This was the last day.
This was the day they moved the planet.
Through
Colin's moccasins he could feel the solid earth, the rounded bulge of the
planet Jethro—his planet—and at the same time he imagined he could sense the
purposeful thrumming of the Tenons' machinery at the heart of the world.
This afternoon they were taking his world
away.
That was Colin's viewpoint. He had been born
on Jethro. He was furious about its theft.
It wasn't Gerban Arnauf's
viewpoint. He was the one who had given orders to seize Jethro, to take it away
through space for Earth's selfish ends. And he was in charge now.
And it wasn't Stephen
Strang's viewpoint either. He had some unusual ideas of his own that often
crossed Gerban's projects. So it was good opportunism for this competing
world-mover to stand up for Colin and for Jethro.
And that was the start of
the trouble. Because when the lives of worlds are at stake there ought to be no
room for personal animosities. And doubly so when the human worlds are being
infiltrated by an implacably alien enemy intelligence.
KENNETH
BULMER
Novels in Ace editions include:
NO
MAN'S WORLD (F-104)
THE
WIZARD OF STARSHIP POSEIDON (F-209) THE MILLION YEAR HUNT (F-285) DEMONS'WORLD
(F-289) LAND BEYOND THE MAP (M-lll)
WORLDS
FOR THE TAKING
KENNETH BULMER
ACE
BOOKS, INC. 1120 Avenue of the
Americas New York, N.Y. 10036
WORLDS
FOR THE TAKING
Copyright
©, 1966, by Kenneth Bulmer AH Rights Reserved
Cover by Hoot
von Zitzewitz
Printed in U.S.A-
PART ONE
.
S.__
Jethro's sky and, taken, uprooted, ravaged,
the planet would spin achingly through a man-made otherness towards an unwanted
resurrection.
Colin
Copping, the first bom of Jethro, walked dreamily up from the lake in that last
pellucid dawn, walking consciously through the sunbeams from his sun Jezreel,
knowing all argument finished and all pleading spent.
A
month ago, at the end of spring, when the patiently transported and lovingly
tended daffodils had been knotted over in Anthea's garden patch, the Earthmen
had finished concreting out their chamber floating in molten magma at the
planet's core. Copping had experienced a traitorous excitement all during the
placid winter as the Earthmen sent their borer down through the substance of
Jethro. He had felt a closeness to all the scientific technology of the human
galaxy then. He had been only sixteen Jethroan years old
and that, as he had meticulously calculated
with conscious belonging pride, made him seventeen and a quarter terrestrial
years old; and the bitter humiliation of his elders had passed over him with a
vague puzzlement. But now, on this last day, he felt all the trapped panic of a
snared rabbit earned kitchenwards by twisted dangling legs.
Arnold
Gunderson with his catch slung over one shoulder fell into step with Copping.
They had known each other all their lives, had fought, quarreled, planned,
sneaked off together. Their moccasins trod the trail silently.
"It's today
then."
"Today."
"Might not be so bad,"—Gunderson
tried to inject a dead enthusiasm into his voice—"we get to ride in a
spaceship—"
"I think if they could have done, they
would have left us on the surface." Copping spoke with slow deliberation.
"They
couldn't do that!" Gunderson puckered worried eyes at Copping. "We
come back here . . . You think?"
"I
don't know what to think. ... All
this . . . How can it ever be the same?" He had no need to gesture.
Beyond
the Lapiz Lake, where they had just taken their last catch, the green and
burgeoning slopes of the Mountains of Carmel Jones led upwards against the sky
until they broke serenely in their cloud-clustering pinnacles of shining rock
and shimmering snow. To the south, the land opened out, verdant and promising
and empty. To the north, the country of Ebanemael, where the second colonist
ship's company had pitched their homes, stretched like the flank of a lazy
well-fed cow humping comfortably against the mountains. Easy neighbors, the
Ebanfolk, in their fat lands of com and blue grass, friendly, laughing and
quaffing hugely at the riotous fairs staged annually on the banks of the border
river Yasmeen, that tumbled whitely to a grave slow-sliding placidity before
merging into the estuary and the sea.
Copping knew this land and loved it, every
winding thread of water interlacing the bending trees, the dim mysterious
greenness of the forests, the errant flash of a startled faun with wide eyes
blankly solemn, the smell of woodsmoke, the depth and intricacy of a sward of
bluebells echoing the translucent blueness above.
This was the last day.
This was the day they moved
the planet.
Through
his moccasins he could feel the solid earth, the rounded bulge of the planet
Jethro—his planet—and at the same time he imagined he could sense the
purposeful, meaningless thrumming of the Terrans' machinery at the heart of
the world.
This afternoon they were
taking his world away.
The
unfairness of it all bewildered young Copping. His father and the other
colonists had argued and pleaded and the siblings had looked on; but when they
understood fully what was to happen, the blunt resigned anger of the small
maltreated by the strong gave them pseudo-courage to carry on with their
preparations for the renunciation of their birthrights.
The
skein of rainbow trout slipped and the last fat juicy fish dragged in the dust
of the trail. Copping hefted the fish higher, not caring that they pressed
against his Lincoln green tunic and brown slacks. These fish were to be roasted
and taken aboard the spaceship more as a symbol than as mere food. The Terrans
being committed would take care of fellow humans, even though they were
Earthpeople three times removed.
The
trail broadened and the log houses of the town came into sight—a first view of
home so familiar to Copping and Gunderson that they scarcely comprehended its
uniqueness now; never again would they see their home just like this beneath
the sun Jezreel.
"I
hear the Ebanfolk tried to smash up the Terrans' camp last night."
Gunderson spoke distantly, as though such antics were reserved for a crazed
minority.
"Too late for that now." Copping
searched the people moving in the streets. He could feel a pain which the sight
of their faces would bring. "It was always too late. Once the Terrans
wanted this planet there was nothing we could do to prevent them taking
it."
Copping spoke with a quiet
reserved viciousness that was all that was left of his hatred. "When they
destroyed our radio, we thought that strange. What help could we ask for from
the human galaxy? These men are the accredited agents of the Human government.
They are obeying the law. The Ebanfolk, by fighting for what is theirs, are
breaking the law."
Gunderson's
thick fingers closed on his fish trident. "I would like—" he said, and stopped. He
swallowed. "At last year's fair I met an Ebanfolk and we talked. I thought
him a braggart then. Now, I am not sure.. .
They
went down into their town, the town of Happy Landings, and saw the Terrans
walking and talking to the people of Jethro as though they were not stealing
their world from under their feet.
Gerban
Amouf watched them walk in, his hooded eyes heavy and impatient with the
affairs of the galaxy; his thick body, clad in the impeccable green uniform of
the Solterran Construction Service, ponderous with authority; his brain ever
demanding functions of performance beyond the limits of a normally constituted
human body. Gerban Amouf was one of Caracci's Young Men. Perhaps only Tung Chi
Leslie could compete on equal terms with Arnouf, always providing, of course,
that one excepted the brilliant phenomenon of Stephen Christopher Strang.
The
sun Jezreel drew higher in the sky, casting blued-steel shadows onto the beaten
square from crowding log houses, striking a brazen shaft from the town
clock—the old ship's chronometer they had set up as a permanent reminder of
home. Before Jethro, home to them had been SGC Seven eight nine three Baker
Four—or so Arnouf thought, vaguely, not caring. Whatever name the planet had
borne interested him even less. These people had not driven their colonizing
ships direct from Earth. That gave Gerban Arnouf all the power he needed.
He
stood now watching the people make their last preparations for evacuation. His
thick body and square fringe-bearded face seemed in their power to bear, down
with a physical force on the town of Happy Landings. Separated by a screen of
local beobab trees the ships waited on the field. Terran ships. Ships of the
SCS. Ships provided by Gerban Arnouf to take the people of Jethro into safety.
He considered his own thoughtfulness and kindness and wondered if he was
getting soft.
(Caracci
said: "The welfare and interests of Solterra override every other interest in the galaxy.")
Arnouf
watched as Copping and Gunderson marched stiffly into their log house where the
smoke of cooking fires indicated some barbarous rite before embarkation. Arnouf
stroked his thick short black beard. He had provided standard space rations.
The men and women of Jethro had proved a stiff-necked lot and he welcomed the
day he would be quit of them.
But their planet was good.
Firm
footfalls on the beaten earth brought Amoufs attention back; he knew this must
be an Earthman walking arrogantly in his hard-heeled spaceboots and not a
native Jethroan in soft silent moccasins. He turned to greet Commodore
Pelling, graying, rough-faced, desperately trying to make rear-admiral and
knowing in his heart he had failed. Arnouf had been Space Navy himself, before
transferring to the SCS; but he allowed no hint of the knowledge that he,
himself, would have made vice-admiral by now to cloud his dealings with this
half-failure.
"All
set and ready to go, sir, as soon as you give the word." Pelling sweated a
little, not so much from the Jez-reel heat, Arnouf saw with malicious
amusement, as from his own inner awareness of tension and lack of moral fiber
to cope with problems not alphabetically listed in the Book.
"No trouble?"
Pelling
shifted uncomfortably. "Camp three was attacked by the Ebanfolk last
night—nothing serious," he added quickly as he saw the thundercloud
gather on Amoufs face. "More in the nature of a demonstration. We chivied
them away—"
"Casualties?"
"Why—none." Pelling appeared
perplexed.
"These people need a
lesson to drive home to them the seriousness of the situation. They have
continually pestered me—me, Gerban Amouf!—with
their fatuous arguments. Well, we know how to deal with
them." "Yes, sir."
Arnouf
braced his stomach muscles, shoving his thumbs down behind the wide
synthileather belt supporting his twin Lee Johns. They were an affectation he
sometimes despised himself for countenancing, and, yet, one he could not do
without. The feel of the hard-ridged butts of the guns, then-drag at his hips,
reassured him. He spoke now reflectively.
"These
humans have been on Jethro for nineteen years terran now, and they have
accomplished virtually nothing! Despite their livestock, they appear to prefer
a hunting culture. Decadent. Where are their universities, their transport
networks, their drive into the future? They are regressing. It's an old story.
Too familiar to be painful any longer. As for their local customs—"
(Caracci
said: "Respect a culture's local traditions and customs and religions, but
never, ever, allow them to interfere with the greater good of Solterra.")
Pelling
rubbed a hand down his clean-shaven jaw. He said carefully, "They're
pretty much like us, sir. Ordinary Earth-type human beings. They're not even
touched with a trace of Shurilala or Takkat blood, and that's going about as
far back in history as you can, without tangling with legends. They're pure
terrestrial—"
Commodore
Pelling stopped speaking and swallowed. He had caught sight of Amouf's face and
what he saw frightened him.
"I
do not care, Commodore Pelling, if they are pure terrestrial or late-culture
Utukku. . . . We are here on Solterran government business. That is all that
need concern you."
"Yes, sir."
"I
am personally supervising the evacuation. As soon as you are off-planet I shall
fly to the Shaft Camp and go down to the center. I shall give you the time you
need to shift into FTL, and then I shall move planet. There must be no slipups."
Pelting sweated, said, "There won't be,
sir. It'll all go as smooth as the drill book."
"Just see that it
does, Commodore."
A
procession began to move from the shaded side of the square with a slow limp
dignity that had no power to affect Gerban Arnouf. He watched, a tiny smile
stirring his lips above the close beard. Commodore Pelling saluted and marched
off, his boots cracking down louder than all the Jethroans' silent moccasins
together.
Arthur
Copping, Colin's father, walked in that procession; old silver-haired
Rainscarfe; hatchet-faced Dirk Tiamat; Sven Gundeison, Arnold's father; the
elders and the citizens of property and repute, they walked in solemn silence
towards Gerban Amouf, the arbiter of their destiny.
Arnouf
watched them come with cynical ease. This was just another chore he must finish
out quickly and as smoothly as he might; even Caracci taught the benefits of
polite diplomacy.
A
crowd of women and children, young men, expectant girls, formed in the
background of the scene, moving like undersea fronds at the whim of the moment;
their clothes subdued in color, for they had laid away their bright garments
on this day of sorrow.
No
real fear of violence touched Amouf; but his organizational instincts prompted
him to call over his wrist-radio. "Captain Nogu, are your men in
position?"
The
voice in the speaker clipped behind his ear said firmly, "All in position,
sir. We have both you and the demonstration in full view."
Arnouf had no need to turn around to check
the inconspicuous company of soldiers lounging at the far gate. They had
screens and energy weapons set up there and they could drop a shield around
Amouf and crisp the Jethroans before the first native could unlimber his
Carpenter. Native? Well—it was a natural thought; these people
were little better than barbarians despite their terrestrial ancestry and
their culture. His contempt for them grew as he waited for their approach.
Cracker-jawed,
silver-haired Rainscarfe spoke for the men of Jethro. He had buried three sons
in the earth of this planet and he was quite prepared to be buried beside them
if needs be. Arnouf knew this. Therefore he acted with a little more discretion
than perhaps otherwise he would have done.
"We
ask you for the last time, Commissioner Amouf. We traveled to this world from
the world of our birth freely. We know Earth and love her as the progenitor of
our people in the galaxy. We are pure terrestrial. There is no blood of Takkat
or Shurilala or Pallas or Octo or any other of our allied once-alien friends in
the galaxy running in our veins. We have lived here on Jethro beneath the sun
Jezreel and made our homes here. All the future lies before us. Will you not
reconsider? Think how you would feel if not hostile aliens but your own
people, your own race, took away your most precious birthright! Have pity on
us, Commissioner! Leave us our world and pick another from the uncounted
billions afloat in the galaxy!"
"There
is nothing left to say, old man. I've listened to you, as I need not have done.
Now pack up your things and go aboard the spaceships."
"But will you
not—"
"No!
I won't! If you're not aboard by noon then you will have to answer for the
consequences."
Amouf
turned heavily and marched off, erect and stiff, priding himself on handling
the stupid natives with firmness and decision.
The delegation stared after him as though
unmoved by this final clapping of the iron door on their hopes; for they had
long since ceased to hope, and their final protest had been in the form of a
ritual designed to placate their own conceptions of themselves as men.
In
their turn they shuffled off over the beaten earth of the square. The women and
children and young people watched them. Then, like a flock of birds turning in
one master-commanded aerial evolution, they all swung away towards their houses
to collect their possessions and file aboard the spaceships.
Anxious though he was to return to the shaft
and descend again to the control chamber in the center of this planet, Gerban
Amouf felt compelled to stay to watch the departure of the colonists. Once rid
of them, then, the whole lucidly organized power of the SCS could be used for
its primary purpose. The incident of the colonists was an irritating sidetrack
that might have ballooned into over-importance had he not handled the
stupidity with firmness and decision.
Firmness and decision. Caracci would have
liked that.
He
had reached Captain Nogu and the gate and stopped for a moment to look with
obvious inspection at the detail of soldiery. Nogu saluted. His thin tough face
stared out from the steel embrasure of his helmet with all the blind arrogance
of the perfect fighting machine. Nogu had once mentioned to Amouf in
conversation that he was married to a girl from the House of Longhi, with a ranch on that pleasant world of Solariadne, and Amouf had been twice
astonished; once that this soulless fighting machine could ever have loved and,
once, again that he had had the impertinence to marry a daughter of one of the
most powerful of terrestrial Houses.
The
soldiers stood with awkward betraying tenseness, conscious of the eye of the
Commissioner upon them. Their dark green and brown combat armor, their bulbous
helmets, the lean sinewy strength of their weapons, all conspired to indicate
very plainly what they were. Fighting Men. Dangerous. Handle With Care.
Amouf
said pleasantly, "Everything is going splendidly, Captain. Rather a
holiday for your men, really."
Nogu
said, "Yes, sir." He said it dutifully; but despite all his own
innate knowledge of authority, his own powers here —and elsewhere—Amouf felt
the chill of blank fighting ferocity chained by obedience and Regulations chafe
at him like rough-scrubbed bark. A breed apart—soldiers.
He
walked on, out towards the space field. Commodore Pelling's little fleet of
little ships—Amouf had not employed large freighters—waited shining bravely in
the sunshine from Jezreel.
The speaker behind his ear buzzed and a cool
voice said, "Attention. Attention. Bogey on screen orbiting planet-wards.
Condition Orange."
Amouf
lifted the wrist-radio and was about to call in when the speaker burped and
said, "Bogey translated. SCS cruiser Archimedes. Captain Morley Christopher Landsdowne. Condition Green."
Amouf
said, "Control—this is the Commissioner. Have you contacted Archimedes yet?"
"Not
yet, sir. Ident signals coming in—yes, here we are. Hooking you direct through
on audio. Stand by."
A
hiss and then the strong authoritative voice of a space captain. "This is
Captain Landsdowne, SCS Archimedes. Clear
for landing at Happy Landings?"
The
Duty Officer aboard Pelling's flagship, where the pick-up and ident had been made,
cut in before Amouf could speak. "Cleared for touchdown on Happy Landings'
field. You'll have to make it snappy. Departure is scheduled for noon local.
Two hours."
Now
what, wondered Amouf, was a Solterran Construction Service cruiser doing here,
now? He had enough ships. Too many for his own peace of mind. He decided to
postpone flying to the shaft and instead see this Christopher Landsdowne. A
man from the House of Christopher. H'mm. If he knew Stephen C. Strang at all
there might be news of that personage. Amouf didn't care for Strang in any but
one way: the object of complete competition.
The brisk walk out to the field tingled up
his muscles and he felt an obscure disappointment when the Duty Officer,
having spotted him on his ground screen, sent off a flier to pick him up. The
flier pilot—flamboyantly bulky in his unnecessary fur-collared short
coat—whipped the little craft up to the airlock nestled on the starboard flank
of Pelling's flagship, SCS Anaximenes.
"The next time, if there is a next time
you fly me, pilot," growled Amouf, "handle your craft with more
common sense and less nonsense. You are no longer an overgrown child playing
with an expensive toy."
The pilot's neck grew red
behind the thick collar.
He had the sense to say
only, "Yes, sir."
Amouf stepped through the airlock, hoping he
would not find anything too complicated for him to handle. He intended to shift
Jethro and nothing was going to stop him; but the advent of this SCS cruiser
was no chance. Something had brought her across the gulfs of a hundred and
ninety light-years to Jezreel.
He
had no idea what that reason could be as he stepped through to the flagship's
control room to wait for the visiting cruiser's captain to flit across. As
Commissioner of the SCS he had supreme power on this planet. He had no idea
what Archimedes wanted and, truly, as he hunched impatiently before the lock, he did not
care.
Even
when the lock opened and Captain Landsdowne stepped through, Amouf did not
know; even when he saw Stephen Christopher Strang following the captain, Amouf
still did not know.
U
Stephen Christopher Strang,
from the day he had first realized the fact, had always taken a huge and secret
delight in the exact parallel of his initials with those of the Solterran
Construction Service. He was a man like that. He found his pleasures inwardly,
looking warmly to the secret little titillations that exposure to the real
galaxy would have blasted and shredded away in ridiculousness. SCS. Yes, he
liked that.
He
had started life, like so many other first-rank men, in the Terran Survey
Corps. But that distinguished and extremely ancient body had had its functions
drastically altered over the past century with the fruition of Caracci's ideas.
Now the SCS garnered with scientific brush and pan the galactic crumbs
dislodged by the TSC. The roles had been reversed.
Now,
as he stepped aboard Captain Pelling's flagship, SCS Anaximenes, he prepared to brave once more the rigors of full Space Navy procedures
and traditions and stuffiness.
As he had said on the way across to Morley
Landsdowne,
"I
suppose we'll have to heel-click and salute and mumbo-jumbo nineteen to the
dozen, Mori. Why the Service can't train and maintain enough spaceship crews itself,
I really don't know. Thank goodness, I don't have to put up with a space navy crew."
Landsdowne's
swarthy reckless face had creased into a smile. "Think yourself lucky, Steve. Caracci likes you. He doesn't
necessarily like all his Young Men."
His
footfalls soft on the deck, Strang followed Lands-downe into Pelling's control
cabin. Pelling shuffled forward, smiling, holding out his hand.
"Captain
Landsdownel This is a pleasure. May I flick for refreshments?"
"Thank
you, sir; but not right now." Landsdowne saluted and expertly contrived to
insert himself into the background as Strang moved forward. Pelling smiled
uncertainly and then shook hands with Strang. Strang smiled bleakly and said,
"Commodore Pelling. Thank you. Ah—Gerban. Nice to see you again after so
long."
Gerban
Amouf took the proffered hand. He had tensed up as soon as Strang had come
aboard. Strang let the smile spread on the inside of his face; he kept just the
hint of a polite official smile distending his lips.
(Caracci
said: "Use your emotions as weapons; never, ever, let them interfere with the good of Solterra.")
"Welcome aboard, Stephen. You've come
from Earth?"
"Not
directly. I called back at Solishtar before coming on here to see you."
"To see me? That was very—nice."
Strang
decided to let Arnouf off lightly. He would gain no pleasure from tormenting
the man.
"I
saw Caracci. He asked me to convey his compliments to you."
"Thank you—"
"I
suppose you have not yet heard of my promotion. I made Chief Commissioner—"
Strang had to stop then and use a tissue to cover the embarrassment he felt at the enormous outpouring of
feral hate and thwarted ambition bursting from Amouf; the man's face had
drained of blood and a gray falcon head stared forth in place of the bearded
bull. Strang disposed of the tissue and said, "I suppose one of us three
would have to make Chief first, Gerban. You, me, or Tung Chi Leslie. And he's
out past the Vermilion Cluster at the moment, a clear eighty light-years
further out than we are now."
Strang
knew quite clearly what Arnouf wanted to say. "Leslie Tung was parsecs off
in space, I was also working in space, on the job; but you, Stephen Strang,
were crawling around Caracci at Headquarters on Earth, licking up for your
promotion."
Oh, yes, that was what Amouf wanted to say.
Amouf
said, "Congratulations, Stephen. I'm sure you deserve the honor."
Which
wasn't bad, Strang decided tolerantly, as a backhander, considering.
"Everything's going fine here, I'm
confident, Gerban."
Ease
the situation out of sight and carry on with the business. He had told Amouf
face-to-face; and that was all he had come for. Arnouf, too, would realize
that. He might even, in that ferret-like brain of his, allow Strang some
gratitude for being told directly, man-to man, instead of being left to find
out when Service orders were next promulgated.
"Yes. We've finalized the drive. The
control chamber is more or less, within the prescribed degrees, at planet
center. We can begin to move this afternoon. Deadline for planet clear is noon,
local."
"Sounds
very competently done, Gerban. Not that I expected anything else. You have a
large number of ships on the field. Surprising. No troubles?"
"None."
"Yes, well, then .. A pause.
Then, "You have—other—business in these
parts?" Amouf forced a smile; it hurt him.
Strang
wished the man hadn't asked that; it showed a lack of delicacy. Hadn't he come
all this way just to tell
Amouf
that he had made Chief? Didn't the man appreciate that?
"Nothing
that can't wait. I'd like to hold off in space a few diameters out and watch you move planet.
That's one sight a man can never tire of."
"No."
"I
suppose as soon as this assignment is over you'll call in for a few weeks on
Solisis? Does a man good to go home now and then."
"I
expect I shall." Amouf's frigidity was now growing to be an embarrassment
to Strang. He had come in friendship; surely they weren't going to have a scene
now?
Strang
moved gently towards the bank of screens showing surrounding space, the extent
of this planet to its horizons, the links with central chamber and the shaft
camp with the other temporary camps. All very efficient—as was natural with any
of Caracci's Young Men.
Strang
tried to throw off the uneasy feeling of being an interloper. After all, he did
out-rank everyone else on-planet. He had never cared much, or so he had
imagined, for rank and title; and even the heady thrill of excitement he had
experienced back on Earth, when Caracci had croaked at him that he was now a Chief Commissioner, had been rigidly suppressed.
But
he had every right to do as he wished now. He could order and command and it
would be done. Power he knew corrupted, or so they said. Perhaps it was as the
man said that only immunity corrupted. Whatever it might be, so far, Strang had
escaped that tarbrush and he had enough humility left to pray he would continue
to escape.
He
looked at the screens, a last idle glance before he took Morley Landsdowne back
to Archimedes and they spaced out.
On the landing field small figures ran. They
ran fleetly, with a lightness and grace new to him. Intrigued, he asked for the
magnification to be stepped up. At once the leading figure snapped into close
focus.
Strang stared with
amazement.
Even as he stared the first explosion boomed
up, outside, not coming through the speakers, an explosion outside the ship and
shattering in with immediate stunning surprise.
A
speaker buzzed and a voice said, "Captain Nogu. Two idiots have burst
through onto the field. They're harmless but they have explosives—"
Viciously,
Arnouf cut across the words. "Crisp them!" he shouted savagely.
Strang
had seen that magnified figure on the screen. He had taken in the green tunic,
the fawn slacks, the soft moccasins. He had seen the long flame rifle that
belonged in a museum. He had noticed the throwing arm, well-used, he surmised,
to throwing rocks to stun rabbits, hurl a clumsily-bundled package of
explosives against the lower fins of the ship. He had seen all that in the
space of a single heartbeat.
Now he said, firmly and harshly, "Belay
that last order. Knock them out. I want to talk to them." The speaker
said, "Yes, sir."
Strang
turned very slowly to face Arnouf. The Commissioner's bearded face had set
hard. His lips compressed into the beard. Strang said gently, "People,
Gerban."
"What
of it?" snapped Arnouf. "They're only a few useless colonists that
haven't stirred themselves since they got here."
"But,"
said Strang, still in that softly modulated voice, "but, Gerban, people.
On planet. And you say you are moving this world this afternoon."
"Yes."
"Their world, Gerban. Their world!"
"They've
been here nineteen years terranl They didn't come from Earth! They are a
handful! And, anyway, they can resettle the planet after it has been
integrated." Amouf seethed. "Think what Caracci says—"
Strang
beckoned. "I do not feel it incumbent upon you, Gerban, to tell me what
Caracci may have said or not said. Please come with me. I feel we
should—discuss—this matter in privacy. Perhaps you have a stateroom?"
"Of course. This way."
At the door, Strang swung his head
dangerously towards
Commodore
Pelling. "Have those two locals brought to me at oncel"
"Yes, sirl" said
Pelling, sweating.
Amouf
had the sense not to say anything as they went through the doorway into a
luxurious stateroom opening off the bridge. It was the Commodore's space cabin.
In luxury it rivaled many Earthside palaces; it gave Strang a queasy feeling as he mentally compared it
with Morley Landsdowne's space cabin aboard Archimedes.
Plumping himself down on a formfit and
flicking for a drink, Arnouf said testily, "Now we are alone, Stephen, I'd
like to make it clear that this Jethro operation was assigned to me personally
by Carracci."
"I'm
not challenging that, Gerban. On the contrary. You must take full
responsibility for what has been done here."
"You know what Caracci said; he repeated
it enough times. 'For the good of Solterra!' Surely that is reason enough for
all our actions?"
"But
they're people, Gerban. They looked like terrestrial stock, or near enough.
Might be a drop of Shurilala blood in there somewhere; but—"
"They
claim one hundred percent purity. But what difference does that make?"
Strang
leaned back in his formfit, considering. "A good question, Amouf. We of
Earth have fought many wars and now we have many good friends in our segment of
the galaxy. A man can be half Takkat and half Palladian and it makes no
difference in a single instance to the way he is treated by the government.
We've had enough quondam alien presidents and governors and what-nots over the
centuries. No, Gerban, their ancestry has nothing to do with it"
"Well, then?"
Here in the privacy of this space cabin,
rank, of course, had gone by the board. The "ChieF before Strang's
"Commissioner" meant nothing in the way they would talk to each
other.
