" Travis asked suddenly.
To his surprise Ross, whom he had come to regard as close to nerveless,
shivered.
"Pure
poison, fella, and don't you ever forget itl I saw two kinds—the baldies who wear the blue suits,
and a furry-faced one with pointed ears. They may look like men—but they aren't.
And believe me, anyone who tangles with those boys in blue is
asking to be chopped up fine in a grinder!"
"I
wonder where they came from." Travis raised his head. There were a few
stars, still dim pinpoints of light in the dawn sky. To think of those as suns
nourishing other worlds such as the solid earth now under him—where men, or at
least creatures fashioned something like men, carried on lives of their own—was
a spread of imagination requiring some effort of mind.
Ross
waved a hand skyward. "Take your pick, Fox. The big brains running this
show of ours believe there was a whole confederation of different worlds tied
together in a United Something-or-other then—" He blinked and then
laughed. "Me—saying 'then' when I mean 'now!' This jumping back and forth
in time mixes a guy's thinking."
"And
if someone were to take off in that ship down there, he'd run into them
outside?"
"If he did, he'd
regret it!"
"But
if he took off in our time—would he still find them waiting?"
Ross
played with the thongs fastening the supply bag. "That's one of the big
questions. And nobody'll have the right answer until
we do go and see. Twelve—fifteen thousand years is a long time. Do you know
any civilization here
that's lasted even a fraction of that? From painted hunters to the atom here. Out there it could be
the atom back to painted hunters—or to nothing—by now." "Would you
like to go and see?"
Ross
smiled. "I've had one brush with the blue boys. If I could be sure they
weren't still on some star map, I might say yes. I wouldn't care to meet them
on their home ground— and I'm no trained space man. But the idea does eat into a fella. . . . Ha—company!"
There
was movement down in the valley—to the north. But those objects issuing out of
the trees at a leisurely and ponderous pace were not Folsom hunters. Ross
whistled very softly between his teeth, watching that advance eagerly, and
Travis shared his excitement.
The
bison herd, the striped horses, the frustrated sabertooth
confronting the giant ground sloths, none had been as thrilling a sight as
this. Even the elephant of their own time could generate a measure of awe in
the human onlooker by the sheer majesty of its movement, its aura of strength
and fearlessness. And these larger and earlier members of the same tribe produced
an almost paralyzing sense of wonder in the two scouts. "Mammoths!"
Tall,
thick-haired giants, their backbones sloping from the huge dome of the skull,
the hump of shoulder, to the shorter hindquarters dwarfed tree and landscape as
they moved. Three of them towered close to fourteen feet at the shoulder. They
bore the weight of the tremendous curled tusks proudly, their trunks swaying in
time to their unhurried steps. They were the most formidable living things
Travis had ever seen. And, watching them, he could not believe that the hunters
he had spied upon in the other valley had ever brought down such game with
spears. Yet the evidence that they had, had been discovered over and over
again—scattered bones with a flint point between the giant ribs or splitting
a massive spine.
"One—two—three—" Ross was counting,
half under his breath. "And a small one—"
"Calf,"
Travis identified. But even that baby was nothing to face without a modem
shotgun to hand.
"Four—five—Family
party?"
Ross speculated.
"Maybe. Or do they travel in herds?"
"Ask the big brains. Ohhh—look at that tree go!"
The
leader in the dignified parade set its massive head :igainst a tree bole, gave a small push, and the tree
crashed. With a squeal audible to the scouts, the mammoth calf hustled forward
and started harvesting the leaves with a busy trunk, while its elders appeared
to watch it with adult indulgence.
Ross
pushed the wind-blown tails of wig hair out of his eyes. "We may have a
problem here. What if they don't move on? I can't see a crew working down there
with those tons of tusks skipping about in the background."
"If
you want to haze 'em on," Travis observed,
"don't let me stop you. I've drag-herded stubborn cows—but I'm riot going
down there and swing a rope at any of those rumps!"
"They might take a fancy to bump over
the ship." "So they might," agreed Travis. "And what could
we do to stop 'em?"
But
for the moment the mammoth family seemed content at their own end of the valley, which was at least a quarter of a
mile from the ship. After an hour's watch Ross tightened the thongs of his
sandals and gathered up his spears.
"I'll report in. Maybe those walking
mountains will keep hunters away—"
"Or draw them here," corrected
Travis pessimistically. "Think you can find your way back?"
Ross grinned. "This trail is getting to
be a regular freeway. All we need is a traffic cop or two. Be seeing you. . .
." He disappeared from their perch with that swift and silent ability to
vanish into the surrounding landscape which Travis still found unusual in a
white man.
As
Travis continued to he
there, chin supported on forearm, idly watching the mammoths, he tried again
to figure out what made Ashe and Ross Murdock so different from the other
members of their race he knew. Of course he had in a measure felt the same lack
of selfconsciousness with Dr. Morgan. To Prentiss
Morgan a man's race and the color of his skin were nothing—a shared enthusiasm
was all that really mattered. Morgan had cracked Travis Fox's shell and let
him into a larger world. And then—like all soft and de-shelled creatures—he had
been the more deeply hurt when that new world had turned hostile. He had then
fled back into the old, leaving everything—even friendship—behind.
Now
he waited for the old smoldering flame of anger to bite. It was there, but
dulled, as the night fire of the volcano was now only a lazy smoke plume under
the rising sun. The desert over which he had ridden to find water a week ago
was indeed time buried. What—?
The
mammoths had moved, with the largest bull facing about. Trunk up, the beast
shrilled a challenge that tore at Travis' ears. This was beyond the squall of
the sabertooth, the grunting roar of a sloth prepared
to do battle. It was the most frightening sound he had ever heard.
A
second time the bull trumpeted. Sabertooth on the hunt? The Alaskan lion?
What animal was large, enough, or desperate enough, to stalk that walking
mountain? Man?
But
if there was a Folsom hunter in hiding, he did not linger. The bull paced along
the edge of the wood and then butted over another tree, to tear loose leaved
branches and crunch them greedily. The crisis was past.
An
hour later a party guided by Ross climbed up to join him. Kelgarries,
and four others, wearing dull green and brown coveralls which faded into the general
background, spread themselves on the ground to share the lookout.
"That's
our baby!" The Major's face was alight with enthusiasm as he sighted the
derelict. "What can you do about her, boys?"
But
one of the crew focused glasses in another direction. "Hey—those things
are mammoths!" he shouted. As one, his fellows turned to follow his
directing finger.
"Sure,"
snapped the Major. "Look at the ship, Wilson. If she is intact, can we
possibly swing a direct transfer?"
Reluctantly
the other man abandoned the mammoth family for business. He studied the
derelict through his lenses. "Some job. Biggest transfer we ever did was
the sub frame—"
"I
know that! But that was two years ago, and Crawford's experiments have proved
that the grid can be expanded without losing power. If we can take this one
straight through without any dismantling, we've put the schedule ahead maybe
five years! And you know what that will mean."
"And
who's going to go down there to set up a grid with those outsize elephants
watching him? We have to have a clear field to work in and no interruptions. A
lot of the material won't stand any rough handling."
"Yeah,"
echoed one of his subordinates. Again the lenses swung to the north. "Just
how are you goint to shoo the mammoths out?"
"Scout
job, I suppose." That resigned comment came from Ashe as he joined the
party. "Well, I'm admitting right here and now that I have no ideas,
bright or otherwise, on how to make a mammoth decide to take a long walk. But
we're open for suggestions."
They
watched the browsing beasts in silence. Nobody volunteered any ideas. It
appeared that this particular problem was not yet covered by any rule on or
off the book.
6
"What
we need is a mine field—like
the one planted around H.Q.," Ross said at last.
"Mine
field?" repeated the man Kelgarries had called
Wilson. Then he said again. "Mine field!"
"Got something?"
demanded the Major.
"Not
a mine field," Wilson corrected. "We could fix it for those brutes to
blow themselves up, all right, but they'd take the ship with them. However, a
sonic barrier now—"
"Run
it around the ship outside your work field—yes!" The Major was eager
again. "Would it take long to get it in?"
"We'd
have to bring a lot of equipment through. Say a day—maybe more. But it is the
only thing I can think of now
which might work."
"All right. You'll get all the material you need—on the double!" promised Kelgarries.
Wilson
chuckled. "Just like that, eh? No howls about expense? Remember, I'm not
going to sign any orders I have to defend with my h'feblood
about two years from now before some half-baked investigating committee."
"If
we pull this off," Kelgarries returned with
convincing force, "We'll never have to defend anything before anyone!
Man—you get that ship through intact and our whole project will have paid for
itself from the day it was nothing but a few wishful sentences on the back of
an old envelope. This is it— the big pay-off!"
That was the beginninning
of a hectic period in Travis' life which he was never able to sort out neatly
in his head afterward. With Ashe and Ross he patrolled a wide area of hill and
valley, keeping watch upon the camps of the wandering hunters, marking down
the drifting herds of animals.
For
two days men shutded back and forth and then erected
a second time transfer within the valley of the smaller ship.
Wilson's
sonic barrier—an invisible yet nerve-shattering wall of high-frequency
impulses—was in place around the ship. And while its signals did not affect
human ears, the tension it produced did reach any man who strayed into its
influence. The mammoth family withdrew into the small woodland from which they
had come. The men working on the globe did not know whether that retreat was
the result of the vibrations or not—but at least the beasts were gone.
Meanwhile
more sonic broadcasters were set up on every path in and out of the valley,
sealing it from invasion. Kel-garries and his
superiors were throwing every resource of the project into this one job.
About
the ship arose a framework of bars as fast as the men could fit one to another.
Travis, watching the careful deliberation of the fitting, understood that
delicate and demanding work was in progress. He learned from overheard comments
that a new type of time transfer was in the process of being assembled here,
and that one so large had never been attempted before. If the job was
successful, the globe would be carried intact through to his own era for
detailed study.
In
the meantime another small crew of experts not only explored the ship, taking
care not to activate any of its machines, but also made a detailed study of the
remains of the crew. Medical men did what they could to discover the cause for
the mass death of the space men. And their final verdict was a sudden attack of
disease or food poisoning, for there were no wounds.
Three
days—four—Travis, weary to his very bones, dragged back from a scouting trip
southward and hunched down by the fire in the small camp the three field men
kept on the heights above the crucial valley. The metallic taste in the air
rasped throat and lungs when he breathed deeply.
For
the past two days the volcanic activity in the north had become more intense.
Once the night before they had all been awakened by a display—luckily miles
away—during which half a mountain must have blown skyward. Twice torrents of
rain had hit, but it was warm rain and the sultriness of the air made
conditions now almost tropical. He would be very glad when that fretwork of
bars was in place and they could leave this muggy hotbox.
"See
anything?" Ross Murdock tossed aside the hide blanket he had pulled about
head and shoulders and coughed rasp-ingly as one of
the sulphur-tinged breezes curled about them.
"Migration—I
think," Travis qualified his report. "The big bison herd is already
well south and the hunters are following it."
"Don't
like the fireworks, I suppose." Ross nodded to the north. "And I
don't blame them. There's a forest burning up there today."
"Seen anything more of
the mammoths?"
"Not around here, I
was northeast anyway."
"How
long before they'll be through down there?" Travis went to look down at
the ship. There was a murky haze gathering about the valley and it was spoiling
the clearness of view. But men were still aloft on the scaffolding of
rods-hurrying to the final capping of the skeleton enclosure about the sphere.
"Ask
one of the brains. The other crew—the medics-finished their
poking this afternoon. They went through transfer an hour ago. I'd say
tomorrow they'll be ready to throw the switch on that gadget. About time. I have a feeling about this place. . . ."
"Maybe rightly." Ashe loomed out of the growing murk. "There's trouble popping to
the north." He coughed, and Travis suddenly noted that the mat of wig was
missing from the older man's head. He saw that there was a long red mark which
could only mark a burn down Ashe's shoulder, crossing
(he white seam of an
earlier scar. Ross, seeing it too, jumped (o his feet and turned Ashe toward
the light of the fire to inspect that burn closer.
"What
did you do—try to play boy on the burning deck?" His voice held an undernote of concern.
"I
miscalculated how fast a stand of green timber can burn —when conditions are
right. The top of a mountain did blow off last night, and that may have an
encore soon. We're moving down nearer to the transfer. And we may have
visitors—"
"Hunters? I saw them moving south—"
But Ashe was shaking his
head in answer to Travis.
"No,
but we may have been too clever about rigging that sonic screen. Those mammoths
have been holed up in a small sub-valley to the north. If the hell I'm
expecting now breaks loose, sonics won't hold them
back, but breaking through such a barrier will make them really wild. They
might just charge straight down through here. Kelgarries
will have to try his big transfer and quick if that happens."
The
scouts reached the floor of the valley in time to see the technicians dropping
from the grillwork and hurrying to the time transfer. But they had not come up
to the grill when the world went mad. Flame, noise, a thunder
in the north, a great up-leap of fire to scorch the underside of lowering
clouds. Travis was thrown off his feet as the ground crawled
sickeningly. He saw the grid sway about the globe, heard cries and shouts.
"—quake!"
A word out of the general clamor made sense of a sort. The volcanic outburst
was being matched by earthquake. Travis stared up at the grid fascinated,
expecting every moment to see the rods fly apart, come crashing down upon the
dome of the ship. But, strangely enough, though the framework swayed, it did
not fall.
In
the thickening murk Kelgarries drove his men to the
personnel transfer. Travis knew that he should join that line, but he was
simply too amazed by the scene to stir. The fogsmoke
was denser and out of it arose 1 a shout in a voice he recognized.
Getting to his feet, he ran to answer that plea for help.
Ashe
lay on the ground. Ross was bending over him, trying to get him to his feet. As
Travis blundered up, his spears thrown away, the smoke closed in and set them
to a strangled coughing. Travis' sense of direction faltered. Which way was the
time transfer? Light ashes drifting through the air blurred air and ground
alike—they might have been caught in a snowstorm.
He
heard a scream of sheer terror, scaling up. A black shape, larger than the
fruit of any nightmare, pounded into sight. The mammoths were charging
down-valley as Ashe had feared.
"—get
out!" Ross pulled Ashe to the right. Now the older man was between them,
stumbling dazedly along.
They
skirted the wall of rods about the globe, squeezed through to the ball. A
mammoth trumpeted behind them. There was little hope now of reaching the
personnel transfer in time and Ashe must have realized that. For
he pulled free of the other two and began to move around the ship, one hand on
its surface for guide.
Travis
guessed his reason—Ashe wanted to find the ladder which led to the open port,
use the ship as a refuge. He heard Ashe call, and slipped around behind him to
discover that the other held the ladder.
Ross
gave his officer a boost, then followed on his heels,
while Travis steadied the dangling ladder as best he could. He started to
ascend when he saw Ashe, only a dark blot, claw through the port above. He
heard again the screeching trumpet of a mammoth and wondered that the beasts
had not already smashed into the framework about the ship. Then he in turn was
able to scramble through the port, and lay gasping and
coughing, the irritation carried in the fog biting into nose and throat
tissues.
"Shut itl"
Travis was jerked roughly away from the door us someone pushed past him. The
outer covering closed with a clang. Now the fog was only a wisp or two, and
utter silence look
the place of the bedlam
outside.
Travis
drew a long breath, one which did not this time rasp in his throat. The bluish
light from the walls of the ship was subdued, but it was not so dim that he
could not see Ashe clearly. The older man lay with his head and shoulders
supported by the wall. A bruise was beginning to discolor on liis forehead, which was no longer shadowed by any wig.
Ross came back from the outer hatch.
"Kind of close quarters here," he
commented. "We might as well spread out some."
They
went out the inner door of the lock, and Murdock swung that shut behind them, a
move which was perhaps to save their lives.
"In here—" Murdock indicated the
nearest door. Those barriers which had been tightly closed on their first visit
to the ship had been opened by the technicians. And the cabin beyond contained
a furnishing which was a cross between a bunk and a hammock, being both fastened
to the wall and swung on straps from the ceiling. Together they guided Ashe to
it and got him down, still dazed. Travis had time for no more than a quick glance about when a voice rang down the well of the
stair.
"Hey! Who's down
there? What's going on?"
They
climbed to the control cabin. In front of them stood a wiry young man wearing
technician's coveralls, who stared at them wide-eyed.
"Who
are you?" he demanded, as he backed away, his fists up to repel an attack.
Travis
was completely bewildered until he caught sight of a reflection on the shining
surface of the control board—a dirty, three-quarters naked savage. And Ross was
his counterpart—the two of them must certainly look like savages to the
stranger. Murdock's hands went to his ash-encrusted wig and he peeled it off, a
gesture Travis copied. The technician relaxed.
"You're
time agents." He made that recognition sound close to an accusation.
"What's going on, anyway?"
"General blowup." Ross sat down suddenly and heavily in one of the swinging chairs.
Travis leaned against the wall. Here in this silent cabin it was difficult to
believe in the disaster and confusion without. "There's a volcanic
eruption in progress," Murdock continued. "And the mammoths charged—
just before we made it in here—"
The
technician started for the stairwell. "We've got to get to the
transfer."
Travis
caught his arm. "No getting out of the ship now. You can't even see—ash
too thick in the air."
"How
close were they to taking this ship through?" Ross wanted to know.
"All
ready, as far as I know," the technician began, and then added quickly,
"d'you mean they'll try to warp her through
now—with us inside?"
"It's
a chance, just a chance. If the grid survived the quake and
the mammoths." Ross's voice was a thin thread, overlaid with a
crust of fatigue. "We'll have to wait and see."
"We
can see—a little." The technician stepped to one
of the side panels his hand going to a button there.
Ross
moved, coming out of his seat in a spring which
rivaled a sabertooth's for speed and deadly purpose.
He struck out at the other, sent him sprawling on the floor. But not before the
button was pressed home. A plate arose from the board, glowed. Then, over the
head of the bewildered and angry technician still on his hands and knees, they
caught sight of swirling ash-filled vapor, as if they were looking through a
window into the valley.
"You fooll"
Ross stood over the technician, and the cold threat Travis had seen in him at their first
meeting was very much alive. "Don't touch anything in here!"
"Wise
guy, eh?" The technician, his face flushed and hard, was getting up, his
fists ready. "I know what I'm doing—"
"Look—out
there!" Travis' cry broke them apart before they tangled.
The
fogged picture still held. But there was something else to see there now. It
was a build up, bar by bar, square by open square of yellow-green lines of
light, possessing the brutal force of lightning but with none of its jagged
freedom. The pattern grew fast, dominated the gray of the drifting ash.
"The grid!" The technician broke away from Ross. With his hands on the back of one
of the swinging seats, he leaned forward eagerly to watch the vision plate.
"They've turned the power on. They're going to try to pull us
through!"
The
grid continued to glow—to scream with light. They could not watch it now
because of its eye-searing brilliance. Then the ship rocked. Another
earth quake—or something else? Before Travis could think clearly he was
caught up in a fury of sensation for which there had surely never been any
name, or any description possible. It was as if his flesh and his mind were at
war with each other. He gasped, writhed. The momentary discomfort he had felt
when he used the personnel transfer was nothing compared to this wrenching. He
tried to find some stability in a dissolving world.
Now
he was on the floor. Above him was the window on the outside. He lifted his
head slowly, his body felt as if he had been beaten. But that window display—there
was no gray now—no ashes falling as snow. All was blue, bright, metallic blue—a
blue he knew and that he wanted above him in safety. He staggered up, one hand
going out to that promise of blue. But about him still was that feeling of
instability.
"Wait!"
The technician's fingers caught his wrist in a hard, compelling grasp. He
dragged Travis away from the vision plate, tried to push him down in one of the
chairs. Ross was
beyond, his scarred hand clenched on the edge of a control panel until the seams
in the flesh stood out in ugly ridges. His face had lost that expression of
cold rage, his expression was intent, wary.
"What's going
on?" Ross asked harshly.
It
was the technician who gave a sharp order. "Get in that seat! Strap down!
If it's what I think, fella—" He shoved Ross
back into the nearest chair, and the other obeyed tamely as if he had not been
at blows with the man only moments earlier.
"We're
through time, aren't we?" Travis still watched that wonderful, peaceful
patch of blue sky.
"Sure—we're
through. Only how long we're going to stay here . . ." The technician
wavered to the third chair, that in which they had discovered the dead pilot
days earlier. He sat down with a suddenness close to
collapse.
"What
do you mean?" Ross's eyes narrowed, his dangerous look was coming back.
"Dragging
us through by the energy of the grid did something to the engines here. Don't
you feel that vibration, man? I'd say this ship was preparing for a
take-off!"
"What?" Travis was half out of his
seat. The technician leaned forward, sent him back into the full embrace of the
swinging chair with a quick shove. "Don't get any bright ideas about a
quick scram out of here, boy. Just look!"
Travis
followed the other's pointing finger. The stairwell through which they had
climbed to the cabin was now closed.
"Power's
on," the other continued. "I'd say we're going out pretty soon."
"We
can't!" Travis began and then shivered, knowing the futility of that
protest even as he shaped it.
"Anything
you can do?" Ross asked, his control once more
complete.
The
technician laughed, choked, and then waved his hand at the array on the control
board. "Just what?" he asked grimly. "I know the use of exactly
three little buttons here. We never dared experiment with the rest without
dismantling all the installations and tracing them through. I can't stop or
start anything. So we're off to the moon and points up,
whether we like it or not."
"Anything
they can do out there?" 'Travis turned back to that patch of blue. He knew
nothing about the machines, even about the science of mechanics. He could only
hope that somewhere, somehow, someone would put an end to this horror which
they faced.
The
technician looked at him and then laughed again. "They can clear out in a
hurry. If there's a backwash when we blast off, a lot of good guys may get thsirs."
That
vibration, which Travis had sensed on his revival from the strain of the time
transport, was growing stronger. It came not only from the walls and flooring
of the cabin, but seemingly from the very air he was gulping in quick, shallow
breaths. The panic of utter helplessness made him sick, dried his mouth,
gripped in twisting pain at his middle.
"How
long—?" he heard Ross ask, and saw the technician shake his head.
"Your guess is as good
as mine."
"But
why? How?" Travis asked hoarsely.
"That
pilot, the one they found sitting here . . ." The technician rapped the
edge of the control board with his fingers. "Maybe he set automatic
controls before he crashed. Then the time transfer—that energy triggered action
somewhere. . . . But I'm only guessing."
"Set automatic controls for where?" Ross's tongue swept over his lips as if they
were dry.
"Home, maybe. This is
it, boys—strap in!"
Travis
fumbled with the straps of the seat, pulled them across his body clumsily. He,
too, felt that last quiver of addition to the vibration.
Then a hand, an invisible hand as large, as
powerful as a mammoth's foot, crushed down upon him.
Under his body the seat straightened out into a swaying bed. He was fastened on
it, unable to breathe, to think, to do more than feel, endure somehow the pain
of flesh and bone under the pressure of that take-off. The blue square was one
moment before his aching eyes—and then there was only blackness.
7
Travis
came back to consciousness
slowly, painfully, aware of a kind of inner bruising before he could assemble
his thoughts coherently. He tasted the stale flatness of blood when he tried to
swallow and found it hard to focus his eyes. That vision plate which had last
been blue was now a dull black. As he moved the slung seat-bed under him swung violendy, though the effort he had made was small. Slowly,
with caution, he raised his body, pushing up with both hands.
On another
swinging cot lay* Ross Murdock, the lower part of his face caked with blood,
his eyes closed, his skin a greenish white under the heavy tan and stain. The
technician seemed to be in no better state. But under them, around them, the
cabin was now quite, devoid of either sound or vibration. Recognizing that,
Travis fumbled with the strap across his middle, tried to get up.
This
attempt brought disastrous results. His efforts drove him away from his
support, right enough. But his feet did not touch the floor. Instead he plunged
out, weightless, to bring up against the edge of the main control board with
force enough to raise a little yelp of pain. Panic-stricken, he held on to the
board, pulling himself along until he could reach die technician. He tried to
rouse the other, his methods growing rougher when they did not appear to be
answered by any signs of returning consciousness.
Finally
the man groaned, turned his head, and opened his eyes. As awareness grew in
their depths, so did surprise and fear.
"What—what happened?" The words
were slurred. "You hurt?"
Travis drew the back of his hand across mouth
and chin, brought it away clotted with blood. He must
look as bad as Ross.
"Can't walk." He introduced the foremost problem of the
moment. "Just—float. . . ."
"Float?"
repeated the technician, then he struggled up,
unfastened his belt. "Then we are through—out
of gravityl We're in
space!"
Jumbled
fragments of articles he had read arose out of Travis' memory. Free of
gravity—no up, down—no weight-He was nauseated, his head spinning badly, but
keeping hold of the board he worked his way past the technician to Ross.
Murdock was already stirring, and as Travis laid hand on his seat he moaned,
his fingers sweeping aimlessly across his chest as if to soothe some hurt
there. Travis gently caught the other's bloody chin, shaking his head slowly
from side to side upon the gray eyes opened.
".
. . and that's it, we're out!" Case Renfry, the
technician, shook his head at the flood of questions from the time scouts.
"Listen, fellas, I was loaned to this project to
help with the breakdown appraisal. I can't fly any ship, let alone this one— so
it must be on automatic controls."
"Set
by the dead pilot. Then it should go back to his base," Travis suggested
gloomily.
"You
are forgetting one thing." Ross sat up with care, keeping firm hold on
his mooring with both hands. "That pilot's base is twelve thousand years
or so in the past. They warped us through time before we took off—"
"And
we can't go home?" Travis demanded again of the technician.
"I wouldn't try meddling with any key on
that board," Renfry said, shaking his head.
"If we're flying on automatic controls, the best thing is to keep on to
the destination and then see what we can do."
"Only
there are a few other things to consider—such as food, water, air
supplies," Travis pointed out.
"Yes—air,"
Ross underlined with chilling soberness. "How long might we be on the
way?"
Renfry
grinned weakly. "Your guess is as good as mine. The air supply is all right—I
think. They had a going plant in the ship and Stefferds
said it was in perfect working order. Keep it fresh by some species of algae in
a sealed section. You can look in at jt but you can't
contaminate the place. And they breathed about the same mixture as we do. But
as to food and water—we'd better look around. Three of us to feed . . ."
