Scanned by person unknown.
Proofed more or less by Highroller.
Made prettier by MollyKates/Cinnamons
style sheet.
Islands of Space by John W. Campbell Jr.
PROLOGUE
In the early
part of the Twenty Second Century, Dr. Richard Arcot, hailed as
"the greatest living physicist", and Robert Morey, his brilliant
mathematical assistant, discovered the so-called "molecular motion
drive", which utilized the random energy of heat to produce useful motion.
John Fuller, designing engineer, helped
the two men to build a ship which used the drive in order to have a weapon to
seek out and capture the mysterious Air Pirate whose robberies were ruining
Transcontinental Airways.
The Pirate, Wade, was a brilliant but
neurotic chemist who had discovered, among other things, the secret of
invisibility. Cured of his instability by modern psychomedical techniques, he
was hired by Arcot to help build an interplanetary vessel to go to Venus.
The Venusians proved to be a humanoid
race of people who used telepathy for communication. Although they were similar
to Earthmen, their blue blood and double thumbs made them enough different to
have caused distrust and racial friction, had not both planets been drawn
together in a common bond of defense by the passing of the Black Star.
The Black Star, Nigra, was dead,
burned-out sun surrounded by a planetary system very much like our own. But
these people had been forced to use their science to produce enough heat and
light to stay alive in the cold, black depths of interstellar space. There was
nothing evil or menacing in their attack on the Solar System; they simply
wanted a star that gave off light and heat. So they attacked, not realizing
that they were attacking beings equal in intelligence to themselves.
They were at another disadvantage, too.
The Nigrans has spent long millennia fighting their environment and had no time
to fight among themselves, so they knew nothing of how to wage a war. The
Earthmen and Venusians knew only to well, since they had a long history of war
on each planet.
Inevitably, the Nigrans were driven back
to the Black Star.*
*See The Black Star Passes.
The war was over. And things became
dull. And the taste of adventure still remained on the tongues of Arcot, Wade
and Morey.
Chapter 1
Three men sat around a table which was
littered with graphs, sketches of mathematical functions, and books of tensor
formulae. Beside the table stood a Munson-Bradley Intergraph calculator which
one of the men was using to check some of the equations he had already derived.
The results they were getting seemed to indicate something well above and
beyond what they had expected.
And anything that surprised the team of
Arcot, Wade and Morey was surprising indeed.
The Intercom buzzed, interrupting their
work.
Dr. Richard Arcot reached over and
lifted the switch. “Arcot speaking.”
The face that flashed on the screen was
businesslike and determined. "Dr.
Arcot, Mr. Fuller is here. My orders are to check with you on all
visitors."
Arcot nodded. Send him up. But from now
on, I'm not in to anyone but my father or the Interplanetary Chairman or the
elder Mr. Morey. If they come, don't bother to call, just send 'em up. I will
not receive calls for the next ten hours. Got it?"
"You won't be bothered, Dr.
Arcot."
Arcot cut the circuit and the image
collapsed.
Less than two minutes later, a light
flashed above the door. Arcot touched the release, and the door slid aside. He
looked at the man entering and said, with mock coldness:
"If it isn't the late John Fuller.
What did you do-take a plane? It took you an hour to get here from
Chicago."
Fuller shook his head sadly. "Most
of the time was spent in getting past your guards. Getting to the
seventy-fourth floor of the Transcontinental Airways Building is harder than
stealing the Taj Mahal." Trying to suppress a grin, , Fuller bowed low.
"Besides, I think it would do your royal highness good to be kept waiting
for a while. You're paid a couple of million a year to putter around in a lab
while honest people work for a living. Then, if you happen to stub your toe
over some useful gadget, they increase your pay. They call you scientists and
spend the resources of two| worlds to get you anything you want—and apologize
if they! don't get it within twenty-four hours.
"No doubt about it; it will do your
majesties good to wait."
With a superior smile, he seated himself
at the table and shuffled calmly through the sheets of equations before him.
Arcot and Wade were laughing, but not
Robert Morey. With a sorrowful expression, he walked to the window and! looked out
at the hundreds of slim, graceful aircars that' floated above the city.
"My friends," said Morey,
almost tearfully, "I give you the great Dr. Arcot. These countless
machines we see have come from one idea of his. Just an idea, mind you! And who
worked it into mathematical form and made it calculable, and therefore useful?
I did I
"And who worked out the math for
the interplanetary ships? I did! Without me they would never have been
built!" He turned dramatically, as though he were playing King Lear.
"And what do I get for it?" He pointed an accusing finger at Arcot.
"What do I get? He is
called 'Earth's most brilliant physicist', and I, who did all the hard work, am
referred to as 'his mathematical assistant'." He shook his head solemnly.
"It's a hard world."
At the table, Wade frowned, then looked
at the ceiling. "If you'd make your quotations more accurate, they'd be
more trustworthy. The news said that Arcot was the 'System's most
brilliant physicist', and that you were the brilliant mathematical assistant
who showed great genius in developing the mathematics of Dr. Arcot's new
theory'." Having delivered his speech, Wade began stoking his pipe.
Fuller tapped his fingers on the table.
"Come on, you clowns, knock it off and tell me why you called a hard-working
man away from his drafting table to come up to this play room of yours. What
have you got up your sleeve this time?"
"Oh, that's too bad," said
Arcot, leaning back comfortably in his chair. "We're sorry you're so busy.
We were thinking of going out to see what Antares, Betelgeuse, or Polaris
looked like at close range. And, if we don't get too bored, we might run over
to the giant model nebula in Andromeda, or one of the others. Tough about your
being busy; you might have helped us by designing the ship and earned your
board and passage. Tough." Arcot looked at Fuller sadly.
Fuller's eyes narrowed. He knew Arcot
was kidding, but he also knew how far Arcot would go when he was kidding —and
this sounded like he meant it. Fuller said: "Look, teacher, a man named
Einstein said that the velocity of light was tops over two hundred years ago,
and nobody's come up with any counter evidence yet. Has the Lord instituted a
new speed law?"
"Oh, no," said Wade, waving
his pipe in a grand gesture of importance. "Arcot just decided he didn't
like that law and made a new one himself."
"Now wait a minute said
Fuller. "The velocity of light is a property of space!"
Arcot's bantering smile was gone.
"Now you've got it, Fuller. The velocity of light, just as Einstein said,
is a property of space. What happens if we change space?"
Fuller blinked. "Change space?
How?"
Arcot pointed toward a glass of water
sitting nearby. "Why do things look distorted through the water? Because
the light rays are bent. Why are they bent? Because as each wave front moves
from air to water, it slows down. The electromagnetic and
gravitational fields between those atoms are strong enough to increase the
curvature of the space between them. Now, what happens if we reverse that
effect?"
"Oh," said Fuller softly.
"I get it. By changing the curvature of the space surrounding you, you
could get any velocity you wanted. But what about acceleration? It would take
years to reach those velocities at any acceleration a man could stand."
Arcot shook his head. "Take a look
at the glass of water again. What happens when the light comes out of
the water? It speeds up again instantaneously. By changing the space
around a spaceship, you instantaneously change the velocity of the ship to a
comparable velocity in that space. And since every particle is accelerated at
the same rate, you wouldn't feel it, any more than you'd feel the acceleration
due to gravity in free fall."
Fuller nodded slowly. Then, suddenly, a
light gleamed in his eyes. "I suppose you've figured out where you're
going to get the energy to power a ship like that?"
"He has," said Morey.
"Uncle Arcot isn't the type to forget a little detail like that."
"Okay, give," said Fuller.
Arcot grinned and lit up his own pipe,
joining Wade in an attempt to fill the room with impenetrable fog.
"AH right," Arcot began,
"we needed two things: a tremendous source of power and a way to store it.
"For the first, ordinary atomic
energy wouldn't do. It's not controllable enough and uranium isn't something we
could carry by the ton. So I began working with high-density currents.
"At the temperature of liquid
helium, near absolute zero, lead becomes a nearly perfect conductor. Back in
nineteen twenty, physicists had succeeded in making a current flow for four
hours in a closed circuit. It was just a ring of lead, but the resistance was
so low that the current kept on flowing. They even managed to get six hundred
amperes through a piece of lead wire no bigger than a pencil lead.
"I don't know why they didn't go on
from there, but they didn't. Possibly it was because they didn't have the
insulation necessary to keep down the corona effect; in a high-density current,
the electrons tend to push each other sideways out of the wire.
"At any rate,; I tried
it, using lux metal as an insulator around the wire."
"Hold it!" Fuller interrupted.
"What, may I ask, is lux metal?"
"That was Wade's idea," Arcot
grinned. "You remember those two substances we found in the Nigran ships
during the war?"
"Sure," said Fuller. "One
was transparent and the other was a perfect reflector. You said they were made
of light— photons so greatly condensed that they were held together by their
gravitational fields."
"Right, We called them light-metal.
But Wade said that was too confusing. With a specific gravity of 103.5,
light-metal was certainly not a light metal! So Wade coined a couple of words. Lux
is the Latin for light, so he named the transparent one lux and the
reflecting one relux."
"It sounds peculiar," Fuller
observed, "but so does every coined word when you first hear it. Go on
with your story."
Arcot relit his pipe and went on.
"I put a current of ten thousand amps through a little piece of lead wire,
and that gave me a current density of 1010 amps per square inch.
"Then I started jacking up the
voltage, and modified the thing with a double-polarity field somewhat similar
to the molecular motion field except that it works on a sub-nucleonic level. As
a result, about half of the lead fed into the chamber became contraterrene
lead! The atoms just turned themselves inside out, so to speak, giving us an
atom with positrons circling a negatively charged nucleus. It even gave the
neutrons a reverse spin, converting them into anti-neutrons.
"Result: total annihilation of
matter! When the contraterrene lead atoms met the terrene lead atoms, mutual
annihilation resulted, giving us pure energy.
"Some of this power can be bled off
to power the mechanism itself; the rest is useful energy. We've got all the
power we need—power, literally by the ton."
Fuller said nothing; he just looked
dazed. He was well beginning to believe that these three men could do the
impossible and do it to order.
"The second thing," Arcot
continued, "was, as I said, a way to store the energy so that it could be
released as rapidly or as slowly as we needed it.
"That was Morey's baby. He figured
it would be possible to use the space-strain apparatus to store energy. It's an
old method; induction coils, condensers, and even gravity itself are storing
energy by straining space. But with Morey's apparatus we could store a lot
more.
"A torus-shaped induction coil
encloses all its magnetic field within it; the torus, or 'doughnut' coil, has a
perfectly enclosed magnetic field. We built an enclosed coil, using Morey's principle,
and expected to store a few watts of power in it to see how long we could hold
it.
"Unfortunately, we made the mistake
of connecting it to the city power lines, and it cost us a hundred and fifty
dollars at a quarter of a cent per kilowatt hour. We blew fuses all over the
place. After that, we used the relux plate generator.
"At any rate, the gadget can store
power and plenty of it, and it can put it out the same way."
Arcot knocked the ashes out of his pipe
and smiled at Fuller. "Those are the essentials of what we have to offer.
We give you the job of figuring out the stresses and strains involved. We want
a ship with a cruising radius of a thousand million light years."
"Yes, sir! Right away, sir! Do you
want a gross or only a dozen?" Fuller asked sarcastically. "You sure
believe- in big orders! And whench cometh the cold cash for this lovely dream
of yours?"
"That," said Morey darkly,
"is where the trouble comes in. We have to convince Dad. As President of
Transcontinental Airways, he's my boss, but the trouble is, he's also my
father. When he hears that I want to go gallivanting off all over the Universe
with you guys, he is very likely to turn thumbs down on the whole deal.
Besides, Arcot's dad has a lot of influence around here, too, and I have a
healthy hunch he won't like the idea, either."
"I rather fear he won't,"
agreed Arcot gloomily.
A silence hung over the room that felt
almost as heavy as the pall of pipe smoke the air conditioners were trying
frantically to disperse.
The elder Mr. Morey had full control of
their finances. A ship that would cost easily hundreds of millions of dollars
was well beyond anything the four men could get by themselves. Their inventions
were the property of Transcontinental, but even if they had not been, not one
of the four men would think of selling them to another company.
Finally, Wade said: "I think we'll
stand a much better chance if we show them a big, spectacular exhibition;
something really impressive. We'll point out all the advantages and uses of the
apparatus. Then well show them complete plans for the ship. They might
consent."
"They might," replied Morey
smiling. "It's worth a try, anyway. And let's get out of the city to do
it. We can go up to my place in Vermont. We can use the lab up there for all we
need. We've got everything worked out, so there's no need to stay here.
"Besides, I've got a lake up there
in which we can indulge in a little atavism to the fish stage of
evolution."^
"Good enough," Arcot agreed,
grinning broadly. "And we'll need that lake, too. Here in the city it's
only eighty-five because the arrears are soaking up heat for their molecular
drive, but out in the country it'll be in the nineties."
"To the mountains, then! Let's pack
up!"
Chapter 2
the many books
and PAPERS they had collected were
hastily put into the briefcases, and the four men took the elevator to the
landing area on the roof.
"We'll take my car," Morey
said. "The rest of you can just leave yours here. They'll be safe for a
few days."
They all piled in as Morey slid into the
driver's seat and turned on the power.
They rose slowly, looking below them at
the traffic of the great city. New York had long since abandoned her rivers as
trade routes; they had been covered solidly by steel decks which were used as
public landing fields and ground car routes. Around them loomed titanic
structures of glistening colored tile. The sunlight reflected brilliantly from
them, and the contrasting colors of the buildings seemed to blend together into
a great, multicolored painting.
The darting planes, the traffic of
commerce down between the great buildings, and the pleasure cars above,
combined to give a series of changing, darting shadows that wove a flickering
pattern over the city. The long lines of ships coming in from Chicago, London,
Buenos Aires and San Francisco, and the constant flow from across the Pole—from
Russia, India, and China, were like mighty black serpents that wound their way
into the city.
Morey cut into a Northbound traffic
level, moved into the high-speed lane, and eased in on the accelerator. He held
to the traffic pattern for two hundred and fifty miles, until he was well past
Boston, then he turned at the first break and fired the ship toward their goal
in Vermont.
Less than forty-five minutes since they
had left New York, Morey was dropping the car toward the little mountain lake
that offered them a place for seclusion. Gently, he let the ship glide smoothly
into the shed where the first molecular motion ship had been built. Arcot
jumped out, saying:
"We're here—unload and get going. I
think a swim and some sleep is in order before we start work on this ship. We
can begin tomorrow." He looked approvingly at the clear blue water of the
little lake.
Wade climbed out and pushed Arcot to one
side. "All right, out of the way, then, little one, and let a man get
going." He headed for the house with the briefcases.
Arcot was six feet two and weighed close
to two hundred, but Wade was another two inches taller and weighed a good fifty
pounds more. His arms and chest were built on the same general plan as those of
a gorilla. He had good reason to call Arcot little.
Morey, though still taller, was not as
heavily formed, and weighed only a few pounds more than Arcot, while Fuller was
a bit smaller than Arcot.
Due to several factors, the size of the
average human being had been steadily increasing for several centuries. Only
Wade would have been considered a "big" man by the average person,
for the average man was over six feet tall.
They relaxed most of the afternoon,
swimming and indulging in a few wrestling matches. At wrestling, Wade
consistently proved himself not only built like a gorilla but muscled like one;
but Arcot proved that skill was not without merit several times, for he had found
that if he could make the match last more than two minutes, Wade's huge muscles
would find insufficient oxygen supply and tire quickly. '
That evening, after dinner, Morey
engaged Wade in a fierce battle of chess, with Fuller as an interested
spectator. Arcot, too, was watching, but he was saying nothing.
After several minutes of uneventful
play, Morey stopped suddenly and glared at the board. "Now why'd I make
that move? I intended to move my queen over there to check your king on the red
diagonal."
"Yeah," replied Wade gloomily,
"that's what I wanted you to do. I had a sure checkmate in three
moves."
Arcot smiled quietly.
They continued play for several moves,
then it was Wade who remarked that something seemed to be influencing his play.
"I had intended to trade queens.
I'm glad I didn't, though; I think this leaves me in a better position."
"It sure does," agreed Morey.
"I was due to clean up on the queen trade. You surprised me, too; you
usually go in for trades. I'm afraid my position is hopeless now."
It was. In the next ten moves, Wade
spotted the weak points in every attack Morey made; the attack crumbled
disastrously and white was forced to resign, his king in a hopeless position.
Wade rubbed his chin. "You know,
Morey, I seemed to know exactly why you made every move, and I saw every
possibility involved."
"Yeah—so I noticed," said
Morey with a grin.
"Come on, Morey, let's try a
game," said Fuller, sliding into the chair Wade had vacated.
Although ordinarily equally matched with
Fuller, Morey again went down to disastrous defeat in an amazingly short time.
It almost seemed as if Fuller could anticipate every move.
"Brother, am I off form
today," he said, rising from the table. "Come on, Arcot—let's see you
try Wade."
Arcot sat down, and although he had
never played chess as extensively as the others, he proceeded to clean Wade out
lock, stock, and barrel.
"Now what's come over you?"
asked Morey in astonishment as he saw a very complicated formation working out,
a formation he knew was far better than Arcot's usual game. He had just worked
it out and felt very proud of it.
Arcot looked at him and smiled.
"That's the answer, Morey!"
Morey blinked. "What—what's the
answer to what?"
"Yes—I meant it—don't be so
surprised—you've seen it done before. I have—no, not under him, but a more
experienced teacher. I figured it would come in handy in our
explorations."
Morey's face grew more and more
astonished as Arcot's strange monologue continued.
Finally, Arcot turned to Wade, who was
looking at him and Morey in wide-eyed wonder. And this time, it was Wade who
began talking in a monologue.
"You did?" he said in
a surprised voice. "When?" There was a long pause, during which Arcot
stared at Wade with such intensity that Fuller began to understand what was
happening.
"Well," said Wade, "if
you've learned the trick so thoroughly, try it out. Let's see you project your
thoughts! Go ahead!"
Fuller, now understanding fully what was
going on, burst out laughing. "He has been projecting his
thoughts! He hasn't said a word to you!" Then he looked at Arcot. "As
a matter of fact, you've said so little that I don't know how you pulled this
telepathic stunt—though I'm quite convinced that you did."
"I spent three months on Venus a
while back," said Arcot, 'studying with one of their foremost
telepathists. Actually, most of that time was spent on theory; learning how to
do it isn't a difficult proposition. It just takes practice.
"The whole secret is that everyone
has the power; it's a very ancient power in the human brain, and most of the
lower animals possess it to a greater degree than do humans. When Man developed
language, it gave his thoughts more concreteness and permitted a freer and more
clearly conceived type of thinking. The result was that telepathy fell into
disuse.
"I'm going to show you how to do it
because it will be invaluable if we meet a strange race. By projecting pictures
and concepts, you can dispense with going to the trouble of learning the
language.
"After you learn the basics, all
you'll need is practice, but watch yourself! Too much practice can give you the
great-granddaddy of all headaches! Okay, now to begin with…"
Arcot spent the rest of the evening
teaching them the Venerian system of telepathy.
They all rose at nine. Arcot got up
first, and the others found it expedient to follow his example shortly
thereafter. He had brought a large Tesla coil into the bedroom from the lab and
succeeded in inducing sufficient voltage in the bedsprings to make very
effective, though harmless, sparks.
"Come on, boys, hit the deck! Wade,
as chief chemist, you are to synthesize a little coffee and heat-treat a few
eggs for us. We have work ahead today! Rise and shine!" He didn't shut off
the coil until he was assured that each of them had gotten a considerable
distance from his bed.
"Ouch!" yelled Morey.
"Okay! Shut it off! I want to get my pants! We're all up! You win!"
After breakfast, they all went into the
room they used as a calculating room. Here they had two different types of
integraph calculators and plenty of paper and equipment to do their own
calculations and draw graphs.
"To begin with," said Fuller,
"let's decide what shape we want to use. As designer, I'd like to point
out that a sphere is the strongest, a cube easiest to build, and a torpedo
shape the most efficient aerodynamically. However, we intend to use it in
space, not air.
"And remember, well need it more as
a home than as a ship during the greater part of the trip."
"We might need an aerodynamically
stable hull," Wade interjected. "It came in mighty handy on Venus.
They're darned useful in emergencies. What do you think, Arcot?"
"I favor the torpedo shape. Okay,
now we've got a hull. How about some engines to run it? Let's get those, too.
I'll name the general things first; facts and figures can come later.
"First: We must have a powerful
mass-energy converter. We could use the cavity radiator and use cosmic rays to
warm it, and drive the individual power units that way, or we can have a main
electrical power unit and warm them all electrically. Now, which one would be
the better?"
Morey frowned. "I think we'd be
safer if we didn't depend on any one plant, but had each as separate as
possible. I'm for the individual cavity radiators."
"Question," interjected
Fuller. "How do these cavity radiators work?"
"They're built like a thermos
bottle," Arcot explained. The inner shell will be of rough relux, which
will absorb the heat efficiently, while the outer one will be of polished relux
to keep the radiation inside. Between the two we'll run a flow of helium at two
tons per square inch pressure to carry the heat to the molecular motion
apparatus. The neck of the bottle will contain the atomic
generator."
Fuller still looked puzzled. "See
here; with this new space strain drive, why do we have to have the molecular
drive at all?"
"To move around near a heavy
mass—in the presence of a strong gravitational field," Arcot said. "A
gravitational field tends to warp space in such a way that the velocity of
light is lower in its presence. Our drive tries to warp or strain space in the
opposite manner. The two would simply cancel each other out and we'd waste a
lot of power going nowhere. As a matter of fact, the gravitational field of the
sun is so' intense that we'll have to go out beyond the orbit of Pluto before
we can use the space strain drive effectively.
"I catch," said Fuller.
"Now to get back to the generators. I think the power units would be
simpler if they were controlled from one electrical power source, and just as
reliable. Anyway, the molecular motion power is controlled, of necessity, from
a single generator, so if one is apt to go bad, the other is, too."
"Very good reasoning," smiled
Morey, "but I'm still strong for decentralization. I suggest a compromise.
We can have the main power unit and the main verticals, which will be the
largest, controlled by individual cosmic ray heaters, and the rest run by
electric power units. They'd be just heating coils surrounded by the field."
"A good idea," said Arcot.
"I'm in favor of the compromise. Okay, Fuller? Okay. Now the next problem
is weapons. I suggest we use a separate control panel and a separate generating panel for the power
tubes we'll want in the molecular beam projectors."
The molecular beam projector simply
projected the field that caused molecular motion to take place as wanted. As
weapons, they were terrifically deadly. If half a mountain is suddenly thrown
into the air because all the random motion of its molecules becomes
concentrated in one direction, it becomes a difficult projectile to fight. Or
touch the bow of a ship with the beam; the bow drops to absolute zero and is
driven back on the stern, with all the speed of its billions of molecules. The
general effect is similar to that produced by two ships having a head-on
collision at ten miles per second.
Anything touched by the beam is broken
by its own molecules, twisted by its own strength, and crushed by its own
toughness. Nothing can resist it.
"My idea," Arcot went on,
"was that since the same power is used for both the beams and the drive,
we'll have two separate power-tube banks to generate it. That way, if one
breaks down, we can switch to the other. We can even use both at once on the
drive, if necessary; the molecular motion machines will stand it if we make
them of relux and anchor them with lux metal beams. The projectors would be
able to handle the power, too, using Dad's new system.
"That will give us more protection,
and, at the same time, full power. Since we'll have several projectors, the
power needed to operate the ship will be about equal to the power required to
operate the projectors.
"And I also suggest we mount some
heat beam projectors."
"Why?" objected Wade.
"They're less effective than the molecular rays. The molecular beams are
instantly irresistible, while the heat beams take time to heat up the target.
Sure, they're unhealthy to deal with, but no more so than the molecular
beam."
"True enough," Arcot agreed,
"but the heat beam is more spectacular, and we may find that a mere
spectacular display will accomplish as much as actual destruction. Besides, the
heat beams are more local in effect. If we want to kill an enemy and spare his
captive, we want a beam that will be deadly where it hits, not for fifty yards
around."
"Hold it a second," said
Fuller wearily. "Now it's heat beams. Don't you guys think you ought to
explain a little bit to the poor goon who's designing this flying battlewagon?
How did you get a heat beam?"
Arcot grinned. "Simple. We use a
small atomic cavity radiator at one end of which is a rough relux parabolic
filter. Beyond that is a lux metal lens. The relux heats up tremendously, and
since there is no polished relux to reflect it back, the heat is radiated out
through the lux metal lens as a powerful heat beam."
"Okay, fine," said Fuller.
"But stop springing new gadgets on me, will you?"
"Ill try not to," Arcot
laughed. "Anyway, let's get on to the
main power plant. Remember that our condenser coil is a gadget for storing
energy in space; we are therefore obliged to supply it with energy to store.
Just forming the drive field alone will require two times ten to the
twenty-seventh ergs, or the energy of about two and a half tons of
matter. That means a, whale of a lot of lead wire will have to be fed into our
conversion generators; it would take several hours to charge, the coils. We'd
better have two big chargers to do the job.
"The controls we can figure out
later. How about it? Any suggestions?"
"Sounds okay to me," said
Morey, and the others agreed.
"Good enough. Now, as far as air
and water go, we can use the standard spacecraft apparatus, Fuller, so you can
figure that in any way you want to."
"We'll need a lab, too," Wade
put in. "And a machine shop with plenty of spare parts—everything we can
possibly think of. Remember, we may want to build some things out in
space."
"Right. And I wonder—" Arcot
looked thoughtful. "How about the invisibility apparatus? It may prove
useful, and it won't cost much. Let's put that in, too."
The apparatus he mentioned was simply a
high-frequency oscillator tube of extreme power which caused vibrations
approaching light frequency to be set up in the molecules of the ship. As a
result, the ship became transparent, since light could easily pass through the
vibrating molecules.
There was only one difficulty; the ship
was invisible, all right, but it became a radio sender and could easily be
detected by a directional radio. However, if the secret were unknown, it was a
very effective method of disappearing. And, since the frequency was so high, a
special detector was required to pick it up.
"Is that all you need?" asked
Fuller.
"Nope," said Arcot, leaning
back in his chair. "Now comes the kicker. I suggest that we make the hull
of foot-thick lux metal and line it on the inside with relux wherever we want
it to be opaque. And we want relux shutters on the windows. Lux is too doggone
transparent; if we came too close to a hot star, we'd be badly burned."
Fuller looked almost goggle-eyed. "A—foot—of—lux!
Good Lord, Arcot! This ship would weigh a quarter of a million tons! That stuff
is dense!"
"Sure," agreed Arcot,
"but we'll need the protection. With a ship like that, you could run
through a planetoid without hurting the hull. We'll make the relux inner wall
about an inch thick, with a vacuum between them for protection in a warm
atmosphere. And if some tremendous force did manage to crack the outer wall, we
wouldn't be left without protection."
"Okay, you're the boss,"
Fuller said resignedly. "It's going to have to be a big ship, though. I
figure a length of about two hundred feet and a diameter of around thirty feet.
The interior I'll "furnish with aluminum; it'll be cheaper and lighter.
How about an observatory?"
"Put it in the rear of the
ship," Wade suggested. "We'll mount one of the Nigran
telectroscopes."
"Control room in the bow, of
course," Morey chipped in.
"I've got you," Fuller said.
"I'll work the thing out and give you a cost estimate and drawings."
"Fine," said Arcot, standing
up. "Meanwhile, the rest of us will work out our little exhibition to
impress Mr. Morey and Dad. Come on, lads, let's get back to the lab."
Chapter 3
It was two weeks before Dr. Robert Arcot and his old friend Arthur
Morey, president of Transcontinental Airways, were invited to see what their
sons had been working on. The demonstration was to take place in the radiation
labs in the basements of the Transcontinental building. Arcot, Wade, Morey, and
Fuller had brought the equipment in from the country place in Vermont and set
it up in one of the heavily-lined, vault-like chambers that were used for
radiation experiments.
The two older men were seated before a
huge eighty-inch three-dimensional television screen several floors above the level
where the actual demonstration was going on.
"There can't be anyone in the room,
because of radiation burns," explained Arcot, junior. "We could have
surrounded the thing with relux, but then you couldn't have seen what's going
on.
"I'm not going to explain anything
beforehand; like magic, they'll be more astounding before the explanation is
given."
He touched a switch. The cameras began
to operate, and the screen sprang into life.
The screen showed a heavy table on which
was mounted a small projector that looked something like a searchlight with
several heavy cables running into it. In the path of the projector was a large
lux metal crucible surrounded by a ring of relux, and a series of points of
relux aimed into the crucible. These points and the ring were grounded. Inside
the crucible was a small ingot of coronium, the strong, hard, Venerian metal
which melted at twenty-five hundred degrees centigrade and boiled at better
than four thousand. The crucible was entirely enclosed in a large lux metal
case which was lined, on the side away from the projector, with roughened
relux.
Arcot moved a switch on the control
panel. Far below them, a heavy relay slammed home, and suddenly a solid beam of
brilliant bluish light shot out from the projector, a beam so brilliant that
the entire screen was lit by the intense glow, and the spectators thought that
they could almost feel the heat.
It passed through the lux metal case and
through the coronium bar, only to be cut off by the relux liner, which, since
it was rough, absorbed over ninety-nine percent of the rays that struck it.
The coronium bar glowed red, orange,
yellow, and white in quick succession, then suddenly slumped into a molten mass
in the bottom of the crucible.
The crucible was filled now with a mass of molten metal that glowed
intensely white and seethed furiously. The slowly rising vapors told of the
rapid boiling, and their settling showed that their temperature was too high to
permit them to remain hot—the heat radiated away too fast.
For perhaps ten seconds this went on,
then suddenly a new factor was added to the performance; There was a sudden
crashing arc and a blaze of blue flame that swept in a cyclonic twisting motion
inside the crucible. The blaze of the arc, the intense brilliance of the
incandescent metal, and the weird light of the beam of radiation shifted in a
fantastic play of colors. It made a strange and impressive scene.
Suddenly the relay sounded again; the
beam of radiance disappeared as quickly as it had come. In an instant, the blue
violet glare of the relux plate had subsided to an angry red. The violent
arcing had stopped, and the metal was cooling rapidly. A heavy purplish vapor
in the crucible condensed on the walls into black, flakey crystals.
The elder Arcot was watching the scene
in the screen curiously. "I wonder—" he said slowly. "As a
physicist, I should say it was impossible, but if it did happen, I should
imagine these would be the results." He turned to look at Arcot junior.
"Well, go on with your exhibition, son."
"I want to know your ideas when
we're through, though, Dad," said the younger man. "The next on the
program is a little more interesting, perhaps. At least it demonstrates a more
commercial aspect of the thing."
The younger Morey was operating the
controls of the handling robots. On the screen, a machine rolled in on
caterpillar treads, picked up the lux case and its contents, and carried them
off.
A minute later, it reappeared with a
large electromagnet and a relux plate, to which were attached a huge pair of
silver busbars. The relux plate was set in a stand directly in front of the
projector, and the big electromagnet was set up directly behind the relux
plate. The magnet leads were connected, and a coil, in the form of two toruses
intersecting at right angles enclosed in a form-fitting relux case, had been
connected to the heavy terminals of the relux plate. An ammeter and a heavy
coil of coronium wire were connected in series with the coil, and a
kilovoltmeter was connected across the terminals of the relux plate.
As soon as the connections were
completed, the robot backed swiftly out of the room, and Arcot turned on the
magnet and the ray projector. Instantly, there was a sharp deflection of the
kilovoltmeter.
"I haven't yet closed the switch
leading into the coil," he explained, "so there's no current."
The ammeter needle hadn't moved.
Despite the fact that the voltmeter
seemed to be shorted out by the relux plate, the needle pointed steadily at
twenty-two. Arcot changed the current through the magnet, and the reading
dropped to twenty.
The rays had been on at very low power,
the air only slightly ionized, but as Arcot turned a rheostat, the intensity
increased, and the air in the path of the beam shone with an intense blue. The
relux plate, subject now to eddy currents, since there was no other path for
the energy to take, began to heat up rapidly.
"I'm going to close the switch into
the coil now," said Arcot. "Watch the meters."
A relay snapped, and instantly the
ammeter jumped to read 4500 amperes. The voltmeter gave a slight kick, then
remained steady. The heavy coronium spring grew warm and began to glow dully,
while the ammeter dropped slightly because of the increased resistance. The
relux plate cooled slightly, and the voltmeter remained steady.
"The coil you see is storing the
energy that is flowing into it," Arcot explained. "Notice that the
coronium resistor is increasing its resistance, but otherwise there is little
increase in the back E.M.F. The energy is coming from the rays which strike the
polarized relux plate to give the current."
He paused a moment to make slight
adjustments in the controls, then turned his attention back to the screen.
The kilovoltmeter still read twenty.
"Forty-five hundred amperes at
twenty thousand volts," the elder Arcot said softly. "Where is it
going?"
"Take a look at the space within
the right angle of the torus coils," said Arcot junior. "It's getting
dark in there despite the powerful light shed by the ionized air."
Indeed, the space writhing the twin
coils was rapidly growing dark; it was darkening the image of the things behind
it, oddly blurring their outlines. In a moment, the images were completely
wiped out, and the region within the coils was filled with a strangely solid
blackness.
"According to the
instruments," young Arcot said, "we have stored fifteen thousand
kilowatt hours of energy in that coil and there seems to be no limit to how
much power we can get into it. Just from the power it contains, that coil is
worth about forty dollars right now, figured at a quarter of a cent per
kilowatt hour.
"I haven't been using anywhere near
the power I can get out of this apparatus, either. Watch." He threw
another switch which shorted around the coronium resistor and the ammeter,
allowing the current to run into the coil directly from the plate.
"I don't have a direct reading on
this," he explained, "but an indirect reading from the magnetic field
in that room shows a current of nearly a hundred million amperes!"
The younger Morey had been watching a
panel of meters on the other side of the screen. Suddenly, he shouted:
"Cut it, Arcot! The conductors are setting up a secondary field in the
plate and causing trouble."
Instantly, Arcot's hand went to a
switch. A relay slammed open, and the ray projector died.
The power coil still held its field of
enigmatic blackness.
"Watch this," Arcot
instructed. Under his expert manipulation, a small robot handler rolled into
the room. It had a pair of pliers clutched in one claw. The spectators watched
the screen in fascination as the robot drew back its arm and hurled the pliers
at the black field with all its might.
The pliers struck the blackness and rebounded as if they had hit a rubber wall.
Arcot caused the little machine to pick up the pliers and repeat the process.
Arcot grinned. "I've cut off the
power to the coil. Unlike the ordinary induction coil, it isn't necessary to
keep supplying power to the thing; it's a static condition.
"You can see for yourself how much
energy it holds. It's a handy little gadget, isn't it?" He shut off the
rest of the instruments and the television screen, then turned to his father.
"The demonstration is over. Got any
theories, Dad?"
The elder Dr. Arcot frowned in thought.
"The only thing I can think of that would produce an effect like that is a
stream of positrons—or contraterrene nuclei. That would explain not only the
heating, but the electrical display.
"As far as the coil goes, that's
easy to understand. Any energy storage device stores energy the strain in
space; here you can actually see the strain in space." Then he smiled at
his son. "I see my ex-laboratory assistant has come a long way. You've
achieved controlled, usable atomic energy through total annihilation of mass.
Right?"
Arcot smiled back and nodded.
"Right, Dad."
"Son, I wonder if you'd give me
your data sheets on that process. I'd like to work out some of the mathematical
problems involved."
"Sure, Dad. But right now—"
Arcot turned toward the elder Mr. Morey. "—I'm more interested in the
mathematics of finance. We have a proposition to put to you, Mr. Morey, and
that proposition, simply stated, is—"
Perhaps it was simply stated, but it
took fully an hour for Arcot, Wade, and Morey to discuss the science of it with
the two older men, and Fuller spent another hour over the carefully drawn plans
for the ship.