"You know Regulations, Gerban. We cannot
take a planet if that planet possesses people without that people's consent."
"Suppose I tell you these people did
consent?"
Strang
shook his head gently. "They do not usually consent with flame rifles and
home-made bombs."
"But
they're useless, I tell you I Once
Jethro has been settled down and integrated around Shanstar they'll be invited
back. They'll be the first to colonize this world again."
"Isn't
the destiny of this world to be a factory unit? Perhaps these people don't
fancy giving up their forests and plains for factory chimneys and
concrete."
"What do they know about it! Ignorant
savages—"
"It's
no good arguing, Gerban. You can't move this planet, and that's final."
"But
we've bored through to the core! The Lansen generators are set up, the drive
is all ready to gol We've spent nine months Terran and millions on this! That
can't go to waste!"
"That's your problem, not mine."
The taste of power was sweet—and corrupting.
Stephen
Strang had fought hard from his origins aboard a Terran Survey Corps base ship
up through the ladder of promotions to the decisive moment when he had transferred
to the CSC and married Shena, and so to selection for special training. And
then the arduous years of toil and learning he spent with the hardest
taskmaster in the galaxy as boss, to become one of Caracci's Young Men: So to
the here and now as the youngest Chief Commissioner in the service. He had
fought hard. And he had enjoyed every minute of it, all the one hundred years
of it, and he meant with a dedicated purpose to enjoy the remaining two hundred
and fifty years of his life, God willing, until they slipped him gently into
space in his regulation oxygen cylinder, if he was lucky, or buried him in his
own private and personal plot of land on Solishtar.
He
could not afford this early in his superior career to make a mistake, however
trivial it might seem.
Slowly,
as though at a tangent, he said, "Tell me, Gerban, if you will, although
I know it to be none of my business, but I have always wondered—why is it that
you seldom ever use your House name?"
The question quite evidently dragged Arnouf
back from some private thought that had displeased him. He stood up and began to pace steadily back and forth in the stateroom.
"I
agree, Stephen, it is of no concern of yours. You are of the House of
Christopher. They are a powerful clan in the galaxy and I have heard that they
respect far more fully than others the individual rights of the family."
"That
is so. Shena has slept only with me and I have since marriage shared no other
woman of my House's bed."
"Admirable,
if old-fashioned. The House of Wayland, I am
told, are notorious for their communal—ah—habits."
"So I have
heard."
"You
know I am of the House of Pyros. The Ancestral Home is CentauriDanae. You know
also that my home is on Solisis. Does that answer your question?"
"I am sorry."
Strang
repressed firmly the natural inclination to offer House transference to a
friend; Amouf would be far too dangerous a man to admit to the same House. Let
him stew in his own psychological family problems. Anyway, old Zeus Christopher
Drummond, the current head of the House of Christopher, was too wily a bird to
admit a man of Arnoufs reputation.
Anyway,
perhaps Arnouf wanted to join the House of Wayland; the man's sexual appetites
might incline in that direction.
The
moment of awkwardness was broken as the ident plate lit up to show the worried
face of Commodore Pelling.
Arnouf
stabbed the ingress button savagely and Pelling, with an army captain treading
on his heels, entered. The captain looked like a hundred other tough competent
rapier-fast army men Strang knew: a breed with which he could find little in
common except the fanatical dedication to Solterran duty.
Following them, shambled two youths clad in
the green and brown hunting rig of the local population, herded by two army
privates, their stun guns unlimbered, the killing energy weapons holstered.
Amouf nodded curtly. Pelling said,
"Ah—these are the two boys, sir. They're still a little woozy from the
stun guns; but—"
"I
can see, thank you, Commodore." Amouf was in no mood to make anything
easier for anyone right now.
Strang
walked across and looked at the two young men. For a sickening instant he thought
of his son Simon and shuddered. If Simon had been in the position of these two
boys, now, what would he have done?
He
said, firmly but without harshness, "What are your names?"
"Colin Copping and
Arnold Gunderson."
"I
think," Strang said gently, "it would be more polite if you addressed
me as sir." He moved a little away and then turned, sharply. "Now.
You threw a bomb at the ships. You carried flame rifles and you seemed to me as
though you intended to use them. Do you mind telling me why?"
Copping
sneered. Gunderson hung his head, exhausted from the run onto the space field
and the despairing excitement of throwing the bombs they had quickly fashioned
from the community's mining stores.
"I can't help you,
Copping, if you won't help me."
That sounded reasonable.
Colin
Copping stared at this man, this outworlder to whom he must appear as a little
insect crawling on the surface of an unimportant speck of a world. "You've
come to steal our world! Well—we're not letting you take our birthright without
a fight!"
Strang
glanced once at Arnouf and then away. The Commissioner glared moodily back.
Trouble was here, now, live in the room like an electric charge. Strang knew he
had to meet it head on. "Why did you not lodge a protest with the
appropriate authorities, Colin?"
Copping all but laughed in his face.
"Appropriate
authorities! They smashed our radio! And who in the galaxy cares for us?"
"The Solterran Construction Service
does, for one!" snapped Strang.
Copping used a swear-phrase he had once heard
his father use when they'd ridden unexpectedly upon a Jeth-roan tiger savaging
his prize herd of Jerseys.
No
one reacted violently. Strang rubbed a hand down his jaw to conceal the
widening of his smile.
"I
think, young fellow, we'd all better go down and meet your local
government—"
"There's
scarcely any need for that now I" Gerban Ar-nouf interrupted angrily, not
bothering about the audience.
"There
is, Gerban. You already know what my decision must be—"
"This
isn't possible! You can't just space-in and calmly destroy nine months' work
and millions of money investment!"
"The
work and the money represent spent capital. They cannot weigh in the balance
against the principles we profess—"
Amouf
looked like a man stretching for the winning tape, suddenly seeing that tape
snatched away from him.
To
cut off what promised, despite all his care, to become a nasty scene—and that
before witnesses—Strang walked toward the door. "Come along with me, you
two," he said curtly. Obediently Copping and Gunderson fell in behind him
with their attendant guards. Captain Nogu glanced stiff-necked and
emotionlessly at Amouf, then wheeled and followed Strang. Over his shoulder,
the Chief Commissioner said, "Anyway, Gerban, the material and drive units
are not wasted. They can be taken from the chamber and used on your next planet
as they would have been in any event."
"A
fine consolation, that is." Amouf's hands were clenched at his sides, not
too far from the ridged butts of the Lee-Johns.
They went out from SCS Anaximenes and down by flier to land with a graceful evolution in the main square
of Happy Landings where the bronze spaceship's chronometer showed half an hour
to noon.
Strang had no wish to turn this simple
business into a melodrama. He was wearing, as was his custom, the standard
undress uniform of the service—a green open necked shirt, green slacks and
spaceboots. He wore no gun. He carried, as any Earthman would, the usual
arsenal of communications equipment and personal effects a civilized human
needed in the galaxy. But he had made no effort to strive after the glamorous
effect so many men affected, men like Gerban Amouf with his stiffly gorgeous
uniform bedecked with badges of rank and ostentatious jewelry. Amouf might
overawe these people of Jethro by sheer magnificence. Strang preferred to
manipulate them by his words and personal presence.
(Caracci
said, "The weapons are not important; the results are. And those results
must always be for the good of Solterra.")
A
group formed wonderingly about the men from Earth and their two Jethroan
prisoners. Colin Copping smiled weakly at his father, feeling foolish like a
child caught scrumping. Old cracker-jawed Rainscarfe stepped forward, all set
to deliver another speech; but Strang cut him off— politely but firmly.
"These
two youngsters tried to blow up the ships and would have shot at us. Why?"
They
told him. All of them. In a confused babble of sound that dinned screechingly
in the square. Strang held up his hands. He faced them, four-square, tough,
determined, trying to be fair.
"I
hear you. The two young men became frustrated with the ineptitude of their
elders and, copying the Ebanfolk, your neighbors, resorted to violence.
Violence can solve nothing. Only logic."
They
listened to him. The sun Jezreel shone down strongly now, the dust thick and
flat at the sides of the square, insect buzz reassuring and somnolent from the
eaves of the peaked log houses, the pile of personal belongings reduced as it
had been loaded aboard waiting trucks. Silently, only half-believing, they
listened.
"I must tell you at once there has been
an error of organization here on Jethro. The SCS recognizes this as your
planet—"
The hubbub drowned his words. They were
shouting and dancing about, waving their hands—and fists—hullabalooing and carrying
on. He quietened them with difficulty and finished what he had to say. "We
shall not be taking your world away from you. You have established an
inalienable right to it by your colonization here. That is all I have to say,
at this time. . . ."
"What,"
he heard Arnouf's sour voice say softly close to his ear, "no abject
groveling apology?"
"That
will be all, Gerban," he said crisply. He stared levelly at the other man.
"As
you wish." Arnouf would have liked to have said more, Strang saw; but the
man bottled it up. He would save his bile till later.
For
Strang, the moment might have held triumph had he wished to display his own
feelings of superiority over Arnouf; the man had been wrong and Strang had had
to put him right. There were so many wrong things in the galaxy, so many
injustices to put right that no one man could handle them all. He had taken
pleasure in correcting this injustice because—he was cheerfully honest with
himself— because Gerban Arnouf had been caught red-handed breaking the regulations.
But he wouldn't crow over it. He wouldn't give Amouf the morbid satisfaction of
retrieving some of his own self-esteem by consoling himself with the reflection
that Strang was merely a bully glorying in his newly-won power.
Strang
didn't bother to wait for the delegation of Jeth-roans to come forward to thank
him.
He
whisked aboard his ship with Morely Landsdowne, already looking forward to the
work ahead in the Zagreb Cluster.
Watching the flier glistening like a flung
drop of water aimed errorlessly towards the airlock on the cruiser's hull,
Colin Copping tried to formulate his thoughts into some coherent order. He felt
the same profound relief, the sense of weight being lifted, that all the men
and women around him were experiencing. But there was more. This moming, when
he had walked up from the Lapiz Lake, there had been no hope in the galaxy for
him. Now, one man had changed all that. One man had stood in the square of
Happy Landings and given him his planet back.
Stephen Christopher Strang.
He
had looked like some god, standing there distributing -unimagined largesse, a
shining being from space concerned with the mysterious dance of the planets in
their courses, stepping, for a few moments, to earth to right a wrong.
Yes,
Colin Copping would not forget Chief Commissioner Stephen Strang.
Ill
Between faceted slivers of chingling quartz flowers, the six-legged
figure ran all scrabbling and sliding with a desperate lunging effort very
painful to watch. The quartz flowers tinkled and chimed and their sharp edges
glinted razors of fight back from this planet's swollen and dying sun.
Groves
of chalcedony led to swards of heliotrope, lawns of bloodstone, beds of
camelian with the drooping ice-cold fronds of chrysoprase forever jangling
emptily over trails of opaque yellow and red jasper. This world stared back
icily at space, hard and cold and frozen, draped in the miniature perfection
of inanimate lace.
The six-legged figure ran.
Its
aerial mechanisms had been burnt out and so it scuttled all chinkling and
chiming and belling across the crystal landscape beneath that bloated sun.
If
ever that sun had owned a name bestowed on it by people—whatever outlandish
shape or form once lived on this planet's surface men—nothing now would ever
bring that name back to life. Human beings called the sun—SGS Nine Nine Seven
Six Eight Omega Twelve. The planet would merely be given its number out from
its sun: this planet was number seventeen.
The
six-legged figure had all this information as well as much else stored
within its carapace as it lurched and struggled, rose and fell, labored on
across the quartz knives that would have flayed an unprotected flesh and blood
living being, piranha-like, to the bone.
One of its six legs ended
at the lowest joint; the missing shank had been shredded in the cold diabolical
glow of an energy weapon that had also snuffed out much of the vision circuits,
shattered the auditory system, sent the guidance circuits chattering and,
finally, completely crisped the anti-grav flying systems.
The
machine ran on insect legs with the blind obedience of a faithful robot
programmed to continue functioning until the last flicker of energy drained
from its cells.
Charles
Christopher Hastings sat sweating in his TSC scout, half a mile above the
surface of Planet Seventeen, and wondered, not without fear, if he was acting
in the best traditions of his Corps or was just being a bloody idiot.
Myra,
his wife, sat next to him, her sensitive fingers trying to coax a more
reassuring response from the crippled Globe-Trotter below.
"Whatever it was, Charlie, it packed a
punch. Oscar down there is really in trouble." "Yeah."
"He can't lift. Well
have to go down for him—"
"I
know." Hasting's voice rasped harshly. His fingers felt slick and clammy
and they shook despite his knowledge that he could lift jets at any second he
wished. But for how long would that be?
Myra, dark and honey-sweet and everything a
man could wish for among the stars, looked curiously at this new husband of
hers. His face shaded gaunt in the overhead fights. His tenseness, the tremble
he could not conceal— "Charlie," she said with sudden decision,
"you haven't told me all of it . . . ."
"That's right-"
"Don't
forget we're married now. I'm one of the Christophers, now. What's the real
picture?"
"If
you really—I'm sorry, Myra—of course, you're just as much a tough rollicking
spacefaring explorer as I am cracked up to be—it's just that, in bed, I can't
disentangle the images—but you're right, of course—"
"Well, tell me! Don't
mumble!"
"We're just a two man scouter with a
Globe-Trotter detailed to do a quick preliminary on Seventeen. Oscar trots
off—and, bingo I—something shoots him up. He's built to withstand most of the
lethal energy weapons we know about; but this blast shredded him. We'll be
lucky if we recover intact—"
"I
know. You mean whoever or whatever did this can creep up on us and shred us,
too."
"Yes.
I'd lift jets right now if we hadn't had that preliminary report. Something's going on down on the surface of Seventeen and Oscar picked it up and
recorded. His transmissions to us were interrupted—you saw what came in, it's
in the tank now—and now we're stuck with waiting for him."
"Can't we go down
now?"
"He's covering a frozen crystalline area
now, a kind of petrified forest, without cover that matters. Once he's reached
the radar-shadow of the cliffs below we can drop down. I don't think we've been detected yet."
"I do keep our
anti-radar gear up to scratch!"
"All
right, dear. You're a most competent exec. I wish Oscar would hurry!"
"Poor
thing," said the girl with the genuine affection of the working spacefarer
for the machines that kept her alive in the hostility of space. "He's
doing dam well with half of him shot away."
"We
haven't even started considering who—or what—did it. No reply from Crossbow?"
"No. That's what I don't like, Charlie. She should have answered our signals.
Maybe—"
"Yeah.
Whatever's doing this could have flung a radio-blanket around the planet. And
if our equipment can't penetrate it—then we're up against a very tough lot, indeed."
"Their beam that crippled poor Oscar
proves that."
Hastings
pulled a tissue and wiped his forehead. The tiny two-place scouter seemed to
him to crush in, small and coffin-nke. He longed for Commander Matlin and the
scouting crew of Crossbow to be with him now, to take the strain along
with him. But Crossbow was orbiting Planet Six and that was many
millions of miles away. So much for the modern day panic for rush and hurry in
the TSC.
The parent base ship, TSS Saint Vincent,
had sent off her scouts to
cover the usual fifty light-year globe of space, as had been standard Terran
Survey Corps procedure over the last few centuries; but now a new refinement
had been added. The Scouts sent off smaller scouters to carry out quick prelims.
If the planets they ran the rule over conformed roughly to what the
high-and-mighty Solterran Construction Service wanted—then the scout would move
in and carry out fuller checks. Hastings regretted the bygone days when a crew
dropped down onto a planetary surface ready to find, record, deduce and then
make an informed assessment, not knowing what they would turn up, not knowing
how their hoped-for new world would turn out.
Myra tried once more to
call Crossbow.
The
set remained obstinately blank, as though willfully obstructing them. Hastings
wiped his hands and checked again on the Globe-Trotter's progress. Now the
six-legged machine charged through a grove of chitinous stalked flowers that
crumpled and tinkled into whirling snowflakes of diaphanous beauty.
Hastings
said, "Nothing on the screens. But whatever did that to Oscar must be
coming closer." He punched the necessary controls to activate the weapons
system and checked with more than usual strictness the tell-tales. All lit up
in correct order and color.
"I
don't think even our weapons could do that to Oscar," he said.
"We could pull out, find Crossbow, and return . . •" Myra stopped speaking. She knew the answer to
that one. Who—or what—had done this?
The Solterran confederation was reaching out
for the galaxy. In its time it had met many aliens, fought them, made friends
with them, founded fresh ties of comradeship, gone together as one homogenous
whole on out to the stars.
Hastings
knew very well that he had been the first man of Earth to bump into this alien
encounter, and he could only hope he would act as all those many men and women
of Earth who had carried mankind this far would have wanted him to act.
"If it is another non-human
contact," said Myra, glumly, "they just shot off everything at Oscar
as soon as they saw him. No parley."
"That's
the typical reaction of a certain type of reasoning. But from that
scrap of recording, I'm positive Oscar stumbled onto something these aliens—if
aliens there be—didn't want seen." He swiveled in the chair and adjusted
the weapons board more comfortably. "And that's why we must stay around to
pick him up."
For
as far as their screens showed the planetary surface, nothing moved but the
tiny gangling figure of the Globe-Trotter hurrying with five and a half hoppity
steps to the frail shelter of the mountains beneath.
Gently,
Hastings began to drop the scouter down, holding her in the radar shadow of the
mountains, gliding down a cleft choked with emerald and topaz proliferations of
splintered rock, aiming to reach ground level at the exact instant the
Globe-Trotter skittered into radar-shadow. By that time, he hoped, he could
have extended a radar and energy-weapon shield. Judging by what had happened to the Globe-Trotter, his shield would not be of much use.
"You
realize," he said steadily to Myra, "that they could be waiting for
the Oscar to be picked up?"
"I had thought of
it."
"I
wish I knew—" He did not finish but settled himself more firmly in his
control seat, wiped his hands and face for the last time, and applied himself
to the ship and her controls.
He allowed himself two pungent comments. One:
"I wish these scouters were larger and fitted with a tractor beam."
And, Two: "I wish these scouters had sublight drive."
That was all.
With
so very many planets to find, docket and handle, the resources of even as
mighty a galactic organization as the Solterran Confederation, and all their
friends, was strained to the limits; and, out here on the fringes, equipment
had to be used and re-used and lovingly cared for and always, but always, there
was never enough of what was needed at the right place at the right time.
Broken shards of crystalline rock spattered
outwards as the little scouter touched down, a puff of vapor wafting and
dissipating in the clear crunching of quartz.
The
Globe-Trotter lurched its last few trailing steps to plunge into the waiting
niche in the flank of the scouter. The door clapped shut. The Globe-Trotter was
home. But Charles and Myra Hastings were very far from home.
Hastings
took the scouter up and away, fast and cleanly, punching out of the mountains'
radar-shadow, screaming through the thin atmosphere of Planet Seventeen, hightailing
it for Crossbow. He had every piece of dazzle equipment operating at full power and he
even resorted to physical maneuvering of the craft as she fled spacewards.
If
an energy bolt penetrated his shields he knew the scouter's hull would not
withstand punishment for anything longer than half a second. The TSC had not
been able to fit Basker's metal regrowth techniques to the Globe-Trotter, so it
was hardly likely they could even think about extending that recreation to a
ship, however small.
If
the scouter was badly hit there would be no way out for Charles and Myra
Hastings.
"If
anything happens to Myra . . ." whispered Hastings. "Oh, I'm a fool,
a big stupid bloody fool!'1
The
scouter cut up through the tenuous atmosphere, jinking, dancing, riding her
planetary drive jets like an inebriated man on stilts. Artificial gravity
within the little craft gave a normal one gravity, angled downwards relative to
the ship's deck, and the humans could handle their equipment in complete
physical comfort. Hastings sweated some more.
They
left the tropopause behind and, on a thinning keening, laned out for space.
The forward screen showed the friendly
distant glitter of stars with a single larger body—Planet Twelve—glowing with
soft reflected light. Against that backdrop of stars, a shape dropped from
nowhere and the scouter's instruments went mad.
"There's a ship out there!"
screamed Myra.
"Waiting for us . . . Where the hell did
he come from?"
The scouter heeled over, veering, as Hastings
cut the planetary jets and coupled in the atomics to the Turners. These little
scouters boasted no automatic combat equipment, cybernetic marvels of offense
and defense maneuvering, and their salvation would rest in the skill of
Hasting's hands and brain. Meters recorded atomic activity, lights flashed and
blinked, each broadcasting its own message. The ident machine—a tiny ersatz
model—skipped through its microfilm profiles, burped, rang a puzzled gong, and started in again.
"Nothing
on ident. And there won't be," snapped Myra. "That's alien."
She
stared at the rear three-quarter screen, showing where the alien had begun to
swing in pursuit.
The
Turners were spinning now, sucking the shattered nuclear particles into their
plumbing and hurling the little ship through space at ever increasing velocity.
Crafty, cunning, beautifully engineered little engines, the Turners. They
could, stretched to their last gasp of power, smash a ship along at point seven
five of light speed. No hyperspace or jump engines, they could logically only
be used for travel within the relatively narrow confines of a solar system.
"We
should have a FTL drivel" snarled Hastings, throwing the little ship
lurchingly around the curve of the planet beneath.
"Why haven't they shot
at us yet?" asked Myra.
"Good
question." Hasting's sweat had dried on him now. "They popped into
our real space-time continuum from whatever pet little hyperspace they use,
right on the button. They knew we were coming. And I, God help me," he
finished in a hating whisper, "could only worry about a planetary problem."
"They want us
alive." Myra spoke with conviction.
"Yeah, well," said Hastings.
Two pairs of eyes flicked to the bright
scarlet DESTRUCT button on the control panel—and looked away. There was always
an answer.
Even
the Palladians' mind recall techniques for probing information from dead brains
wouldn't work after the DESTRUCT button had been pressed.
Twice, pursued and pursuer orbited the
planet. Then,
Hastings,
dry-mouthed, changed course and with the Turners shaking the fabric of the
scouter sent her racing for space.
On
the screens the ominous shark shape following them diminished, fell back. For
four brief and beautiful moments Hastings thought he had succeeded.
The
fire blossomed gently along the flanks of that shark shape. Hastings tried. He
slammed the scouter into a sharp evasive turn and watched the overloads burning
out on the artificial gravity controls. Already the stars were appearing to
change color, to redden, as his speed fouled up the Dopp-ler effect. At this
speed if the artificial gravity failed and he deviated by a hairbreadth from
his course, he and Myra would be bloody film, a molecule thick, neatly painted
over the inside of the hull.
He tried.
He swung the ship again and Myra, calm with
the coolness of performing a prior-arranged function, fired all their weapons
in one single sheet of energy.
Perhaps
that puny outpouring of destruction helped them. Perhaps the alien still
believed he could take them alive. Perhaps only the blind gods of chance in the
galaxy threw their yellowed dice to laugh hugely as the skulls went down to the
board.
The blast shredded the stern of the scouter.
Air whiffed out before force shields bulkheaded across. The Turners had been
crippled and the ship slowed. The artificial gravity partially failed,
operating spasmodically. Metal components strong enough, plastic and fiber
glass, force shields and electronic apparatus designed for tough operating
pressures, all these inanimate objects came through that battering series of
gravitic surges.
Homo sapiens was not physiologically designed
with the same intentions.
Charles
Christopher Hastings and his wife Myra had only one small grain of comfort.
They died quickly.
They
did not even have the comfort of seeing the third stalking ship break from
hyperspace, poise like a striking eagle over the alien ship, and then blot her
out with one supernal discharge of energy.
In
the next instant the third ship wheeled, clawed for the ecliptic, and vanished
once more into her own brand of alien hyperspace.
The
Terran Survey Corps scouter, empty, desolate, lifeless, carrying the crippled
body of a Globe-Trotter, swung listlessly out into space, headed on a course to
take her slipping between the stars, headed meaninglessly on a terminal course
of no return.
IV
Strang had always hankered after the concept of rose and amber
colored walls overhung with the trailing fire of vines and the splendid
opulence of bougainvillea; above them, set back, but, by some professional
trick of perspective sharing importance, there should rise white-columned
shafts gilded-ly Corinthian, with pediments and architraves nobly engraved and
sculpted. Here would depend luxurious rugs and scarves, enscrolled silken
banners, hanging and fluttering. Flowers in profusion, too opulent to be named
short of a gardening catalog, should bloom in rows and beds and trellises, in
arcades and walks, and flaunt their heady perfumes and gaudy beauty from every
ledge and window of the palace.
For, of course, this was a
dream palace he constructed.
Below
those solid, multi-faced and glowing walls, the silken water lapped tidelessly.
Here should glide barges with silken sails and gilded oars, flower entwined,
their prows garlanded and their sterns aflame with jewels and feathers and all
the spices of the orient.
There
was for Strang in this feeling of lightness about his dream not the slightest
hint of Cyrenaic philosophy. His ship had been named Archimedes, not Aristippus.
All
the same . . . All the same when he built this dream palace on Solishtar he
faced over the taken-for-granted scientific appurtenances of modem sybaritic
living with this glowing facade of an ancient and glorious palace from another
time.
There
was a tightness in that that had to do with his struggle to lift himself from
the ranks of the Terran Survey Corps into the highest echelons of the
organization responsible for constructing mankind's home in the galaxy. Not
just anybody could join the service. Not very many gained promotion of
significance. Only a handful had ever been called Caracci's Young Men.
However
much Strang liked his palace on Solishtar, the single thing that pleased him
most was yet a reminder of his purpose in life. Ishtar was a favored planet.
Gardens, parks, rides, sheltered oceans, crags to climb, deeps to plumb,
innumerable bays of white or golden or silver sand, sun-kissed, palm-shaded,
the whole of Ishtar reminded any sane man of the rewards of life. But the
single thing that pleased Strang most hung as the brightest jewel in the sky of
Ishtar.
Visible
by day when their paths so ordained, shining with a steady green friendly light
at night among the myriad distant stars, the globe of another planet forever
shone down in love and protection upon Ishtar. And that other world so close in
space orbiting the same sun was Solterra, old Earth, the home and origin of all
mankind.
Solterra and Solishtar.
So far no other Solarian planet had been
brought quite so close to Earth. Even Solariadne of the House of Longhi,
powerful though that house might be, stood in space at a more respectful
distance than Solishtar.
Stephen
Strang had concluded the business at the Zagreb Cluster for the moment and
could now relax for a few days at his home. The idea of relaxing never occurred
to him; wherever he was his restless brain forever schemed and plotted and the
tentacles of his orders and directions circled within the orbits of his
galactic responsibility.
He
lay back now comfortably in his formfit surrounded by attendant robots to
attune the temperature, the humidity, the noise level, the reception of any
outside stimulus. He had only to flick his fingers and a drink, or a micro
tape, or a seven course meal would be provided instantaneously.
Although science had been forced to develop
non-carcin-ogenous tobacco long ago, Strang had no cigarette, cigar or pipe
circuits installed in his flick robots. He did not smoke, although he
understood that there were still fools about who did so.
Above
him the ceiling at this moment showed a stellar
chart. The word "chart," he supposed with a lazy smile, was a
misnomer. Scale had been tossed aside. All the ceiling symbolism was concerned
with was the representation of the present status of the SCS. And the picture,
although on the surface reassuring, warm and friendly, yet carried the chill
overtones of coming disaster.