"Four!
There's Ashe!" Ross, forgetting where he was, tried to jump free of his
seat and swam forward in a tangle of flailing legs and arms until Renfry drew him down.
"Take
it easy, mighty easy, fella. Hit the wrong button
while you're putting on a dive act that way and we could be worse off than we
are. Who's Ashe?"
"Our section chief. We stowed him in a cabin down below, he had
had a bad knock on the head."
Travis
aimed for the well leading to the center section of the globe. He overshot,
bounced back, and was thankful when his fingers closed on the bar of its cover.
They got it open and made their way clumsily in a direction Travis still
thought of—in spite of the evidence of his eyes—as "down."
To
descend into the heart of the ship required an agility which was a torment to
their bruised and aching bodies. But when they at last reached the cabin they
found Ashe still safely stowed in the bunk, far better tended against the force
of the take-off than they had been. For only his peaceful face showed above a
thick mass of a jelly substance which filled llic
interior of the bunk-hammock.
"He'll
be all right. That's the stuff they keep in their lifeboats to patch up the injured—saved
my life once," Ross identified. "A regular cure for
anything."
"How
do you know so much?" Renfry began, and then,
his eyes wonderingly on Ross, he added, "why—you must be the guy who was
with the Reds on that ship they were stripping!"
"Yes.
But I'd like to know a little more about this one. Food —water. . . ."
They
went exploring"in Renfry's
wake, discovering adaption to weightlessness a hard job, but determined to
learn what they could of the best, and the worst, of their predicament. The technician
had been all through the ship and now he displayed to them the air-renewal
unit, the engine room, and the crew's quarters. They made a detailed
examination of what could only be a mess cabin combined with kitchen. It was a
cramped space in which no more than four men—or man-like beings—could fit at
one time.
Travis
frowned at the rows of sealed containers racked in the cupboards. He extracted
one, shook it near his ear, and was rewarded by a gurgle which made him run a
dry tongue over his blood-stained lips. There must be liquid of a sort inside,
and he could not remember now when he had had a really satisfying drink.
"This
is water—if you want a drink." Renfry brought a Terran canteen out, of a corner. "We had four of these
on board, used 'em while we were working."
Travis
reached for the metal bottle, but did not uncap it after all. "Still have
all four?" Perhaps more than any of the rest on board he
knew the value of water, the disaster of not having it.
Renfry brought them out, shaking each. "Three
sound full. This one's about half—maybe a little less." "We'll have
to go on rations."
"Sure,"
the technician agreed. "Think there're some concentrate food tablets
here, too. You fellas have any of those?"
"Ashe
still had his supply bag with him, didn't he?" Travis asked Ross.
"Yes.
And we'd better see how many of the tablets we can find."
Travis
looked at the alien container which had gurgled. At the moment he would have
given a great deal to be able to force the lid, to drink its contents and ease
both thirst and hunger.
"We
may have to come to trying these." Renfry took
the container from the scout, fitted it back into the holder space.
"I'd
guess we'll have to try a lot of things before this trip is over—if it ever is.
Right now I'd like to try a bath, or at least a wash." Ross surveyed his
own scratched, half-naked, and very dirty body with marked disfavor.
"That
you can have.
Come on."
Again
Renfry played guide, bringing them to a small cubbyhole
beyond the mess cabin. "You stand on that—maybe you can hold yourself in
place with those." He pointed to some rods set in the wall. "But get
your feet down on that round plate and then press the circle in the waE."
"Then
what happens? You roast or broil?" Travis inquired with suspicion.
"No—this
really works. We tried it on a guinea pig yesterday. Then Harvey Bush used it
after he upset a can of oil all over him. It's rather like a shower."
Ross
jerked at the ties of his disreputable kilt and kicked off his sandals, his
movements sending him skidding from wall to wall. "All
right. I'm willing to try." He got his feet on the plate, holding
himself in position by the rods, and then pressed the circle. Mist curled from
under the edge of the floor plate, enveloped his legs, rose
steadily. Renfry pushed shut the door.
"Hey!" protested
Travis, "he's being gassed!"
"It's
okay!" Ross's voice, disembodied, came from beyond. "In fact—it's
better than okay!"
When
he came out of the fogged cubby a few minutes later, the grime and much of the
stain were gone from his body. Moreover, scratches which had been raw and red
were now only faint pinkish lines. Ross was smiling.
"All the comforts of home. I don't know what that stuff is, but it
peals you right down to your second layer of hide and makes you like it. The
first good thing we've found in this mousetrap."
Travis shucked his kilt a litde
more slowly. He didn't relish being shut into that gassy box, but neither did
he enjoy the present state of his person. Gingerly he stepped, or skipped, onto
the floor disk, got his feet flattened on its surface, and pressed the circle,
holding his breath as the gassy substance puffed up to enfold him.
The
stuff was not altogether a gas, he discovered, for it had more body than any
vapor. Rather, it was as if he were immersed in a flood of frothy bubbles which
rubbed and slicked across his skin with the even pressure of a vigorous
toweling. Grinning, he relaxed and, closing his eyes, ducked his head under the
surface. He felt the smooth swish across his face, drawing the sting out of
scratches and the ache out of his bruises and bumps.
When
the bubbles ebbed- and Travis stepped out of the cubby, he was met by a changed
Ross. The latter was just hitching up over his broad shoulders the upper part
of a tight, blue-green suit which clung to his body, modeling every muscle as
he moved. One piece, its stocking covering for legs
and feet were soled with a thick sponge which
cushioned each step. Ross picked another bundle of blue-green from the floor
and tossed it to the Apache.
"Compliments
of the house," he said. "I certainly never thought I'd want to wear
one of these again."
"Their
uniforms?"
Travis remembered the dead pilot.
"What
is this—silk?" He rubbed his hand over the sleek surface of a fabric he
could not identify, and was attracted by the play of color—blue, green,
lavender. It rippled from one shade to another as the material moved.
"Yes.
It has its good points, all right—insulated against cold and heat, for one
thing. For another, it can be traced."
Travis
paused, his arm half through the right sleeve. "Traced?"
"Well,
I was trailed over about fifty miles of pretty rugged territory because I was
wearing one like this. And they tried to get at me mentally, too, when I had it
on. Went to sleep one night and woke up heading right back to the boys who
wanted to collect me."
Travis
stared, but it was plain Ross meant every word he said. Then the Apache glanced
down again at the silky stuff he was wearing, with an impulse to strip it off.
Yet Murdock in spite of his story, was fastening the
studs which ran from one shoulder to the other hip of his own garment.
"If
we were in the right time, I wouldn't touch this with a fifty-foot pole,"
Ross continued, smiling wryly. "But, seeing as how we are some thousands
of years removed from the rightful owners, I'll take the chance. As I said,
these suits do have some points in their favor."
Travis
snapped his own studs together. The material felt good, smooth, a little warm,
almost as soothing as the foam bubbles which had scoured and energized his
tired body. He was willing to chance wearing the uniform; it was infinitely
better than the hide garment he had discarded.
They
were learning to navigate through weightlessness. The usual form of progress
approached swimming, and they found convenient handholds to draw them along. If
Travis could forget that the ship was boring on into the unknown, their present
lodging had a lot to recommend it. But when the four of them gathered in the
control cabin an hour or so later, they prepared to consider the major problem
with what objectivity they could summon.
Ashe,
alertly himself again, fresh from the healing of the aliens' treatment, held
the leadership by unspoken consent. Only it was to Renfry
that the three time scouts looked for liope. The
technician had little to offer.
"The
pilot must have set the ship's controls on some type of homing device just
before he died. I'm just guessing at Ibis, you
understand, but it is the only explanation to make sense now. When we explored
here, my chief, working from what he knew of the tape records from the Russian
headquarters, traced three installations: the-one giving outside vision,"
he began, tapping lightly on the plate which had been blue for those few
precious moments before their involuntary lake-off. "Another
which is the inside com system connecting speakers all over the ship. And a third—this." He pressed a lever to its head in a
slot. Three winks of light showed on the hoard and out of the air above their
heads came a sound which might have been a word in an unknown tongue."
"And what is that?" Ashe watched the lights with interest.
"Guns! We have four ports open now, and a weapon in each ready to fire. It was
the chief's guess that this was—is— a small military scout, or police patrol
ship." He clicked the lever back into place and the lights were gone.
"Not
very helpful now," Ross commented. "What about I lie chances for getting back home?"
Renfry shrugged. "Not a chance that I can see
so far. Krankly, I'm afraid to do any poking around
these controls while we're in space. There is too good a chance of stopping and
not getting started again—either forward or back."
"That
makes sense. So well just have to keep on going to
whatever port for which your controls are now set?"
Renfry nodded. "Not my controls, though, sir. This—all of IIiis—is
far advanced, and different—beyond our planes. Maybe, if I had time, and we
were safely on ground, I could discover how the engines tick, but what makes
them do so would still be another problem." "Atomic fuel?"
"Even that I can't say. The engines are completely sealed. That
sealing may be atomic shielding, we didn't dare pry
too far."
"And
home port may be anywhere in the universe," mused Ashe. "They had
some type of distance-time jump—voyages couldn't have lasted centuries."
Renfry was
studying the banks of buttons and levers with an expression of complete
exasperation. "They could have every gadget in a fiction writer's
imagination, sir, and we wouldn't know it—until the thing did or didn't
work!"
"Quite a prospect." Ashe got up with the careful motions of a
novice in no-weight. "I think a detailed exploration of the rest of our
present home is now in order."
There
were three of the small living cabins, each equipped with two bunk-hammocks.
And by experimenting with the wall panels they discovered clothing, personal
effects of the crew. Travis did not like to empty those shallow cupboards and
handle those possessions of dead men. But he did his share during the hunt for
some clue which might mean the difference between life and death for the
present passengers. He had opened a last small cavity in one locker when he
caught a promising glitter. He picked up the object and found himself holding a
rectangle of some slick material with the texture of glass. It was milky white,
blank when he picked it up. But the chill of the first touch faded as he turned
it over curiously. The rim was bordered in a band of tiny flashing bits of
yellow which might be gem stones—framing blank-ness
instead of a picture.
A
picture! If he could hold a picture of a far place—what sort would it be? Family—home—friends? He watched the plain surface within the
border. Plain—? There was something there! Color was seeping up to the surface, spreading;
outlines were becoming solid. Bewildered, almost frightened, Travis studied
that changing scene.
He
did have a picture now. And one he knew. It was an entirely familiar scene—a
stretch of desert and mountains. Why, he might be standing on the cliffs
looking toward Red Horse CanyonI He wanted to throw
the thing from him. How could an alien who lived twelve thousand years ago
carry among his belongings a_picture of the country
Travis knew as home? It was unbelievable—unreall
"What
is it, son?" Ashe's hand was real on his arm, Ashe's voice warm through
the chill congealing inside him as he continued to stare at the thing he held,
the thing which, in spite of its familiar beauty, was wrong, terrible. . . .
"Picture . . ."
he mumbled. "Picture of my home—here."
"What?"
Ashe stopped closer and gave an exclamation, took the block out of Travis'
hands. The younger man wiped his sweating palms down his thighs, trying to wipe
away the touch of that weird picture.
But, as he watched the desert scene, he cried
out. For it was fading away, the colors were absorbed in the original white.
The outlines of cliffs and mountains were gone. Ashe held the plaque up in both
of his hands. And now there was a new stirring in the depths, a murky flowing
as again a scene grew into sharp brilliance.
Only
this was not the desert, but a stand of tall, green trees Travis recognized as
pines. Below them was a strand of gray-white sand, and
beyond the pound of waves lashing high in foam against fanged rocks. Above that
resdess water white birds hung.
"Safeharborl" Ashe sat down suddenly on the bunk and I lie picture shook as his hands trembled. "That's the
beach by my home in Maine—in Maine, I tell you! Safeharbor,
Maine! Hut how did this get here?" His expression was one of dazed
bewilderment.
"To me it showed my home also,"
Travis said slowly. "And now to you another scene.
Perhaps to the man who once lived in this cabin it also showed his home. This
is a magic thing, I think. Not of the magic which your people
have harnessed to do their will, nor of the magic of my Old Ones
either." Somehow the thought that this object bewildered the white man as
much as it did him took away a little of the fear. Ashe raised his eyes from
the scene of shore and sea to meet Travis'. Slowly he nodded.
"You
may be guessing, but I'll stake a lot on your guess
being right. What they knew, these people—what wonders they knew! We must learn
all we can, follow them."
Travis
laughed shakily. "Follow them we are, Doctor Ashe. About the
learning—well, we shall see."
8
A figuhe edged along the narrow corridor, his
cushioned feet barely touching the floor. In the timeless interior of the
spaceship where there was no change between day and night, Travis had had to wait
a long time for this particular moment. His brown hands, too thin nowadays,
played with the fastening of his belt. Under that was a gnawing ache which
never left him now.
They had stretched their water supply with
strict rationing, and the concentrate tablets the same way. But tomorrow —or
in the next waking period they would arbitrarily label
"tomorrow"—they would have only four of those small squares. And
Travis was keenly aware of not only that indisputable fact but of something
which Ross had said that day when they had argued out the need for experiment
with alien food supplies.
GALACTIC DE
R-E'L I C T
"Case
Renfry," the younger time agent had pointed out
the obvious, "is certainly not going to be your tester. If we are ever
going to be able to find out what makes this bus tick and get it started home
again, he's the one to do it. And, chief-he had then turned upon
Ashe—"you've the best brain—it's up to you to help him. Maybe somewhere in
this loot we've found you can locate a manual, or a do-it-yourself tape that'll
give us a fair break."
They
had been pulling over the material they had found in the cabins. Objects such
as the disappearing picture were set aside on the hope that Ashe, with his
archaeologist's training in the penetration of age-old mysteries, might
understand them through study.
"Which,"
Ross had continued," leaves the food problem up to a volunteer—me."
Travis
had remained quiet, but he had also made plans. He had already followed Ross's
reasoning to a logical end, but his conclusion differed from Murdock's. Of the
four men on board he, not Murdock, was certainly the most expendable. And the
history of his people testified to the fact that Apaches possessed the toughest
of digestive apparatus. They had been able to live off the natural products of
a land where other races starved. So—he was now engaged in his own private
project.
Last sleep period he had tackled the first
container chosen from the supply cupboard, the one which had sloshed when
shaken. He had swallowed two large mouthfuls of a sickly sweet substance with
the consistency of stew. And, while the taste had not been pleasant, Travis had
suffered no discomfort afterward. Now he chose a small round can, prying off
the lid quickly while listening for any warning from the corridor.
He had left Ross asleep in the small cabin
they shared, had looked in upon Renfry and Ashe
before he made this trek.
There
was so little time and he had to wait a reasonable period between each tasting.
Travis
wanted a drink, but he knew better than to take one. He had palmed his
concentrate tablet at the last "meal," held the canteen to his mouth but
not drunk, keeping his stomach empty. Now he studied his new selection with disgust.
A
brown jelly, it quivered slightly with the movement of the cylinder in his
hand, its surface reflecting the light. Using the edge of the lid as an
improvised spoon, Travis ladled a portion into his mouth. Unlike the stew the
stuff had little flavor, though he did not relish the greasy feel on his
tongue. He swallowed, took a second helping. Then he chose a third sample—a
square box. He would wait. If there were no ill effects from
the jelly—then this. If he could prove four or five of these different
containers held food the Terrans could stomach, they
might have enough to outlast the voyage.
He
did not return to his bunk. The magnetic bottoms of each container clung to the
surface of the table, just as the thick soles of his suit feet clung to.the walking surfaces in the ship when he planted them
firmly. They had all adapted in a measure to the lack of gravity and the actual
conditions of space flight. But Travis had a sturggle
to conceal his dislike of the ship itself, of the confinement forced upon
them. And now, to sit alone brought him a fraction of comfort, for he dared to
relax that strict control.
He
had enjoyed the venture into time. The prehistoric world had been an open
wilderness he could understand. But the ship was different. It seemed to him
that the taint of death still clung to its small cabins, the narrow corridors
and ladders, that the very alienness of it was a
menace far more acute than a sabertooth or a mammoth
in a rocking charge.
Once
he had believed that he wanted to know more about the Old Ones. He had wanted
to probe the mysteries which could be deduced from bits of broken pottery or an
arrowhead pried from a dust-filled crevice in a cave. But those Old Ones had
been distantly akin to him—those who had built this ship were not. For a moment
or two his claustrophobia welled up, shaking his control, making him want to
batter the walls about him with his fists, to beat his way out of this shell into
the light, the air—freedom.
But
outside these walls there was no light, no air, and only the freedom of
vacuum—or of the mysterious hyperspace which canceled the distance between the
stars. Travis fought his imagination. He could not face that picture of the
ship hanging in an emptiness where perhaps there were not even the frigid
points of light to mark the stars—where there was nothing solid and stable.
The
travelers could only hope that sometime they would reach the home port for
which the dying alien pilot had set the controls. But that course had been set
twelve thousand —perhaps more—years ago. What port would they find waiting
beyond the wall of time? Twelve—fifteen thousand years. . . . These were
figures too great for the normal comprehension of ordinary man. At that time
on earth, the first mud-walled villages had not yet been built, nor the first
patch of grain sown to turn man from a wandering hunter to the householder, the
landowner. What had the Apache been then —and the white man? Roving
hunters with skill in spear and knife and the running down of game. Yet
it was at that time that these aliens had produced this ship, voyaged space,
not only between the planets of a single system, but from star to starl
Travis
tried to think of their future, but his thoughts kept sliding back to the
pressing urge to be in the open. He yearned to stand under the sun with
wind—yes, even a desert wind hot and laden with grit—blowing against him. That
longing was as acute as a pain—a paint
His hands went to his middle. A sudden thrust
of pure agony had rent him and it was not born out of any homesickness. The
cramping was physical and very real. He bent half double, trying to ease that
hot clawing in his insides as the cabin misted before his eyes. Then the stab
was gone, and he straightened—until it caught him again. This was it. His luck
at his second attempt with the alien food was bad.
Somehow
he got to his feet, lurched against the table as a
third bout of cramps caught him. The torture ebbed, leaving his hands and face
wet. And in the few moments before the next pang he made it halfway along the
corridor, reaching the haven he sought just as his outraged stomach finally
revolted.
Travis
would not have believed that two mouthfuls of a greasy jelly could so weaken a
man. He pulled his spent body back to the mess cabin, dropping limply into a
chair. More than anything now he wanted water, to cleanse the foulness from his
mouth, to slake the burning in his throat. The canteens mocked him for he dare not take one up, knowing just how little of the
precious liquid still remained.
For
a while he hunched over the table, weakly glad of his freedom from pain. Then
he drew the can of jelly to him. This must be marked poisonous. Only two
containers had been tested—and how many more would prove impossible?
Only
five concentrate tablets were left, counting the one he had hidden that day.
Nothing was going to multiply that five into ten—or into two hundred. If they
were to survive the voyage of unknown duration, they must use some of this other food. But Travis could not control the shaking of
his hands as he worked to free the lid of the square box. Maybe he was rushing
things, taking another sample so soon after the disastrous effects of the
other. But he knew that if he did not, right here and now, he might not be able
to force himself to the third attempt later.
The
lid came free and he saw inside dry squares of red. To his questing finger
these had the texture of something between bread and a harder biscuit. He
raised the can to sniff. For the first time the odor was faintly familiar.
Tortillas paper-thin and crisp from the baking had an aroma not unlike this.
And because the cakes did arouse pleasant memories, Travis bit into one with
more eagerness than he would have believed possible moments earlier.
The
stuff crumbled between his teeth like com bread, and he thought the flavor was
much the same, in spite of the unusual color. He chewed and swallowed. And the
mouthful, dry as it was, appeared to erase the burning left by the jelly. The
taste was so good that he ventured to take more than a few bites, finishing the
first cake and then a second. Finally, still holding the box in one hand, he
slumped lower in his seat, his eyes closing as his worn body demanded rest.
He
was riding. There was the entrance to Red Horse Dan-yon, and the scent of
juniper was in the air. A bird flew up— his eyes followed that free flight. An
eagle! The bird of power, ascending far up into a cloudless
sky. But suddenly the sky was no longer blue, but black with a blackness
not born of normal night. It was black, and caught in it were stars. The stars
grew swiftly larger—because he was being drawn up into the blackness where
there were only stars. . . .
Travis
opened heavy-lidded eyes, looked up foggily at a blue figure. Looming over him
was a thin, drawn face, slight hollows marking the cheeks, dark smudges under
cold gray eyes.
"Ross!"
The Apache lifted his head from his arm, wincing at the painful crick in his
back.
The
other sat down across the table, glanced from the array of supply containers to
Travis and back again.
"So
this is what you've been doing!" There was accusation in his tone, almost
a note of outrage.
"You said yourself it
was a job for the most expendable."
"Trying to be a hero on the quiet!" Now the accusation was plain and hot.
"Not
much of a one." Travis rested his chin on his fist and considered the
containers lined up before him. "I've sampled three so far—exactly
three."
Ross's
eyelids flickered down. His usual control was back in place, though Travis did
not doubt the antagonism was still eating at him.
"With
what results?"
"Number
one"—Travis indicated the proper can—"too sweet, kind of a stew—but
it stays with you in spite of the taste. This is number two." He tapped
the tin of brown jelly. "I'd say its only use
was to get rid of wolves. This"—he cradled the can of red cakes—"is
really good."
"How long have you
been at it?"
"I tried one last
sleep period, two this."
"Poison,
eh?" Ross picked up the tin of jelly, inspecting its contents.
"If
it isn't poison, it puts up a good bluff," Travis shot back a little
heatedly, stung by the suggestion of skepticism.
Ross
set it down. "I'll take your word for it," he conceded. "What
about this little number?" He had arisen to stand before the cupboard,
and now he turned, holding a shallow, round container. The secret of its
fastening was harder to solve, but when it was open at last they looked at some
small balls in yellow sauce.
"D'you know, those might just be
beans," Ross observed. "I've yet to see any service ship where beans
in some form or other didn't turn up on the menu. Let's see if they eat like
beans." He scooped up a good mouthful and chewed thoughtfully.
"Beans—no—I'd say they taste more like cabbage— which had been spiced up a
bit. But not bad, not bad at all!"
Travis
found himself nursing a small wicked desire to have the cabbage-beans do their
worst to Ross, not with as devastating results as the jelly—he wouldn't wish that on anyonel But if they would just make
themselves felt enough to prove to Murdock that food testing was not as easy as
all that. . . .
"Waiting for them to
turn me inside out?" Ross grinned.
Travis
flushed and then the stain spread and deepened on his cheeks as he realized how
he had given himself away. He pushed the cracker-bread to one side and got up
to select with inward—if not outward—defiance a tall cylinder which sloshed as
he pried at its cap.
"Misery
loves company," Ross continued. "What does that smell like?"
Travis
had been encouraged by his discovery of the bread. He sniffed hopefully at the
cone opening and then snatched the holder away from his nose as a white froth
began to puff out.
"Maybe
you have the push-button soap," Ross commented unhelpfully. "Give the
stuff a lick, fella, you have only one stomach to
lose for your country."
Travis, so goaded, licked—suspicious and expecting something entirely
unpalatable.
But, to his surprise, though it was sweet, the froth was not so
sickly as the stew had been. Rather, the result on the tongue was refreshing,
carrying satisfaction for his craving for water. He gulped a bigger mouthful
and sat waiting, a little tensely, for fireworks to begin inside him.
"Good?"
Ross inquired. "Well, your luck can't be rotten all the time."
"This
luck is mixed." Travis capped the foam which had continued to boil
wastefully from the bottle. "We're alive— and we're still traveling."
"Traveling
is right. A little more information as to our destination would be useful and
comforting—or the reverse."
"The
world the builders of this ship owned can't be too different from ours,"
Travis repeated observations made earlier by Ashe. "We can breathe their
air without discomfort, and maybe eat some of their food."
"Twelve
thousand years. . . . D'you know,
I can say that but I can't make it mean anything real." Ross's hostility
had
either
vanished or been submerged. "You say the words but you can't stretch your
imagination to make them picture something for you—or do you know what I
mean?" he challenged.
Travis,
rasped on an ancient raw spot, schooled down some heat before he replied. "A little. I did four years at State U. We don't wear
our blankets and feathers all the
time."
Ross glanced up, a flicker of puzzlement in those cold gray
eyes. \
"I
didn't mean it like that—for what it's worth." Then he smiled and for the
first time there was nothing superior or sardonic in that expression.
"Want the whole truth, fella? I picked up what
education I had before I went into the Project the hard way—no State U. But you
studied the chief's racket —archaeology—didn't you?"
"Yes."
"So—what
does twelve thousand years mean to you? You deal with time in big doses, don't
you?"
"That's
a long span on our world, jumps one clear back to the cave period."
"Yeah—before
they put up the pyramids of Egypt—before they learned to read and write. Well,
twelve thousand years ago, these blue boys had the stars for theirs. But I'm
betting they haven't kept them! There hasn't been a single country on our
world, not even China, that has had a form of civilization lasting that long.
Up they climb and then—" he snapped his fingers. "It's kaput for
them, and another top dog takes over the power. So maybe when we get to this
port Renfry believes we're homing
for, well find nothing, or else someone else waiting for us there. You can bet
one way or another and have a good chance of winning on either count. Only, if
we do find nothing—then maybe our number's up for sure."
Travis
had to accept the logic of that. Suppose they did come into a port which had
ceased to exist, set down on a strange world from which they could not lift
again because they had not the skill to pilot the ship. They would be exiles
for the rest of their lives in a space uncharted by their kind. "We're not
dead yet," Travis said.
Ross
laughed. "In spite of all our efforts? No—that's
our private battle cry, I think. As long as a man's alive he's going to keep
kicking. But it would be good to know just how long we're going to be shut up
in this ship." His usual half flippancy of tone thinned over that last as
if his carefully cultivated self-sufficiency was beginning to show the slimmest
of cracks.
In
the end their experiments with the food were partially successful. The crackers
Travis continued to label "com"; the foam and Ross's cabbag-beans could be digested by the interior apparatus of
a human being without difficulty. And they added to that list a sticky paste
with the consistency of jam and a flavor approaching bacon, and another
cake-like object which, though it had a sour tang that puckered the mouth, was
still edible. Greatly daring, Travis tapped the aliens' water supply and drank.