At last, the elder Mr. Morey settled
back and looked vacantly at the ceiling. They were seated now in the conference
room of Transcontinental Airways.
"Well, boys," said Mr. Morey,
"as usual, I'm in a position where I'm forced to yield. I might refuse
financial backing, but you could sell any one of those gadgets for close to a
billion dollars and finance the expedition independently, or you could, with
your names, request the money publicly and back it that way." He paused a
moment. "I am, however, thinking more in terms of your safety than in
terms of money." There was another long pause, then he smiled at the four
younger men.
"I think, however, that we can
trust you. Armed with cosmic and molecular rays, you should be able to put up a
fair scrap anywhere. Also, I have never detected any signs of feeblemindedness
in any of you; I don't think you'll get yourselves in a jam you can't get out
of. I'll back you."
"I hate to interrupt your
exuberance," said the elder Dr. Arcot, "but I should like to know the
name of this remarkable ship."
"What?" asked Wade.
"Name? Oh, it hasn't any."
The elder Morey shook his head sadly.
"That is indeed an important oversight. If a crew of men can overlook so
fundamental a thing, I wonder if they are to be trusted."
"Well, what are we going to call
it, then?" asked Arcot.
"Solarite II might
do," suggested Morey. "It will still be from the Solar System."
"I think we should be more
broadminded," said Arcot. "We aren't going to stay in this system—not
even in this galaxy. We might call it the Galaxian."
"Did you say broadminded?"
asked Wade. "Let's really be broad and call it the Universite or
something like that. Or, better yet, call it Flourine! That's
everywhere in the universe and the most active element there is. This ship will
go everywhere in the universe and be the most active thing that ever existed!*'
"A good name!" said the elder
Morey. "That gets my vote!"
Young Arcot looked thoughtful.
"That's mighty good-I like the idea-but it, lacks ring." He paused,
then, looking up at the ceiling, repeated slowly:
"Alone, alone, all, all alone;
Alone on a wide, wide sea;
Nor any saint took pity on
My soul in agony."
He rose and walked over to the window,
looking out where the bright points of light that were the stars of space rode
high in the deep violet of the moonlit sky.
"The sea of all space—the sea of
vastness that lies between the far-flung nebulae—the mighty void—alone on a
sea, the vastness of which no man can imagine—alone-alone where no other man
has been; alone, so far from all matter, from all mankind, that not even light,
racing at billions of miles each day, could reach home in less than a million
years." Arcot stopped and stood looking out of the window.
Morey broke the silence. "The
Ancient Mariner." He paused. " 'Alone' will certainly be right.
I think that name takes all the prizes."
Fuller nodded slowly. "I certainly
agree. The Ancient Mariner. It's kind of long, but it is the
name."
It was adopted unanimously.
Chapter 4
the ancient
mariner was built in the big
Transcontinental shops in Newark; the power they needed was not available in
the smaller shops.
Working twenty-four hours a day, in three
shifts, skilled men took two months to finish the hull according to Fuller's
specifications. The huge walls of lux metal required great care in
construction, for they could not be welded; they had to be formed in position.
And they could only be polished under powerful magnets, where the dense
magnetic field softened the lux metal enough to allow a diamond polisher to do
the job.
When the hull was finished, there came
the laborious work of installing the power plant and the tremendous power
leads, the connectors, the circuits to the relays—a thousand complex circuits.
Much of it was standard: the molecular
power tubes, the molecular ray projectors, the power tubes for the invisibility
apparatus, and many other parts. All the relays were standard, the gyroscopic
stabilizers were standard, and the electromagnetic braking equipment for the
gyros was standard.
But there would be long days of work
ahead for Arcot, Wade, and Morey, for only they could install the special
equipment; only they could put in the complicated wiring, for no one else on
Earth understood the circuits they had to establish.
During the weeks of waiting, Arcot and
his friends worked on auxiliary devices to be used with the ship. They wanted
to make some improvements on the old molecular ray pistols, and to develop
atomic powered heat projectors for hand use. The primary power they stored in
small space-strain coils in the handgrip of the pistol. Despite their small
size, the coils were capable of storing power for thirty hours of continuous
operation of the rays. The finished weapon was scarcely larger than a standard
molecular ray pistol.
Arcot pointed out that many of the
planets they might visit would be larger than Earth, and they lacked any way of
getting about readily under high gravity. Since something had to be done about
that, Arcot did it. He demonstrated it to his friends one day in the shop yard.
Morey and Wade had just been in to see
Fuller about some details of the ship, and as they came out, Arcot called them
over to his work bench. He was wearing a space suit without the helmet.
The modern space suit is made of woven
lux metal wires of extremely small diameter and airproofed with a rubberoid
flurocarbon plastic, and furnished with air and heating units. Made as
it was, it offered protection nothing else could offer; it was almost a perfect
insulator and was resistant to the attack of any chemical reagent. Not even
elemental flourine could corrode it. And the extreme strength of the lux metal
fiber made it stronger, pound for pound, than steel or coronium.
On Arcot's back was a pack of relux
plated metal. It was connected by relux web belts to a broad belt that circled
Arcot's waist. One thin cable ran down the right arm to a small relux tube
about eight inches long by two inches in diameter.
"Watch!" Arcot said, grinning.
He reached to his belt and flipped a
little switch.
"So long! See you later!" He
pointed his right arm toward the ceiling and sailed lightly into the air. He
lowered the angle of his arm and moved smoothly across the huge hangar,
floating toward the shining bulk of the rapidly forming Ancient Mariner.
He circled the room, rising and sinking at will, then headed for the open door.
"Come out and watch me where
there's more room," he called.
Out in the open, he darted high up into
the air until he was a mere speck in the sky. Then he suddenly came dropping
down and landed lightly before them, swaying on his feet and poised lightly on
his toes.
"Some jump," said Morey, in
mock surprise.
"Yeah," agreed Fuller.
"Try again."
"Or," Wade put in, "give
me that weight annihilator and I'll beat you at your own game. What's the
secret?"
"That's a cute gadget. How much
load does it carry?" asked Morey, more practically.
"I can develop about ten tons as
far as it goes, but the human body can't take more than five gravities, so we
can only visit planets with less than that surface gravity. The principle is
easy to see; 111 show you."
He unhooked the cables and took the
power pack from his back. "The main thing is the molecular power unit
here, electrically heated and mounted on a small, massive gyroscope. That gyro
is necessary, too. I tried leaving it out and almost took a nosedive. I had it
coupled directly to the body and leaned forward a little bit when I was in the
air! Without a gyro to keep the drive upright, I took a loop and started
heading for the ground. I had to do some fancy gymnastics to keep from ending
up six feet under—literally.
"The power is all generated in the pack
with a small power plate and several storage coils. I've also got it hooked to
these holsters at my belt so we can charge the pistols while we carry them.
"The control is this secondary
power cable running down my arm to my hand. That gives you your direction, and
the rheostat here at the belt changes the velocity.
"I've only made this one so far,
but I've ordered six others like it. I thought you guys might like one,
too."
"I think you guessed right!"
said Morey, looking inside the power case. "Hey! Why all the extra room in
the case?"
"It's an unperfected invention as
yet; we might want to put some more stuff in there for our own private
use."
Each of the men tried out the apparatus
and found it quite satisfactory.
Meanwhile, there was other work to be
done.
Wade had been given the job of gathering
the necessary food and anything else in the way of supplies that he might think
of. Arcot was collecting the necessary spare parts and apparatus. Morey was
gathering a small library and equipping a chemistry laboratory. Fuller was to
get together the necessary standard equipment for the ship—tables, seats,
bunks, and other furniture.
It took months of work, and it seemed it
would never be finished, but finally, one clear, warm day in August, the ship
was completely Quipped and ready to go.
On the last inspection, the elder Dr.
Arcot and the elder Mr. Morey went with' the four younger men. They stood
beside the great intergalactic cruiser, looking up at its shining hull.
"We came a bit later than we
expected, son," said Dr. Arcot, "but we still expect a good
show." He paused and frowned. "I understand you don't intend to take
any trial trip. What's the idea?"
Arcot had been afraid his father would
be worried about that, so he framed his explanation carefully. "Dad, we
figured this ship out to the last decimal place; it's the best we can make it.
Remember, the molecular motion drive will get a trial first; we'll give it a
trial trip when we leave the sun. If there's any trouble, naturally, we'll
return. But the equipment is standard, so we're expecting no trouble.
"The only part that would require a
trial trip is the space-control apparatus, and there's no way to give that a
trial trip. Remember, we have to get far enough out from the sun so that the
gravitational field will be weak enough for the drive to overcome it. If we
tried it this close, we'd just be trying to neutralize the sun's gravity. We'd
be pouring out energy, wasting a great deal of it; but out away from the sun,
we'll get most of the energy back.
"On the other hand, when we do get
out and get started we will go faster than light, and we'd be hopelessly beyond
the range of the molecular motion drive in an instant. In other words, if the
space-control drive doesn't work, we can't come back, and if it does work,
there's no need to come back.
"And if anything goes wrong, we're
the only ones who could fix it, anyway. If anything goes wrong, I'll radio
Earth. You ought to be able to hear from me in about a dozen years." He
smiled suddenly. "Say! We might go out and get back here in time to hear
ourselves talking!
"But you can see why we felt that
there was little reason for a trial trip. If it's a failure, we'll never be
back to say so; if it isn't, we'll be able to continue."
His father still looked worried, but he
nodded in acquiescence. "Perfect logic, son, but I guess we may as well
give up the discussion. Personally, I don't like it. Let's see this ship of
yours."
The great hull was two hundred feet long
and thirty feet in diameter. The outer wall, one foot of solid lux metal, was
separated from the inner, one-inch relux wall by a two inch gap which would be
evacuated in space.. The two walls were joined in many places by small lux
metal cross-braces. The windows consisted of spaces in the relux wall, allowing
the occupants to see through the transparent lux hull.
From the outside, it was difficult to
detect the exact outline of the ship, for the clear lux metal was practically
invisible and the foot of it that surrounded the more visible part of the ship gave
a curious optical illusion. The perfect reflecting ability of the relux made
the inner hull difficult to see, too. It was more by absence than presence that
one detected it; it blotted out things behind it.
The great window of the pilot room
disclosed the pilot seats and the great switchboard to one side. Each of the
windows was equipped with a relux shield that slid into position at the touch
of a switch, and these were already in place over the observatory window, so
only the long, narrow portholes showed the lighted interior.
For some minutes, the elder men stood
looking at the graceful beauty of the ship.
"Come on in—see the inside,"
suggested Fuller.
They entered through the airlock close
to the base of the ship. The heavy lux door was opened by automatic machinery
from the inside, but the combination depended on the use of a molecular ray and
the knowledge of the correct place, which made it impossible for anyone to open
it unless they had the ray and knew where to use it.
From the airlock, they went directly to
the power room. Here they heard the soft purring of a large oscillator tube and
the indistinguishable murmur of smoothly running AC generators powered large
contraterrene reactors.
The elder Dr. Arcot glanced in surprise
at the heavy-duty ammeter in a control panel.
"Half a billion amperes! Good Lord!
Where is all that power going?" He looked at his son.
"Into the storage coils. It's going
in at ten kilovolts, so that's a five billion kilowatt supply. It's been going
for half an hour and has half an hour to' run. It takes two tons of matter to
charge the coil to capacity, and we're carrying twenty tons of fuel—enough for
ten charges. We shouldn't need more than three tons if all goes well, but 'all'
seldom does.
"See that large black cylinder up
there?" Arcot asked, pointing.
Above them, lying along the roof of the
power room, lay a great black cylinder nearly two feet in diameter and
extending out through the wall in the rear. It was made integral with two giant
lux metal beams that reached to the bow of the ship in a long, sweeping curve.
From one of the power switchboards, two heavy cables ran up to the giant
cylinder.
"That's the main horizontal power
unit. We can develop an acceleration of ten gravities either forward or
backward. In the curve of the ship, on top, sides, and bottom, there are power
units for motion in the other two directions.
"Most of the rest of the stuff in
this section is old hat to you, though. Come on into the next room."
Arcot opened the heavy relux door,
leading the way into the next room, which was twice the size of the power room.
The center of the floor was occupied by a heavy pedestal of lux metal upon
which was a huge, relux-encased, double torus storage coil. There was a large
switchboard at the opposite end, while around the room, in ordered groups,
stood the familiar double coils, each five feet in diameter. The space within
them was already darkening.
"Well," said Arcot, senior,
"that's some battery of power coils, considering the amount of energy one
can: store. But what's the big one for?"
"That's the main space
control," the younger Arcot answered. "While our power is stored in
the smaller ones, we can shoot it into this one, which, you will notice, is
constructed slightly differently. Instead of holding the field within it,
completely enclosed, the big one will affect all the space about it. We will
then be enclosed in what might be called a hyperspace of our own making."
"I see," said his father.
"You go into hyperspace and move at any speed you please. But how will you
see where you're going?"
"We won't, as far as I know. I
don't expect to see a thing while we're in that hyperspace. We'll simply aim
the ship in the direction we want to go and then go into hyperspace. The only
thing we have to avoid is stars; their gravitational fields would drain the
energy out of the apparatus and we'd end up in the center of a white-hot star.
Meteors and such, we don't have to worry about; their fields aren't strong
enough to drain the coils, and since we won't be in normal space, we can't hit
them."
The elder Morey looked worried. "If
you can't see your way back you'll get lost! And you can't radio back for
help."
"Worse that that!" said Arcot.
"We couldn't receive a signal of any kind after we get more than three
hundred light years away; there weren't any radios before that.
"What we'll do is locate ourselves
through the sun's light. We'll take photographs every so often and orient
ourselves by them when we come back."
"That sounds like an excellent method
of stellar navigation," agreed Morey senior. "Let's see the rest of
the ship." He turned and walked toward the farther door.
The next room was the laboratory. On one
side of the room was a complete physics lab and on the other was a well-stocked
and well-equipped chemistry lab. They could perform many experiments here that
no man had been able to perform due to lack of power. In this
ship they had more generating facilities than all the power stations of Earth
combined! |,
Arcot opened the next door. "This
next room is the physics and chemistry storeroom. Here we have a duplicate—in
some cases, six or seven duplicates—of every piece of apparatus on board, and
plenty of material to make more. Actually, we have enough equipment to make a
new ship out of what we have here. It would be a good deal smaller, but it
would work.
"The greater part of our materials
is stored in the curvature of the ship, where it will be easy to get at if
necessary. All our water and food is there, and the emergency oxygen tanks.
"Now let's take the stairway to the
upper deck."
The upper deck was the main living
quarters. There were several small rooms on each side of the corridor down the
center; at the extreme nose was the control room, and at the extreme stern was
the observatory. The observatory was equipped with a small but exceedingly
powerful telectroscope, developed from those the Nigrans had left on one of the
deserted planets Sol had captured in return for the loss of Pluto to the Black
Star. The arc commanded by the instrument was not great, but it was easy to
turn the ship about, and most of their observations could be made without
trouble.
Each of the men had a room of his own;
there was a small galley and a library equipped with all the books the four men
could think of as being useful. The books and all other equipment were clamped
in place to keep them from flying around loose when the ship accelerated.
The control room at the nose was
surrounded by a hemisphere of transparent lux metal which enabled them to see
in every direction except directly behind, and even that blind spot could be
covered by stationing a man in the observatory.
There were heat projectors and molecular
ray projectors, each operated from the control room in the nose. To complete
the armament, there were more projectors in the stern, controlled from the
observatory, and a set on either side controlled from the library and the
galley.
The ship was provisioned for two
years—two years without stops. With the possibility of stopping on other
planets, the four men could exist indefinitely in the ship.
After the two older men had been shown
all through the intergalactic vessel, the elder Arcot turned to his old friend.
"Morey, it looks as if it was time for us to leave the Ancient Mariner
to her pilots r
"I guess you're right. Well—I'll
just say goodbye—but you all know there's a lot more I could say." Morey
senior looked at them and started toward the airlock.
"Goodbye, son," said the elder
Arcot. "Goodbye, men. Ill be expecting you any time within two years. We
can have no warning, I suppose; your ship will outrace the radio beam.
Goodbye." Dr. Arcot joined his old friend and .they went outside.
The heavy lux metal door slid into place
behind them, and the thick plastic cushions sealed the entrance to the airlock.
The workmen and the other personnel
around the ship cleared the area and stood well back from the great hull. The
two older men waved to the men inside the ship.
Suddenly the ship trembled, and rose
toward the sky.
Chapter 5
arcot, at the
controls of the Ancient Mariner,
increased the acceleration as the ship speared up toward interplanetary space.
Soon, the deep blue of the sky had given way to an intense violet, and this
faded to the utter black of space as the ship drew away from the planet that
was its home.
"That lump of dust there is going
to look mighty little when we get back," said Wade softly.
"But," Arcot reminded him,
"that little lump of dust is going to pull us across a distance that our
imaginations can't conceive of. And we'll be darned happy to see that pale
globe swinging in space when we get back—provided, of course, that we do get
back."
The ship was straining forward now under
the pull of its molecular motion power units, accelerating at a steady rate,
rapidly increasing the distance between the ship and Earth.
The cosmic ray power generators were
still charging the coils, preventing the use of the space strain drive. Indeed,
it would be a good many hours before they would be far enough from the sun to
throw the ship into hyperspace.
In the meantime, Morey was methodically
checking every control as Arcot called out the readings on the control panel.
Everything was working to perfection. Their every calculation had checked out
in practice so far. But the real test was yet to come.
They were well beyond the orbit of Pluto
when they decided they would be safe in using the space strain drive and
throwing the ship into hyperspace.
Morey was in the hyperspace control
room, watching the instruments there. They were ready!
"Hold on!" called Arcot.
"Here we go-if at all!" He reached out to the control panel before
him and touched the green switch that controlled the molecular motion machines.
The big power tubes cut off, and their acceleration ceased. His fingers pushed
a brilliant red switch—there was a dull, muffled thud as a huge relay snapped
shut.
Suddenly, a strange tingling feeling of
power ran through them—space around them was suddenly black. The lights dimmed
for an instant as the titanic current that flowed through the gigantic conductors
set up a terrific magnetic field, reacting with the absorption plates. The
power seemed to climb rapidly to a maximum—then, quite suddenly, it was gone.
The ship was quiet. No one spoke. The
meters, which had flashed over to their limits, had dropped back to zero once
more, except those which indicated the power stored in the giant coil. The
stars that had shone brilliantly around them in a myriad of colors were gone.
The space around them glowed strangely, and there was a vast cloud of strange,
violet or pale green stars before them. Directly ahead was one green star that
glowed big and brilliant, then it faded rapidly and shrank to a tiny dot—a
distant star. There was a strange tenseness about the men; they seemed held in
an odd, compelled silence.
Arcot reached forward again.
"Cutting off power, Morey!" The red tumbler snapped back. Again space
seemed to be charged with a vast surplus of energy that rushed in from all
around, coursing through their bodies, producing a tingling feeling. Then space
rocked in a gray cloud about them; the stars leaped out at them in blazing
glory again.
"Well, it worked once!"
breathed Arcot with a sigh of relief. "Lord, I made some errors in
calculation, though! I hope I didn't make any more! Morey—how was it? I only used
one-sixteenth power."
"Well, don't use any more,
then," said Morey. "We sure traveled! The things worked perfectly. By
the way, it's a good thing we had all the relays magnetically shielded; the
magnetic field down here was so strong that my pocket kit tried to start
running circles around it.
"According to' your magnetic drag
meter, the conductors were carrying over fifty billion amperes. The small coils
worked perfectly. They're charged again; the power went back into them from the
big coil with only a five percent loss of power—about twenty thousand
megawatts."
"Hey, Arcot," Wade said.
"I thought you said we wouldn't be able to see the stars."
Arcot spread his hands. "I did say
that, and all my apologies for it. But we're not seeing them by light. The stars
all have projections—shadows—in this space because of their intense
gravitational fields. There are probably slight fluctuations in the field,
perhaps one every minute or so. Since we were approaching them at twenty
thousand times the speed of light, the Doppler effect gives us what looks like
violet light.
"We saw the stars in front of us as
violet points. The green ones were actually behind us, and the green light was
tremendously reduced in frequency. It certainly can't be anything less than
gamma rays and probably even of greater frequency.
"Did you notice there were no stars
off to the side? We weren't approaching them, so they didn't give either
effect."
"How did you know which was
which?" asked Fuller skeptically.
"Did you see that green star directly
ahead of us?" Arcot asked. "The one that dwindled so rapidly? That
could only have been the sun, since the sun was the only star close enough to
show up as a disc. Since it was green and I knew it was behind us, I decided
that all the green ones were behind us. It isn't proof, but it's a good
indication."
"You win, as usual," admitted
Fuller.
"Well, where are we?" asked
Wade. "I think that's more important."
"I haven't the least idea,"
confessed Arcot. "Let's see if we can find out. I've got the robot pilot
on, so we can leave the ship to itself. Let's take a look at Old Sol from a
distance that no man ever reached before!"
They started for the observatory. Morey
joined them and Arcot put the view of Sol and his family on the telectroscope
screen. He increased the magnification to maximum, and the four men looked
eagerly at the system. The sun glowed brilliantly, and the planets showed
plainly.
"Now, if we wanted to take the
trouble, we could calculate when the planets were in that position and determine
the distance we have come. However, I notice that Pluto is still in place, so
that means we are seeing the Solar System as it was before the passing of the
Black Star. We're at least two light years away."
"More than that," said Morey.
He pointed at the screen. "See here, how Mars is placed in relation to
Venus and Earth? The planets were in that configuration seven years ago. We're
seven light years from Earth."
"Good enough!" Arcot grinned.
"That means we're within two light years of Sirius, since we were headed
in that direction. Let's turn the ship so we can take a look at it with the
telectroscope."
Since the power had been cut off, the
ship was in free fall, and the men were weightless. Arcot didn't try to walk
toward the control room; he simply pushed against the wall with his feet and
made a long, slow dive for his destination.
The others reached for the handgrips in
the walls while Arcot swung the ship gently around so that its stern was
pointed toward Sirius. Because of its brilliance and relative proximity to Sol,
Sirius is the brightest star in the heavens, as seen from Earth. At this much
lesser distance, it shone as a brilliant point of light that blazed
wonderfully. They turned the telectroscope toward it, but there was little they
could see that was not visible from the big observatory on the Moon.
"I think we may as well go
nearer," suggested Morey, "and see what we find on close range
observation. Meanwhile, turn the ship back around and I'll take some pictures
of the sun and its surrounding star field from this distance. Our only way of
getting back is going to be this series of pictures, so I think we had best
make it complete. For the first light century, we ought to take a picture every
ten light years, and after that one each light century until we reach a point
where we are only getting diminishing pictures of the local star cluster. After
that, we can wait until we reach the edge of the Galaxy."
"Sounds all right to me,"
agreed Arcot. "After all, you're the astronomer, I'm not. To tell you the
truth, I'd have to search a while to find Old Sol again. I can't see just where
he is. Of course, I could locate him by means of the gyroscope settings, but
I'm afraid I wouldn't find him so easily visually."
"Say! You sure are a fine one to
pilot an expedition in space!" cried Wade in mock horror. "I think we
ought to demote him for that! Imagine!
He plans a trip of a thousand million light years, and then gets us out seven
light years and says he doesn't know where he is! Doesn't even know where home
is! I'm glad we have a cautious man like Morey along." He shook his head
sadly.
They took a series of six plates of the
sun, using different magnifications.
"These plates will help prove our
story, too," said Morey as he looked at the finished plates. "We
might have gone only a little way into space, up from the plane of the ecliptic
and taken plates through a wide angle camera. But we'd have had to go at least
seven years into the past to get a picture like this."
The new self-developing short-exposure
plates, while not in perfect color balance, were more desirable for this work,
since they took less time on exposure.
Morey and the others joined Arcot in the
control room and strapped themselves into the cushioned seats. Since the space
strain mechanism had proved itself in the first test, they felt they needed no
more observations than they could make from the control room meters.
Arcot gazed out at the spot that was
their immediate goal and said slowly: "How much bigger than Sol is that
star, Morey?"
"It all depends on how you measure
size," Morey replied. "It is two and a half times as heavy, has four
times the volume, and radiates twenty-five times as much light. In other words,
one hundred million tons of matter disappear each second in that star.
"That's for Sirius A, of course.
Sirius B, its companion, is a different matter; it's a white dwarf. It has only
one one-hundred-twenty-five-thousandths the volume of Sirius A, but it weighs one
third as much. It radiates more per square inch than our sun, but, due to
its tiny size, it is very faint. That star, though almost as massive as the
sun, is only about the size of Earth."
"You sure have those statistics
down pat! said Fuller, laughing. "But I must say they're interesting.
What's that star made of, anyway? Solid lux metal?"
"Hardly!" Morey replied.
"Lux metal has a density of around 103, while this star has a density so
high that one cubic inch of its matter would weigh a ton on Earth."
"Wow!" Wade ejaculated.
"I'd hate to drop a baseball on my toe on that star!"
"It wouldn't hurt you," Arcot
said, smiling. "If you could lift the darned thing, you ought to be tough
enough to stand dropping it on your toe. Remember, it would weigh about two
hundred tons! Think you could handle it?"
"At any rate, here we go. When we
get there, you can get out and try it."
Again came the shock of the start. The
heavens seemed to reel about them; the bright spot of Sirius was a brilliant
violet point that swelled like an expanding balloon, spreading out until it
filled a large angle.
Then again the heavens reeled, and they
were still. The control room was filled with a dazzling splendor of brilliant
blue-white light, and an intense heat beat in upon them.
"Brother! Feel that heat,"
said Arcot in awe. "We'd better watch ourselves; that thing is giving off
plenty of ultraviolet. We could end up with third-degree sunburns if we're not
careful." Suddenly he stopped and looked around in surprise. "Hey!
Morey! I thought you said this was a double star! Look over there! That's no
white dwarf—it's a planet!"
"Ridiculous!" snapped Morey.
"It's impossible for a planet to be in equilibrium about a double star!
But—" He paused, bewildered. "But it is a planet! But—but it can't
be! We've made too many measurements on this star to make it possible!"
"I don't give a hang whether it can
or not," Wade said coolly, "the fact remains that it is. Looks as if
that shoots a whole flock of holes in that bedtime story you were telling us
about a superdense star."
"I make a motion we look more
closely first," said Fuller, quite logically.
But at first the telectroscope only
served to confuse them more. It was most certainly planet, and they had a strange, vague feeling of having seen it
before.
Arcot mentioned this; and Wade launched
into a long, pedantic discussion of how the left and right hemispheres of the
brain get out of step at times, causing a sensation of having 'seen a thing
before when it was impossible to have seen it previously.
Arcot gave Wade a long, withering stare
and then pushed himself into the library without saying a word. A moment later,
he was back with a large volume entitled: "The Astronomy of the Nigran
Invasion," by D. K. Harkness. He opened the volume to a
full-page photograph of the third planet of the Black Star as taken from a
space cruiser circling the planet. Silently, he pointed to it and to the image
swimming on the screen of the telectroscope.
"Good Lord!" said Wade in
astonished surprise. "It's impossible! We came here faster than light, and
that planet got here first!"
"As you so brilliantly remarked a
moment ago," Arcot pointed out, "I don't give a hang whether it can
or not—it is. How they did it, I don't know, but it does clear up a number of
things. According to the records we found, the ancient Nigrans had a force ray
that could move planets from their orbits. I wonder if it couldn't be used to
break up a double star? Also, we know their scientists were looking for a
method of moving faster than light; if we can do it, so could they. They just
moved their whole system of planets over here after getting rid of the
upsetting influence of the white dwarf."
"Perfect!" exclaimed Morey
enthusiastically. "It explains everything."
"Except that we saw that companion
star when we stopped back there, half an hour ago," said Fuller.
"Not half an hour ago," Arcot
contradicted. "Two years ago. We saw the light that left the companion
before it was moved. It's rather like traveling in time."
"If that's so," asked Fuller,
suddenly worried, "what is our time in relation to Earth?"
"If we moved by the space-strain
drive at all times," Arcot explained, "we would return at exactly the
same time we left. Time is passing normally on Earth as it is with us right
now, but whenever we use the space-strain, we move instantaneously from one
point to another as far as Earth and the rest of the universe is concerned. It
seems to take time to us because we are within the influence of the field.
"Suppose we were to take a trip
that required a week. In other words, three days traveling in space-strain, a
day to look at the destination, and three more days coming back. When we
returned to Earth, they would insist we had only been gone one day, the time we
spent out of the drive. See?"
"I catch," said Fuller.
"By the way, shouldn't we take some photographs of this system? Otherwise,
Earth won't get the news for several years yet."
"Right," agreed Morey.
"And we might as well look for the other planets of the Black Star,
too."
They made several plates, continuing
their observations until all the planets had been located, even old Pluto,
where crews of Nigran technicians were obviously at work, building giant
structures of lux metal. The great cities of the Nigrans were beginning to
bloom on the once bleak plains of the planet. The mighty blaze of Sirius had
warmed Pluto, vaporizing its atmosphere and thawing its seas. The planet that
the Black Star had stolen from the Solar System was warmer than it had been for
two billion years.
"Well, that's it," said Arcot
when they had finished taking the necessary photographs. "We can prove we
went faster than light easily, now. The astronomers can take up the work of
classifying the planets and getting details of the orbits when we get back.
"Since the Nigrans now have a sun
of their own, there should be no reason for hostility between our race and
theirs. Perhaps we can start commercial trade with them. Imagine! Commerce over
quintillions of miles of space!"
"And," interrupted Wade,
"they can make the trip to this system in less time than it takes to get
to Venus!"
"Meanwhile," said Morey,
"let's get on with our own exploration."
They strapped themselves into the
control seats once more and Arcot threw in the molecular drive to take them,
away from the sun toward which they had been falling.
When the great, hot disc of Sinus had
once more diminished to a tiny white pinhead of light, Arcot turned the ship
until old Sol once more showed plainly on the crosshairs of the aiming
telescope in the rear of the vessel.
"Hold on," Arcot cautioned,
"here we go again!"
Again he threw the little red tumbler
that threw a flood of energy into the coils. The space about them seemed to
shiver and grow dim.
Arcot had thrown more power into the
coils this time, so the stars ahead of them instead of appearing violet were
almost invisible; they were radiating in the ultra-violet now. And the stars
behind them, instead of appearing to be green, had subsided to a dull red glow.
Arcot watched the dull red spark of
Sirius become increasingly dimmer. Then, quite suddenly, a pale violet disc in
front of them ballooned out of nowhere and slid off to one side.
The spaceship reeled, perking the men
around in the control seats. Heavy safety relays thudded dully; the instruments
flickered under a suddenly rising surge of power-then they were calm again.
Arcot had snapped over the power switch.
"That," he said quietly,
"is not so good."
"Threw the gyroscopes, didn't
it?" asked Morey, his voice equally as quiet.
"It did—and I have no idea how far.
We're off course and we don't know which direction we're headed."
Chapter 6
"what's the matter?"
asked Fuller anxiously.
Arcot pointed out the window at a red
star that blazed in the distance. "We got too near the field of gravity of
that young giant and he threw us for a loss. We drained out three-fourths of
the energy from our coils and lost our bearings in the bargain. The attraction
turned the gyroscopes and threw the ship out of line, so we no longer know
where the sun is.
"Well, come on, Morey; all we can
do is start a search. At this distance, we'd best go by Sirius; it's brighter
and nearer." He looked at the instrument panel. "I was using the next
lowest power and I still couldn't avoid that monster. This ship is just a
little too hot to handle."
Their position was anything but
pleasant. They must pick out from the vast star field behind them the one star
that was home, not knowing exactly where it was. But they had one tremendous
help—the photographs of the star field around Sol that they had taken at the
last stop. All they had to do was search for an area that matched their
photographs.
They found the sun at last, after they
had spotted Sirius, but they had had to rotate the ship through nearly
twenty-five degrees to do it. After establishing their bearings, they took new
photographs for their files.
Meanwhile, Wade had been recharging the
coils. When he was finished, he reported the fact to Arcot.
"Fine," Arcot said. "And
from now on, I'm going to use the least possible amount of power. It certainly
isn't safe to use more."
They started for the control room, much
relieved. Arcot dived first, with Wade directly behind him. Wade decided
suddenly to go into his room and stopped himself by grabbing a handhold. Morey,
following close behind, bumped into him and was brought to rest, while Wade was
pushed into his room.
But Fuller, coming last, slammed into
Morey, who moved forward with new velocity toward the control room, leaving
Fuller hanging at rest in the middle of the corridor.
"Hey, Morey!" he laughed.
"Send me a skyhook! I'm caught!" Isolated as he was in the middle of
the corridor, he couldn't push on anything and remained stranded.
"Go to sleep!" advised Morey.
"It's the most comfortable bed you'll find!"
Wade looked out of his room just then,
"Well, if it isn't old Weakmuscles Fuller! Weighs absolutely nothing and
is still so weak he can't push himself around."
"Come on, though, Morey—give me a
hand—I got you off dead center." Fuller flailed his hand helplessly.
"Use your brains, if you have
any," said Morey, "and see what you can do. Come on, Wade—we're
going."
Since they were going to use the space
control, they would remain in free fall, and Fuller would remain helplessly
suspended in mid-air.
The air of the ship suddenly seemed
supercharged with energy as the space around them became gray; then the stars
were all before them. The ship was moving forward again.
"Well, old pals," said Fuller,
"at least I have traffic blocked fairly well if I feel like it, so
eventually you'd have to help me. However—" He floundered clumsily as he
removed one of his foam-rubber space-boots, "—my brains tell me that
action is equal and opposite to reaction!" And he threw the boot with all
possible velocity toward Morey!
The reaction of the motion brought him
slowly but surely to a handhold in the wall.
In the meantime, the flying boot caught
Morey in the chest with a pronounced smack! as he struggled vainly to avoid
it. Handicapped by the lack of friction, his arms were not quite powerful
enough to move his mass as quickly as his legs might have done, for his inertia
was as great as ever, so he didn't succeed in ducking.
"Round one!" called Arcot,
laughing. "Won by Kid Fuller on a TKO! It appears he has brains and knows
how to use them!"
"You win," laughed Morey.
"I concede the battle!"
Arcot had cut off the space-strain drive
by the time Fuller reached the control room, and the men set about making more
observations. They took additional photographs and turned on the drive again.
Time passed monotonously after they had
examined a few stars. There was little difference; each was but a scene of
flaming matter. There was little interest in this work, and, as Fuller
remarked, this was supposed to be a trip of exploration, not observation. They
weren't astronomers; they were on a vacation. Why all the hard work? They
couldn't do as good a job as an experienced astronomer, so they decided to
limit their observations to those necessary to retrace their path to Earth.
"But we want to investigate for
planets to land on, don't we?" asked Morey.
"Sure," agreed Fuller.
"But do we have to hunt at random for them? Can't we look for stars like
our own sun? Won't they be more apt to' have planets like Sol's?"
"It's, an idea," replied
Morey.
"Well, why not try it then?"
Fuller continued logically. "Let's pick out a G-O type sun and head for
it."
They were now well out toward the edge
of the Galaxy, some thirty thousand light years from home. Since they had
originally headed out along the narrow diameter of the lens-shaped mass of
stars that forms our Island Universe, they would reach the edge soon.
"We won't have much chance of
finding a G-O this far out," Arcot pointed out. "We're about out of
stars. We've left most of the Galaxy behind us."
"Then let's go on to another of the
galactic nebulae." said Morey, looking out into the almost unbroken night
of intergalactic space. Only here and there could they see a star, separated
from its nearest neighbor by thousands of light years of empty space.