Centrally
in the ceiling, positioned in a logical
system and not as a result of a super-eflation
of ego, the Earth's Sun anchored everything else. No one knew better than
Strang that Sol was merely a small star something like thirty thousand
light-years from the hub of the Milky War Galaxy; but even then—the Sun was
not just any old star in the galaxy. As far as human kind went the Sun
represented the best, most perfect, indeed in many instances the only sort of
star around which they could orbit their planets. Within sixteen light-years of
the Sun there were only two other reasonable sensible yellow G-stars like old
Sol; but there were no less than thirty-four of the little red M-stars, there
were seven smallish orange K-stars, a single
brilliant show-off yellow-white F-star, a couple of reckless brilliant
A-stars—and to make up the round fifty there were also four white dwarfs,
burned out. In addition there were the dark companions; but no man wanted a black sun in his sky.
All
this, and more, was shown schematically on Strang's ceiling. He lay back,
sipping' gently at a tall frosted glass of Vodka with a dash of Jebal juice,
and considered. Je-bal juice, once the Takkatians had removed the offending
old-goat flavor, had proved a welcome addition to the vice-larder of Earth's
drinking store.
But that ceiling, now . . .
There were only fifty planets circling Earth
and still room for more.
Strang's job in life was going out and
bringing back planets for Sol. Why, even Centaurus had thirty-eight planets and
even today, he'd heard, they were adjusting the complex gravitational fluxes
to insert two more, like sliding fruit pips into a circle of pips around a
dinner plate.
His
ident plate lit up and the face of his son's personal deegee showed. Strang
sighed and flicked to let the human-oid in.
The
doppelganger looked so much like Simon that perhaps only a close member of the
family could have said with confidence that it was merely a deegee and not
Simon in the flesh.
"Where
are you, Simon? Are you really busy or merely being discourteous, as usual?"
The
deegee exhibited all Simon's facial characteristics. The thin cheeks and
spiritual modeling of the forehead and eyes revealed clearly now a son's
discomfort in the presence of a father figure grown too vast for easy living.
God knew, but it was Strang's own fault; but he'd indulged Shena and the
boy—and this self-willed impractical dreamer had been the result. He felt very
glad, at times like this, for the warm cozy comfort of his daughters Sally and
Sarah and Susan.
"I
am sorry to displease you, Father—" the humanoid said in Simon's light
voice.
"Don't
go around being sorry all the time, Simon! You've sent your deegee so there
must be a good reason. Now get on with what you have to say."
The deegee gulped. Sometimes, Strang wished
that they didn't make these doppelgangers so damned faithful a copy of their
master. Lots of folk dolled up their deegee, gave them a clearer skin and
brighter eyes, a tougher physique; women assigned their humanoid messengers
figures out of dreamland; but always the personality and character dicta
rendered a faithful copy of the mold. This deegee was Simon in all but human flesh and blood and
immediate control.
"I
thought of welcoming you back home, Father." "Thank you, Simon."
Strang hadn't thought to offer the deegee a
seat; the things weren't human, they had no muscles and hearts to tire. He knew
that Simon—wherever he was-was watching him through the eyes of his messenger.
Strang essayed a smile.
"That was kind of you, Simon. Where are
you?" "I'm on Jethro."
"Oh, interesting. Nice planet—now what
did you want?"
The
deegee smiled Simon's small secret smile, the smile that had years ago been
able to infuriate his father.
"I see you don't remember Jethro,
Father."
"Not
off hand, Simon. I've just spaced in from the Zagreb Cluster. There is a lot doing there—many worlds—well, we both know your reactions to
that."
"Yes. Shall I remind you about
Jethro?"
"If you must, Simon. But please be
brief."
"I
could," the doppelganger said tartly," have spoken to you on the
telephone."
"I
know, I know, Simon. I suppose I should be thankful that you deigned to send
your deegee." He could not resist adding with dark sarcasm: "As it
is one of the highest compliments one man can pay another to come visit him in
person, I suppose I could not expect that from my own son."
The door set in the opposite wall opened and
Shena Strang walked through physically. She had not used the teleport and she
was there in exquisite person; this vibrant being was no doppelganger. The very
first time Strang had seen Shena, he had said, quite consciously, to himself:
"That is the girl I want for my wife. I want no other. If I cannot have
her—then I have no other."
He
had always considered her reciprocal affection the major mystery and wonder of
the galaxy.
Now she said in a quick gush of joy:
"Simonl",
She moved forward, then stopped, her
outstretched arms falling to her sides. "Oh." Then: "Simon. Why
don't you come home? Sending a deegee to see your father and mother is
hardly—well—is it?"
The expression on the deegee's face changed
as Shena walked flowingly towards a formfit. Simon never looked like that for
his father.
"Mother—I
do not want to hurt you—but there is work for me to do—here on Jethro."
Shena looked her surprise,
arching an eyebrow at Strang.
"I
had no idea you'd reverted to the outdoor life, Simon, dear. Whatever is there
for you on a frontier planet?"
Sudden
amusement hit Strang. "Now what, my darling Shena, happens to make you
know a planet called Jethro? I haven't heard of it."
"But
you have, darling! You know—you told me the story as soon as you got back from
Zagreb."
"I did?"
"You've
let slip the planet's name, that is all. You remember. You went there to tell
that crawling little Gerban Amouf that you'd pipped him into Chief's
rank."
"Oh!
Of course! He had some foul up there and I had to stop him shifting planet. I
enjoyed doing that."
Simon's deegee fairly
snarled at Strang.
"You
went there and you stopped them moving planet!" Strang hitched back in
surprise, the formfit moving to adjust beneath him. "Why do you think I
am on Jethro now? Just where do you think Jethro is right now?"
Tartly, Strang said,
"Circling the sun Jezreel."
"Oh,
no, Father. Oh, no. Gerban Amouf pulled a few strings. He saw Caracci. Yes,
Father, Caracci! Jethro has been moved! It is being orbited around Centaurus
right now."
V
Sitting at ms controls on Jethro with the precise manipulation
of his messenger beneath his fingers and brain, Simon Strang must have flinched
back automatically from the look he saw in his father's eyes, the bleak hating
expression that for a moment transformed Strang's face into a devil mask, for
the doppelganger flinched back, too, one hand reflexive-Iy going up as though
to shield its face. "Gerban Amouf dared to do this!"
"I don't know, Father," said
Simon's deegee with Simon's light familiar voice: "I don't know who did
it. All I know is it is done. Far Centaurus is taking in two more worlds today—you
would know all about that of course—to make them up to forty. One of those
planets is a world you gave your solemn pledge would not be torn from its
parent sun and dragged across space—"
Strang had himself in
control again.
"I
do not need the flowery rhetoric, Simon. I believe what you say because, heaven
forgive me, you are my son and I don't believe you learned to lie either from
your mother or me."
"Thank you." A deegee could catch
just that solemnly gleeful note of mockery Simon could bedevil his father with.
Damned things. Strang had a cupboard full of the things upstairs somewhere and,
when he was forced to sit before the controls and send off his deegee to some
errand or other, he always felt as though part of himself had been truncated.
There was no glee in seeing through the eyes of a deegee as there was in
exploring with a Globe-Trotter, or any other of the complex and fantastically
expensive long-range semi-robots employed by terrans. This replica of Simon
now; Strang knew that when Simon had finished talking to him he would extricate
himself from the controls and program the deegee to do whatever it was Simon
wished next. If the thing was programmed to go back to Jethro, it would act
with its own robotic life, in full control, going back faithfully performing
the last commands Simon had set up.
There was no dividend in sending a messenger
by remote control if you had to stay with it, guiding it for twenty-four hours
a terran day.
Twenty-fours hours a day—for most Solarian
planets in the golden orbits. When you inserted your own planet into a solar
system you'd set the daily rotation period to conform comfortably with what you
desired.
"Gerban
Arnouf," Strang said at last. But this time the words breathed out slowly
and with a menace Strang was wholly unconscious he could create. Shena glanced
across, drew down the corners of her lips, and flicked for tea.
"It's not your fault, Stephen, dear, if
that horrible little man goes behind your back."
Strang,
of course, had thought forward far beyond that point.
"What
are you going to do about it, Father?" Simon maintained his insistency in
face of his father's brooding down-drawn brows.
"Thank
you for telling me, Simon. Call this damned half-robot off now and skedaddle,
will you? I've a lot to do."
As
an ego-deflater of his son, Strang had always been able and, with a
sado-masochism repugnant to him, willing.
Simon's indignation wilted. As always.
"You're nothing but a
grave-robber—" he began weakly.
"Not
now, Simon, please!" Strang accepted the tea his wife flicked the robots
to serve him. He sipped delicately, quite able to relish the beverage and
concentrate on his next moves together. Tea was far better than Vodka and Jebal
Juice; far better than any other drink. Tea represented a high peak of culture
of which Earth could be proud in the galaxy.
"You're sure you're orbiting Centauras, Simon?" Simon's answer would have
brought him a stiff paddling fifty years ago.
"I accept that, then. I won't insult
your intelligence by asking you if you're sure you're on Jethro. D'you happen
to know Shanstar?"
"Yes. Canalape Brown did some marvelous
landscapes on—let me see—the fifth planet under Shanstar. Remarkable the way
he balanced his monochromes against the livid-ness of—"
"Spare
me your infernal quasi-artistic mumbo-jumbo, Simon. You're absolutely sure
Jethro is not being slipped into orbit around Shanstar?"
"Quite, quite
sure."
"Thank you, Simon. Now get this heap of
machinery out of here before I blow its fuse."
Witíi a
strange loping dignity in a faithful reproduction of Simon's jerky abstracted
walk, the deegee left.
Shena
sighed. "If only Simon would come home like a good boy."
"He's
sixty years old, isn't he, Shena? Well, he's just about grown up. Time he was
married with grandchildren I could make something of."
"He will, dear. And I expect you
will—try."
"Now
what's that supposed to mean?" Then Strang saw Shena was smiling with
loving mockery and he thought about it right then and there . . . but there was
this damned Jeth-ro business . . . Amoufl He'd have to fix that man's wagon
yet.
"Jethro was scheduled to orbit Shanstar
until I stepped in," he said musingly. "Now it's gone to Centaurus.
If they were going to change, Caracci could have done worse than assign Jethro
to Sol. A fine planet. Just like home."
"You
know Susan is becoming all tightened up over her marriage. I'm glad you're
home, Steve—she'll welcome you with rather more affection than usual this
time."
"What's
that? Susan—oh—of course . . . her wedding. Well, it's not yet, is it?"
"I
had tentatively decided it for the next time you were home."
"What
does Bruce say? Have you broached it to him yet?"
Shena
knew her husband wasn't asking about the date of the marriage of his eldest
daughter. The other matter had naturally jumped into prominence in the
conversation. House affiliations and allegiances had that habit. She knew only
too well the figure her majestic husband cut in the galaxy, the big tough
domineering Chief-Commissioner with a heart of solid gold; she had to cut him
down to size sometimes, remind him who was boss around their palace and then
let him imagine he was bullying her to reassert his childish male dominance.
Carefully,
she said, "Bruce has been under heavy pressure from his parents."
She tucked her feet up in the form-fit and the couch moved gently to
accommodate her in a familiar pattern of reactions. "They calculate that
having a Christopher girl in the family will boost
their standing."
"Well, of course. But I don't really
want my girl going to some potty little planet around Shurilala. The House of
Kassim. Who the hell's ever heard of them?"
"Susan has."
"A
debating point, darling Shena, and one beneath my notice. Either Bruce joins
the House of Christopher or he doesn't marry Susan."
Shena
sighed again. Simon had been a terrible
disappointment to Steve. But Simon had his own values and his own tough ideas
of honor and what things were important. She tended to doubt that Stephen
Strang would ever find a psuedo son, and certainly not by brow-beating
young Bruce Kassim Oquendo, who was a nice boy but too easily swayed by his
parents. You had to stand up to Steve, if you wanted him to notice you.
She
knew enough now, however, to leave that subject until she had further facts to
report back. She had often smiled ruefully at the way her Steve tried to run
his family as he ran his department in the SCS; but that was her Steve. She
had never regretted marrying him. Now some of those hussies in the House of
Wayland . . .
Stephen
Strang lay slumped in his formfit wrestling with the alternatives open to him.
He could forget the whole affair, assuming it
to be beneath his notice and go on about his affairs. That way, he knew only
too well, lay traps and pitfalls for the future.
He
could find out everything there was to find out about the alteration in his
orders and then challenge Arnouf. That way, too, there lay danger for the
unwary.
He would have, he surmised sourly, to go see
Caracci himself.
He did not relish the idea of going cap in
hand after Gerban Amouf.
One
of his communications robots buzzed discreetly and said, "Charles
Christopher Hastings is calling, sir, from his palace on planet; however, his
communications robot says he knows of your dislike of deegee conversations and
the matter is urgent and he cannot reach here in person in time and he
therefore asks if—"
"Sure, sure," said Strang abruptly.
"Cut the cackle. Charlie and I know each other by now. Put him on."
The
communications robot lit the screen and brought it wheeling across to stand
comfortably before Strang. Shena didn't bother to flick for her own
communications robot to set up a slave monitor but stood up and walked across
to her husband. Comfortably, she sat on the arm of his form-fit which grew a
second arm and back to support her—but not before Strang's own arm had gone
around her waist
The
screen showed the white-haired, drawn and distraught face of Charles Hastings.
The pouches under his eyes and the fines on his face showed his age—he must be
nearly three hundred and eighty—quite old—but Strang had never seen him quite
so upset before.
"Thank
you, Stephen, for accepting my call. It's young Charlie—"
'Tour great-grandson—he's out with the TSC,
isn't he, right now?" A nod.
Hastings swallowed with
difficulty.
"He's been reported
missing. No hope, I'm afraid."
"Oh—poor Alice I"
said Shena on an indrawn breath.
"I am very sorry to
hear that Charlie. Very sorry."
"He
had just been married to a charming gal— Myra— wonderful match. And now he's
gone. I don't quite—"
Strang,
as gently as he could, under the pressures of this Jethro business building in
him, said, "Just—uh—what can I do, Charlie?"
"Why, I don't know—that is—I
thought—"
Shena,
he felt sure, knew what Charlie Hastings wanted. Why she should always be able
to unravel the secrets these weak characters hugged to their bosoms puzzled and
sometimes exasperated him. But Hastings was a friend, even if he was on his
last legs.
"I'll
try to attend the memorial service, Charlie," he said heavily. "But
business just lately—well, it's being a bind, I don't mind telling you. I may
not be able to make it."
"I'll
come and see you right now, Charlie," said Shena firmly, moving enough to
dislodge the formfit's extra arm and to dislodge Strangs loving grasp.
"Alice must beorí,
it's a shame, all these
fine young people being sacrificed in the depths of space I"
"Thank you, Shena, my
dear. Alice will—"
Shena walked toward the
door. "I shan't be long, Charlie."
"Thank
you, again," said Charles Hastings and his communications robot killed
the screen.
"So
that's what old Charlie wanted I" Strang grumbled to himself. "Well, why
the blue blazes couldn't he come right out and say so?"
Strang's
personal radio buzzed gently behind his ear and Shena's voice said, "I
think I'll take Sally. She's been so irritable and restless since Sarah went
off to the Survey Corps." A little choked gasp. "Suppose we heard
that Sarah —oh, no, Stevel That couldn't be, could it?"
"It's
hardly likely, my dear. Sarah is working aboard a base ship, TSS Collingwood. They're bigger than some planets I know. She's as safe as you or
I."
"Well—you know all
about that.. ."
"1 do."
"All the same, Sally
needs a change."
"D'you
think taking her to a houseful of mourning women is the best change?"
"I
know what you mean. But 111 see
she gets out. She's our youngest daughter. She's bound to feel constrained."
Strang laughed—or almost
laughed in the mood he was in.
"I hardly imagine
Sally as constrained by anything."
"Oh,
youl You've turned her into the tomboy of the family." Then Shena cut
transmission and Strang could easily understand why. He supposed he had
sublimated his desire for a son onto Sally—she'd come along when it was clearly
evident that Simon was no spacefaring hero-type.
A
few moments later Shena came fussily back unnecessarily superintending her
personal robots with their baggage compartments.
"Which flier do you want me to take,
Steve?"
"Any
one you like. Oh—leave me the RR Golden Ghost. Ill have to hop across to Earth."
Shena and her train of robots swept out.
Strang heard her talking to herself as she went, pulling on a pair of syn-thisilk
gloves, "I hope I've packed everything that Sally will need. She's such a
funny girl . . . Can't think who she takes after . . ."
Sally
was out at the sportsdrome and Strang, not without an evil litde chuckle,
wondered what her current beau would say when his prize girlfriend was abruptly
swept off by a regal mother.
Then
he set about his own affairs before going out to the Golden Ghost
and setting course for
Earth.
VI
His whole future stood at risk. No one knew that better than
he did himself.
When
he returned from his visit to Caracci he returned to an empty palace. In his
present frame of mind that suited him admirably.
First:
he flicked for a whisky. Second: he flicked for a large china pot. This he
lifted high above his head with both hands, the muscles straining down his
back. Then he hurled it full force against a marble wall and shouted, high and
vehemently: "Let it smash!" The retrieval robots whipped their
tentacles that would have prevented the smash back into their coils. The pot
shattered hard and splinteringly and with the utmost satisfaction. Third: he
went down to his firing range, picked out his old Carpenter and spent two hours
smashing every conceivable target bis robots presented to him.
Fourth:
he took no pills but went to bed and slept for eight hours of dreamless
quietude.
When
he awoke he stretched languorously, completed his toilet, flicked for breakfast
and, over terran bacon and eggs and tea, saw what he would have to do. He was a
changed man. He could not quite grasp that fact fully, as yet; but he felt
different. A core of white-hot steel had entered his indifference, and his
attitude to life had subtly altered.
He felt a stab of annoyance when one of
Shena's deegees walked gravely into his bedroom and smiled at him. The thing
wore one of Shena's housecoats and for the minutest stab of time desire tugged
at Strang. Then, he said grufly, "Good morning, my dear. Everything all
right?"
Shena's
voice issued from the deegee. "Good morning, darling. You look as though
you've slept well. No blondes?"
Normally,
Strang would have said: "Hah!" and invented a complex bit of lustful love-life for her delighted consumption.
Now,
he said, "I'm going to be busy today, Shena. I suppose everything is all
right your end?"
"Why,
yes." The deegee mirrored Shena's perplexity. "Alice is feeling a
little better now. Sally's been packed off with a couple of the family. I'm
coping."
"That's
good. I'm spacing out today. If you want me, you can contact me through the
office."
The
deegee looked hurt. "Oh, Steve! Must you? So soon . . . And what about the
memorial service? The Hastings expect—well, they are among our oldest friends. .. ."
"Send
my apologies. ■ With a wreath. But the galaxy doesn't wait for us to cry over our
dead."
"No, I suppose not.
But it seems so—heartless—somehow."
"The galaxy doesn't
have a heart."
"I
don't know, Steve . . . Very well, dear. Ill call you. Love."
The deegee turned as Shena would have turned
and walked smoothly out of his bedroom. The trouble with his wife was she was
too dam sexy for a staid Chief-Commissioner in the SCS.
At once his thoughts channeled. Chief.
Well—he was lucky to be that still. Gerban Amouf had really put the boot in.
Anger choked Strang for a moment; then he willed it out of existence. Arnouf he
would deal with later, in his own sweet time.
On a mere
technicality—and a false and rotten one at
that__
Amouf
had won easily. He had made Strang look a fool —an inefficient clown, an
unprofessional clod, a man willing to allow a little patronizing sympathy for a
bunch of sham pagan perfects to overrule the guiding precepts of his life. Oh,
those poor people on Jethrol So sad, taking their planet away from them like
thatl He writhed as he recalled Carac-ci's rustling voice summing up the pros
and cons. The final decision had turned on the length of time the Jethroans had
been on their planet. Nineteen years.
Well,
that seemed clear enough, Caracci had ruled. They've not yet come of age. They
haven't established full rights to the planet. Twenty-one full terran years of
residence in the bag and then, and only then, could they plead immunity through
tenure.
Strang
felt the blood thumping in his temples, a pagan temple-beat of consuming
hatred, a hatred consuming for what end? Against whom? Caracci? Certainly not.
Arnouf? Certainly yes—but more; much more than hatred for a single man flowed
from Strang as he marched briskly through to the landing platforms. Weather had
scheduled a fine day and he blinked as he came out into the sunlight. He liked
the feel of Solarian sunlight. Spectroscopic analysis could prove the old
original sun to have her own original sunlight; but a man from Earth could tell
that without complicated apparatus; it had been bred in the pores of his skin,
the muscles around his eyes, the whole feel and sweat and human body of a man.
Old Sol. There were't too many like her. That
was why men had to look carefully at the antecedents of all the stars they
surveyed—you found no spaceman talking about discovering a star; after all,
they were plain enough to see shining away there in space—why, men had to
evaluate the values of all the G-type stars they could lay their hands on. He
stamped across to the RR Golden Ghost and then paused, one foot on the airlock
threshold, to stare upon his palace.
He'd
begun this walk to his flier thinking of Arnouf and hating the man and writhing
under the rebuke he had suffered. He'd ended it preoccupied with his life's
preoccupation—thinking of stars and their planets.
The lesson was not lost on
him.
Going through to the little
control cockpit, he shut the airlock doors, lifted the Golden Ghost
on her stilts, activated
the Turners and then punched in the course for SCS Archimedes.
Heading
out past the orbit of Solmars, he looked for a long time in the rear view-screens. The sun dented space with her
brilliance. Around her stretched the dancing ring of her brood, fifty planets
in the golden orbits, bathed in friendly sunlight, lapped in security, circling
in the paths where water could be true to itself.
He
was not a sighing man. But the sight filled him with an indefinable ache, a
yearning for something he did not yet know existed, and this feeling he
experienced as much on an incoming journey as on an outgoing.
It
was supremely right that mankind should have brought fifty planets to circle
with Earth around the sun.
That was sensible logical
planning.
Before
Stephen C. Strang was finished there would be a hundred—two hundred—as many as he could squeeze in without disrupting
planetary surfaces by clashing gravitic fields. There were floods, sheets,
cataracts of light and energy pouring out from the sun in every direction. How
stupid, therefore, to permit just one planet to bathe in that life-giving
energy! How silly.
Fill the sky with planets!
Make
of the Solar System the finest home a man could find in all his wanderings in
the galaxy.
That—that was work a man
understood.
When
Archimedes swam up from space before him, from where she had hung re-provisioning
in the docking areas around Mars, another thought struck him in contradistinction:
if populating the solar system was work a man understood, then Archimedes had hitherto represented work he had signally failed to comprehend.
Before
this last trip home, he had often commented acidly on the warlike exterior of
his ship, the gun turrets, the screens, the torpedo launchers, the
destruct-emitters and, with particular and acid contempt, on the scarlet
DES-TRUCT button quadruply-sealed at the captain's console. Fripperies, he had
called them. Basic conceits. He had thought: Why in the name
of a
blue-tailed baboon should I have to
ride in
a spaceship
cluttered with warlike stores and labeled
a cruiser
when I
need a
scientific and research ship dedicated to
my work?
Often he'd chaffed Morley
Landsdowne on his captain's quiet methodical routine, his quasi-naval
organization, his concentration to regulations of all the clashing demands of
his ship.
Now—after
being trodden into the muck by Gerban Am-ouf—Strang found a new and horrifying
satisfaction in these warlike preparations. Out of the question for him to
think or dream of engaging in a ship-to-ship duel among the stars with Arnouf's
Anaximenes. That way lay only paranoic madness. Oh, no—he just felt a warmth of satisfaction
at sight of the rows of gunports, the destruct-emitters, the covered apertures
for torpedoes, all the feral power of his ship waiting for him to take
control.
Never
before had he trodden his ship's decks with so much sensuous satisfaction.
As
usual he was met by a mass of accumulated detail administration
work, mostly decisions referred to him by his secretarial bureau robots who had
been programmed to handle any query up to planetary level. With a paper of
query headings in one hand, he walked through to his private apartments aboard,
briskly cutting his way through problem after decision after problem, stripping
away the fat and cohering the right answers for his secretariat to assemble
and execute.
Right answers?
Up
to now, up to this unsettling Jethro experience, he had never had cause to
doubt his administrative capabilities.
Morley
Landsdowne greeted him with a smile.
"Ship is all yours, sir."
"Thank you,
Captain."
That had the formalities
over with.
Normally,
now, Strang would say something like: "All satisfactory, Mori? No
snags?" And Landsdowne would reply: "Everything sewn up space-tight,
Steve. We're all raring to go."
Not this time. Not now.
Strang
nodded and went on with his tireless stream of orders and decisions. He wanted
routine out of the way fast. -He noticed Landsdowne's puzzled expression—a hurt
expression—and pushed on, still deciding the fate of planets as he went.
Landsdowne
said, "An item of news you won't like hearing, Steve. . . . Do you want
it now—or when you get it?"
"What is it, Mori? You
can see I'm busy."
Landsdowne's
puzzled smile froze, like gelatine setting over a mold.
"Service bulletin promulgating orders
came in. Gerban Arnouf made Chief Commissioner." That had power to halt
Strang.
He
stopped speaking to the secretarial robots. His hand clenched up on the paper
of abstracted headings until he had sense and will power to force the
constricting fingers open. He made a curious
little gesture with his head, a kind of dabbing duck. He ground a smile
out of stiffening features.
"That's interesting, Mori. Thank you for
telling me." "Thought I'd be the scapegoat. No sense in letting you
see it in the bulletin. .. . Well,
you know." He did know.
One part of his mind wanted to say, "Thanks, Mori,
for telling me. Thanks for forcing
me to
face up
to it
in company,
where I had to keep
face, instead of alone from
the bulletin—when I might
have reacted
in any
one of
a dozen tomfool ways."
And the part of his mind that grew every day
more dominant made him say, "I won't forget your concern, Mori. Gerban
Amouf was, after all, one of Caracci's Young Men. Like me, he deserved the
promotion."
What did Caracci have to
say to cover this situation?
Morley
Landsdowne nodded with that painted smile still foolishly attached to his grim
face and found an excuse to vanish about the affairs of his ship.
So
he'd hurt Morley's feelings. WelL so he had. His own feelings had been more
than hurt by Caracci.
And Morley Christopher Landsdowne was getting
to know too much about Chief Commissioner Strang; there had to be a line of
demarcation between chief and operative otherwise discipline in the galaxy
would break down. Going into his apartments, Strang made a promise to handle
Landsdowne with more aloof formality in future.
The
decision to attend to the outstanding affairs in the Zagreb Cluster was easy to
arrive at; the patience actually to oversee the preliminary and final functions
and remain in the Cluster on the spot, became arduous and increasingly
difficult day by day. He felt constricted. He wanted to be up and about not
only the galaxy's business, or that portion of the galaxy for which he was
responsible, but his own more pressing problems.
The
Zagreb Cluster had been a feather in his cap.' He had reported in his good
fortune matter-of-factly; now, as he went about reaping that reward he tended
to trumpet his achievements abroad. He wanted the Solarian worlds to know just
how good he was at his job. More—he wanted them to know just how good he was as
a human being.
From
his command post aboard his ship, Strang could oversee the work with direct
control of half a hundred stars. The Cluster, with a carefully counted two
hundred fifty stars of varying values, lay lumped together in space in an
envelope of something like forty light-years diameter, flat and squashed in
volume, afloat like an island of light in a sea of gloom. Around the Cluster,
space had been swept clear by one of those mysterious sweeping arms of dust
that scored their way through the galaxy, leaving behind them ashes, emptiness
and the great dark.
As
human kind worked a painstaking way out into the galaxy and ferreted about in
the spiral arm that had bome the Sun, the frontiers of the explored expanded
with the frightening speed of a blown-up balloon. Inevitably there were
lacunae. Amouf had been working on Jethro at a mere one-hundred-ninety
light-years from Solterra. Tung Chi Leslie had begun working the Vermilion
Cluster something like two hundred and seventy light-years out. The Vermilion
Cluster had been a great moment for Tung; but boasting only one hundred and
seventy or so stars, it had been eclipsed by Strang's own Zagreb Cluster—and
that lay a clear three-hundred-sixty light-years out.