Though the liquid had a metallic aftertaste which the drinker could not relish,
it was not harmful.
In addition the younger members of the
involuntary crew made themselves useful in the cautious investigations carried
on by Ashe and Renfry. The technician was in an
almost constant state of frustration during the hours he spent in the control
cabin trying to study machines he dared not activate or dismantle for the
fuller examination he longed to make. Travis was seated behind him one
morning—at least it was ten o'clock by Renfry's
watch, their only method of time-keeping —when there was a change to report, to report and take action on.
A
shrill buzz pierced the usual silence, beeping what must be a warning. Renfry grabbed at the small mike of the ship's com circuit.
"Strap
down!" He rasped the order with rising
excitement. "There's an alert sounding here—we may be coming in to land.
Strap down!"
Travis grabbed at the protecting bands on his
chair. Below they must be scrambling for the bunks. There was vibration
again—he was sure he could not mistake that. The ship no longer felt inert and
drifting—she was coming alive.
What
followed was again beyond his powers of description. The action came in two
parts, the first a queasy whirl of sensation not far removed from what they
had experienced when the ship had been whirled through the time transfer. Limp
from that, Travis lay back, watching the vision plate which had been blank for
so long. And when his eyes caught what was not appearing there, he gave a cry
of recognition.
"That's the sun!"
A point of blazing yellow
set a beacon in the black of space.
"A sun," Renfry
corrected. "We've made the big hop. Now it's the homestretch—into the
system. . . ."
That
blaze of yellow-red was already sliding away from the plate. Travis had an
impression that the ship must be slowly rotating. Now that the brighter glare of
the sun was gone he could pick up a smaller dot, far smaller than the star
which nurtured it. That held steady on the. plate.
"Something
tells me, boy," Renfry said in a small and
hesitant voice, "that's where we're going."
"Earth?" A warm surge of hope spread through Travis.
"An
earth maybe—but not ours."
9
"We're
down." Renfry's voice, thin, harsh, broke the silence of the
control cabin. His hands moved to the edge of the panel of levers and buttons
before him, fell helplessly on it. Though he had had nothing
to do with that landing, he seemed drained by some great effort.
"Home port?" Travis got the words out between dry lips. The descent had not been as nerve- and body-wracking as their take-off from his native
world, but it had been bad enough. Either the aliens' bodies were better atuned to the tempo of their ships, or else one acquired,
through painful experience, a conditioning to such wrenching.
"How
would I know?" Renfry flared, plainly eaten by
his own frustration.
Their
window on the outside world, the vision plate, did mirror sky again. But not
the normal Terran sky with its blue blaze which
Travis knew and longed to see again. This was a blue closer to green, assuming
the hue of the turquoise mined in the hills. There was something cold, inimical
in that sky.
Cutting
up into the open space was a structure which gave off a metallic glint. But the
smooth sweep of those dull red surfaces ended in a jagged splinter, raw against
the blue-green, plainly marking a ruin.
Travis
unfastened his seat straps and stumbled to his feet, his body once more
adjusting clumsily to the return of gravity. As much as he had come to dislike
the ship, to want his freedom from it, at this moment he had no desire to
emerge under that turquoise sky and examine the ruin pictured on the plate. And
just because he did have that reluctance, he fought against it by going.
In
the end they all gathered at the space lock while Renfry
mastered the fastening, then went on to the outer door. The technician glanced
back over his shoulder.
"Helmets
fastened?" His voice boomed hollowly inside the sphere now resting on
Travis' shoulders and made a part of him by a close-fitting harness. Ashe had
discovered those and had tested them, preparing for this time when they had to
dare a foray into the unknown. The bubble was equipped with no cumbersome
oxygen tanks. It worked on no principle Renfry was
able to discover, but the aliens had used these and the Terrans
must trust to their efficiency now.
The
outer port swung back into the skin of the ship. Renfry
kicked out the landing ladder, turned to back down it. But each of them, as he
emerged from the globe, glanced quickly around.
.
What lay below was a wide sweep of hard white surface which must cover miles of
territory. This was broken at intervals by a series of structures of the dull
red, metallic material set in triangles and squares. In the center of each of
those was a space marked with black rings. None of the red structures was
whole, and the landing field—if that was what it was—had the sterile atmosphere
of a place long abandoned.
"Another
ship. . . ." Ashe's arm swung up, his voice came to Travis through the
helmet com.
There
was a second of the globes, right enough, reposing in one of the
building-cornered squares perhaps a quarter of a mile away. And beyond that
Travis spotted a third. But nowhere was there any sign of life. He felt wind,
soft, almost caressing, against his bare hands.
They
descended the ladder and stood in a group at the foot of their own ship, a
little uncertain as to what to do next.
"Wait!"
Renfry caught at Ashe. "Something moved—over
there!"
They had found weapons in the ship; now they
drew those odd guns, twin to the one Ross had had when Travis had first met
him. The wind blew, a fragment of long-dread vegetation
balled before it, caught against the globe and then was whirled
away in a dreary dance.
But out of an opening at the foot of the red
tower nearest to them something was issuing. And Travis, watching that coil
snapping straight for them, froze. A snake? A snake
unwinding to such a length that its reaching head was
approaching their stand while the end of its tail still lay within the ruin
where it denned?
He
took aim at that swaying coil. Then Renfry's hand
struck his wrist pads, knocking up the barrel of the blaster. And in that
moment the Apache saw what the other had noticed first, that the snake was not
a thing of flesh, skin, supple bones, but of some manufactured material.
More
movement was continuing to issue in a mechanical writhing from the door through
which that snake had crawled. This newcomer strode forward by jerks, paused,
came on, as if compelled to advance against the dictates of ancient fabric and
long wear. The thing was vaguely manlike in form, in that it advanced on stilt
legs. But it had four upper appendages now folded against its central bulk,
and where the head should have been there was a nodding stalk resembling the
antennae of a com unit.
Its
jerky walk with the many pauses conveyed more and more a sense of internal
discord, of rust and wear, and the deterioration of time. How much time? The
four Terrans stepped away from the ship, giving free
passage to the strange partners from the tower.
"Robots!" Ross said suddenly. "They're robots! But what are they going to
do?"
"Refuel, I
think." Ashe rather than Renfry answered that.
"You've
hit it!" The technician pushed forward. "But do they have
fuel—now?"
"We'd
better hope there is some left." Ashe sounded bleak. "I'd say we
aren't supposed to stay here—better get back on board."
The
threat of being trapped here, of locked controls raising the ship and leaving
them marooned, induced a wave of something close to panic in all three hearers.
They raced to the ladder, began to climb. But when they reached the air lock, Renfry remained at the open door, retailing the movements
of the robots.
"I
think that animated pipeline's been connected—underneath. Can't see what the
walker's doing—maybe he just stands by in case of
trouble. And there's something coming through the hose—you can see it swelll We're taking on whatever
we're supposed to have!"
"A fueling station." Ashe looked out over the wide stretch of
crumbling towers and checkerboard landing spaces. "But see the size of
this place. It must have been constructed to handle hundreds, even thousands,
of ships. And since they couldn't all be
in to refuel at the same time, that predisposes a fleet"—he drew a deep
breath of wonder—"a fleet almost beyond comprehension. We were right—this
civilization was galaxy-wide. Maybe it spread to the next galaxy."
But
Travis' eyes rested on the splintered cap of the tower from which the robots
had come. "By the looks no one has been here for some time," he
observed.
"Machines,"
Renfry answered, "will go on working until they
run down. I'd say that walking one down there is close to its final stop. We
triggered some impulse when we landed on the right spot. The robots were
activated to do their job-maybe their last job. How long since they worked the
last time? This may have kept going for a long part of that
twelve thousand years you're always talking about—an empire dying slowly. But I
wouldn't try to measure the time. These aliens knew machinery, and their alloys
are better than our best."
"I'd
like to see the interior of one of those towers." Ashe said wistfully.
"Maybe they kept records, had something we could understand to explain it
all."
Renfry shook his head. "Wouldn't
dare try it. We might raise before you got
inside the door. Ahh—the walker is going back now.
I'd say get ready for take-off."
Thev made tight the open port, the inner door of
the space lock. Renfry, out of habit, went on up to
the control cabin. But the other three took to their bunks. There was a waiting
period and then once more the blast into space. This time they did not lose
consciousness and endured until they were once more in space.
"Now what?" Hours later they squeezed into the mess cabin to hold a rather aimless
conference concerning the future. Since no one had anything more than guesses
to offer, none of them answered Renfry's question.
"I
read a book once," Ross said suddenly with the slightly embarrassed air of
one admitting to a minor social error, "that had a story in it about some
Dutch sea captain who swore he'd get around the horn in one of those old-time
sailing ships. He called up the Devil to help him and he never got home-just
went on sailing through the centuries."
"The Flying
Dutchman," Ashe identified.
"Well, we haven't
called up any Devil," Renfry remarked.
"Haven't
we?" Travis had spoken his thoughts, without realizing until they all
stared at him that he had done so aloud.
"Your Devil
being?"
Ashe prompted.
"We
were trying to get knowledge out of this ship— and it wasn't our kind of
knowledge," he floundered a little, attempting to put into words what he
now believed.
Scavengers getting their just deserts?" Ashe summed up. "If you follow that
line of reasoning, yes, you have a point. The forbidden fruit
of knowledge. That was an idea planted so long ago in mankind's
conscience that it lingers today as guilt."
"Planted," Ross
repeated the word thoughtfully, "planted.
"Planted!" Travis echoed, his mind making one of those
odd jumps in sudden understanding of which he had only recently become
conscious. "By whom?"
Then
glancing around at the alien ship which was both their transport and their
prison, he added softly, "By these people?"
"They didn't want us to know about
them." Ross's words came in a rush. "Remember what they did to that
Red time base—traced it all the way forward and destroyed it in every era.
Suppose they did have contacts with primitive man on our
world—planted ideas—or gave them such a terrifying lesson at one time or other
that the memory of it was buried in all their descendants?"
"There
are other tales beside your Flying Dutchman, Ross," Ashe squirmed a little
in his seat. None of the chairs in the ship was exactly fitted to the human
frame or provided comfort for the modern passengers. "Prometheus
and the fire— the man who dared to steal the knowledge of the gods for the use
of mankind and suffered eternally thereafter for his audacity, though his
fellows benefited. Yes, there are clues to back such a theory, faint
ones." His eagerness grew as he spoke. "Maybe—just maybe—we'll find
out!"
"The
supply port was long deserted," Travis pointed out. "There may be
nothing left of their empire anywhere."
"Well,
we've not found the home port yet." Renfry got
to his feet. "Once we set down there—I hadn't intended to say this, but if
we ever get to the end of this trip, there's a chance we may get back,
providing—" He drummed his fingers against the door casing. "Providing we have more than our share of luck."
"How?" demanded
Ashe.
"The controls must now be set with some
sort of a guide-perhaps a tape. Once we are grounded and I can get to work,
that might just be reversed. But there are a hundred 'ifs' between us and
earth, and we can't count on anything."
"There's
this, too," Ashe added thoughtfully to that faintest of hopes. "I've
been studying the material we have found. If we can crack their language
tapes—some of the records we have discovered here must deal with the
maintenance and operation of the ship."
"And
where in space are you going to find a Rosetta Stone?"
returned Travis. He did not dare to believe that either of the two discoveries
might be possible. "No common word heritage."
"Aren't
mathematics supposed to be the same, no matter what language? Two and two
always add to four, and sums such as that?" puzzled Ross.
"Please
find me some symbols on any of those tapes you've been running through the
reader that have the smallest resemblance to any numbers seen on earth." Renfry had swung back to the pessimistic side of the
balance. "Anyway—I'm not meddling with the machines in that control cabin
while we're still in space."
Still
in space—how long were they going to keep on voyaging? And somehow they found
this second lap of their journey into nowhere worse than the first had been.
All of them had been secretly convinced that there was only one goal, that their
first star port would be their last. But the short pause to refuel now promised
a much longer trip. Their only way of telling time was by the hours marked on
the dial of Renfry's watch. Days—Ashe
made a record of those by counting hours. It was one week since they had
left the fuel port—two days more.
Out
of the sheer necessity for keeping their minds occupied, they pried at the
puzzles offered them in the ship. Ashe had already mastered the operation of a
small projector which "read" the wire-kept records, and so opened up
not a new world but worlds. The singsong speech which went with the pictures
meant nothing to the Terrans. But the pictures— and
such pictures! Three-dimensional, colored, they allowed one a window on the
incomprehensible life of a complex civilization stretching from star to star.
Races, cultures, and only a third of them
humanoid— were these actually factual records? Or were they fiction meant to
divert and amuse during the long hours of space travel? Or reports of some
service action? They could guess at any answer
to what they saw unrolled on the screen of the small machine.
"If
this was a police ship and those are authentic reports of past cases,"
commented Ross, "they sure had their little problems." He had watched
with rapt attention a very lurid battle through a jungle which appeared to be
largely waterlogged. The enemy there was represented by white amphibious
things with a distracting ability to elongate parts of
their bodies at will—to the discomfiture of opponents they were so able to
ensnare. "On the other hand," he went on, "these may be just
cheer-for-the-brave-boys-in-blue story writing to amuse the idle hour. Who are
we to know?"
"There's
one which I discovered this morning—of more interest to us personally."
Ashe sorted through the plate-shaped containers of record wire. "Take a
look at this now." He drew out the coil of the jungle battle and inserted
the new spool.
They
watched the minute screen expectantly. Travis tried to guess the meaning of the
high-pitched cackle of explanation which rang through the cabin, its tone
shrill enough to rasp human ears.
Then
they saw a sky, gTay, lowering with thick clouds. Below it
stretched a waste of what could only be snow such as they knew on their own
world. A small party moved into the range of the picture, and the familiar blue
suits of those in it were easy to distinguish against the gray-white of the
monotonous background.
"Suggest anything to
you?" Ashe asked of Ross.
Murdock
was leaning forward, studying the picture with a new intentness that argued an
unusual interest in so simple a scene.
There
were four blue-suited, bald-headed humanoids. They wore no outer clothing and
Travis remembered Ross's remarks concerning the insulating qualities of the
strange material. Over their heads they did have the bubble helmets, and they
were traveling at a pace which suggested the need for caution in footing.
The
tape blinked in one of those quick changes to which the viewers had become
accustomed. Now they must be surveying the same country from the angle of one
of the four blue-clad travelers. There was a sudden, breath-taking drop; the
camera must have skimmed at top speed down into a valley. Before them lay a
second descent—and the perspectives were out of proportion.
They
were not distorted enough, however, to hide what the photographer wanted to
record. The viewers were gazing down onto a wide, level space
and in that, half buried in banks of drifted snow, was one of the large
alien freighters.
"It can't be!"
Ross's expression was one of startled surprise.
"Keep watching,"
Ashe bade.
At a
distance, around the stranded half globe, black dots moved. They trailed off on
a line marked clearly in the beaten snow as a path which had been worn by a
good amount of traffic. There was another disconcerting click and again they
saw ice—a huge, murky wall of it, rearing into the gray sky. And
directly to that wall of ice led the beaten path.
"The Red time post! It must be! And this ship"—Ross was almost sputtering—"this
ship must have been mixed up in that raid on the Reds!"
There was a last click and
the screen went blank.
"Where's the rest?"
Ross demanded.
"You've
seen all there is. If they recorded any more, it's not on this spool."
Ashe fingered the colored tag fastened to the container from which he had taken
the coil. "Nothing else with a label matching this,
either."
"I
wonder if the Reds got back at them some way. If that was
what killed off the crew later. Germ warfare. . . ." Ross jiggled
the switch of the projector back and forth. "I suppose we'll never
know."
Then, over their heads, blasting the usual
quiet of the ship, came the warning from the control
cabin where Renfry kept his self-imposed watch.
"She's
triggering for another break-through, fellas. Strap
down! I'd say we're due for the big snap very soon!"
They
hurried to the bunks, Travis pulled at his protecting webbing. What would they
find this time? Another robot-inhabited way stop—or the home port they were
longing to reach? He set himself to endure the wrench of the breakthrough from
distance-defeating hyper-space to normal time, hoping that familiarity would
render the ordeal easier.
Once
more the ship and the men in it were racked by that turnover which defied
natural laws and paid in discomfort of mind and body.
"Sun ahead." Travis, opening his eyes, heard Renfry's
voice, a litde sharpened, through the ship-wide com.
"One—two-four planets. We seem to be bound for the second."
More waiting time. Then once more descent into atmosphere, the return
of weight, the vibration singing through walls and floors about them.
Then the set-down, this time with a slight grating bump, as if the landing had
not been so well controlled as it had at the fueling
port.
"This
is different. . . ." Renfry's report trailed
into silence, as if what he saw in the plate had shocked him into speechlessness.
They
climbed to the control cabin, crowded below that window on the new world. It
must be night—but a night which was alive with reddish light, as if some giant
fire filled the sky with the reflection of its fury. And that light rippled
even as flames would ripple in their leaping.
"Home?" This time Ross asked the question.
Renfry,
entranced as he still watched that display of fiery light, made a usual
cautious answer.
"I don't know—I just
don't know."
"We'll
try a look-see from the port." Ashe took up his planet-side command.
"Might be a volcano," Travis
hazarded from his experience
in the prehistoric world.
"No,
I dont' think so. I've only seen one thing like
that—" "I know what you mean." Ross was already on the ladder.
"The Northern Lights!"
10
The
checkerboard spread
of the fueling port, different as its architecture had been, was yet not too
far removed from their own experience. But this—Travis gazed at the wild display
beyond the outer door—this was the most fantastic dream made real.
That
flickering red played in tongues along the horizon, filling about a quarter of
the sky, ascending in licks up into the heavens. It paled stars and battled the
moon which hung there—a moon three times the size of the one which accompanied
his home planet.
Rippling
out from about the ship was a stretch of cracked, buckled,
once-smoothly-surfaced field. There was a faint crackling in the air which did
not come from any wind but apparently from static electricity. And the lurid
light with its weaving alternately illuminated and reduced to shadow the whole
countryside.
"Air's
all right." Renfry had cautiously slipped off
his helmet. At his report the others freed their own heads. The air was dry, as
arid as desert wind.
"Buildings of some sort—in that direction." They turned heads to follow Ross's gesture.
Whereas
the towers of the fueling field, ruined as they were, had fingered straighdy into the sky, these structures, or structure,
hugged the earth, the tallest portion not topping the globe. And nowhere in the
red light could Travis sight anything suggesting vegetation. The desolation of
the fuel port had been apparent, but here the barrenness was disturbing, almost
menacing.
None
of them was inclined to go exploring under that fiery sky, and nothing moved in
turn toward the ship. If this was another break in their journey, intended for
the purpose of servicing their transport, the mechanics had broken down. At
last the Terrans withdrew into the ship and closed the
port, waiting for day.
"Desert. . . ." Travis said that
half to himself but Ashe glanced at
him inquiringly.
"You mean—out
there?"
"There's
a feel in the air," Travis explained. "You leam to recognize it when you've lived most of your life
with it."
"Is this the end of
the trip?" Ross asked Renfry again.
"I
don't know." They had climbed back to the control cabin. Now the
technician was standing in front of the main control panel. He was frowning at
it. Then he turned suddenly to Travis.
"You
feel desert out there. Well, I feel machines—I've lived with them for most of my life. We've set down here, there's no indication that we're going to
take off again. Nothing but a sense that I have—that we're not finished
yet." He laughed, a little self-consciously. "All right, now tell me
that I'm seeing ghosts and I'll have to agree."
"On
the contrary, I agree with you so thoroughly that I'm not going too far from
the ship." Ashe smiled in return. "Do you suppose this is another
fuel stop?"
"No robots out," Ross objected.
"Those
could have been immobilized or rusted away long ago," Renfry
replied. He appeared sorry now that he had raised that doubt.
They went at last to their bunks, but if any
of them slept, it was in snatches. To Travis, lying on the soft mattress which
fitted itself to the comfort of his body, there was no longer any security—the
odd security offered by the ship while in flight. Now outside the shell he
could rest his hand against was an unknown territory more liable to offer danger
than a welcome. Perhaps the display of fiery lights in the night, perhaps the
dry air worked on him to produce the conviction that this was not indeed a
world of machines left to carry out tasks set them before his kind had evolved.
No, there was life here and it waited—outside.
He
must have dozed, for it was Ross's hand on his shoulder which brought him
awake. And he trailed after the other to the mess. He ate, still silent, but
with every nerve in his gaunt body alert, convinced that danger lay outside.
They
went armed, strapping on the belts supporting the aliens' blasters. And they
issued into a merciless sunlight, as threatening with its white brilliance as
the flames of the night before.
Ashe
shielded his eyes with his hand. "Try wearing the helmets," he
ordered. "They might just cut some of the glare."
He
was right. When they fastened down the bubbles, transparent as the material
appeared, it cut that daylight so that their eyes were unaffected.
Travis
had been right, too, in his belief that they were in desert country. Sand—dunes
of white sand, glittering with small sun-reflecting particles which must be
blinding to unshielded eyes—crept over the long, deserted landing space. Here
were no other grounded ships as they had seen at the first galactic port, only
lonely sweeps of sand, unbroken by the faintest hint of vegetation.
Sand—and the buildings, those low, earth-hugging buildings—perhaps a
quarter of a mile away.
The
four from the ship hesitated at the foot of the ladder. It was not only Renfry's hunch that their voyage was not completed that
kept them tied to the globe. The barrenness of the countryside certainly was
no invitation to explore. And yet there was always a chance that some discovery
might help to solve the abiding riddle of their return.
"We
do it this way." Ashe, the veteran explorer, took over with decisive
authority. "You stay here, Renfry—up at the
door. Any sign the ship is coming to life again and you fire—on maximum."
A
bolt of the force spewed from the narrow muzzle of the alien weapon would
produce a crackle of blue fire which should be visible for miles. They were not
sure of the range of the helmet corns, but they could be certain of the
effectiveness of a force bolt as a warning.
"Can
dol" Renfry was
already swinging up the ladder, displaying no disappointment in not being one
of the explorers.
Then,
with Ashe in the center and the lead, the other two flanking him a little
behind and to the right and left, the Terrans headed
for the buildings. Travis mechanically studied the sand under foot. What he was
searching for he could not have told, nor would that loose sand have held
tracks-tracks! He glanced back. The faint depressions which marked his
footsteps were already almost undistinguishable. There was certainly nothing to
indicate that anyone—or anything—
had passed over that
portion of the forgotten base for days, months, years, generations.
But
the sand was not everywhere. He stepped aside to avoid a broken block of the
pavement tilted up to one side and forming a hollow—a concealing hollow. Travis
hesitated, gazing down into that hollow.
Last night a wind had swept across this
field; he had felt it up at the port of the ship. Today the air was dead, not a
breeze troubled the lightest drift of sand. And that hollow was free of sand.
He did not know why his instincts told him that this was wrong. But because he was. nudged by that
subconscious uneasiness, he went down on his knees to study
the
interior of the pocket with the close scrutiny of a hunter-tracker.
So
he saw what he might otherwise have missed—that depression marked in the soil
where the sand had not drifted. On impulse he rubbed his fingertips hard across
that faint mark. There was a greasy feel. He unfastened his helmet long enough
to raise those same investigating fingers to his nostrils.
A rank odor—sweat of something alive—something with filthy body habits. He was sure of it! And because that thing
must have crouched here for a long time in a well-chosen hiding place from
which it could watch the ship undetected, he could also believe it possessed
intelligence—of a kind. Snapping down his helmet once more, he reported his
find over the com.
"You
say it must have been there for some time?" Ashe's voice floated back.
"Yes.
And it can't have been gone long either." He was basing all his deductions
upon that lingering taint which had been imparted by
a warm body to the dusty earth within the small shelter.
"No tracks?"
"They
wouldn't show in this stuff." Travis scuffed his foot across a small fan
of sand. No, no tracks. But there could only be one place from which the hidden
watcher had come —the buildings half concealed by the creeping dunes. He stood
up, walked forward, his hand swinging very close to the weapon at his belt. The
sense of danger ahead was very strong.
Ashe
was before the midpoint of the buildings—there was really only one as they
could see now. Its two outlying wings were each
connected by a low-lying, windowless passage to the main block. Travis was
familiar with the effects of wind and blown-sand erosion upon rock outcrops.
Here the same factors had been in operation to pit surfaces, round and polish
away comers and edges, until the walls were like the dunes rising about them.
There
were no windows—no visible doorways. But at the end of the wing before Travis
there was a dip in a sand dune, breaking the natural line chiseled by the wind.
It was a break unusual enough to catch his alerted attention.
"Over
here," he called sofdy, forgetting that the
helmet com and not the air waves carried his voice. Slowly, with the caution of
a stalker after wary game, he moved toward that break in the dune. There were
no tracks, yet he was almost certain that the disturbance had been recent and
made by the passage of something moving with a purpose-not just the result of a
vagary of the night wind.
He
rounded the pointing finger of one dune which now arose at his shoulder height
against the wall, and knew he was right. The sand had obviously been thrust
back—blocked loosely on either side—as if some door had opened outward from the
building, pushing the sand drift before it.
"Cover
him!" Ashe's shadow crossed the sun-drenched sand of the dune, met the
other one cast by Ross. With the two time agents at his back, the Apache began
a detailed inspection of that length of wall.
Although
his eyes could detect no difference in that surface, his fingers did when he
ran them along about waist level. There was a strip here, extending down to the
ground, which was not of the same texture as the substance above and to the
sides, But though he pressed, pulled, and applied his weight to move it in
every way he could think to try, there was no yielding. He was sure that that
portion could open, to cause the marks in the sand.
At
last, getting down on his hands and knees, Travis crawled along, trying to
force fingertips under at ground's edge. And so he discovered a harsh tuft of
hair protruding. Combined efforts of knife tip and fingers worked the wisp
loose. It was coarse stuff, coarser than any animal's he had ever seen, each
separate hair enlarged to the size of half a dozen normal Terran
specimens. And it was a gray-white in color, melting into the shade of the sand
so it could not be distinguished against the dunes.