"You know," said Wade slowly,
"I've been wondering about the progress along scientific lines that a race
out here might make. I mean, suppose that one of those lonely stars had
planets, and suppose intelligent Me evolved on one of those planets. I think
their progress would be much slower."
"I see what you mean," Arcot
said. "To us, of Earth, the stars are gigantic furnaces a few light years
away. They're titanic tests tubes of nature, with automatic reading devices
attached, hung in the sky for us to watch. We have learned more about space
from the stars than all the experiments of the physicists of Earth ever secured
for us. It was in the atoms of the suns that we first counted the rate of
revolutions of the electrons about their nuclei."
"Couldn't they have watched their
own sun?" Fuller asked. "Sure, but what could they compare it with?
They couldn't see a white dwarf from here. They couldn't measure the parallax
to the nearest star, so they would have no idea of stellar distances. They
wouldn't know how bright S Doradus was. Or how dim Van Maanen's star was."
"Then," Fuller said
speculatively, "they'd have to wait until one of their scientists invented
the telectroscope."
Arcot shook his head. "Without a
knowledge of nuclear physics, the invention of the telectroscope is impossible.
The lack of opportunity to watch the stars that might teach them something
would delay their knowledge of atomic structure. They might learn a great deal
about chemistry and Newtonian physics, and go quite a ways with math, but even
there they would be handicapped. Morey, for instance, would never have
developed the autointegral calculus, to say nothing of tensor and spinor
calculus, which were developed two hundred years ago, without the knowledge of
the problems of space to develop the need. I'm afraid such a race would be
quite a bit behind us in science.
"Suppose, on the other hand, we
visit a race that's far ahead of us. We'd better not stay there long; think
what they might do to us. They might decide our ship was too threatening and
simply wipe us out. Or they might even be so far advanced that we would mean
nothing to them at all—like ants or little squalling babies." Arcot
laughed at the thought.
"That isn't a very complimentary
picture," objected Fuller. "With the wonderful advances we've made,
there just isn't that much left to be able to say we're so little."
"Fuller, I'm surprised at
you!" Arcot said. "Today, we are only opening our eyes on the world
of science. Our race has only a few thousand years behind it and hundreds of
millions yet to come. How can any man of today, with his freshly-opened eyes of
science, take in the mighty pyramid of knowledge that will be built up in those
long, long years of the future? It's too gigantic to grasp; we can't imagine
the things that the ever-expanding mind of man will discover."
Arcot's voice slowed, and a far-off look
came in his eyes.
"You might say there can be no
greater energy than that of matter annihilation. I doubt that. I have seen
hints of something new—an energy so vast—so transcendently tremendous—that it
frightens me. The energies of all the mighty suns of all the galaxies—of the
whole cosmos—in the hand of man! The energy of a billion billion billion suns!
And every sun pouring out its energy at the rate of quintillions of horsepower
every instant!
"But it's too great for man to
have—I am going to forget it, lest man be destroyed by his own might."
Arcot's halting speech told of his
intense thought—of a dream of such awful energies as man had never before
conceived. His eyes looked unseeing at the black velvet of space with its few,
scattered stars.
"But we're here to decide which way
to go," he added with a sudden briskness as he straightened his shoulders.
"Every now and then, I get a new idea and I—I sort of dream. That's when
I'm most likely to see the solution. I think I know the solution now, but
unless the need arises, I'm never going to use it. It’s too dangerous a
toy."
There was silence for a moment, then
Morey said, quietly:
"I've got a course plotted for us.
We'll leave this Galaxy at a steep angle—about forty-five degrees from the
Galactic plane—to give us a good view of our own Galaxy. And we can head for
one of the nebulae in that general area. What do you say?"
"I say," remarked Fuller,
"that some of the great void without seems to have leaked into my own poor
self. It's been thirty thousand years since I am going to have a meal this
morning—whatever it is I mean—and I want another." He looked meaningfully
at Wade, the official cook of the expedition.
Arcot suddenly burst out laughing.
"So that's what I've been wanting I" It had been ten chronometer
hours since they had eaten, but since they had been outracing light, they were
now thirty thousand years in Earth's past.
The weightlessness of free fall makes it
difficult to recognize normally familiar sensations, and the feeling of hunger
is one of them. There was little enough work to be done, so there was no great
need for nourishment, but the ordinary ' sensation of hunger is not caused by
lack of nourishment, but an empty stomach.
Sleep was another problem. A restless
body will not permit a tired brain to sleep, and though they had done a great
deal of hard mental work, the lack of physical fatigue made sleep difficult.
The usual "day" in space was forty hours, with thirty-hour waking
periods and ten hours of sleep.
"Let's eat, then," Arcot
decided. "Afterwards, we'll take a few photographs and then throw this
ship into high and really make time."
Two hours later, they were again seated
at the control board. Arcot reached out and threw the red switch. "I'm
going to give her half power for ten seconds." The air about them seemed
suddenly snapping with unprecedented power—then it was gone as the coil became
fully charged.
"Lucky we shielded those
relays," Arcot muttered. The tremendous surge of current set up a magnetic
field that turned knives and forks and, as Wade found to his intense disgust,
stopped watches that were not magnetically shielded.
Space was utterly black about them now;
there wasn't the slightest hint of light. The ten seconds that Arcot had
allowed dragged slowly. Then at last came the heavy crashing of the huge
relays; the current flowed back into the storage coils, and space became normal
again. They were alone in the blackness.
Morey dove swiftly for the observatory.
Before them, there was little to see; the dim glow of nebulae millions of light
years away was scarcely visible to the naked eye, despite the clarity of space.
Behind them, like a shining horizon, they
saw the mass of the Galaxy for the first time as free observers.
Morey began to make swift calculations
of the distance they had come by measuring the apparent change in diameter of
the Galaxy.
Arcot floated into the room after him
and watched as Morey made his observations and began to work swiftly with
pencil and paper. "What do you make?" Arcot asked.
"Mmmmm. Let's see." Morey
worked a moment with his slide rule. "We made good time! Twenty-nine light
years in ten seconds! You had it on at half power—the velocity goes up as the
cube of the power—doubling the power, then, gives us eight times the
velocity—Hmmmmmm." He readjusted the slide rule and slid the hairline over
a bit. "We can make ten million light years in a little less than five days
at full power.
"But I suggest we make another stop
in six hours. That will put us about five radii, or half a million light years
from the Galaxy. We'll need to take some more photographs to help us retrace
our steps to Earth."
"All right, Morey," Arcot
agreed "It's up to you. Get your photos here and well go on. By the way, I
think you ought to watch the instruments in the power room; this will be our
first test at full power. We figured we'd make twenty light years per second,
and it looks as if it's going to be closer to twenty-four."
A few minutes later, Arcot seated
himself at the control board and flipped on the intercom to the power room.
"All ready, Morey? I just happened to think—it might be a good idea to
pick out our galaxy now and start toward it."
"Let's wait," cautioned Morey.
"We can't make a very careful choice at this distance, anyway; we're
beyond the enlarging power range of the telectroscope here. In another half
million light years, we'll have a much better view, and that comparatively
short distance won't take us much out of our way."
"Wait a minute," said Fuller.
"You say we're beyond the magnification range of the telectroscope. Then
why would half a million light years out of ten million make that much
difference?"
"Because of the limit of amplification
in the tubes," Arcot replied. "You can only have so many stages of
amplification; after that, you're amplifying noise. The whole principle of the
vacuum tube depends on electronic emission; if you get too much
amplification, you can hear every single electron striking the plate of the
first tube by the time the thing reaches the last amplifying stage! In other
words, if your incoming signal is weaker than the minimum noise level on the
first amplifying stage, no amount of amplification will give you anything but
more noise.
"The same is true of the
telectroscope image. At this distance, the light signal from those galaxies is
weaker than the noise level. We'd only get a flickering, blurred image. But if
we go on another half million light years, the light signal from the nearer
nebulae will be stronger than the base noise level, and full
amplification will give us a good image on the screen."
Fuller nodded. "Okay, then let's go
that additional half million light years. I want to take a look at another
galaxy."
"Right." Arcot turned to the
intercom. "Ready, Morey?"
"Anytime you are."
"Here goes!" said Arcot. He
pushed over the little red control.
At full power, the air filled with the
strain of flowing energy and actually broke down in spots with the terrific
electrical energy of the charge. There were little snapping sparks in the air,
which, though harmless electrically, were hot enough to give slight burns, as
Wade found to his sorrow.
"Yike! Say, why didn't you tell us
to bring lightning rods?" he asked indignantly as a small spark snapped
its way over his hand.
"Sorry," grinned Arcot,
"but most people know enough to stay out of the way of those things.
Seriously, though, I didn't think the electrostatic curvature would be so slow
to adjust. You see, when we build up our light-rate distortion field, other
curvatures are affected. We get some gravity, some magnetic, and some
electrostatic field distortion, too. You can see what happens when they don't
leak their energy back into the coil.
"But we're busy with the
instruments; leave the motorman alone!"
Morey was calling loudly for tests.
Although the ship seemed to be behaving perfectly, he wanted check tests to
make sure the relays were not being burned, which would keep them from
responding properly. By rerouting the current around each relay, Arcot checked
them one by one.
It was just as they had finished testing
the last one that Fuller yelled.
"Hey! Look!" He
pointed out the broad viewport in the side of the ship.
Far off to their left and far to their
right, they saw two shining ships paralleling their course. They were shining,
sleek ships, their long, longitudinal windows glowing with white light. They
seemed to be moving at exactly the same speed, holding grimly to the course of
the Ancient Mariner. They bracketed the ship like an official guard,
despite the terrific velocity of the Earthmen’s ship.
Arcot stared in amazement, his face
suddenly clouded in wonder. Morey, who had come up from the power room, stared
in equal wonder.
Quickly, Wade and Fuller slid into the
ray control seats. Their long practice with the rays had made them dead
"shots, and they had been chosen long before as the ship's official ray
operators.
"Lord," muttered Morey as he
looked at the ships, "where can they have come from?"
Chapter 7
silently, the
four men watched the two ships, waiting
for any hostile movement. There was a long, tense moment, then something
happened for which three of them were totally unprepared.
Arcot burst into
sudden laughter.
"Don't—ho—hoh-ho—oh—don't
shoot!" he cried, laughing so hard it was almost impossible to understand
him. "Ohoh— space—curved!" he managed to gasp.
For a moment more, Morey looked
puzzled—then he was laughing as hard as Arcot. Helplessly, Wade and Fuller
looked at them, then at each other. Then, suddenly, Wade caught the meaning of
Arcot's remark and joined the other two in laughter.
"All right," said Fuller,
still mystified, "when you halfwitted physicists recover, please let me in
on the joke!" He knew it had something to do with the mysterious ships, so
he looked closely at them in hopes that he would get the point, too. When he
saw it, he blinked in amazement "Hey! What is this? Those ships are exact
duplicates of the Ancient Mariner!"
"That—that's what I was laughing
at," Arcot explained, wiping his eyes. "Four big, brave explorers,
scared of their own shadows!"
"The light from our own ship has
come back to us, due to the intense curvature of the space which encloses us.
In normal space, a light ray would take hundreds of millions of years to travel
all the way around the Universe and return to its point of origin.
Theoretically, it would be possible to photograph our own Galaxy as it was
thousands of mille-nia ago by the light which left it then and has traveled all
the way around the curvature of space.
"But our space has such terrific
curvature that it only takes a fraction of a second for light to make the trip.
It has gone all the way around our little cosmos and come back again.
"If we'd shot at it, we would have
really done ourselves in! The ray beam would go around and hit us from
behind!"
"Say, that is a nice
proposition!" laughed Fuller. "Then we'll be accompanied by those
ghosts all the way? There goes the spirit 'nine fathoms deep' which moves the
ship-the ghosts that work the sails. This will be a real Ancient Mariner
trip!"
It was like that famed voyage in another
way, too. The men found little to do as they passed on at high speed through
the vast realm of space. The chronometer pointed out the hours with
exasperating slowness. The six hours that were to elapse before the first stop
seemed as many days. They had thought of this trip as a wonderful adventure in
itself, but the soundless continued monotony was depressing. They wandered around,
aimlessly. Wade tried to sleep, but after lying strapped in his bunk for half
an hour, he gave up in despair.
Arcot saw that the strain of doing
nothing was not going to be good for his little crew and decided to see what
could be done about it. ^
He went down to the laboratory and
looked for inspiration. He found it.
"Hey! Morey! Wade! Fuller! Come on
down here! I've got an idea!" he called.
They came to find him looking
meditatively at the power pack from one of the flying suits he had designed. He
had taken the lux metal case off and was looking at the neat apparatus that lay
within.
"These are equipped for use with
the space suits, of course," Morey pointed out, "and that gives us
protection against gases. But I wonder if we might install protection against
mechanical injury—with intent to damage aforethought! In other words, why not
equip these suits with a small invisibility apparatus? We have it on the ship,
but we might need personal protection, too."
"Great idea," said Wade,
"provided you can find room in
that case."
"I think we can. We won't need to
add anything but a few tuning devices, really, and they don't take a whale of a
lot of power."
Arcot pointed out the places where they
could be put; also, he replaced some of the old induction coils with one of his
new storage cells and got far higher efficiency from the tubes.
But principally, it was something to do.
Indeed, it was so thoroughly something
to' do that the six hours had almost elapsed before they realized it. In a very
short time, they returned again to the control room and strapped themselves in.
Arcot reached toward the little red
switch that controlled the titanic energies of the huge coil below and pulled
it back a quarter of the way.
"There go the ghosts!" he
said. The images had quickly disappeared, seemingly leaping away from them at
terrific speed as the space in which the ship was enclosed opened out more and
more and the curvature decreased. They were further away from themselves!
Easing back a quarter at a time, to
prevent sparks again flying about in the atmosphere of the ship, Arcot cut the
power to zero, and the ship was standing still once more.
They hurriedly dived to the observatory
and looked eagerly out the window.
Far, far behind them, floating in the
marvelous, soft, utter blackness of space, was a shining disc made up of
myriads of glowing points. And it didn't seem to be a huge thing at a great
distance, but simply a small glowing object a few feet outside the window.
So perfectly clear was their view
through the lux metal wall and the black, empty space that all sense of
distance was lost.. It seemed more a miniature model of their universe—a tiny
thing that floated close behind them, unwavering, shining with a faint light, a
heatless illumination that made everything in the darkened observatory glow
very faintly. It was the light of three hundred million suns seen at a distance
of three million million million miles! And it seemed small because there was
nothing with which to compare it.
It was an amazingly beautiful thing,
that tiny floating disc of light.
Morey floated over to the cameras and
began to take pictures.
"I'd like to take a color shot of
that," he said a few minutes later, "but that would require a direct
shot through the reflector telescope and a time exposure. And I can't do that;
the ship is moving."
"Not enough to make any
difference," Arcot contradicted. "We're moving away from it in a
straight line, and that thing is three quintillion miles away. We're not moving
fast enough to cause any measurable contraction in a time exposure. As for
having a steady platform, this ship weighs a quarter of a million tons and is
held by gyroscopes. We won't shake it."
While Morey took the time exposure,
Arcot looked at the enlarged image in the telectroscope and tried to make
angular measurements from the individual stars. This he found impossible.
Although he could spot Betelgeuse and Antares because of their tremendous
radiation, they were too close together for measurements; the angle subtended
was too small.
Finally, he decided to use the distance
between Antares and S Doradus in the Lesser Magellanic Cloud, one of the two
clouds of stars which float as satellites to the Galaxy itself.
To double-check, he used the radius of
the Galaxy as base to calculate the distance. The distances checked. The ship
was five hundred thousand light years from home!
After all the necessary observations
were made, they swung the ship on its axis and looked ahead for a landing
place. The nebulae ahead were still invisible to the naked eye except as
points, but the telectroscope finally revealed one as decidedly nearer than the
rest. It seemed to be a young Island Universe, for there was still a vast cloud
of gas and dust from which stars were yet to be born in the central whorl—a single
titanic gas cloud that stretched out through a million billion miles of space.
"Shall we head for that?"
asked Arcot at last, as Morey finished his observations.
"I think it would be as good as
any—there are more stars there than we can hope to visit."
"Well, then, here we go!"
Arcot dived for the control room, while
Morey shut off the telectroscope and put the latest photographs in the
file. Suddenly space was snapping about him—they were off again. Another shock
of surging energy—another—the ship leaped forward at tremendous speed—still
greater—then they were rushing at top speed, and beside them ran the ghost
ships of the Ancient Mariner.
Morey pushed himself into the control
room just as Arcot,
Wade, and Fuller were getting ready to
start for the lab.
"We're off for quite a while,
now," he said. "Our goal is about five days away. I suggest we stop
at the end of four days, make more accurate measurements, then plan a closer
stop.
"I think from now on we ought to
sleep in relays, so that there will be three of us awake at all times. I'll
turn in now for ten hours, and then someone else can sleep. Okay?"
It was agreed, and in the meantime the
three on duty went down to the lab to work.
Arcot had finished the installation of
the invisibility apparatus in his suit at the end of ten hours, much to his
disappointment. He tested it, then cast about for something to do while Wade
and Morey added the finishing touches to theirs.
Morey came down, and when Wade had
finished his, which took another quarter of an hour, he took the off duty
shift.
Arcot had gone to the library, and Morey
was at work down below. Fuller had come up, looking for something to do, and
had hit upon the excellent idea of fixing a meal.
He had just begun his preparations in
the kitchen when suddenly the Ancient Mariner gave a violent leap, and
the men, not expecting any weight, suddenly fell in different ways with
terrific force!
Fuller fell half the length of the
galley and was knocked out by the blow. Wade, asleep in bed, was awakened violently
by the shock, and Morey, who had been strapped in his chair, was badly shaken.
Everyone cried out simultaneously—and
Arcot was on his way to the control room. The first shock was but a forerunner
of the storm. Suddenly the ship was hurled violently about; the air was shot
through with great burning sparks; the snapping hiss of electricity was
everywhere, and every pointed metal object was throwing streamers of blue
electric flame into the air! The ship rocked, heaved, and cavorted wildly, as
though caught in the play of titanic forces!
Scrambling wildly along the hand-holds,
Arcot made his way towards the control room, which was now above, now below,
and now to one side of him as the wildly variable acceleration shook the ship.
Doggedly, he worked his way up, frequently getting severe burns from the
flaming sparks.
Below, in the power-room, the relays
were crashing in and out wildly.
Then, suddenly, a new sound was added
just as Arcot pulled himself into the control chair and strapped himself down.
The radiation detector buzzed out its screaming warning!
"COSMIC RAYS!" Arcot yelled.
"HIGH CONCENTRATION!"
He slapped at the switch which shot the
heavy relux screens across every window in the ship.
There was a sudden crash and a fuse went
out below— a fuse made of a silver bar two feet thick! In an instant, the
flames of the burning sparks flared up ,and died. The ship cavorted madly,
shaking mightily in the titanic, cosmic forces that surrounded it—the forces
that made the highest energy form in the universe!
Arcot knew that nothing could be done
with the power coil. It was drained; the circuit was broken. He shifted in the
molecular drive, pushing the acceleration to four gravities, as high as the men
could stand.
And still the powerful ship was being
tossed about, the plaything of inconceivable forces. They lived only
because the forces did not try to turn
the ship more violently, not because of the strength of the ship, for nothing
could resist the awful power around them.
As a guide, Arcot used the compass
gyroscope, the only one not twisted far out of its original position; with it,
he managed to steer a fairly straight course.
Meanwhile, in the power room, Wade and
Morey were working frantically to get the space-strain drive coil recharged.
Despite the strength-sapping strain of working under four gravities of
acceleration, they managed to get the auxiliary power unit into operation. In a
few moments, they had it pouring its energies into the coil-bank so that they
could charge up the central drive coil.
Another silver bar fuse was inserted,
and Wade checked the relays to make sure they were in working order.
Fuller, who had regained consciousness,
worked his way laboriously down to foe power room carrying three
space-suits. He had stopped in the lab to get the power belts, and the three
men quickly donned them to help them overcome the four-gravity pull.
Another half hour sped by as the bucking
ship forced its way through the terrific field in space.
Suddenly they felt a terrific jolt
again—then the ship was moving more smoothly, and gradually it was calm. They
were through!
"Have we got power for the
space-strain drive yet?" Arcot called through the intercom.
"Enough," Morey cried.
"Try it!"
Arcot cut off the molecular motion
drive, and threw in all the space-control power he had. The ship was suddenly
supercharged with energy. It jarred suddenly—then was quiet. He allowed ten
minutes to pass, then he cut off the drive and allowed the ship to go' into
free fall.
Morey's voice came over the intercom.
"Arcot, things are really busted up down here! We had to haywire half the
drive together."
"Ill be right down. Every
instrument on the ship seems to be out of kilter!"
It was a good thing they had plenty of
spare parts; some of the smaller relays had burned out completely, and several
of the power leads had fused under the load that had been forced through them.
The space-strain drive had been leaking
energy at a terrific rate; without further repair, it could not function much
longer.
In the power room, Arcot surveyed the
damage. "Well, boys, we'd better get to work. We're stranded here until we
get that drive repaired!"
Chapter 8
forty hours
later, Arcot was running the ship
smoothly at top speed once again. The four men had gone to bed after more than
thirty hours of hard work. That, coupled with the exhaustion of working under
four gravities, as they had while the ship was going through the storm, was
enough to make them sleep soundly.
Arcot had awakened before the others and
had turned on the drive after resetting their course.
After that was done, there was little to
do, and time began to hang heavily on Arcot's hands. He decided to make a
thorough inspection of the hull when the others awoke. The terrific strain
might have opened cracks in the lux metal hull that would not be detectable
from the inside because the inner wall was separated from the outer envelope.
Accordingly, he got out the spacesuits, making sure the oxygen tanks were full
and all was ready. Then he went into the library, got out some books, and set
about some calculations he had in mind.
When Morey woke, some hours later, he
found Arcot still at work on his calculations.
"Hey!" he said, swinging
himself into the chair beside Arcot, "I thought you'd be on the lookout
for more cosmic rays!"
"Curious delusion, wasn't it?"
asked Arcot blandly. "As a matter of fact, I've been busy doing some
figuring. I think our chance of meeting another such region is about one in a
million million million million. Considering those chances, I don't think we
need to worry. I don't see how we ever met one-but the chances of hitting one
are better than hitting two."
Just then Fuller stuck his head in the
door.
"Oh," he said, "so you're
at it already? Well, I wonder if one of you could tell me just what it was we
hit? I've been so busy I haven't had a chance to think."
"Don't take the chance now,
then," grinned Morey. "You might strain your brain."
"Please!" Fuller
pleaded, wincing. "Not before breakfast. Just explain what that storm
was."
"We simply came to a region in space
where cosmic rays are created," explained Arcot.
Fuller frowned. "But there's
nothing out here to generate cosmic rays!"
Arcot nodded. "True. I think I know
their real source, but I believe I'll merely say they are created here. I want
to' do more work on this. My idea for an energy source greater than any other
in the universe has been confirmed.
"At any rate, they are created in
that space, a perfect vacuum, and the space there is distorted terrifically by
the titanic forces at work. It is bent and twisted far out of the normal, even
curvature, and it was that bumpy spot in space that threw us about so.
"When we first entered, using the
space-strain drive, the space around the ship, distorted as it was, conflicted
with the region of the cosmic ray generation and the ship lost out. The
curvature of space that the ship caused was sometimes reinforced and sometimes
cancelled out by the twisted space around it, and the tremendous surges of
current back and forth from the main power coil to the storage coils caused the
electric discharges that kept burning through' the air. I notice we all got a
few burns from that. The field was caused by the terrific surges of current,
and that magnetic field caused the walls of the ship to heat up due to the
generation of electric current in the walls."
Fuller looked around at the walls of the
ship. "Well, the Ancient Mariner sure took a beating."
"As a matter of fact, I was worried
about that," said Ar-cot. "Strong as that hull is, it might easily have
been strained in that field -of terrific force. If it happened to hit two
'space waves' .M once, it might have given it an acceleration in two different
directions at once, which would strain the walls with a force amounting to
thousands of tons. I laid out the suits up front, and I think we might
reasonably get out there and take a look at the old boat. When Wade gets
up—well, well—speak of the devil! My, doesn't he look energetic?"
Wade's huge body was floating in through
the library door. He was yawning sleepily and rubbing his eyes. It .was evident
he had not yet washed, and his growing beard, which was heavy and black on his
cheeks, testified to his need for a shave. The others had shaved before coming
into the library.
"Wade," said Arcot,
"we're going outside, and we have to have someone in here to operate the
airlock. Suppose you get to work on the hirsute adornment; there's an atomic
hydrogen cutting torch down in the lab you can use, if you. wish. The rest of
us are going outside." Then Arcot's -voice became serious. "By the
way, don't try any little jokes like starting off with a little acceleration. I
don't think you would —you've got good sense—but I like to make certain. If you
did, we'd be left behind, and you'd never find us in the vast immensity of
intergalactic space."
It wasn't a pleasant idea to
contemplate. Each of the suits had a radio for communication with each other
and with the ship, but they would only carry a few hundred miles. A mere step
in space 1
Wade shook his head, grinning. "I
have no desire to be left all by myself on this ship, thank you. You don't need
to worry."
A few minutes later, Arcot, Morey, and
Fuller stepped out of the airlock and set to work, using power flashlights to
examine the outer hull for any signs of possible strain.
The flashlights, equipped as they were
with storage coils for power, were actually powerful searchlights, but in the
airlessness of space, the rays were absolutely invisible. They could only be
seen when they hit the relux inner wall at such an angle that they were
reflected directly into the observer's eyes. The lux metal wall, being
transparent, was naturally invisible, and the smooth relux, reflecting one
hundred percent of the incident light, did not become illuminated, for
illumination is the result of the scattering of light.
It was necessary to look closely and
pass the beams over every square inch of the surface. However, a crack would be
rough, and hence would scatter light and be even more readily visible than
otherwise.
To their great relief, after an hour and
a half of careful inspection, none of them had found any signs of a crack, and
they went back into the ship to resume the voyage.
Again they hurled through space, the
twin ghost ships following them closely. Hour after hour the ship went on. Now
they had something else to do. They were at work calculating some problems that
Arcot had suggested in connection with the velocities of motion that had been
observed in the stars at the edge of the island universe they were approaching.
Since these stars revolved about the mass of the entire galaxy, it was possible
to calculate the mass of the entire universe by averaging the values from
several stars. Their results were not exact, but they were reliable enough.
They found the universe to have a mass of two hundred and fifty million suns,
only a little less than the home Galaxy. It was an average-sized nebula.
Still the hours dragged as they came
gradually nearer their goal—gradually, despite their speed of twenty-four light
years per second!
At the end of the second day after their
trouble with the cosmic ray field, they stopped for observation. They were now
so near the Island Universe that the stars spread out in a huge disc ahead of
them.
"About three hundred thousand light
years distant, I should guess," said Morey.
"We know our velocity fairly
accurately," said Wade. "Why can't we calculate the distance between
two of these stars and then go on in?"
"Good idea," agreed Arcot.
"Take the angle, will you, Morey? I'll swing the ship."
After taking their measurements, they
advanced for one hour. Knowing this distance from experience, they were able to
calculate the diameter of this galaxy. It turned out to be on the order of
ninety thousand light years.
They were now much closer; they seemed,
indeed, on the very edge of the giant universe. The thousands of stars flamed
bright below them, stretching across their horizon more and more—a galaxy the
eyes of men had never before seen at such close range I This galaxy had not yet
condensed entirely to stars, and in its heart there still remained the vast gas
cloud that would eventually be stars and planets. The vast misty cloud was
plainly visible, glowing with a milky light like some vast frosted light bulb.
It was impossible to conceive the size
of the thing; it looked only like some model, for they were still over a
quarter of a million light years from it.
Morey looked up from his calculations.
"I think we should be there in about three hours. Suppose we go at full
speed for about two hours and then change to low speed?"
"You're the astronomical boss,
Morey," said Arcot. "Let's go!"
They swung the ship about once more and
started again. As they drew nearer to this new universe, they began to feel
more interest in the trip. Things were beginning to happen!
The ship plunged ahead at full speed for
two hours. They could see nothing at that velocity except the two ghost ships
that were their ever-present companions. Then they stopped once more.
About them, they saw great suns shining.
One was so close they could see it as a disc with the naked eye. But they could
not see clearly; the entire sky was misty and the stars that were not close
were blotted out. The room seemed to grow warm.
"Hey! Your calculations were
off!" called Arcot. "We're getting out of here!"
Suddenly the air snapped and they were
traveling at low speed under the drive of the space-strain apparatus. The
entire space about them was lit with a dim violet glow. In ten minutes, the
glow was gone and Arcot cut the drive.
They were out in ordinary dark space,
with its star-studded blackness.
"What was the matter with my
calculations?" Morey wanted to know.
"Oh, nothing much," Arcot said
casually. "You were only about thirty thousand light years off. We landed right
in the middle of the central gas cloud, and we were plowing through it at a
relative velocity of around sixteen thousand miles per second! No wonder we got
hot!
"We're lucky we didn't come near
any stars in the process; if we had, we could have had to recharge the
coil."
"It's a wonder we didn't burn up at
that velocity," said Fuller.
"The gas wasn't dense enough,"
Arcot explained. "That gas is a better vacuum than the best pump could
give you on Earth; there are fewer molecules per cubic inch than there are in a
radio tube.
"But now that we're out of that,
let's see if we can find a planet. No need to take photographs going in; if we
want to find the star again, we can take photos as we leave. If we don't want
to find it, we would just waste film.
"Ill leave it to Morey to find the
star we want."
Morey set to work at once with the
telescope, trying to find the nearest star of spectral type G-O, as had been
agreed upon. He also wanted to find one of the same magnitude, or brilliance.
At last, after investigating several such suns, he discovered one which seemed
to fulfill all his wishes. The ship was turned, and they started toward the
adventure they had really hoped to find.
As they rushed through space, the
distorted stars shining vividly before them, they saw the one which was their
goal. A bright, slowly changing violet point on the crosshairs of the aiming
telescope,,
"How far is it?" asked Ascot.
"About thirty light
"centuries," replied Morey, watching the star eagerly.
They drove on in silence. Then,
suddenly, Morey cried out: "Look! It's gone!"
"What happened?" asked Arcot
in surprise. -Morey rubbed his chin in thought. "The star suddenly flared
brightly for an instant, then disappeared. Evidently, it was a G-O giant which
had burned up most of the hydrogen that stars normally use for fuel. When that
happens, a star begins to collapse, increasing in brilliance due to the heat
generated by the gas falling toward the center of the star.
"Then other nuclear reactions begin
to take place, and, due to the increased transparency of the star, a supernova
is produced. The star blows away most of its gaseous envelope, leaving only the
superdense core. In other words, it leaves a white dwarf." He paused and
looked at Arcot. "I wonder if that star did have any planets?"
They all knew what he meant. What was
the probable fate of beings whose sun had suddenly collapsed to a tiny,
relatively cold point in the sky?
Suddenly, there loomed before them the
dim bulk of the star, a disc already, and Arcot snapped the ship over to the
molecular motion drive at once. He knew they must be close. Before them was the
angry disc of the flaming white star.
Arcot swung the ship a bit to one side,
running in close to the flaming star. It was not exceedingly hot, despite the
high temperature and intense radiation, for the radiating surface was too
small.
They swung about the star in a parabolic
orbit, for, at their velocity, the sun could not hold them in a planetary
orbit.
"Our velocity, relative to this
star, is pretty high," Arcot announced. "I'm swinging in close so
that I can use the star's attraction as a brake. At this distance, it will be
about six gravities, and we can add to that a molecular drive braking of four
gravities.
"Suppose you look around and see if
there are any planets. We can break free and head for another star if there
aren't."
Even at ten gravities of deceleration,
it took several hours to reduce their speed to a point which would make it
possible to head for any planet of the tiny sun.
Morey went to the observatory and swept
the sky with the telectroscope.
It was difficult to find planets because
the reflected light from the weak star was so dim, but he finally found one. He
took angular readings on it and on the central sun. A little later, he took
more readings. Because of the changing velocity of the ship, the readings were
not too accurate, but his calculations showed it to be several hundred million
miles out.
They were decelerating rapidly, and soon
their momentum had been reduced to less than four miles a second. When they
reached the planet, Arcot threw the ship into an orbit around it and began to
spiral down.
Through the clear lux windows of the
control room, the men looked down upon a bleak, frozen world.
Chapter 9
below the ship lay the unfamiliar panorama of an unknown world that
circled, frozen, around a dim, unknown sun, far out in space. Cold and bleak,
the low, rolling hills below were black, bare rock, coated in spots with a
white sheen of what appeared to be snow, though each of the men realized it
must be frozen air. Here and there ran strange rivers of deep blue which poured
into great lakes and seas of blue liquid. There were mighty mountains of deep
blue crystal locating high, and in the hollows and cracks of these crystal mountains
lay silent, motionless seas of deep blue, unruffled by any breeze in this
airless world. It was a world that lay frozen under a dim, dead sun.
They continued over the broad sweep
of the level, crystalline plain as
the bleak rock disappeared behind them. This world was about ten thousand miles
in diameter, and its surface gravity about a quarter greater than that of
Earth.
On and on they swept, swinging over the
planet at an altitude of less than a thousand feet, viewing the unutterably
desolate scene of the cold, dead world.
Then, ahead of them loomed a bleak, dark
mass of rock again. They had crossed the frozen ocean and were coming to land
again—a land no more solid than the sea.
Everywhere lay the deep drifts of snow, and
here and there, through valleys, ran the streams of bright blue.
"Look!" cried Morey in sudden
surprise. Far ahead and to their left loomed a strange formation of jutting
vertical columns, covered with the white burden of snow. Arcot turned a
powerful searchlight on it, and it stood out brightly against the vast
snowfield. It was a dead, frozen city.
As they looked at it, Arcot turned the
ship and headed for it without a word.
It was hard ro realize the enormity of
the catastrophe that had brought a cold, bleak death to the population of this
world—death to an intelligent race.
Arcot finally spoke. "I'll land the
ship. I think it will be safe for us all to leave. Get out the suits and make
sure all the tanks are charged and the heaters working. It will be colder here
than in space. Out there, we were only cooled by radiation, but those streams
are probably liquid nitrogen, oxygen, and argon, and there's a slight
atmosphere of hydrogen, helium and neon cooled to about fifty degrees Absolute.
We'll be cooled by conduction and convection."
As the others got the suits ready, he
lowered the ship gently to the snowy ground. It sank into nearly ten feet of
snow. He turned on the powerful searchlight, and swept it around the ship.
Under the warm beams, the frozen gasses evaporated, and in a few moments he had
cleared the area around the ship.
Morey and the others came back with
their suits. Arcot donned his, and adjusted his weight to ten pounds with the
molecular power unit.
A short time later, they stepped out of
the airlock onto the ice field of the frozen world. High above them glowed the
dim, blue-white disc of the tiny sun, looking like little more than a bright
star.
Adjusting the controls on the suits, the
four men lifted into the tenuous air and headed toward the city, moving easily
about ten feet above the frozen wastes of the snow field.
"The thing I don't
understand," Morey said as they shot toward the city, "is why this
planet is here at all. The intense radiation from the sun when it went
supernova should have vaporized it!"
Arcot pointed toward a tall,
oddly-shaped antenna that rose from the highest building of the city.
"There's your answer. That antenna is similar to those we found on the
planets of the Black Star; it's a heat screen. They probably had such antennas
all over the planet.
"Unfortunately, the screen's
efficiency goes up as the fourth power of the temperature. It could keep out
the terrific heat of a supernova, but couldn't keep in the heat of the planet
after the supernova had died. The planet was too cool to make the screen work
efficiently!"
At last they came to the outskirts of
the dead city. The vertical walls of the buildings were free of snow, and they
could see the blank, staring eyes of the windows, and within, the bleak, empty
rooms. They swept on through the frozen streets until they came to one huge
building in the center. The doors of bronze had been closed, and through the
windows they could see that the room had been piled high with some sort of
insulating material, evidently used as a last-ditch attempt to keep out the
freezing cold.