The three men were working at the ends of long spokes that extended out from
Solterra into the galaxy, and the spokes diverged sharply. Much space separated
him from Amouf now— and that was good.
Of
course, the men and women of the Terran Survey Corps considered these distances
from home as being mere childish steps into the unknown. They worked in the
vast deeps. God knew where Sarah aboard TSS Collingwood was now. A thousand light-years out? A
thousand parsecs, even? Truly, the men of Earth—and their once-alien neighbors—aspired
to a high destiny.
Strang
had often considered that word, "destiny." Man's manifold destiny
among the stars. He believed in that. He believed that to be what mankind was
all about. He had rejected the religion of sex preached by many people. He had
reached an understanding with his conscience over his own personal religion;
now he could devote all his energies to fulfilling what he devoutly believed
to be the reason mankind had stood up from the mudflats of Earth and gazed at
the stars.
Simon
did not share his views. Simon, too, had rejected the shallow sexual allure so
prevalent, and he had even been able to share some of his father's beliefs in
God and the symbols of godhead; but Simon believed in many fundamental principles
that irritated, bored and bewildered Strang. Simon hewed his own path.
Strang
had been working hard in the Zagreb Cluster for some terran fortnight or so,
when one of his scouts reported back on Star grid ten coordinates
seventy-twenty-one.
He
put a finger on the star on the chart on one wall of his office and said to his
communications robot, "Shoot all the information you have through to my
secretariate. I'll let you have a decision within an hour."
The
scout's voice, perfectly reproduced from his ship some thirty fight-years off,
said, "Tape feeding in now, sir."
As he might have guessed, the trouble lay
with the Utukki. Strang had had dealings with this alien race before, although
he had not been old enough to take part in the brief war that had flared up. He
had always been glad of that. Alien cultures were for study, for friendship,
for learning all that a man could; hardly for fighting.
Now he felt quite prepared
to take a tough line.
His
secretarial bureau arbitrarily assigned the name Par-vati, the next name in
their coding list, to the planet. Named for Parvati, daughter of the
Himalaya—the personification of the power of Sakti of Silva—the name meant only
a tag label now, an old terrestrial name given to a new and virgin planet to be
brought under the sway of that bright eye that burst forth from Siva's
forehead.
Parvati,
the scout reported in, had been settled by a roving colonist ship of Utukki.
Strang
called Landsdowne and curtly ordered him to take his ship across to Parvati.
Unless
he handled this affair well it could prove ugly. He had no need to be reminded
of the legal position. Hadn't that been pointed out to him with humiliating
force over the question of Jethro?
Archimedes flashed briefly into the terrestrial brand of hy-perspace, her engine
room crew cutting in standard drive power from her banks of Mclvors so that
they flung her slickly across that gap of thirty light-years in appreciable
minutes less than eight terran hours.
The
sun was a foppish show-off yellow-white F-star, diameter—one-million-one-hundred-fifty-thousand
miles; its surface temperature—six-thousand-five-hundred degrees centigrade.
Bigger and hotter than Sol, it could, nevertheless, support life on planets
positioned at the optimum distances from its blazing heart.
On one of those planets a colonist ship from
Utukki had started up an Utukki frontier world. Down on terran-named Parvati
existed an irritating stumbling block to the acquisition of a new planet, and
Stephen Strang felt no compunction over the course of action he might have to
initiate to remove the obstruction.
The scouter clipped back onto her base ship
as Archimedes coasted the last few million miles on her
planetary drive and Strang spoke face-to-face with the scout over a communications
channel. His broad good-humored face with the crinkle-lines around the eyes,
telling of a man who habitually lived outdoors, stiffened in formal anxiety at
speaking to a Chief Commissioner in person. "Scout Hemmingway, sir."
"How
far along are they—I don't mean the statistics in your report, I mean from your
subjective appraisal."
"Well,
sir—they've reverted to their treetop beehives, quite a sizable area of
forestry has been taken over. They're established on a largish island—the size
of Galloway on Ishtar, sir. So far, they've not extended. They seemed happy
and contented—although, being Utukki that's a difficult one to decide."
"I know."
"They regard Parvati
as their world, sir."
"Well, they will have
to be shown their mistake."
When
Strang had finished with Scout Hemingway, dismissing him with no word of
praise, Morley Landsdowne walked in. Strang stood up and began pacing the
floor. Landsdowne looked unhappy.
"All
the ships are in position, Steve. I called in echelon eleven as well. If we're
going to—if we are—then we'll need to make it quick and clean. No
fumbles."
"Cauterization."
Landsdowne swatted. "Quite."
"When
I was very tiny—couldn't have been more than five or six, I heard about the
Utukku. The war was on then. Hatred for these spindly tree-living aliens was
dinned into
n
us—
"But
the war's been over a long time. We're working with them now. Oh, I know
they're not fully integrated with us like the Shurilala and the Takkatians and
the Palladians and all the others. But that sort of complete merging of races
and cultures takes time. Even the Sha-Ngoy aren't quite fully integrated
members of the Solarian Confederation —call it what you will. And we licked
them what, a thousand years ago?"
"You forget, Morley. Out in space you
never know when you are at war. The Utukku were thrashed by us; but they gave
us a mauling in the process." Strang gestured irritably. "Anyway, all
that doesn't matter. I want the planet they're on and I'm going to have it.
There's another planet or two around this sun, isn't there?"
"Of
course. There's a Mars-sized planet within the golden orbits—"
"Well, then ..."
"I'm not sure how
their trees will thrive there. . . ."
Strang
stopped pacing and sat before a communications panel, where at his fingertips
lay the controls for a whole bureau of secretarial robot channels. "I
don't give a damn for their trees. Parvati has a gravity of one point one of
Terra's—and that is good I We'll start the borer at once. You'd better warn
Colonel Jelal to begin rounding up the Utukku. We don't want any of them left
when Parvati is moved."
"I'm a little concerned about the
suitability of the smaller-sized world. We can provide a breatheable
atmosphere, of course, but—"
"But nothing, Morleyl Get those damn
aliens off my planet and let's get it shifted I"
When Morley Landsdowne had gone, Strang began
working with his secretariat. The knowledge that he was now doing just what
Gerban Arnouf had done left him cold. He catalogued the scout's information
and chuckled with a sudden delighted surprise as one fact jumped out of the
mass of accumulated data.
Twenty-one
years, Caracci had said. The Utukku had been on Parvati for twenty-two years,
terran. That had worried him a little, had been a hazy spot of indefiniteness
in his plans. But now the answer lay clearly before him. Let Amouf try to swing
another boot and this time Strang had an answer.
He'd cripple the little crawler.
Reports
flowed in: Borer started. Attack on camp. Attack repulsed. No casualties. The
report on Utukku casualties somehow failed to be integrated into the records;
Strang let it lie for a time, and then, as though absently, wiped it from the
tapes.
Down
there on Parvati, men were driving their borer down into the crust of the
planet, down and down, penetrating with wholly human determination down to the
very center. That would take six to eight months terran. Strang did not intend
to hang about that long; he was here solely to supervise the peaceful removal
of the Utukku.
And
they would go peacefully, he determined, if he had to fight them all the way.
Colonel
Jelal with his strange ideas of personal chivalry inherited from a long line of
Arab-Takkat ancestors reported in personally to Strang. In Strang's
apartment—furnished with personal possessions he liked to carry about with him
in space, and reminders of Shena, his children, his days in the TSC, the past
victories with the SCS, and those private memories with which a man garlands
his habitation strong and enhancing around him—Colonel Jelal bulked like a
temporarily caged tiger.
He thought of Captain Nogu, working back on
Jethro for Gerban Amouf, and he remembered his reactions to that man of iron;
previously he would have reacted in the same withdrawn, uncomfortably unsettled
way to Jelal. But not this time. Not now.
Not after Amouf had pushed his face into the
muck.
He
saw a kinship now in the repellent professional killer. He saw a man who could
be useful to him in ways denied more normal men. So he smiled and gestured to a
formfit and flicked for drinks.
Colonel
Jelal sat and smiled back—saying, "Jebal Juice and Vodka, sir! My Takkatian
ancestors be praised. It's difficult to find the stuff in the fleet."
"You
must take a half dozen magnums—if the champagne people will pardon the use of
the word—back with you, Colonel. It is my pleasure." Strang lifted his
glass. "I appreciate your coming to see me. What happened?"
Jelal swallowed half his drink then let the
rest wait.
"Nothing
that regulations couldn't handle, sir. But in view of your explicit orders, I
felt it obligatory to inform you fully in person. The Utukku—a most insanitary lot—were
up in their confounded woven balls of treehouses, throwing down domestic refuse
on our heads." "They didn't use weapons?"
"Had
more sense. I'd warned 'em. We cut through the trees with a flamer. They came
down in grand style. Then a gang of Utukku got clever and came at us with those
blasted spitball poisonous gadgets. They used to fill their ships with the
filth when we boarded, back in the war." Jelal's hawk-face ridged as he
remembered. "Hasn't been a decent
war since the Utukku."
"I
had no idea you were that old—that you'd ever served in the war, Colonel."
Jelal downed the rest of his drink.
"Promotion
doesn't come quickly to the army, sir, until the civvies need us. Then they'll
give us gold braid and medals to choke us—providing we do the fighting for
them."
Strang
decided not to contradict. A hundred years to make colonel! That must draw a
man's patience out fine.
"But you didn't hurt the Utukku?"
"Officially, sir, or off the
record?"
"Off
the record. I have everything switched off." He gestured. "The tapes
monitoring the affair have been wiped."
"Well,
then, sir, you know they did attack us with real weapons in the end. We just
had to let them have it."
"Yes.
I understand." Something kicked in Strang. For one horrified instant he
saw what the soldier meant by saying: "Well, we just had to let
them have
it." Ordinary, mundane, common words. Not even
purple slang. But they meant a wailing
woman clawing at what was left of her husband, a child asking for a father who had been scattered to the four
winds. Then Strang shut the lid down on his mind and sealed it over with the
hatred he now so assiduously cultivated.
"Most
regrettable, Colonel. But you had your duty to do." "Yes, sir."
Strang stood up and the gallant colonel rose
too. He looked about for a table to put the empty glass on; Strang smiled and
flicked and the robot took the glass out of Jelal's fingers.
"This
has been—ah—pleasant, Colonel. I repeat I appreciate your discretion and your
zeal in reporting to me directly. I needn't have scrubbed the monitor tapes
after all. We found Parvati a virgin planet and moved it as such."
"If you say so,
sir."
"But
I do, my dear Colonel, I do. Jelal? You have mentioned your Takkatian blood;
but—?"
Colonel
Jelal stood to attention. There was nothing incongruous in this; he shared the
edgy, sharp, ferocious blood of Takkat and when allied with the smoother sharpness
of the Terran Arab the result had been a superb fighting man; he stood to
attention, then, from pride.
"I
am Colonel Alah-ed-din Ryohzh Jordan Jelal, of the House of Jordan, of
Solormazd and of Takkatyazatas."
Strang
nodded and smiled. He had been expecting something of the sort; a small and
insignificant House puffing itself up in nomenclature for what it lacked in
stature.
"I
shall remember, Colonel. You have served me well. Maybe you will not have to
wait so long for your brigade."
Speaking
with a rough stilted politeness, Jelal ushered himself out. The man was clearly
not used to gracious living. He hadn't even much idea of what to do with an
empty glass!
Then, remembering, Strang said to a secrobot,
"Send half a dozen bottles of Jebal Juice to Colonel Jelal. Usual compliments."
He
stood up and stretched. In a few months time they'd be through to the core of
Parvati. Then the engineers could put in the Lansen generators and the planet
could begin the haul back to the solar system. That is, if Caracci decided
that Sol should have it. Strang chuckled now with more well-being than for some
time past. He went along to his gym, let his robots strip him off and then lay
in an anti-grav bath while they toned up his skin and muscles. When he felt
glowing with health once more, he went back to his apartments. Jelal had
settled the damned Utukku on that other planet that had been made habitable.
Let them stew there. He'd done a good job.
The
feel of the smooth green uniform material in his hands made him think of all
the times he'd donned the green. He'd always thought before selflessly of the
service or the corps. Now, perhaps, was time to think of Stephen Christopher
Strang.
Throughout
the Zagreb Cluster, the men from Solterra were at work. Every planet that could
be called a "second Earth" was needed. Within the parameters of size
and gravity, dictated by an unequivocal Earth equals One, the planets were
selected. It mattered nothing what their surfaces might be like—molten, frozen,
liquid or desert. Once within that magical lambent circle of life around old
Sol, they would soon be terraformed into planets a man could live on and be
proud to own as home.
When
Caracci's personal assistant called in, Strang relished his malicious amusement
at finding once again a new and unfamiliar female voice and face on the screen.
(Caracci said: "Pick your subordinates with the care you choose a wife and
you will fail. Moral: Pick your subordinates with the care you would choose the
arbiters of your professional life.")
The malicious amusement in Strang, of course,
came from Caracci's own continual shifting of human female assistants. Caracci
couldn't stand women—but the government did not look kindly on even the head of
independent departments employing valuable manpower in womenpower jobs.
The communications robot
brought the screen across.
The
girl said, "Caracci wishes me to extend his congratulations, Chief
Commissioner, on the results coming from the Zagreb Cluster. Here on Earth
we're all very pleased."
"Thank you."
Strang waited.
"Parvati," the girl said. Demurely,
she in turn waited.
Strang
looked at her. He looked at her as a man looks at a woman and not as a
businessman looks at an assistant.
Nice.
Very nice. Astonishingly young, too, She couldn't be above forty. Her figure
fitted firm and obtrusively into a sheath laminated from silver and gold; her
cosmetic robots must have been programmed with consummate artistry. They had
decided on the naive look. She looked like a virgin on a pagan altar—and she
made every man subconsciously wish to rush in and strike the curved knife from
the palsied hand of the wicked priest. Oh, yes, a very sweet piece of sex.
Strang put her back into family focus.
"Parvati? Oh, yes. Fully up to
schedule—you know that from my reports." "Utukku?"
Strang thought with icy
savagery: Til find the
informer if I have to thumbscrew
every last pantry boy."
"Yes,"
he said without widening or narrowing his smile. "What about them?"
The girl reacted. She allowed surprise to
arch those perfect eyebrows. Strang allowed a little chuckle to sidle around
inside. So that cosmetic armor could be chipped.
"You
shifted them off-planet. Wasn't than rather—ah— drastic? The regulations—"
"I
am well aware," Strang interrupted, allowing his smile to disappear,
"that you speak on behalf of Caracci. Had you not done so I would have you
severely disciplined for daring to quote the regulations at a Chief
Commissioner. But—please go on."
An abrupt flaring fierceness fused the girl's
face into fury; then it died and she said, "I also know of the recent judgment
on Jethro. But Caracci laid it down that twenty-one years was the deadline for
immunity of tenure." She shifted her seat—all that Strang could see past
her of the room back on Earth in which she sat. She appeared more ill at ease.
"Give me your message." Strang
chopped the words. "Caracci wishes your explanation—when the Utukku had
been there over twenty-one years." Here be dragons!
Here was the point at which one promising
career abruptly terminated in a real meaning to that much-abused word
"terminal."
Off-handedly,
Strang said, "I should have thought the ruling spoke for itself. The
Judgment of Jethro"—how Ger-ban Amouf must relish that phrase 1—"clearly
sets out the form. The Jethroans were terrestrial stock. The Utukku were Utukku
stock. The terrestrial year is one year terran. The Utukku year is one and a
quarter years terran. The Utukku had not been on Parvati for twenty-one years
Utukki."
She had the decency to let
fall a little gasp.
Strang
pushed his casual manner. He knew well enough this whole interview was on tape
for Caracci's later delectation—if the cunning Machiavelli wasn't looking and
listening right now.
"But we measure by
terran units—" she began.
He
half turned away from the screen, so that now he could swing back, bearing down
on her full-face, letting his eyebrows draw together, giving her the full
treatment of the personality that had carried him this far in the galaxy.
"Are you questioning Caracci's judgment,
miss?"
She
shook her head. The pause for her next words stretched —and stretched—and
Strang knew he had won.
At
least—he had won over this young girl and he was wise enough not to count that
as a famous victory. But he had done what he had set out to do; he had
established a fact—by a posteriori, reasoning, he had tacitly sanctioned what he
had done. He felt Caracci knew all this—in fact he was damn well sure of it—but
he knew Caracci pragmatist enough to hold what the gods gave him. Parvati was
a golden world. ... As good as
Jethro, anyway. . . .
The girl lapsed into
formula.
"I will aquaint Caracci with all that
you have said. He will be contacting you."
Strang
knew she meant that she would be contacting him. Caracci never spoke to anyone
except face-to-face. That was one reason why he employed personal assistants to
oversee and program his communications robots. And the best
of galactic
luck to
him, decided Strang, feeling a little lightheaded
after the strain.
The girl turned to go—and
Strang said softly, "It has
been a pleasure talking to you. Would you
tell me your name?"
"Abby
Merilees—Abby Christopher Merilees." Strang's smile became genuine.
"A Christopher! I'll look you up next time I'm Earthside!"
PART TWO
VII
Sarah Strang kissed Dick Madin for the last time, a strong
clean passionate kiss that could only exist when two people had found complete
fulfillment in each other, and then twisted around in the bed to put a foot in
his back and kick him out onto the floor.
He
fell in a tangle of bedclothes, laughing and swearing and trying to get back to
his knees to grab her again. She laughed wickedly at him.
"AH out, Sir Calahadl
I'm on duty in ten minutes."
She jumped out of the bed
and began to dress.
Looking
at her with the devil still in his eyes, Richard Matlin fumbled on his own
clothes.
"You're
a beautiful witch, Sarah. I hate having to break off and leave you like
this—"
"You
know what the motto of the TSC is, don't you, Dick? A husband—or a wife in your
case, you lecherous hound—in every planet of call."
Matlin
snapped the last magneclamp across his green shirt. "If I took you
seriously I'd say we've been lucky to find humankind among the stars. We could
have been trying to make love to a scarlet ten tentacled monstrosity called
Uzzisbeg—"
"We'll get to the real aliens one day,
Dick. Whoever seeded the stars in the long ago with human beings must have
reached a limit—"
They
were brushing their hair now, smartening themselves up. "They might have
gone right through the whole galaxy. We might find sexually compatible people
right to the opposite rim. What a thoughtl"
"You dirty old man I"
And
then they were in each other's arms again. They both knew this high-flown talk
of stars and galaxies a poor substitute, a pitiful cover-up for the things they
felt and could not put into words.
"You look after
yourself. Think of Charlie and poor Myra."
He
kissed her ear. "I can take that from you, Sarah. But—" He held her
off, gripping her shoulders in the thin green shirt. "I'll look out for
myself. You don't imagine I like living with the reminder of
Charlie and Myra, do you? They were fine folks. Just married, too. .. ."
"Well—you're
just about to be married, after this next mission. Don't you forget it. You
give any ten tentacled Uzbig what's-it, who feel amorous, the strict quarantine
treatment. I want you all to myself."
"I'll look out,
Sarah."
"I
want my old man to see you in one piece. He's going to rupture a few Venturis when I walk in with a husband —but he's going
to have to take it for once instead of always dishing it out."
*Tfour
father," Matlin said, strapping on his belt, "sounds quite a man from
all you've told me." He pulled the Lee Johns around so that they snugged comfortably.
"He's
a man and a half. But my mother's the real strength of the family. She's
wonderfull You'll like her. I'm not sorry I transferred to Saint Vincent
from Collingwood without telling Dad; but I feel guilty about Mother."
"Well, don't. It was the best day's work
you ever did."
"And
to think I asked for a transfer because I was being pursued with lascivious
intentions by a nasty piece of workl I didn't think I'd meet you!"
Transfer
between base ships of the TSC was most unusual because the base ship became a
small world of its own, self-contained, independent of planetary bases. And,
too, because the ships moved out into the galaxy on courses divergent from
the Solarian sphere of influence. They were a long way apart. A very long way.
Now Matlin slapped his commander's cap down
on his dark hair, his strong face with the big beaked nose smiling fondly at
Sarah. He touched her hand, an oddly affectionate gesture, like the giving of
a last going away present
"I'm glad you did,
love."
"So am I."
Discretion
prompted Matlin to leave Sarah's cabin first and march briskly down from the
scientific quarters through the crews area and so, by a cunning circuitous
route back to his own scourer's bay. He walked in humming cheerfully
to himself, moving with the lean lath-like
strength of the athlete in perfect training, fooling nobody but himself.
Lieutenant-Commander
John Tait Emiko, his flat rubbery-tough features creasing with the repressed
smile he shared with most of the other members of the crew of Ter-ran Survey
Scout Crossbow, tore off a salute as being the best way of distracting the skipper's
attention.
Commander
Richard Tait Matlin—most of the TSC personnel were of the House of Tait,
although quite a number of McGilligans were about—saluted in return and said,
"What the hell's all the formal mumbo-jumbo about, John?"
Emiko
smiled and spread his hands. "Have to keep the crew on their toes,
Dick." Emiko was the scout's exec. "We're spacing out today and we
want to leave base ship as a smart scout, don't we?"
"You
won't impress the admiral with a supergiant-full of salutes, John. All set to
lift jets?"
"All set."
Crossbow lay snugged in the cradles in her bay along the flank of Saint Vincent.
Crossbow gave warmth and light and air and sustenance to a whole ship's crew—and yet she was only one of many sisters who nosed
up to their parent's ports and docking facilities in space, or who lay in their
cradles inside that mighty shape, as now did Crossbow.
Matlin
had seen to his end of the departure procedures before he
had gone to take his farewell of Sarah; the exec's responsibilities had been
carried out with Emiko's usual exactness. Nothing now stopped his scouter from
taking space.
He went through to his control room and gave
the necessary orders. Saint
Vincent opened
her valve and Crossbow's cradles swung over silently. The scouter
lifted off. Gently, she turned and aimed her needle prow for the distant star
glitter of unknown worlds. A few last brief messages crackled from parent to
child; then Crossbow leaped into hyperspace and vanished from the
ken of her home.
Two months terran later, Matlin felt the
pride of a father seeing his first-born run up with the morning newspaper as
the report clicked in from scouter number four, Harry Le-Blanc commanding.
Emiko had called Matlin and together they listened as the waves poured in.
"... a
right two-and-eight this one is," LeBlanc was saying. "We didn't spot
a thing as we came in and then, as soon as we'd landed, an aircraft went by
overhead. We lifted off quick and now we're hanging two planetary diameters
out. She's a nice world, brand-new, just what the SCS boys drool over. Gravity
as near Earth One as makes no difference. But that darned aircraft—"
The speech stopped.
A
tech looked up quickly. "We've lost his beam. It just snapped."
"Well, hell,"
said Emiko. "Get it back, for goshsakes!"
But
there was no getting back contact with Harry LeBlanc in scouter number four.
"Don't do another
Hastings on mel" prayed Matlin to all the gods of space—but under his breath.
He
snapped quick orders. "Take us across there—fast-John] Guns—action stations. We're going to act as though we've run into big
trouble I"
Well—they must have,
mustn't they?
Guns
sat at his board and soon the fascia lit with the green ready tell-tales.
Guns—young Lieutenant Hardy Mc-Gilligan Swift had yet to fire his weapons in
anger. His tallow hair and fresh boyish face set over that board he had
studied, until he could fight it in pitchdarkness and with no art-grav, like
some pagan priest culling miracles from a stone idol.
The
other officers and crewmen in the control room settled down to action stations.
There was no fuss. Just men and women setting about their appointed tasks—this
time grimly determined that what had happened to Charlie and Myra Hastings was
not to be repeated.
That
tragedy had begun like this. A simple report from Hastings that his
Globe-Trotter had picked up something interesting and then silence. Nothing
had been seen or heard of their little scouter since.
Thoughtfully,
Matlin sent a report back to Saint Vincent. Then he ordered an open circuit set up to the
base ship so that everything that happened aboard Crossbow would at once be known on their parent's flag deck.
Viewed
from space, the planet LeBlanc had found did indeed look a green and golden
lovely world. Auspiciously enough, the sun was a G-star a little larger than
old Sol and the planet swam four out from her primary, bathed in the friendly
rays at the best possible distance for life.
Matlin recalled what he had
heard of LeBlanc's message.
., we didn't spot a thing . . ."
Had
that meant not spotting whatever inimical power had them in its grip now,
assuming their equipment had not malfunctioned; or did it mean they had
observed no signs of life? Matlin felt jumpy. His old man used to say at times
like these: "Think of your stomach, lad." His father had been a bluff
gunnery officer, a man who could hit an orange at a parsec, or so his admiring
friends claimed. Like so many other pioneers of the TSC he had failed to return
from a mission. Matlin still missed the gruff voice and the hearty clap on the
back. His mother, to his regret, he had never known. But he liked to think,
now, that she must have been very like Sarah.
The forward screens showed this world. He
decided to call it LeBlanc—until the soulless filing indices of the SCS got
around to it and arbitrarily assigned it the next name on the list.
The pilot brought Crossbow out of subspace neatly and, as they hit real space again and could look
out and see the
planet before them, a moment of sheer panic hit Matlin. What happened now was
his responsibility. He had the lives of two hundred or so men and women
directly in his keeping. His mistake would not only be paid for with his own
life; but with a mass holocaust that would give him no rest beyond the grave.
"Anything?" he
snapped unnecessarily.
The
Radar officer, young Lieutenant Hilary Hines, said back at him, just as
sharply, "Nothing."
The
signals officer, Lieutenant Joanna Brule, chimed in, "Nothing on the
bands. Still checking."
Those
two girls caused more mayhem in the love lives of his crew than a dozen others.
"Take
her in gently, pilot," he said. He sat on his throne with all his kingdom
spread out to his eyes and ears and beneath his fingertips. His, the ship—and
his, the crushing burden.
Crossbow edged gently on her planetary drive in
towards the planet he had called LeBlanc.
Hines said, shrilly,
"There's something—"
The
screens showed a flicker, a slicing glimpse of a shark-shape knifing in from
space where before had been only the distant glow of the starfields.
Joanna Brule said,
"The bands are cluttered with signals."
Hardy Swift said,
"Fired, fired, fired!"
The
pilot said nothing but swung the ship in a bounding leaping turn that sent the
engines keening up the scale and the red alarms blinking on the artgrav board.
With
painful intensity, Matlin watched that menacing shark shape. He had time in the
fragmentary lapse between the interchange of fire to see just how that shape
was—Mankind habitually called hostile aliens with whom no formal friendly
contact had been made, with whom they were tacitly at war, sharks. Sharks. That name had been borne in the minds of men by many now friendly
once-alien races back home.
Whoever the alien was, the weaponry was
powerful. He saw no sign of a strike
on that black hull when his ship lurched. Smoke gushed from the artgrav board
and connections fizzed as power overloaded them. Ozone stank in the air. A
rear bulkhead burst inwards followed by a ravening wall of flame and smoke. Oil
stank. Burnt insulation fouled the air. In the abrupt noise and bedlam, with
alarms going off and flames crackling, with the crash and shatter of sundering
metal, the low evil hiss of escaping air insinuated itself like the hand of
death.
Emergency
action snapped everyone into the task they must perform.
Matlin
maintained a well-trained on-the-ball crew. Men and women pulled on spacesuits
even as they manipulated their equipment. The quickest way to deal with the
fire was to evacuate the ship of air. The overloaded circuits would either hold
or channel their power. The smoke would go with the air. Any damage that did
not precisely affect the fighting power of the ship would be ignored.