Having
a greasy feel it clung to Travis' fingers, and he did not really need the
evidence of his nose to tell him that it was rankly odorous. He brought it back
to Ashe, his distaste in handling it growing steadily. The latter put the trophy
away in one of his belt pockets.
"Any chance of opening that?" Ashe indicated the hidden door in the wall.
"Not
that I can see," Travis returned. "It is probably secured on the
inside."
They
studied the building dubiously. Behind its length, as far as they could judge,
there was only a waste of sand dunes reaching out and out to the sky rim where
the fire had played the night before. If there was any riddle to be solved, its
answer lay inside this locked box and not in the desert countryside.
"Ross,
you stay here. Travis, move on to the end of the wing. Stay there where you can
see Ross—and me, as I go along the back."
Ashe
used the same care as the Apache had done, running his hands along the eroded
surface, seeking any indication of another door which might possibly be
forced. He went the entire length of the building and came back—with nothing to
report.
"There
were windows once and a door. But they were all walled up a long time ago,
sealed tight now. We might pick out the sealing, given time and the right
tools."
Ross's
voice came through the helmet corns. "Any chance of
getting in through the roof, chief?"
"If
you're game to try—up with you!"
Travis
stood iigainst the wall which refused to give up its
secrets and Ross used him as a ladder, mounting to the roof.
He moved inward and the two left on the
ground lost sight of him. But on Ashe's orders he made a running commentary of
what he saw through the com.
"Not
much sand—you'd think there would be more. . . . Hulloo!" There was an eagerness in that sudden exclamation. "This is something! Round plates set in circles all over— about the size of
quarters. They are solid and you can't move them."
"Metal?" Ashe asked.
"Nooo . .
." the reply was hesitant. "Seem more like some kind of glass, only
they aren't transparent." "Windows?" suggested Travis.
"Too
small," Ross protested. "But there are a lot of them— all over.
Wait!" The urgency in that last cry alerted both the men on the ground.
"Red—they're turning red!"
"Get
out of there! Jump!" Ashe's order barked loudly
in all their helmets.
Ross
obeyed without question, landing with a paratrooper's practiced roll on one of
the dune crests. The others scrambled to join him, all their attention focused
on the roof of the sealed building. Perhaps something in the sun-repelling
qualities of their helmets enabled them to see those rays as faint reddish
lines cutting up from the roof into the reach of the sky.
The
skin on Travis' bare hands tingled with a pins-and-needles sensation as if the
circulation in it had been arrested and was not coming back to duty. Ross
scrambled up out of the sand and shook himself vigorously.
"What
in the world is going on?" There was an unusual note of awe in his tone.
"I
think—some fireworks to discourage you. I believe that we may assume whoever
lives in there is definitely not at home to curious callers. Not only that, but
the householder has some mighty unpleasant gadgets to back up his desire for
GALACTIC DE
R"E-L I C T
privacy.
Probably just as well we didn't find his, her, or its front door
unlocked."
Travis
could no longer see those thin fiery lines. Either the power had been shut off,
or the rays were now past the point of detection by human eyes, even with the
aid of the helmet. That coarse hair, the repulsive odor—and
now this. Somehow the few facts did not add properly. The hair, of
course, could have been left by a watchdog, or the
equivalent on this particular planet of a watchdog. That supposition would also
fit with the low entrance into the building. But a watchdog that kept to
carefully chosen cover, the best in the whole landscape, and stayed to spy,
maybe for hours, on the ship—? Those facts did not fit with the general nature
of any animal he had ever known. Rather, that action matched with intelligence,
and intelligence meant man.
"I
believe they are nocturnal," Ashe said suddenly. "That fits with all
we've seen so far. This sun glare may be as painful for them as it is for us
without helmets. But at night—"
"Going to sit up and
watch what happens?" Ross asked.
"Not out in the open.
Not until we know more."
Silently
Travis agreed to that. There was a furtiveness about the last night's spying
which made him wary. And to his mind this world was far more frightening and
sinister than the fueling port. Its very arid
barrenness held a nebulous threat he had never sensed in the desert lands of
his own planet.
They
walked back to the ship, climbed the ladder, and were glad to close the port
upon the dead white glare, to unhelm in the blue glow
of the interior.
"What did you
see?" Ashe asked Renfry.
"Murdock taking a high dive from the roof and then some red
lines, very faint, shooting up from all over its surface. What did you do, push
the wrong doorbell?"
"Probably waked
somebody up. I
don't think that's a very
healthy place to go visiting. Lord—what
a stink!" Ross ended, sniffing.
Ashe held on his palm the tuft of hair and
the odor rising from it was not only noticeable in the usual scentless atmosphere
of the ship, but penetrating in its foulness.
They carried the lock into the small
cubbyhole which might once have been the quarters of the commander and where
Ashe had assembled his materials for study. In spite of the noisome effluvia of
their trophy, they gathered around as he pulled
the tuft apart hair by hair and spread it flat.
"Those
hairs—so thick! Renfry marveled.
"If they are hairs. What I wouldn't give for a lab!" Ashe
placed a clear sheet of the aliens' writing materials to imprison the lock.
"That
smell—" Travis, remembering how he had handled the noisome find, rubbed
his hand back and forth across his thigh.
"Yes?" Ashe prompted.
"Well—I
think that comes from just plain filthiness, sir. Or, part might be because the
hairs are from a creature we don't know."
"Alien metabolism." Ashe nodded. "Each Terran
race has a distinctive body odor far more apparent to a man of another than to
one of his own breed. But what are you getting at, Travis?"
"Well,
if that does come from some—some man" he used the term because he had no
other— "and not from an animal, then I'd say he was living in a regular
sty. And that means either a pretty low type of primitive, or a
degenerate."
"Not necessarily," Ashe pointed
out. "Bathing entails water, and we haven't seen any store of water
here."
"Sure, there's no water we can see. But
they must have some. And I think—" Only there were few proofs he could
offer to bolster his argument.
"Might be. Anyway, tonight well watch and see what does come out of the booby-trapped box over
there."
The
napped during the day, Renfry in the control cabin as
usual. None of them could see any reason why the ship had earthed on this sand
pile, and the very barrenness of the place reinforced Renfry's
belief that this could not be their ultimate goal. It was only logic that the
ship must have originally voyaged from some center of civilization—and this was
not that.
The
glare of the sun was gone and dusk clothed the mounds of creeping sand when
they gathered again at the door in the outer skin to watch the building and the
stretch of ground lying between them and that enigmatic block.
"How
long do you suppose we'll have to wait?" Ross shifted position.
"No time at all," Ashe answered softly. "Look!" From behind
the dune which marked the low doorway Travis had discovered, there showed a
very faint reddish glow.
11
Had
the flaming display of
the late evening before been in progress, they could not have spotted that. And
now, in the dusk, with the shapes of the dunes distorting vision, it was
difficult to see. Ashe was counting slowly under his breath. As he reached
"twenty" the glow vanished with a sudden completeness which
suggested the slamming of a door.
Travis
strained his eyes, watching the end of that masking dune. If the thing which
had spied upon them the night before was coming back to the old position, the
shortest route to take would cross that point. But he had seen nothing so far.
There was a very thin sound, but that came
from the opposite direction, a whispering from the open country. Then a pat of arid air touched his cheek, wind rising with the
coming of night. And the whispering must be the moving of sand grains under its
first tentative stir.
"We could ambush one
scout," Ross observed wistfully.
"Their
senses may be more acute than ours. Certainly if they are nocturnal, their
night sight will be. And we can believe that they are already suspicious of us.
Also, I'd like to know a little more about the nature of something or someone
I'm going to lay a trap for."
Travis only half heard Ashe. Surely he had seen a flicker of movement out
there. YesI His fingers closed on the older man's arm
in swift warning pressure. A blob of shadow had slipped from the end of the
dune, skidded quickly into hiding, heading straight for the hollow behind the
upended block of masonry. Was the spy now setded in
for a long spell of duty in that improvised observation post? Or tonight would
he, she or it venture closer to the ship?
The
dusk deepened and with the coming of true dark the tongues of fire danced in
the sky. Though the light afforded by that display was not steady, it did
illuminate the smoother ground immediately about the globe. Any attack on the
part of the unknown natives could be sighted by the men on guard above. The Terrans knew, though, that with the ladder up and open port
some dozen feet removed from ground level, they had
little to fear from any actual attempt to force their stronghold. Unless the
creatures out there possessed weapons able to cut down the distance advantage.
"Close
the inner-lock door," Ashe said suddenly. "Well shut off the ship's
light, make it hard for them to spot us here."
With
the lock shut and the blue light of the ship blanked out, they lay flat on the
floor of the cramped space, trying not to hamper each other, awaiting the next
move on the part of the lurker or lurkers below.
"Something there," Ross warned sofdy. "To the left—right at the end
of that last dune."
The
lurker was impatient. A blob of dark, which might have been a head, moved
against the white sand. Wind sang around the ship, gathering up grit. The men
snapped down their helmets in protection against that. But those whirls of sand
devils did not appear to bother the native.
"I
think there are more than one of them," Travis
said. "That last movement came too far away from the first I
sighted."
"Could they be getting
ready to rush us?" Ross wondered.
Oddly
enough, none of the Terrans had drawn his blasters.
The perch was so high above the surface over which the attackers must advance,
and the smooth rounding of the un-climbable globe was so apparent, that both
gave them a sense of security.
The
dark thing made a dart toward the globe. And it either ran bent almost
double—or else on all fours! One of the startling jumps of the sky's light spotlighted the form, and the watchers
exclaimed.
Man
or animal? The thing had four long limbs, and two more
projections at mid-body. The head was round, down-held
as it darted, so that they could not sight any
features. But the whole body was matted with hair—dark hair, not light to match
the tuft Travis had found. There was no sign of clothing, nor did the creature
appear to be carrying weapons.
For a single moment that flitting shadow
paused, facing the ship. Then it scurried back into hiding among the dunes once
more. There was another flash of movement which the watchers could hardly
detect, as this time the body of the runner merged in color with the sand about
it.
"That might have been your hair
shedder," remarked Ashe. "It certainly was lighter in color than the
first one."
"They come in different colors—but all
about the same size," Ross added. "And what in the world are
they?"
"Nothing in our world." Ashe was definite about that. "We can
believe, though, that they are interested in this ship and that they are trying
to find some way of getting to it undetected."
"The
way they move," Travis said, "as if they feared attack. .. . They must
have enemies."
"Enemies to be associated with such a ship as this?" Ashe jumped to the point with his usual
speed of understanding. "Yes, that could be. Only I don't believe that
there has been a ship here for a long, long time."
"Memories passed
down—"
"Memories
would mean they are men!" Travis was not aware until he voiced those words
out of a sense of outrage that he abhorred association with those half-seen
creatures in the dunes.
"To
themselves they may be men," Ashe returned,
"and we might represent monsters. All relative, son.
At any rate, I believe that they do not regard us with kindness."
"What
I wouldn't give for a flashlight now," Ross said wistfully. "I'd like
to catch one of them in a beam for a really good look."
They
were treated to a wealth of half glimpses of the natives moving through the
sand hills as the minutes crawled on, but never did they have a chance really
to study one.
"I
think they're working their way around to come in behind the globe—on our
blind side," Travis offered, having traced at least two in that possible
direction.
"Won't
do them any good—this is the only opening." Ross sounded close to smug.
But
the thought of the natives coming in behind the globe could not be accepted so
easily by Travis. Every buried instinct of hunter and desert warrior argued
that such a chance threatened his own security. Reason told him, though, that
there was only this one door to the ship, and that it was easily defended. They
need only close it and nothing could reach them.
"What
was the reason for this port anyway?" Ross pursued the big question a few
seconds later. "There must have been some purpose for stopping here. Do we
have to find something —or do something—before we can leave again?"
That
thought had ridden all their minds, but Ross had brought fear into the open.
And what if the solution lay over there, in that building to which there was no
entrance—unless one could be forced at night? A nighttime entrance guarded by
the flitting hairy things which could see in the dark and whose home
hunting-ground it was. . . .
"The building—?" Travis made a question of it. He felt Ashe stir beside him.
"Might
just be," the other assented. "If we are hung up here much longer, we
can try burning our way in by day. These blasters pack a pretty hefty charge
when set at maximum."
Travis'
hand shot out, clamped down on Ashe's shoulder. His helmet was locked against
the grit drift in the wind, but his hand had been resting on the edge of the
door casing and had caught that thud-thud transmitted by the outer skin of the
globe. Below the bulge which kept the Terrans from
viewing the ground directly under the curve of the side, something was beating
on the metallic outer casing of the vessel— for what purpose and with what
result, he could not guess. He groped for Ashe's hand, drew it out beside his
own and pressed the palm flat to get the same message.
"Pounding,
I think." He realized that the messages in
helmet corns could not reach the ears of lurkers below. "But
why?"
"Trying
to hole the ship?" Ross hung over the other two.
"They've no chance of getting through the hull—or have they?" His
concluding flash of anxiety was shared by the rest. What did they know of the
resources of the natives?
Coiled
beside Travis was the ladder. Dare he push that out,
climb over to see what the night creepers were doing below? The thud of the
pounding appeared to him to be taking on both speed and intensity. Suppose by
some miracle, or the use of some unknown tool, the hairy things could pierce
the outer skin of the globe? Then there would be no possible hope of escape
from this forgotten desert.
He
began to edge the ladder forward. Ashe made a grab which the younger man fended
away.
"We have to see,"
he said, "we have
to!"
Ross
and Ashe moved together and in that narrow space blocked each other long enough
for Travis to squeeze through the door, swing over the lip and climb down the
length of his own body. Then he felt the ladder catch tight and knew that the
other two were preventing its descent to ground level.
Gripping
the rungs tightly, holding his body as close as he could to the surface of the
ship, Travis looked down. The play of red flashes against the sky furnished a
weird light for the activity below, for there was activity. He had been right. The hairy things had crept in unseen from
behind the ship, and a group of them were now clustered about the base of the
globe. But what they were doing he could not make out in the constant
flickering of the light. Then one reared from its usual quadrupedal
stance, and raised its forearms over its hump of head. The appendages at its
midsection gave a twitch, writhed out in a manner which suggested boneless-ness, and clasped tight to the ship.
The
creature gave a bound into the air and then hung, its
hind feet now a foot or so off the ground. Apparently it held on by the grip of
waist tentacles against the globe, while the fists or paws on its forelimbs
pounded vigorously against that surface. There was something about that
hitching climb, for it gave another squirm upward as Travis watched,
which spelled for him a purposeful malignancy.
Now
a second creature had hitched itself by midsection tentacles to the hull and
was beginning to ascend. Travis could sight no weapons, nothing
but those steadily pounding fists. But neither did he have any wish to battle
the slow climbers. He reported to Ashe and was ordered back into the ship. They
closed the port, took the precaution of sealing it as if making ready for
flight, and then loosened their helmets.
Neither the pounding nor the sound of the
climbers could reach them now. But Travis did not believe that the creatures
had ceased their efforts to win into the ship, futile as those efforts might
seem. The Terrans climbed to the control cabin to
watch the outer world on the limited view of the vision plate. Renfry looked puzzled.
"I
don't get it. I still say that I'm sure this isn't the end of the flight. But I
can't tell you why, or the why of this port, either. If the answer lies in that
building, you'll have to crack it open. But we may have a better cracker than
just those hand blasters."
Ross caught his meaning first. "The ship's guns!" "Might
be."
"Can we use them?" Ashe wanted to know.
"Well,
they're less a top secret than the rest of the stuff around here. Remember
this?" He pressed a lever. Lights winked, that
word from a vanished language spoke out of the thin air. It was all as it had
been on their exploration of the ship.
"And you can fire them?"
"The
chief—my chief—doped out that this does that"— Renfry
fingered another switch he did not depress. "As far as I deduce, one of
those king-sized blasters should just about clip across the roof of your
strongbox. We can try it on for size any
time you're ready."
But Ashe was rubbing his jaw in that
absent-minded way which meant he had not yet come to a decision. "Too much guessing in all of this. We don't know that
we have to crack that place open in order to lift ship again. In fact, if we
did crack it and couldn't find what we needed—we wouldn't be any better off.
These natives must depend upon that shelter for their lives. Break it open and
they're just as dead as if we mowed them down with
blasters. They may not be anything or anybody we'd care to live with, but this
is their world and we're intruders. I'd like to wait a little before I try anything
as drastic as blowing up the place."
None
of them was inclined to push him into action. Outside the flames beat into the
night sky, and the white of the moon they had noted the night before was marred
by a more yellow gleam from a smaller satellite trailing behind the larger. But
of the activity of the dime skulkers the screen gave
them no clue.
That
came not by sight but by a startling shifting of the ship itself. How had the
creatures outside achieved that movement? Perhaps, Travis imagined, by the
sheer weight of many creeping bodies plastered to the hull. The globe canted
from its landing position. And maybe that triggered the flying controls. For
the now-familiar warnings of a take-off alerted them all.
"No!"
Renfry protested, "we
can't—not yet—not until we know why."
But
the engines the Terrans did not understand, and could
not hope to control, had no ears for that feeble defiance. Perhaps only a time
limit had governed their visit, a full day and night of planetary time. Or
maybe it was the strange attack of the hairy things.
And
those creatures—would they free themselves in time, drop to the ground as the
ship lifted, warned by the vibration? Or would they cling in stupid
concentration upon their attack, to be carried out into the freezing blackness
of the eternal space night?
The unwilling crew of the
ship followed the old routine of strap down and wait for the wrench of
blast-off, the break into hyper-space. Again they were being carried into the
unknown with perhaps a long voyage ahead.
But
it was not to be the same this time. Travis noticed the first departure from
the usual routine. The take-off was not so severe—or else he had adjusted to it
far better than he ever had before. He did not black out completely, nor did he
have to undergo that terrible twisting. And he heard Renfry's
voice exclaim in wonder:
"I don't think we went into hyper! What
happened?"
They
were up and about, watching the vision plate of the ship. Renfry's
guess was right. For instead of the complete blankness which closed in upon
them when they made a big inter-system jump, they saw now the receding orb of
the desert planet, its face a mass of shifting color as they withdrew from it.
"Must
be heading for another planet in this same system," Ashe supplied one
answer. And, as the hours wore on, they believed that was the right one. The
ship now appeared to be on course for the third planet of that unknown sun.
"Do
we visit them all?" inquired Ross with some of his old flippancy. "If
so— why? Milk delivery?"
Three
days went by, four. They ate the alien food and moved restlessly about the
ship, unable to pay attention for any length of time to anything but the screen
in the control cabin. Then on the sixth day, came the signals of an approaching
landing.
On
the vision plate the goal showed a vivid blue-green, patched here and there
with orange-red. It was arresting in its splashes of contrasting color. They
had drawn lots for the occupancy of the three seats in the control cabin, and
the odd man to be relegated to the bunk below. So Travis now lay alone and
unseeing in the heart of the throbbing globe, wondering what new future they
must confront.
The ship set down this time in the planet's
day. The Apache freed himself from his straps, stumbled in the return clutch of
gravity to the ladder and climbed up to share the others' view of the new
world.
"No-!"
The ruined towers standing starkly to portion
off the expanse of the fueling port had speared as
straightly into the sky—but they had not been like this one. Against a background
of cloudless, delicate pink, was an opaline dome,
curved in flowing lines which spiraled up in turn to a fragile, frosting lace.
It was impossible to believe that this was the result of man's construction.
Tom lace. ... As he studied those lifting spans,
Travis could mark the breaks which spoiled the perfect pattern. Yet in spite of
that damage there was still the fantastic beauty of foam and light and play of
rainbow color. It rose out of dark foliage with a tinge of blue which was not a
part of the green of his own world's leaves.
And
those leafy branches stirred almost languidly as if light breezes pulled at
them, showing here and there a touch of other colors. Fruit?
Flowers?
Renfry brought their attention away from the scene
which was so ethereal as to seem unreal.
"Look!"
He
was on his feet before the main control board, his hands grasping the back of
the pilot's seat so tightly that the muscles stood out on his taut arms. For
the board had taken on life. They had witnessed the flickers of light which had
heralded the readying of the ship's guns. This was something else—a line of
small winks of brilliance flowing unevenly down the rows of levers and buttons.
And where each flashed a lever arose, a button sank or snapped above the level
of the board. There was a final burst of light from a spot Travis could have
covered with his thumb. And there a lid opened, a cavity beneath disgorged a
small, coin-shaped bit of red metal which tinkled out, to roll across the
floor.
Renfry came to life, dove to catch it up. He held
it in his hand as if the disk was something very precious indeed.
"Home port!" He swung about to face them, his eagerness lighting a flame in his
eyes. "This is the home port! And I think I am holding the course
tape!"
There
could be no other explanation for what they had just witnessed. The journey
plotted by a dying man had come to its full conclusion. That small button of
metal Renfry had closed fist upon, held now not only
the secret of their arrival— but of their return. If they were ever to regain
their own world, it would be because they had solved the workings of that disk.
Yet
Travis' eyes went from the technician's clenched hand and what it held, back to
the vision plate. The picture there was of a gentle wind lifting flowering
branches about a tower of opal against a sky of palest rose. And the immediate
future seemed at that moment more entrancing than the more distant one.
Perhaps
Ashe shared that feeling at the moment. For the senior time agent moved toward
the inner ladder. He paused at the well and looked back over his shoulder, to
say with a strange simplicity:
"Let us go
out—now."
12
If
there had once been a wide
landing strip here, the space was long since swallowed
by a cover of green. From the mass crushed by the landing of the ship came the
scent of growing things, some spicy, some rank.
The Terrans had not worn their helmets, nor did they need to
here. A sunlight no stronger than that of early summer
in the temperate zone of their own world greeted them. And there was no burden
of sand in the soft wind which whirled flower petals and torn leaves from the
wreckage under their feet.
Now
that they had a wider view than that offered by the vision plate, they noted
other breaks in the luxuriance of growing things. The opal tower with its
fantastic form was flanked by another building as strange and as far removed
from the style of its companion as the desert world was from this green one.
For the massive blocks of dull red, geometric in their solidity, could not have
sprung from the same creative imagination—or perhaps from even the same race or
age.
And
beyond that was another, with knife-sharp gables and narrow windows secretive
in its gray walls. It had a pointed roof of some rough material, dull under the
sun, and gave rootage in places to vines, even a
small tree. But again it was not of the same vintage as the fairylike dome or
the massive blocks.
"Why—?"
Ross's head turned slowly as he looked from one of those totally dissimilar
buildings to the next. All were tall, dwarfing the globe, and all had their
lower stories hidden by the vegetation.
Travis
thought back to a past which seemed a little blurred by all which had happened
lately. There were places on his own world where a
Zuni village in miniature stood beside a Sioux lodge or an Apache wickiup.
"A museum?" He ventured the only explanation he could see.
Ashe's
face was pale under his fading tan. He stared raptly from dome to block, block
to sharply accented gables. Or else a capital where each
embassy built in their home style."
"And
now it is all dead," Travis added. For that was true. This was as deserted
as the fueling port.
"Capital perhaps—of a galactic empire. What there is to be learned here! A treasure
house—" Ashe was breathing fast. "We may have the treasures of a
thousand worlds to uncover here."
"And
who will ever know—or care?" Ross asked. "Not that I'm not ready to
go and look for them."
Travis
tensed. There was a stirring in the mass of tangled vegetation where the
grounding of the globe had flattened some of the fern trees, bearing with them
others tied together by vines. He watched that shaking of bruised and broken
branches. Something alive was working its way from a point about a hundred
yards away from the ship toward the wall of still-standing plants, its progress
marked by that movement. And the fugitive thing must be fairly large by the
amount of displacement.
Had that crawling unseen thing been injured in the crash of the tree
ferns? Was
it now dragging itself off to die? Travis listened, striving to hear more than
the rustling of the leaves. But if the thing was hurt, it made no complaint. Animal? Or—something else?
Something as alien as the dune lurkers, more than animal, yet different from
man as they knew man?
"It's
in cover now," breathed Ross. "Couldn't haye
been too hurt or it wouldn't have moved so lively."
"I
think we can believe that this world isn't as empty as it might look to the
first glance," Ashe said a little dryly. "And what
about those?"
"Those"
came lightiy, drifting
across the torn clearing caused by the descent of the globe. They flapped
gossamer wings once or twice to keep air-borne, but their attention was manifesdy centered on the ship.
And
what were they? Birds? Insects?
Flying mammals? Travis could almost believe the four small creatures were a
weird combination of all three species. Their long narrow wings, prismatic and
close to transparent, resembled those of an insect. Yet they had bodies
equipped with three legs, two smaller ones in front ending in there clawshaped digits, one larger limb in back with even more
pronounced talons. Their heads seemed to be set directly on their shoulders
with no visible neck and were round at
the top, narrowing to a curved beak, while their eyes—four of theml—protruded on short stalks, two in front and two in
back. And their triangles of bodies were clothed in plushy fur of a pale and
frosted blue.
Slowly,
in a solemn, silent procession, they drifted toward the ship. The second in
line broke out of formation, dipped groundward. Its
hind claws found anchorage on a stub of broken branch and its wings folded
together above its back as might those of a Terran
butterfly.
The
two last in line flapped back and forth across the open port twice and then
wheeled, flew off, mounting into the sky to clear the treetops. But the leader
came on, until it hung, beating wings now and then to maintain altitude, direcdy before the entrance of the ship.
It
was impossible to read any expression in those stalked eyes, a brilliant blue.
But none of the four Terrans felt any repulsion or
alarm as they had upon their encounter with the nocturnal desert people.
Whatever the flyer was, they could not believe that it was either agressive or a possible danger to them.
Renfry expressed their common reaction to the
creature first:
"Funny
little beggar, isn't he? Like to see him closer. If
they're all the same as him here, we don't have to worry."
Why
the technician should refer to the winged thing as "he" was obscure.
But the creature was attractive enough to hold their concentrated interest.
Ross snapped his fingers and held out his hand in welcome.
"Here, boy," he
coaxed.
Those
brilliant bits of blue winked as the eye stalks moved, the wings beat, and the
flyer approached the port. But not close enough for the Terrans
to touch. It hung tiiere, sus-
pended in
mid-air for a long moment. Then with a flurry of beating
wings, sparking rainbows, it mounted skyward, its partner taking off from the
brush below at the same moment to join it. A few seconds later they vanished as
if they had never been.