"Shall we break in?" asked
Arcot.
"We may as well," Morey's
voice answered over the radio. "There may be some records we could take
back to Earth and have deciphered. In a time like this, I imagine they would
leave some records, hoping that some race might come and find
them."
They worked with molecular ray pistols
for fifteen minutes tearing a way through. It was slow work because they had to
use the heat ray pistols to supply the necessary energy for the molecular
motion.
When they finally broke through, they
found they had entered on the second floor; the deep snow had buried the first.
Before them stretched a long, richly decorated hall, painted with great colored
murals.
The paintings displayed a people dressed
in a suit of some soft, white cloth, with blond hair that reached to their
shoulders. They were shorter and more heavily built than Earthmen, perhaps, but
there was a grace to them that denied the greater gravity of their planet. The
murals portrayed a world of warm "sunlight, green plants, and tall trees
waving in a breeze—a breeze of air that now lay frozen on the stone floors of
their buildings.
Scene after scene they saw—then they
came to a great hall. Here they saw hundreds of bodies; people wrapped in heavy
cloth blankets. And over the floor of the room lay little crystals of green.
Wade looked at the little crystals for a
long time, and then at the people who lay there, perfectly preserved by the
utter cold. They seemed only sleeping—men, women, and children, sleeping under
a blanket of soft snow that evaporated and disappeared as the energy of the
lights fell on it.
There was one little group the men
looked at before they left the room of death. There were three in it—a young
man, a fair, blonde young woman who seemed scarcely more than a girl, and
between them, a little child. They were sleeping, arms about each other, warm
in the arms of Death, the kindly Reliever of Pain.
Arcot turned and rose, flying swiftly
down the long corridor toward the door.
"That was not meant for us,"
he said. "Let's leave."
The others followed.
"But let's see what records they
left," he went on. "It may be that they wanted us to know their
tragic story. Let's see what sort of civilization they had."
"Their chemistry was good, at
least," said Wade. "Did you notice those green crystals? A quick,
painless poison gas to relieve them of the struggle against the cold."
They went down to the first floor level,
where there was a single great court. There were no pillars, only a vast,
smooth floor.
"They had good architecture,"
said Morey. "No pillars under all the vast load of that building."
x "And the load is even greater under this
gravity," remarked Arcot.
In the center of the room was a great, golden
bronze globe resting on a platform of marble. It must have been new when this
world froze, for there was no sign of corrosion or oxidation. The men flew over
to it and stood beside it, looking at the great sphere, nearly fifteen feet in
diameter.
"A globe of their world," said
Fuller, looking at it with interest.
"Yes," agreed Arcot, "and
it was set up after they were sure the cold would come, from the looks of it.
Let's take a look at it." He flew up to the top of it and viewed it from
above. The whole globe was a carefully chiseled relief map, showing seas,
mountains, and continents.
"Arcot—come here a minute,"
called Morey. Arcot dropped down to where Morey was looking at the globe. On
the edge of one of the continents was a small raised globe, and around the
globe, a circle had been etched.
"I think this is meant to represent
this globe," Morey said. "I'm almost certain it represents this very
spot. Now look over here." He pointed to a spot which, according to the
scale of the globe, was about five thousand miles away. Projecting from the
surface of the bronze globe was a little silver tower.
"They want us to go| there,"
continued Morey. "This was erected only shortly before the catastrophe;
they must have put relics there that they want us to get. They must have
guessed that eventually intelligent beings would cross space; I imagine they
have other maps like this in every large city.
"I think it's our duty to visit
that cairn."
"I quite agree," assented
Arcot. "The chance of other men visiting this world is infinitely
small."
"Then let's leave this City of the
Dead!" said Wade.
It gave them a sense of depression
greater than that inspired by the vast loneliness of space. One is never so
lonely as when he is with the dead, and the men began to realize that the
original Ancient Mariner had been more lonely with strange companions
than they had been in the depths of ten million light years of space.
They went back to the ship, floating
through the last remnants of this world's atmosphere, back through the chill of
the frozen gases to the cheering, warm interior of the ship.
It was a contrast that made each of them
appreciate more fully the gift that a hot, blazing sun really is. Perhaps that
was what made Fuller ask: "If this happened to a star so much like our
sun, why couldn't it happen to Sol?"
"Perhaps it may," said Morey
softly. "But the eternal optimism of man keeps us saving: 'It can't happen
here.' And besides—" He put a hand on the wall of the ship, "—we
don't ever have to worry about anything like that now. Not with ships like this
to take us to a new sun—a new planet."
Arcot lifted the ship and flew over the
cold, frozen ground beneath them, following the route indicated on the great
globe in the dead city. Mile after mile of frozen ice fields flew by as they
shot over it at three miles per second.
Suddenly, the bleak bulk of a huge
mountain loomed gigantic before them. Arcot reversed the power and brought the
ship to a stop. With the powerful searchlight, he swept the area, looking for
the tower he knew should be here. At last, he made it out, a pyramid rather
than a tower, and coated over with ice. They soon thawed out the frozen gasses
by playing the energy of three powerful searchlights upon them, and in a few
minutes the glint of gold showed through the melting ice and show.
"It looks," said Wade,
"as though they have an outer wall of gold over a strong wall of iron or
steel to protect it from corrosion. Certainly gold doesn't have enough tensile
strength to hold itself up under this gravity—not in such masses as that."
Arcot brought the ship down beside the
tower and the men once more went out through the airlock into the cold of the
almost airless world. They flew across to the pyramid and looked for some means
of entrance. In several places, they noticed hieroglyphics carved in great,
foot-high characters. They searched in vain for a door until they noticed that
the pyramid was not perfect, but truncated, leaving a flat area on top. The
only joint in the walls seemed to be there, but there was no handle or visible
methods of opening the door.
Arcot turned his powerful light on the
surface and searched carefully for some opening device. He found a bas-relief
engraving of a hand pointing to a corner of the door. He looked more closely
and found a small jewel-like lens set in the metal.
Suddenly the men felt a vibration! There
was a heavy click, and the door panel began to drop slowly.
"Get on it!" Arcot cried.
"We can always break our way out if we're trapped!"
The four men leaped on it and sank slowly
with it. The massive walls of the tower were nearly five feet thick, and made
of some tough, white metal.
"Pure iron!" diagnosed Wade.
"Or perhaps a silicon-iron alloy. Not as strong as steel, but very
resistant to corrosion."
When the elevator stopped, they found
themselves in a great chamber that was obviously a museum of the lost race. All
around the walls were arranged models, books, and diagrams.
"We can never hope to take all this
in our ship!" said Arcot, looking at the great collection. "Look—there's
an old winged airplane! And a steam engine—and that's an electric motor! And
that thing looks like some kind of an electric battery."
"But we can't take all that
stuff," objected Fuller.
"No," Morey agreed. "I
think our best bet would be to take all the books we can—making sure we get the
introductory ones, so we can read the language.
"See—over there—they have marked
those shelves with a single vertical mark. The ones next to them have two vertical
marks, and next ones three. I suggest we load up with those books and take them
to the ship."
The rest agreed, and they began carrying
armloads of books, flying out through the top of the pyramid to the ship and
back for more.
Instead of flying back to the pyramid
for the last load, Arcot announced that he was going to leave a note for anyone
who might come here later. While the others went back for the last load, he
worked at drawing the "note".
"Let's see your masterpiece,"
said Morey as the three men returned to the ship with the last of the books.
Arcot had used a piece of tough, heavy
plastic which would resist any corrosion the cold, almost airless world might
have to offer.
Near the top, he had drawn a
representation of their ship, and beneath it a representation of the route they
had taken from universe to universe. The galaxy they were in was represented by
a cloud of gas, its main identifying feature. Underneath the dotted line of
their route through space, he had printed "200,000,000,000, u".
Then followed a little table. The
numeral "1" followed by a straight bar, then "2" followed
by two bars, and so on up to ten. Ten was represented by ten bars and, in
addition, an S-shaped sign. Twenty was next, followed by twenty bars and two
S-shaped signs. Thus he had worked up to "100".
The system he used would make it clear
to any reasoning creature that he had used a decimal system and that the zeroes
meant ten times.
Next below, he had drawn the planetary
system of the frozen world, and the distance from the planet they were on to
the central sun he labeled "«". Thus, the finders could reason that
they had come a distance of two hundred billion units, where a distance of
three hundred million miles was taken as the unit; they had, then, come from another
galaxy. Certainly any creature with enough intelligence to reach this frozen
world would understand this!
"Since the year of this planet is
approximately eight times our own," Arcot continued, "I am indicating
that we came here approximately five hundred years after the catastrophe."
He pointed at several of the other drawings.
They left the message in the tower, and
Arcot closed the door, leaving the pyramid exactly as it had been before they
had come.
"Say!" Morey commented,
"how did you open and close that door, anyway?"
Arcot grinned. "Didn't you notice
the jewel at the corner? It was the lens of a photoelectric cell. My flashlight
opened the door. I didn't figure it out; it just worked accidentally."
Morey raised an eyebrow. "But if
the darned thing is so simple, any creature, intelligent or not, might be able
to get in and destroy the records!"
Arcot looked at him. "And where are
your savages going to come from? There are none on this planet, and anyone
intelligent enough to build a spaceship isn't going to destroy the contents of
the tower."
"Oh." Morey looked a little
sheepish.
They went into the airlock and took off
their suits. Then they began packing the precious books in specimen cases that
had been brought for the purpose of preserving such things.
When the last of them was carefully
stowed, they returned to the control room. They looked silently out across this
strange, dead world thinking how much it must have been like Earth. It was dead
now, and frozen forever. The low hills that stretched out beneath them were
dimly lighted by the weak rays of a shrunken sun. Three hundred million miles
away, it glowed so weakly that this world received only a little more heat than
it might have received from a small coal fire a mile away.
So weakly it flared that in this thin
atmosphere of hydrogen and helium, its little corona glowed about it plainly,
and even the stars around it shone brilliantly. The men could see one
constellation that grouped itself in the outlines of a dragon, with the sun of
this system as its cold, baleful eye.
Gradually, Arcot lifted the ship, and,
as they headed out into space, they could see the dim frozen plains fall
behind. It was as if a load of oppressing loneliness parted from them as they
flew out into the vast spaces of the eternal stars.
Chapter 10
arcot looked speculatively at the star field in the great broad
window before him. "We'll want to find another G-O sun, naturally, but I
don't think We ought to go directly from here. If we did, we'd have to do a lot
of backtracking to get back to this dead star. I suggest we go back to the edge
of this galaxy, taking pictures on the way out, so that any future
investigators can come in directly. It'll only take a few hours."
"I think you're right," agreed
Morey. "Besides, that will give us a wider choice of stars to pick our
next G-O from. Let's get going."
Arcot moved the red switch, and the ship
shot away at half speed. They watched the green image of the white dwarf fade
and then suddenly flare up and become bright again as they outraced the light
that had left it five centuries before.
They stopped and took more photographs
so that the path could be marked. They stopped every light century until they
reached a point where the star was merely a dim point, almost lost in the
myriad of stars around it.
Then out to the edge of the galaxy they
went, out toward their own universe.
"Arcot," Morey called,
"let's go out, say one million light years into space, at an angle to this
galaxy, and see if we can get both galaxies on one plate. It will make
navigation between them easier."
"Good idea. We can get out and back
in one day—and this 'time' won't count back on Earth, anyway." Since they
would travel in the space-strain all the time, it would not count as Earth
time.
Arcot pushed the red control all the way
forward, and the ship began to move at its top velocity of twenty-four light
years per second. The hours dragged heavily, as they had when they were coming
in, and Arcot remained alone on watch while the others went to their rooms for
some sleep, strapping their weightless bodies securely in the bunks.
It was hours later when Morey awoke with
a sudden premonition of trouble. He looked at the chronometer on the wall—he
had slept twelve hours I They had gone beyond the million light year mark! It
didn't matter, except it showed that something had happened to Arcot.
Something had. Arcot was sound asleep in
the middle of the library—exactly in the middle, floating in the room ten feet
from each wall.
Morey called out to him, and Arcot awoke
with a guilty start. "A fine sentry you make," said Morey
caustically. "Can't even keep awake when all you have to do is sit here
and see that we don't run into anything. We've gone more than our million light
years already, and we're still going strong. Come on! Snap out of it!"
"I'm sorry—I apologize—I know I
shouldn't have slept, but it was so perfectly quiet here except for your
deep-toned, musical snores that I couldn't help it," grinned Arcot.
"Get me down from here and we'll stop."
"Get you down, nothing!" Morey
snapped. "You stay right there while I call the others and we decide
what's to be done with a sleeping sentry."
Morey turned and left to wake the
others.
He had awakened Wade and told him what
had happened, and they were on their way to wake up Fuller, when suddenly the
air of the ship crackled around them! The space was changing! They were coming
out of hyper-space!
In amazement, Morey and Wade looked at
each other. They knew that Arcot was still floating helplessly in the middle of
the room, but—
"Hold on, you brainless apes! We're
turning around!" came Arcot's voice, full of suppressed mirth.
Suddenly they were both plastered
against the wall of the ship under four gravities of acceleration! Unable to
walk, they could only crawl laboriously toward the control room, calling to
Arcot to shut off the power.
When Morey had left him stranded in the
library, Arcot had decided it was high time he got to the floor. Quickly, he
looked around for a means of doing so. Near him, floating in the air, was the
book he had been reading, but it was out of reach. He had taken off his boots
when he started to read, so the Fuller rocket method was out. It seemed
hopeless.
Then, suddenly, came the inspiration!
Quickly, he slipped off his shirt and began waving it violently in the air. He
developed a velocity of about two inches a second—not very fast, but fast
enough. By the time he had put his shirt back on, he had reached the wall.
After that, it was easy to shoot himself
over to the door, out into the corridor and into the control room without being
seen by Morey, who was in Wade's room.
Just as Wade and Morey reached the
doorway to the control room, Arcot decided it was time to shut the power off.
Both of the men, laboring under more than eight hundred pounds of weight, were
suddenly weightless. All the strength of their powerful muscles were expended
in hurling them against the far wall.
The complaints were loud, but they
finally simmered down to an earnest demand to know how in the devil Arcot had
managed to get off dead center.
"Why, that was easy," he said
airly. "I just turned on a little power; I fell under the influence of the
weight and then it was easy to get to the control room."'
"Come on," Wade demanded.
"The truth! How did you get here?"
"Why, I just pushed myself
here."
Yes; no doubt. But how did you get hold
of anything to
push?"
"I just took a handful of air and
threw it away and reached the wall."
"Oh, of course—and how did you hold
the air?"
"I just took some air and threw it
away and reached the wall."
Which was all they could learn. Arcot
was going to keep his system secret, it seemed.
"At any rate," Arcot
continued, "I am back in the control room, where I belong, and you are not
in the observatory where you belong. Now get out of my territory!"
Morey pushed himself back to the
observatory, and after a few minutes, his voice came over the intercom.
"Let's move on a bit more, Arcot. We still can't get both galaxies on the
same plate. Let's go on for another hour and take our pictures from that
point."
Fuller had awakened and come in in the
meantime, and he wanted to know why they didn't take some pictures from this
spot.
"No point in it," said Morey.
"We have the ones we took coming in; what we want is a wide-angle
shot."
Arcot threw on the space-strain drive
once more, and they headed on at top speed— .
They were all in the control room,
watching the instruments and joking—principally the latter—when it happened.
One instant they were moving smoothly, weightlessly along. The next instant,
the ship rocked as though it had been struck violently! The air was a snapping
inferno of shooting sparks, and there came the sharp crash of the suddenly
volatilized silver bar that was their main power fuse. Simultaneously, they
were hurled forward with terrific force; the straps that held them in place
creaked with the sudden strain, and the men felt weak and faint.
Consciousness nearly left them; they
'had been burned in a dozen places by the leaping sparks.
Then it was over. Except that the ghost
ships no longer followed them, the Ancient Mariner seemed unchanged.
Around them, they could see the dim glowing of the galaxies.
"Brother! We came near
something!" Arcot cried. "It may be a wandering star! Take a look
around, quick!"
But the dark of space seemed utterly
empty around them as they coasted weightless through space. Then Arcot snapped
off the lights of the control room, and in a moment his eyes had become
accustomed to the dim lights.
It was dead ahead of them. It was a dull
red glow, so dim it was scarcely visible. Arcot realized it was a dead star.
"There it is, Morey!" he said.
"A dead star, directly ahead of us! Good God, how close are we?"
They were falling straight toward the
dim red bulk.
"How far are we from it?"
Fuller asked.
"At least several million—"
Morey began. Then he looked at the distance recorded on the meteor detector.
"ARCOT! FOR HEAVEN'S SAKE DO SOMETHING! THAT THING IS ONLY A FEW HUNDRED
MILES AWAY!"
"There's only one thing to
do," Arcot said tightly. "We can never hope to avoid that thing; we
haven't got the power. I'm going to try for an orbit around it. We'll fall
toward it and give the ship all the acceleration she'll take. There's no time
to calculate—I'll just pile on the speed until we don't fall into it."
The others, strapped into the control
chairs, prepared themselves for the acceleration to come.
If the Ancient Mariner had
dropped toward the star from an infinite distance, Arcot could have applied
'enough power to put the ship in a hyperbolic orbit which would have carried
them past the star. But they had come in on the space drive, and had gotten
fairly close before the gravitational field had drained the power from the main
coil, and it was not until the space field had broken that they had started to
accelerate toward the star. Their velocity would not be great enough to form an
escape orbit.
Even now, they would fall far short of
enough velocity to get into an elliptical orbit unless they used the molecular
drive.
Arcot headed toward one edge of the
star, and poured power into the molecular drive. The ship shot forward under an
additional five and a half gravities of acceleration. Their velocity had been
five thousand miles per second when they entered hyperspace, and they were
swiftly adding to their original velocity.
They did not, of course, feel the pull
of the sun, since they were in free fall in its field; they could only feel the
five and a half gravities of the molecular drive. Had they been able to
experience the pull of the star, they would have been crushed by their own
weight.
Their speed was mounting as they drew
nearer to the star, and Arcot was forcing the ship on with all the additional
power he could get. But he knew that the only hope they had was to get the ship
in a closed ellipse around the star, and a closed ellipse meant that they would
be forever bound to the star as a planet! Helpless, for not even the titanic
power of the Ancient Mariner could enable them to escape!
As the dull red of the dead sun
ballooned toward them, Arcot said: "I think we'll make an orbit, all
right, but we're going to be awfully close to the surface of that thing!"
The others were quiet they merely
watched Arcot and the star as Arcot made swift movements with the controls,
doing all he could to establish them in an orbit that would be fairly safe.
It seemed like an eternity—five and a
half gravities of acceleration held the men in their chairs almost as well as
the straps of the anti-acceleration units that bound them. When a man weighs
better than half a ton, he doesn't feel like moving much.
Fuller whispered to Morey out of the
corner of his sagging mouth. "What on Earth—I mean, what in Space is that
thing? We're within only a few hundred miles, you said, so it must be pretty
small. How could it pull us around like this?"
"It's a dead white dwarf—a 'black
dwarf, you might say," Morey replied. "As the density of such matter
increases, the volume of the star depends less and less on its temperature. In
a dwarf with the mass of the sun, the temperature effect is negligible; it's
the action of the forces within the electron-nucleon gas which makes up the
star that reigns supreme.
"It's been shown that if a white
dwarf—or a black one— is increased in mass, it begins to decrease sharply in
volume after a certain point is reached. In fact, no cold star can
exist with a volume greater than about one and a half times the mass of the
sun—as the mass increases and the pressure goes up, the star shrinks in volume
because of the degenerate matter in it. At a little better than 1.4 times the
mass of the sun—our sun, I mean: Old Sol—the star would theoretically collapse
to a point.
"That has almost happened in this
case. The actual limit is when the star has reached the density of a neutron,
and this star hasn't collapsed that far by a long shot.
"But that star is only forty
kilometers—or less than twenty-five miles in diameter!"
It took nearly two hours of careful
juggling to get an orbit which Arcot considered reasonably circular.
And when they finally did, Wade looked
at the sky above them and shouted: "Say, look! What are all those
streaks?"
Arcing up from the surface of the dull
red plain below them and going over the ship, were several dim streaks of light
across the sky. One of them was brighter than the rest, a bright white streak.
The streaks didn't move; they seemed to have been painted on the sky overhead',
glowing bands of unwavering light.
"Those," said Arcot, "are
the nebulae. That wide streak is the one we just left. The bright streak must
be a nearby star.
"They look like streaks because
we're moving so fast in so small an orbit." He pointed to the red star
beneath them. "We're less than twenty miles from the center of that thing!
We're almost exactly thirty kilometers from its center, or about ten kilometers
from its surface! But, because of it's great mass, our orbital velocity is
something terrific!
"We're going around that thing
better than three hundred times every second; our 'year' is three milliseconds
long! Our orbital velocity is seven hundred thousand kilometers per second!
"We're moving along at about a
fifth of the speed of light!"
"Are we safe in this orbit?"
Fuller asked.
"Safe enough," said Arcot
bitterly. "So damned safe that I don't see how we'll ever break free. We
can't pull away with all the power on this ship. We're trapped!
"Well, I'm worn out from working
under all that gravity; let's eat and get some sleep."
"I don't feel like sleeping,"
said Fuller. "You may call this safe, but it would only take an instant to
fall down to the surface of that thing there." He looked down at their
inert, but titanically powerful enemy whose baleful glow seemed even now to be
burning their funeral pyre.
"Well," said Arcot,
"falling into it and flying off into space are two things you don't have
to worry about. If we started toward it, we'd be falling, and our velocity
would increase; as a result, we'd bounce right back out again. The magnitude of
the force required to make us fall into that sun is appalling! The gravitational
pull on us now amounts to about five billion tons, which is equalized
by the centrifugal force of our orbital velocity. Any tendency to change it
would be like trying to bend a spring with that much resistance.
"We'd require a tremendous force to
make us either fall into that star—or get away from it.
"To escape, we have to lift this
ship out against gravity. That means we'd have to lift about five million tons
of mass. As we get farther out, our weight will decrease as the gravitational
attraction drops off, but we would need such vast amounts of energy that they
are beyond human conception.
"We have burned up two tons of
matter recharging the coils, and are now using another two tons to recharge
them again. We need at least four tons to spare, and we only started out with
twenty. We simply haven't got fuel enough to break loose from this star's
gravitational hold, vast as the energy of matter is. Let's eat, and then we can
sleep on the problem."
Wade cooked a meal for them, and they
ate in silence, trying to think of some way out of their dilemma. Then they
tried to sleep on the problem, as Arcot had suggested, but it was difficult to
relax. They were physically tired; they had gone through such great strains,
even in the short time that they had been maneuvering, that they were very
tired.
Under a pull five times greater than
normal gravity, they had tired in one-fifth the time they would have at one
gravity, but their brains were still wide awake, trying to think of some way—any
way—to get away from the dark sun.
But at last sleep came.
Chapter 11
morey thought he was the first to waken when, seven hours later, he
dressed and dove lightly, noiselessly, out into the library. Suddenly, he
noticed that the telectroscope was in operation—he heard the low hum of its
smoothly working director motors.
He turned and headed back toward the
observatory. Arcot was busy with the telectroscope.
"What's up, Arcot?" he
demanded.
Arcot looked up at him and dusted off
his hands. "I've just been gimmicking up the telectroscope. We're going
a-round this dead dwarf once every three milliseconds, which makes it awfully
hard to see the stars around us. So I put in a cutoff which will shut the
telectroscope off most of the' time; it only looks at the sky once every three
milliseconds. As a result, we can get a picture of what's going on around us
very easily. It won't be a steady picture, but since we're getting a still
picture three hundred times a second, it will be better than any moving picture
film ever projected as far as accuracy is concerned.
"I did it because I want to take a
look at that bright streak in the sky. I think it'll be the means to our
salvation— if there is any."
Morey nodded. "I see what you mean;
if that's another white dwarf—which it most likely is—we can use it to escape.
I think I see what you're driving at."
"If it doesn't work," Arcot
said coolly, "we can profit by the example of the people we left back
there. Suicide is preferable to dying of cold."
Morey nodded. "The question is: How
helpless are we?"
"Depends entirely ton that star;
let's see if we can get a focus on it."
At the orbital velocity of the ship, focusing
on the star was indeed a difficult thing to do. It took them well over an hour
to get the image centered in the screen without its drifting off toward one
edge; it took even longer to get the focus close enough to a sphere to give
them a definite reading on the instruments. The image had started out as a
streak, hut by taking smaller and smaller sections of the streak at the proper
times, they managed to get a good, solid image. But to get it bright enough was
another problem; they were only picking up a fraction of the light, and it had
to be amplified greatly to make a visible image.
When they finally got what they were
looking for, Morey gazed steadily at the image. "Now the job is to figure
the distance. And we haven't got much parallax to work with."
"If we compute in the timing in our
blinker system at opposite sides of the orbit, I think we can do it," Arcot
said.
They went to work on the problem. When
Fuller and Wade showed up, they were given work to do—Morey gave them equations
to solve without telling them to what the figures applied.
Finally Arcot said: "Their period
about the common center of gravity is thirty-nine hours, as I figure it."
Morey nodded. "Check. And that
gives us a distance of two million miles apart."
"Just what are you two up to?"
asked Fuller. "What good is another star? The one we're interested in is
this freak underneath us."
"No," Arcot corrected,
"we're interested in getting away from the one beneath us, which
is an entirely different matter. If we were midway between this star and that
one, the gravitational effects of the two would be cancelled out, since we
would be pulled as hard in one direction as the other. Then we'd be free of
both pulls and could escape!
"If we could get into that neutral
area long enough to turn on our space strain drive, we could get away between
them fast. Of course, a lot of our energy would be eaten up, but we'd get away.
"That's our only hope," Arcot
concluded.
"Yes, and what a whale of a hope it
is," Wade snorted sarcastically. "How are you going to get out to a
point halfway between these two stars when you don't have enough power to lift
this ship a few miles?"
"If Mahomet can not go to the
mountain," misquoted Arcot, "then the mountain must come to
Mahomet."
"What are you going to do?"
Wade asked in exasperation. "Beat Joshua? He made the sun stand still, but
this is a job of throwing them around!"
"It is," agreed Arcot quietly,
"and I intend to throw that star in such a way that we can escape between
the twin fields! We can escape between the hammer and the anvil as millions of
millions of millions of tons of matter crash into each other."
"And you intend to swing
that?" asked Wade in awe as he thought of the spectacle there would be
when two suns fell into each other. "Well, I don't want to be
around."
"You haven't any choice,"
Arcot grinned. Then his face grew serious. "What I want to do is simple.
We have the molecular ray. Those stars are hot. They don't fall into each other
because they are rotating about each other. Suppose that rotation were
stopped—stopped suddenly and completely? The molecular ray acts catalytically;
we won't supply the power to stop that star, the star itself will. All we have
to do is cause the molecules to move in a direction opposite to the rotation.
We'll supply the impulse, and the star will supply the energy!
"Our job will be to break away when
the stars get close enough; we are really going to hitch our wagon to a star!
"The mechanics of the job are
simple. We will have to calculate when and how long to use the power, and when
and how quickly to escape. We'll have to use the main power board to generate
the ray and project it instead of the little ray units. With luck, we ought to
be free of this star in three days!"
Work was started at once. They had a
chance of life in sight, and they had every intention of taking advantage of
it! The calculating machines they had brought would certainly prove worth their
mass in this one use. The observations were extremely difficult because the
ship was rocketing around the star in such a rapid orbit. The calculations of
the mass and distance and orbital motion of the other star were therefore very
difficult, but the final results looked good.
The other star and this one formed a
binary, the two being of only slightly different mass and rotating about each
other at a distance of roughly two million miles.
The next problem was to calculate the
time of fall from that point, assuming that it would stop instantaneously,
which would be approximately true.
The actual fall would take only seven
hours under the tremendous acceleration of the two masses! Since the stars
would fall toward each other, the ship would be drawn toward the falling mass,
and since their orbit around the star took only a fraction of a second to
complete, they had to make sure they were in the right position at the halfway
point just before collision occurred. Also, their orbit would be greatly
perturbed as the star approached, and it was necessary to calculate that in,
too.
Arcot calculated that in twenty-two
hours, forty-six minutes, they would be in the most favorable position to start
the fall. They could have started sooner, but there were some changes that had
to be made in the wiring of the ship before they could start using the
molecular ray at full power.
"Well," said Wade as he
finally finished the laborious computations, "I hope we don't make a
mistake and get caught between the two! And what happens if we find we haven't
stopped the star after all?"
"If we don't hit it exactly the
first time," Morley replied, "we'll have to juggle the ray until we
do."
They set to work at once, installing the
heavy leads to the ray projectors, which were on the outside of the hull in
countersunk recesses. Morey and Wade had to go outside the ship to help attach
the cables.
Out in space, floating about the ship,
they were still weightless, for they, too, were supported by centrifugal force.
The work of readjusting the projectors
for greater power was completed in an hour and a quarter, which still left over
twenty hours before they could use them. During the next ten hours, they
charged the great storage coils to capacity, leaving the circuits to them open,
controlled by the relays only. That would keep the coils charged, ready to
start.
Finally, Wade dusted off his hands and
said: "We're all ready to go mechanically, and I think it would be wise if
we were ready physically, too. I know we're not very tired, but if we sit
around in suspense well be as nervous as cats when the time comes. I suggest we
take a couple of sleeping tablets and turn in. If we use a mild shock to awaken
us, we won't oversleep."
The others agreed to the plan and
prepared for their wait.
Awakened two hours before the actual
moment of action, Wade prepared breakfast, and Morey took observations. He knew
just where the star should be according to their calculations, and looked for
it there. He breathed a sigh of relief—it was exactly in place! Their
mathematics they had been sure of, but on such a rapidly moving machine, it was
exceedingly difficult to make good observations.
The two hours seemed to drag
interminably, but at last Arcot signaled for the full power of the molecular
rays. They waited, breathlessly, for some response. Nearly twenty seconds
later, the other sun went out.
"We did it!" said Wade in a
hushed voice. It was almost a shock to realize that this ship had power enough
to extinguish a sun!
Arcot and Morey weren't awed; they
didn't have time. There were other things to do and do fast.
They had checked the time required for
them to see that the white dwarf had gone out. Half of this gave them the
distance from the star in light seconds.
The screen had already been rigged to
flash the information into a computer, which in turn gave a time signal to the
robot pilot that would turn on the drive at precisely the right instant. There was
no time for human error here; the velocities were too great and the
time for error too small.
Then they waited. They had to wait for
seven hours spinning dizzily around an improbably tiny star with an equally
improbably titanic gravitational field. A star only a couple of dozens of miles
across, and yet so dense that it weighed half a million times as much as the
Earth! And they had to wait while another star like it, chilled now to absolute
zero, fell toward them!
"I wish we could stay around to see
the splash," Arcot said. "It's going to be something to see. All the
kinetic energy of those two masses slamming into each other is going to be a
blaze of light that will really be something!"
Wade was looking nervously at the
telectroscope plate. "I wish we could see that other sun. I don't like the
idea of a thing that big creeping up on us in the dark."
"Calm down," Morey said
quietly. "It's out of our hands now; we took a chance, and it was a chance
we had to take. If you want to watch something, watch Junior
down there. It's going to start doing some pretty interesting tricks."
As the dense black sun approached them,
Junior, as Morey had called it, did begin to do tricks. At first they seemed to
be optical effects, as though the eye itself were playing tricks. The red,
glowing ball beneath them began to grow transparent around its surface, leaving
an opaque red core which seemed to be shrinking slowly.
"What's happening?" Fuller
asked.
"Our orbit around the star is
becoming more and more elliptical," Arcot replied. "As the other sun
pulls us, the star beneath us grows smaller with the distance; then, as we
begin to fall back toward it, it grows larger again. Since this is taking place
many hundreds of times per second, the visual pictures all seem to blend in
together."
"Watch the clock," Morey said
suddenly, pointing.
The men watched tensely as the hand
moved slowly a-round.
"Ten —nine —eight —seven —six —five
—four —three —two -one -ZERO!"
A relay slammed home, and almost
instantaneously, everyone on the ship was slammed into unconsciousness.
Chapter 12
hours later, Arcot regained consciousness. It was quiet in the
ship. He was still strapped in his seat in the control room. The relux screens
were in place, and all was perfectly peaceful. He didn't know whether the ship
was motionless or racing through space at a speed faster than light, and his
first semiconscious impulse was to see.
He reached out with an arm that seemed
to be made of dry dust, ready to crumble; an arm that would not behave. His
nerves were jumping wildly. He pulled the switch he was seeking, and the relux
screens dropped down as the motors pulled them back.
They were in hyperspace; beside them
rode the twin ghost ships.
Arcot looked around, trying to decide
what to do, but his brain was clogged. He felt tired; he wanted to sleep. Scarcely
able to think, he dragged the others to their rooms and strapped them in their
bunks. Then he strapped himself in and fell asleep almost at once.
Still more hours passed, then Arcot was
waking slowly to insistent shaking by Morey.
"Hey! Arcot! Wake up! ARCOT!
HEY!"
Arcot's ears sent the message to his
brain, but his brain tried to ignore it. At last he slowly opened his eyes.
"Huh?" he said in a low, tired
voice.
"Thank God! I didn't know whether
you were alive or not. None of us remembered going to bed. We decided you must
have carried us there, but you sure looked dead."
"Uhuh?" came Arcot’s
unenthusiastic rejoinder.
"Boy, is he sleepy!" said Wade
as he drifted into the room. "Use a wet cloth and some cold water,
Morey."
A brisk application of cold water
brought Arcot more nearly awake. He immediately clamored for the wherewithal to
fill an aching void that was making itself painfully felt in his midsection.
"He’s all right!" laughed
Wade. "His appetite is just as healthy as ever!"
They had already prepared a meal, and
Arcot was promptly hustled to the galley. He strapped himself into the chair so
that he could eat comfortably, and then looked around at the others.
"Where the devil are we?"
"That," replied Morey
seriously, "as just what we wanted to ask you. We haven't the beginnings
of an idea. We slept for two days, all told, and by now we're so far from all
the Island Universes that we can't tell one from another. We have no idea where
we are.
"I've stopped the ship; we're just
floating. I'm sure I don't know what happened, but I hoped you might have an
idea."
"I have an idea," said Arcot.
"I'm hungry! You wait until after I've eaten, and I'll talk." He fell
to on the food.
After eating, he went to the control
room and found that every gyroscope in the place had been thrown out of place
by the attractions they had passed through. He looked around at the meters and
coils.
It was obvious what had happened. Their
attempt to escape had been successful; they had shot out between the stars,
into the space. The energy had been drained from the power coil, as they had
expected. Then the power plant had automatically cut in, recharging the coils
in two hours. Then the drive had come on again, and the ship had flashed on
into space. But with the gyroscopes as erratic as they were, there was no way
of knowing which direction they had come; they were lost in space!
"Well, there are lots of galaxies
we can go to," said Arcot. "We ought to be able to find a nice one
and stay there if we can't get home again."
"Sure," Wade replied,
"but I like Earth! If only we hadn't all passed out! What caused that,
Arcot?"
Arcot shrugged. "I'm sure I don't
know. My only theory is that the double gravitational field, plus our own-
power field, produced a sort of cross-product that effected our brains.
"At any rate, here we are."
"We certainly are," agreed
Morey. "We can't possibly back track; what we have to do is identify our
own universe. What identifying features does it have that will enable us to recognize
it?
"Our Galaxy has two 'satellites',
the Greater and Lesser Magellanic Clouds. If we spent ten years photographing
and studying and comparing with the photographs we already have, we might find
it. We know that system will locate the Galaxy, but we haven't the time. Any
other suggestions?"