Guns
skittered about on his seat as though he sat on live coal. Through all the din,
Matlin heard him chanting steadily to himself: "Fired, fired,
fired!"
Each
time he spoke, Crossbow's guns vomited their lethal energy in tidal
waves of power.
"What's
the score, Guns?" howled Matlin. "I think our first hit. But she's
twisting about all over the range. She's fast and dodgy all right—there!"
Matlin's fascinated gaze flicked to the forward screen—two had been darkened
by damage but on the third he saw the distant shark shape reel and fire
speckles break out all along her hull. "There! A beautiful strike! That's
set their back teeth aswim, I'll bet!"
Then
Crossbow juddered again and the artgrav finally expired in a smoking eruption
from the board.
For
anyone not accustomed to spending the major portion of their life aboard a
spaceship, the sensations afflicting the crew of Crossbow would have been traumatic, ending, in all probability, in complete
irreversible madness. Even for Matlin's crew, accustomed to living in a tin can
of air among nothingness, the cessation of artificial gravity and reversal to
free fall came as a shock.
All
the lights went out and then, almost continuously, but with an ominous flicker,
the blue emergencies flicked on. In that ghastly corpse-light men and women
activated the seldom-used magneclamps that held them in their control seats.
Hilary
Hines missed and someone cursed as she drifted overhead, a spaceboot clipping
the Wctim alongside the helmeted ear. A hand reached out and gripped the seat
of her suit and hauled her in like a dirigible being moored. Flushed and
ashamed at her loss of professional dignity she slid back into her seat before
the radar plot.
The
only noises now were those coming in over ship's intercom connected through to
the suit radios. Tension and fear crawled in Matlin like white evil worms.
Where was the shark? Another blow like the last would finish his ship, he felt
convinced.
He
called the engine room. "What's your hyperspace position, Frenchy? Have
you any Mclvors left?"
Before
the answer crackled from his phones, Guns' voice said calmly, "I'm down to
four turrets, Skipper. No power on the others."
"Check, Guns. Keep
fighting."
Frenchy's
slow drawl said, "We've three Mclvors in reasonable nick, Skipper. I can
jump when you wish."
Around
him in the control room amid the shambles of battle, the blue battle-lamps
gleamed eerily from the helmets of his crew—his friends. Each man and women
bent to the task allotted. He knew they were as frightened as he was. On the
remaining screens, the shark showed distantly, a paper cut-out plastering
against star-dazzle. As he looked, he saw her fire yet again.
"Take
us out of this, Frenchyl Quickly—anywhere—but get our heads down!"
"Check-"
All
the lights dimmed as the Mclvors sucked power from the emergency supply. Matlin
felt that familiar premonitory stir of his hair as static discharged
preparatory to the wizardry of the Mclvors taking the ship out of real space
and hurling her into that terran developed other-space, in which light lagged
and was left far behind. They had begun to jump—then. . . .
Crossbow buckled. She bent in as an out-of-control ancient car wrapped itself
around a lamppost. No noise tortured his eardrums as the decks buckled and
split, as the hull concaved inwards. He saw Guns plucked from his seat by a
spinning girder and hurled the full length of the control cabin.
A radar tech's suit split
and the girl mushroomed.
Pieces
of equipment and machinery blundered through the emptiness of the room, moving
with a deceptive speed, holding images in his retina long after they had
passed.
The bedlam pouring in oyer
his suit radio sickened him.
The
whole wrath of destruction without fire and smoke and noise held a ghostly
horror more bowel-constricting than the reality, a terror bom of nightmare.
He could not separate
individual voices on his phones.
He
knew that he, too, must be shouting and praying and then, hopelessly, trying to
give orders.
Crossbow was finished.
The
last thing he saw, before the single remaining screen flickered electrically to
blackness, was the evil shark shape asparkle with hits turning stem on,
diminishing, vanishing with a single reflected gleam from a fin into the
far-off star-haze.
Then he, too, blacked out.
VIII
The ball of semi-liquid mud spun smoothly in the grip of
whirling artificial gravity fields. From the domed transparent roof,
fluorescents cast a pale clean light that searched for the crannies in a
person's face and gentled them with planing light. The mud ball was about the
size of an overblown football and it spun easily three feet above the
workbench. Around the walls of the domed building the necessities of an amateur
scientist had been lovingly positioned. Yet, still the building contained the
warmth of human presence very comforting in face of the abstract chill of pure
scientific equipment.
"Hey, Golden BoyI I'm for the beach.
Coming?"
The young man, half draped into immobility under wires and meggers and prods and all the arcane equipment of a practical technological
scientist, glanced up. His square hard face with the Drummond jaw and liquid
brown eyes relaxed as he saw the sprite
leaning against the door jamb.
"Hi,
Sally I" He jerked an eye back to the mud ball, then manually, and with delicate
care, adjusted a vernier controlling the artgrav input. There were robots at
hand; but this job had to be done at
this stage by a clumsy human hand. This had to be a field
test conducted under the natural laws of the galaxy unperfected by .cybernetic
machinery. If a man could do it, then a robot
could do it Standing
on its cryotron banks.
"Well, come on then,
slowcoach."
"Come here, Sally. I want to show you
this."
Sally
Strang sighed. Craig Christopher Drummond—Golden Boy—was proving a drag. She walked over the comfortable warmed
floor to him now, her bare midriff bronzed and brown, her dark hair screwed
unfemininely into a bathing cap, her whole lithe body an allure that, in the
minibikini, had the power to extend
a man's eyes on stalks.
"You'll
catch your—ah—nose in one of these damn gadgets of yours one day, Craig."
"Look at this . .
." He bent, absorbed.
The
mud ball spun. From its north and south poles two wires depended to the shelf of equipment under Drummond's fingers.
"Very
nice, Golden Boy. I've seen it—" "Wait . . ."
Boys—or
young men, if they took Sally's fancy—could be tiresome at times. She stood at
his elbow and leaned over. Playing with mud pies at his agel
Meticulously,
Drummond began moving a lever he had quickly lashed up on a homemade meter panel. He moved it with exaggerated caution.
As
the lever moved, the mud ball moved in its supporting gravity field, inching
across from left to right, moving through the air.
"There I" Drummond breathed, his face intense, his whole
posture concentrating on that moving mud ball. Sally's vibrant body pressing
against him could have been the other side of the Coal Sack for all the notice
he took—until—until .... Sally moved
impatiently. She joggled his arm. The lever moved swiftly.
The ball of mud moved with echoing vigor.
It broke.
It splashed.
It sprayed.
Mud
drenched Drummond and Sally, clinging to them, clogging their eyes, matting
their hair, swishing in their ears. They staggered back, two muddy goblins.
"You idiot!"
"Me?
It's your filthy mud! Ugh!" Sally spat. "It's all in my mouth! You
beast!"
"You interfering nitwitted woman!"
"You clumsy scientific—scientific
cockroach I"
"Witch!"
"OOOH!" Sally stormed off, shaking
with fury. And Craig Drummond laughed.
Instantly
Sally swung around, one hand streaking down to a suspected rip in her
minibikini.
"I thought mudbaths made you girls
beautiful?"
"There's
mud and mud, nincompoop! That stinking concoction of yours has ruined my
complexion, I shouldn't wonder—"
Drummond switched off the main power supply
and wiped a muddy finger over his eyebrows, flicking drops onto the floor,
where robotic apertures sucked it away with the rest of the accidental debris.
He smiled at Sally, seeing her in her emerald minibikini, for the first time since
she had entered, with the eye of the healthy young male animal he was. He
whistled lecherously.
"You
said something about the beach. We can wash this mud off there. After all, it's
good Ishtar earth."
"All
right. But I'm going to duck you until you splutter for forgiveness."
"You're
on. I want to see you fall off your water skis again. You make such an
attractive dent in the water."
"Beast—I'm
just learning." "Now you're repeating yourself."
They
went out, these two, in the sunshine of old Sol; two youngsters in a galaxy
that looked with kindness on the citizens of the Solarian worlds, not yet
formed, not yet hardened into men and women, who could face the bitter truths
that lay beyond this golden moment of youth.
After
the memorial service to Charles and Myra Hastings, Shena Strang had gone back
to the palace on the other side of the planet; but Sally and young Craig
Drummond, a distant cousin of some degree, had obtained permission for her to
visit the home of her great-grandfather, Zeus C. Drummond, the head of the
House of Christopher.
"I
wonder why I bothered," she said, as they walked into the surf and
splashed about, until the mud had washed from them to return to the sea from
whence it came. "If I'd known you were going to shut yourself up in that tired
old laboratory all the time instead of seeing I had a good time—"
"Selfish,
like all women," Drummond said to a wave.
She
splashed him. They splashed each other. Then they fought. They wrestled. After
a time, Craig Drummond shouted for mercy, racing up towards the beach with
Sally breathing slaughter on his heels, belaboring him with a dripping and
extremely odoriferous bunch of seaweed.
Just
how the fight would have ended—in grievous bodily harm, mayhem, wounded pride
and anticlimax or the embarrassment of having to deal with the probability of
an unexpected addition to Ishtar's population—was not put to the test. A communications
robot buzzed respectfully for attention, its metal legs sliding in the sand,
and said, "A call for Miss Sally Strang from Miss Susan Strang."
As
the screen lit up, Sally collapsed before it on the sand, dripping and
laughing, flushed, her bathing cap lost and her hair, shining and lustrous,
rippling over her shoulders. Craig Drummond circling warily back, began to
have ideas on just how he would have finished the fight.
Susan,
the eldest of the three sisters and the one with the solemn face and innocent
eyes and the mouth that could tremble so easily with hurt, smiled out at her
youngest sister from the screen.
"Sally!
You do look as though you're enjoying the holiday."
"Isn't all life a holiday, Susan? I
can't wait to get into space and start a real job. How's things?"
The
last said very casually, very off-handedly; the subject of Bruce Kassim
Oquendo had proved a sore spot between the sisters.
"Not
too good, I'm afraid." Susan, Sally saw with disastrous understanding,
was near to tears.
"Oh, Susie—I'm
sorry!"
"Well,
after all the things you've said to me. . . . Bruce was most upset—"
"Well! You didn't tell
him what I'd said, for goshsakes!"
"Oh,
Sally, do speak like a responsible adult and not a frazzle-brained adolescent!
What sort of language is 'goshsakes'? I'm sure you didn't get it from
me."
Sally
changed the subject, abruptly. "I suppose Dad's cutting up rough
again."
"Yes. He's being
awful."
Sally
had never really cared for Bruce Oquendo. Oh, he was nice enough, in a
namby-pamby way, a simpering obedience to the prissy laws of politeness giving
him the appearance of a man-of-the-galaxy. But she doubted he had the strength
of will that even chuckle-headed Craig Drummond possessed, for all his mudball
tomfoolery.
And
Sally was young enough to want a man who was a man for a husband.
"I
can't see why the House of Kassim won't let Bruce go. After all, the House of
Christopher is rather grand. We are, after all, big bugs in the Solarian
Confederation."
"The House of Kassim
are proud, Sally—"
"I'm
sure they are. I mean, it doesn't signify these days that their planet orbits
Shurilala—having alien blood in your veins is just the same as having French,
or Italian, or German—it's something to be proud of. We're all human beings,
when all's said and done. But this Bruce is really a drag, Susan—" She
frowned at her own clumsiness. "No-Susan—I didn't mean that—I'm
sorry—" "What did you mean?"
"Well—he ought to be able to speak out
for himself. Have you told him what you want to do?" "I'll do what he
wants—"
"Don't
be a fool, Susan! He's ruled by his parents. And they aren't like ours. Tell
him you've made up your mind—Kassim or Christopher—Shurilala or Sol—but for
pete's sake, do something about it!"
Craig
Drummond chuckled. "Little sister really throws her weight about."
"You
keep out of this, Golden Boy. Just think you're lucky to be Christopher, is
all."
"I am, darling, I
am."
"And
you can keep that hanky-panky talk for your fancy women."
"I
don't have any—but if you carry on like this, 111 sign you up as number one!"
"Hullo,
Craig," said Susan, as he flicked into her vision on the screen her
communications robot held for her.
"Hi,
gorgeous! Remember me to Bruce. Tell him to put more pills in his pep!"
Susan
wiped an eye. Sally flicked a back-handed scoop of sand at Drummond and drove
him off the screen. "Get lost, dunderhead," she said sweetly.
"I
wondered, Sally, if you'd talk to Dad. You know he likes you best—"
"That's
not true, Susie! You know it isn't!" Warm affection for this grave and
gentle elder sister filled Sally with a guilt feeline she could never now shake
off.
"It
doesn't matter. Now Sarah is off aboard Saint Vincent, you're the only one I can turn to. . .
."
"I thought Sarah was
aboard Collingwood?"
"She was; but there was some unpleasant
business. Anyway, some very high Tait brass was invoked and now she's shifted.
So it's you I'm turning to, Sal."
"I'll
see him at once. I don't know what I can do—but 111 try." She looked with
a seriousness, at odd variance with the tomfoolery of moments ago, at her
sister. "D'you really love this Bruce, Susan? Do you really want to marry him?''
"Yes, Sally, I dor
The
communications robot handled the shutting down of the conversation, its metal
feet sliding in the sand and a patch of damp sand clinging to one foot in a most un-mechanical way. It
waddled off back to the villa. All about them, the sea and sand and sky formed a backdrop that lulled and refreshed and reminded one every moment of
every day that humanity had been very lucky in the galaxy.
Only
then did Sally realize she had no idea of where Susan had been speaking from.
The wedding had been postponed when the House of Kassim had proved intractable.
Whether they would prove as intractable as her father, or not, remained to be
seen.
Sometimes,
she wished the system of Houses and planets had not been invented. It had
proved completely successful for so long she supposed it would never be changed
now, not until mankind changed his ways of life once more; but in this case it
irked. It wasn't as if each House went out and found and brought home its own
planets anymore, as they had in the old days. There'd been some real old
punch-ups in those days, squabbling over planets, before the Solterran
Construction Service had been brought into being. And then that strange man
Caracci had taken over the SCS, and since then, the Service had been all cold
and aloof and scientific and dedicated to planet-hunting with a single-mindedness of pinjpose almost robotlike in execution.
It
was the TSC for Sally; of that she was completely sure. Soon now she would don
the green uniform of the corps and venture out to fare on far adventures among
the stars—Godl—there wasn't any other conceivable life for a human being.
Craig
Drummond, of course, didn't share that view at all. All romantic yearning after
adventures, he'd said, all childish dreaming.
Well—they'd see about that.
She threw the seaweed at him, dodged his
grasping hands and raced like a latter-day Danae up the beach.
"I'm
for lunch!" she shouted. "You go and make some more of your old mud
balls!"
"One
day, miss," Drummond shouted after her, "one day—you'll seel"
IX
"No
wonder," said Commander Matlin grimly,
"no wonder Harry LeBlanc saw no signs of life!"
They
stood now on the planetary surface, the few pitiful bedraggled survivors of Crossbow's spectacular destruction; and, like space-wrecked people through the
years, they thanked their luck for coming through safely and cursed their luck
for being condemned to life imprisonment.
Only
two of the hastily launched life-shells had made it down in one piece, as far
as Matlin knew. All attempts on their radios to raise anyone else had failed.
They had to consider themselves space castaways, and stranded on a planet
hitherto unknown to man, parsecs away from the nearest friendly aid. Their only
hope lay in Saint Vincent and
the dispatch of a rescue force.
"Don't
count on it," Matlin had said harshly. Now he gestured toward the
blackened and charred area stretching back from the beach towards the damp
green forest inland. "That's reality for us now."
They all stared at the devastation.
"Well,"
said John Emiko truculently, "we didn't
do it coming down in our life-shells—"
"And
I'll wager none of my shoots could have struck the planet like this," said
Guns. He pulled his pants up angrily-like them all when their spacesuits had
been discarded, he was now holding together a rapidly shredding uniform.
Material designed for the use of sedentary personnel aboard a spaceship, where
weather could not get at its fibers, did not possess even the strengths of
normal terrestrial fabrics. Even the usual wear-once-and-toss-away clothes in
such prevalent use had a little more stamina.
They had made planetfall somewhere south of
the planet's equator and—or so he said—Matlin had sighted Le-Blanc's scouter
to the south, just before the life-shell struck. Now they were trying to reach
their comrade. A forlorn hope? Ridiculous? Sure—Matlin knew all that. He also
knew that he had to keep what was left of his ship's company actively doing
something—anything—to postpone for as long as possible the evil day when they
fully understood what had happened.
Matlin
was not usually a man much accustomed to inner questioning. He knew what his
task in life was and he had at least the humility to be thankful for that. As
his old man used to say: "Get stuck into the job at hand and let the
bald-bonces do the worrying." The only snag to that was that Matlin now
carried responsibility beyond even that his father had borne. And Matlin still
believed his greatest enemy was the fear in him that threatened to cause his
complete collapse in moments of danger. . . .
"Well,
we didn't do it." Hilary Hines said, squatting down on a rock and picking
bits of sand from between her toes. "So that means they did."
"The sharks—"
"Yeah,"
said Matlin with casual force. "They must have been burning and blasting
this town when we turned up."
"My
feet are burning," said Joanna Brule, plumping down next to Hines. The
rest of the party, a scant fifty or so from Crossbow's crew, disposed themselves haphazardly a-round the beach. Matlin walked
across to the reason for his mental slackness in numbering the survivors.
The
six wounded men and two injured women lay in their lashed-up stretchers and
tried to act as though they didn't know the score. Matlin tried to act as
though he could give them comfort. When they died he would be able to enumerate
his flock more accurately—forty-seven survivors.
The
sea stretched on their left hand, rolling humped and fretful to the horizon.
White clouds sailed a blue sky. Behind them, if they ignored the scar, where
once a town had stood, the land lay green and inviting. This world of LeBlanc
would be a fine trophy to bring home to old Sol.
"Wonder who the people were, Dick,"
Emiko said, walking beside Matlin.
"Anybody's
guess is as good as mine. Those foundations look about the size a human being
would build if he was laying out a town."
Bits
of smashed stoned and brick, calcined rafters, all the derelict waste of a
major catastrophe scattered along the beach and wafted on the wind. A shred of
burned cloth—bright orange and royal blue—tumbled across the sand and idly
Emiko bent to retrieve it.
"A
happy people, I'll bet," he said, turning the cloth over in his hands.
'They wouldn't have woven a gay material like this otherwise." He let the
scrap of a vanished civilization trail from his hand, back onto the sand.
"The
sharks blasted their town out of existence. The work's been done for a long
time—the forest is beginning to creep
back."
"Those damned
aliens—"
"These
people of the scorched town would have been aliens, too—"
"I
know. But you know what I mean." Matlin did.
Slowly,
voicing a question that coiled in his mind, demanding an answer that would
bring unwanted visions and unwanted conflicts, he said, "We couldn't have
taken this world for ourselves, John. Not with people living on it D'you
suppose the sharks are taking worlds for themselves? D'you think they just wipe
out everyone on a planet and then grab it?"
"Hell," said Emiko, his face drawn
and hating. "I'll bet they would—"
A
few of the castaways trailed forlornly into the ashes but, even apart from
everyone's tiredness and reaction after the crash, there was no heart in this
raking over the mass graves of an unknown race. The concept of meeting a human being
not born on one of the many worlds of the Solarian grouping or aboard one of
their spaceships still had power to grip a man's imagination; but not like
this, not in turning over fused chunks, burned artifacts, the ruined residue of
a race.
"We
don't know, John." Matlin stood up and waved an arm. "We'd better get
moving again before everyone goes maudlin on us. We're in enough trouble
ourselves."
Emiko
rose with a grunt of effort. "Saint Vincent will send a rescue party. I know our radio is
being fouled up by the same sort of blanket that stopped Charlie Hastings from
sending—but Saint Vincent won't let us down."
"You're right, of
course, John."
Matlin
spoke with force. But he didn't know. He hadn't the strength even to admit they
might be marooned here forever.
The
survivors trailed in and, picking up their wounded and the radios and all their
other gear that had proved salvable, they set off once more along the beach,
heading south.
Someone
up front shouted shrilly, pointing. Everyone stopped. Over the curve of the
horizon a lean shape streaked through the air towards them. Before anyone had a
chance even to move position, that atmosphere-splintering aircraft screamed
past above, contrails breaking away in ruler-straight lines, keening a passage
down over the opposite horizon.
"So now they know we're here!"
Matlin felt like cursing his luck; but he knew luck had no part in that littie
demonstration of planetary power.
"Sharks?" someone
asked in a quavering voice.
"Who
the hell else?" demanded Emiko belligerently. "Grow up, will
you!"
"Having
tried to destroy the people of this world," Matlin said mildly, but loud
enough for them all to hear, "it seems the sharks are patrolling, just to
make sure they have succeeded. Well—they've found us. We don't know how long
they'll take to react. But we must assume they will be quick." He jerked a
thumb at the trees. "We've got to hide. Don't rush it!" He shouted as
one or two broke running for the trees. "You're still a ship's company and
under my orders!"
But
they did rush. In a scrabbling rout they scuttled for the trees. Pressing in
between the palm-like boles, wondering if they had made transit into the fire
from the frying pan, Matlin pushed forward to the head of the column once
everyone was off the beach.
His
heart thumped and sweat stung his eyes. This sort of exercise was hardly
duplicated by the gym robots back aboard. This stretched sinews, jolted leg
muscles, drew a gasp of effort at each step. Men slipped on the thick and
treacherously slippery mat of leaves beneath the trees. Women stumbled over
looping vines. There could be any sort of vegetable horror luring in here. The
leaves closed overhead and shut the party into a tomb of verdure.
Most
of the surviving personnel had come from the command sections of his ship, and
whilst the human side of Matlin rejoined that his friends had come through so
far alive, he felt sorrow for those of his company who had not made it
intensify, because of his feeling for those who had. But it also meant that the
tough planetary explorers, the men who habitually traipsed over alien planets,
had been snuffed out. He must do this work with personnel only half-trained for
it.
After
an hour of back-breaking struggling forward, he called a halt. They rested,
panting, wiping the sweat away, trying to cobble their clothes about them. A
girl carrying a power pack sacrificed vital undergarments to make a pad for the
strap that had rubbed a weal red and angry across her shoulder.
Matlin
felt the heavy drag of the twin Lee Johns at his waist. Those were among the
last of the company's possessions to be sacrificed. Most of the officers had
some sort of side arm. Matlin, knew, with somber foreboding and bowel-loosening
fear, they might not get the chance to use them.
Above
the screen of leaves, a howling rose, screeching decibels of sound down,
drenching the forests in noise.
"There goes another
one," said Emiko sourly.
This
planet of LeBlanc possessed a day and a night cycle similar to Earth's—that
first natural clock that had counted out the time for a large slice of the
galaxy—and soon the shadows of night threw fresh problems at Matlin.
Everyone
was shattered by tiredness. They had to rest. Some of the girls were in a bad
way. Reluctantly, Matlin gave orders to camp. Emiko found the spot, his flat
rubbery face showing a trace of his old humor as he reported a stream and a cleared sward overhung by trees.
Tiredness
dragged at Matlin as he organized watches, denied the use of fire, ate a hasty
emergency ration that, if nothing else, gave him strength and cleared away the
immediate effects of fatigue. But a man couldn't go on indefinitely on pills.
They
lashed the women and off-duty men into the trees and then, two by two, the
sentries prowled the camp, on the lookout for—for what? So far the only fauna
they had seen came into the see-and-admire class—butterflies, humming-birds
tree-sloths and similar alien equivalents to terrestrial animals. But—what
else lurked in this damn forest beyond the edge of vision?
The
problem confronting Matlin was simple; but it admitted of only one correct
answer. The wrong answer brought death.
He sat in the crotch of a tree cleaning one Lee Johns, the other in its holster with the strap
unclipped, ready for instant use. As he worked, his mind raced around die
alternatives.
If he radioed out at the wrong time the
sharks would pick up the signal, echoing back from their blanket, and home in
on him.
If
he failed to radio out the rescue ships from Saint Vincent
would never find him.
Just
how long would they take? When would they arrive? How long would they remain?
And—the big one—would they be able to handle the sharks waiting for them?
He sweated over vectors and times and
sublight speeds and ratios of possibility until the first Lee Johns gleamed
blue and menacingly beautiful. Then he shoved it back in its holster and
started in on the second. He'd always thought guns ugly before. Now they looked
just fine.
"Hi, Skipper. What about some
sleep?"
"I'm okay, John. I'm a
walking pill box right now."
"And me. I'm worried
over the female personnel."
Emiko
hadn't called them girls, and that meant he was being formal and that meant he was worried. ~"I know. We'll have to push on as best we can. I'd like
the men to carry a little more equipment. And also scout ahead. Give the girls
a little more chance to acclimatize, harden up."
"Wilco,
Skipper. D'you think the sharks can find us in here?"
Matlin
checked the charge on the second gun. His fingers trembled very slightly
against the blue metal.
"Difficult
to say. If they follow us in by land we ought to have some warning. I know we're
not getting anywhere by going inland like this. But we can't hang around this
area too long."
"If
they drop a bomb on this whole forest—" He didn't finish.
"Well start at first light and push
right on. We can follow the stream back. That should give easier
marching." "Check."
The
next day proved even worse torture as tired muscles pulled against stiffness,
the wildly variant exercise straining unused muscles, the agony of flesh and
blood pitting itself against the trail only through the masochistic bludgeoning
of will power. And driving all their wills, Matlin flogged them on.
Fear rode at their back and
terror urged them on.
By
evening of the second day, the stream had sunk between rocky banks and the
water ran fast and whitely-bub-bling over rapids and log-falls. They saw a
number of nasty-looking animals much the size and shape of a Nile crocodile,
except that they jumped sure-footed from rock to rock on correspondingly longer
and more flexible legs. Their teeth-hedged mouths gaped whitely at the humans,
slogging along the bank above them. The girls looked down and Patsy, the
biologists and botanists teams' secretary, would have stopped for a closer
look; but Emiko urged her on with a back-handed
compliment.
"It's
a funny thing, Skipper," he said, coming back to Matlin at the rear,
"those animals down there—alien and yet sufficiently terrestrial-looking
to tell us exactly what their capabilities are—would tear us to bits for a
light snack if they had half a chance. Yet we looked down on them with a
detached scientific curiosity—you saw Patsy—"
"I know. But we also have the sense not
to let them get at us. What's the funny bit, John? I need a good laugh around now. Tone up my muscles."
At once Matlin saw he had offended his exec.
He cussed himself for a clumsy fool; John Emiko had more inside that round
skull and behind that flat face than a mere regulation-bound spaceship exec
might be expected to have. Contritely, he said, "Sorry, John—nerves shot
to hell. What's your pointr^'
"You're lucky to have any nerves left,
Skipper. Most of the crew's have been in for retreads ages ago."
Emiko
was back to some parody of bis usual form, and Matlin felt the comfort of a strong crutch once again buttressing his inner weaknesses.
"Well?"
"Those aliens—we spotted them as soon as
they boiled out of hyperspace—oh, sure, they fired first. But we were all ready
to fire, smash right back. That's a pretty poor commentary on modem
interstellar life, isn't it? I mean, you meet up with an entirely fresh
life-form and the first thing you do is start trying to kill it."
"If
they hadn't fired, we wouldn't have, and probably right now, we'd be sitting
around a table, living it up a little, with them catching up with the news in
our neck of the galaxy." He smiled wanly. "And wicky werka, of
course."