"Do
you suppose it is intelligent?" Ross watched after the vanished flyer, his
disappointment mirrored on his usually impassive face.
"Your
guess is as good as mine," Ashe replied. "Renfry,"
he spoke to the technician, "you have your journey tape now. Can you reset
it?"
"I
don't know. Wish I had a manual—at least some type of guide. Do you suppose you
can find such a thing here?"
"Why
are you in such a big hurry to leave, chief? We only got here
and it looks like a pretty good vacation spot to me." Ross raised his head
a little to eye the dome where opal lights played under the sun's rays.
"That is just why," Ashe replied quiedy. "There are too many temptations here."
Travis
understood. To Ashe the appeal of those waiting buildings, of
the knowledge which they might contain, must be almost overpowering.
They could postpone work on the ship, delay and delay, fascinated by this world
and its secrets. He knew the same pull, though perhaps in a lesser degree.
Before it trapped them all, they must struggle against that enveloping desire
to plunge into the green jungle, slash a path to the opal dome and see for
themselves, what wonders it housed.
Ashe
was sorely tempted. And because he was-the man he was, he must be fighting that
temptation now, believing that if he once plunged -wholeheartedly into
exploration, he might not be able to stop. Also Renfry
was offering them an excuse to do just that by wishing for some aid in the
problem of the tape.
An hour later the three of them did leave the
ship, Renfry remaining in charge there. Using the
lowest beam of the blasters, they cut a path into the woods. Travis picked up a
flower head. Five wide petals, fluted, crinkled a little at the tips, were a
deep cream in color, shading orange at the heart. Resting on his palm, those
petals began to move visibly, closing until he held a bud instead of a flower.
He could not toss away the blossom. Its color was too arresting, its spicy
scent appealing. He worked the short stem into one of the latches of a belt
pouch, where, the heat of his hand removed, the flower opened once again. Nor
did it fade or droop in spite of the shortness of its stem.
Now,
out of the direct rays of the sun, the Terrans found
the air cool, moist, heavy with the odor of too luxuriant vegetation. Not that
those odors were unpleasant—in fact, they were overpoweringly good. Spicy
scents warred with perfumes and the sharper smell of earth as their feet
scuffed through the mass of dead leaves.
"Whewl" Ross waved his hand back and forth in front of
his face as if to set up a reviving current of air. "Perfume factory—or
what have you I I feel as if I were burrowing through
about a ton of roses!"
Ashe
appeared to have lost some of his sombemess since
they had left the ship. "With another of carnations thrown in," he
agreed. "I think I can detect"—he sniffed and then sneezed—
"some cloves and maybe a few nutmegs into the bargain."
Travis
breathed shallowly. He had welcomed the mixture of perfumes minutes earlier.
Now he found himself wishing instead to face a wind with a burden of sage and pinon in place of these cloying scents in their thick
abundance.
The
jungle grew clear up to the base of the opaline building.
And the structure itself doomed far higher from ground level than had appeared
true from the port of the ship. They worked their way along, hunting the
entrance which must exist somewhere, unless the inhabitants had all worn wings.
Oddly
enough—though there were windows in plenty of stories above, many opening on
small airy balconies—the first story showed no openings at all. Here were
panels set in carved frames alternating with solid blocks of the opal material.
And each panel was patterned in a gleaming mosaic, not forming any recognized
design but merely wedding color to color in blending shades.
The Terrans cut their way through underbrush and reached the
end of the wall. This was a large building occupying the space of a normal Terran city block. But around the corner they found the
door, at the head of a curling ramp. The portal extended almost the full height
of the first story and it was open, a carved archway. The frame was like frozen
lace, with here a curve and there a point cracked and gone.
They
hesitated. Save for the sighing of the wind, the sound of leaf against moving
leaf, and some small twitters and squeaks from the unseen inhabitants of the
green world which lay about the foot of the ramp, there was quiet—the quiet of
the forgotten.
Ashe
stepped onto the ramp, his soft-shod feet making not the slightest whisper. He
climbed the gentle slope almost reluctantly, as if he did not really want to
know what waited within.
Travis
and Ross came behind. There were pockets of dead leaves caught in the curves of
the ramp, and more drifted inside the open portal. They shuffled through them,
to come into a hall which was breath-taking in its height. For
it went up and up, until they were dizzied when they tried to follow its inner
spiral with their eyes. And covering this expanse was the great opaline dome. The sunlight shone through it, painting
rainbows on walls and on the ramp which climbed in a coil along the walls,
serving other archways of fetter-lace on every floor level.
Here there was none of the brilliance of the
outside mosaics.
The
spread of color was sharply reduced to soft, faded shades, a dusky violet, a
pallid green, a dusty rose, a cream. . . .
"... forty-eight—forty-nine—fifty! Fifty doors up and down that ramp at
least." Ross kept his voice to a murmur and yet that echo of a whisper
carried eerily back to them. "Where do we start?" Now his tone was
definitely higher, in challenge to that echo and the stillness which deadened
it.
Ashe
left them, crossed the expanse of hall, both of his hands going out to a niche. When they hurried after him they discovered he was holding a
small statuette carved of a dusky violet stone. Like the blue flyers, the
subject bore baffling resemblances to living things they knew, and yet was in
its totality alien.
"Man?" Ross
wondered. "Animal?"
"Totem? God?" Travis added out of his own
knowledge and background.
"All or any,"
conceded Ashe. "But it is a work
of art."
That
they could all recognize, even if the subject still puzzled them. The figure
was posed erect on two slender hind limbs, both of which terminated in feet of
long, narrow, widely separated, clawed digits. The body, also slender but with
a well-defined waist and broad shoulders, was closer to the human in general
appearance, and there were two arms held aloft, as if the creature was about to
leap outward into space. But it would have a better chance of survival in such
a leap than those now passing the statuette from hand to hand. From the arms
supported skin wing-flaps, extended on ribs not unlike those possessed by the Terran bats.
The
head was the least human, almost grotesque in its ugliness to the time agents'
eyes. There were sharply pointed ears, overshadowing in their size and extension
the rest of the features which were crowded together in the forepart of the
face. Eyes were set deep within cavities under heavy skull ridges, the nose was
simply a vertical slit above a mouth from which thin vestiges of lips curled
back to display a
usable and frightening set of fangs. And yet its ugliness was not repulsive,
not horrifying. There was no clothing to suggest that it represented an
intelligent being. Yet all of them were certain, the longer they examined the figure, that it had not been meant to portray an animal.
To
the touch the violet stone was smooth and cool, and when Travis held it out
into a patch of light from the dome, the statuette sparkled as might a gem. The
careful detail of the figure was in contrast to the abstraction of the murals
on the outer walls, more akin to the carvings on the dome and about the
doorways.
Ross
drew his finger along the interior of the niche where Ashe had found the image.
Dust piled there was pushed out to the floor. How long had the winged one stood
there undisturbed?
Ashe
carried it in the crook of his arm as they went on— not up the spiral of the
ramp but into the first of the open doorways on ground level. But the room
beyond was empty, lighted through slits high on the wall. They wandered on.
More empty rooms, no trace of those who had once lived here—if this had been a
dwelling place and not a building of public use. It was as if the inhabitants
when they had at last withdrawn, had stripped it bare, forgetting only the
little statue in the hall.
As
they came from the last bare chamber, Ross sighed and leaned against the wall.
"I don't know how you feel about
it," he announced. "But I've swallowed more than my share of dust
this past hour or so. Also breakfast was a long time back. A coffee break right
about now—providing we had the coffee—might be heartening."
They didn't have coffee, but they had come
provided with the foam drink from the ship. So, sitting in a row across the
ramp, they sucked in turn from containers of that and ate some of the
"com" cakes they carried for trail rations;
"Be
good to have some fresh food," Travis said wistfully. The rather
monotonous diet from the ship's stores satisfied hunger but did not appeal to
his taste. He allowed himself the luxury of visualizing a sizzling steak and
all that would accompany it back at the ranch.
"Maybe some on the hoof—out there." Ross, his hands full, pointed with his chain
toward the riot of greenery they could sight from their present perch. "We
could go hunting. . . ."
"How about that?" Travis roused and turned to Ashe eagerly. "Dare we try?"
But
the older agent did not warm to the suggestion. "I wouldn't kill—until I
knew what I was killing."
For
a moment Travis did not understand, and then the meaning of the rather ambiguous
statement sank in. How could they be sure that the prey was not—man! Or man's equivalent here? But he still wanted that steak,
with a longing which gnawed at him.
"Do
we climb?" Ross stood up. "This'll be an all-day job right here, if
we stick to it. I'd say the cupboard's bare,
though."
"Maybe." Ashe cradled his bat-thing in his arm. "We can take a quick look
through the ground floor of that big red block to the north."
They
fought their way through the thick wall of brush, grass, tree and vine to the
red building of the monolithic architecture. Here again they faced an open
door, this one narrow as the window slits, as if grudging any entrance at all.
"I'd
say the guys who built this one didn't like their neighbors too well,"
Ross commented. "This could make a pretty good fort if you had to have
one. That domed place is wide open."
"Different
peoples. . . ." Travis had been a little in advance, lingering for a
moment before he took the step which would bring him over the threshold. Once
inside he froze.
"Trouble!" His blaster was out, ready to fire.
There was a wide hall before him, as there
had been in the dome building. But where that had been clean and bare, this one
was different.
A
series of partitions some five or six feet high cut back and forth, chopping
the floor space into a crazy quilt of oddly shaped and sized spaces, with litde chance to see from one to the next. But that did not
bother Travis so much as the message recorded by his nose.
The
odor of the night creatures had been something like this. It was the taint of a
lair—a lair long in use. It smelled of decay, alien body reek, dried and rotted
vegetation and animal matter. Something denned here, used this place freely for
some time.
It
was the eagerness of that strange hunter which betrayed it. A low, throaty
murmur, such as a cat might utter when intent upon unsuspecting prey, carried
across the shadows.
Travis
spun around. He saw the hunched shape balancing on top of a partition, knew it
was about to launch straight for him. And he pressed the firing button of the
blaster as he brought it up.
The
attacker was caught in mid-air. A terrible yowl of rage, and pain, echoed and
re-echoed about the massive walls. A flailing limb, well provided with claws,
raked across Travis' body from the waist down, sending him reeling from the
door into the greater gloom. Just then Ross and Ashe burst in, to center the
full beams of their weapons on the rolling, caterwauling thing making a second
attempt at Travis.
Whatever it was, the creature possessed
abnormal vitality. It was not until those blast rays met and crossed in its
body that it lay still. Travis scrambled to his feet,
shaken. He knew that if he had not had that split second of warning, he would
be dead—or so badly mauled he would have longed for death.
He
limped back toward the door, his thigh and leg feeling numb from the force of
that smashing stroke. But under his questing hand the fabric of the suit was untom, and there seemed to be no open wound.
"Did
it get you?" Ashe came to meet him, pushing aside his hands to look at his
body. Travis, still shaken, winced under the exploring probe of the other's
fingers.
"Just
bruised.
What was it?"
Ross
arose from a gingerly inspection of the remains. "After the blasting we
gave it, your guess is as good as mine. But it is sure sudden death on six
legs—and that's no overstatement."
The
blasters had not left too much to identify, that was true. But the thing had
been six-legged, furred, and carnivorous—and it was about eight feet long with
fangs and claws in proportion to the size.
"Sabertooth,
local variety," Ross remarked.
Ashe
nodded to the outer world. "I suggest we make a strategic withdrawal. These
may be nocturnal, too, but I'd rather not tangle with another in the
jungle."
13
"Did you think we'd find no nasty surprises?" Ross drummed on the mess table with his scarred
hand, his eyes showing amusement, even if his lips did not curve into a smile.
"Let me share with you a small drop of good common sense, fella. It's just when things look the smoothest that
there's a big trap waiting ahead on the trail."
Travis
rubbed his bruised thigh. The other's humor grated. And since he had had time
to consider the late battle, he began to suspect that he had been a little too sure of himself when he had entered the red-walled
building. That didn't make him any more receptive to Ross's implied criticism,
though—or what he chose to believe was criticism.
"You
know"—Renfry came in from the corridor talking
to Ashe—"those blue flying things came back twice while you were gone.
They flew almost up to the port, but not inside."
Travis,
recalling the claws with which those were equipped, grunted. "Might be
just as well," he commented.
"Then,"
Renfry said, paying no attention to his interruption,
"just before you came back I found this—inside the outer lock."
"This"
was clearly no natural curiosity such as might have been deposited on their
doorstep by some freak of the wind. Three green leaves possessing yellow ribs
and veins had been pinned together with two-inch thoms into a cornucopia holder, a holder filled with
oval, pale-green objects about the size of a thumbnail.
They
could be fruit, seeds, a form of grain. Oddly enough,
Travis was sure they were food of a sort. And plainly, too, they were an
offering—a gesture of friendship—an overture on the part of the blue flyers.
Why? For what purpose?
"You didn't see a
flyer leave it?" questioned Ashe.
"No. I went to the
port—and there it was."
One
of the seed things had dropped out of the packet, rolled across the table.
Travis put a fingertip to it and the globe promptly burst as does an over-ripe
grape when pressed. Without thinking, he raised his sticky finger to his mouth.
The taste was tart, yet sweet, with the fresh cleanness of mint or some like
herb.
"Now
you've done it," observed Ross. "Well, we can watch while you break
out in purple spots, or turn all green and shrivel up." His words were
delivered in his usual amused tone, but there was a heat beneath that Travis
did not understand. Unless once more Ross believed the Apache had taken too
much on himself in that unthinking experiment.
"Good flavor," he returned with
stolid defiance. And deliberately he chose another, transferring it to his mouth and breaking the
skin with his teeth. The berry, or seed, or whatever it was, did not satisfy
his desire for fresh meat, but it was not a concentrate or something out of one
of the aliens' cans and the taste was good.
"That
is enough!" Ashe swept up the leaf bag and its contents. "We'll have
no more unnecessary chances taken."
But
when Travis experienced no ill effects from his sampling, they shared out the
rest of the gift at the evening meal, relishing the flavor after their weeks of
the ship's supplies.
"Maybe
we can trade for some more of these," Ross had begun almost idly. Then he
gave a start and sat straighter in the uncomfortable mess seat.
Ashe
laughed. "I wondered just when that possibility was going to dawn on
you."
Ross
grinned. "You may well ask. You'd think nothing stuck long between my
ears, wouldn't you? All right—so we set up as traders again. I never did get a
good chance to try out my techniques when we were on the Beaker nan—too
many interruptions."
Travis
waited patiently for them to explain. This was another of those times when
their shared experiences from the past shut him out,
to remind him that only chance had brought him into this adventure, after all.
"There
ought to be some things among all that stuff we routed out to study which
should attract attention." Ross wriggled around Ashe to leave the mess
cabin. "I'll see."
"Trade,
eh?" Renfry nodded. "Heard how you boys on
the time runs play that angle."
"Its'
a good cover, one of the best there is. A trader moves around without question
in a primitive world. Any little strangeness in his speech, his customs, his
dress, can be legitimately accounted for by his profession. He is supposed to
come from a distance, his contacts don't expect him to
be like their fellow tribesmen. And a trader picks up news quickly. Yes, trade was a cover the project
used from the first."
"You were a trader, back in time?"
Travis asked.
Ashe
appeared willing enough to talk of his previous ventures. "D'you ever hear of the Beaker
Folk? There were
traders for you—had their
stations from Greece to Scodand during the early
Bronze Age. That was my cover, in early Britain, and again in the Baltic. You
can really be fascinated by such a business. My first partner might have
retired a millionaire—or that period's equivalent to one." Ashe paused,
his face closing up again, but Travis asked another question.
"Why didn't he?"
"The Reds located our station in that
era. Blew it up. And themselves into
the bargain because they gave us our fix on their own post when they did
that." He might have been discussing some dry fact in a
report—until you saw his eyes.
Travis
knew that Ross was dangerous. He thought now that Ashe probably could surpass
his young subordinate in ruthless action, was there any need to do so. Ross
came back, his hands full. He set out his selections for their appraisal.
There
was a length of material—perhaps intended for a scarf—which they had found in
one of the crew lockers. A small thread of a vivid purple barred the green
length, both colors bright enough to rivet attention. Then there were four
pieces of carved wood, a coral-shaded wood with flecks of gold. They were
stylized representations of fern fronds or feathers, as far as the Terrans could tell, and Ashe believed they might be men in
some game, though playing board and other pieces had not been located. Lastly
was the plaque which could so mysteriously reproduce a picture of home for the
one holding it. That Ashe pushed aside with a shake of
head.
"That's
too important. We needn't be too generous the first time, anyway. After all,
we've only a small offering to top. Try the scarf and two of these."
"Put them in the
port?" Ross asked.
"I'd say no. No use encouraging
visitors. Use your judgment in picking out some place below."
Ashe
might have told Ross to take the initiative in that venture, but he followed
him out. Travis, his leg having given him a sudden severe twinge, retired to
his bunk, to try out the healing properties that resting pad had to offer in
the circumstances. He shipped off his suit, stretched out with a grimace or
two, and relaxed.
He
must have gone to sleep under the narcotic influence of the healing jelly which
seeped out and over him, triggered by his need. When he roused, it wis to find Ross pulling at him.
"What's the
matter?"
Ross
allowed him no time for protest. "Ashe's gone!" His face might be
schooled and impassive, but little cold devils looked out of his eyes.
"Gone?"
The drowsiness induced by the healing of the bunk did not make quick thinking
easy. "Gone where?"
"That's what we have
to find out. Get moving!"
Travis,
his bruises and aches gone, dressed, buckled the arms belt Ross pushed into his
hands. "Let's have the story."
Ross
was already in the corridor, every line of his taut body expressing his
impatience.
"We
were out there—fixed up a trading stone. There were a couple of flyers watching
us and we waited to see if they would come down. When they didn't, Ashe said we
had better take cover, as if we were going on to the buildings. Ashe detoured
around a fallen tree—I saw him go. I tell you— I saw him! Then he wasn't
there—or anywhere!" Ross was clearly shaken well out of his cultivated
imperviousness.
"A ground trap?" Travis gave the first answer probable
as he followed Ross to the air lock. Renfry was there
making fast two lengths of silky cord barely coarser then knitting yam but
which, as they had discovered earlier, possessed a surprising strength. So
hitched to the ship, they could prowl the vicinity and yet leave a guide to
their whereabouts.
"I
crawled over that ground inch by inch," Ross said between set teeth.
"Not so much as a worm or ant hole showing. He was there one minute—the
next he wasn'tl"
Making
fast their lines and leaving Renfry as lookout, they
descended into the trampled and blasted area about the globe where the green
was now withering under a sun not far from setting. Darkness would complicate
their search. They had better move swiftly, find some clue before they were so
baffled.
Ross
took the lead, balancing along a fallen tree trunk to its crown of dropping
fern fronds, now crushed and broken. "He was right here."
Travis
swung down into the crushed foliage. The sharp smell of sticky sap, as well as
the heavy scents of flowers and leaves, was cloying. But Ross was right. The
vegetation on the ground had been pulled away in a wide sweep, and there was no
sign that the dank earth beneath had been disturbed. He sighted
a round-toed track, but it was twin to the ones he was leaving in the mold and
could have been pressed there by either Ashe or Ross. But, because it was the
only possible trace, he turned in the direction it pointed.
A
moment or two later, at the very edge of the clearing Ross had made during his
search, Travis saw something else. There was another tree trunk lying there, the remains of a true forest giant. And it had
not been brought down by the landing of the ship, but had lain there long
enough for soil and fallen leaves to build up about it, to grow a skin or
red-capped moss or fungi.
Across
that moss there were now two dark marks, ragged scars, suggesting that someone
or something had clawed for a desperate hold against irresistible force. Ashe?
But how had he been captured without Ross's seeing or hearing his struggles?
Travis vaulted the tree trunk. There was his
confirmation— another footprint deep in the mold. But beyond
it-nothing—absolutely nothingl And
no living creature could have continued along that stretch of soft earth
without leaving a trace. From this point it did appear that Ashe had vanished
into thin air.
Airl Not on the ground but above it was where
they would have to search. Travis called to Ross. There were tall trees about
them now, trees with twenty feet or more of smooth bole before their first fem
branches broke from the trunks. The wind rustled there, but they could sight no
movement that was not normal, hear no sounds aloft.
Then
one of the blue flyers came along, hovering over Travis, watching him with all
four of its stalked eyes. The flyers—had they taken Ashe? He couldn't believe
that. A man of Ashe's weight and strength, undoubtedly struggling hard into the
bargain—at least the scrapping on the moss suggested that—could not have been
airborne unless by a large flock of the blue creatures working together. But
the Apache believed as completely as if he had witnessed it, that Ashe had been
taken away either through the air or along a road of treetops.
"How
did they get him up?" Ross puzzled. He appeared willing to accept Travis'
idea, but the Apache, in turn, was forced to agree such a maneuver would be
difficult. "And getting up," the time agent continued, "where in
the world did they take him?"
"This
lies in the opposite direction from the three nearest buildings," Travis
pointed out. "To transport a prisoner might force them to travel in a
direct line to their own quarters-speed would matter more than
concealment."
"Which means a direct strike out into, the jungle." Ross
eyed the wilderness of trees, vines and brush with disfavor. "Well,
there's one little trick—let me have your belt. This was something they showed
us in basic training—good old basic." He took Travis' belt, made it fast
to his own, increasing its expansion to the last hole
before he measured it about the tree. But the girth of the bole was too great.
Ross untied his cord connection with the ship, slashed off a length to incorporate
in the circle of belts. This time it served, uniting him to the bole. With the belt to support him, he hitched up the trunk
which overhung the signs of struggle.
The
fronds shook as he forced his way between them. "Here's your clue,"
he called down. "There's been a rope strung about this limb—worn a groove
in the bark. And— Well, well, well—they're not so
bright, after all—or they don't think we are. Here's a way to travel, all
right—and by the upper reaches. Come up and see!"
A
line made of cord and belts slapped down the trunk and Travis caught at it,
making the climb with less agility than Ross had shown, to join the other at
his perch among the fronds. He found the agent folding up between his hands
another rope, but a supple green one which aped the vines native to this aeriel place.
"You
do a Tarzan act." Ross flipped the rope end for emphasis. "Swing over
to that tree, probably find another rope end there—and so on. I still don't see
how they boosted Ashe along. Though"—his eyes narrowed—"maybe they
waited to go until I went back to the ship for you."
Travis eyed the rope.
"Leaving that here means one thing—"
"That
they intend to return?" Ross nodded. "They may have some bright plans
about scooping us up one by one. But who are 'they'? Not those blue flyers. . .
."
"Those
might act as their hounds." Travis tried not to glance at the ground, for
his present perch inspired little confidence in him.
"And
that fruit present was bait for a trap," Ross agreed. "It fits. The fruit to get us out of the ship, the flyers to report when we
came. Then—pounce!—one of us is snaffled! Only Ashe isn't going to stay
a prisoner."
"This could be a trap, too," Travis
reminded him as he gave the rope a jerk and discovered Ross had been right, the
line was very firmly attached to its tree anchorage.
"True enough. But
we'll find some way."
"At night?" The sun was close to setting. Travis wanted to be on the trail just as
much as Ross, but common sense would pay off better than a reckless dash to the
rescue.
"Night—"
Ross squinted at the patches of sunlight. "These things move around in the
daytime. And they're used to heights."
"Which suggests there may be good reasons for not traveling on the
ground or in the dark." Travis was growing a little tired of
talking. "Our friend in the red house may be one of those reasons. What is
your solution?"
"We
go back to the domed place—up to the top. There is a balcony around the dome
itself, and we can take our bearings from there."
Travis
could agree with that. But they had to argue down the protests of Renfry. The technician's demands to accompany them Ross
was able to overcome by pointing out crisply that alone of their party Renfry possessed the knowledge, or fraction of knowledge,
which might mean their eventual control of the ship, and so of their future.
And the need for a scouting party before dark urged the necessity for speed in
their try to locate landmarks which might guide them on a hunt for Ashe.
They
threaded the path they had cut that morning. Travis glanced now and then-at the
sky when they crossed small glades. He had half expected to find the blue
flyers on the lookout. But none appeared.
Ross
took the inner ramp under the dome at a rapid trot. His pace, however, slowed
as they wound their way up past five levels, then six, seven, eight, nine and
finally ten. There was no sound in the building, nothing to break the echoing
emptiness of the fantastically beautiful shell.
They
reached the balcony, a narrow walk curving completely around the bulk of the
dome, protected by a breast-high parapet of the carved lace. The wind, now
rising in intensity, pulled at their hair, sang weirdly through the openwork.
Ross took the lead. He hurried to the vantage point from which they could
obtain an unrestricted view in the direction they thought Ashe's captors had
headed.
There
were other buildings, or the remains of buildings, rising out of the jungle.
Some of them were smaller than the dome, three or four—at a greater
distance—taller. And the taller ones had a certain similarity of oudine which suggested that they must have had a common
architectural origin.
It
was one of those which Ross indicated now. "If they were headed for the
nearest building across thè treetops—that must be
it." He sighted along his pointed finger as he might have along a rifle
barrel.
Travis was listing all possible landmarks—though from
ground level perhaps three-quarters of them would not be of
much use. "To the right of that funnel-shaped capping,
and
the left of the pile of blocks. It may be several miles from
here." ,
To
cut a trail along the ground was possible—using their blasters. But such action
would certainly advertise their coming. If they wanted to located/the
enemy—always providing, of course, that the enemy was roosting in the structure Ross had just chosen—the process must entail a
longer and more complicated bit of trail craft. And such a scout could not be
made at night.
"There's one way of checking," Ross
said, as if he were thinking aloud. "If we stay here until dark, we'd
know."
"How?"
"Lights. If we see any fights out there—they would be proof."
"Slim chance. They'd be fools to use lights."
"Could be trap-setting again," Ross
demurred. "More bait to pull us in."
"That's
just guessing. How can we tell what makes their minds tick? We don't even know
what they are. You didn't like the type who first wore this uniform."