"We came out here to visit planets,
didn't we?" asked Arcot. "Here's our chance—and our only chance—of
getting home, as far as I can see. We can go to any galaxy in the
neighborhood—within twenty or thirty million light years— and look for a planet
with a high degree of civilization.
"Then we'll give them the
photographs we have, and ask them if they've any knowledge of a galaxy with two
such satellites. We just keep trying until we find a race which has learned through
their research. I think that's the easiest, quickest, and most satisfactory
method. What do you think?" It was the obvious choice, and they all
agreed. The next proposition was to select a galaxy.
"We can go to any one we
wish," said Morey, "but we're now moving at thirty thousand miles per
second; it would take us quite a while to slow down, stop, and go in the other
direction. There's a nice, big galactic nebula right in front of us, about
three days away—six million light years. Any objections to heading for
that?"
The rest looked at the glowing point of
the nebula. Out in space, a star is a hard, brilliant, dimensionless point of
light. But a nebula glows with a faint mistiness; they are so far away that
they never have any bright glow, such as stars have, but they are so vast,
their dimensions so great, that even across millions of light years of space
they appear as tiny glowing discs with faint, indistinct edges. As the men
looked out of the clear lux metal windows, they saw the tiny blur of light on
the soft black curtain of space.
It was as good a course as any, and the
ship's own inertia recommended it; they had only to redirect the ship with
greater accuracy.
Setting the damaged gyroscopes came
first, however. There were a number of things about the ship that needed
readjustment and replacement after the strain of escaping from the giant star.
After they had made a thorough
inspection Arcot said:
"I think we'd best make all our
repairs out here. That flame that hit us burned off our outside microphone and
speaker, and probably did a lot of damage to the ray projectors. I'd rather not
land on a planet unarmed; the chances are about fifty-fifty that we'd be
greeted with open cannon muzzles instead of open arms."
The work inside was left to Arcot and
Fuller, while Morey and Wade put on spacesuits and went out onto the hull.
They found surprisingly little
damage-far less than they had expected. True, the loudspeaker, the microphone,
and all other instruments made of ordinary matter had been burned off clean.
They didn't even have to clean out the spaces where they had been recessed into
the wall. At a temperature of ten thousand degrees, the metals had all boiled
away—even tungsten boils at seven thousand degrees, and all other normal matter
boils even more easily.
The ray projectors, which had been
adjusted for the high power necessary to stop a sun in its orbit, were
readjusted for normal power, and the heat beams were replaced.
After nearly four hours work, everything
had been checked, from relays and switch points to the instruments and
gyroscopes. Stock had been taken, and they found they were running low on
replacement parts. If anything more happened, they would have to stop using
some of the machinery and break it up for spare parts. Of their original supply
of twenty tons of lead fuel, only ten tons of the metal were left, but lead was
a common metal which they could easily pick up on any planet they might visit.
They could also get a fresh supply of water and refill their air tanks there.
The ship was in as perfect condition as
it had ever been, for every bearing had been put in condition and the
generators and gyroscopes were running smoothly.
They threw the ship into full speed and
headed for the galaxy ahead of them.
"We are going to look for
intelligent beings," Arcot reminded the others, "so we'll have to
communicate with them. I suggest we all practice the telepathic processes I
showed you—we'll need them."
The time passed rapidly with something
to do. They spent a considerable part of it reading the books on telepathy that
Arcot had brought, and on practicing it with each other.
By the end of the second day of the
trip, Morey and Fuller, who had peculiarly adaptable minds, were able to
converse readily and rapidly, Fuller doing the projecting and Morey the
receiving. Wade had divided his time about equally between projecting and
reading, with the result that he could do neither, well.
Early on the fourth day, they entered
the universe toward which they were heading. They had stopped at about half a
million light years and decided that a large local cluster of very brilliant
suns promised the best results, since the stars were closer together there, and
there were many of the yellow G-O type for which they were seeking.
They had penetrated into the galaxy as
far as was safe, using half speed; then, at lower speeds, they worked toward
the local cluster.
Arcot cut the drive several light years
from the nearest sun. "Well, we're where we wanted to be; now what do we
do? Morey, pick us out a G-O star. We await your royal command to move."
After a few minutes at the
telectroscope, Morey pointed to one of the pinpoints of light that gleamed
brightly in the sky. "That one looks like our best bet. "It's a G-O a
little brighter than Sol."
Morey swung the ship about, pointing the
axis of the ship in the same direction as its line of flight. The observatory
had been leading, but now the ship was turned to its normal position.
They shot forward, using the
space-strain drive, for a full hour at one-sixteenth power. Then Arcot cut the
drive, and the disc of the sun was large before them.
"We're going to have a job cutting
down our velocity; we're traveling pretty fast, relative to that sun,"
Arcot told the others. Their velocity was so great that the sun didn't seem to
swerve them greatly as they rushed nearer. Arcot began to use the molecular
drive to brake the ship.
Morey was busy with the telectroscope,
although greatly hampered by the fact that it was a feat of strength to hold
his ami out at right angles to his body for ten seconds under the heavy
acceleration Arcot was applying.
"This method works!" called
Morey suddenly. "The Fuller System For Finding Planets has picked another
winner! Circle the sun so that I can get a better look!"
Arcot was already trying vainly to
decrease their velocity to a figure that would permit the attraction of the sun
to hold them in its grip and allow them to land on a planet.
"As I figure it," Arcot said,
"we'll need plenty of time to come to rest. What do you think, Morey?"
Morey punched figures into the
calculator. "Wow! Somewhere in the neighborhood of a hundred days, using
all the acceleration that will be safe! At five gravities, reducing our present
velocity of twenty-five thousand miles per second to zero will take
approximately twenty-four hundred hours-one hundred days! We'll have to use the
gravitational attraction of that sun to help us."
"We'll have to use the space
control," said Arcot. "If we move close to the sun by the space
control, all the energy of the fall will be used in overcoming the space-strain
coil's field, and thus prevent our falling. When we start to move away again,
we will be climbing against that gravity, which will aid us in stopping. But
even so, it will take us about three days to stop. We wouldn't get anywhere
using molecular power; that giant sun was just too damned generous with his
energy of fall!"
They started the cycles, and, as Arcot
had predicted, they took a full three days of constant slowing to accomplish
their purpose, burning up nearly three tons of matter in doing so. They were
constantly oppressed by a load of five gravities except for the short intervals
when they stopped to eat and when they were moving in the space control field.
Even in sleeping, they were forced to stand the load.
The massive sun was their principal and
most effective brake. At no time did they go more than a few dozen million
miles from the primary, for the more intense the gravity, the better effect
they got.
Morey divided his time between piloting
the ship while Arcot rested, and observing the system. By the end of the third
day, he had made very creditable progress with his map.
He had located only six planets, but he
was certain there were others. For the sake of simplicity, he had assumed
circular orbits and calculated their approximate orbital velocities from their
distance from the sun. He had determined the mass of the sun from direct
weighings aboard their ship. He soon had a fair diagram of the system
constructed mathematically, and experimental observation showed it to be a very
close approximation.
The planets were rather more massive
than those of Sol. The innermost planet had a third again the diameter of
Mercury and was four million miles farther from the primary. He named it
Hermes. The next one, which he named Aphrodite, the Greek goddess corresponding
to the Roman Venus, was only a little larger than Venus and was some eight
million miles farther fro^| its primary—seventy-five million miles from the
central sun'.' .',
The next, which Morey called Terra, was
very much like Earth. At a distance of a hundred and twenty-four million miles
from the sun, it must have received almost the same amount of heat that Earth
does, for this sun was considerably brighter than Sol.
Terra was eight thousand two hundred
miles in diameter, with a fairly clear atmosphere and a varying albedo which
indicated clouds in the atmosphere. Morey had every reason to believe that it
might be inhabited, but he had no proof because his photographs were
consistently poor due to the glare of the sun.
The rest of the planets proved to be of
little interest. In the place where, according to Bode's Law, another planet,
corresponding to Mars, should have been, there was only a belt of asteroids.
Beyond this was still another belt. And on the other side of the double
asteroid belt was the fourth planet, a fifty-thousand-mile-in-diameter
methane-ammonia giant which Morey named Zeus in honor of Jupiter.
He had picked up a couple of others on
his plates, but he had not been able to tell anything about them as yet. In any
case, the planets Aphrodite and Terra were by far the most interesting.
"I think we picked the right angle
to come into this system," said Arcot, looking at Morey's photographs of
the wide bands of asteroids. They had come into the planetary group at right
angles to the plane of the ecliptic, which had allowed them to miss both
asteroid belts.
They started moving toward the planet
Terra, reaching their objective in less than three hours.
The globe beneath them was lit brightly,
for they had approached it from the daylight side. Below them, they could see
wide, green plains and gently rolling mountains, and in a great cleft in one of
the mountain ranges was a shimmering lake of clearest blue.
The air of the planet screamed about
them as they dropped down, and the roar in the loudspeaker grew to a mighty
cataract of sound. Morey turned down the volume.
The sparkling little lake passed beneath
them as they shot on, seventy-five miles above the surface of the planet. When
they had first entered the atmosphere, they had the impression of looking down
on a vast, inverted bowl whose edge rested on a vast, smooth table of deep
violet velvet. But as they dropped and the violet became bluer and bluer, they
experienced the strange optical illusion of "flopping" of the scene.
The bowl seemed to turn itself inside out, and they were looking down at its
inner surface.
They shot over a mountain range, and a
vast plain spread out before them. Here and there, in the far distance, they
could see darker spots caused by buckled geological strata.
Arcot swung the ship around, and they
saw the vast horizon swing about them as their sensation of "down"
changed with the acceleration of the turn. They felt nearly weightless, for
they were lifting again in a high arc.
Arcot was heading back toward the
mountains they had passed over. He dropped the ship again, and the foothills
seemed to rise to meet them.
"I'm heading for that lake,"
Arcot explained. "It seems absolutely deserted, and there are some things
we want to do. I haven't had any decent exercise for the past two weeks, except
for straining under high gravity. I want to do some swimming, and we need to
distill some water for drink; we need to refill the tanks in case of
emergencies. If the atmosphere contains oxygen, fine; if it doesn't, we can get
it out of the water by electrolysis.
"But I hope that air is good to
breathe, because I've been wanting a swim and a sun bath for a long time!"
Chapter 13
the Ancient Mariner hung high in the air, poised
twenty-five miles above the surface of the little lake. Wade, as chemist,
tested the air while the others readied the distillation and air condensation
apparatus. By the time they had finished, Wade was ready with his report.
"Air pressure about 20 psi at the
surface; temperature around ninety-five Fahrenheit. Composition: eighteen
percent oxygen, seventy-five percent nitrogen, four-tenths of one percent
carbon dioxide, residue—inert gasses. That's not including water vapor, of
which there is a fair amount.
"I put a canary into the air, and
the bird liked it, so I imagine it's quite safe except for bacteria, perhaps.
Naturally, at this altitude the air is germ-free."
"Good," said Morey, "then
we can take our swim and work without worrying about spacesuits."
"Just a minute!" Fuller
objected. "What about those germs Wade mentioned? If you think I'm going
out in my shorts where some flock of bacteria can get at my tender anatomy,
you've got another think coming!"
"I wouldn't worry about it,"
Wade said. "The chances of organisms developing along the same
evolutionary line is quite slim. We may find the inhabitants of the same shape
as those of another world, because the human body is fairly well constructed
anatomically. The head is in a place where it will be able to see over a wide
area and it's in a safe place. The hand is very useful and can be improved upon
but little. True, the Venerians have a second thumb, but the principle is the
same.
"But chemically, the bodies are
probably very different The people of Venus are widely different -chemically;
the bacteria that can make a Venerian deathly ill is killed the instant it
enters our body, or else it starves to death because it can't find the kind of
chemical food it needs to live. And the same thing happens when a Venerian is
attacked by an Earthly microorganism.
"Even on Earth, evolution has
produced such widely varying types of life that an organism that can feed- on
one is totally incapable of feeding on another. You, for instance, couldn't
catch tobacco mosaic virus, and the tobacco plant can't catch the measles
virus.
"You couldn't expect a
microorganism to evolve here that was capable of feeding on Earth-type tissues;
they would have starved to death long ago."
"What about bigger animals?"
Fuller asked cautiously. "That's different. You would probably be
indigestible to an alien carnivore, but he'd probably kill you first to find
out. If he ate you, it might kill him in the end, but that would be small
consolation. That's why we're going to go out armed."
Arcot dropped the ship swiftly until
they were hovering a bare hundred feet over the waters of the lake. There was a
little stream winding its way down the mountainside, and another which led the
clear overflow away.
"I doubt if there's anything of
great size in that lake," Arcot said slowly and thoughtfully. "Still,
even small fish might be deadly. Let's play safe and remove all forms of life,
bacterial and otherwise. A little touch of the molecular motion ray, greatly
diffused, will do the trick."
Since the molecular ray directed the
motion of the molecules of matter, it prevented chemical reactions from taking
place, even when greatly diffused; all the molecules tend to go in the same
direction to such an extent that the delicate balance of chemical reactions
that is life is upset. It is too delicate a thing to stand any power that
upsets the reactions so violently. All things are killed instantly.
As the light haze of the ionized air
below them glowed out in a huge cone, the water of the lake heaved and seemed
to move in its depths but: there was no
great movement of the waters; they lost
only a fraction of their weight. But every living thing in that lake died
instantly.
Arcot turned the ship, and the shining
hull glided softly over to one side of the lake where a little sandy beach
invited them. There seemed no indication of intelligent life about.
Each of them took a load of the supplies
they had brought, and carried them out under the shade of an immense pine-like
tree—a gigantic column of wood that stretched far into the sky to lose its
green leaves in a waving sea of foliage. The mottled sunlight of the bright
star above them made them feel very much at home. Its color, intensity, and
warmth were all exactly the same as on Earth.
Each of the men wore his power suit to
aid in carrying the things they had brought, for the gravity here was a bit
higher than that of Earth. The difference in air pressure was so little as to
be scarcely noticeable; they even adjusted the interior of the ship to it.
They had every intention of staying here
for awhile. It was pleasant to lie in the warm sun once more; so pleasant that
it became difficult to remember that they were countless trillions of long
miles from their own home planet. It was hard to realize that the warm, blazing
star above them was not Old Sol.
Arcot was carrying a load of food in a
box. He had neutralized his weight until, load and all, he weighed about a
hundred pounds. This was necessary in order to permit him to drag a length of
hose behind him toward the water, so it could be used as an intake for the
pumps.
Morey, meanwhile, was having trouble. He
had been carrying a load of assorted things to use—a few pneumatic pillows, a
heavy iron pot for boiling the water, and a number of other things.
He reached his destination, having
floated the hundred or so feet from the ship by using his power suit. He
forgot, momentarily, and dropped his load. Immediately, he too began to
"drop"—upward! He had a buoyancy of around three hundred pounds, and
a weight of only two fifty. In dropping the load, the sudden release had caused
the power unit to jerk him upward, and somehow the controlling knob on the
power pack was torn loose.
Morey shot up into the air, showing a
fair rate of progress toward his late abode—space! And he had no way to stop
himself. His hand power unit was far too weak to overcome the pull of his
power-pack, and he was' rising faster and faster!
He realized that his friends could catch
him, and laughingly called down: "Arcot! Help! I'm being kidnapped by my
power suit! To the rescue!"
Arcot looked up quickly at Morey's call
and realized immediately that his power control had come off. He knew there was
twenty miles or so of breathable air above, and long before Morey rose that
far, he could catch him in the Ancient Mariner, if necessary.
He turned on his own power suit, using a
lift of a hundred pounds, which gave him double Morey's acceleration. Quickly
he gathered speed that shot him up toward his helpless friend, and a moment
later, he had caught up with him and passed him. Then he shut off his power and
drifted to a halt before he began to drop again. As Morey rose toward him,
Arcot adjusted the power in his own suit to match Morey's velocity.
Arcot grabbed Morey's leg and turned his
power down until he had a weight of fifty pounds. Soon they were both falling
again, and when their rate of fall amounted to approximately twenty miles per
hour, Arcot cut their weight to zero and they continued down through their
momentum. Just short of the ground, he leaped free of Morey, who, carried on by
momentum, touched the ground a moment later. Wade at once jumped in and held
him down.
"Now, now! Calm yourself,"
said Wade solicitously. "Don't go up in the air like that over the least
little thing."
"I won't, if you'll get busy and
take this damned thing off—or fasten some lead to my feet!" replied Morey,
starting to unstrap the mechanism. "You'd better hold your horses there,"
said Arcot, "If you take that off now, we sure will need the Ancient
Mariner to catch up with it. It will produce an acceleration that no man
could ever stand—something on the order of five thousand gravities, if the
tubes could stand it. And since that one is equipped with the invisibility
apparatus, you'd be out one good invisibility suit. Restrain yourself, boy, and
I'll go get a new knob control.
"Wade, get the boy a rock to hold
him down. Better tie it around his neck so he won't forget it and fly off into
space again. It's a nuisance locating so small an object in space and I
promised his father I'd bring the body back if there was anything left of
it." He released Morey as Wade handed him a large stone.
A few minutes later, he returned with a
new adjustment dial and repaired Morey's apparatus. The strain was released
when he turned it, and Morey parted with the rock with relief.
Morey grunted in relief, and looked at
the offending pack.
"You know, that being stuck with a
sky-bound gadget that you can't turn off is the nastiest combination of feeling
stupid, helpless, comical, silly and scared I've hit yet. It now—somewhat
late—occurs to me that this is powered with a standard power coil, straight off
the production line, and that it has a standard overload cut-out for protection
of associated equipment. I want to install an emergency cutoff switch, in case
a knob, or something else, goes sour. But I want to have the emergency overload
where I can decide whether or not an emergency overload is to be accepted. I'd
feel a sight more than silly if that overload relay popped while I was a couple
thousand feet up.
"Trouble with all this new stuff of
ours is that we simply haven't had time to find out all the 'I never thought of
that' things that can go wrong. If the grid resistor on that oscillator went
out, for instance, what would it do?"
Arcot cocked an eye at the power pack,
visualizing the circuits. "Full blast, straight up, and no control. But
modern printed resistors don't fail."
"That's what it says in all the
books." Wade nodded wisely. "And you should see the stock of
replacement units every electronics shop stocks for purposes of replacing
infallible units, too. You've got a point, my friend."
"I can see four ways we can change
these things to failsafe operation, if we add Morey's emergency cut-off switch.
If it did go on-full then, you could use intermittent operation and get
down," Arcot acknowledged.
"Anybody know what silly
fail-unsafe tricks we overlooked in the Ancient Mariner?" Fuller
asked.
"That," said Wade with a grimace, "is a silly
question. The I didn't think of that' type of failure occurs because I didn't
think of that, and the reason I didn't think of it is because it never occurred
to me. If we'd been, able to think of 'em, we would have. We'll probably get
stuck with a few more yet, before we get back. But at least we can clean up a
few bugs in these things now."
"Forget it for now, Wade, and get
that chow on," suggested Fuller. He was lying on his back, clad only in a
pair of short trunks, completely relaxed and enjoying life. "We can do
that when it's dark here."
"Fuller has the right idea,"
said Morey, looking at Fuller with a judicious eye. "I think I'll follow
his example."
"Which makes three in favor and one
on the way," said Arcot, as he came out of the ship and sank down on the
soft sand of the beach.
They lay around for a while after lunch,
and then decided to swim in the cool waters of the lake. One of them was to
stand guard while the others went in swimming. Standing guard consisted of
lying on his back on the soft sand, and staring up at the delightful contrast
of lush green foliage and deep blue sky.
It was several hours before they
gathered up their things and returned to the ship. They felt more rested than
they had before their exercise. They had not been tired before, merely
restless, and the physical exercise had made them far more comfortable.
They gathered again in the control room.
All the apparatus had been taken in, the tanks were filled, and the compressed
oxygen replenished. They closed the airlock and were ready to start again.
As they lifted into the air, Arcot
looked at the lake that was shrinking below them. "Nice place for a
picnic; we'll have to remember that place. It isn't more than twenty million
light years from home."
"Yes," agreed Morey, "it
is handy. But suppose we find out where home is first; let's go find the local
inhabitants."
"Excellent idea. Which way do we go
to look?" Wade asked.
"This lake must have an outlet to
the sea," Morey answered. "I suggest we follow it. Most rivers of any
size have a port near the mouth, and a port usually means a city."
"Let's go," said Arcot,
swinging the shining ship about and heading smoothly down along the line of the
little stream that had its beginning at the lake. They moved on across the
mountains and over the green foothills until they came to a broad, rolling
plain.
"I wonder if this planet is
inhabited," Arcot mused. "None of this land seems to be
cultivated."
Morey had been scanning the horizon with
a pair of powerful binoculars. "No, the land isn't cultivated, but take a
look over there—see that range of little hills over to the right? Take a
look." He handed the binoculars to Arcot.
Arcot looked long and quietly. At last
he lowered the binoculars and handed them to Wade, who sat next to him.
"It looks like the ruins of a
city," Arcot said. "Not the ruins that a storm would make, but the
ruins 'that high explosives would make. I'd say there had been a war and the
people who once lived here had been driven off."
"So would I," rejoined Morey.
"I wonder if we could find the conquerors?"
"Maybe—unless it was mutual
annihilation!"
They rose a bit higher and raised their
speed to a thousand miles an hour. On and on they flew, high above the gently
rolling plain, mile after mile. The little brooklet became a great river, and
the river kept growing more and more. Ahead of them was a range of hills, and
they wondered how the river could thread its way among them. They found that it
went through a broad pass that twisted tortuously between high mountains.
A few miles farther on, they came to a
great natural basin in the pass, a wide, level bowl. And in almost the exact
center, they saw a looming mass of buildings—a great city! "Look!"
cried Morey. "I told you it was inhabited!" Arcot winced. "Yes,
but if you shout in my ear like that again, you'll have to write things out for
me for ever after." He was just as excited as Morey, nevertheless.
The great mass of the city was shaped
like a titanic cone that stood half mile high and was fully a mile and a half
in radius. But the remarkable thing about it was the perfect uniformity with
which the buildings and every structure seemed to conform to this plan. It
seemed as though an invisible, but very tangible line had been drawn in the
air. It was as though a sign had been posted: "Here there shall be
buildings. Beyond this line, no structure shall extend, nor any vehicle
go!"
The air directly above the city was
practically packed with slim, long, needle-like ships of every size—from tiny
private ships less than fifteen feet long to giant freighters of six hundred
feet and longer. And every one of them conformed to the rule perfectly!
Only around the base of the city there
seemed to be a slight deviation. Where the invisible cone should have touched
the ground, there was a series of low buildings made of some dark metal, and
all about them the ground appeared scarred and churned.
"They certainly seem to have some
kind of ray screen over that city," Morey commented. "Just look at
that perfect cone effect and those low buildings are undoubtedly the
projectors." Arcot had brought the ship to a halt as he came through the
pass in the mountain. The shining hull was in the cleft of the gorge, and was,
no doubt, quite hard to see from the city.
Suddenly, a vagrant ray of the brilliant
sun reached down through a break in the overcast of clouds and touched the
shining hull of the Ancient Manner with a finger of gold. Instantly,
the ship shone like the polished mirror of a heliograph.
Almost immediately, a low sound came
from the distant city. It was a pulsing drone that came through the microphone
in a weird cadence; a low, beating drone, like some wild music. Louder and
stronger it grew, rising in pitch slowly, then it suddenly ended in a burst of
rising sound— a terrific whoop of alarm.
As if by magic, every ship in the air
above the city shot downward, dropping suddenly out of sight. In seconds, the
air was cleared.
"It seems they've spotted us,"
said Arcot in a voice he tried to make nonchalant.
A fleet of great, long ships was
suddenly rising from the neighborhood of the central building, the tallest of
the group. They went in a compact wedge formation and shot swiftly down along
the wall of the invisible cone until they were directly over the low building
nearest the Ancient Mariner. There was a sudden shimmer in the air. In
an instant, the ships were through and heading toward the Ancient Mariner
at a tremendous rate.
They shot forward with an acceleration
that was astonishing to the men in the spaceship. In perfect formation, they
darted toward the lone, shining ship from far-off Earth!
Chapter 14
the four
earthmen watched the fleet of alien ships
roar through the air toward them.
"Now how shall we signal
them?" asked Morey, also trying to be nonchalant, and failing as badly as
Arcot had.
"Don't try the light beam
method," cautioned Arcot. The last time they had tried to use a light beam
signal was when they first contacted the Nigrans. The Nigrans thought it was
some kind of destruction ray. That had started the terrible destructive war of
the Black Star.
"Let's just hang here peaceably and
see what they do," Arcot suggested.
Motionless, the Ancient Mariner
hung before the advancing attack of the great battle fleet. The shining hull
was a thing of beauty in the golden sunlight as it waited for the advancing
ships.
The alien ships slowed as they
approached and spread out in a great fan-shaped crescent.
Suddenly, the Ancient Mariner
gave a tremendous leap and hurtled toward them at a terrific speed, under an
acceleration so great that Arcot was nearly hurled into unconsciousness. He
would have been except for the terrific mass of the ship. To produce that
acceleration in so great a mass, a tremendous force was needed, a force that
even made the enemy fleet reel under its blow!
But, sudden as it was, Arcot had managed
to push the power into reverse, using the force of the molecular drive to
counteract the attraction the aliens had brought to bear. The whole mighty
fabric of the ship creaked as the titanic load came upon it. They were using
"a force of a million tons!
The mighty lux beams withstood the
stress, however, and the ship came to a halt, then was swiftly backing away
from the alien battle fleet.
"We can give them all they
want!" said Arcot grimly. He noticed that Wade and Fuller had been knocked
out by the sudden blow, but Morey, though slightly groggy, was still in
possession of his senses.
"Let's not," Morey
remonstrated. "We may be able to make friends with them, but not if we
kill them off."
"Right!" replied Arcot,
"but we're going to give them a little demonstration of power!"
The Ancient Mariner leaped
suddenly upward with a speed that defied the eyes of the men at the rays of the
enemy ships. Then, as they turned to follow the sudden motion of the ship—it
was not there!
The Ancient Mariner had
vanished!
Morey was startled for an instant as the
ship and his companions disappeared around him, then he realized what had
happened. Arcot had used the invisibility apparatus!
Arcot turned and raced swiftly far off
to one side, behind the strange ships, and hovered over the great cliff that
made the edge of the cleft that was the river bed. Then he snapped the ship
into full visibility.
Wade and Fuller had recovered by now,
and Arcot started barking out orders. "Wade—Fuller—take the molecular ray,
Wade, and tear down that cliff—throw it down into the valley. Fuller, turned
the heat beams on with all the power you can get and burn that refuse he tears
down into a heap of molten lava!
"I'm going to show them what we can
do! And, Wade-after Fuller gets it melted down, throw the molten lava high in
the air!"
From the ship, a long pencil of rays,
faintly violet from the air they ionized, reached out and touched the cliff. In
an instant, it had torn down a vast mass of the solid rock, which came raining
down into the valley with a roaring thunder and threw the dirt of the valley
into the air like splashed mud.
Then the violet ray died, and two rays
of blinding brilliance reached out. The rock was suddenly smoking, steaming.
Then it became red, dull at first, then brighter and brighter. Suddenly it
collapsed into a great pool of white-hot lava, flowing like water under the
influence of the beams from the ship.
Again the pale violet of the molecular
beams touched the rock—which was now bubbling lava. In an instant, the great
mass of flaming incandescent rock was flying like a glowing meteor, up into the
air. It shot up with terrific speed, broke up in mid-air, and fell back as a
rain of red-hot stone.
The bright rays died out, but the pale
fingers of the molecular beams traced across the level ground. As they touched
it, the solid soil spouted into the air like some vast fountain, to fall back
as frost-covered powder.
The rays that had swung a sun into
destruction were at work! What chance had man, or the works of man against
such? What mattered a tiny planet when those rays could hurl one mighty sun
into another, to blaze up in an awful conflagration' that would light up space
for a million light years around with a mighty glare of light!
As if by a giant plow, the valley was
torn and rent in great streaks by the pale violet rays of the molecular force.
Wade tore loose a giant builder and sent it rocketing into the heavens. It came
down with a terrific crash minutes later, to bury itself deep in the soil as it
splintered into fragments.
Suddenly the Ancient Mariner
was jerked violently again. Evidently undaunted by their display of power, the
aliens' rays had gripped the Earthmen's ship again and were drawing it with
terrific acceleration. But this time the ship was racing toward the city,
caught by the beam of one of the low-built, sturdy buildings that housed the
protective ray projectors.
Again Arcot threw on the mighty power
units that drove the ship, bracing them against the pull of the beam.
"Wade! Use the molecular ray! Stop
that beam!" Arcot ordered.
The ship was stationary, quivering under
the titanic forces that struggled for it. The enemy fleet raced toward them,
trying to come to the aid of the men in the tower.
The pale glow of the molecular beam
reached out its ghostly finger and touched the heavy-walled ray projector
building. There was a sudden flash of discharging energy, and the tower was hurled
high in the air, leaving only a gaping hole in the ground.
Instantly, with the collapse of the beam
that held it, the Ancient Mariner shot backward, away from the scene
of the battle. Arcot snapped off the drive and turned on the invisibility
apparatus. They hung motionless, silent and invisible in the air, awaiting
developments.
In close formation, one group of ships
blocked the opening in the wall of rays that the removal of one projector
building had caused. Three other ships went to investigate the wreck of the
building that had fallen a mile away.
The rest of the fleet circled the city,
darting around, searching frantically for the invisible enemy, fully aware of
the danger of collision. The unnerving tension of expecting it every second
made them erratic and nervous to the nth degree.
"They're sticking pretty close to
home," said Arcot. "They don't seen to be too anxious to play with
us."
"They don't, do they?" Morey
said, looking angry. "They might at least have been willing to see what we
wanted. I want to investigate some other cities. Come on!" He had
thoroughly enjoyed the rest at the little mountain lake, and he was
disappointed that they had been driven away. Had they wanted to, he knew, they
could easily have torn the entire city out by the roots!
"I think we ought to smash them
thoroughly," said Wade. "They're certainly inhospitable people!"
"And I, for one, would like to know
what that attraction ray was," said Fuller curiously.
"The ray is easily understood after
you take a look at the wreck it made of some of these instruments," Arcot
told him. "It was projected magnetism. I can see how it might be done if
you worked on it for a while. The ray simply attracted everything in its path
that was magnetic, which included our lux metal hull.
"Luckily, most of our apparatus is
shielded against magnetism. The few things that aren't can be repaired easily.
But I'll bet Wade finds his gear in the galley thrown around quite a bit."
"Where do we go from here,
then?" Wade asked. "Well, this world is bigger than Earth," said
Morey. "Even if they're afraid to go out of their cities to run farms,
they must have other cities. The thing that puzzles me, though, is how they do
it—I don't see how they can possibly raise enough food for a city in the area
they have available!"
'People couldn't possibly live in
hydrogen instead of oxygen'," Arcot quoted, grinning. "That's what
they told me when I made my little announcement at the meeting on the Black
Star situation. The only trouble was—they did. That suggestion of yours meets
the same fate, Morey!"
"All right, you win," agreed
Morey. "Now let's see if we can find the other nations on this world more
friendly."
Arcot looked at the sun. "We're now
well north of the equator. We'll go up where the air is thin, put on some
speed, and go into the south temperate zone. We'll see if we can't find some
people there who are more peaceably inclined."
Arcot cut off the invisibility tubes.
Instantly, all the enemy ships in the neighborhood turned and darted toward
them at top speed. But the shining Ancient Mariner darted into the
deep blue vault of the sky, and a moment later was lost to their view.
"They had a lot of courage,"
said Arcot, looking down at the city as it sank out of sight. "It doesn't
take one-quarter as much courage to fight a known enemy, no matter how deadly,
as it does to fight a known enemy force-something that can tear down mountains
and throw their forts into the air like toys."
"Oh, they had courage, all
right," Morey conceded, "but I wish they hadn't been' quite so
anxious to display it!"
They were high above the ground now,
accelerating with a force of one gravity. Arcot cut the acceleration down until
there was just enough to overcome the air resistance, which, at the height they
were flying, was very low. The sky was black above them, and the stars were
showing around the blazing sun. They were unfamiliar stars in unfamiliar
constellations—the stars of another universe.
In a very short time, the ship was
dropping rapidly downward again, the horizontal power off. The air resistance
slowed them rapidly. They drifted high over the south temperate zone. Below
them stretched the seemingly endless expanse of a great blue-green ocean.
"They don't lack for water, do
they?" Wade commented.
"We could pretty well figure on
large oceans," Arcot said. "The land is green, and there are plenty
of clouds."
Far ahead, a low mass of solid land
appeared above the blue of the horizon. It soon became obvious that it was not
a continent they were approaching, but a large island, stretching hundreds of
miles north and south.
Arcot dropped the ship lower; the
mountainous terrain had become so broken that it would be impossible to detect
a city from thirty miles up.
The green defiles of the great mountains
not only provided good camouflage, but kept any great number of ships from
attacking the sides, where the ray stations were. The cities were certainly
located with an eye for war! Arcot wondered what sort of conflict had lasted so
long that cities were designed for perpetual war. Had they never had peace?
"Look!" Fuller called.
"There's another city!" Below them, situated in a little natural bowl
in the mountains, was another of the cone cities.
Wade and Fuller manned the ray
projectors again; Arcot dropped the ship toward the city, one hand on the reverse
switch in case the inhabitants tried to use the magnetic beam
At last, they had come quite low. There
were no ships in the air, and no people in sight.
Suddenly, the outside microphone picked
up a low, humming sound. A long, cigar-shaped object was heading toward the
ship at high speed. It had been painted a dark, mottled green, and was nearly
invisible against background of foliage beneath the ship.
"Wade! Catch that on the ray!"
Arcot commanded sharply, moving the ship to one side at the same time.
Instantly, the guided missile turned and kept coming toward them.
Wade triggered the molecular beam, and
the missile was suddenly dashing toward the ground with terrific speed. There
was a terrific flash of flame and a shock wave of concussion. A great hole
gaped in the ground.
"They sure know their
chemistry," remarked Wade, looking down at the great hole the explosion
had torn in the ground. "That wasn't atomic, but on the other hand, it
wasn't dynamite or TNT, either! I'd like to know what they use!"
"Personally," said Arcot
angrily, "I think that was more or less a gentle hint to move on!" He
didn't like the way they were being received; he had wanted to meet these
people. Of course, the other planet might be inhabited, but if it wasn't—
"I wonder—" said Morey
thoughtfully. "Arcot, those people were obviously warned against our
attack—probably by that other city. Now, we've come nearly halfway around this
world; certainly we couldn't have gone much farther away and still be on the
planet. And we find this city in league with the other! Since this league goes
halfway around the world, and they expected us to do the same, isn't it fair to
assume, just on the basis of geographical location, that all this world is in
one league?"
"Hmmm—an interplanetary war,"
mused Arcot. "That would certainly prove that one of the other planets is
inhabited. The question is—which one?"
"The most probable one is the next
inner planet, Aphrodite," replied Morey.
Arcot fired the ship,, into the sky.
"If your conclusions are correct—and I think they are—I see no reason to
stay on this planet. Let's go see if their neighbors are less aggressive!"
With that, he shot the ship straight up,
rotating the axis until it was pointing straight away from the planet. He
increased the acceleration until, as they left the outer fringes of the
atmosphere, the ship was hitting a full four gravities.
"I'm going to shorten things up and
use the space control," Arcot said. "The gravitational field of the
sun will drain a lot of our energy out, but so what? Lead is cheap, and before
we're through, we'll have plenty or I'll know the reason why!"
Dr. Richard Arcot was angry—boiling all
the way through!