"It
bothers me, though." Emiko shook his head. "We meet up with a
brand-new alien grouping—we don't eveny know what they look like, if they're
humanoids. They might, even be these mythical monster-aliens we're supposed to
riifi up against one day. But we don't know. We just trade? shots."
Matlin decided they'd come far enough. The
bank of the stream had now congested in on itself, branches and vines loping
across to trail in the narrowing stream, pooling and rippling red in the last
rays of the sun. Overhead the sky showed through rents in the leaves; on their
present course that head cover would soon disappear as the arching trees gave
way to brush and grass.
He
gave the necessary orders and when everything had been seen to, he found a dry
spot beneath a low bush that gave him a good field of view of the trail back.
John Emiko slid down beside him, his face worried.
"How much longer,
Skipper?"
"Between
ourselves, I'm disappointed—hell! I'm shattered!—that we've heard no
indications that a rescue ship has come for us. I figured on tomorrow morning
as the latest. If those two aircraft that chased us didn't spot us—if the
rescue ship gets here in between patrols—hell, John, there are a lot of ifs and
buts in this thing!"
"We trust in you,
Skipper."
There
was no answer to that in words that a man of Matlin's stamp could give and remain calmly unsentimental.
He
said, "Been thinking about what you'd said about these damn sharks. There,
you see-reflex habit. We usually call aliens we haven't made contact with
sharks—or octos— because that brands them as just another problem we have to
solve after having solved plenty more of a similar nature in the past. We don't
create bogey men to frighten our-^ssfves. The galaxy can do that quite nicely,
thank you."
\et we never have quite the same series of events
when we meet up with aliens—remember the stories about the Utukku? All
sweetness and light at first, language interchanges, presents, culture
missions—then, blooey!"
"Different
from the Lego. We just couldn't get to talk to them. The history books have it
all down in tridi color; how we called them Octos, fought them for Gideon's
plane-J^ry bases, used those creaky old fluxwagons and manual controls to beat them. There wasn't anything there of
the Impossibility of contact with aliens' notions; all the time the Octos were
targets for annihilation, our back room boys were trying everything they had to
talk to them like sane civilized human beings. And, in the end, we did."
"Yes.
You have to be just a little bit careful how you hold out the hand of
friendship in the galaxy. You never have the chance to make a mistake twice."
"Still
and all," Matlin said, rubbing the back of his neck tiredly where the
muscles ached from equipment straps, "these damn sharks reacted too fast.
They saw us and they fired. At least we'd have given them a chance to talk and
try to establish communication."
"Maybe they're fighting a war of their,
own and are punch-drunk, space-happy—and as woozy-brained as I am right
now." And John Emiko yawned hugely.
In
that awkward position, fists clenched and arms bent up and mouth open with
muscles stretching, he stopped moving and breathing, held frozen. Matlin slid a
gun out and waited, crouching under the bush. Slowly, carefully, Emiko let his
breath out, lowered his arms and sank down beside his captain. Together,
breathing softly, their guns aimed down the back trail, they waited for that
dark figure to move again, to flit craftily from one bush to the next
Speaking
so softly his breath hardly stirred, Matlin said, "Remember what we said
about the sharks. Don't fire until we have to—and not at all if we can help
it."
Someone
in the camp behind them stirred and a low voice sounded. There was nothing they
could do about that without giving away their position. They didn't want to assume
that darkly flitting shape following them was an enemy; but they wanted to stay
alive and they had to be careful.
A thing like a loon chittered from the side,
answered immediately by another on the other side. "All around us,"
Emiko whispered.
Before
the decision to awake the camp and chance a misunderstanding could be taken,
Matlin heard the savagely upraised voices, the screaming hate-filled shrieks,
the coughing uproar of projectile weapons. The aliens were attacking and their
numbers showed in a dark wave that broke against the outskirts of the camp. A
bullet gouged the dirt beside
Matlin's
head and earth stung his cheeks. The gun was on low-power and he aimed it and
pressed the trigger, fanning a wash
of energy across that fearsome horde avalanching towards him. At his side,
Emiko was firing short stabbing bursts on full power.
The
camp awoke to a pandemonium of shouts and curses and then, as the crew saw
their commander firing steadily, they became a steady core of men and women
determined to stay alive as long as possible. Carpenters and Smeeson
Fifty-Two's belched lividly, hurling needles and explosive shells. Lee-Johns
lit with dripping purple fire the surrounding rocks and bushes and limned in
devouring flame the enormous charging bodies of warriors who clawed in with one
thought in their heads: "Kill the aliens!"
For the Solarians were
aliens, too, on this planet
Liquid
fire dripped above their heads and searing drops bumed narrow holes through
clothing and flesh and blood. Men and women screamed and, screaming, fought on
until they died. Smoke drifted, flat and stinking. In the incessant
sheet-lightning discharges no coherent picture could be formed of the total
effect; a man could see only what lay before him and fired at anything that
tried to kill him.
More of the deadly dripping
fire balls lofted over.
A
crazed figure, burning, the hair tvdning upwards in a Medusa-crown of flame, screaming through bubbling lips, ran across
Matlin's line of fire. He choked. Then he snapped his second Lee-Johns up to
full power and mercifully gave the boon of euthanasia to Hilary Hines.
"They keep on coming,
Skipper!"
"Try to shoot those
devilish fire balls down!"
A blackened man rolled like a sack of
charcoal to the edge of the bank and fell straight into the torrent.
Flames gouted all over the camp area. Bushes
bumed. Matlin saw one of the radios take a bullet in its guts and spray
transistors and printed circuits outwards like a gay rocket at a corpse-meet.
He cursed and lumbered across to where Joanna Brule, unarmed, crouched in a
scooped hole beneath a plastic sheet. Her body, white and rosy in flickering
fireglow, bulged up, buttocks high. Under her stomach she cradled the last
radio, protecting it with her self.
Matlin
flopped beside her, smiling at her face, trying to do the impossible. He
smacked her bottom lightly. "Good girl. We'll soon knock off these alien
beasties—then we can call the ship."
"Skipper—"
Her face was ghastly, her eyes and mouth black holes in dough. "Hilary—you saw
Hilary?"
"She's
out of it now, Joanna. But you've a job to do stilL Don't let me down!"
"No—no, I won't,
skipper. ..."
"Good girl."
Empty
words, pathetic inspiration. But what damn else could he do?
He
spun back to the fight, cursing with a crazed personal hatred for these alien
devils who were murdering his friends. This wasn't the work for which the
Terran Survey Corps trained. This wasn't scientific exploration of the galaxy.
This was butchers' work.
"They're slowing down,
Skipper!"
John
Emiko walked with a limp, holding his thigh. Below the knee his leg dangled
awkwardly, blood ran down his shin. "Took a stupid bullet. But we're
licking them!"
Matlin
nodded brutally. What had been bothering him exploded now into action. He found
the first body he stumbled across, hefted it, staggered back to Joanna Brule.
"Here!
Get up, girl! Put this poor devil over the radio! Then get down beside
it!"
He
draped the dead man—it had been Jack Perry, he saw, a first-class signals
man—over the set and patted Joanna gently on the cheek. She was not in a state
of shock. But that lay in store for her.
A
fire ball fell and exploded nearby and a sizzling splatter of drops spat
fiendishly across the dead man. Matlin ripped out his medikit and slapped
styptic pastilles over the half-dozen inflamed spots on Joanna's skin. He left
her the kit. "Treat yourself, Joanna! They're coming in again!"
This time the attack swarmed balefully up to
the inner defense ring of bushes, blackened now and sere skeletons.
Matlin
paused to recharge his Lee-Johns, dismay chilling him as his fumbling fingers
discovered two more charges. When their ammunition had gone—then the aliens
would do as they wished with them.
At
first, as that crazed battle swayed there on an alien planet, Matlin thought
even the sky had turned to flame. Then he saw the sky redden and lighten with
the dawn.
How
long they had been fighting, he didn't know. The only thing left in his world
was to hold out. They had to beat these aliens. There had been no time to
parley, to talk of friendship; the aliens had attacked and they meant to kill
every last terran. There could be only one answer to that.
Over
the horizon, its noise blasting shrilly through the racket of battle below, an
aircraft lanced like the terminal arbiter of final doom. Craning upwards,
Matlin caught a glimpse of the ship—a black dot arrow-heading a white groove
across'the sky. He knew what that aircraft was doing now. He could imagine the
sights coming on, the warhead being programmed, the quick thrust of energy and
then the missile's engines thrusting it forward in unerring aim at the ring of
fire on the ground below.
As he looked, the aircraft
exploded into a ring of fire.
Two rings, one on the
ground, the other in the sky.
Matlin shook his head
dazedly.
The noise buffeted down
about then.
He
scrabbled up, fanned a last burst of fire at shambling figures that slavered
and tried to tear his throat out, fought his way back to Joanna. She still lay
beside the radio and the dead man. He leant down and smacked her hard.
"Call out, Joannal
Call the TSC1 Emergency band!"
Numbed,
she couldn't understand. He shook her, screaming.
Then she realized what her captain was
saying. She gave one sob and then her blood-bedabbled fingers flew at the radio
and she began to scream into the microphone.
Matlin
whirled away, seeing dead men, bumed equipment, expended weapons. Fire glazed
his eyes. Sweat channeled the muck on his chest. His legs felt balloon-large
and leaden-heavy. He dragged himself back to the perimeter and saw Hardy Swift
firing the last charge in his Lee-Johns. Swift had no legs. Then Guns keeled
over, dead. Emiko cursed and fired, his energy spraying a charging group of
aliens and whiffing them into their component atoms. A little silence ensued.
Into that silence dropped, like liquid notes
of gold, the shrilly descending whine of a ship on planetaries. They all
looked. All that were left.
A
pinnace dropped down towards them, the lower ports open, her little gun turret
swinging around menacingly. Men waved from within. Matlin waved back—he did not
stand up.
The
pinnace's turret flamed and fire sprouted amongst a group of rocks on the river's edge. Shrieking figures cartwheeled from
their deadly cover. Weapons crisped them.
Emiko said, "I think
that's the last of them, Skipper."
The
pinnace settled in the center of the perimeter. The first man out was
Lieutenant-commander Mbebe, his face grim and drawn, the Lee-Johns dwarfed in
his fist.
"Hurry it up, Dick I" he shouted. "Everybody aboard."
Carrying
what was left of his crew into the pinnace sickened Matlin. But at last the
hideous task was over. The little craft rose, closed ports and bolted for the
sky. Matlin sat exhausted at the side of Mbebe's control chair. He knew he was
back aboard a ship of the TSC; but he couldn't feel that
yet.
The
pinnace's parent Survey Corps battleship had dropped down to the outermost
fringes of the planet's atmosphere. She whipped the little craft up on a tractor beam and tucked her into her bay. Matlin, supported by Mbebe,
stumbled along to the control room. If anything more was to happen, he wanted
to see it.
He was not disappointed.
The
whole battleship control, larger than the pinnace just stowed away, buzzed and
hummed and shone with activity. On the screens Matlin saw, with a queer jolt
of awe and humility, five Survey Corps battleships in steady line astern behind
the flagship. So Saint Vincent had sent six battleships to rescue him and
his crew! He felt small.
Orders
relayed in tight crisp voices, meters danced around their dials, men and women
all wearing wonderful freshly laundered uniforms worked with calm assurance;
the air smelt like wine, control fascia lights shone with the reassuring
comfort of Christmas tree decorations. This, this whole heady atmosphere, was
home.
"Shark on screen, sir!"
The
tech's voice had not finished before the answering orders whipped out, flat and
hard. "Destroy!"
Hating
himself for his feelings and quite powerless to prevent them, Matlin sat and
watched with tremendous soul-shaking satisfaction the complete destruction of
seven shark spaceships.
His thoughts were not nice.
But
then—he had just been through a "not-nice" experience.
"That," said John Emiko with savage
glee, "is what we should have done to them as soon as we saw them, Skipper."
"Sharks, yes," said Matlin, weakly,
his head hurting. "Well?"
"Don't
you understand yet, John?" Matlin's feelings chumed like sour milk inside
him, the bile tasted filthy at the back of his mouth. "Don't you know who
those poor devils were?"
"You
feel sorry for them! After what they did—you saw Hilary, and Guns, and—"
"I know. This is how interstellar wars
start. All the hatred and the cruelty and the killing. We would have talked.
But they wanted revenge. They wanted to kill the aliens who had burned and
devastated their towns. They weren't sharks, John! They were the people of this
planet—fighting for it against—against us!"
"Oh, God!" said John Emiko.
X
Already the first steel mill had belched its loud and soulless
burp against the planet Jethro and the first plates had skittered off the
rollers, shimmering with peacock-tailed color, pooled with liquid oily
reflections of a new sun in the Jethroan sky.
No
longer the sun, Jezreel, but the Sun, Centaurus. No longer—Jezreeljethro—but
Centaurusjethro.
The
steel mill began with a never satisfied maw burrowing deep into the heart of
the Mountains of Carmel Jones and extending through a whole complicated series
of automated shops and foundries and mills, ended by the banks of the river
Yasmeen. Already the Lapiz Lake showed bands and streaks of putrefaction and
industrial contamination.
"Of
course," the hemisphere manager had said, warmly believing his own
industrial propaganda, "of course, all the effluents will be cleared up in
time. We'll have this planet looking ship-shape in no time at all I No time at
all!"
"It
always looked pretty good to me before." Colin Copping had aged since the
day he and Arnold Gunderson had tried to blow up a SCS spaceship. Now—now he
had other plans.
"We
won't let it rest like this, Colin." Simon Strang stood braced against the
feel of the world about him, a world called to his attention by a despairing
message from Tom and Fay Bames. They were old friends in the inchoate but
articulate half-world in which Simon lived, of the House of Wolfgang, an old
imperious House of much fame. Old Rainscarfe had called the head of his parent
House of Wolfgang as soon as their ships had made planetfall again; but by
then, nothing but the Construction Service could have moved Jethro back. And
the SCS were not in the business of taking planets away from the Solarian
Confederation.
Now
Simon Strang was saying good-bye. He had done what he could, raised what
dust-devils he had been able to blow into being; but everyone, once the Lansen
generators had begun to whine deep in the core of Jethro, had known that the
process was irreversible.
Anthea
was weeping. Old Rainscarfe, Gunderson, Dirk Tiamat, Arthur Copping, all stood
uncomfortably on the edge of the raw concrete landing field. Brilliantly lit
brand-new hangars serrated the sky. Somewhere beneath their steel and concrete
roots, the crushed bulbs of Anthea's daffodils would never flower again.
"Good-bye,
Simon!" they called. To Strang their voices sounded like a last sea dirge
for a hero sliding to his last bourn in the empty reaches of the sea.
Strange
how mankind had this hate-love relationship with the sea carried over into his
feelings for the wider ocean of space. Homer would have understood the men and
women who ventured across the light-splintered parsecs in their frail metal
shells of air. But there was no blind Homer alive today to sing a song of the
scourge of space, a last lay of the light-years.
Arthur
Copping gripped his son by the shoulders. He looked searchingly into his face
and then, as though reassured by what he found there, nodded briefly. A hard
man, he expected strength and durability in his son above anyone else.
"Good-bye, Colin. Don't forget to screen
your mother. She's worried about you going off into space alone like this. But
I'm not. I joy in the opportunity for you. Be strong, Colin. Do what is right.
Do what you have to do."
"I'm
only going to Earth, Father—I mean"—that statement carried so many
psychological overtones it would screw a couch into a formfit—"I mean—I'm
not going into space. I'm going across to Earth. And that, if you please, is a
wondrous thought. . . ."
"You know what Earth means to us."
Old silver-haired Rainscarfe, like them all, treasured the memory of their heritage
bound up in a planet none had seen.
"Our ancestors traveled slowly and
dangerously across the light-years, going from one planet to another, always
seeking fresh horizons—and now, here we are, back a mere four light-years from
Earth."
Dirk
Tiamat said gruffly, "It's putting the clock back, if you ask me."
Simon
caught that. "I like that, Dirk. Tutting the clock back.' I'll use that.
It should catch attention."
The five minute warning hooted above their
heads.
"Good-byeI"
"Good-byel" "Thank you, all." "Take care of
yourselfl"
And
then they were in the ship, walking quickly through to the waving lounge,
looking down on the spectators moving back to the terminal area, already cut
off from the people of this world by the final clang of the airlocks. Simon
Strang and Colin Copping waved down and imagined they could pick out their
individual friends in that variegated waving crowd below.
"It's very good of
you, Simon, to take me with you—"
"Nonsense,
Colin. I need a good human companion—I can hardly call you a secretary,
otherwise the department of manpower will be on my neck—someone to run my
secro-bots for me. I have to get through an enormous amount of work every day.
You're going to be a great help. And I'll see you work hard I"
"111 work, Simon. Never worry about that. I'll work."
The
expression in Colin Copping's face was lost on Simon as he stared for the last
time down on Jethro.
Then
the spaceliner lifted on her planetary drive, a brief announcement burbled
smoothly over the tannoy, then she shifted onto her sublight drive and whisked
into hyper-space for the miniscule hop to Solterra.
Colin
Copping had been immensely pleased to take the position offered by Simon Strang
for three main reasons: One; Simon Strang was exceedingly wealthy. Two; He
traveled extensively in the galaxy. Three; the third was a far more personal
reason and one that Copping wasn't prepared even to think about too
intensively just yet.
There
would be time for that. He knew the time would come, as he had known the snows
would melt on the flanks of the Mountains of Mount Carmel in the spring, where
now brute mechanical fingers clawed away the splendors of his home.
All the wonders and the splendors and the
marvels of Earth made Copping ask one simple question: "If men can make a
planet as beautiful as this why did they have to rape my world?"
"How
do you think Earth became so beautiful, Colin?" Simon's sensitive face
betrayed too easily the cast of his thoughts. "Where an empty planet is
used I grant no harm is done; but when men take a planet like Jethro to use as
factory-area, why then, man is gravely at fault."
They
booked in at a middle-class hotel, for Simon hated ostentation, and taking a
penthouse suite, he at once set about taking up all his old contacts. As he sat
before his deegee controls, Copping wandered off to flop down into a formfit
and flick for a comrobot to bring him the news. The screen was set up and
Copping at once began to feel the verve and pace of life here on Earth.
They
had set down at the South Pole landing field and their hotel overlooked the
tropical gardens positioned exactly at the
point where Scott had found
Amundsen's flag.
The
statues of the first men to reach this spot on the Earth's surface, lovingly
carved from Carrara marble, stood surrounded by the lustiness of hibiscus,
poinsettia and the flamboyance of the firetree amid a profusion of orchids.
Now
Copping, in his automatically temperate-oriented hotel suite, ignored the
riotous color outside and concentrated on the pseudo life of the screen. He
learned a great deal—not so much of what happened on Earth for that was
supposedly common knowledge in the galaxy—but details of habits, attitudes,
ways of looking at things and people that shook him out of the rut of a
frontier planet's ways.
On Jethro the log houses had been built as
buildings should, with a solid roof and four square walls. But here— they built
houses inside out. Part of his childhood education had familiarized him with
the concept, of course, and he had seen photographs and film depicting not only
Earth's cities, but many other of mankind's cities on the planets of the
confederation. But actually to see it, at first hand—why, here people lived in
houses which they attached to the permanent central umbilical cord of the
building, rising hundreds of storys into the sky, clustered like grapes on a
vine, attaching their inlets for water and power and their outlets for sewage
direct to the cities' facilities. Then, when they fancied a move, or business
took them to another city, they simply disconnected, set the antigravs going
and flew off to another city and another endoskele-ton. Each separate house
could be a man's kingdom, tastefully decorated as he wished and as often as he
wished, his for the flying and his for the living—exoskeleton houses except for
only the most particular of purposes were as outmoded as the internal
combustion engine.
Simon
relinquished his deegee controls and brisked across to Colin Copping. His
intense absorption in the things of life he considered mattered showed now in the bright smile, the pleased
look about him. "They've arranged a little reception for me, Colin.
Rather nice, really. And you'll be able to meet the people who care about what is going on in the galaxy."
Copping
voiced a thought that had bothered him. "But why me, Simon? After all,
although I have the usual education of a modem Solarian, I'm still a frontier
boy. I'm not at home yet with the super-civilization habitual to you."' He
tried to make it sound casual.
"I'll
be frank, Colin." Simon flung himself into a formfit and dangled a leg
over the edge. The formfit gave up trying to grow a support for that nervous
limb after a time. "I need you for my secretarial bureau. True. But, more—
you are here as a symboll You can talk. You can make people really feel what is
happening to the worlds wrenched into slavery by the SCS."
"Yes-well-"
"I'm not talking in purple prose, Colin.
What I say has been attested time after time. Jethro is just one more example."
"But your father—"
"My father!" Simon's face shadowed
with the bitterness he felt and the bewilderment. "I thought he was a fine
man. A straight man! Then he deliberately estranged me—oh, the story is too
familiar—and too painful—for me to repeat it now. The incident of Jethro was
merely the last in a line long of sins of omission and commission." He
stood up fretfully. "But tonight you'll have the opportunity of telling
some of the doubters your story—at first hand. There is a man, Walter Gokstad,
who must be convinced. If you wish to right the wrong done to Jethro—Gokstad
must be brought over to our side I"
That
evening at the reception held in the Sparkling Palace hanging on the invisible
wires of artgravs, a thousand feet above the surface of a sub-tropical pool,
Copping met Walter Gokstad and at once took a violent dislike to the man.
It
wasn't that he was fat—everyone could keep in tiptop physical shape on the gym
machines—but that he gave the impression of fatness. And oiliness. He minced up
to Copping to shake hands, smiling wetly, like a barrel of lard, all soft
blubber and sham and affectation. Copping shook hands and felt with repugnance
the soft smooth skin, apparently boneless. It was like shaking hands with a
snake-skin—the impression, false though it might be, of sliminess remained.
".
. . pleased to meet you, my dear Colin. Simon has been telling me about the
tragedy of Jethro. Such a shame. Yet these things sometimes happen." They
walked slowly together across the parquet floor between drifting pendulous
globes of light casting a shimmering chiaroscuro of color and variegated
shadows all about them. "You can't build a solar system without breaking a
few eggs."
Gokstad
laughed rumblingly at his own joke—and Copping felt sick.
Something
must have shown on his face for Simon spoke, smiling a warning. "Shall we
go across to the display? I know you don't share our views, Walter. But we're
right, you know."
"Convince
me and I'll buy," Gokstad said with all the self-importance of a mouse
hooked on cocaine. Copping dropped back a couple of paces. Simon walked at his
elbow as Gokstad high-stepped across the floor.
"He's—" Copping couldn't say what
he felt. "He's awful!"
"You
have to dirty your fingers a little, Colin, when you're dealing with certain
elements in the galaxy. He's an impot-tant man. Has the ear of influential
government circles. And he doesn't like Caracci."
"That's the first nice
thing I've heard about Caracci."
Simon
made a face. "Maybe. Gokstad doesn't like Caracci because he's bucking
for his job. Chief of SCSI"
"Well,
he must be a big wheel. And you think if he takes over he'll be amenable to
your friends' ideas?"
"We've got to convince
him first."
Out
of his thoughts and not the non sequitur Simon obviously considered the remark,
Copping said: "And I looked
at Strang like he was a god!"
The
reception had gone off well and parties of people congregated and broke apart
to join other groupings. Copping found himself, Simon, Gokstad, one or two
others including a few girls all dressed in relaxed informal evening lounging
clothes, sitting before the display. Other people drifted across and soon an
animated crowd watched with the mild self-aware interest of civilized beings.
"That's
right," Simon had said to Copping. "We try not to become excited.
Over-indulgence in extravagant emotions is very wearing. The psyche suffers
too, you know. But over this world-stealing business, well—I may be
surprised."
"I can become
excited," Copping had said darkly.
For
that sophisticated audience, the display-in-chief consisted of an edited and
compressed version of the events on Jethro. Film clips, sonorous music, heavily
slanted dialogue, all told eloquently of a free and happy people forced into
virtual slavery, their planet torn from them. The auditorium end of the great
hall hushed as that galactic tragedy unfolded.
Amid
murmurs of "disgraceful!" "uncivilized"
"shocking," the next section of the display lit up and for Copping
followed fifteen minutes of learning, a quarter of an hour when his mind
expanded to new facts and a fresh concept of what he was fighting. For the
guests at the reception this was old stuff and most drifted off, back to the
dancing and the talking and the drinking. But Copping sat watching the story of
humankind expanding into the galaxy presented in a way all the histories and
all the lectures at colleges had failed to convey to him.
Simon
said softly, "This is our latest presentation, Colin, carefully programmed
to hit the right spots in everybody's subconscious.
It will be screened during peak viewing hours."
Gokstad
heaved himself up. "I don't have to sit here and watch your moronic
near-subliminal propaganda, Simon."
"It's not—" Simon
began to protest hotly.
"You'll
have to watch your step or you'll have the morals boys after you. Subliminal is
still a dirty word, you know."
"You
watch, Colin." Simon jackknifed up and, smiling, drew Gokstad away,
bending over the shorter man like a father-elect escorting a nine month
pregnancy to the hospital. Colin Copping heard Gokstad saying: ". . . my ships and my corporation! I can't afford mud . . . my responsibilities and my planets
.. ."
Thankfully, Copping turned
back to the display.
Every
schoolchild knew the story, naturally, as part of their education to life in
the galaxy. In this tridi full color display, Copping was presented with the
facts in a new light; he began to see why so many people strongly disagreed
with the government viewpoint. The foundation of their argument was the
contention: "We should go on and out and colonize as we go. To bring back
planets to our doorstep is to negate human achievement. When we meet up with
the real aliens we will still be a fumbling race of people tied by their
planets' apron strings to the solar system of their birth."
Along around here, Copping surmised, Simon
would, on the next presentation, add in Dirk Tiamat's gruff opinion: "It's
putting the clock back."
This
program would be beamed out on the screens of the solar systems, paid for as
bona fide advertising. It would make people think. They could see and hear for
themselves what was going on in the galaxy in their name. Copping saw very
clearly that he and his like, the men who had been dispossessed, were very
small beer; he was here to add emotional overtones necessary for a good
presentation. What a man like Gokstad really cared about was money and power;
not the well being of a few ragged frontiersmen.
Gradually
Copping disregarded the display, sinking back in his seat to review
dispassionately the progress he had so far made. If Simon convinced Gokstad and
the people behind him to support his friends, the SCS might be crippled if
Gokstad came to power.
Copping wasn't really sure
that would satisfy him.
The
accident of the man who had tried to befriend him being the son of the man who
had deceived him had at first seemed wildly ironic; only later had Copping
realized the extra power that chance relationship gave him. When a man hated
his father there were levers and hidden springs of the subconscious to be
manipulated.
As for Gerban Amouf—an old
Smeeson seemed just.
A
drink in bis hand and his jewelled fingers flashing, Walter Gokstad was
impressing a crowd with his personality as Copping wandered over. The reception
was growing wilder now and the musical robots had merged imperceptibly into the
latest jimjah craze and a few girls and men were jim-jahing away beneath the
speakers. Their antics drew a disbelieving gape from Copping.
"That,
my dear Colin, is the civilization they rape a world to maintain." Simon appeared flushed. His forehead caught the
lights, gleaming slickly.
"You
can't convince me it's wrong to jimjah," said a redhead with an emerald
sequined dress that undulated as she spoke. "It's absolutely the
topi"
She jimjahed off and became caught up in the
whirls and wriggles and contortions, her red hair a bright flame beneath the
fluorescents. Copping stared at her. His throat had gone dry. There were other
things in the galaxy apart from planets and policy and politics. . ..
"All
this jimjah nonsense I" Gokstad upended his drink and at once took
another from the robot at his elbow. "Came in from a bunch of primitives
we turned up on some planet or other. Even adults are doing itl Ridiculous!