Travis plucked at the blue fabric crossing his chest. "If this was their
home planet, wouldn't they be able to play games with us the way they did with
you—by mental control?"
"Look
out there!" Ross's sweep of hand included half the landscape, the sea of
untroubled jungle, the buildings rising in isolated
islands out of it. - "Whatever they had— it's dead now—long dead. And
maybe they're dead, too—or back at the primitive stage. If they're primitives,
Ashe can handle them to a point; he's been taught to do just that. I've seen
him in action. Give me an hour up here past sundown. Then if we see no
lights—I'll go. . . ."
Travis
drew his blaster. Dark, or even heavy dusk, here might unleash things to lurk
in the shadows along their trail. But he could understand Ross's point, and
they had a well-marked path to the ship.
"All
right."
They
walked slowly around the dome waiting for the murk of evening to gather. And so
they counted at least fifty more buildings, fantastic, unlike, some even
appearing to defy the laws of gravity. Beyond them were those others, tall,
thin, of a common mold. Were those the native structures and these others
embassies, examples of trans-galactic architecture as Ashe had suggested? If
not all of them were stripped, what a wealth of knowledge lay-Travis was jerked
out of speculation by a cry from Ross. There was still a reflection of sunlight
in the sky at their backs. But—Murdock's hunch had paid off. A wink of light
flashed across the green from the first of the distant tall towers. Flashed on—off—on.
Was it meant to be an enticing signal?
14
They
held a council of war in
the ship, the outer hatch closed against the night, that simple precaution
taught them by the desert world.
"It'll
be difficult to go straight through the tangle in that direction," Renfry observed. "They'd be waiting for you to try
it."
"Sometimes
the fastest way is around, not straight," Ross agreed. He had a map drawn
on a sheet of material from the aliens' stores, the crosses and squares on it
marking the various buildings they had sighted. "See here—they bunch,
those tall towers. But here, and here, and here, are other buildings. Suppose
we head for this one which looks like an outsized oil
can, then beyond that there's the pile of blocks. The one we want is between
them. So—move to the funnel top, then start beyond to the block pile—and cut
back. If we can make them believe we're just searching everything in that
direction, it'll buy us time. Reach a point about here"—his forefinger dug into the surface of the improvised map— "and
then do a right-about-face and go at top speed." He looked up
challengingly. "Anybody got a better idea?"
Renfry shrugged. "This is your party, you've had the training for this type of thing. But
I'll go along."
"And
let some joker take the ship behind our backs?" Ross wanted to know.
"They've a line on us—they must have or they wouldn't have scooped up the
chief so neatly. He's no recruit at this type of fun and games, remember. I've
seen him in action."
"Through the treetops," Travis
mused. "If that's their
regular mode of travel, then maybe we have another
point in our favor. Once we're really into the jungle, there's a lot of cover
which will give us protection. They can't watch us from above all the
time."
"You're both set on this then?" Renfry still studied the map.
Ross
stood up. "I don't propose to let them nobble
the chief and get away with it. And the quicker we are on the move—the
better!"
But
even Ross had to admit that they must wait until dawn to put their plan to the
test. They rummaged the ship for supplies and assembled a small pack apiece.
Each wore a belt supporting alien blasters. In addition a coil of the supple
cord-rope was wound from shoulder to hip about their bodies, and they had
retained the flint knives from their hunter disguise. Brittle though the flint
might be, the finely chipped blades could still serve
a deadly purpose in close combat. They slung packsacks with food and the froth
containers:
Renfry disputed his staying with the ship. But he
was forced to admit that there was not way to lock
the port behind them and so a guard must remain. However, he insisted upon
triggering the armament of the spacer. So when they descended the ladder to the
ground in the first dull rose of the early morning, the black mouths of those
sinister tubes were thrust from the shell of the globe.
They
took turns cutting a path. And, where they could, they pushed through the
underbrush, saving the power of the blasters. It was Travis who led when they
thrust completely through a fern wall into a green tunnel.
The
ground here had been worn into a shallow trough and beaten hard. Travis needed
only one look to know that slot for what it was—a game trail, leading either to
water or to some favorite grazing ground. It had been well traveled, and for
some length of time.
There
were tracks here, pads with the pinprick indentations of claws well beyond
them, a clover hoof with so deep a cleavage that the hoof must be almost split
in two, and some smaller tracings too alien to be
identified.
"This
goes in the right direction. Do we follow it?" Travis was in two minds
about such an action, himslef. On one hand they could
greatly increase their speed and speed might be important. But a well-used game
trail not only provided a road for animals—it was as well a lure for those
creatures that preyed upon such travelers.
Ross
moved out on the narrow path. It had twists and turns, but the way did run in
the direction of the funnel top which was their first goal.
"We do," he
decided.
Travis
dropped into a loose trot which fitted his feet into the slot of the track. He
caught small sounds in the vegetation about them—twitters, squeaks, sometimes a harsh, croaking call. But he saw nothing of the
creatures that voiced them.
The
trail took a dip into a shallow ravine. At the bottom a stream trickled lazily
over brown-green gravel and above them the sky was open. There they disturbed a
fisher.
Travis'
hand went to the grip of his blaster, dropped away again. Like the blue flyers,
this strange inhabitant of the unknown world gave no impression of hostility.
The beast was about the size of a wild cat, and somewhat similar to a cat in
appearance. At least, it possessed a round Jiead with
eyes set slighdy aslant. But the ears very very long and sharply pointed with heavy tufts of—feathers
at their tips. Feathersl The
blue flyer had been furred, provided with insect wings. The fisher, plainly a
ground dweller, was fluffily clothed in soft feathers of the same blue-green
shade as the foliage about. Had it not been crouched on the rock in the open,
it would have passed unseen.
Its
haunches and hind legs were heavy and it squatted back upon them. Two pairs of
far more slender and longer front limbs held a limp, scaled thing which it had
been methodically denuding of a series of fringe legs by the aid of teeth and
claws. Interrupted, the animal watched Travis with round-eyed interest,
displaying neither alarm nor anger at his sudden appearance.
As the Terran edged
forward, the creature freed one front leg, still clasping its prey in the other
three, and flicked a fringe leg or two from its feather-clad paunch in
absent-minded tidiness. Then folding its breakfast to its
middle with the intermediary pair of arms or forepaws, it leaped spectacularly
from a sitting position, to be hidden in the brush.
"Rabbit—cat—owl—whatsis," Ross commented. "Wasn't
afraid though."
"Means that it either hasn't any enemies—or none resembling
us."
Travis studied the curtain into which the fisher had plunged. "Yes, it's
still watching—from over there," he added in a half whisper.
But
the presence of the feather-clad feaster was in a way a promise of security
along this road. Travis found the opening of the trail on the other side of the
stream. And he was now better pleased to follow it, Even though once more the
tree fems closed in overhead and he and Ross were
swallowed in what was a tight tunnel of green.
The
indications of a busy, hidden life about them continued to come in sounds.
Twice they stumbled on evidence of some hunter or hunters working the trail.
Once they found a fluff of plush-like gray fur still bedaubed with light
pinkish blood, then a clot of cream-yellow feathers and draggled skin.
There
was an open apron about the funnel building. A fan of stone, dappled with red
moss but not yet claimed in entirity by the jungle
and the game trail, skirted this, running on past the building. If they were to
continue to follow Ross' plan, they must strike back now into the jungle again
and bull their way through its resilient mass. But first, for the benefit of
any watchers, they crossed that moss-spattered apron to the building as if
about to search its interior. Only there was no easy entrance here. A grill, of
the same imperishable material as that which formed the fan area before the
door, forbade their entry. Through its bars they could see parts of the inside.
Plainly this particular structure had been left furnished after a fashion, for
objects, muffled in disintegrating coverings, crowded the floor.
Ross,
his face pressed close to the bars, whistled. "I'd say they were getting
ready for movers, only the vans never arrived. The chief'll
want to break in here, might be some of his kind of pickings about."
"Better
collect him first." Travis stood at the top of those
four wide steps leading to the barred door. He could sight
the tower which was their ultimate goal, though the fern trees shielded it for
about three stories up. To his survey there were no signs of life about it,
nothing moved at any of the window holes. Yet there had been that light at
yesterday's dusk.
"All right—we'll get to it!" Ross
came away from the grill. He swung his arm wide in an extravagant gesture to
mark not the goal of their choice but the block building beyond it.
They
had to cut their way now, using blasters and their hands to pull and break a
path between the small, isolated glades where the fall of some giant tree in
the past had cleared a passable strip for them. Panting and floundering, they
came to the fifth such clearing.
"This is it,"
Ross said. "We'll turn back from here."
Luckily
the summit of the tower showed now and then as a guide. They were approaching
it from thevback, and by some freakish whim of nature
there was less underbrush here. So they had to choose cover, watching the
heights for any indication that some scout or spy might lurk aloft. Not that
they could be certain of spotting any army under the circumstances, Travis
decided gloomily, moving with the wariness of one expecting an ambush at any
moment.
They had covered perhaps half of the distance
which would bring them to the base of the tower when both of them were startled
into immobility by a squall. The batde cry of the
thing which had laired in the red hall! And the sound was so distorted by the
jungle about them that Travis could not tell whether its source lay before or
behind.
That
first wail of battle was only the starting signal of a racket, a din to split Terran eardrums. A bird thing boomed out of the brush, flew
in blind panic straight for the two, blundered past them in safety. A graceful,
slender creature with a dappled coat and a single curving hom
flashed away before Travis was tndy sure he had seen
it.
But
those howls of rage and blood hunger chorused on. There must be more than one
of the beasts—perhaps a pack of them! And from the noise, they were engaged in
combat. Travis could only think of Ashe cornered in the tower to face such as
enemy. He began to run. Ross drew level with him before they plunged together
into a hedge of brush, fighting their way in the straightest line to the base
of the tower.
Travis
tripped, staggered forward, fighting to regain his balance, and plowed on his
hands and knees into the open. He was facing the entrance to the tower, a long,
narrow slit of opening. From within came the sounds. Ross, blaster in hand,
leaped past him, a blue streak of concentrated action.
The
Apache scrambled up, was only a step or two behind the time agent as they
entered, finding themselves directly on the foot of an upward-leading ramp. One
of those squalling roars, sounding above, ended in a cough. A mass of dull red
fur, flailing legs, a flat, narrow, weasel's head
showing snapping jaws, rolled down, struggling in convulsive death agony. Ross
leaped aside.
"Blaster
got that one!" he shouted. "Chief! Ashe! You up there?"
If
there was any answer to that hail, the words were drowned in the screech of the
animals. The light was dusky here, but there was enough for the Terrans to spot the barrier across the ramp. It was a
barrier which had been there some lime but was now showing a gap, choked by two
of the red beasts struggling against each other in their eagerness to force
that doorway. Behind them snarled a third.
Travis
steadied the barrel of the blaster across his forearm and nicked a darting
weasel-head with a sniper's expert aim. The thing did not even cry out, but
reared, somersaulted backward down the ramp as the men jumped apart to give it
room.
One
of the creatures at the gap caught sight of the two below and pulled back,
allowing its fellow through the barrier while it whirled to spring at Ross. His
blaster beam raked across its shoulders and it screamed hideously, collapsed,
scratching frantically with its hind feet to gain footing. Ross fired again and
the animal was still. But the rage of the fight beyond the barrier continued.
"Ashe!"
Ross shouted. And Travis, catching his breath, echoed that call. To go through
the gap in the barrier before them and perhaps be met by a blaster beam from a
friend was certainly not to be desired.
"Hullloooo!" The cry was weirdly echoed, dehumanized, and
it appeared to come from some distance ahead or above. But both of them had
heard it and now they pushed past the barrier into a wide hallway.
There
was light here, coming in white flames from smoking brands which lay on the
floor at the far end as if tossed from a higher level. One of the red beasts
lay dead and -they hurdled the body. Another, dragging
useless hindquarters, crept with deadly purpose toward them and Travis picked
it off. But the beam in his blaster died before he lifted finger from firing
button. Another try proved his fears correct—the charge in the weapon was
exhausted.
There was a scrambling on the second ramp at
the far end of the hall. Ross stood at the foot, his blaster up. Travis stooped
to scoop up one of the torches. He whirled the brand in the air, bringing the
smoldering end into a burst of life.
Ross
aimed at a charging weasel-head, missed, flung himself to the side of the ramp
and over to the floor to escape the rush. But the beast plunged insanely after
him. Travis whirled the torch a second time, bringing its flaming end down in a
swing against the snaky, darting head of the attacker.
One
of those powerful forepaws aimed a vicious swipe, tore the torch from the
Apache's hold. But Ross was up to his knees again, blaster ready. And the red
animal died. Travis retreated, a little unsteadily, to pick up a second torch.
"Hullloooo!" Again that shout
from overhead. Ross answered it.
"Ashe! Down here. . .
."
There
were no more squalls from the ramp. But Travis wondered if more of the beasts
lay in wait. With a useless blaster he had no desire to climb into the unknown.
A flint knife was nothing against the weasel-heads.
They
waited, listening, at the foot of the ramp. But when there came no other
attack, Ross pattered ahead and Travis followed, nursing his new torch. His
hand shot out, closed on Ross's arm, as he caught up with the other. Something
was waiting for them up there.
Travis
thrust the torch into that pocket of gloom at the head of the ramp, saw Ross's
blaster at ready—
"Come
on in!" The words were ordinary enough, but Ashe's voice sounded a little
breathless and in higher pitch than usual. But it was Ashe, unharmed and seeming his usual self, who stepped into the pool of
light and waited for them to join him. Only he was not alone. Half-seen shadows
moved behind him. Ross did not holster his blaster and Travis' hand rested on
his knife hilt.
"You
all right, chief?"
Ashe laughed in answer to
Ross's demand. "Now that the space patrol has landed,
yes. You boys introduced the right play at the proper moment. Come on
and meet the gang."
The
torch sputtered as those shadows moved in closer to Ashe. Then a new light
blazed up well above floor level and Travis blinked at the company that fire
revealed.
Ashe
was six feet tall, giving Travis himself an inch or so. But in this company he
towered, for the tallest of his companions came only a little above his
shoulder.
"They have wingsl"
Yes,
with a sudden twitch a flap of wing—not feathered, but ribbed skin—had
unfurled, pointing up above its owner's shoulder. Where had he seen a wing such
as that? On the statue from the domed building!
However,
the faces now all turned toward the Terrans were not
as grotesque as the one of the image. The ears were not so large,
the features were more humanoid, though the noses remained vertical slits.
Either the statue had been a caricature, or it represented a far more primitive
type.
The
natives hung back, and from their narrow, pointed jaws came
a low murmur, rising and falling, which Travis could not separate into distinct
sounds or words.
"Local inhabitants?" Ross still held his blaster. "They the ones who kidnapped you, chief?"
"In a manner of speaking. I take it you accounted for the wild life
below?"
"All
we saw," Travis returned, still watching the winged people, for they were
people, of that he was sure.
"Then
we can get out of here." Ashe turned to the waiting shadows and holstered
his own weapon with an emphatic slam. Two of the winged men beckoned and the
rest stood back, allowing Ashe, Ross and Travis to pass them, to climb a third
ramp. At the top the Terrans saw the open yellow of
sunlight, and came out into a wide hall with archways, not doors, clown its
length.
Travis' nostrils expanded as he caught a
mixture of scents, some pleasant, some otherwise. There was activity here;
there were indications that this was a permanent settlement. The archways were
hung with nets of green into which were tucked flowers here and there, many
like the one he had found on his first day of exploration. Logs, hollowed out
and so made into troughs, stood about the walls. From them grew a mixture of
plants, all reaching toward the sun which came through windows, running a
curtain of green from floor level to ceiling.
The
people were no longer just shadows. And in this brighter light their humanoid
resemblance was marked. The furled wings covered their backs as might folded
cloaks, and they wore no clothing save ornaments of belt, collar or armlets.
The weapons, which all within sight carried, were small spears —litde enough protection against the red killers which had
assailed them from below.
They
watched the Terrans closely, keeping up their murmur
of speech, but making no threatening gestures. And since it was impossible for
the Terrans to read any expression on their faces,
Travis did not know whether the three from the ship were considered prisoners,
allies, or merely strange objects of general interest.
"Here. ..."
Ashe stopped before one of the curtained archways and pursed his lips to give a
gende hoot.
The
curtain parted and he went in, signaling the other two to follow him.
Under
their feet was thick matting plaited from vines and leaves.
And there were low partitions of latticework over which living plants climbed
to form dividing walls, cutting one large room into a series of smaller
cubicles around a central space fronting the archway.
"Pay
attention to nothing around the wall," Ashe said quickly. "Keep your
eyes on the one at the table."
Squatting
by a table raised some two feet from the carpeted floor was one of the winged
men. Those they had
GALACTIC DE
R-E"L I C T
seen in
the outer hallway had had skins which were a dusky lavender color, close in
shade to the very stone from which the image had been carved. But this one was darked, almost a deep purple. And there was something in
his constrained movements which suggested the stiffness of age.
But
when the native looked up to meet Ashe's gaze in welcome, Travis knew that this
was not only a man, but a great man among his kind. It was there in his eyes,
in the pride of his carriage, and in the slow deliberation of the searching
study with which he regarded the three Terrans.
15
"What
a junkyard!" Ross stared
about him in sheer stupefaction.
"Treasure house!"
his chief corrected him almost sharply.
Travis
simply stood between them and gazed. Perhaps both descriptions could apply in
part.
"They
kidnapped you to sort this
out for them?" Ross demanded,
as if he couldn't believe a word of that conclusion.
"That's
the general idea," Ashe admitted. "Question is— where do we start,
what do we have, and how can we get across to them the meaning of anything we
do find—if we can make it out ourselves?"
"How
long have they been collecting all this?" Travis wondered. There were
paths through those piles of moldering materials, so one could investigate the contents of the heaps. But the general confusion of the
mass was almost intimidating.
Ashe
shrugged. "When your total method of communication consists of gestures,
a lot of ragged guessing, and pointing, how is anyone to know anything?"
"But why you? I mean—how are you supposed to know what makes all this tick, or thump, or otherwise run?" Ross asked again.
"We came in the ship. They may have some
hazy tradition-legends—that the ship people knew everything." "The
Fair Gods," Travis threw in..
"Only
we are not Cortez and his men," Ashe returned with a snap.
"They
aren't the baldies, or that furry-faced operator I saw on the vision plate of
the ship the Reds had. So where do they fit in?"
"Judging
by that statue, their ancestors were known to the builders of the dome,"
Ashe replied. "But I think they are primitive, not decadent."
Travis' imagination made a
sudden, swift leap.
"Pets?"
Both of the others looked
at him. Ashe drew a deep breath.
"You
might just be right!" The way he spaced his words gave them an impressive
emphasis. "Give our world ten thousand years and the right combination of
conditions and see what could happen to our dogs or our cats."
"Are we
prisoners?" Ross came back to a main point.
"Not
now. Our handling of the weasels took care of that. A common enemy is an
excellent argument for mutual peace. And we have a common purpose here, too. If
we're goirig to find out anything which will help Renfry, it will be in just such a collection as this."
"It'd
take a year just to shuffle through the top layer in this mess," Ross gave
a gloomy opinion.
"We
know what we are looking for—we have examples on the ship. Anything we can
uncover in the process which might help our winged friends, we turn over to
them. And who knows what we may find?"
Ashe
was right about the attitude of the winged people. The chief or leader, who had
first received them in the vine-walled room and brought them in turn into the
huge chamber containing^ the loot gathered by his tribe, showed no
unwillingness to let them return to the ship. But their path back, followed on
ground and not by the aeriel ways of the natives, was
supervised by two of the blue flyers that had some link with the winged
people—perhaps a relationship not unlike man and hound.
During
his period of captivity Ashe had learned that the red weasels were the
principal local menace and that the winged fold had tried to wall off the lower
sections of their dwelling towers to baffle the hunters. These creatures had
worked with sly cunning—which suggested a measure of intelligence on their part
also—on the ramp barrier. But only a determined raid made by a whole pack had
finally broken through that laboriously constructed wall to get at the living
quarters of the flying people. Ashe's readiness to use his blaster on the
behalf of his captors and the surprise attack by Ross and Travis had completely
destroyed the marauding pack. These two things had also made a favorable
impression upon the intended victims. As Ashe had commented, a common enemy was
a firm base on which to build an alliance.
"But'
they can fly," Ross protested. "Why didn't they just take off—out the
windows, and let those six-legged weasels have the place?"
"For
a reason their chief was finally able to make plain. This is apparently the
season during which their young are bom. The males
could have escaped, but the females and young could not."
They
found Renfry awaiting their arrival at the ship in a
fingernail-gnawing state of impatience. Relieved to see them whole and
together, he greeted them with the news that he had managed to trace the
routing of the trip tape through the control board. Whether he could reset
another tape, or reverse the present one, he did not yet know.
"I don't know about rewinding this one." He tapped the coin-sized disk
they had seen ejected from the board on the morning of their arrival. "If
the wire breaks—" He shrugged and did not need to elaborate.
"So
you'd like to have another to practice on." Ashe nodded. "All right,
we all know what to look for when we start our digging into the treasure trove
tomorrow."
"If
any still exist." Renfry sounded dubious.
"Deduction number one." Ashe took a long pull from the froth-drink
can. "I believe most of the stuff the winged folk have gathered came from
towers such as the one they use to house their village. And there are a number
of those here. The other buildings of radically different design are not duplicated.
Which leads you to surmise that the tower structures are
native to this planet, the other types imported for some purpose.
"When
that pilot set the control tape to bring the ship here, he was setting course
either for his home—or his service headquarters. Therefore, it is not too
improbable to suppose that we can hope to come across something in that 'miscellaneous
mixture of loot they've gathered which is allied to record tapes we have found
on this ship. And I will not rule out journey wires among the litter."
"There
are a lot of ifs, ands, and maybes in that," Renfry
said.
Ashe
laughed. "Man, I have been dealing with ifs and maybes for most of my adult
life. Being a snooper into the past takes a lot of guessing—then the hard grind
of working to prove your guesses are right. There are certain bqsic patterns which become familiar—which you can use as
the framework for your guess."
"Human
patterns," Travis reminded. "Here we do not deal with humans."
"No,
we don't. Unless you widen the definition of human to include
any entity with intelligence and the power to use it. Which I believe we
shall have to do, now that we are no longer planet—or system—bound. Anyway, to
hunt through the remains of the tower civilization is the first concrete job we
have now."
The
next morning found them all, Renfry included, back at
the tower. And, in those patches of sunlight which entered the packed room, the
job Ashe and the chief of the winged people had set them looked even more
formidable.
That
is—it did until the cubs, or chicks, or children of the natives turned up to
offer busy hands and quick bright eyes to assist. Travis found himself the
center of a small gathering of winged midgets, all watching him with eager
attention as he tried to disentangle a pile of disintegrating objects. A pair
of small hands swooped to catch a rolling container, another helper brought out
a box. A third straightened a coil of flexible stuff which was snarled about
the top layer of the pile. The Apache laughed and nodded, hoping that both
gestures would be translated as thanks and encouragement. Apparently they
were, for the youngsters dived in with a will, their small hands wriggling into
places he could not reach. Twice, though, he had hurriedly to jerk some
too-ambitious delver back from a threatened avalanche of heavy goods.
So
much of what they uncovered, examined, and put to one side was either too badly
damaged by time to be of any use, or else had no meaning for the Terrans. Travis struggled with the covers of crumbling
containers and boxes. Sometimes he would see them go to dust with their
contents under his prying hands; other times he would find their interiors
filled only with powder which might once have been fabric.
Lengths
of an alloy, fashioned into sections of pipe, he laid
to one side. These seemed still intact and might be of use to the winged
people, either as material for weapons more effective than their spears, or
for tools. Once he came upon an oval box which flaked to bits in his hands, But it left mingled with the powder on his palm a glittering
stone set in a scroll of metal, as untarnished and perfect as the day the jewel
had been stored. His volunteer assistants hummed with wonder and he gave it to
the nearest, to see it passed from hand to hand and at last gravely returned to
his keeping.
By
noon none of the four Terrans, working in opposite
corners of the big room, had found anything useful to their own purposes. They
met under a window to share food supplies free of the dust of the rubbish heap.
"I
knew it was a year's job," Ross complained. "And what have we found
so far? Some metal which hasn't rusted completely away, a few jewels—"
"And this." Ashe held out a round spool. "If I'm not mistaken, this is a
record tape. And it may be intact. Looks something like those we found aboard
the ship."
"Here
comes the big boss," Ross said, glancing up.
"Are you going to ask him for that?"
The
chief who had brought them to this storeroom entered the far doorway with his
escort. He moved slowly about the perimeter of the room to inspect the piles
where the explorers had made such a small beginning. When he reached the Terrans they stood up, towering over both chief and escort.
Though they did not share language and their communication was by gesture,
Ashe went to work to suggest a few uses for the morning's salvage. The gems
were understandable enough. And the metal tubes were examined politely without
much interest.
Ashe
spoke to Renfry across the chief's shoulder. "Any chance of working these into spears?"
"Given
time—and tools—maybe." But the technician did not sound too certain.
Last
of all Ashe displayed the spool, and for the first time the chief became
animated. He took it into his own hands and hummed to one of the guards who
went off at a trot. He tapped one finger on the red tape and then spread out
all the digits several times, ending with a wide inclusive sweep of one arm.
"What's
he trying to tell us, Ashe?" Renfry had been
watching the performance closely.
"I
think he means that this is only one of many. We may have made a real
discovery."
The
guard came back followed by a smaller, younger edition of himself.
Taller than the children, the newcomer was probably an adolescent. He saluted
the chief with a clap of his wings and stood waiting until his leader held out
the spool. Then, reaching out, the chief caught at Ashe's hand and put the
youngster's in it—waving them off together.
"You
going?"
Ross wanted to know.
"I
will. I think they want to show us where this came from. Renfry,
you had better come too. You might be able to recognize a technical record
better than I could."
When
they were gone, the chief and his retinue after them, Ross looked about him
with dissatisfaction written plain on his face.
"There's nothing worth
grubbing for here."