Chapter 15
there was the familiar tension in the air as the space field built
up and they were hurled suddenly forward; the star-like dot of the planet
suddenly expanded as they rushed forward at a speed far greater than that of
light. In a moment, it had grown to a disc; Arcot stopped the space control.
Again they were moving forward on molecular drive.
Very shortly, Arcot began to decelerate.
Within ten minutes, they were beginning to feel the outermost wisps of the
cloud-laden atmosphere. The heat of the blazing sun was intense; the surface of
the planet was, no doubt, a far warmer place than Earthmen would find
comfortable. They would have been far better suited to remain on the other
planet, but they very evidently were not wanted!
They dropped down through the
atmosphere, sinking for miles as the ship slowed to the retarding influence of
the air and the molecular power. Down they went, through mile after mile of
heavy cloud layer, unable to see the ground beneath them.
Then, suddenly, the thick,
all-enveloping mists that held them were gone.-They were flying smoothly along
under leaden skies—perpetual, dim, dark clouds. Despite the brightness of the
sun above them, the clouds made the light dim and gray. They reflected such an
enormous percentage of the light that struck them that the climate was not as
hot as they had feared.
The ground was dark under its somber
mantle of clouds; the hills, -the rivers that crawled across wide plains, and
the oddly stunted forests all looked as though they had been modeled in a great
mass of greenish-gray putty. It was a discouraging world.
"I'm glad we didn't wait for our
swim here," remarked Wade. "It sure looks like rain."
Arcot stopped the ship and held it
motionless at ten miles while Wade made his chemical analysis of the air. The
report looked favorable; plenty of oxygen and a trace of carbon dioxide mixed
with nitrogen.
"But the water vapor!" Wade
said. "The air is saturated with it! It won't be the heat, but the
humidity that'll bother us—to coin a phrase."
Arcot dropped the ship still farther, at
the same time moving forward toward a sea he had seen in the distance. Swiftly,
the ground sped beneath them. The low plain sloped toward the sea, a vast,
level surface of gray, leaden water.
"Oh, brother, what a pleasant
world," said Fuller sarcastically.
It was certainly not an inspiring scene.
The leaden skies, the heavy clouds, the dark land, and the gray-green of the
sea, always shaded in perpetual half-light, lest the burning sun heat them
beyond endurance. It was a gloomy world. They turned and followed the coast.
Still no sign of inhabitants was visible. Mile after mile passed beneath them
as the shining ship fallowed up the ragged shore. Small indentations and
baylets ran into a shallow, level sea. This world had no moon, so it was
tideless, except for the slight solar tides.
Finally, far ahead of them, and well
back from the coast, Arcot spotted a great mountain range.
"I'm going to head for that,"
he told the others. "If these people are at war with our very inimical
friends of the other planet, chances are they'll put their cities in the mountains,
too."
They had such cities. The Ancient
Mariner had penetrated less than a hundred miles along the twisted ranges
of the mountains before they saw, far ahead, a great, cone-shaped city. The
city was taller, larger than those of the other planet, and the cone ran up
farther from the actual city buildings, leaving the aircraft more room.
Arcot stopped and watched the city a
long time through the telescope. It seemed similar to the others in all
respects. The same type of needle-like ships floated in the air above it, and
the same type of cone ray projectors nestled in the base of the city's
invisible protection.
"We may as well take a
chance," said Arcot. He shot the ship forward until they were within a
mile of the city, in plain sight of the inhabitants.
Suddenly, without any warning signal,
apparently, all the air traffic went wild—then it was gone. Every ship seemed
to have ducked into some unseen place of refuge.
Within a few minutes, a fleet of
battleships was winging its way toward the invisible barrier. Then it was out,
and, in a great semi-cylinder a quarter of a mile high, and a quarter of a mile
in radius, they advanced toward the Ancient Mariner.
Arcot kept the ship motionless. He knew
that their only weapon was the magnetic ray; otherwise they would have won the
war long ago. And he knew he could cope with magnetism.
Slowly the ships advanced. At last, they
halted a quarter of a mile from the Earth ship. A single ship detached itself
from the mass and advanced to within a few hundred feet of the Ancient
Mariner.
Quickly, Arcot jumped to his feet.
"Morey, take the controls. Evidently they want to parley, not fight. I'm
going over there."
He ran the length of the corridor to his
room and put on his power suit. A moment later, he left the airlock and
launched himself into space, flying swiftly toward the ship. He had come alone,
but armed as he was, he was probably more than a match for anything they could
bring to bear on him.
He went directly toward the broad
expanse of glass that marked the control room of the alien ship and looked in
curiously.
The pilot was a man much like Arcot;
quite tall, and of tremendous girth, with a huge chest and great powerful arms.
His hands, like those of the Venerians, had two thumbs.
With equal curiosity, the man stared at
Arcot, floating in the air without apparent means of support.
Arcot hung there a moment, then motioned
that he wished to enter. The giant alien motioned him around to the side of the
ship. Halfway down the length of the ship, Arcot saw a port suddenly open. He
flew swiftly forward and entered.
The man who stood there was a giant as
-tall as Wade and even more magnificently muscled, with tremendous shoulders
and giant chest. His thighs, rounded under a close-fitting gray uniform, were
bulging with smooth muscle.
He was considerably larger than the man
in the pilot room, and whereas the other had been a pale yellow in color, this
man was burned to a more healthy shade of tan. His features were regular and
pleasing; his hair was black and straight; his high forehead denoted a high
degree of intelligence, and his clear black eyes, under heavy black eyebrows,
seemed curious, but friendly.
His nose was rather thin, but not sharp,
and his mouth was curved in a smile of welcome. His chin was firm and sharp,
distinct from his face and neck.
They looked each other over, and Arcot
smiled as their eyes met.
"Torlos," said the alien,
pointing to his great chest.
"Arcot," replied the Earthmen,
pointing to himself. Then he pointed to the stranger. "Torlos." He
knew he hadn't pronounced it exactly as the alien had, but it would suffice.
The stranger smiled in approval.
"Ahcut," he said, pointing to the Earthman.
Then he pointed to the comparatively thin
arms of the Earthman, and to his own. Then he pointed to Arcot's head and to
the mechanism he wore on his back, then to his own head, and went through the
motions of walking with great effort.
Again he pointed at Arcot's head,
nodding his own in approval.
Arcot understood immediately what was
meant. The alien had indicated that the Earthman was comparatively weak, but
that he had no need of muscle, for he made his head and his machines work for
him. And he had decided that the head was better!
Arcot looked at the man's eyes and
concentrated on the idea of friendship, projecting it with all his mental
power. The black eyes suddenly widened in surprise, which quickly turned to
pleasure as he tried to concentrate on one thought. It was difficult for Arcot to
interpret the thoughts of the alien; all his concepts were in a different form.
At last, he caught the idea of location—but it was location in the
interrogative! How was he to interpret that?
Then it hit him. Torlos was asking:
"Where are you from?"
Arcot pulled a pad of paper and a pencil
from his pocket and began to sketch rapidly. First, he drew the local galaxy,
with dots for stars, and swept his hand around him. He made one of the dots a
little heavier and pointed at the bright blur in the cloudy sky above them.
Then he drew a circle around that dot and put another dot on it, at the same
time indicating the planet beneath them.
Torlos showed that he understood.
Arcot continued. At the other end of the
paper, he drew another galaxy, and indicated Earth. Then he drew a dotted line
from Earth to the planet they were now on.
Torlos looked at him in incredulous
wonder. Again he indicated his respect for Arcot's brain.
Arcot smiled and indicated the city.
"Can we go there?" he projected into the other's mind.
Torlos turned and glanced toward the end
of the corridor. There was no one in sight, so he shouted an order in a deep,
pleasant voice. Instantly, another giant man dame striding down the corridor
with a lithe softness that indicated tremendous muscular power, excellently
controlled. He saluted by placing his left hand over the right side of his
chest. Arcot noted that for future reference.
Torlos spoke to the other alien for a
moment. The other left and returned a minute later and said something to Torlos.
Torlos turned to Arcot indicating that he should return to his ship and follow
them.
Arcot suddenly turned his eyes and
looked directly into the black eyes of the alien. "Torlos," he
projected, "will you come with us on our ship?"
"I am commander of this ship. I can
not go without the permission of my chief. I will ask my chief."
Again he turned and left Arcot. He was
back in a few minutes carrying a small handbag. "I can go. This keeps me
in communication with my ship."
Arcot adjusted his weight to zero and
floated lightly out the doorway. He rose about six feet above the landing, then
indicated to Torlos that he was to grasp Arcot's feet, one in each hand. Torlos
closed a grip of steel about each ankle and stepped off the platform.
At once, they dropped, for the power
suit had not been adjusted to the load. Arcot yelped in pain as Torlos, in his
surprise at not floating, involuntarily gripped tighter. Quickly, Arcot turned
on more power and gasped as he felt the weight mount swiftly. He had estimated
Tories' weight at two hundred seventy or so—and it was more like three hundred
and fifty! Soon, however, he had the weight adjusted, and they floated easily
up toward the Ancient Mariner.
They floated in through the door of the
ship, and, once inside, Torlos released his hold. Arcot was immediately slammed
to the floor with a weight of three hundred and fifty pounds!
A moment later, he was again back on the
floor, rubbing his back. He shook his head and frowned, then smiled and
pretended to limp.
"Don't let go so suddenly," he
admonished telepathically.
"I did not know. I am sorry,"
Torlos thought contritely.
"Who's your friend?" asked
Wade as he entered the corridor. "He certainly looks husky."
"He is," Arcot affirmed.
"And he must be weighted with lead! I thought he'd pull my legs off. Look
at those arms!"
"I don't want to get him mad at
me," Wade grinned. "He looks like he'd make a mean opponent. What's
his name?"
"Torlos," replied Arcot, just
as Fuller stepped in.
Torlos was looking curiously at a
crowbar that had been lying in a rack on the wall. He picked it up and flexed
it a bit, as a man might flex a rapier to test its material. Then he held it
far out in front of him and proceeded to tie a knot in the inch-thick metal
bar! Then, still frowning in puzzlement, he untied it, straightened it as best
he could, and put it back in the rack.
The Earthmen were staring in utter
astonishment to see the terrific strength the man displayed.
He smiled as he turned to them again.
"If he could do that at arm's
length," Wade said thoughtfully, "what could he do if he really
tried?"
"Why don't you try and see?"
Fuller asked sweetly.
"I can think of easier—but probably
no quicker—ways of committing suicide," Wade replied.
Arcot laughed and, looking at Torlos,
projected the general meaning of the last remarks. Torlos joined them in the
laugh.
"All my people are strong," he
thought. "I can not understand why you are not. That was a tool? We could
not use it so; it is too weak."
Wade and the others picked up the
thought, and Wade laughed. "I suppose they use old I-beams to tie up their
Christmas presents."
Arcot held a moment of silent
consultation with Torlos, then turned to the others. "We are supposed to
follow these men to their city to have some kind of an audience with their
ruler, according to Torlos. Let's get started; the rest of the fleet is
waiting."
Arcot led Torlos through the main engine
room, and was going into the main coil room when Torlos stopped him.
"Is this all your drive
apparatus?" he thought.
"Yes, it is," Arcot projected.
"It is smaller than the power
equipment of a small private machine!" His thoughts radiated surprise.
"How could you make so great a distance?"
"Power," said Arcot.
"Look!" He drew his molecular ray pistol. "This alone is
powerful enough to destroy all your battle fleet without any danger on our
part. And, despite your strength, you are helpless against me!"
Arcot touched a switch on his belt and
vanished.
In amazement, Torlos reached out a hand
to the spot where Arcot had stood. There was nothing there. Suddenly, he
turned, touching the back of his head. Something had tugged at his hair!
He looked all around him and moved his
arms around— to no avail. There was nothing there.
Then, in the blink of an eye, Arcot was
floating in the air before him. "What avails strength against air,
Torlos?" he asked, smiling.
"For safety's sake," Torlos
thought, "I want to be your friend!" He grinned widely.
Arcot led the way on into the control room,
where Morey had already started to follow the great fleet toward the city. "What are we going to do at the
city?" Arcot asked Torlos telepathically.
"This is the capital of the world,
Sator, and here is the commander-of-all-military-and-civil-forces. It is he you
will see. He has been summoned," Torlos replied carefully.
"We visited the third world of this
system first," Arcot told the alien, "and they repulsed us. We tried
to be friendly, but they attacked us at once. In order to keep from being damaged,
we had to destroy one of their city-protecting ray buildings." This 'last
'thought was hard to transmit; Arcot had pictured mentally a scene in which the
ray building was ripped out of the ground and hurled into the air.
In sudden anxiety and concern, Torlos
stared into Arcot's eyes. And in that look, Arcot read what even telepathy had
hidden heretofore.
"Did you destroy the city?"
asked Torlos anxiously. But it was not the question of a man hoping for the
destruction of his enemies' cities; Arcot got the mental picture of the city,
but with it; he picked up the idea of "home"! Of course, the ideas of
"city" and "home" might be synonymous with these people;
they never seemed to leave their cities. But why this feeling of worry?
"No, we didn't want to hurt
them," Arcot thought. "We destroyed the ray building only in self
defense."
"I understand." Despite
obvious mental efforts, Torlos positively radiated a feeling of relief!
"Are you at war with that
world?" Arcot asked coolly.
"The two worlds have been at war
for many generations," Torlos said, then quickly changed the subject.
"You will soon meet the leader of all the forces of Sator. He is
all-powerful here. His word must be absolutely obeyed. It would be wise if you
did not unnecessarily offend him. I see from what your mind tells me that you
have great power, but there are many ships on Sator, more than Nansal can
boast.
"Our commander, Horlan, is a
military commander, but since every man is necessarily a soldier, he is a true
ruler."
"I understand," Arcot thought.
He turned to Morey and spoke in English, which Torlos could not understand.
"Morey, we're going to see the top man here. He rules the army, which runs
everything. You and I will go, and leave Wade and Fuller behind as a rear
guard. It may not be dangerous, but after being chased off one world, we ought
to be as careful as possible.
"We'll go fully armed, and we'll
stay in radio contact at all times. Watch yourselves; we don't want them even
to touch this ship until we know what kind of people they are."
They had followed the Satorian ships
toward the city. The giant magnetic ray barrier opened for them, and the Ancient
Mariner followed. They were inside the alien city.
Chapter 16
below the Ancient Mariner, the great buildings of the
alien city jutted up in the gray light of this gray world; their massiveness
seemed only to accentuate the depressing light.
On the broad roofs, they saw hundreds of
people coming out to watch them as they moved across the city. According to
Torlos, they were the first friendly strangers they had ever seen. They had
explored all the planets of this system without finding friendly life.
The buildings sloped up toward the
center of the city, and the mass of the great central building loomed before
them.
The fleet that was leading the Earth
ship settled down to a wide courtyard that surrounded the building. Arcot
dropped the Ancient Mariner down beside them. The men from Tories'
ship formed into two squads as they came out of the airlocks and marched over
to the great shining ship of Earth. They formed two neat rows, one on each side
of the airlock.
"Come on, Morey," said Arcot.
"We're wanted. Wade, keep the radio going at full amplification; the
building may cut out some of the power. I'll try to keep you posted on what's
going on, but we'll probably be busy answering questions telepathically."
Arcot and Morey followed Torlos out into
the dim light of the gray sky, walking across the courtyard between the ranks
of the soldiers from Torlos' ship.
Before them was a heavy gate of solid
bronze which swung on massive bronze hinges. The building seemed to be made of
a dense, gray stone, much like granite, which was depressing in its perfectly
unrelieved front. There were no bright spots of color as there were on all
Earthly and Venerian structures. Even the lines were grimly utilitarian; there
seemed to be no decoration.
Through the great bronze door they
walked, and across a small vestibule. Then they were in a mighty concourse, a
giant hallway that went completely through the structure. All around them great
granite pillars rose to support the mighty building above. Square cut, they
lent but little grace to the huge room, but the floor and walls were made of a
hard, light green stone, almost the same color as foliage.
On one wall there was a giant tablet, a
great plaque fifteen feet high, made of a deep violet stone, and inlaid with a
series of characters in the language of this world. Like English letters, they
seemed to read horizontally, but whether they read from left to right or right
to left there was no way of knowing. The letters themselves were made of some
red metal which Arcot and Morey didn't recognize.
Arcot turned to Torlos and projected a
thought: "What is that tablet?"
"Ever since the beginning of the
war with the other planet, Nansal, the names of our mighty leaders have been
inscribed on that plaque in the rarest metal."
The term "rarest metal" was
definite to Torlos, and Arcot decided to question him further on the meaning of
it when time permitted.
They crossed the great hall and came to
what was evidently' an elevator. The door slid open, and the two Earth-men
followed Torlos and his lieutenant into the cubicle. Torlos pushed a small
button. The door slid shut, and a moment later, Arcot and Morey staggered under
the sudden terrific load as the car shot upward under an acceleration of. at
least three gravities!
It continued just long enough for the
Earthmen to get used to it, then it snapped off, and they went flying up toward
the ceiling as it continued upward under its own momentum. It slowed under the
influence of the planet's gravitation and came to a stop exactly opposite the
doorway of a higher floor.
"Wow! Some elevator!"
exclaimed Morey as he' stepped out, flexing his knees as he tried to readjust
himself. "That's what I call a violent way of getting upstairs! It wasn't
designed by a lazy man or a cripple! I prefer to walk, thanks! What I want to
know is how the old people get upstairs. Or do they die young from using their
elevators?"
"No," mused Arcot.
"That's the funny thing. They don't seem to be bothered by the
acceleration. They actually jumped a little off the floor when we started, and
didn't seem to experience much difficulty when we stopped." He looked thoughtful
for a moment. "You know, when Torlos was bending that crowbar back there
in the ship, I picked up a curious thought—I wonder if—" He turned to the
giant alien. "Torlos, you once gave me the thought-idea bone metal'; what
is that?"
Torlos looked at him in surprise and
then pointed mutely to a heavy belt he wore—made of closely woven links of iron
wire!
"I was right, Morey!" Arcot
exclaimed. "These men have iron bones! No wonder he could bend
that crowbar! It would be as easy as it would for you or me to snap a human arm
bone!"
"But, wait a minute!" Morey
objected. "How could iron grow?"
"How can stone grow?"
countered. Arcot. "That's what your bones are, essentially—calcium
phosphate rock! It's just a matter of different body chemistry. Their body
fluids are probably alkaline, and iron won't rust in an alkaline
solution." Arcot was talking rapidly as they followed the aliens down the
long corridor.
"The thing that confirms my theory
is that elevator. It's merely an iron cage in a magnetic beam, and it's pulled
up with a terrific aspiration. With iron bones, these men would be similarly
influenced, and they wouldn't notice the acceleration so much."
Morey grinned. "I'll be willing to
bet they don't use cells in their prisons, here! Just magnetize the floor, and
the poor guy could never get away!"
Arcot nodded. "Of course, the bones
must be pure iron; their bones evidently don't retain any of the magnetism when
they leave the field."
"We seem to be here," Morey
interrupted. "Let's continue the discussion later."
Their party had stopped just outside a
large, elaborately carved door, the first sign of ornamentation the Earthmen
had seen. There were four guards armed with pistols, which, they discovered
later, were powered by compressed air under terrific pressure. They hurled a
small metal slug through a rifled barrel, and were effective over a distance of
about a mile, although they could only fire four times without reloading.
Torlos spoke briefly with the guard, who
saluted and opened the door. The two Earthmen followed Torlos into a large
room.
Before them was a large, crescent-shaped
table, around which were seated several men. At the center of the crescent
curve sat a man in a gray uniform, but he was so bedecked with insignia,
medals, ribbons, and decorations that his uniform was scarcely visible.
The entire assemblage, including the
leader, rose as the Earthmen entered. Arcot and Morey, taking the hint, snapped
to attention and delivered a precise military salute.
"We greet you in the name of our
planet," said Arcot aloud. "I know you don't understand a word I'm
saying, but I hope it sounds impressive enough. We salute you, O High Mucky muck!"
Morey, successfully keeping a straight
face, raised his hand and said sonorously: "That goes double for me,
bub."
In his own language, the leader replied,
putting his hands to his hips with a definite motion, and shaking his head from
side to side at the same time.
Arcot watched the man closely while he
spoke. He was taller than Torlos, but less heavily built, as were all the
others here. It seemed that Torlos was unusually powerful, even for this world.
When the leader had finished, Arcot
smiled and turned to project this thoughts at Torlos.
"Tell your leader that we come from
a planet far away across the vast depths of space. We come in peace, and we
will leave in peace, but we would like to ask some favors of him, which we will
repay by giving him the secret of our weapons. With them, he can easily conquer
Nansal.
"All we want is some wire made from
the element lead and some information from your astronomers."
Torlos turned and spoke to his leader in
a deep, powerful voice.
Meanwhile, Morey was trying to get in
communication with the ship. The walls, however, seemed to be made of metal,
and he couldn't get through to Wade.
"We're cut off from the ship,"
he said quietly to Arcot. "I was afraid of that, but I think it'll be all
right. Our proposition is too good for them to turn down."
Torlos turned back to Arcot when the
leader had finished speaking. "The Commanding One asks that you prove the
possibilities of your weapons. His scientists tell him that it is impossible to
make the trip that you claim to have made."
"What your scientists say is true,
to an extent," Arcot thought. "They have learned that no body can go
faster than the speed of light—is that not so?"
"Yes. Such, they say, is the fact.
To have made this trip, you must, of necessity, be not less than twenty million
years old!"
"Tell them that there are some
things they do not yet know about space. The velocity of light is a thing that
is fixed by the nature of space, right?"
Torlos consulted with the scientists
again, then turned back to Arcot. "They agree that they do not know all
the secrets of the Universe, but they agree that the speed of light is fixed by
the nature of space."
"How fast does sound travel?"
Arcot asked.
"They ask in what medium do you
mean?"
"How fast does light travel? In
air? In glass? The speed of light is as variable as that of sound. If I can
alter the nature of space, so as to make the velocity of light greater, can I
not then go faster than in normal space?"
"They say that this is true,"
Tories said, after more conversation with the men at the table, "but they
say that space is unalterable, since it is emptiness."
"Ask them if they know of the
curvature of space." Arcot was becoming worried for fear his explanation
would be unintelligible; unless they knew his terms, he could not explain, and
it would take a long time to teach them.
"They say," Torlos thought,
"that I have misunderstood you. They say space could not possibly be
curved, for space is emptiness, and how could empty nothingness be
curved."
Arcot turned to Morey and shrugged his
shoulders. "I give up, Morey; it's a bad case. If they insist that space
is nothing, and can't be curved, I can't go any further."
"If they don't know of the
curvature of space," said Morey, "ask them how they learned that the
velocity of light is the limiting velocity of a moving body."
Torlos translated and the scientists
gave their reply. "They say that you do not know more of space than they,
for they know that the speed of light is ultimate. They have tested this with
spaceships at high speeds and with experiments with the smallest particles of electricity."
The scientists were looking at Arcot now
in protest; they felt he was trying to foist something off on them.
Arcot, too, was becoming exasperated.
"Well, if they insist that we couldn't have come from another star, where
do they think I come from? They have explored this system and found no such
people as we, so I must have come from another star. How? If they won't accept
my explanations, let them think up a theory of their own to explain the
facts!" He paused for Torlos to translate, then went on. "They say I
don't know any more than they do. Tell them to watch this."
He drew his molecular ray pistol and
lifted a heavy metal chair into the air. Then Morey drew his heat beam and
turned it on the chair. In a few seconds, it was glowing white hot, and then it
collapsed into a fiery ball of liquid metal. Morey shut off the heat beam, and
Arcot held the ball in the air while it cooled rapidly under the influence of
the molecular ray. Then he lowered it to the floor.
It was obvious that the scientists were
impressed, and the Emperor was talking eagerly with the men around him. They
talked for several minutes, saying nothing to the Earthmen. Torlos stood
quietly, waiting for a message to relay.
The Emperor called out, and some of the
guards moved inside the door.
Torlos turned to Arcot. "Show no
emotion!" came his telepathic warning. "I have been listening to them
as they spoke. The Commanding One wants your weapons. Regardless of what his
scientists tell him about the possibility of your trip, he knows those weapons
work, and he wants them.
"You see, I am not a Satorian at
all. I'm from Nansal, sent here many years ago as a spy. I have served in their
fleets for many years, and have gained their trust.
"I am telling you the truth, as you
will soon see.
"These people are going to follow
their usual line of action and take the most direct way toward their end. They
are going to attack you, believing that you, despite your weapons, will go down
before superior numbers.
"And you'd better move fast; he's
calling the guards already!"
Arcot turned to Morey, his face calm,
his heart beating like a vibrohammer. "Keep your face straight, Morey.
Don't look surprised. They're planning to jump us. We'll rip out the right wall
and—"
He stopped. It was too late! The order
had teen given, and the guards were leaping toward them. Arcot grabbed at his
ray pistol, but one of the guards jumped him before he had a chance to draw it,
Torlos seized the guard by one leg and an arm and, tensing his huge muscles,!
hurled him thirty feet against the Commanding One with such force that both
were killed instantly! He turned and grabbed another before his first victim
had landed and hurled him toward the advancing guards. Arcot thought fleetingly
that here was proof of Torlos' story of being from Nansal; the greater gravity
of the third planet made him a great deal stronger than the Satorians!
One of the guards was trying to reach
for Arcot. Acting instinctively, the Earthman lashed out with a hard jab to the
point of the Satorians jaw. The iron bones transmitted the shock beautifully to
the delicate brain; the man's head jerked back, and he collapsed to the floor.
Arcot's hand felt as though he'd hit it with a hammer, but he was far too busy
to pay any attention to the pain.
Morey, too, had realized the futility of
trying to overcome the guards by wrestling. The only thing to do was dodge and
punch. The guards were trying to take the Earthmen alive, but, because of their
greater weight, they couldn't move quite as fast as Arcot and Morey.
Torlos was still in action. He had seen
the success of the Earthmen who, weak as they were, had been able to knock a
man out with a blow to the jaw. Driving his own fists like pistons, he imitated
their blows with deadly results; every man he struck went down forever.
The dead were piling around him, but
through the open door he could see reinforcements arriving. Somehow, he had to
save these Earthmen; if Sator got their secrets, Nansal would be lost!
He reached down and grabbed one of the
fallen men and hurled him across the room, smashing back the men who struggled
to attack. Then he picked up another and followed through with a second
projectile. Then a third. With the speed and tirelessness of some giant engine
of war, he slammed his macabre ammunition against the oncoming reinforcements
with telling results.
At last Arcot was free for a moment, and
that was all he needed. He jerked his molecular ray pistol from its holster and
beamed it mercilessly toward the door, hurling the attackers violently
backwards. They died instantly, their chilled corpses driving back against
their comrades with killing force.
In a moment, every man in the room was
dead except for the two Earthmen and the giant Torlos.
Outside the room, they could hear
shouted orders as more of the Satorian guards were rallied.
"They'll try to kill us now!"
Arcot said. "Come on, we've got to get out of here!"
"Sure," said Morey, "but
which way?"
Chapter 17
"Morey, pull down the wall over that door to block their
passage," Arcot ordered. "I'll get the other wall."
Arcot pointed his pistol and triggered
it. The outer wall flew outward in an explosion of flying masonry. He switched
on his radio and called the Ancient Mariner.
"Wade! We were cut off because of
the metal in the walls! We've been double crossed—they tried to jump us. Torlos
warned us in time. We've torn out the wall; just hang outside with the airlock
open and wait for us. Don't use the rays, because we'll be invisible, and you
might hit us."
Suddenly the room rocked under an
explosion, and the debris Morey's ray had torn down over the door was blasted
away. A score of men leaped through the gap before the dust had settled. Morey
beamed them down mercilessly before they could fire their weapons.
"In the air, quick!" Arcot
yelled. He turned on his power suit and rose into the air, signaling Torlos to
grab his ankles as he had done before. Morey slammed another parting shot
toward the doorway as he lifted himself toward the ceiling. Then both Earthmen snapped
on their invisibility units. Torlos, because of his direct contact with Arcot,
also vanished from sight.
More of the courageous, but foolhardy
Satorians leaped through the opening and stared in bewilderment as they saw no
one moving. Arcot, Morey, and Torlos were hanging invisible in the air above
them.
Just then, the shining bulk of the Ancient
Mariner drifted into view. They drew back behind the wall and sought
shelter. One of them began to fire his compressed air gun at it with absolutely
no effect; the heavy lux walls might as well have been hit by a mosquito.
As the airlock swung open, Arcot and
Morey headed out through the breach in the wall. A moment later, they were
inside the ship. The heavy door hissed closed behind them as they settled to the
floor.
"I'll take the controls,"
Arcot said. "Morey, head for the rear; you take the moleculars and take
Torlos with you to handle the heat beam." He turned and ran toward the
control room, where Wade and Fuller were waiting. "Wade, take the forward
molecular beams; Fuller, you handle the heat projector."
Arcot strapped himself into the control
chair.
Suddenly, there was a terrific
explosion, and the titanic mass of the ship was rocked by the detonation of a
bomb one of the men in the building had fired at the ship.
Torlos had evidently understood the
operation of the heat beam projector quickly; the stabbing beam reached out,
and the great tower, from floor to roof, suddenly leaned over and slumped as
the entire side of the building was converted into a mass of glowing stone and
molten steel. Then it crashed heavily to the ground a half mile below.
But already there were forty of the
great battleships rising to meet them.
"I think we'd better get
moving," Arcot said. "We can't let a magnetic ray touch us now; it
would kill Torlos. I'm going to cut in the invisibility units, so don't use the
heat beams whatever you do!"
Arcot snapped the ship into invisibility
and darted to one side. The enemy ships suddenly halted in their wild rush and
looked around in amazement for their opponent.
Arcot was heading for the magnetic force
field which surrounded the city when Torlos made a mistake. He 'turned the
powerful heat beam downwards and picked off an enemy battleship. It fell, a
blazing wreck, but the ray touched a building behind it, and the ionized air
established a conducting path between the ship and the planet.
The apparatus was not designed to make a
planet invisible, but it made a noble effort. As a result one of the tubes
blew, and the Ancient Mariner was visible again. Arcot had no time to
replace the tube; the Satorian fleet kept him too busy.
Arcot drove the ship, shooting, twisting
upward; Wade and Morey kept firing the molecular beams with precision. The pale
rays reached out to touch the battleship, and wherever they touched, the ships
went down in wreckage, falling to the city below. In spite of the odds against
it, the Ancient Mariner was giving a good account of itself.
And always, Arcot was working the ship
toward the magnetic wall and the base of the city.
Suddenly, giant pneumatic guns from
below joined in the battle, hurling huge explosive shells toward the
Earth-ship. They managed to hit the Ancient Mariner twice, and each
time the ship was staggered by the force of the blast, but the foot-thick armor
of lux metal ignored the explosions.
The magnetic rays touched them a few
times, and each time Torlos was thrown violently to the floor, but the ship was
in the path of the beams for so short a time that he was not badly injured. He
more than made up for his injuries with the ray he used, and Morey was no mean
gunner, either, judging from the work he was doing.
Three ships attempted to commit suicide
in their efforts to destroy the Earthmen. They were only semi-successful; they
managed to commit suicide. In trying to crash into the ship, they were simply
caught by Morey's or Wade's molecular beam and thrown away. Morey actually
developed a use for them. He caught them in the beam and used them as bullets
to smash the other ships, throwing them about on the molecular ray until they
were too cold to move.
Arcot finally managed to reach the
magnetic wall. "Wade!" he called. "Get that projector
building!" A molecular beam reached down, and the black metal dome sailed
high into the sky, breaking the solidity of the magnetic wall. An instant
later, the Ancient Mariner shot through the gap. In a few moments,
they would be far away from the city.
Torlos seemed to realize this. Moving
quickly, he pushed Morey away from the molecular beam projector, taking the
controls away from him.
He did not realize the power of that
ray; he did not know that these projectors could move whole suns out of their
orbits. He only knew that they were destructive. They were several miles from
the city when he turned the projector on it, after twisting the power control
up.
To his amazement, he saw the entire city
suddenly leap into the air and flash out into space, a howling meteor that
vanished into the cloudbank overhead. Behind it was a deep hole in the planet's
surface, a might chasm lined with dark granite.
Torlos stared at it in amazement and
horror.
Arcot turned back slowly, and they
sailed over the spot where the city had been. They saw a dozen or so
battleships racing away from them to spread the news of the disaster; they were
the few which had been fortunate enough to be outside the city when the beam
struck.
Arcot maneuvered the ship directly over
the mighty pit and sank slowly down, using the great searchlights to illuminate
the dark chasm. Far, far down, he could see the solid rock of the bottom. The
thing was miles deep.
Then Arcot lifted the ship and headed up
through the cloud layer and into the bright light of the great yellow sun,
above the sea of gray misty clouds.
Arcot signaled Morey, who had come into
the control room, to take over the controls of the ship. "Head out into
space, Morey. I want to find out why Torlos pulled that last stunt. Wade, will
you put a new tube in the invisibility unit?"
"Sure," Wade replied. "By
the way, what happened back there? We were surprised as the very devil to hear
you yelling for help; everything seemed peaceful up to then."
Arcot flexed his bruised hands and
grinned ruefully. "Plenty happened." He went on to explain to Wade
and Fuller what had happened in their meeting with the Satorian Commander.
"Nice bunch of people to deal
with," Wade said caustically. "They tried to get everything and lost
it all. We would have given them plenty if they'd been decent about it. But
what sort of war is this that the people of these two planets are carrying on,
anyway?"
"That's the question I intend to
settle," replied Arcot. "We haven't had an opportunity to talk to
Torlos yet. He had just admitted to me that he was a spy for Nansal when the
fun began, and we've been too busy to ask questions ever since. Come on, let's
go into the library."
Arcot indicated to Torlos that he was to
go with him. Wade and Fuller followed.
When they had all seated themselves,
Arcot began the telepathic questioning. "Torlos, why did you force Morey
to leave the ray and then destroy the city? You certainly had no reason to kill
all the non-combatant women and children in that city, did you? And why, after
I told you absolutely not to use the heat beam while we were invisible, did you
use the rays on that battleship? You made our invisibility break down and
destroyed a tube. Why did you do this?"
"I am sorry, man of Earth,"
replied Torlos. "I can only say that I did not fully understand the effect
the rays would have. I did not know how long we would remain invisible; the
thing has been accomplished in our laboratories, but only for fractions of a
second, and I feared we might become visible soon. That was one of their latest
battleships, equipped with a new secret, and very deadly weapon. I do not know
exactly what the weapon is, but I knew that ship could be deadly against us,
and I wanted to make sure we were not attacked by it. That is why I used the
beam while your ship was invisible.
"And I did not intend to destroy
the city. I was only trying to tear up the factory that builds these
battleships; I only wanted to destroy their machines. I had no conception of
the power of that ray. I was as horrified to see the city disappear as you
were; I only wanted to protect my people." Torlos smiled bitterly. "I
have lived among these treacherous people for many years, and I cannot say that
I had no provocation to destroy their city and everyone in it. But I had no
intention of doing it, Earthman."
Arcot knew he was sincere. There could
be no deception when communicating telepathically. He wished he had used it
when communicating with the Commanding One of Sator; the trouble would have
been stopped quickly!
"You still do not have any
conception of the magnitude of the power of that beam, Torlos," Arcot told
him. "With the rays of this ship, we tore a sun from its orbit and threw
it into another. What you did to that city, we could do to the whole planet. Do
not tamper with forces you do not understand, Torlos.
"There are forces on this ship that
would make the energies of your greatest battleship seem weak and futile. We
can race through space a billion times faster than the speed of light; we can
tear apart and destroy the atoms of matter; we can rip apart the greatest of
planets; we can turn the hurtling stars and send them where we want them; we
can curve space as we please; we can put out the fires of a sun, if we wish.