They look like cavorting elephants."
At
once Copping became a fervent advocate of the jim-jah craze and all it stood
for.
"But
I'm sure, Walter, you'll see the factual advantages from our position."
Simon evidentiy took up the threads of an interrupted argument.
"Scavenging space for planets is not fit work for Solarians! Apart from
the efforts of the TSC—which seem to grow less every year—we just aren't going
out into the galaxy!"
"We're
bringing planets to form good strong tightly-knit communities around solid
G-stars, Simon!" Gokstad's drinking rate carried on steadily despite what
ever else he might be doing. "We're building a mightly empire—"
"Empire,
schmooey!" snapped a dark-faced, extravagantly dressed man beside Simon. This,
Copping knew, was Tom Bames, a member of his own parent House. At his side a
pale, pretty woman in transparent yellow fluff-clothes smiled anxiously, her
eyes darting everywhere but at the people to whom she was talking. This was Bame's
wife, Fay.
"All
right, Tom! Call it Confederation of free races, if you wish. I don't care what
you call the setup. But it works!"
"That isn't the final
arbiter among the stars . . ."
"You find me a
better."
"Any time!"
"Now, now," said Simon, his
breeziness hollow under the strain. "All the alien peoples we've met in
the past are united with us in the Confederation. We call it the Solar-ian
Confederation—"
"And the Shurilala and the Takkatians
call it that, too!" Gokstad drank, smiling widely. "That proves something!"
"Of
course! But we must break this idea of bringing planets back to our central
suns! There is still time. But if we leave it too late the pioneering spirit
will be leeched from us and we'll end up a bunch of cowering agoraphobes!"
"Nonsense, Simon!
You're looking on the black side!"
Copping
thought he saw quite clearly the character and accomplishments of the people
among whom he was not to five. They disgusted him in a way he found peculiar;
after
all, some of them were doing what they believed in, and the others made
expediency appear logical. But they would not serve his ends. He would have to
rid himself of Simon Strang as soon as Stephen Strang's son had reached the end
of his usefulness to him.
After that—then they would
see, wouldn't they?
But
in the interim—why, that could be made to be enjoyable.
He
found a drink and wondered away from the group around Simon and Gokstad. He saw
the redhead in the undulating emerald dress and began to work his way through
the dancers towards her, his body already moving experimentally in the abandon
of the jimjah.
PART THREE
XI
Around multi-layered catwalks and hovering closer on
minutely-controlled artgravs, the scientists clustered about the great ball.
One hundred feet in diameter, the ball had been sculpted by a series of master
hands to represent a planet. The name of the planet happened to be Vesta—but
this same procedure had been carried out on many planets previously and would,
so Chief Controller Stephen Christopher Strang sincerely believed, be carried
out on very many more.
The
years had treated Strang with kindly indulgence and even without his gym
machines and the normal expectancy of physical fitness until the last few years
of a man's life span, he still looked tough and fit and eager for work.
He
had made Controller after Chief Commissioner and now he had reached the
penultimate step. From Chief Controller he could only go on to become Head of
the SCS—or downwards to retirement and relaxation out of the gaudy swirl of
interstellar geopolitics.
All
about him his men studied the modeled globe of Vesta. This way paid dividends.
Strang had once long ago seen a planet moved by the Lansen generators without
the minutely detailed study experience had shown necessary. The planet had
split open. The experience had been nerve-shattering. The Commissioner in
charge had died in the holocaust and Strang had only a single pang of pity for
the man.
Now his scientists studied and measured and
made their reports. They would inform him of the latest positions of faults and
schisms, of undersea trenches and all the lines of failure along which the
crust of this world could slip
and writhe and torture itself in the turmoil
of adjustment. In a very real sense a planet was like a living being; it wasn't
built to be hurled through space without protection on any other course than
the one it had followed since it had been bom.
Worlds
were fragile objects-Even old Earth, in the days before weather control had
brought order under man's guiding hands, had shown what such a fragile object
could do. A single hurricane could suck a quarter of a million tons of water
from the sea every second. Two hundred miles an hour winds would flatten
everything in their paths. A day's condensation could liberate energy
approximating that achieved by the explosion of thirteen thousand megaton
bombs. Earthquakes occurred at the rate of roughly two a minute. Only a few of
these achieved great, magnitude, and stressed-constmction of buildings and the
endoskeleton systems had long since obviated the needless death tolls of
another era.
Earthquakes
were no novelty to Strang. The colossal forces boiling and bubbling inside a
heavy planet continually seeking equilibrium thrust upwards and the crust of
the planet would break and rift at weak points, along lines of fault, riding up
in gashes and wounds that would— if Strang allowed—rend the planet to pieces.
Within Earth-type planets—all that, for the moment, the SCS were concerned
with—a solid white-hot inner core of iron and nickel, surrounded by molten
outer core of slightly cooler metal and covered by the brittle crust
represented an eggshell filled with liquid fire with a dense ballbearing at the
center. Clumsy handling of that little fireball could bum a man's fingers down
to stumps.
Strang had a use for all his fingers.
He
had a job to do. No natural force, no laws of celestial mechanics, no—and with
special vehemence—no other man, was going to stop him carrying out that job to
a successful conclusion.
So
he studied the modeled globe of Vesta, slowly spinning in the artgravs, noting
every possible weakness.
Distances covered in interstellar exploration
and planetgathering had increased sharply over the years, the expected effect
of a massive increase in area resulting from a volume-expansion did not hold
true in a galaxy composed of a flat one hundred thousand light-year diameter
disc; itself not in any sense solidly packed with stars but consisting of
spiral arms, great oceans of emptiness and streaks and swirls of hydrogen and
cosmic dust. Outside the disc the globular clusters held some interest and there
were always the angled-orbit stars filling out the galaxy's sphere. But Strang
had hewed close to his path. He had moved outwards from the hub, along the
spiral arm in which the Earth lay thirty thousand light-years from the center.
The so-called Rim of fiction, of course, did not exist in fact; the stars
attentuated and grew more disparate as the spiral arm fizzled out There must—it
stood to reason—be a star from which if you looked out away from the Milky Way
you would see no other stars but those amassed in the far distant galaxies. The
true desert of space would extend blackly away out to those unimaginable
distances. But then—there were plenty of stars from which, if you looked out in
the same way—you would see only one or two stars of your own Milky Way galaxy.
Space sort of crept in among the scattered stars, the darkness burrowing in
between spiral arms, the emptiness creating a dimly-lit tattering of the hem
of the Galaxy.
With
the completion of his work with Vesta, Strang had no intention of pursuing
further planets out along a random path towards that mythical Rim of the
galaxy. With Vesta safely tucked away he intended to retrace his steps and
challenge Tung Chi Leslie for a slice of the spiral arm extending in towards'
the hub. There—he felt convinced—lay the exciting future.
Strang
stepped down onto the floor. He craned his head back for a last look at the
simulacrum world.
"Everything's set sir." Doctor
Sitobem, the Field Chief, smiled with his usual nervous deprecatory twitch of
the lips. Sitobem—a member of the House of Longhi—was a good and competent
scientist-tumed-aclministrator. With his sparse hair and the skin tightly-drawn
over strong bones, his face conveyed an odd aura of a pared marble statue. But
he knew his stuff.
"You
can begin clearing the Shaft Camp, Doctor." Strang had developed a brusque
style with his men in these latter years. He tended to regard his associates in
the light of what they could do for him and no longer as personalities. "I intend to have a meal. Then we can go down
to the chamber."
"Very well, sir.
Oh—your son—"
"Is he still hanging
around?"
Sitobem
knew well enough the regard father and son held each other in; it had been
going on for long enough.
"Yes,
sir. He asked permission to go down to the chamber with us."
"He did what? What the hell's come over
Simon I Oh— all right. But get rid of that secretary of his. There won't be room
for idle sightseers, and Simon will be one too many. But this might be an
education for him, at that. . . ."
In
the shadows leading to the teleport, Colin Copping listened. He had grown into
a tough masculine dynamo of power, a man whose brooding eyes looked on the
galaxy and found it wanting. So far he had not found it expedient to throw over
Simon Strang; but now—his face habitually showed a blank lackey mask—but now
the time had come.
Like
everyone else on the Shaft Camp he wore crisp green coveralls. He had
cultivated the ability to merge not only with his background but with other
men. Now he stood deferentially aside as Stephen Strang bustled past issuing
his last orders.
Simon
Strang walked across, nervous, his face sweating, to fall in at the tail of the
comet following the presence of his father.
Oh, yes,
Copping decided. This was a
very fine time indeed.
"What's got into you, Simon? Want to
share the thrills and dangers of shifting planet?"
Simon's
hps trembled. "There's no danger—is there? I mean—"
His father laughed brutally.
"If there was danger I can't envisage
you joining us."
Simon
turned away to hide the anger. Watching and listening, Copping felt a twinge
of pity for the man who had befriended him. But then he remembered Jethro—and
the pity vanished.
Over
the meal Strang became expansive. He talked. The others listened. He told.them
of his determination to open up fresh areas of the spiral arm in towards the
hub. He felt confident, he said, that man's true destiny lay in that direction.
The
whole meal partook of the quality of a ritual feast, a banquet on the eve of a
great hero's conquering departure. In the shadows Copping nursed his hate and
waited.
Simon
tried to inject something of his own point of view. But—as Copping saw with
cynical clarity—the dreams and ideas of Simon and his friends had not moved a
millimeter since the day he had joined them at the reception at which Walter
Gokstad had bluntly rebuffed them. That seemed a long time ago to Copping.
"Oh,
shut that claptrap, Simon I Have you seen Sally latelyr
"No—but Susan and Sarah send their
love—"
Strang's
face congested. The veins beat thickly in his neck and forehead. He slammed a
knife down hard.
"I've
told you and your mother, Simon. I want to hear nothing about—about those
two!"
"Just
because they married without your approval doesn't mean they have ceased to exist!"
Simon said with some courage.
"Oh, but it does! As far as I am
concerned Mrs. Oquendo and Mrs. Matlin do not exist!"
Simon
couldn't face his father. He stuffed a forkful of something into his mouth and
chewed. But his left hand twisted the fork with knuckle-blanching force.
Copping
looked at Stephen Strang as a man looks at an alien life form under a
microscope. The Chief Controller had not, expectedly, remembered Copping from
that pyrotechnic visit to doomed Jethro. Copping fingered the Carpenter at
his waist and he allowed a thin smile to form on his face, safe from all
observation. He had once thought
After the meal the scientists'no longer
needed began to clear away Shaft Camp and trail across to the waiting
spaceships. The chamber party assembled before the tele-port. Teleports were
useful at short ranges for bulky items, or at long ranges for lightweight
objects; so far the boffins had not perfected an all-purpose teleport. They
would, one day, of course. Copping stood in the shadows as the overheads
dimmed, and waited.
Dr.
Sitobem went through first. He entered the box, the door shut, the cycling
fight glowed and then, as air sighed through the inlets, the door opened and
the next man stepped through. Sitobem, having been broken down to constituent
nuclear particles and shot down into the chamber at the planet's core, had been
reassembled there without apparent dislocation of continuity. When Simon went
through he licked his lips and was clumsy about entering the box, with Strang's
brutal laughter echoing in his head.
The
narrow shaft first driven by the borer sometimes stayed intact right through a
planetary operation. More often, as here on Vesta, subterranean upheavals
crushed it, filled it with molten fire, twisted it into chaotic uselessness.
All the borer did was to open the first channel into the core and then,
surrounded by a manmade electromagnetic shielding flux that withstood all those
awesome pressures around, the teleport would be erected and the scientists
commuted from chamber to surface via broken down beams of nucleonic particles
and wavicles. The idea of riding some super-gigantic elevator to and from the
surface chilled practical men to the marrow.
Strang
went through last. Even alone, the bulldog arrogance showed in the way he
strutted rather than walked into the box.
Looking at him Copping felt the bile rising
in waves of sheer hatred. When the cycling light died, he moved forward like a
deadly cat stalking towards the waterhole and his prey.
This—he was going to enjoy.
In
the chamber at the planet's nickel and iron core, Dr. Sitobem requested the
usual check from the geophone operators. Connected to the surface and thence,
by normal sub-light radio to the orbiting spaceships, they checked on the
progress of the surface parties.
Commodore Morley Lansdowne
came on the circuit.
"All
set up here, Doctor. I'm lifting jets on the last ship in ten minutes."
"Good. The shield is
due on in thirty minutes."
"Check."
"Remember,
Morley," Strang leaned over the top and growled into the geophone,
"we're staging at the hundred light-year mark. I don't intend to stay down
here all the trip in to Pallas."
"I
understand—sir."
No
one could blame a Chief Controller for wishing to remain immured at the core of
a planet. The fauna and flora of Vesta contained many interesting specimens and
although the shield to be flung about the planet would protect them from the
rigors of lightless space, it always paid dividends to stage a journey and let
the planet swim for a day or so in the friendly rays of a G-star on the way.
Strang stumped back to the
control desk he had usurped.
"Pallas!"
he said with ironic emphasis. "In the old days we all went out and grabbed
planets for our own home suns and allies. Now we're a governmental service; we
do the work and bring home the planets and sometimes we have to orbit them
around the suns of the Confederation."
Dr.
Sitobem, twitching his hps, ventured mildly, "We're not xenophobes any
longer, sir. Why—the Paints have been our good friends for centuries!"
"Yeah,
I know. I'd just rather be orbiting this planet a-round Sol, or Centaurus, or
one of the home suns."
Simon,
keeping in the background, knew his father was just being awkward, trying to
rile his associates. Ancient wars in space were best forgotten. Especially with
the continued stories coming in with monotonous regularity of the imminent
collision of the Solarian Confederation with another and
—heartbreakingly—inimical alien race.
It
seemed there would always be Sharks in space for men to meet and fumble around
the courtesies and the hatreds before real contact was made. It seemed—but that
was sloppy thinking. There would be
initially inimicable aliens just as there would be aliens with whom Earthmen became fast friends from the moment of
first contact.
To
Simon, his father had grown into a bloated ogre. He had made this visit to try
to bring his father to an acceptance of Susan's and Sarah's marriages. The
family had been split and his mother ached in private and faced the world with
a stony public visage. That hurt Simon.
Now
that would-be great man of iron sat surrounded by his lackeys, superintending
the removal of one more world. He would share the never-flagging excitement of
the moments when the Lansen generators started up and the planet moved. Then,
during the staging halt around the selected star, he would teleport to the
surface and be taken off by a pinnace from his fleet. No doubt about it. Chief
Controller Stephen Christopher Strang was a big man. His father. Big.
Strang
himself sat slumped, watching all that went on with the professional, cold and
completely passionless eye of the perfectionist who knows what he wants and the
means of obtaining it. He did not interfere in the operation. Techs studied
their dials and waited for Dr. Sitobem to give the signal. When it came even
the filtered air within the chamber at the core of the world subtly changed.
The Lansen generators began their sub-audible whine—no dogs, on pain of
instant madness—and as the potential built up so men's skins fibriHated, hair
brittled, teeth ached, the whole body of man, bone and flesh, blood and muscle,
tautened and strummed in time to the harmonics hammering inaudibly from the
generators.
Simon's
fingernails drove into his palms. One or two of the femal techs, all with hair
clipped short, blew their noses on tissues. The echoing ball of the manmade
chamber where should only be solid nickel and iron so compressed that it beat
in white-hot fangs of anger at the intrusion, thrummed with activity.
On the geophone transmitted from his
flagship, Morley
Landsdowne's voice said: "The sun is
fluctuating. Dimming is taking place on a regular cycle, level eleven on the
Lan-sen charts."
"Thank
you," answered Sitobem. He looked like a chicken about to be plucked.
"The thermocouples and lightmeters are repeating satisfactorily."
Landsdowne
sniffed. He had been in a chamber at moment of potential breakthrough and he
had welcomed the sound of a voice from outside. He had known the reactions of
the sun were monitored in the chamber and, it stood to reason, as men drew off
vast quantities of pure energy to power their Lansen generators the sun would
show that drain in a fluctuation, a dimming, reaction to man's interference.
Evidently Dr. Sitobem didn't relish the human voice—or he was worried.
"She's nearly there!" said a girl
tech. Strang glanced at the records. Potential had built up to breakthrough
point. Any heartbeat now, and—
They flashed. They coruscated for a single
chronocron of time. Then Landsdowne's voice said: "Vesta's gone into
hy-perspace! You've shifted her!"
Strang
leaned back. Now they were pelting through mankind's version of that other
space and time continuum where at a steady rate of knots they outpaced
laggardly light in their own space-time continuum.
Another planet was Earthward bound.
Well-Pallas bound.
■ The good feeling soaked through Strang. He had been violently
displeased when Susan had, defying his wishes, married that oaf Oquendo and
gone to be a sniveling Kassim around Shurilala. He had been even more
displeased when Sarah—his Sarah!—had pranced in towing some lout of a TSC
Commander and claiming the man to be her husband. He'd been badly let down by
the two elder daughters. Sally—well, Sally had her sights set on that young lad
Craig Drummond. With Zeus Drummond about to give up the leadership of the House
of Christopher, Strang could not afford to offend the old man. House Leadership
had long figured in Strang's plans for his career. Anyway, Craig seemed the
sort of boy he could trust his daughter to. Apart from the nonsense he talked
about shifting planets without boring to the center, a nonsense Strang had not
fully investigated—he seemed a suitable match. But Susan—and Sarah . . .
Life
never dealt four aces in a row. . . . You had to fight for what you wanted, and
when you got half of it, the first half turned rotten in your hand.. . .
The
Lansen generators even sucking raw gobbets of power from a sun could not hurl
the bulk of a planet through sub-space with the speed the Mclvors could drive a
spaceship. Morley Landsdowne was waiting in orbit around the G-star when the
planet Vesta popped out of hyperspace and took up a temporary orbit. The shield
went down and the warm and wonderful sunshine shone down on the surface once
more. Not one of the animals of the surface would know that the sun they saw
again was not the sun they had seen disappear from their sky. . . .
Techs
sat back and blew out their cheeks. A hum of relieved conversation broke out in
the chamber. The first leg was over. Strang nodded to Sitobem.
"Very
good, Doctor. I am leaving you now. Just carry on with the good work as though
I were still here."
He went with heavy
authority towards the teleport.
He
never allowed himself to think of his exact situation in the chamber. After
all, a man's mind could accept the fact of his being buried alive beneath the
load of a complete planet; everywhere he turned was up. There was no longer a down.
He
entered the box and the doors shut. The cycling fights remained dead.
Irritation seized him. He had a ten thousand light-year thick spiral arm to
investigate and its planets to bring home as trophies—this delay infuriated
him.
He
thumped the overriding manual controls and still the cycling program remained
dead.
He stormed from the teleport back into the
chamber.
"What
the hell's going on? Get some techs on that box and get them on quickl I don't
have time to waste hanging about down here I"
"At once, sir." Sitobem scurried
away, hounding his techs into scurrying action.
A
curious frozen waiting descended on the chamber. The gathered scientists and
techs knew well enough what was going on. They could travel instantaneously to
the surface via the teleport, or as near instantaneously as made no difference.
But that single door had been closed. Now they waited to find if it had also
been bolted.
Strang's
main feelings were those of frustration and impatience. Fear, as yet, had no
place in his mind.
For
his son, Simon, the fear came first, gibbering and clawing blackly on bis
shoulder, leering with the mask of putrefying death in his face. Simon had to
face that fear. Then he saw his father, scowling, beating one fist into the
other palm—and the feeling of absolute spite that sight created drove out
feelings of self-fear, gave him a hate-love reaction of luxurious mocking
laughter.
Sitobem
looked ghastly. The fluorescents sheened green and sickly from his forehead,
gouged pits of verdigris in his cheeks, shrank his wizened neck to a stalk. He
had to swallow twice, convulsively, before he could speak.
"Commodore
Landsdowne is on the surface, sir. He reports the surface teleport completely
wrecked."
"Wrecked? That's not
possible."
"It
looks, sir, Commodore Landsdowne says, like the work of a bomb. The Shaft Camp
has been largely destroyed."
"A
bomb!" Strang's face betrayed bis bewilderment. "Why should a bomb be
left lying about in a dangerous state? Why have a bomb on surface at all?"
He pushed Sitobem out of the way, thrusting his large face at the geophone.
"Morley?
Clear away the debris and set up a fresh teleport. Snap to it! I've work to do
out of this hole!"
Landsdowne
said, carefully, "The four spare teleports we carried were aboard Firedrake, sir. There was an explosion and fires." Quite clearly Strang heard
Landsdowne's swallow over the geophone. "All the teleports were
destroyed."
Simon
said, "Oh! Colin was traveling aboard Firedrake. I do hope he isn't injured."
"No casualties." Landsdowne's voice
brought no comfort to the men trapped in the chamber.
Strang
stood before the geophone, stunned. The feeling of insupportable pressures
that, as a spaceman, he felt in the center of a planet and hitherto been thrown off by him as old-maid's fears. Whilst
the madunery drew power through the heat-exchangers from the white-hot heart of
the planet the air conditioners would run, the refrigeration would operate, the
artificial gravity would keep them from floating around under pseudo free fall
conditions. Despite the unforgettable fact that this control chamber lay at
the core of a planet, their situation was paralleled by a control room in
space. That had always been the comfort for Strang.
But now—now that door had been shut and
bolted.
"I've
never been an advocate," he said with harsh emphasis, "of a
cybemarchy. I've fought always against allowing deciding principles to be taken
out of a man's hands. But no damnfool machine would have let a bomb go off at the
teleport and aboard the storeship carrying the spares." He turned his
head, still bent, and lowered upon the men and women watching him. "Well
get out of here. We'll get out And, I promise you, the man responsible for this
will be caught and tried and punishedl I'll see to that!"
"But what are we going
to do?" shouted a female tech.
Strang crushed her with a
look.
"We'll keep our heads
for a start."
"This
is awful!" Dr. Sitobem gripped his hands together. They squealed. The
sound set teeth on edge.
Strang
undamped his holster flap. "I'll crisp the first person who panics! I'm
not indulging in any hysteria. We're scientific human beings, we inhabit the
galaxy—we're not brainless animals . . . Now—all of you get out and do what
you'd be doing. Don't worry. I'll get you out of this."
They
went, reluctantly, fearful, out to their sleeping quarters. Strang gripped
Sitobem hard by the shoulder.
"Listen
to me, Doctor. You have to show these people just what a leader they have. So
help me, if you crack up on me I'll crucify you! Now—get out there and sort out
the food situation. We may be down here some time."
Like a whipped cur, Sitobem scuttled for the
crew's quarters. Simon and his father glared at each other. Only a skeleton
staff remained monitoring controls.
"Just
keep all your remarks to yourself, Simon. I've work to do." Strang turned
his back on his son.
Mildly,
Simon said to that broad and arrogant back, "I was only going to say you
stomped on that incipient panic. They'd have gone if you hadn't—"
"I
know, Simon. That's my job. They were near to a mass hysteria that would have finished us.
Now get out from under my feet."
Strang
held still for a moment, head down, grasping the warm plastic of the geophone. Dear God!
Not like
this, not entombed in the hellfires
of an
alien planet!
Then
he lifted the receiver and spoke with all his brutaL irritable harshness.
"Morleyl
Unless you come up with a solution I'm going to have to get out of here my
way."
Landsdowne's
voice sounded thin and scratchy. "This is a hell of a mess . . . We can't
get you out right away. The borer would take months—"
"What
the hell's the use of the borer, Morley? We want a teleport on the surface, not down here."
"I was thinking you
could come up through the shaft—"
"Well,
that's outl And, anyway, we don't have the time. Our air should be okay for a
bit yet; but we're short of food and water. We can only recycle a certain
amount—we didn't program this chamber for long-term occupancy. Maybe we will in
future. Have you any other bright ideas?"
"We have already
radioed for a fresh teleport—"
"Yes. I thought you'd do that. Where is
the nearest set located?"
His
vicious sarcasm was not lost on Morley Landsdowne. Truly, their relationship
had changed over the years."
"The Service don't
have any nearer than Epsilon—"
"Don't
tell me what you can't do I Where is the set? How long will it take to get
here?"
"The set's not far away—Briséis. But—"
"But nothing! As I
recall Briséis
is a week away—I'd be prepared to waste a week of my life shut up down here.
A week—" Strang paused as Landsdown, who had been spluttering away trying
to interrupt, at last got through. "That's on Mclvors, sir."
"Well?"
But Strang had recognized the hollow feeling in his stomach. This was not good.
"I
said the Service's nearest was Epsilon. There are no Mclvor powered ships on Briséis—no Service, no Navy, no Marines. They have a
fast freighter there—one of the old Antares tubs powered by VRM engines—"
"I
remember those. Only a quarter the speed of the Mclvors."
"Yes, sir."
"A
month. A whole solid month terran well be stuck down here."
"I'm afraid so—"
"You're afraid I Why? You're not chained in this damned white-hot dungeon!" "No, sir."
Sitobem
had walked in, still shaking. Now he said through pinched hps, "I've
checked the store situation. We could possibly last out a month terran—just—by
strict rationing—"
"All
right, Doctor! Thank you. I know how to handle a rationing system. We'll go
down to subsistence level if necessary—"
. "It'll be touch and go, sir—"
"All right! Don't harp on it." Strang gripped the
geophone as though he could wring the thing's neck. "Listen to me, Morley.
And you, Doctor. I'm not staying cooped up down here for a month. Gerban Amouf
has certain plans culminating before then and I must be on hand to—well,
that's by the by. And Tung Chi Leslie, also, must be handled— I'm letting you
all into my confidence like this, fully conscious of the risk I am taking; but
also well aware of the loyalty and trust I obtain from my subordinates."
Simon winced.
"The
well being of the galaxy demands that I leave this prison immediately."
Mankind—and that included Stephen
Strang—always spoke
casually
of the galaxy when they meant very well that small slice they had so far
explored. The galaxy with its one hundred thousand light-year diameter disc
remained a far-distant prospect for the thorough exploration the TSC deemed
necessary. Plenty of ships had driven full-tilt on their space drives across
the galaxy—and some had even returned. But the Solarian government's firm
attitude was to explore cautiously and consolidate the gains before going on.
Simon knew this, everyone knew this; but when Stephen Strang spoke of the
galaxy needing him immediately—why, they tended to imagine the whole vast teeming
multitude of stars rising up and beseeching Stephen Strang.
The most lamentable trouble was—it wasn't
funny.
"How
do you intend to do that, sir?" Landsdowne must have known by now that
Strang had an alternative.
Strang
consciously preened himself. He spoke with blatant overtones of triumph in his
voice. "We're trapped down here and it is imperative we get out
immediately. I am going to use the Lansen generators unpredictably—"
"You're going to shatter the planet!"
IYes"
"But
you can't I" Sitobem thrust forward with agonized earnestness. "What
of all our work! Vesta is a wonderful planet! You can't wantonly smash it up
just to liberate yourself-"
''Think, Doctor!" Strang's voice and
gesture menaced the old scientific administrator. "Think very carefully
what you say to me now!"
Sitobem swallowed and then, very
courageously, said, "I meant merely that in view of an alternative rescue
it would be vandalism to destroy the planet now."
"I
do not ask you, Dr. Sitobem, to manage the affairs of my slice of the galaxy!
What I say goes. I am not to be cooped up in a planet. That seems perfectly
straight forward."
"It's a risky step—" Landsdowne
said, worriedly. "If I am prepared to take the risk that is all that concerns
you, Morley."