Travis
had picked up a length of the tubing, to examine it in the full light of the
window. The section was four feet or so long and showed no signs of erosion or
time damage. An alloy, it was light and smooth, and what its original use had
been he did not know. But as he ran it back and forth through his hands an idea
was born.
The
winged men needed better weapons than the spears. And to make such weapons from
the odds and ends of metals they had found in this litter required forging
methods perhaps none of the Terrans, not even Renfry, had the skill to teach. But there was one arm which
could be made—and perhaps even the ammunition for it might also exist in the
unclassified masses on the floor. It was not a weapon his own people had used,
but to the south those of his race had developed it into a deadly and accurate arm.
"What's so special
about that tube?" Ross asked.
"It
might be special—for these people." Travis held it up,
put one end experimentally to his hps. Yes, it was
light enough to be used as he planned.
"In
what way?"
"Didn't
you ever hear of blowguns?" "What?"
"The main part is a tube such as
this—they're used mosdy by South American Indians. A
small splinter arrow is blown through and they are supposed to be accurate and
deadly. Sometimes poisoned arrows are used. But the ordinary kind would do if
you hit a vital point, say one of those weasel's eyes —or its throat."
"You
begin to make sense, fella." Ross hunted for a
section of pipe to match Travis'. "You plan to give these purple people a
better way to kill red weasels. Can you make one to really work?"
"We
can always try." Travis turned to the clustering children and gestured,
getting across the idea that such sections of pipe were now of importance. The
junior assistants scattered with excited hums as if he had loosed a swarm of
busy bees in the room.
As
Travis had hoped, he was also able to discover the necessary material for
arrows there. Again their original use was unknown, but at the end of a half
hour's search he had a handful of needle-slim slivers of the same light alloy
as the pipes themselves. Since he had never built or used a blowgun and knew
the principles of the weapon only through reading, he looked forward to a
period of trial and error. But at last they gleaned from the room a wealth of
raw materials with which to experiment. And they had not yet done when the
youngster who had guided Ashe came back, to gut at Ross's sleeve and beckon the
Terrans to follow.
They
wound from one ramp to another, passing the point where the weasels had
breached. But they did not leave the tower. Instead their guide went to the
back of the entrance hall, putting both hands to a seemingly blank wall and
pushing. Travis and Ross, watching his effort, joined their strength to his
and a panel slipped back into the wall.
Before
them was not a room, but a more sharply inclined ramp descending into a well of
shadow which increased in darkness until its foot could not be sighted from
their present stand. The winged boy took the downward path at a run. His wings
expanded until they balanced his body and he skimmed at a speed neither of the Terrans was reckless enough to try to match.
Once
they reached the foot of the descent, they saw in the distance the smoky gleam
of one of the native torches. And, guided by that, they ran along a narrow
corridor where dust rose in puffs under their pounding feet.
The
room of plunder in the tower above had housed un-sorted heaps of bits and
pieces. The place they now entered, where Ashe awaited them, was a monument to
the precision and efficiencey of the same race—or a
kindred people—of those who flew the ship.
Here
were machines, banks of controls, dim, dark vision plates. And as the Terrans advanced slowly the torch displayed racks and
racks of containers, not only of record tapes, but of journey disks. Hundreds,
thousands of those button spools which had brought them across space, were
racked in cylinders with transparent tops and unknown symbols of the other
people on their labels.
"Port
control center—we think." Ashe may have temporized by adding those last
two words, but there was a certainty in his tone which suggested he was sure. Renfry was filling the front of his suit with samples taken
from both record containers and tape racks.
"Library. . . ."
Travis added an identification of his own.
Ashe nodded. "If we
only knew what to takel Lord, maybe everything we
want, we need—not only for now but for the whole future—is right here!"
Ross
went to the nearest rack, began to follow Renfry's
example.
"We
can try to run these on the reader in the ship. And if we take enough of them,
the odds are at least one or two should be helpful."
His
logical approach to the problem was the sensible one. They went about the
selection as methodically as they could, lifting samples from each rack of
holders.
"A
whole galaxy of knowledge must be stored here," Ashe marveled, as his
fingers flicked one coil after another free:
They
left at last, the fronts of their flexible suits bulging, their hands full. But
before they left the tower, Travis also gathered up the lengths of pipe and the
needle slivers. And when they were back in the ship, the reader set up, their
plundered record rolls ready to feed, the Apache went to work on fashioning the
weapon he hoped to offer to the winged people in return for their sharing of
the stored wisdom.
Renfry, an
array of small tools from the crew lockers aligned before him, was operating on
one of the route disks. He was prying off its cover and carefully unwinding the
thin wire spiral curled within. Twice he was doomed to disappointment, that
fragile thread upon which a ship could cruise to the stars snapping brittlely under his most careful handling. The second time
that happened he looked up, his face drawn, his eyes red with strain.
"I don't think it can be done."
"There's
this." Ashe reached for one of the waiting disk tapes. "Those you are
working with are old. The one in the ship is new."
There-
it was again, the jog in time which might return them to their own world—or
might not. But that reminder appeared to encourage Renfry.
He checked the outside of his disks, pushing aside any which showed the pitting
of
GALACTIC DE
R.E L I C T
years.
His next choice did not look too different from the one which held their future
locked into its spiral. For the third time he pried delicately to force off the
case.
But
it was not to be that night that they learned anything which was of value to
them. The record tapes in the reader gave only a series of pictures,
fascinating in themselves, but of no value now. And in addition there were
others which merely flashed symbols—perhaps formulae, perhaps written accounts.
At last Ashe snapped off the machine.
"We can't expect to be
lucky all the time."
"There're
thousands of those things stored in that place," Ross pointed out.
"If we do find anything useful—it will have to be by luck!"
"Well,
luck is what we have to count on in our game." Ashe's voice was tired,
drained. He moved slowly, rubbing his hands across his eyes. "When you
give up a belief in luck, you're licked!"
16
Travis
set the mouthpiece of a
blowgun to his lips and puffed. A thin, shining
silver, tipped with a fleecy tuft, sped— to center on his improvised target of
a red-veined leaf and pin it more securely to the trunk of a fern tree some ten
feet away. He was absurdly pleased with the success of his trial shot. He moved
back another four feet and prepared for a second test. All the while the low
humming of his enthralled native audience buzzed bee-fashion across the
clearing.
When
he was able to place a second dart almost beside the first, his satisfaction
was close to complete. With a crooked finger Travis beckoned to the winged
youth who had helped
to carry the newly manufactured weapons to the
testing ground. He handed over the tube he had just used, picking up a second,
slightly longer, from the selection on the ground.
The young warrior laid his spear on the leaf
mold, hooking his clawed toes over its shaft while he fumbled with the blowgun.
Raising the weapon to his mouth, he gave a vigorous puff. Not as centered as
Travis' shot had been, the sliver hit the tree slightly above the leaf. Two
other natives, their wings unfolding slighdy as they
ran, hurried to inpsect the target, and Travis,
smiling and nodding, brought his hands together in a sharp clap of approval.
They needed no more urging to try this new
weapon. Tubes were snatched, passed from hand to hand, with some squabbling on
the outer fringes of the gathering. Then each took his turn to try shooting,
with varying degrees of success. They halted from time to time to pick the
target clean of ammunition, or put up another leaf over the tattered remnants
of the last.
Several
of Travis' pupils had sharpshooters' eyes, and the Apache believed that with
practice they could far surpass his own efforts. When the midday sun bit down
on the range, he left the blowguns with the enthusiastic marksmen and went to
hunt up his crew mates.
Renfry was still buried in his study of journey
tapes and the ship's circuits. But when Travis climbed to the control cabin he
found Ashe there also. The reader was set up on the floor, and both of them
were squatting before it, alternately watching some recording and making
attacks on the main panel of the pilot's unit. The case of that had been
removed, exposing an intricate wiring pattern. And from time to time Renfry traced one of those threads up or down and either
beamed or frowned at the results of his investigation.
"What's going
on?"
Ashe answered Travis.
"We may have had our break! This record is a manual of sorts. It provides
some wiring blueprints Renfry has been able to
identify with that cat's cradle of cords up there."
"Some wiring." Renfry's
enthusiasm did not match Ashe's at that moment. "About
one line in ten! This is like trying to put together a Nike head when
all your working instructions are written in Chinese code! Yeah—the red cord
hits the plate there—but does it say anything about these white loop-de-loops
to the left?"
Ashe
squinted at the loops in question and consulted the record reader again.
"Yes!" Renfry was down on his knees in an
instant to see for himself the diagram on the picture
screen.
"Anybody home?" Ross's voice floated up the well of the interior ladder, and Travis
could feel the vibration of his footfalls on the rungs as he climbed.
His
head and shoulders emerged from the stairwell. His face was streaked with dust
which testified to his occupation of the morning as the investigator on duty in
the crazy treasure house at the winged people's tower.
"Any
luck?" Travis asked with some sympathy. Ross shrugged.
"A
handful of stuff they may be able to use. I'm no big brain to string together some
wire, nails and a couple of pieces of tin and produce an A-jet all set to fly.
Saw your William Tells busy with those spitters of
theirs. One of them had already bagged an addition to the dinner pot—not that
the dear departed looked too edible. I don't care for things with about four
dozen legs all clawing at once. But I could relish some more civilized food
right now."
Travis
glanced at Ashe and the dedicated Renfry. "If we
have any today, looks as if you and I are elected to get it ready. They've discovered
a record which shows the inside of the control board."
"Well—that's
more like it!" Ross climbed the rest of the way into the cabin and stooped
to look over Ashe's shoulder at the minature screen.
"I'd say it's closer to the plans for a demon-inspired, four-lane
thru-way," he commented judiciously. "And I'll settle for a can of
stew."
Renfry and Ashe were pried away and they ate in the
absent-minded fashion of men whose complete interest was centered elsewhere.
When they had gone, Ross stretched and gazed at Travis.
"Care
for a little look-see of our own?" he asked with a casualness which
aroused Travis' suspicion.
"In
what direction?"
"That funnel place. Remember—the front
hall is packed as if the boys living there had been in a hurry to move out, but
had to leave their baggage behind? I'd like to have a good look at the
baggage."
"If
I remember rightly, there is also a good stout grill over the doorway,"
Travis reminded him.
"And I have a way to
get around that. Come on."
Ross's
way of passing the secured door was simple enough. One of the natives flew to a
second-story window equipped with a coil of climbing cord from the ship. He was
fronted by a shutter across the window. But prying with his spear point forced
the latch on that, and a few moments later the rope dangled down the side of
the building in open invitation to climb.
The
gallery into which they so forced a way gave many indications it had been
hurriedly stripped. Some ragged tatters of flimsy web, which fell to powder at
the touch of an investigating finger, still hung on the walls. And there were
pieces of oddly shaped furniture shrouded in dust. But the dust on the floor
was marked in places by tracks and, seeing those, their native companion
fingered his spear. Then, his eyes on the Terrans
holding their attention, he drove it point down into the pattern of that trail
with the vigor or one making a determined attack upon an enemy.
Another lair of the weasel
things?
Travis, studying those tracks in the half gloom beyond the light from the
opened window, believed not. In fact, the marks were disturbingly like a human
footprint. And the teasing picture provided by his imagination of some one of
the old lords of this place lingering on to haunt its solitude, grew
disturbingly in the back of his mind.
Here
for the first time they found a stairway, though its treads were so narrow and steep as to make the Terrans
believe that it had been made to accommodate bodies unlike their own. Ross,
taking the lead, went down, his explorer's zeal well tempered with caution, in
search of the crowded hall they had seen from without.
Travis
sniffed. There was a faint fetid odor, not just the accumulation of the dust of
centuries, the decay of leaves borne in by the wind, the taint of some small
animal lair. This was not only strong enough to be of recent origin, but also
the stench was vaguely familiar.
Warning of a weasel den? He did not think so. This was not quite so rank and compelling as that
which had burdened the air in the red-walled structure those beasts had taken
for their own. And it was not the alien but inoffensive odor which clung to the
winged people's quarters.
He
noted that the nose flap of their native companion expanded, and the deep-set
eyes in that lavender face shone as they turned alertly from side to side. Not
for the first time the Apache regretted the absence of a quick common form of communication.
It had proved impossible for the Terrans to
approximate the humming sounds which made up the natives' speech. And none of them in return appeared able to utter any recognizable word, in spite of all
the coaxing and patient repetition of common nouns or action verbs.
The interior of the building was a grayish
gloom, though the hall into which they had descended had a greater measure of
light from the door. Ross stepped out, skirting a pile of boxes. He laid his
hand on the top one, his other hovering over the grip of his blaster.
Travis remained where he was. That smell—it
tugged at his memory. They stood still, the winged youth freezing with them.
Then a sudden gust of wind puffing in the latticed doorway brought with it a
warm, fresh reek and Travis knew—
"The sand people!" His words were a hiss of whisper but they
carried the authority of a shout. What were the nocturnal creatures of the
shrouded desert world doing here?
"You
are sure?" To his surprise Ross questioned his identification no further
than that.
"You
don't forget a stink like that in a hurry." Travis' eyes were busy,
surveying the pools of shadow about the crates and boxes piled in the hallway.
Had anything moved out there? Were they being watched now by eyes which could
see farther than their own in this dusk?
The
hand of the native touched his arm, an appeal for attention. Travis' head swung
slowly as he saw the other ready a spear. He fitted a dart in his blowgun.
"There
is something—to the left." Ross's whisper was the thinnest trickle of
sound. His blaster was pointed at that shadowy comer.
Then
the hall came alive, a boiling up of forms from every likely and concealing
cover. The things which beat toward them in attack shambled swiftly on four
limbs like animals. Their silent advance carried with it an added horror in the
fact that those slavering beasts had once been—or their remote ancestors had
been—men!
The
last of blaster fire crackled, brought down three of the clumsy runners. A
tentacle licked out and then a fourth attacker went down, a dart dancing in
its hairy throat. Behind Travis the native ran back a few steps up stairs,
launched out into the air with a beat of his wings. Wheeling over the enemy, he
stabbed down at the boneless middle limbs raised to drag him down with a
concentration which hinted at a long enmity between the two species.
Ross
cried out. A tentacle flicked from the shadows, coiled about his ankle and
pulled, as he fought to keep his balance. He turned the blaster beam on that
rope of living flesh. He was answered by a roar as the loop fell away. Then
Travis' dart caught the thing which arose to its hind legs clawing for Ross's
shoulders. The Apache shot as fast as he could insert darts into the pipe. He
had backed to the stairs and now he flailed out with his weapon as a club,
clearing a space to drag Ross with him.
The
native's spear had been jerked from his hold by a tentacle. He perched on one
of the piles of boxes, and now he rocked back and forth on his refuge, beating
his wings to hasten the tumble of the stack. He rose into the air just as the
bulky containers crashed down across the foot of the stairway to provide the
beginnings of a barrier.
"Blaster
charge—exhausted," Ross panted. He gripped the barrel of the weapon now
useless as a gun, smashed the butt down on the round skull of a creature
scrambling over the wreckage.
They
retreated up the stairway. Travis kicked out, catching another coarsely haired
head under the chin, slamming its owner back and down to tangle with another
eager attacker. The native sent a second pile of boxes crashing. Now he was
flying back and forth over the ruck of the enemy main
body, bombing them with smaller packages he snatched up from the heaps.
For a moment the Terrans
were free. They took advantage of that lull to win back to the gallery where
they had entered what might have proved a trap. The native shot up, over their
heads. He stood on the sill of the open window to beckon them on. uttering excited hums which rose in the scale until their
volume approached squeaks.
Travis shouldered Ross behind him toward the
exit. "I've only two more darts—get out quick!"
For
a moment the other resisted, then his common sense took command and he ran for the
window. Travis aimed a dart at a hunched shoulder and head just appearing above
the stairs. But that missile only nicked a furred upper arm, and fangs showed
in a gap which was no longer a man's mouth. Eyes, small, red with fury, and yet
alight—horribly so—with a spark of intelligence, were on him.
He
backed to the window. A lavender-skinned arm reached over his shoulder, a hand
fastened on the blowgun, twisted at it, trying to pull the tube from his grasp.
The native still kept his post on the sill; now he wanted the weapon.
And
Travis, knowing that the other had a means of escape he himself did not
possess, surrendered the blowgun, then boosted his
body over and out on the rope. He watched the lavender back of their rear
guard. Wings projected outside the frame of the window and they were raised,
ready. . . .
Then
the native threw himself backward and out in a wild display of aerial
gymnastics. His wings flapped wide, broke his fall and he roared again,
spiraling upward as the first shaggy head protruded from the window. Hairy
fists pawed at eyes which were apparendy blinded by
the sun. Ross had reached the ground, Travis was not
far behind him. The rope swung vigorously, scraping him along the building, and
he realized that those above were trying to draw him up.
The
Apache let go, falling as relaxed as he could, and the lightened rope flapped
wildly as it was jerked up into the window. But they were safely out in the day
and he did not believe that the nocturnal creatures would pursue them into the
light. However, as they crossed the strip of jungle to reach the ship, both of
them applied their scoutcraft to discovering whether
or not they were being trailed.
Ashe
listened to their report frowningly. "It might be worse—if we were staying
here."
Ross threw aside the useless blaster. "D'you mean we're getting out? When?"
"Another day—maybe two. Renfry is ready to
try rewinding the tape."
For
the first time Travis made himslef face how much
would depend upon the proper handling of that slender length of wire, how one
small break would defeat their purpose and leave them exiled here forever. Or how a weakness which they could not see might develop in space,
snapping their invisible tie with their home world, to set the ship drifting
between solar systems an eternal derelict. Could Renfry rewind the spool? And if it were
rewound—would it work in reverse? There could be no test flight. Once they
raised ship from this spot, they were gambling with their lives on a very
slender thread composed mainly of hope and an illogical belief in luck.
"You
understand now?" Ashe asked. "Remember this—we can stay here."
They
would be exiles for the rest of their lives, but they would be alive. There were enemies here, but they could set up an alliance with
the winged natives, join them. Suddenly Travis got to his feet. He went to
that compartment in the cabin where they had put the square of picture block
which could tune in on a man's memory and make home visible to him. He had to
know—whether the past had pull enough to push him into this greatest gamble of
his life.
He
held the slab between his hands, looked into its curdled depths. Soon he
saw—red cliffs rising from the fringe of smoky green marking pinon—a blue sky—the hills of home. He could almost taste
the bite of alkali dust in a rising wind, feel the
swell of a horse's barrel between his legs. And he knew that he must take the
chance. . . .
In
the end they all made the same choice. Ross summed up their feelings:
"Time travel—that is
different. We're still on our own world. If something goes wrong and we're
marooned back before history began—well, it'll give a guy a bad jolt, sure. Who
wants to play around with mammoths when he's more used to A-jets? But still,
he'd know pretty well what he was up against and that the people he'd meet
would be his own species. But to stay here— No, not even if we get the job of
playing gods for the winged people! They aren't our kind— we're visitors, not
immigrants. And I don't want to be a lifetime visitor anywhere!"
They
made a last trip to the record library, transporting back to the ship and
stowing away in every available storage place all the record tapes which
appeared to be intact. The chief of the natives, delighted with the blowguns,
allowed them to choose other objects from the tribe's treasure room. He only
asked that they return in time, bringing with them new knowledge to share. They
saw no more of the nocturnal creatures from the funnel-spired
building—though they again took the precaution of sealing the ship at night.
"Will
we be back?" Ross
asked when Ashe came from his last meeting with the chief.
"Let
us get home safely with this haul," Ashe returned dryly, "and someone
will be back, all right. You can depend on that. Well, Renfry?"
The
technician looked like a ghost of his usual self. Lines of tension, probably
never to be erased, bracketed his mouth, marked the corners of his tired eyes.
His hands shook a litde and he could not lift his
drinking container to his mouth without hooking all ten fingers about it.
"The tape's rewound," he said flatly. "And the wire
didn't break. Tomorrow I'll thread it ready to run. For the rest—we pray the
trip out. That's all I can tell you."
Travis
lay on his bunk that night—his bunk,
their ship. . . . The globe and its contents had
grown progressively less alien when compared to what lay without. Around his
wrist was a heavy band of red metal set with small, full, sea-green stones in a
pattern which suggested breaking waves, a gift presented to him by the winged chief
at their formal farewell. He was sure that the lavender-skinned flying man had
not fashioned that bracelet. How old was the ornament? And from what world,
from the art of what forgotten and long-vanished race had it come?
They
had not even scratched the surface of what was to be found in this ancient
port. Had the jungle-cloaked city been the capital of some galaxy-wide empire,
as Ashe suspected? They had had no time to explore very far. Yes, there would
be a return—sometime. And men from his world would search and speculate, and
learn, and guess—perhaps wrongly. Then, after a while there again would be a
new city rising somewhere—maybe on his own world—which would serve as a
storehouse of knowledge gained from star to star. Time would pass, and that city,
too, would die. Until some representative of a race as yet unborn would come to
search and speculate—and guess—Travis slept.
He
awoke swiftly, with a quick sense of urgency. Over his head he heard the sigh
of the speaker from the control cabin.
"All
ready," came Renfry's
voice, thin, drained. Why, the technician must have worked through the night,
eager to prove his handiwork.
"All ready."
They still had time to say "no" to
this crazy venture, to choose known perils against the unknown. Travis felt a
surge of panic. His hands levered against the bunk, pushing his body up. He had
to stop Renfry—they must not blast into space.
Then he lay down once more, made his hands
clasp the bunk straps across his body, his lips pressed tighdy
together. Let Renfry push the proper button—soon! It
was the waiting which always wore on a man. He felt the familiar vibration,
singing through the walls, through his body. There was no going back now.
Travis closed his eyes and tried not to stiffen his whole body in protest
against that waiting.
17
"We're
out—safely."
"So far—so good." Another voice made answer to that over the com system.
Travis
opened his eyes and wondered if anyone ever became thoroughly inured to the
discomfort of a planetary take-off. He had forgotten during the past days when
they had been comfortably earth-bound what it meant to be wrenched into the
heights beyond atmosphere and gravity. But at least the tape had worked to the
extent that they had lifted safely off world.
And
their flight continued, until at length they all breathed easier and began to
hold more confident feelings than just hope concerning their future.
"If
we simply repeat the pattern," Ashe observed thoughtfully on the evening
of the fifth day, "we set down again on the desert world sometime
tomorrow."
"Be
better if we could eliminate that stop," Travis remarked. There was
something in the desolate waste and the night things which repulsed him as
nothing else had during this fantastic voyage.
"I've
been thinking. . . ." Ross glanced across the swinging seat to the pilot's
perch where Renfry spent most of his waking hours.
"We refueled on the trip out—at the first port. Suppose—just suppose that
we exhausted the supply there."
Renfry
grinned, a death's-head stretch of skin across bones. His thumb jerked downward
in the immemorial gesture of
sardonic defeat. "Then we've had it, fella. Let's hope that we can stretch out luck past that
particular point along with all the rest of the elastic tricks."
This
time they downed on the desert port in the early morning, when the lavish
display of flames along the horizon was paling into nothingness. They saw the
blaze of the rising sun reflected too brightly from the endless drifts of sand.
"Two days here, roughly—if we
do duplicate the pattern exactly."
Waiting
two days, cooped up in the ship, not sure that they would take off again. At the thought of it, Travis shifted restlessly in his
seat. And the specter Ross had evoked shared the narrow confines of the cabin
with them all.
"Any
walk-about?" Ross must be feeling it too—that goading desire to be busy,
to drown in action ever-present fears.
"Not
much reason for that," Ashe replied calmly enough. "We'll take a look
outside—in daytime. Not that I believe there is much to see."
The
sun-repelling helmets on, they opened the outer hatch. They surveyed the
expanse where the winds might have whittled new patterns among the dunes, but
where they could see no change since their last visit. The enigmatic sealed
buildings still squatted beyond, with no sign of life about.
"What
did they do here?" Ross's hands moved
restlessly along the frame of the exit port. "There was some reason for
this stop—there had to be. And why were those same things-people, animals,
whatever they are—or were—on the other world, in the funnel-topped
building?"
"Which
are the exiles?" Ashe asked. "Is this their home world, while those
others exist across the void and have for generations because they were not
recalled in time? Or are these the exiles and the others are at home? We may
never know the reason or answer to any questions about them." He studied
the squat building among the creeping dunes. "They must live underground,
with that building covering the entrance. Perhaps they live underground on the
other planet also. Once they must have been here to service ships—to maintain
some necessary outpost."
"And then," Travis said slowly,
"the ships didn't come any more."
"Yes. There were no more ships. Perhaps
a whole generation waited—hoping for ships—for recall. Then they either sank
into apathy and stagnation, to slide down the hill of evolution, or they more consciously adapted
to their surroundings."
"In the end, the result was the
same," Ross observed. "I don't think those here are any different
from the ones in the funnel building. And there they had a better world to
adapt to."
"Wait!"
Travis had been studying that sand-enclosed block with interest. Now he thought
that his memory of the place as it had been weeks earlier did not match what he
saw now. "Was that elevation on the left there before?"
Ross
and Ashe leaned forward, their attention settling on the end of the structure he indicated.
"You're
right, that's hew!"
Ross's affirmation came first. "And I don't think that projection is made
of stone like the rest, either."
The
block which had so oddly appeared on the corner of that distant roof did not give out a metallic
answer to the sun's rays. But neither was it dull-coated. There was a sleek
sheen to it, such as might be displayed by opaque glass or obsidian. The hump had no openings that they
could see, and what its purpose might be remained as much of a mystery as the
rest of this age-old puzzle.
It
remained so for a very few moments. Then there was action of a sort the
watchers in the ship did not expect. They had seen the rays which protected the
roof of the building against assault or investigation. Now they witnessed the
use of what must have been one of the aggressive weapons of the men who had
first erected that block.
What
was it which lashed out, cracked a whip's thong about the skin of the ship? A beam of fire? A bolt of energy? A
force which the Terrans could neither imagine nor
name?
Travis
only knew that the energy wash of that blow crushed him back into the globe,
hurled him into the inner door of the lock with Ross and Ashe thrust tight
against him. Their bodies were flattened on the metal wall of the ship until
the breath was forced from their lungs and the world went black about them.