"Torlos, respect the powers of this
ship, and do not release its energies unknowingly; they are too great."
Torlos looked around him in awe. He had
seen the engines—small, apparently futile things, compared with the solid might
of the giant engines in his ship—but he had seen explosive charges that he knew
would split any ship open from end to end bounce harmlessly from the smooth walls
of this ship. He had seen it destroy the fleet of magnetic ships that had
formed a supposedly impregnable guard around the mightiest city of Sator.
Then he himself had touched a button,
and the giant city had shot off into space, leaving behind it only a screaming
tornado and a vast chasm in the crust of the Blasted planet.
He could not appreciate the full
significance of the velocities Arcot had told him about—he only knew that he
had made a bad mistake in underrating the powers of this ship! "I will not
touch these things again without your permission, Earthman," Torlos
promised earnestly.
The Ancient Mariner drove on
through space, rapidly eating up the millions of miles that separated Nansal
from Sator. Arcot sat in the control room with Morey discussing their
passenger.
"You know," Arcot mused,
"I've been thinking about that man's strength; an iron skeleton doesn't
explain it all. He has to have muscles to move that skeleton around."
"He's got muscles, all right,"
Morey grinned. "But I see what you mean; muscles that big should tire
easily, and his don't seem to. He seems tireless; I watched him throw those men
one after another like bullets from a machine gun. He threw the last one as
violently as the first—and those men weighed over three hundred pounds!
Apparently his muscles felt no fatigue!"
"There's another thing,"
pointed out Arcot. "The way he was breathing and the way he seemed to keep
so cool. When I got through there, I was dripping with sweat; that hot, moist
air was almost too much for me. Our friend? Cool as ever, if not more so.
"And after the fight, he wasn't
even breathing heavily!"
"No," agreed Morey. "But
did you notice him during the fight? He was breathing heavily, deeply,
and swiftly— not the shallow, panting breath of a runner, but deep and full,
yet faster than I can breathe. I could hear him breathing in spite of all the noise
of the battle."
"I noticed it," Ascot said.
"He started breathing before the fight started. A human being can
fight very swiftly, and with tremendous vigor, for ten seconds, putting forth
his best effort, and only breathe once or twice. For another two minutes, he
breathes more heavily than usual. But after that, he can't just slow down back
to normal. He has used up the surplus oxygen in his system, and that has to be
replaced; he has run into 'oxygen debt'. He has to keep on breathing hard to
get back the oxygen surplus his body requires.
"But not Torlos! No fatigue for
him! Why? Because he doesn't use the oxygen of the air to do work, and
therefore his body is not a chemical engine!"
Morey nodded slowly. "I see what
you're driving at. His body uses the heat energy of the air! His muscles turn
heat energy into motion the same way our molecular beams do!"
"Exactly—he lives on heat!"
Arcot said. "I've noticed that he seems almost cold-blooded; his body is
at the temperature of the room at all times. In a sense, he is reptilian, but
he's vastly more efficient and greatly different than any reptile Earth ever
knew. He eats food, all right, but he only needs it to replace his body cells
and to fuel his brain."
"Oh, brother," said
Morey softly. "No wonder he can do the things he did! Why, he could have
kept up that fight for hours without getting tired! Fatigue is as unknown to
him as cold weather. He'd only need sleep to replace worn parts. His world is
warm and upright on its axis, so there are no seasons. He couldn't survive in
the Arctic, but he's obviously the ideal form of life for the tropics."
As the two men found out later, Morey
was wrong on that last point. The men of Tories' race had a small organ, a mass
of cells in the lower abdomen which could absorb food from the bloodstream and
oxidize it, yielding heat, whenever the temperature of the blood dropped below
a certain point. Then they could live very comfortably in the Arctic zones;
they carried their own heaters. Their vast strength was limited then, however,
and they were forced to eat more and were more subject to fatigue.
Wade and Fuller had been trying to speak
with Torlos telepathically, and had evidently run into difficulty, for Fuller
called into the control room: "Hey, Arcot, come here a minute! I thought
telepathy was a universal language, but this guy doesn't get our ideas at all!
And we can't make out some of his. Just now, he seemed to be thinking of
'nourishment' or 'food', and I found out he was thinking of 'heat'!"
"I'll be right down," Arcot
told him, heading for the library.
As he entered, Torlos smiled at him;
Arcot picked up his thought easily: "Your friends do not seem to
understand my thoughts."
"We are not made as you are,"
Arcot explained, "and our thought forms are different. To you, 'heat' and
'food' are practically the same thing, but we do not think of them as
such."
He continued, explaining carefully to
Torlos the differences between their bodies and their methods of using energy.
"Stone bones!" Torlos thought
in amazement. "And chemical engines for muscles! No wonder you seem so
weak. And yet, with your brains, I would hate to have to fight a war with your
people!"
"Which brings me to another
point," Arcot continued. "We would like to know how the war between
the people of Sator and the people of Nansal began. Has it been going on very
long?"
Torlos nodded. "I will tell you the
story. It is a history that began many centuries ago; a history of persecution
and rebellion. And yet, for all that, I think it an interesting history.
"Hundreds of years ago, on
Nansal…"
Chapter 18
hundreds of years
ago, on Nansal, there had lived a wise
and brilliant teacher named Noras. He had developed an ideal, a philosophy of
life, a code of ethics. He had taught the principles of nobility without
arrogance, pride without Stubbornness, and humility without servility.
About him had gathered a group of men
who began to develop and spread his ideals. As the new philosophy spread across
the planet, more and more Nansalians adopted it and began to raise their
children according to its tenets.
But no philosophy, however workable,
however noble, can hope to convert everyone. There always remains a hard core
of men who feel that "the old way is the best way". In this case, it
was the men whose lives had been based on cunning, deceit, and treachery.
One of these men, a brilliant, but
warped genius, named Sator, had built the first spaceship, and he and his men
had fled Nansal to set up their own government and free themselves from the
persecution they believed they suffered at the hands of the believers of Norus.
They fled to the second planet, where
the ship crashed and the builder, Sator, was killed. For hundreds of years,
nothing was heard of the emigrants, and the people of Nansal believed them
dead. Nansal was at peace.
But the Satorians managed to live on the
alien world, and they built a civilization there, a civilization based on an
entirely different system. It was a system of cunning. To them, cunning was
right. The man who could plot most cunningly, gain his ends by deceiving his
friends best, was the man who most deserved to live. There were a few
restrictions; they had loyalty, for one thing—loyalty to their country and
their world.
In time, the Satorians rediscovered the
space drive, but by this time, living on the new planet had changed them
physically. They were somewhat smaller than the Nansalians, and lighter in
color, for their world was always sunless. The warm rays of the sun had tanned
the skins of the Nansalians to a darker color.
When the Satorians first came to Nansal,
it was presumably in peace. After so many hundreds of years without war, the
Nansalians accepted them, and trade treaties were signed. For years, the
Satorians traded peacefully.
In the meantime, Satorian spies were
working to find the strengths and weaknesses of Nansal, searching to discover
their secret weapons and processes, if any. And they rigorously guarded their
own secrets. They refused to disclose the secrets of the magnetic beam and the
magnetic space drive.
Finally, there were a few of the more
suspicious Nansalians who realized the danger in such a situation. There were
three men, students in one of the great scientific schools of Nansal, who
realized that the situation should be studied. There was no law prohibiting the
men of Nansal from going to Sator, but it seemed that Nature had raised a more
impenetrable barrier.
All Nansalians who went to Sator died of
a mysterious disease. A method was found whereby a man's body could be
sterilized, bacteriologically speaking, so he could not spread the disease, and
this was used on all Satorians entering Nansal. But you can't sterilize a whole
planet. Nansalians could not go to Sator.
But these three men had a different
idea. They carefully studied the speech and the mannerisms and customs of the
Satorians. They learned to imitate the slang and idioms. They went even
further; they picked three Satorian spaceship navigators and studied them
minutely every time they got a chance, in order to learn their habits and their
speech patterns. The three Satorians were exceptionally large men, almost
perfect double| of the three Nansalians—and, one by one, the Nansalians
replaced them.
They had bleached their faces, and
surgeons, working from photographs, changed their features so that the three
Nansalians were exact doubles of the three astrogators. Then they acted. On
three trips, one of the men that went back as navigator was a Nansalian.
It was six years before they returned to
Nansal, but when they finally did, they had learned two things.
In the first place, the 'disease' which
had killed Nansalians who had come in contact with Satorians on Nansal was
nothing but a poison which acted on contact with the skin. The Nansalians who
had gone to Sator had simply been murdered. There was no disease; it had simply
been a Satorian plot to keep Nansalians from going to Sator.
The second thing they had learned was
the secret of the Satorian magnetic space drive.
It was common knowledge on Sator that
their commander would soon lead them across space to conquer Nansal and settle
on a world of clear air and cloudless skies, where they could see the stars of
space at night. They were waiting only until they could build up a larger fleet
and learned all they could from the Nansalians,
They attacked three years after the
three Nansalian spies returned with their information.
During those three years, Nansal had
secretly succeeded in building up a fleet of the magnetic ships, but it went
down quickly before the vastly greater fleet of the Satorians. Their magnetic
rays were deadly, killing everyone they struck. They could lift the iron-boned
Nansalians high into the air, then drop them hundreds of feet to their death.
The buildings, with their steel and iron
frames, went down, crushing hundreds of others. They practically depopulated
the whole planet.
But the warnings of the three spies had
been in time.
They had enlarged some of the great
natural caverns and dug others out of solid rock. Here they had built
laboratories, factories, and dwelling places far underground, where the
Satorians could never find them.
Enough men reached the caverns before
the disaster struck to carry on. They had been chosen from the strongest,
healthiest, and most intelligent that Nansal had. They lived there for over a
century, while the planet was overrun by the conquerors and the cities were
rebuilt by the Satorians.
During this century, the magnetic ray
shield was developed by the hidden Nansalians. Daring at last to face their
conquerors, they built a city on the surface and protected it with the magnetic
force screen.
By the time the Satorians found the
city, it was too late. A battle fleet was mobilized and rushed to the spot, but
the city was impregnable. The great domed power stations were already in
operation, and they were made of nonmagnetic materials, so they could not be
pulled from the ground. The magnetic beams were neutralized by the shield, and
no ship could pass through it without killing every man aboard. That first city
was a giant munitions plant. The Nansalians built factories there and laughed
while the armies of Sator raged impotently at the magnetic barrier. They tried
sending missiles through, but the induction heating in every metal part of the
bombs either caused them to explode instantly or to drop harmlessly and burn.
In the meantime, the men of Nansal were
building their fleet. The Satorians stepped up production, too, but the
Nansalians had developed a method of projecting the magnetic screen. Any
approaching Satorian ship had its magnetic support cut from under it, and it
crashed to the ground. It took nearly thirty years of hard work and harder
fighting for the Nansalians to convince the people of Sator that Nansal and the
philosophy of Norus had not only not been wiped out, but was capable of wiping
out the Satorians. With their screened and protected fleet, the followers of Noras
smashed the Satorian cities, and drove their enemy back to Sator.
There were only three enemy cities left
on Nansal when, somehow, they managed to learn the secret of the magnetic
screen.
By this time, the forces of Nansal had
increased tremendously, and they developed the next surprise for the Satorians.
One after another, the three remaining cities were destroyed by a barrage of
poison gas.
The fleet of Sator tried to retaliate,
but the Nansalians were prepared for them. Every building had been sealed and
filters had been built into the air conditioning systems.
Shortly, the men of Nansal were again in
control of their planet, and the fleet stood guard over the planet.
The Satorians, beaten technologically,
were still not ready to give up. Falling back on their peculiar philosophy of
life, they pulled a trick the Nansalians would never have thought of. They sued
for peace.
The government of Nansal was willing;
they had had enough of bloodshed. They permitted a delegation to arrive. The
ship was escorted into the city and the parleying began.
The Satorian delegation asked for
absolutely unreasonable terms. They demanded fleet bases on Nansal; they
demanded an unreasonable rate of exchange between the two powers, one which
would be highly favorable to Sator; they wanted to impose fantastic
restrictions on Nansalian travel and none whatsoever on their own.
Month followed month and months became
years as the diplomats of Nansal tried, patiently and logically, to show the
Satorians how unreasonable their demands were.
Not once did they suspect that the
Satorians had no intention of trying to get the conditions they asked for.
Their sole purpose was to drag the parleying on and on, bickering, quarreling,
demanding, and conceding just enough to give the Nansalians hope that a treaty
might eventually be consummated.
And during all that time, the factories
of Sator were working furiously to build the greatest fleet that had ever
crossed the space between the two planets!
When they were ready to attack, the
Satorian delegation told Nansal frankly that they would not treaty with them.
The day the delegation left, the Satorian fleet swept down upon Nansal!
The Nansalians were again beaten back
into their cities, safe behind their magnetic screens, but unable to attack. But
the forces of Sator had not won easily—they had, in fact, not won at all. Their
supply line was too long and their fleet had suffered greatly at the hands of
the defenders of Nansal.
For a long while, the balance of power
was so nearly equal that neither side dared attack.
Then the balance again swung toward
Nansal. A Nansalian scientist discovered a compact method of storing power.
Oddly enough, it was similar to the method Dr. Richard Arcot had discovered a
hundred thousand light centuries away! It did not store nearly the power, and
was inefficient, but it was a great improvement over their older method of
generating energy in the ship itself.
The Nansalian ships could be made smaller,
and lighter, and more maneuverable, and at the same time could be equipped with
heavier, more powerful magnetic beam generators.
Very shortly, the Satorians were again
at the mercy of Nansal. They could not fight the faster, more powerful ships of
the Nansalians, and again they went down in defeat.
And again they sued for peace.
This time, Nansal knew better; they went
right on developing their fleet while the diplomats of Sator argued.
But the Satorians weren't fools; they
didn't expect Nansal to swallow the same bait a second time. Sator had another
ace up her sleeve.
Ten days after they arrived, every
diplomat and courier of the Satorian delegation committed suicide! Puzzled, the
government of Nansal reported the deaths to Sator at once, expecting an
immediate renewal of hostilities; they were quite sure that Sator assumed they
had been murdered. Nansal was totally unprepared for what happened; Sator
acknowledged the message with respects and said they would send a new
commission.
Two days later, Nansal realized it had
been tricked again. . A horrible disease broke out and spread like wildfire.
The incubation period was twelve days; during that time it gave no sign. Then
the flesh began to rot away, and the victim died within hours. No wonder the ambassadors
had committed suicide!
Millions died, including Tories' own
father, during the raging epidemic that followed. But, purely by lucky
accident, the Nansalian medical research teams came up with a cure and a
preventive inoculation before the disease had spread over the whole planet.
Sator's delegation had inoculated
themselves with the disease and, at the sacrifice of their own lives, had
spread it on Nansal. Although the Satorians had developed the horribly virulent
strain of virus, they had not found a cure; the diplomats knew they were going
to die.
Having managed to stop the disease
before it swept the planet, the Nansalians decided to pull a trick of their
own. Radio communication with Sator was cut off in such a way as to lead the
Satorian government to believe that Nansal was dying of the disease.
The scientists of Sator knew that the
virus was virulent; in fact, too virulent for its own good. It killed the host
every time, and the virus could not live outside a living cell. They knew that
shortly after every Nansalian died, the virus, too, would be dead.
Their fleet started for Nansal six
months after radio contact had broken off. Expecting to find Nansal a dead
planet, they were totally unprepared to find them 'alive and ready for the
attack. The Satorian fleet, vastly surprised to find a living, vigorous enemy,
was totally wiped out.
Since that time, both planets had
remained in a state of armed truce. Neither had developed any weapon which
would enable them to gain an advantage over their enemy. Each was so
spy-infested that no move could pass undiscovered. Stalemate.
Chapter 19
torlos spread
his hands eloquently. "That is the
history of our war. Can you wonder that my people were suspicious when your
ship appeared? Can you wonder that they drove you away? They were afraid of the
men of Sator; when they saw your weapons, they were afraid for their
civilization.
"On the other hand, why should the
men of Sator fear? They knew that our code of honor would not permit us to make
a treacherous attack.
"I regret that my people drove you
away, but can you blame them?"
Arcot had to admit that he could not. He
turned to Morey. "They were certainly reasonable in driving us from their
cities; experience has taught them that it's the safest way. A good offense is
always the best defense.
"But experience has taught me that,
unlike Torlos, I have to eat. I wonder if it might not be a good idea to get a
little rest too—I'm bushed."
"Good idea," agreed Morey.
"I'll ask Wade to stand guard while we sleep. If Torlos wants company, he
can talk to Wade as well as anyone. I'm due for some sleep myself."
Arcot, Morey, and Fuller went to their
rooms for some rest. Arcot and Morey were tired, but after an hour, Fuller rose
and went down to the control room where Wade was communicating telepathically
with Torlos.
"Hello," Wade greeted him.
"I thought you were going to join the Snoring Chorus."
"I tried to, but I couldn't get in
tune. What have you been doing?"?
"I've been talking with Torlos—and
with fair success. I'm getting the trick of thought communication," Wade
said enthusiastically. "I asked Torlos if he wanted to sleep, and it seems
that they do it regularly, one day in ten. And when they sleep, they sleep
soundly. It's more of a coma, something like the hibernation of a bear or a
possum.
"If you want to do business with
Mr. John Doe, and he happens to be asleep, your business will have to wait. It
takes something really drastic to wake these people up.
"I remember a remark one of my
classmates made while I was going to college. He was totally unconscious of the
humor in the thing. He said: 'I've got to go to more lectures. I've been losing
a lot of sleep.'
"He intended them to be totally
disconnected thoughts, but the rest of us knew his habits, and we almost
knocked ourselves out laughing.
"I was just wondering what would
happen if a Nansalian were to drop off in class. They'd probably have to call
an ambulance or something to carry him home!"
Fuller looked at the giant. "I
doubt it. One of his classmates would just tuck him under his arm and take him
on home—or to the next lecture. Remember, they only weigh about four hundred
pounds on Nansal, which is no more to them than fifty pounds is to us."
"True enough," Wade agreed.
"But you know, I'd hate to have him wrap those arms of his about me. He
might get excited, or sneeze or something, and—squish!"
"You and your morbid
imagination." Fuller sat down in one of the seats. "Let's see if we
can't get a three-way conversation going; this guy is interesting."
Arcot and Morey awoke nearly three hours
later, and the Earthmen ate their breakfast, much to Torlos' surprise.
"I can understand that you need far
more food than we do," he commented, "but you only ate a few hours
ago. It seems like a tremendous amount of food to me. How could you possibly
grow enough in your cities?"
"So that's why they don't
have any farms!" Fuller said.
"Our food is grown out on the
plains outside the cities; where there is room," Arcot explained.
"It's difficult, but we have machines to help us. We could never have
developed the cone type of city you have, however, for, we need huge huge
quantities of food. If we were to seal ourselves inside our cities as your
people have to protect themselves' from enemies, we would starve to death very
quickly."
"You know," Morey said,
"I'll have to admit that Torlos' people are a higher type of creation than
we are. Man, and all other animals on Earth, are parasites of the plant world.
We're absolutely incapable of producing our own foods. We can't gather energy
for ourselves. We're utterly dependent on plants.
"But these men aren't—at least not
so much so. They at least generate their own muscular energy by extracting heat
from the air they breathe. They combine all the best features of plants,
reptiles, and mammals. I don't know where they'd be classified
biologically!"
After the meal, they went to the control
room and strapped themselves into the control seats. Arcot checked the fuel
gauge.
"We have plenty of lead left,"
he said to Morey, "and Torlos has assured me that we will be able to get
more on Nansal. I suggest we show him how the space control works, so that he
can tell the Nansalian scientists about it from personal experience.
"In this sun's gravitational field,
we'll lose a lot of power, but as long as it can be replaced, we're all
right."
Turning to the Nansalian, Arcot pointed
out towards the little spark of light that was Torlos' home planet. "Keep
your eyes on that, Torlos. Watch it grow when we use our space control
drive."
Arcot pushed the little red switch to
the first notch. The air around them pulsed with power for an instant, then
space had readjusted itself.
The point that was Nansal grew to a
disc, and then it was swiftly leaping toward them, welling up to meet them, expanding
its bulk with awesome speed. Torlos watched it tensely. "
There was a sudden splintering crash,
and Arcot jerked open the circuit in alarm. They were almost motionless again
as the stars reeled about them.
Torlos had been nervous. Like any man so
effected, he had unconsciously tightened his muscles. His fingers had sunk into
the hard plastic of the arm rest on his chair, and crushed it as though it had
been put between the jaws of a hydraulic press!
I'm glad we weren't holding hands,"
said Wade, eyeing the broken plastic.
"I am very sorry," Torlos
thought humbly. "I did not intend to do that. I forgot myself when I saw
that planet rushing at me so fast." His chagrin was apparent on his face.
Arcot laughed. "It is nothing,
Torlos. We are merely astonished at the terrific strength of your hand. Wade
wasn't worried; he was joking!"
Torlos looked relieved, but he looked at
the splintered arm rest and then at his hand. "It is best that I keep my
too-strong hands away from your instruments."
The ship was falling toward Nansal at a
relatively slow rate, less than four miles a second. Arcot accelerated toward
the planet for two hours, then began to decelerate. Five hundred miles above
the planet's surface, their velocity cut the ship into a descending spiral
orbit to allow the atmosphere to check their speed.
The outer lux hull began to heat up, and
he closed the relux screens to cut down the radiation from it. When he opened
them again, the ship was speeding over the broad plains of the planet.
Torlos told Arcot that by far the
greater percentage of the surface of Nansal was land. There was still plenty of
water, for their seas were much deeper than those of Earth. Some of the seas
were thirty miles deep over broad areas-hundreds of square miles. As if to
compensate, the land surfaces were covered with titanic mountain ranges, some
of them over ten miles above sea level.
Torlos, his eyes shining, directed the
Earthmen to his home city, the capital of the world-nation.
"Is there no traffic between the cities
here, Torlos?" Morey asked. "We haven't seen any ships."
"There's continuous traffic,"
Torlos replied, "but you have come in far to the north, well away from the
regularly scheduled routes. The commerce must be densely populated with
warships as well, and both warships and commercial craft are made to look as
much alike as possible so that the enemy can not know when ships of war are
present and when they are not, and their attacks are more easily beaten off.
They are forced to live off our commerce while they are here. Before we
invented the magnetic storage device, they were forced to get fuel from our
ships in order to make the return journey; they could not carry enough for the
round trip."
Suddenly his smile broadened, and he
pointed out the forward window. "Our city is behind that next range of
mountains!"
They were flying at a height of twenty
miles, and the range Torlos indicated was far off in the blue distance, almost
below the horizon. As they approached them, the mountains seemed to change
slowly as their perspective shifted. They seemed to crawl about on one another
like living things, growing larger and changing from blue to blue-green, and
then to a rich, verdant emerald.
Soon the ship was rocketing smoothly
over them. Ahead and below, in the rocky gorge of the mountains, lay a great
cone city, the largest the Earthmen had yet seen. As they approached, they
could see another cone behind it—the city was a double cone! They resembled the
circus tents of two centuries earlier, connected by a ridge.
"Ah—home!" smiled Torlos.
"See—that twin cone idea is new. It was not thus when I left it, years
ago. It is growing, growing-and in that new section! See? They have bright
colors on all the buildings! And already they are digging foundations out to
the left for a third cone!" He was so excited that it was difficult for
Arcot to read his thoughts coherently."
"But we won't have to build more
fortifications," Torlos continued, "if you will give us the secret of
the rays you use!
"But, Arcot, you must hide in the
hills now; drop down and deposit me in the hills. I will walk to the city on
foot.
"I will be able to identify myself,
and I will soon be inside the city, telling the Supreme Three that I have
salvation and peace for them!"
"I have a better idea," Arcot
told him. "It will save you a long walk. We'll make the ship invisible,
and take you close to the city. You can drop, say ten feet from the ship to the
ground, and continue from there. Will that be all right?"
Torlos agreed that it would.
Invisible, the Ancient Mariner
dove down toward the city, stopping only a few hundred feet from the base of
the magnetic wall, near one of the gigantic beam stations.
"I will come out in a one-man
flier, slowly, and at low altitude, toward that mountain there," Torlos
told Arcot, pointing. "Then you may become visible and follow me into the
city.
"You need fear no treachery from my
people," he assured them. Then, smiling: "As if you need fear
treachery from the hands of any people! You have certainly proven your ability
to defend yourselves!
"Even if my people were
treacherously inclined, they would certainly have been convinced by your escape
from the Satorians. And they have undoubtedly heard all about it by now through
the secret radios of our spies. After all, I was not the only Nansalian spy
there, and some of the others must surely have escaped in the ships that ran
away after I destroyed the city." Arcot could feel the sadness in his mind
as he thought of the fact that his inadvertent destruction of the city had
undoubtedly killed some of his own people.
Torlos paused a moment, then asked:
"Is there any message you wish me to give the Supreme Council of Three?"
"Yes," replied Arcot.
"Repeat to them the offer we so foolishly made to the Commanding One of Sator.
We will give them the molecular ray which tore the city out of the ground, and,
as your people have seen, also tore a mountain down. We will give them our heat
beam, which will melt anything except the material of which this ship is made.
And we will give them the knowledge to make this material, too.
"Best of all, we will give them the
secret of the most terrific energy source known to mankind; the energy of
matter itself. With these in your hands, Sator will soon be peaceful.
"In return, we ask only two things.
They will cost you almost nothing, but they are invaluable to us. We have lost
our way. In the vastness of space, we can no longer locate our own galaxy. But
our own Island Universe has features which could be distinguished on an
astronomical plate, and we have taken photographs of it which your astronomers
can compare with their own to help us find our way back.
"In addition, we need more
fuel—lead wire. Our space control drive does not use up energy except in the
presence of a strong gravitational field; most of it is drained back into our
storage coils, with very little loss. But we have used it several times near a
large sun, and the power drainage goes up exponentially. We would not have
enough to get back home if we happened to run into any more trouble on the
way."
Arcot paused a moment, considering.
"Those two things are all we really need, but we could like to take back
more, if your Council is willing. We would like samples of your books and
photographs and other artifacts of your civilization to take back home to our
own people.
"That, and peace, are all we
ask."
Torlos nodded. "The things you ask,
I am sure the Council will readily agree to. It seems little enough payment for
the things you intend to do for us."
"Very well, the. We will wait for
you. Good luck!"
Torlos turned and jumped out of the
airlock. The ship rose high above him as he suddenly became visible on the
plain below. He was running toward the city in great leaps of twenty
feet—graceful, easy leaps that showed his tremendous power.
Suddenly, a ship was darting down from
the city toward him. As it curved down, Torlos stopped and made certain signals
with his arms, then he stood quietly with his hands in the air.
The ship hovered above him, and two men
dropped thirty feet to the ground and questioned him for several minutes.
Finally, they motioned to the ship,
which dropped to ten feet, and the three men leaped lightly to its door and
entered. The door snapped shut, and the ship shot toward the city. The magnetic
wall opened for a moment, and the ship shot through. Within seconds, it was out
of sight, lost in the busy air traffic above the city.
"Well," said Arcot, "now
we go back to the hills and wait."
Chapter 20
for two days, the Ancient Mariner lay hidden in the hills.
It was visible all that time, but at least two of the men were watching the sky
every hour of the day. Torlos himself was, they knew, perfectly trustworthy,
but they did not know whether his people were as honorable as he claimed them
to be.
Arcot and Wade were in the control room
on the afternoon of the second day—not Earth days, but the forty-hour Nansalian
days—and they had been quietly discussing the biological differences between
themselves and the inhabitants of this planet.
Suddenly, Wade saw a slowly moving speck
in the sky. "Look, Arcot! There's Torlos!"
They waited, ready for any hostile
action as the tiny ship approached rapidly, circling slowly downward as it came
nearer. It landed a few hundred feet away, and Torlos emerged, running rapidly
toward the Earth ship. Arcot let him in through the airlock.
Torlos smiled broadly. "I had
difficulty in convincing the Council that my story was true. When I told them
that you could go faster than light, they strongly objected. But they had to
admit that you had certainly been able to tear down the mountain very
effectively, and they had received reports of the destruction of the Satorian
capital.
"It seems you first visited the
city of Thanso when you came here. The people were nearly panic-stricken when
they saw you rip that mountain down and uproot the magnetic ray station. No one
ship had ever done that before!
"But the fact that several guards
had seen me materialize out of thin air, plus the fact that they knew you could
make yourselves invisible, convinced them that my story was true. "They
want to talk to you, and they say that they will gladly grant your requests.
But you must promise them one thing—you must stay away from any of our people,
for they are afraid of disease. Bacteria that do not bother you very much might
be deadly to us. The Supreme Council of Three is willing to take the risk, but
they will not allow anyone else to be exposed."
"We will keep apart from your
people if the Council wishes," Arcot agreed, "but there is no real
danger. We are so vastly different from you that it will be impossible for you
to get our diseases, or for us to contract yours. However, if the Council wants
it, we will do as they ask."
Torlos at once went back to his ship and
headed toward the city.
Arcot followed in the Ancient
Mariner, keeping about three hundred feet to the rear.
When they reached the magnetic screen of
the city, one of the beam stations cut its power for a few moments, leaving a
gap for the two ships to glide smoothly through.
On the roofs of the buildings, men and
women were collected, watching the shining, polished hull of the strange ship
as it moved silently above them.
Torlos led them to the great central
building and dropped to the huge landing field beside it. All around them, in
regular rows, the great hulls of the Nansal battleships were arranged. Arcot
landed the Ancient Mariner and shut off the power.
"I think Wade is the man to go with
me this time," Arcot said. "He has learned to communicate with Torlos
quite well. We will each carry both pistols and wear our power suits. And we'll
be in radio communication with you at all times.
"I don't think they'll start
anything we don't like this time, but I'm not as confident as -I was, and I'm
not going to take any useless chances. This time I'm going to make
arrangements. If I die here, there's going to be a very costly funeral, and
these men are going to pay the costs!
"I'll call you every three minutes,
Morey. If I don't, check up on me. If you still don't get an answer, take this
place apart because you won't be able to hurt us then.
"I'm going to tell Torlos about our
precautions. If the building shields the radio, 111 be listening for you and
I'll retrace my steps until I can contact you again. Right? Then come on,
Wade!" Arcot, fully equipped, strode down the corridor to the airlock.
Torlos was waiting for them with another
man, whom Torlos explained was a high-ranking officer of the fleet. Torlos, it
seemed, was without official rank. He was a secret service agent without
official status, and therefore an officer had been assigned to accompany the
Earthmen.
Torlos seemed to be relaxing in the
soft, warm sunlight of his native world. It had been years since he had seen
that yellow sun except from the windows of a space flier. Now he could walk around
in the clear air of the planet of his birth.
Arcot explained to him the precautions
they had taken against trouble here, and Torlos smiled. "You have
certainly learned greater caution. I can't blame you. We certainly seem little
different from the men of Sator; we can only stand on trial. But I know you
will be safe."
They walked across the great court,
which was covered with a soft, springy turf of green. The hot sun shining down
on them, the brilliant colors of the buildings, the towering walls of the
magnificent edifice they were approaching, and, behind them, the shining hull
of the Ancient Mariner set among the dark, needle-shaped Nansalian
ships, all combined ,to make a picture that would remain in their minds for a
long time.
Here, there were no guards watching them
as they were conducted to the meeting of the Supreme Council of Three.
They went into the main entrance of the
towering government building and stepped into the great hall on the ground
floor. It was like the interior of an ancient Gothic cathedral, beautiful and
dignified. Great pillars of green stone rose in graceful, fluted columns,
smoothly curving out like the branches of some stylized tree to meet in arches
that rose high in pleasing curves to a point midway between four pillars. The
walls were made of a dark green stone as a background; on them had been traced
designs in colored tile.
The whole hall was a thing of colored
beauty; the color gave it life, as the yellow sunlight gave life to the trees
of the mountains.
They crossed the great hall and came at
last to the elevator. Its door was made of narrow strips of metal, so bound
together that the whole made a flexible, but strong sheet. In principle, the
doors worked like the cover of an antique roll-top desk. The idea was old, but
these men had made their elevator doors very attractive by the addition of
color. In no way did they detract from the dignified grace of the magnificent
hall.
Torlos turned to Ascot. "I wonder if
it would not be wise to shut off your radio as we enter the elevator. Might not
the magnetic force affect it?"
"Probably," Arcot agreed. He
contacted Morey and told him that the radio would be cut off for a short while.
"But it won't be more than three minutes," Arcot finished. "If
it is—you know what to do."
As they entered the elevator, Torlos
smiled at the two Earthmen. "We will ascend more gradually this time, so
that the acceleration won't be so tiring to you." He moved the controls
carefully, and by gentle steps they rose to the sixty-third floor of the giant
building.
As they stepped out of the elevator,
Torlos pointed toward an open window that stretched widely across one wall.
Below them, they could see the Ancient Mariner.
"Your radio contact should be
good," Torlos commented.
Wade put in a call to Morey, and to his
relief, he made contact immediately.
The officer was leading them down a
green stone corridor toward a simple door. He opened it, and they entered the
room beyond.
In the center of the room was a large
triangular table. At a place at the center of each side sat one man on a
slightly raised chair, while on each side of him sat a number of other men.
Torlos stopped at the door and saluted.
Then he spoke in rapid, liquid syllables to the men sitting at the table,
halting once or twice and showing evident embarrassment as he did so.
He paused, and one of the three men in
command replied rapidly in a pleasant voice that had none of the harsh command
that Arcot had noticed in the voice of the Satorian Commanding One. Arcot liked
the voice and the man.
Judging by Earth standards, he was past
middle age-whatever that might be on Nansal—with crisp black hair that was
bleaching slightly. His face showed the signs of worry that the making of
momentous decisions always leaves, but although the face was strong with
authority, there was a gentleness that comes with a feeling of kindly power.
Wade was talking rapidly into the*
radio, describing the scene before them to Morey. He described the great table
of dark wood, and the men about it, some in the blue uniform of the military,
and some in the loose, soft garments of the civilian. Their colored fabrics,
individually in -good taste and harmony, were frequently badly out of harmony
with the costume of a neighbor, a difficulty accompanying this brightly tinted
clothing.
Torlos turned to Arcot. "The
Supreme council asks that you be seated at the table, in the places left for
you." He paused, then quickly added: "I have told them of your
precautions, and they have said: 'A wise man, having been received
treacherously once, will not again be trapped! They approve of your policy of
caution.
"The men who sit at the raised
portions of the table are the Supreme Three; the others are their advisors who
know the details of Science, Business, and War. No one man can know all the
branches of human endeavor, and this is but a meeting place of those who know
best the individual lines. The Supreme Three are elected from the advisors in
case of the death of one of the Three, and they act as coordinators for the
rest.
"The man of Science is to your
left; directly before you is the man of Business, and to your right is the
Commander of the Military.
"To whom do you wish to speak
first?"
Arcot considered for a moment, then:
"I must first tell the Scientist what it is I have, then tell the
Commander how he can use it, and finally I will tell the Businessman what will
be needed."
Arcot had noticed that the military
officers all wore holsters for their pneumatic pistols, but they were
conspicuously empty. He was both pleased and embarrassed. What should he do—he,
who carried two deadly pistols. He decided on the least conspicuous course and
left them where they were.
Arcot projected his/ at Torlos. "We
have come a vast distance across- space, from another galaxy. Let your
astronomer tell them what distance that represents."
Arcot paused while Torlos put the
thoughts into the words of the Nansalian language. A moment later, one of the
scientists, a tall, powerfully built man, even for these men of giant strength,
rose and spoke to the others. When he was seated, a second rose and spoke also,
with an expression of puzzled wonder.
"He says," Torlos translated,
"that his science has taught him that a speed such as you say you have
made is impossible, but the fact that you are here proves his science wrong.