Travis
was on the floor, fighting for the air his body had to have, pain in bands
about his chest. And before his blurred eyes was the open door of the port. In
that moment all that mattered was that oblong of empty space—that, and beneath
the torture of his body, the sense that that space must be shut out—that what
lay beyond it meant final extinction.
He
clawed at the body across his knees, turned over somehow and inched painfully
from under its weight, moving in a worm's progress toward the outer port. There
was a singing in his ears, filling his head, adding to bis
daze. Then he was staring out into the glare of sun and sand.
At
first he thought he was lightheaded—that what he was seeing could not be true.
For there was no wind, yet from the hidden floor of the landing space sand was
rising in thin, unwavering sheets, walling in the globe. And those curtains of
grit arose vertically, unmoved by any breeze! It was incredible—it could not
happen—yet before his eyes it did.
He
lunged to his knees, thrust against the door, shut out the curtains of sand,
the harsh light of the sun, the thing which could not be true. And as his hands
fumbled to shoot home I he
alien bolts, the pain lessened. He could breathe again without the constriction
which had held his lungs imprisoned. He turned to the other two.
The congested blueness of their faces
startled him into quick action. He jerked both men up into a sitting position
against the wall. Ashe's blue eyes opened.
"What—?" He only got out that one
faint word as Travis turned his attention to Ross.
There was a thin thread of blood trickling
from the corner of the younger scout's slack mouth. He moaned as Travis shook
him gendy. Ashe moved and winced, his hands going to
his chest.
"What happened?" He was able to get
out the whole demand this time.
"The space—marines—landed." Ross's
lips shaped the words one at a time. There was a shadow of a grin about them.
"—On me, I think."
"Hullloooo down therer The call
was disembodied over the ship's com, but it was imperative.
"What's going on?"
Although
the hull could cut out sun, sound, the world without, they could now feel
movement through its layers of protection. It was as if the ship were being
buffeted by some force. Those walls of sand? Travis
hauled himself to the ladder wall and began to climb, seeking the vision plate
by the controls which was now their only link with outside.
He
discovered Renfry standing before that link, his disbelieving
eyes on thick curdles of sand, sand rising from the ground, drawing in with
steady purpose to engulf the ship. They were on the point of being buried in a
sea of grit, and there was no reason to believe that that was not directed,
consciously, by very active animosity and intelligence.
"Can
we get out?" Travis dragged himself to the nearest seat. "Any way to up ship?"
If
the tape governed their departure according to the earlier schedule, they were
stuck here for another night, another day. By that time the globe could be so
deeply buried that there would be no hope of blasting free from the tons of
sand. They would be sealed into a living tomb.
Renfry's hands went out to the keyboard of the
controls, hesitated there. His lips tightened. "It's a big risk but I
could try."
"It'll
probably be a bigger risk to stay." Travis remembered the two he had left
at the lock. They must be brought out of danger before the shock of blast-off.
"Give me five minutes," he said. "Then blow—if you canl"
He
found Ashe on his feet, dragging Ross out into the corridor. Travis hurried to
help.
"Renfry is going to try to blast off," he reported.
"We're being buried in sand."
They
got Ross to a bunk. Ashe flopped into the adjoining one, and Travis barely made
it to the next cabin and the waiting cushion there, when the warning shrilled
through the com. There was the vibration of laboring engines. But it went on
far longer than before. Travis lay tense, willing the wrench of blast-free to
come, counting off seconds. . . .
The
vibration was building up—higher than he had ever known it to go before. And
the ship rocked on its base, movement and sound becoming one, a sickening
mixture which churned the stomach, deadened thought but not fear.
The
break came in an instant of prolonged red agony. Afterward came
blackness—nothing at all....
Vibration
was gone, sound was gone—but sensation remained. And the clean, aromatic scent
of the healing jelly which filled the bunks on occasion of need. Travis opened
his eyes. Had they pulled free from the desert planet?
He
sat up, brushing the jelly from him. It slid easily from his skin, from the
suit, leaving the usual well-being of mind and body. The confidence which had
been jolted out of him had already flooded back. He got to his feet, went to
peer into the neighboring cabin.
Ross
and Ashe still lay inert under the quivering mounds of that substance on which
the aliens had based their first aid. He climbed to the control cabin.
Renfry was strapped into the pilot's chair, but his
head lolled limply on his shoulders, his white face alarming Travis. A heart
beat slowly under his questing fingers. He unfastened the technician, somehow
managed, with the aid of no-weight, to get him to his bunk below. The vision
plate presented only that swirl of dead black which was the sign of
hyper-space. They had not only broken loose from the sand trap, they were also
embarked on the next leg of the long journey which might or might not take them
home.
How
long had that portion of the journey lasted before? Nine days by Renfry's watch—nine days between the sand and the fueling
port. Nine days until they could be sure that Renfry's
blast-off had not thrown the tape off course.
As
they recovered from that shock Ashe took command, using the loot they had
gathered from the storehouse of records to focus their interest outside
themselves. On the plea of hunting another ship's operation manual, he set them
to work in shifts at the record reader, processing every tape which could still
be run through that machine. More than one promising coil broke, whipped into a
tangle they did not dare try to unravel. But even those must be kept for the
experts at home to study. For Ashe never admitted after their break from the
desert world that they were not going
to get home. He pointed out that the odds they had already licked totaled a
formidable sum and that there was no reason to believe that their luck would
not continue to hold.
But
even Ashe, Travis thought to himself, must have
doubts, be as nervous as the rest—though he did not show it—when Renfry's watch marked the ninth day's flight and they had
no warning of arrival at the fueling port. They made only a pretense of a
midday meal. Travis had calculated rations just that morning. By going on very
slim supplies, they would have enough of the food they dared use to see them
home—if the voyage was not prolonged. He reported that fact to Ashe and received
only an absent-minded grunt in reply.
Then—as
if to prove all their worst forebodings untrue— the warning came. Travis
strapped down, sharing quarters with Ross this time. The other grinned at him.
"The
chief's called it right again! Here we go for a shot of gas from the service
station—then homel"
Even
the discomfort of landing could be forgotten when they did see about them the
ruined towers marking off landing spaces, the metallic turquoise sky of their
first galactic port. Why, they were almost home!
They
clattered down to the space lock and opened it eagerly —to watch for the
creeping snake of the fuel line and its attendant robot. But long moments went
by and there was no movement in the shadow of the nearest tower. Travis studied
the immediate terrain. Had they set down in the same square they had visited
before? Might a change in so slight a matter provide the reason for the silence
about them?
"Could be due to the time element." As Ashe's voice-sounded in his helmet com,
the old man might have been reading his thoughts. "We left the second stop
well ahead of our former schedule."
They
clung to that hope as an hour, and then two, passed and there was no movement
from the tower. Pooling their recollections of the place, they were fairly
certain that they had landed in the same square. And they avoided putting into
words the other dire possibility—that the mechanism of the ancient port had at
last been exhausted, perhaps by the very effort put upon it weeks before when
the globe had been serviced there.
Renfry spoke at last. "I don't know how much
fuel we have on board. I can't even tell you the nature of that fuel. And
whether we can take off without more is also an open
question. But if we can, I don't believe we'll be able to finish the trip. We
may be working against time—but we'll have to discover if we can push those
machines into one more job. And we'll have to do it quick!"
They swung out of the globe, and Renfry crawled under its arching side, to discover a new
catastrophe. If there had been any fuel left in the ship's sealed storage
compartments, it was gone now. There was an ominous damp patch spreading from
an opening at ground level.
Renfry's voice came hollowly. "That's done it, fellas. She's empty. Unless you can get that pipe line on
the jog again, we're grounded for keeps."
"What
made that open up?" Ross wondered with the bafflement of one to whom
machines are still mysterious save for their most obvious functions.
"Might
be some mechanism triggered by this." Ashe stamped on the pavement.
"Well, let's go and look for the robot and that animated pipe line."
They
walked toward the tower. From ground level the structure was even more pointed
and needle-like. There was an opening at the foot, the doorway from which the
robot had come. Ashe reached that, stood for a moment peering within.
The
chunky robot which had clanked into duty at their first visit was still there,
just within the doorway. And beyond, plain to be seen in a rusty, yellowish
light, were a corporal's guard of its fellows. All alike, they were backed
against the far wall as if awaiting some long-past official inspection.
From
a well in the center of the floor, to be glimpsed around the bulk of the robot
in the doorway, was a massive piece of metal which Travis recognized as the
"head" of the snake pipe line. Ashe reached out almost reluctantly to
push the robot. To their surprise the machine, which had appeared so massive
and immobile, answered to that handling. It did not react as might an alarm
clock shaken into running once again—instead it toppled disappointingly forward
with an odd flaccidity. One of the arms clattered loose and spun across the
pavement to strike on the snake's head. "It's movingl
Look—it's moving!"
Ross
was right. In a jerky, sullen manner the heavy end of the mobile pipe line
raised, inched forward about a foot while the Terrans
held their breaths in hope—until it fell supinely once more.
"Hit it again,"
advised Ross.
Ashe edged around the prostrate robot to
inspect more closely what they could now see of the pipe. This small portion
displayed no signs of deterioration. He stooped, took a good grip on the
"head" and tugged. The he hurriedly jumped back while Ross and Travis
kicked the robot out of the path of the creeping snake. Two feet—three—out in
the open it went—and headed for the ship. Renfry saw
them coming and waved, crawling back under the bulge of the globe to make ready
for the pipe's arrival.
But
they had exulted too soon. Some four feet away from the tower the head sank to
earth once more. Ashe tried his former method of revival, without result. They
took turns shaking it, together and separately. It was much heavier than the
robot and they could not urge it into any further effort.
Renfry came to join in a consultation. He went back
to inspect the well from which the pipe emerged, only to return as baffled as
he had gone.
"Can we pull it by
hand?" Travis wanted to know.
"That's what we'll
have to try now." Renfry was grim.
They
brought out the light, tough rope from the ship, made fast lines about the
"head," and set to work. At Ashe's word of command they gave a concentrated
jerk. The stubborn pipe gave, started forward, but not under its own power.
They gained another four, five feet, but the effort required to
move that dead weight was exhausting. Now their gains were shorter, and
the strain they must exert to produce them grew greater and greater.
Ross
tripped, went down, levered himself up, his face in the bowl of the helmet
showing a set snarl. He seized the rope again as if it were a man he could
tangle with—and jerked in concert with the other three. This time there was no
yielding at all, and their feet slipped on the cracked and age-old stone.
18
Thavis
sat back on his heels in
the immemorial position of the dismounted range rider. The others sprawled
beside the tow rope, their faces a congested red from their efforts. Renfry squirmed, braced himself on his hands and began to
fumble with the latching of his helmet. He threw the bubble back and breathed
hard with the immediacy of a drowning man.
"Put
on your helmet, you fool!" Ashe raised his head from his arms; his voice
in the com was broken by the laboring of his lungs.
But Renfry shook his head, his lips moving in words sealed away
by the protection he no longer shared. Travis' fingers went to the fastenings
of his own helmet.
"I
don't think we need these." He pulled off the bubble and lifted his head
to meet the touch of a small, playful breeze. The air was crisp, like that of a
Terran autumn. And it filled his lungs in an
invigorating way. He reached for the rope, ready to try again.
"There's
no use in pulling ourselves blind." Ashe's voice was no longer rendered
metallic by the alien com. "The trouble may lie back in the tower."
Renfry began to crawl on his hands and knees back
the length of the pipe, inspecting its surface as he went. At last he staggered
to his feet and lurched through the door, the others after him.
They
found the technician down by the mouth of the well from which the pipe
extended. He was examining the covering there, trying to wriggle the flexible
tube back and forth.
"The
thing must be caught—below thisl" He hammered
his fist against the capping.
"Can we get that lid
off and see?" Ross wanted to know.
"We can try."
But
such an operation required tools of a sort—levers, wedges. . . . There was the
line of waiting robots—could parts of their bodies be put to more practical
purposes? Ross had picked up a loose "arm," shed by the one which had
disintegrated, testing the rod's strength with all the force of his own arm
and shoulder.
Travis
studied the well capping. There was no opening, no vestige of crack into which
a wedging tool might be inserted. And now Renfry ran
his hands about the ring through which the pipe issued, striving to find by
touch what none of them could see. He tapped with the rod, first lighdy and then with increasing force, leaving some dents
and scratches, but making no other impression on the fitting.
"Does that unscrew?"
Ross suggested.
Renfry scowled, spat out a couple of short and
forceful words. He transferred his efforts from the immediate vicinity of the
pipe to the outer rim of the cover. And it was there that he did make a
promising discovery. They worked fast, one at each, to pick the accumulated
dust of centuries out of four depressions in which were sunk
knobs which might just be the heads of bolts.
Then
they turned to the broken robot, dismantled its remains, until they were
equipped with pieces of metal to force those heads. It was slow, disheartening
work. Once Travis went back to the ship to gather up the
containers of the jelly which had poisoned him during the testing of the
supplies.
They
smeared the stuff in and around the stubborn knobs, hoping it would lubricate
and loosen, while they pounded and prodded. But their efforts were encouraged
when the first bolt yielded, and Renfry used
blistered fingers to work it entirely free. And that small success gave a spurt
to their labors.
It
was nightfall and they were working mainly by touch when Ashe's bolt came
free—the second one.
"This
is it for now," he told them. "We can't rig any sort of light in here
and there's no use in trying to free the rest in the dark. I've hit my fingers
more than this blasted thing for the past half hour."
"Time may be running out on the journey
tape," Ross answered tightly. He was putting into words one of the two
fears which grinned over their shoulders during all those hours of punishing
labor.
"Well,
we aren't going to lift without fuel." With a sharp exclamation and a hand
to his back, Ashe stood up. "And we can't work on in the the dark without rest or food. Those things we know—the
rest we're just guessing at."
So
they stumbled back to the ship, realizing only when they stopped the battle
with the stubborn casing how completely tired they were. Travis knew that Ashe
was right. They could not hope to lick the problem by driving their bodies past
the point of human endurance.
They
ate, more than the proper rations for the meal, wavered to their bunks,
collapsing, drunk with fatigue. And Travis was still stiff in the morning when
he awakened to Ross's shaking—blinking foggily up at the other's thin face.
"Back
to the salt mines, brother!" Ross put the blackened and torn nail of an
abused finger to his mouth. "I could do with a blowtorch now. Climb out of
your downy bed, but fast, and join the slave gang."
It
was midmorning before they worked the fourth and last bolt out of its bed. And
for a long moment after Renfry threw it from him with
emphatic force, they just sat about the rim of the well, their torn and
blistered hands hanging limply between their knees.
"All
right."
Ashe roused. "Now
let's see if she'll come upl"
To
get levers to raise the cover they had to dismantle
two more of the robots. And they carried out that destruction with a kind of
savage satisfaction. Somehow, attacking the unresisting semi-manlike forms gave
them release from some of the frustration and lurking fear. They achieved stout
bars and went back to attack the well cover.
They
never knew afterward how long it took them to pry that plug out of its bed. But
a last frantic heave on the part of all, together, suddenly snapped it apart in
two halves, displaying the dark hole from which the pipe arose.
Though
it was day outside, as brilliantly clear a day as the one before had been, the
interior of the tower was not too well lighted and they had no torch to explore
those depths. Renfry lay down, to thrust both arms
into the well, running his hands along the surface of the pipe as far as he
could reach.
"Find
anything?" Ashe crouched beside him, peering over one shoulder.
"No.
. . ." And then he changed that to a quick
and excited, "YesI"
"I
can barely touch it—feels as if the scaled coating on the pipe is caught."
He wriggled and Travis caught hold of his legs to anchor him.
In
the end Renfry did the rest of the tedious job
painfully, with frequent halts for rest. He hung head down in that pit, kept
from wedging his head and shoulders in too tightly by the others' hold on him.
He had to work mainly by sense of touch, since his own body blocked out
three-fourths of the already subdued light, and with improvised tools hurriedly
culled from the litter about them.
The fourth time they pulled him out for a breather, he rolled over on his back and lay gasping. "I've pried
the thing loose as far down as I can reach." His words came one by one as
if he could barely summon up the strength to push them out. "And it's
still fast farther down."
"Maybe
we can work it loose, pulling from up here." Ashe's hands curved about the
scaled surface of the pipe where it projected over the side of the well.
"You
can try." Renfry rubbed his fists across his
forehead as Travis, with a heave he tried to make gentie,
moved the technician's dead weight away from the side of the opening, to put
his own hands overlapping Ashe's.
Together
they strained to move the column of the pipe inside the tube of the well. But
it appeared glued to the side where Renfry had fought
to free it. Beads of sweat gathered along the line of black hair above Travis'
forehead, trickled down to sting across his lips. And in the half-light he saw
Ashe's jaw line set—sharp under the thin brown skin—while the cords and muscles
of his arms and shoulders stood out to be modeled under the fabric of the blue
suit.
Then
Ross added his weight to the effort. "You pull," he told Ashe.
"Let us push in your direction. If it is ever going to give, that ought to
do it."
For
a long, long moment it seemed that the pipe was not going to give, that too
much damage existed below. Then Ashe flew back, the hose striking him a
forceful blow in the chest, as, out of their sight, the obstruction gave away
and Ross and Travis sprawled halfway across the opening.
They
scrambled up and Ross hurried to pull Ashe free of the hose. With Renfry trailing, they went back to the outer air of the
port. They took up the towrope once again and began the labor of dragging the
hose to meet the ship. The scaled pipe moved sluggishly, but they were winning,
foot by painful foot.
Then
Travis, during one of their all-too-frequent halts, glanced back and cried out.
They were three-fourths of the way to their goal, but from under the belly of
the hose snake was spreading a stain of moisture which gleamed in the afternoon
light. That last rip to free the tube must have weakened its fabric and the
burden of the unknown fuel was being lost.
Renfry
stumbled back, knelt to explore, and jerked one hand away with a cry of pain.
"It's corrosive—like acid." he warned. "Don't touch it."
"Now what?" Ross kicked dirt over the stain, watched the soil crumble into slime in
the dark smear of fluid.
"We
can get the pipe on to the ship—and hope that enough of the fuel comes
through," Ashe answered in a colorless voice. "I don't think we can
hope to mend the hose."
And
because they could see no other way out, they went back to hauling at the
towrope, trying not to glance back or think of the fuel seeping out of the pipe
line. Renfry nursed his burnt hand against his chest
until they at last pushed the end of the hose under the curve of the globe. He
got down and crawled under, grunting with pain as he fastened the head of the
snake against the opening in the ship.
"Is
it feeding through?" Ross asked the all-important question.
Renfry, almost as if he dreaded the answer, put his
good hand palm-down on the scaled side of the pipe, holding it there for a long
moment while they waited to know the future.
"Yes."
They had no idea how much fuel the ship
required—or whether the necessary amount was still available. The moist seepage
along the hose continued to spread. But Renfry lay
with his hand on the pipe, nodding to them from time to time that the feed of
fluid was still in progress.
There
came a pop like a small explosion. The head of the pipe cropped from the
opening in the ship, the hose now flaccid. Renfry
tapped and hammered at the cap which had slid into place, pulling down over it
a second protective lock. When that clicked under his efforts he rolled out.
"That's that. We've
all we're going to get."
"Is
it enough?" Travis wanted to ask—to demand. But he knew that the others
were as ignorant as he of the proper answer.
They
straggled back to the port ladder, somehow pulled themselves up, and made their
way in a blind haze of fatigue to the cabin bunks. What they could do they had
done—now their success was back again in the hands of blind fortune.
Travis
roused out of a dose. The vibration in the walls— They were bound off-planet again! But were they heading
home? Or would that unknown fuel only take them into space, abandon them there
to drift forever?
He
dreamed—of red cliffs and sage, piñón pine,
and the songs of small birds in a canyon. He dreamed of the feel of a desert
wind against one's body and the surge of horse muscles between one's legs—of a
world which was, before mankind aspired to space. And it was a good dream, so
good a one that even when it drifted from him after the way of dreams, Travis
lay veiy still, his eyes closed, trying to will it
back again.
But
the sterile smell of the ship was in his nostrils, the feel of the ship was
under his hands, closing around his body. And his old claustrophobic dislike of
the globe was reborn with an intensity he had almost forgotten. He opened his
eyes with a forced effort.
"We're
still on the beam." Ross sat on the bunk opposite, his face hollow with
strain under the blue light. He held up his hands. Both normal and scarred
fingers were crossed, and he laughed as he so displayed them. "Soup's
on," he added.
They
counted the ration tins again that day. The contents of those few containers must
be stretched to the limit now. Ashe measured out the portions which must serve
for nourishment each waking period.
"We will just have enough if the time
element remains the same. Stay in your bunks as much as possible—the less
energy you burn the better."
But
a man could sleep just so much. And however earnestly they pursued that
escape, there came a time when sleep fled and one could only lie, staring up,
or with closed eyes, while lone minutes of waiting stretched into hours, always
darkened by fears.
"I
was thinking," Ross spoke suddenly into the silence of the cabin he shared
with Travis, "when we come in we should show up on the radar screens
before we land. It'll be just like some bright boy to loose
off a missile, just for practice. We can't possibly signal that we're only
space travelers coming home."
"We're
armed." But Travis wondered what defenses the globe did have. Missiles were top secret. Their government-other governments—could
have any number of unpleasant surprises waiting to greet air-borne craft which
could not adequately identify themselves.
"Dream
on." Ross sounded scornful. "I don't see us knocking down Nike Four and all
her cousins and aunts with those cannon. We don't even know how to aim the
things!"
They
broke out of hyper-space, that period of discomfort heightened by their
weakened condition. But in spite of that weakness, they dragged themselves to
the control cabin to watch that green-patched ball grow on the vision screen.
Travis discovered he was shaking, feeling almost as ill as he had during the
food-testing session. Was that green ball-home? Dared they believe so—or was it
a mirage they were all sharing now because they wanted it so badly? Just as the
picture plate of the aliens could reproduce any man's home site to lighten his
loneliness?
But
now the familiar lines of the continents sharpened. Ross's head went down, his
face hidden in his hands. And Ashe spoke slowly certain measured words Travis
knew, though they were no part of his own heritage. Renfry's
hands ran back and forth along the edge of the control board, caressingly.
"She did itl She's brought us home!"
"We aren't down yet!" Ross didn't
lift his head and his words were sharp, as if perhaps he could insure their
eventual safe landing by his very doubt of it.
"She
brought us this far," Renfry crooned.
"She'll take us the rest of the way. Won't you, old girl?"
They
met the jolt of the break into Terran atmosphere,
accepted it, half numbed, still unbelieving. Ross released his hold on the
chair, made for the well of the ladder.
"I'm
going down." He averted his eyes from the vision plate as if unable to
watch any longer.
And
suddenly Travis shared the other's distrust of that window on space. He
followed Ross, swinging down the ladder to their cabin, throwing himself prone
in the bunk to await their landing—if there
would be a safe landing.
The
thin vibration of a take-off motor was nothing to the pressure of air against
the globe skin now. It raised a hum which sang in their ears, through every
atom of their tense bodies. All the waiting they had managed to put behind them
was nothing compared to this last stretch they could not measure by any clock. The feeling that something might-would happen—to negate all their
hard-won safety gnawed deep.
Travis
heard Ross mutter on the other side of the cabin but could distinguish no
words. What were they doing now? Racing night or day around the surface of
their world, trying to home on the spot from which the alien journey tape had
lifted them weeks ago?
Seconds
crawled—minutes—hours. . . . One could measure this only by uneven breaths
drawn with difficulty as the weight of gravity pulled once more. Were they now
registering on radar screens, hostile and friendly alike, summoning a net of
missiles to fence them off from the firmness of solid earth? Travis could
almost picture the rise of such a bullet, trailing a spear tail of fire—coming
in—
He
cringed as he lay in the bunk, the soft padding rising about his gaunt body.
"Coming
down."
Had those words sounded through the ship's
com? Or were they only an echo of his own imagination?
He
felt the pressure against the padding, the squeeze of chest and lungs, harder
to bear because of his weakness. But he did not black out.
There
was a jar, the ship rolled, settled slighdy aslant. Travis'
hands moved to the straps about him. There was complete silence. He was loathe
to break it, hardly daring to move—somehow unable even now to believe that they
were down, that under them must rest the brown
soil of his own earth.
Ross
sat up jerkily. Freeing himself from the protective harness of the bunk, he
made for the door. He walked like a sick
man, driven by some overwhelming force outside himself.
His voice came as a whisper. "Got—to—see. . . ."
And
then Travis knew that he must see also. He could not accept any evidence except
that of his eyes. He followed Ross along the corridor—to the inner lock. And when the other fumbled at the closing, he. added his own strength to open it.
They
went through the air lock, laid hold almost together on the outer port. Ross
was shaking, his head hunched between his shoulders, his face gray and wet.
It
was Travis who opened the door. They were facing east and the time must be
early dawn, for there was a belt of shadow beneath the curve of the ship while
on the horizon light banners spread pale gold. He dropped down, his eyes on
that band.
"Company coming." Ross swept out an arm. There was a
soaring rumble of sound. A quartet of planes in
formation cut across the light patch of sky.
There
were lights flashing on about the ship—flooding away the shadows. Now Travis
could pick out a buckled framework, signs of a disaster. And among the wreckage
men were moving, drawing in to the star ship. But beyond them the sun was
rising. His sun—rising to light his world! They had made it against all the
stacked odds. Travis' hand smoothed the skin of the globe beyond the frame of
the open port, as he might have smoothed the arched neck of the pinto that had
brought him through a grueling day's ride on the range.
The
sun was yellow on the distant hills. And those were made of the good brown
earth of home!
"All
the classic elements are present in full measure in Galactic Derelict, It suffers not at all in being a sequel to
Andre Norton's excellent Time Traders.
"The
U.S. Army's race with the Russians through and against Time remains Norton's
background. Both search for abandoned wrecks of a race that had interstellar
travel back in Man's infancy.
"Travis Fox, Apache, joins Ross
Murdock and Dr. Gordon Ashe,
time agents, in attempting the
transfer, intact, of an alien ship
through 20,000 years to the present.
Inadvertently, controls are acti-
vated and the group is launched on
an involuntary galactic tour. Their
efforts to return to Here and Now
constitute a top-notch science-
adventure yam." -GALAXY Magazint