"He reasoned that since your kind
live on no planet of this system, you must come from another star. Since his
science says that this is just as impossible as coming from another galaxy, he
is convinced of the fallacy in the theories."
Arcot smiled. The sound reasoning was
creditable; the man did not label as "impossible" something which was
proven by the presence of the two Earthmen.
Arcot tried to explain the physical
concepts behind his space-strain drive, but communication broke down rapidly;
Torlos, a warrior, not a scientist, could not comprehend the ideas, and was
completely unable to translate them into his own language.
"The Chief Physicist suggests that
you think directly at him," Torlos finally told Arcot. "He suggests
that the thoughts might be more familiar to him than to me." He grinned.
"And they certainly aren't clear to me!"
Arcot projected his thoughts directly
toward the physicist; to his surprise, the man was a perfect receiver. He had a
natural gift for it. Quickly, Arcot outlined the system that had made his
intergalactic voyage possible.
The physicist smiled when Arcot was
finished, and tried to reply, but he was not a good transmitter. Torlos aided
him.
"He says that the science of your
people is far ahead of us. The conceptions are totally foreign to his mind, and
he can only barely grasp the significance of the idea of bent emptiness that
you have given him. He says, however, that he can fully appreciate the possibility
that you have shown him. He has given your message to the Three, and they are
anxious to hear of the weapons you have."
Arcot drew the molecular pistol, and
holding it up for all to see, projected the general theory of its operation
toward the physicist.
To the Chief Physicist of Nansal, the
idea of molecular energy was an old one; he had been making use of it all his
life, and it was well known that the muscles used the heat of air to do their
work. He understood well how it worked, but not until Arcot projected into his
mind the mental impression of how the Earthmen had thrown one sun into another
did he realize the vast power of the ray.
Awed, the man translated the idea to his
fellows.
Then Arcot drew the heat pistol and
explained how the annihilation of matter within it was converted into pure heat
by the relux lens.
"I will show you how they
work," Arcot continued. "Could we have a lump of metal of some
kind?"
The Scientist spoke into an intercom
microphone, and within a few minutes, a large lump of iron—a broken casting—was
brought in. Arcot suspended it on the molecular beam while Wade melted it with
the heat beam. It melted and collapsed into a ball that glowed brilliantly and
flamed as its surface burned in the oxygen of the air. Wade cut off his heat
ray, and the ball quickly cooled under the influence of the molecular beam
until Arcot lowered it to the floor, a perfect sphere crusted with ice and
frost.
Arcot continued for the better part of
an hour to explain to the Council exactly what he had, how they could be used,
and what materials and processes were needed to make them.
When he was finished, the Supreme Three
conferred for several minutes. Then the Scientist asked, through Torlos:
"How can we repay you for these
things you have given us?"
"First, we need lead to fuel our
ship." Arcot gave them the exact specifications of the lead wire they
needed.
He received his answer from the man of
Business and Manufacturing. "We can give you that easily, for lead is
cheap. Indeed, it seems hardly enough to repay you."
"The second thing we need,"
Arcot continued, "is information. We became lost in space and are unable
to find our way home. I would like to explain the case to the Astronomer."
The Astronomer proved to be a man of
powerful intelligence as well as powerful physique, and was a better
transmitter than receiver. It took every bit of Arcot's powerful mind to
project his thoughts to the man.
He explained the dilemma that he and his
friends were in, and told him how he could recognize the Galaxy on his plates.
The Astronomer said he thought he knew of such a nebula, but he would like to
compare his own photographs with Arcot's to make sure.
"In return," Arcot told him,
"we will give you another weapon—a weapon, this time, to defeat the
astronomer's greatest enemy, distance. It is an electrical telescope which will
permit you to see life on every planet of this system. With it, you can see a
man at a distance ten times as great as the distance from Nansal to your sun!"
Eagerly, the Astronomer questioned Arcot
concerning the telectroscope, but others were clamoring for Arcot's attention.
The Biologist was foremost among the
contenders; he seemed worried about the possibility of the alien Earthmen
carrying pathogenic bacteria.
"Torlos has told us that you have
an entirely different internal organization. What is it that is different? I
can't believe that he has correctly understood you."
Arcot explained the differences as
carefully as possible. By the time he was finished, the Biologist felt sure
that any such creature was sufficiently far removed from them to be harmless
biologically, but he wanted to study the Man of Earth further.
Arcot had brought along a collection of
medical books as a possible aid in case of accident. He offered to give these
to Nansal in exchange for a collection of Nansalian medical texts. The English
would have to be worked out with the aid of a dictionary and a primary working
aid which Arcot would supply. Arcot also asked for a skeleton to take with him,
and the Biologist readily agreed.
"We'd like to give you one in
return," Arcot grinned, "But we only brought four along, and,
unfortunately, we are using them at the moment."
The Biologist smiled back and assured
him that they would not think of taking a piece of apparatus so vitally
necessary to the Earthmen.
The Military Leader was the man who
demanded attention next. Arcot had a long conference with him, and they decided
that the best way for the Military Leader to learn the war potential of the Ancient
Mariner was to personally see a demonstration of its powers.
The Council decided that the Three would
go on the trip. The Military Commander picked two of his aides to go, and the
Scientist picked the Astronomer and the Physicist. The head of Business and
Manufacturing declined to bring any of his advisors.
"We would learn nothing," he
told Arcot, "and would only be in the way. I, myself, am going only
because I am one of the Three."
"Very well," said Arcot.
"Let's get started."
Chapter 21
the party
descended to the ground floor and walked
out to the ship. They filed into the airlock, and in the power room they looked
in amazement at the tiny machines that ran the ship. The long black cylinder of
the main power unit for the molecular drive looked weak and futile compared to
the bulky machines that ran their own ships. The power storage coils, with
their fields of intense, dead blackness, interested the Physicist immensely.
The ship was a constant source of wonder
to them all. They investigated the laboratory and then went up to the second
floor. Morey and Fuller greeted them at the door, and each of the four Earthmen
took a group around the ship, explaining as they went.
The library was a point of great
interest, exceeded only by the control room. Arcot found some difficulty in
taking care of all his visitors; there were only four chairs in the control
room. The Three could sit down, but Arcot needed the fourth chair to pilot the
ship. The rest of the party had to hold on as best they could, which was not
too difficult for men of such physical strength; they were accustomed to high
accelerations in their elevators.
Morey, Wade, and Fuller strapped
themselves into the seats at the ray projectors at the sides and stern.
Arcot wanted to demonstrate the
effectiveness of the ship's armament first, and then the maneuverability. He
picked a barren hillside for the first demonstration. It was a great rocky
cliff, high above the timber line, towering almost vertically a thousand feet
above them.
Wade triggered his molecular projector,
and a pale beam reached out toward the cliff. Instantly, the cliff leaped ten
miles into the air, whining and roaring as it shot up through the atmosphere.
Then it started to fall. Heated by its motion through the air, it struck the
mountaintop as a mass of red hot rock which shattered into fragments with a
terrific roar! The rocks rolled and bounced down the mountainside, their path
traced by a line of steam clouds.
Then, at Arcot's order, the heat beams
were all turned on the mountain at full power. In less than a minute, the peak
began to melt, sending streamers of lava down the sides. The beams began to eat
out a crater in the center, where the rock began to boil furiously under the
terrific energy of the heat beams.
Then Arcot shut off the heat beams and
turned on the molecular ray.
The molecules of the molten rock were
traveling at high velocities—the heat was terrific. Arcot could see that the
rock was boiling quite freely. When the molecular beam hit it, every one of
those fast moving molecules shot upward together! With the roar of a meteor, it
plunged toward space at five miles a second I
It had dropped to absolute zero when the
beam hit it, but at that speed through the air, it didn't stay cold long! Arcot
followed it up in the Ancient Mariner. It was going too slowly for
him. The air had slowed it down and heated it up, so Arcot hit it with the
molecular ray again, converting the heat back into velocity.
By the time they reached free space,
Arcot had maneuvered the lump of rock into an orbit around the planet.
"Tharlano," he thought at the Astronomer,
"your planet now has a new satellite!"
"So I perceive!" replied
Tharlano. "Now that we are in space, can we use the instrument you told me
of?"
Arcot established the ship in an orbit
twenty thousand miles from the planet and led them back to the observatory,
where Morey had already trained the telectroscope on the planet below. There
wasn't much to see; the amplification showed only the rushing ground moving by
so fast that the image blurred.
He turned it to Sator. It filled the
screen as they increased the power, but all they "could see was billowing
clouds. Another poor subject.
Morey showed Tharlano, the Astronomer,
how to use the controls, and he began to sweep the sky with the instrument,
greatly pleased with its resolving ability and tremendous magnification.
The Military Leader of the Three pointed
out that the Satorians still had a weapon that was reported deadly, and they
were in imminent danger unless Arcot's inventions were applied at once. All the
way back to Nansal, they spent the time discussing the problem in the Ancient
Mariner's Library.
It was finally agreed that the necessary
plans and blueprints were to be given to the Nansalians, who could start
production at once. The biggest problem was in the supply of lux and relux,
which, because of their vast energy-content, required the atomic converters of
the Ancient Mariner to make them. The Earthmen agreed to supply the
power and the necessary materials to begin operations.
When the ship landed, a meeting of the
manufacturers was called. Fuller distributed prints of the microfilmed plans
for the equipment that he had packed in the library, and the factory engineers
worked from them to build the necessary equipment.
The days that followed were busy days
for Earthmen and Nansalians alike.
The Nansalians were fearful of the
consequences of the weapon that the Satorians were rumored to have. The results
of their investigations through their agents had, so far, resulted only in the
death of the secret service men. All that was known was exactly what the
Satorians wanted them to know; the instrument was new, and it was deadly.
On the other hand, the Satorians were
not entirely in the dark as to the progress of Nansal, as Arcot and Morey discovered
one day.
After months of work designing and
tooling up the Nansalian factories, making the tools to make the tools to make
the war material needed, and training the engineers of Nansal all over the
planet to produce the equipment needed, Arcot and Morey finally found time to
take a few days off.
Tharlano had begun a systematic search
of the known nebulae, comparing them with the photographs the Earth-men had
given him, and looking for a galaxy with two satellite star clouds of exactly
the right size and distance from the great spiral.
After months of work, he had finally
picked one which filled the bill exactly! He invited Arcot and Morey to the
observatory to confirm his findings.
The observatory was located on the
barren peak of a great mountain more than nine miles high. It was almost the
perfect place for an astronomical telescope. Here, well above the troposphere,
the air was thin and always clear. The solid rock of the mountain was far from
disturbing influences which might cause any vibration in the telescope.
The observatory was accessible only from
a spaceship or air flyer, and, at that altitude, had to be pressurized and
sealed against the thin, cold air outside. Within, the temperature was kept
constant to a fraction of a degree to keep thermal expansion from throwing the
mirror out of true.
Arcot and Morey, accompanied by Tharlano
and Torlos, settled the Ancient Mariner to the landing field that had
been blasted out of the rock of the towering mountain. They went over to the
observatory and were at once admitted to the airlock.
The floor was of smoothed, solid rock,
and in this, the great clock which timed and moved the telescope was set.
The entire observatory was, of course, surrounded
by a magnetic shield, and it was necessary to make sure there were no enemy
ships around before using the telescope, because the magnetic field affected
the light rays passing through it.
The mirror for the huge reflecting
telescope was nearly three hundred inches in diameter, and was powerful enough
to spot a spaceship leaving Sator. Its military usefulness, however, was practically
nil, since painting the ships black made them totally invisible.
There were half a dozen assistants with
Tharlano at the observatory at all times, one of them in charge of the great
file of plates that were kept on hand. Every plate made was printed in
triplicate, to prevent their being destroyed in a raid. The original was kept
at the observatory, and copies were sent to two of the largest cities on
Nansal. It was from this file that Tharlano had gathered the data necessary to
show Arcot his own galaxy.
Tharlano was proudly explaining the
telescope to Arcot, realizing that the telectroscope was far better, but knowing
that the Earthmen would appreciate this triumph of mechanical perfection. Arcot
and Morey were both intensely interested in the discussion, while Torlos,
slightly bored by a subject he knew next to nothing about, was examining the
rest of the observatory.
Suddenly, he cried out in warning, and
leaped a full thirty feet over the rock floor to gather Arcot and Morey in his
great arms. There was a sharp, distinct snap of a pneumatic pistol, and the
thud of a bullet. Arcot and Morey each felt Torlos jerk!
Quick as a flash, Torlos pushed the two
men behind the great tube of the telescope. He leaped over it and across the
room, and disappeared into the supply room. There was the noise of a scuffle,
another crack from a pneumatic pistol, and the sudden crash and tinkle of
broken glass.
Suddenly, the figure of a man described
a wide arc as it flew out of the supply room and landed with a heavy crash on
the floor. Instantly, Torlos leaped at him. There was a trickle of blood from
his left shoulder, but he gripped the man in his giant arms, pinning him to the
floor. The struggle was brief. Torlos simply squeezed the man's chest in his
arms. There was the faint creak of metal, and the man's chest began to bend! In
a moment, he was unconscious.
Torlos pulled a heavy leather belt off
of the unconscious man and tied his arms with it, wrapping it many times around
the wrists, and was picking the man up when Tharlano arrived, followed by Arcot
and Morey. Torlos smiled broadly. "This is one Satorian spy that won't
report. I could have finished him when I got my hold on him, but I wanted to
take him before the Council for questioning. He'll be all right; I just dented
his chest a little."
"We owe our lives to you again,
Torlos," Arcot told him gravely. "But you certainly risked your life;
the bullet might well have penetrated your heart instead of striking a rib, as
it seems to have done."
"Rib? What is a rib?" The
thought concept seemed totally unfamiliar to Torlos.
Arcot looked at him oddly, then reached
out and ran an exploratory hand over Torlos' chest. It was smooth and solid!
"Morey!" Arcot exclaimed. "These men have no ribs! Their chest
is as solid as their skulls!"
"Then how do they breathe?"
Morey asked. "How do you breathe? I mean most of the time. You use your
diaphragm and your abdominal muscles. These people do, too!"
Morey grinned. "No wonder Torlos
jumped in front of that bullet! He didn't have as much to fear as we do—he had
a built-in bullet proof vest! You'd have to shoot him in the abdomen to reach
any vital organ."
Arcot turned back to Torlos. "Who
is this man?"
"Undoubtedly a Satorian spy sent to
murder you Earth-men. I saw the muzzle of his pistol as he was aiming and
jumped in the way of the bullet. There is not much damage done."
"We'd better get back to the
city," Arcot said. "Fuller and Wade might be in danger!"
They bundled the Satorian spy into the
ship, where Morey tied him further with thin strands of lux cable no bigger
than a piece of string.
Torlos looked at it and shook his head.
"He will break that as soon as he awakens, without even knowing it. You
forget the strength of our people."
Morey smiled and wrapped the cord around
Torlos' wrists.
Torlos looked amuse, and pulled. His
smile vanished. He pulled harder. His huge muscles bulged and writhed in great
ridges along his arms. The thin cord remained complacently undamaged. Torlos
relaxed and grinned sheepishly.
"You win," he thought.
"I'll make no more comments on the things I see you do."
They returned to the capital at once.
Arcot shoved the speed up as high as he dared, for Torlos felt there might be
some significance in the attempt to remove Arcot and Morey. Wade and Fuller had
already been warned by radio, and had immediately retired to the Council Room
of the Three. The members of the Investigation Board joined them to question
the prisoner upon his arrival.
When they arrived, Arcot and Morey went
in with Torlos, who was carrying the struggling, shackled spy over his
shoulder.
The Earthmen watched while the expert
interrogators of the Investigation Board questioned the prisoner. The
philosophy of Norus did not permit torture, even for a vicious enemy, but the
questioners were shrewd and ingenious in their methods. For hours, they took
turns pounding questions at the prisoner, cajoling, threatening, and arguing.
They got nowhere. Solidly, the prisoner
stuck by his guns. Why had he tried to shoot the Earthmen? He didn't know. What
were his orders from Sator? Silence. What were Sator's plans? Silence. Did he
know anything of the new weapon? A shrug of the shoulders.
Finally, Arcot spoke to the Chief
Investigation Officer. "May I try my luck? I think I'm powerful enough to
use a little combination of hypnosis and telepathy that will get the
information out of him." The Investigator agreed to try it.
Arcot walked over as if to inspect the
prisoner. For an instant, the man looked defiantly at Arcot. Arcot glared back.
At the same time, his powerful mind reached out and began to work subtly within
the prisoner's brain. Slowly, a helpless, blank expression came over the man's
face as his eyes remained fixed on Arcot's own. The man was as helplessly bound
mentally as the lux cable bound him physically.
For a full quarter of an hour, the two men,
Earthmen and Satorian, stood locked in a frozen tableau, staring into each
other's eyes. The onlookers waited in watchful silence. Finally, Arcot turned
and shook his head, as if to clear it. As he did so, the spy slumped forward in
his chair, unconscious.
Arcot rubbed his own temples and spoke
in English to Morey. "Some job! You'll have to tell them what I found out;
my head is splitting! With a headache like this, I can't communicate.
"Torlos was right; they were trying
to get rid of all four of us. We're the only ones who can operate the ship, and
that ship is the only defense against them.
"He knows several other spies here
in the city, and we can, I think, practically wipe out the Satorian spy system
all over the planet with the information he gave me and what we can get from
others we arrest.
"Unfortunately, he doesn't know
anything about the new weapon; the higher-ups aren't telling anyone, not even
their own men. I get the idea that only those on board the ships using it will
know about it before the attack.
"An attack is planned, and very
soon. He didn't know when. We can only lie in readiness and do everything we
can to help these people with their work."
While Morey relayed this information to
the Investigating Board and the Council, Wade was talking in low tones to
Arcot.
"They had a lot of workmen bring
twenty tons of lead wire on board this evening, and the distilled water tanks
are full. The tanks are full of oxygen, and they gave us some synthetic food
which we can eat.
"They have it all over us in the
field of chemistry. They've found the secret of catalysis, and can actually
synthesize any catalytic agent they want. They can make any possible reaction
go in either direction at any rate they desire.
"They took a slice of flesh from my
arm and analyzed it down to the last detail. From that, they were able to
predict what sort of food we would need to eat. They can actually synthesize
living things!
"I've tried the food they made, and
it has a very good flavor. They guaranteed it would have all the necessary
ingredients, right down to the smallest trace element!
"We're fully stocked for a long
trip. The Three said it was their first consideration that we should be able to
return to our homes."
"How about their armament?"
Arcot asked. He was holding his head in his hands to ease the throbbing ache
within it.
"Each city has a projector supplied
by the regular power station on top of their central building. The molecular
ray, of course; they still don't have enough power to run a heat beam.
"We didn't have time to make more
than one for each city, but this one will give the Satorians a nasty time if
they come near it. It works nicely through the magnetic screen, so it won't be
necessary for them to lower the barrier to shoot."
Morey had finished telling the Council
what Arcot had discovered from the prisoner, and the Councilmen were leaving
one by one to go to their duties in preparing for the attack.
"I think we had best go back to the
Ancient Mariner" Arcot said. "I need an aspirin and some
sleep."
"Same here," agreed Fuller.
"These men make me feel as though I were lazy. They work for forty or
fifty hours and think nothing of it. Then they snooze for five hours and
they're ready for another long stretch. I feel like a lounge lizard if I take
six hours out of every twenty-four."
They asked Torlos to stand guard on the
ship while they got some much needed sleep, and Torlos consented readily after
getting the permission of the Supreme Three.
The Earthmen were returned to their ship
under heavy guard to prevent further attempts at assassination.
It was seven hours after they had gone
to sleep that it came.
Through the ship came the low hum that
rose quickly to a screeching call of danger—the warning! The city was under
attack!
Chapter 22
the nansalian
fleet was already outside the city and
hard at it. The fight was on! But Arcot saw that the fight was one-sided in the
extreme. Ship after ship of the Nansalian fleet seemed to burst into sudden,
inexplicable flame and fall blazing against another of their own ships! It
seemed as though some irresistible attraction drew the ships together and
smashed them against each other in a blaze of electric flame, while the ships
of Sator did nothing but stay far off to one side and dodge the rays of the
Nansalian ships.
Quickly, Arcot turned to Torlos.
"Torlos, go out! Leave the ship! We can work better when you aren't here,
since we don't have to worry about exposure to magnetic rays. I don't like to
make you miss this, but it's for your world!"
Torlos showed his disappointment; he
wanted to be in this battle. But he realized that what the Earthman said was
true. Their weak, stone bones were completely immune to the effects of even the
most powerful magnetic ray.
He nodded. "I'll go. Good Luck! And
give them a few shots for me!"
He turned and ran down the corridor to
the airlock. As soon as he was outside, Arcot lifted the ship.
It had taken less than a minute to get
into the air, but in that minute, the Nansalian fleet had taken a terrific
beating. Arcot noticed that the few ships of Sator that had been hit smashed
into the ground with a terrible blaze of violet light that left nothing but
pile of fused metal.
"They've got something, all
right," Arcot thought to himself as he drove the Ancient Mariner
into battle.
It would be impossible for the
Nansalians to lower their magnetic screen, even for a second, so Arcot simply
aimed the ship toward it and turned on the power.
"Hold on!" he called as they
struck it. The ship reeled and sank suddenly planetward, then it bounced up and
outward. They were through the wall.
The rooms were suddenly oppressively
hot, and the molecular cooler was struggling to lower it. "We made
it," Morey said triumphantly, "but the eddy currents sure heated up
the hull!"
They were out of the city now, speeding
toward the battle. Following a prearranged system, the Nansalian ships
retreated, leaving the Earthmen a free hand. They needed no help!
Wade, Fuller, and Morey began to lash
out with the molecular beams, smashing the Satorian ships in on themselves,
crushing them to the ground, where they exploded in violet flame.
Wade and Fuller began to work together.
Wade caught one ship in the molecular ray, and Fuller hit with a heat beam.
Like some titanic broom they swept it around at dozens of miles a second,
leaping, twisting, smashing ship after ship. Like a snowball, the lump of
glowing metal grew with each crash, till a dozen ships had fallen into it. It
was a new broom, and it swept clean!
Then a magnetic beam caught the Ancient
Mariner. With a shock, it slowed down at a terrific rate. Then Arcot
turned on more power, and simply dragged the other ship along by its own
magnetic beam! Wade tore the ship loose with his molecular beam, but the mighty
mass of metal that had been his broom was gone, a glowing mass of metal on the
ground.
"We haven't seen that new weapon
yet," Morey called.
"Can't find us!" Arcot replied
into the intercom. The sun was setting, and the blazing red star was lighting
the ship, making it seem like a ball of fire when still and a flashing streak
of red light when in motion.
Ship after ship of the Satorians was
going down before the three beams of the Earth ship; the great fleet was
dissolving like a lump of sugar in boiling water.
Suddenly, just ahead of them, an enemy
ship drove toward them with obvious intent to ram; if his magnetic beam caught
them, and drew them towards him, there would be a head-on collision.
Wade caught it with a molecular beam,
and it became a blazing wreck on the ground.
"All rays off!" Arcot called.
As soon as they were off, Arcot hit a switch, and the Ancient Mariner
vanished.
Arcot drove the invisible ship high
above the battle. Below, the Satorians were searching wildly for the ship. They
knew it must be somewhere near, and feared that at any second it might
materialize before them with its deadly rays.
Arcot stayed above them for nearly a
minute while the ships below twisted and turned, wildly seeking him. Then they
went into formation again and started back for the city.
"That's what I wanted!" Arcot
said grimly. "In formation, they're like sitting ducks!" He dropped
the ship like a plummet while the ray operators prepared to sweep the formation
with their beams.
Suddenly the Ancient Mariner
was visible again. Simultaneously, three rays leaped down and bathed the
formation in their pale radiance. The front ranks vanished, and the line broke,
attacking the ship that hung above them now. Four magnetic beams hit the Ancient
Mariner at once! Arcot couldn't pull away from all four, and his gunners
couldn't tell which ships were holding them.
All at once, the men felt a violent
electrical shock! The air about them was filled with the blue haze of the
electric weapon they had seen!
Instantly, the magnetic beams left them,
and they saw behind them a single, Satorian ship heading toward them,
surrounded by that same bluish halo of light. A suicide ship!
Arcot accelerated away from it as Fuller
hit it with a molecular beam. The ship reeled and stopped, and the Ancient
Mariner pulled away from it rapidly. Then, the frost-covered ship of the
dead came on, still heading for them!
Arcot turned and went off to the right,
but like a pursuing Nemesis, the strange ship came after them in the shortest,
most direct route!
The molecular beams were useless now;
there was no molecular energy left in the frozen hulk that accelerated toward
them. Suddenly, the two envelopes of blue light touched and coalesced! A great,
blinding arc leaped between the two ships as the speeding Satorian hull smashed
violently against the side of the Ancient Mariner! The men ducked
automatically, and were hurled against their seat-straps with tremendous force.
There was a rending, crashing roar, a sea of flame—and darkness.
They could only have been unconscious a
few seconds, for when the fog went away, they could see the glowing mass of the
enemy ship still falling far beneath them. The lux wall where it had hit was
still glowing red.
"Morey!" Arcot called.
"You all right? Wade? Fuller?"
"Okay!" Morey answered.
So were Wade and Fuller.
"It was the lux hull that saved
us," Arcot said. "It wouldn't break, and the temperature of the arc
didn't bother it. And since it wouldn't carry a current, we didn't get the full
electrical effect.
"I'm going to convince those birds that
this ship is made of something they can't touch! Well give them a real
show!"
He dived downward, back into the battle.
It was a show, all right! It was
impossible to fight the Earth ship. The enemy had to concentrate four magnetic
rays on it to use their electric weapon, and they could only do that by sheer
luck!
And even that was of little use, for
they simply lost one of their own ships without harming the Ancient Mariner
in the least.
Ship after ship crumpled in on itself like
crushed tinfoil or hurled itself violently to the ground as the molecular beams
touched them. The Satorian fleet was a fleet no longer; it was a small
collection of disorganized ships whose commanders had only one thought—to flee!
The few ships that were left spearheaded
out into space, using every bit of acceleration that the tough bodies of the
Satorians could stand. With a good head start, they were rapidly escaping.
"We can't equal that
acceleration," said Wade. "We'll lose them!"
"Nope!" Arcot said grimly.
"I want a couple of those ships, and I'm going to get them!"
At four gravities of acceleration, the Ancient
Mariner drove after the fleeing ships of Sator, but the enemy ships soon
dropped rapidly from sight.
Twenty five thousand miles out in space,
Arcot cut the acceleration. "We'll catch them now, I think," he said
softly. He pushed the little red switch for an instant, then opened it. A
moment before, the planet Nansal had been a huge disc behind them. Now it-was a
tiny thing, a full million miles away.
It took the Satorian fleet over an hour
to reach them. They appeared as dim lights in the telectroscope. They rapidly
became larger. Arcot had extinguished the lights, and since they were on the
sunward side of the approaching ships, the Ancient Mariner was
effectively invisible.
"They're going to pass us at a
pretty good clip," Morey said quietly. "They've been accelerating all
this time."
Arcot nodded in agreement. "We'll
have to hit them as they come toward us. We'd never get one in passing."
As the ships grew rapidly in the plate,
Arcot gave the order to fire!
The molecular rays slashed out toward
the onrushing ships, picking them off, as fast as the beams could be directed.
The rays were invisible in space, so they managed to get several before the Satorians
realized what was happening.
Then, in panic, they scattered all over
space, fleeing madly from the impossible ship that was firing on them. They
knew they had left it behind, yet here it was, waiting for them!
"Let them go," Arcot said. "We've
got our specimens, and the rest can carry the word back to Sator that the war
is over for them."
It was several hours later that the Ancient
Mariner approached Nansal again, bringing with it two Satorian ships. By
careful use of the heat beam and the molecular beam, the Earthmen had managed
to jockey the two battle cruisers back to Nansal.
It was nighttime when they landed. The
whole area a-round the city was illuminated by giant searchlights. Men were
working recovering the bodies of the dead, aiding those who had survived, and
examining the wreckage.
Arcot settled the two Satorian ships to
the ground, and landed the Ancient Mariner.
Tories sprinted over the ground toward
them as he saw the great silver ship land. He had been helping in the examination
of the wrecked enemy ships.
"Have they attacked anywhere else
on the planet?" Arcot asked as he opened the airlock.
Torlos nodded. "They hit five other
cities, but they didn't use as big a fleet as they did here. The plan of battle
seems to have been for the ships with the new weapons to hit here first and
then hit each of the other cities in turn. They didn't have enough to make a
full-scale attack; evidently, your presence here made them desperate.
"At any rate, the other cities were
able to beat off the magnetic beam ships with the projectors of molecular
beams."
"Good," Arcot thought.
"Then the Nansal-Sator war is practically over!"
Chapter 23
richard ascot stepped into the open airlock of the Ancient
Mariner and walked down the corridor to the library. There, he found
Fuller and Wade battling silently over a game of chess and Morey relaxed in a
chair with a book in his hands.
"What a bunch of loafers,"
Arcot said acidly. "Don't you ever do anything?"
"Sure," said Fuller. "The
three of us have entered into a lifelong pact with each other to refrain from
using a certain weapon which would make this war impossible for all time."
"What war?" Arcot wondered.
"And what weapon?"
"This war," Wade grinned,
pointing at the chess board. "We have agreed absolutely never to read each
other's minds while playing chess."
Morey lowered his book and looked at
Arcot. "And just what have you been so busy about?"
"I've been investigating the weapon
on board the Satorian ships we captured," Arcot told them. "Quite an
interesting effect. The Nansalian scientists and I have been analyzing the
equipment for the past three days.
"The Satorians found a way to cut
off and direct an electrostatic field. The energy required was tremendous, but
they evidently separated the charges on Sator and carried them along on the
ships.
"You can see what would happen if a
ship were charged negatively and the ship next to it were charged positively!"
The magnitude of electrostatic forces is
terrific! If you put two ounces of iron ions, with a positive charge, on the
north pole, and an equivalent amount of chlorine ions, negatively charged, on the
south pole, the attraction, even across that distance, would be three hundred
and sixty tons!
"They located the negative charges
on one ship and the positive charges on the one next to it. Their mutual
attraction pulled them toward each other. As they got closer, the charges arced
across, heating and fusing the two ships. But they still had enough motion
toward each other to crash.
"They were wrecked by less than a
tenth of an ounce of ions which were projected to the ship and held there by an
automatic field until the ships got close enough to arc through it.
"We still haven't been able to
analyze that trick field, though."
"Well, now that we've gotten things
straightened out," Fuller said, "let's go home! I'm anxious to leave!
We're all ready to go, aren't we?"
Arcot nodded. "All except for one
thing. The Supreme Three want to see us. We've got a meeting with them in an
hour, so put on your best Sunday pants."
In the Council of Three, Arcot was
officially invited to remain with them. The fleet of molecular motion ships was
nearing completion—the first one was to roll off the assembly line the next
day—but they wanted Arcot, Wade, Morey, and Fuller to remain on Nansal.
"We have a large world here,"
the Scientist thought at them. "Thanks to you people, we can at last call
it our own. We offer you, in the name of the people, your choice of any spot in
this world. And we give you—this!" The Scientist came forward. He had a
disc-shaped plaque, perhaps three inches in diameter, made of a deep ruby-red
metal. In the exact center was a green stone which seemed to shine of its own
accord, with a pale, clear, green light; it was transparent and highly
refractive. Around it, at the three points of a triangle, were three similar,
but smaller stones. Engraved lines ran from each of the stones to the center,
and other lines connected the outer three in a triangle. The effect was as
though one were looking down at the apex of a regular tetrahedron.
There were characters in Nansalese at
each point of the tetrahedron, and other characters engraved in a circle around
it.
Arcot turned it in his hand. On the back
was a representation of the Nansalian planetary system. The center was a pale
yellow, highly-faceted stone which represented the sun. Around this were the
orbits of planets, and each of the eleven planets was marked by a different
colored stone. The Scientist was holding in the palm of his hand another such
disc, slightly smaller. On it, there were three green stones, one slightly
larger than the others.
"This is my badge of office as
Scientist of the Three. The stone marked Science is here larger. Your plaque is
new. Henceforth, it shall be the Three and a Coordinator! "Your vote shall
outweigh all but a unanimous vote of the Three. To you, this world is
answerable, for you have saved our civilization. And when you return, as you
have promised, you shall be Coordinator of this system!"
Arcot stood silent for a moment. This
was a thing he had never thought of. He was a scientist, and he knew that his
ability was limited to that field.
At last, he smiled and replied: "It
is a great honor, and it is a great work. But I can not spend my time here
always; I must return to my own planet. I can not be fairly in contact with
you.
"Therefore, I will make my first
move in office now, and suggest that this plaque signify, not the Coordinator,
and first power of your country, but Counselor and first friend in all things
in which I can serve you.
"The tetrahedron you have chosen;
so let it be. The apex is out of the plane of the other points, and I am out of
this galaxy. But there is a relationship between the apex and the points of the
base, and these lines will exist forever.
"We have been too busy to think of
anything else as yet, but our worlds are large, and your worlds are large.
Commerce can develop across" the ten million light years of space as
readily as it now exists across the little space of our own system. It is a
journey of but five days, and later machines will make it in less! Commerce
will come, and with it will come close communication.
"I will accept this plaque with the
understanding that I am but your friend and advisor. Too much power in the
hands of one man is bad. Even though you trust me completely, there might be an
unscrupulous successor.
"And I must return to my world.
"Your first ship will be ready
tomorrow, and when it is completed, my friends and I will leave your planet.
"We will return, though. We are ten
million light years apart, but the universe is not to be measured in space
anymore, but in time. We are five days apart. I will be nearer to you at all
times than is Sator!
"If you wish, others of my race shall
come, too. But if you do not want them to come, they will not. I alone have
Tharlano's photographs of the route, and I can lose them."
For a moment, the Three spoke together,
then the Scientist was again thinking at Arcot.
"Perhaps you are right. It is
obvious your people know more than we. They have the molecular ray, and they
know no wars; they do not destroy each other. They must be a good race, and we
have seen excellent examples in you.
"We can realize your desire to
return home, but we ask you to come again. We will remember that you are not
ten million light years, but five days, from our planet."
When the conference was ended, Arcot and
his friends returned to their ship. Torlos was waiting for them outside the
airlock.
"Abaout haow saon you laive?"
he asked in English.
"Why—tomorrow," Arcot said, in
surprise. "Have you been practicing our language?"
Torlos reverted to telepathy. "Yes,
but that is not what I came to talk to you about. Arcot—can a man of Nansal
visit Earth?" Anxiously, hopefully, and hesitatingly, he asked. "I
could come back on one of your commercial vessels, or come back when you
return. And—and I'm sure I could earn my living on your world! I'm not hard to
feed, you know!" He half smiled, but he was too much in earnest to make a perfect success.
Arcot was amazed that he should ask. It
was an idea he would very much like to see fulfilled. The idea of metal-boned
men with tremendous strength and strange molecular-motion muscles would inspire
no friendship, no feeling of kinship, in the people of Earth. But the man
himself—a pleasant, kindly, sincere, intelligent giant—would be a far greater
argument for the world of Nansal that the most vivid orator would ever be.
Arcot asked the others, and the vote was
unanimous, let him come!
The next day, amid great ceremony, the
first of the new Nansalian ships came from the factories. When the celebration
was over, the four Earthmen and the giant Torlos entered the Ancient
Mariner.
"Ready to go, Torlos?" Arcot
grinned.
"Pearfactly, Ahcut. Tse soonah tse
bettah!" he said in his oddly accented English.
Five hours saw them out of the galaxy.
Twelve hours more, and they were heading for home at full speed, well out in
space.
The Home Galaxy was looming large when
they next stopped for observation. Old Tharlano had guided them correctly!
They were going home!