Sitobem
slumped back on a control bench. "When a planet splits the crust ruptures and
disintegrates—then the molten outer core spills out, fiery and volcanic. Gobs
of matter spray into space and start to solidify. Anything on the surface, of
course, is at once destroyed. But—but the inner core—nickel and iron at
tremendous pressure and white-heat—"
"That will explode outwards rather
splendidly!" Strang spoke with a relish as of a new experience. "But
we're right in the center—"
"And,
in theory, should be left floating in space in our chamber. The planet should
unfold from around us like a cosmic dance of the seven veils."
Thirty
years or so ago that particular image would have been unthinkable to Strang.
But there had been Abby Meri-lees in the interim. Shena hadn't known about her
but, Strang suspected, she was growing more aware of the latest conquests. A
pity. But mooning about women wouldn't get him out of this spot. He felt the
strength of confidence in what he was doing support his decisions. Space knew
what Gerban Arnouf was up to—and as for Leslie Tung-well, both of them had been
put-out when, as Controllers, they had seen Strang make Chief Controller first.
First. That was the thing. To be first in everything.
He'd surely be the first deliberately to
smash up a planet.
Around
him in the chamber the scientists had crept quietly back. He knew he had their
complete attention.
He
spoke heavily into the geophone. "Start getting everything you want off
surface, Morley. Let me know when you're clear."
"Yes, sir—but—"
Strang rode on unheedingly. "You'd
better stand well off in space. Vesta will probably break up spectacularly—
mind you take film. I want to see that. Then as soon as we break free of the
last of the core send in for us fast. We'll wait until we can establish direct
radio contact—one of the techs here will lash up a spacerig—and then well cut
the force flux shield." He laughed with self-satisfaction. "After
that you can break your way in with pickaxes."
"We can do all that, of course, sir.
We'll erect our own shield with air and everything. And the chamber's physical
concrete walls are thin—but. . . but. .."
"That's
it, then. Stop butting and get your tail off the surface I"
A murmur of conversation from behind
Landsdowne reached over the geophone link. A sharp voice said something about:
"Blasted egocentric arrogance!" And another voice, a deep rumble,
said: "Waste of a perfectly good planet."
Strang
heard. He was aware of a sudden indrawn breath from Sitobem and some of the
other close scientists. He vaguely understood they expected him to explode into
anger. But the voices from Landsdowne's flagship pleased him. What little men
thought of him gave him a valuable insight into his course in life. Of course,
what they said stemmed only from their own knowledge that they were small insignificant ciphers in the galaxy.
They didn't have the courage to own to what they wanted and then to go all out
for that end.
A
fresh voice cut in over the murmur on the geophone. At first, listening, Strang
did not want to believe what it said. Then he was forced to listen as the
scientists at his back broke into excited exclamations of joy.
The
voice said: ". . . picked up our signal and is now vectoring in on
overdriven Mclvors! Be here inside thirty hours terran. Another eight hours to
unship and reerect the teleport and the chamber can be evacuated at once."
"Thirty-eight hours!" "That's
no time at all!" "That's great!"
The
scientists pounded one another's backs. Simon, watching his father's face, saw
no echoing pleasure. He moved closer, said in a whisper of gloating triumph,
"You wanted to
smash up the planet, didn't you, Father?"
Strang
jerked as though stung by an electric discharge. "What?" And then,
bleakly, "Get lost, Simon."
Simon moved away. He knew enough to leave his
father to enjoy that moment of triumphant loss alone.
Sharp
on thirty-six hours terran later Strang was the first to step into the box and
be whisked to the surface. His face showed granite and marble lines of
displeasure. Simon, following him out, saw the figure that detached itself from
the crowd of waiting scientists and service personnel at the Shaft Camp.
"Susan!"
She
laughed and kissed him and then disengaged to speak to her father. Strang stood
humped, talking to Landsdowne. He did not turn, did not alter a plane of his
features, did not falter over a single syllable in his conversation as his
daughter spoke to him.
"Father!"
Susan swung away, tears dangerously bright in her eyes. A tall, handsome and
crinkly-haired man stepped out angrily, took her arm.
"Hold up, Sue! Ill
speak to the idiot-"
"No—Bruce! It'll only
make trouble—"
Bruce
Kassim Oquendo stared with hot eyes at his father-in-law. He did not like what
he saw. "I'm talking to Stephen Christopher Strang!" he said loudly
and clearly. "I do not expect a reply. We picked up your distress call and
came running with our teleport. But it seems we needn't have bothered to call
on you."
Strang's voice had died, but he still refused
to turn around. Morley Landsdowne felt like pulling the planet in on top of a
hole and not roming out for a week.
Oquendo went on, "As far as I am
concerned, Chief Controller Strang, you could have stayed down in your pit
until hell froze over." He pivoted Susan around. "Come on, Susan.
Don't bother to say good-bye to your father. He hasn't the manners to understand
a pig's grunt."
XII
Strang stormed back to Solishtar in a turbulent frame of
mind. '
He expended a full three hours' energy on the
Carpenters and a whole slew of china cabinets, strewing the rifle range with
whitely-glinting shards. Even then he saw the image of glinting stars in the
smashed crockery. He was a man chained to space and well aware of his bonds.
Shena had gone visiting
friends on Solvenus—one of the old original planets of the system—and Strang by
this time had no compunctions in temporarily installing his latest conquest.
She was an empty-headed little courtesan who foolishly affected silver hah-;
but Strang, with her lack of conversation and her magnificent body, found her
entirely adequate to his needs.
A communications robot trundled across after
they had finished the evening meal and plunked the screen before the couch,
switching on.
"Not yet, you mindless mechanical
monster!" Strang hastily tumbled the girl off the end of the couch and
straightened up his white shirt, pulling the collar back over his shoulder to
cover the bites. She sat up on the floor, arching her back, and squealed.
"Shut up, idiot! And take that leg off
the screen!"
"But
I thought I was going to meet your friends—" she started to wail.
Then
Strang pushed his face forward, forgetting the girl, not caring just how much
she was showing, concentrating on Major General Alah-ed-din Ryohzh Jordan
Jelal.
"Clear to talk, sir?"
"All
clear, Aladdin. You've news?" The ferocious eagerness beat from Strang
like a bloodhound on the scent.
Jelal
shook his head. He had aged, like them all, over the past years; but that
death's head appearance of ruthless dedication to the practice of killing still
had power to chill and repel. "I'm having to report no success on tracing
anyone, sir. We've been over the ground a dozen times. Fire-drake was just a mess. Forensics screened her; but all traces had been
lost."
"So you've failed?"
"The police are keen on the coincident
accident theory,
SIT.
"The
police are bumblers! That's why I told you to find out." Strang punched a
fist into the couch. It was not a formfit and so did not respond. "Anyway,
even if it was an accident someone must have been responsible! And I wanted
him! I want him fricasseed and served up finely grated—"
Jelal
had not missed the past tense.
"Everything happened on top of
everything else, sir. It's a sad reflection on our police force; but—"
"It
doesn't throw my personal army forces up in a very favorable light, does it,
Aladdin?"
"No, sir."
"I
shall be spacing out to the SGC Omega Twelve sector."
"But Tung Chi
Leslie-"
"I
know. I shall deal with that problem when it occurs. You will prepare your
usual army forces—consult Commodore Landsdowne over transport. But, General—you
will leave a cadre in the Solarian base. I'm having fresh replacements sent
there. They will follow when indoctrinated. Understood?"
"Understood,
sir." Jelal's teak face showed an emotion now, a puzzlement he could not
hide.
"Don't
worry over your orders, Aladdin. I shan't ask you to fight Leslie Tung's
army—that would be impolite. . . ."
"Yes, sir."
Strang
relaxed from the screen, saw a naked ankle protruding from the end of the
couch and kicked it. He then had to cough hard to cover the squeal. "Now
you're a major general, Aladdin, you're entitled to a deegee. See that you have
one installed here. I dislike deegees just as much as I ever did; but at least
they are better than this screening."
"It is a compliment, sir, to have my
deegee installed in your palace—"
"Save me the compliments. Now get on
with it. Ill see you in the Omega twelve sector."
The
screen darkened and the comrobot bustled it away. Strang reached down a hand,
caught a leg and hauled in.
"I
can at least tell a deegee to wait outside the door," he said. The girl
giggled.
"I always said these robots were too
uppity—they delight in putting me in embarrassing situations."
"Not them, my flower—you can do that by
yourself quite refreshingly often."
Next morning Strang programmed the Wolseley superhornet to take the
girl back to Solariadne—she was holidaying there—and took the RR Golden Ghost
out to his ship hanging in
parking orbit off Solmars. He moved with a snap. He had given the houserobots
strict programs to clean the palace up. He didn't care if Shena knew. He just
had no time and mental energy to spare in emotional squabbles. He needed all
his power and skill for the battles that lay ahead.
After
all, that close bi-symbiosis of Shena and himself had been a rarity these days.
The House system permitted certain well-defined spheres of free love; you could
enjoy someone of your own House, if in the normal course of events that would
have been possible, with no guilt feelings riding an earlier age and with no
problems of conscience. No offspring, no transgression of forbidden degrees;
these rules remained. And yet despite all this, Strang had his houserobots
minutely programmed to clear the palace of every trace of the empty-headed
silver-haired courtesan, despite her name—something Christopher something. He
told himself he wanted no emotional drain before important conferences in
space. He told himself he didn't mind if Shena knew. . . .
Strang
had in these latter days developed the mannerism of clamping his mouth shut
with an arrogance all the more pronounced for its deliberation, pausing between
sentences. He would do this and then cut his gaze down across his auditor's
face. He had found it an amusingly satisfying tool in his perennial ego-flaying
gambits. Morley Landsdowne, who had risen one rank in thirty years, had
wounding experience of that mannerism. Jelal—who had risen two—had so far been
spared. Strang had a use for Major General Jelal in his plans, a use for which
a strong and self-centered man's interests would be vital. Landsdowne had
remained too much what Strang had once been.
The old Archimedes rode somewhere in the fleet that awaited his orders. Like a warrior
past his prime his old flagship still hunted with the new bucks. Now he stepped
aboard SCS Anaxagoras amid the circumstance of centuries old
tradition, the twittering of pipes, the sideboys, the immaculately turned-out
guard. He saluted, a mere gesture, and at once went below.
His secretarial bureau
robots clustered, waiting.
The
strange and obscurely alarming impression had crossed his mind before that he
dealt more with machines than he did with people; one day the whole
shooting-match might be taken over by the electronic marvels and the cybemarchy
he hated and feared would overwhelm mankind's encroachments on the galaxy.
He
kicked a secrobot's leg as he sat down. The feeling of stolid indifference
reassured him. To rule, a brain must know what hate was. And then, knowing,
discard it.
He
had debated his wisdom in not seeing Caracci this time in the solar system.
Caracci, that much older, that much more authoritarian, had in effect given
Strang carte blanche on his area of space the last time the two had met. In
making this Rubicon move to adjust his sphere of influence, Strang had not
wished to chance a revocation of that august edict. He was playing it close to
the chest.
By
this time Tung Chi Leslie would know that Strang had sent in a prognosis of
diminishing returns on his own sector and had transhipped at Solmars. He would
seek urgent reasons for transmitting this information to Caracci. So far
Caracci had not responded. The reasons for that seemed clear enough to Strang
aboard SCS Anaxagoras. Gerban
Amouf had not yet jumped.
Stephen
Strang would not thank anyone these days for calling him one of Caracci's Young
Men. Those days were dead. He had heard with disfavor reports of Amouf's accumulation
of a cadre of intense young workers, forming what he hoped one day would be
called Amouf's Young Men. As a Controller, Amouf was trying to run before he
had finished walking. Strang believed he had no need for any help of that
close, intimate nature as yet. He had his teams. His subordinates had been
hand-picked and, by this time in his career, Strang knew them and their capabilities
and weaknesses.
There
would be time enough for his own group of Young Men. You had to be first in the
galaxy, yes; but there was no percentage in rushing headlong forward without
first checking the way.
He
could outwit and, if necessary, smash Leslie Tung. Of this he felt very sure.
Gerban Amouf represented the greater opposition—and that opposition was mortal.
After
half an hour of intense concentration and effort he had wiped out a
considerably greater portion of the work load than he had expected. He leaned
back, stretching in the formfit, and Morley Landsdowne came through on the
ship's intercom.
"We're all ready to
go, sir. Permission to space out?"
"Whenever you like. I
shall come up to the bridge shortly."
"Yes, sir."
Strang
went back to his secrobots and was about to initi-tate a regrading scheme in
the radar tech branch when the intercom said: "Slight hold, sir.
Permission to board has been received from Miss Sally Strang. Shall—"
"Yes!"
said Strang, standing up and cascading files and loose papers onto the deck.
"TeU her to come on in. I'll be at the main airlock."
"Check."
He
moved with purposeful vigor from his suite and positioned himself on the apron
area before the airlocks of the main cluster, an idiotic smile on his face and a feeling of bursting rockets in his head.
Sally.
She came through like a new planet swinging
into orbit.
"Dad!
I heard all about it from Sarah!" Sally hugged him, giving him no time to
answer, rushing on. "It must have been awful. I mean—trapped down there in
the middle of a planet,
white hot fires all about, no food and water and the air running out—I know it
was only your example that kept everybody sane! I know I'd have died!"
"It wasn't like that and you
wouldn't." He did not mention Sarah. That had been settled.
"Thank God you got out all right."
"Yes. Well—how are you, Sally? What have
you been doing? I couldn't reach you on Isis—"
T knowl I've
been out with Craig trying out his new technique. It works, Dad, it really
doesl"
"H'mm, young lady.
That has to be proved—"
She
stood back. As Strang looked over her shoulders he saw the airlock doors
closing on a motley collection of electronic equipment,
cables, meters, precariously boxed contraptions. Standing sheepishly beside it
like a junkman in a breaker's
yard, Craig Drummond showed unmistakable signs of not knowing whether to step
briskly forward, disappear, or to stay there until someone noticed him.
"We've
been shifting some of the asteroids around— Had to put them all back
through." Sally laughed mischievously. "They're all counted and
tallied—"
"Of
course. We use 'em as we want them—and you've been juggling with them, have
you, miss?"
Craig Drummond cleared his throat, jerked
forward, and blurted out, "I've been shifting them, sir. Any blame falls
on me."
And Stephen Strang laughed.
T can see your shining armor from here,
Craig. Nice to see you. Now come on down to my rooms for a drink. Oh— and it
seems you're on the way to the Omega Twelve sector. That's where I'm bound and
I can't stop to put you off."
"That's just find,
Dad. That's where we want to go."
"Oh?"
She hung onto his arm as she had done when
they'd walked the cultivated parklands of Isis in the long ago; when she'd been
a gay mischievous sprite without a care in her head apart from the next
party, the new doll, the latest packet of sweets. Now she was contemplating
marriage . . . Incredible.
"Craig's ideas work, Dadl I've seen the doohickey—"
"The
Split-potential principle," Craig put in with a deprecating cough.
"That's
the gadget. I've seen it spin an asteroid in from Jupiter and pop it sweetly
along Mars orbit. Of course, like I said, we had to put it back. But—"
"That's an asteroid, Sally."
"It'll work on a
planet, tool You'll seel"
"Will I? How?"
She
laughed and they entered his apartments where at once she hurled her purse down
onto a formfit and dragged Craig over to her father. "Why, easy. You're
going to shift your next planet using Craig's brains, Dad!"
At
once Strang saw with instantaneous intuitive clarity what his next moves must
be in the cosmic battle of wits between the men who had once been Caracci's
Young Men.
Eighty planets now swung around Sol, and her
home suns had likewise expanded their planetary populations. Strang inititated
a policy memo direct to Caracci, with copies to Leslie Tung and Gerban Arnouf,
outlining his belief that the time had come for a further expansion of Solarian
outpost civilizations. The precis said succinctly, "With the almost
certain advent of Shark problems centering around the Omega Twelve sector I
believe we should establish a stellar population on the outskirts ready to
take the initial shock."
He
knew well enough the ribald answer to that one. It took time, they would scoff,
to set up a stellar system sufficient for that purpose. It took time to move
planets and populate them. Population by people was the care of Solarian
Commonwealth Expansion; the SCS provided the homes, and the SCE inhabited them.
Strang knew that SCE had been running behind schedule; a dozen new worlds to
colonize would come like manna from heaven to them.
He
finished: "I will set up a planetary grouping inside a year terran."
He sent the forms off and lay back in his
formfit, chuckling maliciously. Let Arnouf pick the bones out of that one.
Caracci's answer came back by return. "Proceed. Caracci."
Again—carte blanche.
Having successfully sidestepped the problem
of Leslie Tung, Strang could leave Arnouf to roast a little longer.
Out
here heading inwards along the spiral arm to the hub, the stars clustered more
thickly than Strang had ever before seen. The Zagreb cluster by comparison
appeared a desert.
Most of the stars were little red M-stars, of
little practical value. A few variables were charted and then pointedly
ignored. The giants and supergiants, also, related to the terrans solely as
astrogation points. Let the scientists enthuse over them. The SCS had business
to conduct in the galaxy. Strang made his choice carefully, ending up with two
mild yellow G-stars within a light-year of each other, around which he planned
to orbit a solar defense complex that would act as a shield to the Solarian
Confederation and as a jumping off point for the next planned expansion.
From
all the stars around with heavy planets of roughly Earth size he would take the
raw material for his dream.
He
saw that Craig Drummond was issued with a set of regulation Service coveralls,
inconspicuously green, putting Drummond squarely into the framework of the
organization operating under Strang's own hand. He wanted no specially
privileged operatives undermining his authority.
Then
he turned Drummond and his equipment with a landing team loose on sun SGC Nine Nine Seven
Six Eight Omega Twelve. Planets Sixteen, Seventeen and Eighteen were all first
class material. He would take them alL
Strang
made a point of personally checking over the defense warning devices suspended
in hyperspace. They formed a great sphere of early warning information telling
of the approach of any massive body in hyperspace, matching the much greater
and more complex defensive sphere around the Solarian Confederation home suns.
As
he said gruffly to Landsdowne, "I don't want to be jumped by any damn
runaway planets, or Shark-controlled worlds. We've had enough of that in the
past."
Landsdowne
nodded. He spoke less and less freely to Strang these days.
"And
I want our teams fully committed. Get all the borers in action on suitable
planets. I want the Lansen generators operating inside six months."
"Yes, sir."
Strang
stood at the apex of his career, looking out on space, seeing the starfields
glitter clear across the view. Not many of those dots of light were of much
use. But those that were, were going to be tucked away in the firm grasp of the
Solarian Confederation. He stood at the apex so far —but he intended to go on
upwards. He hadn't asked to be born into the galaxy, but he had been and he was
firmly resolved to take everything that the galaxy could give him.
He
turned away from that blazing panorama sprawled in casual might across the
screens and began to leave the bridge of his flagship. He had set the machinery
in motion; but there remained still much to be done.
The
radar officer said, "A contact, sir! Two—there are two bogeys out
there!" She read off the ranges and bearings and declinations.
Then: "Bogey One
calling. Relaying."
The
voice from the speakers said: "SCS Anaxagoras. Request
permission to come aboard. This is private yacht Liberty, Colin Copping commanding."
"Copping?"
said Landsdowne. "Oh—Simon Strang's secretary."
"No longer," said Strang shortly.
"I hear he left Simon. All right. Let him come aboard." "Second
bogey no response, sir—"
"Action
stations," said Morley Landsdowne quietly. He took command. "Will you
remain here, sir, or go to your—"
"I've
never been in action before, Morley, and if you think you can cheat me out of
it now, you're mistaken."
"Let's hope we don't
have to, sir—"
The ident machine chuntered through its
electronic memories. It dinged its bell and spat out a card. Landsdowne picked
it up.
"TSC two-place scouter!" He looked
surprised. "Not alien. Still—I think I'll remain at action stations until
we find out a little more." He looked like a man enjoying himself for the
first time in years. "No reply?"
"Nothing,
sir." The signals officer checked her techs. "We're picking up
nothing at all in any band."
"Right.
Have a party go out and pick it up. But take things easily. You'll be covered
from here, but if you're too close—"
A boarding party left Anaxagoras in a launch. Intrigued, Strang waited on the bridge. He did not
truthfully know if he was pleased or disappointed that there was not to be the
lethal flare of spatial combat. Colin Copping entered the control room. He
looked about in surprise, saw the tense faces of the personnel, said something
and was firmly hushed by an officer.
The
speaker said: "We've made contact, sir. It's a TSC two-place scouter all
right. Badly damaged. On free orbit. It must have been out here for some
time—"
"Bring
it aboard," Landsdowne said. "If there's a mystery here we'll get to
the bottom of it. Jump to it!"
Everyone
including Strang waited excitedly. They did not notice the way Colin Copping
was staring at Stephen Strang, took no notice of the pinched look of hatred
yellowing around his nostrils and the way his fists clenched savagely at his
sides.
XIH
Tehran Survey Corps Commanders, as a breed of men, stood as a race apart
from all other ranks and tides. A TSG Commander would be the human being in
command of other human beings at the time of their contact with aliens. This
single facet of their responsibilities alone sums up why men like Richard
Matlin felt a glow of more than ordinary affection for the rank, duties and
responsibilities of a TSC Commander. Also—they ranked with a Space Navy
Captain and equivalent ranks in other services. That added a pleasurable little
tickle of gilt on the gingerbread.
'
Now, Commander John Emiko widened his flat rubbery face into a cheerfully
impudent smile and said, "Looks like I made it at last, Dick."
Captain
Richard Matlin answered that smile with a gentle punch on the shoulder,
contemptuous of deep psychological reasons behind the brief gesture of
affection.
They
stood in the Admiral's space cabin—the stiff formality of space punctilio had
little parade in the TSC—and they felt good. Even so, Dick Matlin appreciated
the twinge of nostalgic regret for that special and exotic rank of Commander
that he was now passing by.
"You'll be getting Halberd, John." The Admiral twinkled at them. An old space-dog, he knew good
men. "As for you, Dick—there's a special and interesting one in the bag
for you."
"I
hope," Matlin said with a totally unexpected flare of hope, "you mean
a ship, sir."
The
Admiral laughed gently. "Only in a manner of speaking." A com robot
wheeled a screen across and at once it lit up with the fiery stars of space. A
voice was saying: ". . . devilish fast. On a par with our Roma class cruisers. And they carry weaponry to match."
The
three Survey Corpsmen in the room had no need to be told the details. The com
robots' positive handling of the screen, the dots of light wheeling there among
the stars, the impersonal voice with its assessment of capabilities. They knew
the score.
The
voice said: "I've decided to disengage. There appear to be four of them
and my central turrets have been shot to blazes. No communication with engines.
I just hope Jock keeps them at full bore." A slight pause in which a
distant and curiously frightening crackle became audible. Then: "Okay, so
I'm running away. I'm running because I want to come back with something a
little more lethal than a TSC scout."
"That sounds like
Peter Armitage," Matlin said flatly.
The
admiral had picked up his own personal hushphone. Now he looked up, his face
bleak. "It's Peter, all right. He's way way out. We're sending a
battleship echelon off at once. I only hope he makes it."
The screen went black.
"Hell—" said
Emiko unsteadily.
"That
could be his communications shot out. We don't know." Matlin wasn't
whistling in the dark; that could have happened.
"I
hope that's all it is." The admiral spoke quickly on the phone again and
then said, "His beam snapped cleanly. That could also be the same sort of
experience you went through, Dick."
"Yeah. I
remember."
One wall of the admiral's space cabin
represented in foreshortened tridi the segment of galaxy that TSS Saint Vincent was now exploring. Various color symbols denoted stars and their planets
together with their status in the current exploration program. Right on the
edge of virgin territory—that was the way the TSC still conceived of their
search among the drifting stars—the admiral pointed out the symbol representing
Peter Armitage's TS Scout Audacious.
"Way out," agreed
Matlin.
"We
keep running into the Sharks on a widening plane of partition." The
admiral let himself down gently into a formfit. "Seems to me they're making
no attempt to stop us in a big way. They just jump out from nowhere, smash up
our advanced elements, and then disappear. So far we've run across no signs of
their colonizing worlds. The chances are that they're even farther away from
their home worlds than we are from Earth."
"If
we keep expanding like we are we're bound to meet up with them in a
face-to-face—or face-to-thing—encounter some time." Emiko nodded at the
tridi display. "It can't come soon enough for me."
Le Blanc still worried the
old crew of TSS Crossbow.
"They've
got to stop pulling back some time," agreed Matlin. "But I would
still like to know more about them. I can't help this feeling I have of callous
waste. Why would two alien cultures have to meet in war?"
"They
haven't always, Dick." The admiral's memories went back a long way, past
the Utukku, to encompass the friendly meeting with other alien cultures.
"We always start by assuming any race that has starflight to be basically
peaceful, having fought through their war neuroses." He smiled.
"That's oversimplifying a complex psychological condition, of course; but
until an alien race proves itself unfriendly, we act with friendship."
"We had no chance,
though, with this lot of Sharks."
"No."
The screen lit and a signals officer said,
"A brief and garbled signal came in from Audacious. They're badly hit but they're breaking away."
"Thank God for that," said the
admiral. He meant it.
The
tension in the space cabin eased. "Ill be getting along then," said
Emiko. "I want to look at my new ship."
When
Emiko left, Matlin looked enquiringly at the admiral. The old space-dog seemed
to be enjoying a private joke now that he could turn from that drama
light-years away.
"I'm giving you a ship, Dick. Interesting.
You're getting a two-place TSC scouter." "A whatr
"A two-place scouter. Badly
damaged."
Three and a half hours later Captain and Mrs.
Matlin were on their way aboard a TSC Space Packet—as passengers —to the Omega
Twelve sector.
All
Sarah said, was, "Now Dad's got to see you in line of duty. I could have
wished it some other way. But this way is better than nothing."
From
Shurilala, around the same time, another ship clove hyperspace with spinning
Mclvors heading for the Omega Twelve sector. Aboard, a family squabble had been
in progress for some time. Bruce Oquendo felt he had been badly done by. He'd
tried to stand up for Susan, hadn't he? They'd spaced in and overstrained their
engines so that he'd had to have a complete overhaul, they'd brought the
teleport in to free Susan's father—and the boor just ignored them. Oquendo
thought he had done the only thing open to him to do.
So Susan had torn into him, telling him what
a bigmouthed baby he was, telling him he ought to have known better. So—the squabble
smoldered on.
"I
don't see why we should space out just so I can apologize to him."
Oquendo slumped in the control seat, letting the automatics run the ship, not
looking at his wife; just letting himself slouch there, baffled.
"You were the one who told him what you
thought—"
"All
right! Suppose I was wrong to say what I did. That doesn't mean I couldn't send
a deegee—" '
"Father hates deegees."
"Well,
that's his hard luck. They're in common use now, nothing weird about them, is
there?"
"He
just doesn't like them. And just as I was
thinking we were getting back to be friends againl Oh, Brucel You know all the
trouble we had when we were married—"
"I
don't think," Bruce Kassim Oquendo said tartly, "I shall forget."
"Well,"
Susan said back at him, just as shortly, "you should try."
The
silence that descended hung thick and heavy and exceedingly irritatingly.
Oquendo's
ship arrowed the starlanes, heading out to the Omega Twelve sector. The silence
of space outside that speeding hull rang with noise in comparison with the
silence within.
In
the Omega Twelve sector towards which those two ships traveled in
parsec-gulping strides, Stephen Strang had temporarily banished the mystery of
the little TSC two place scouter they picked up from his mind. The Survey Corps
were sending a man along to pick up their property and investigate the charred
relics of scouter and Globe-Trotter. Strang turned to other more rewarding
avenues of speculation.
Gerban Amouf, never one to be slow to take a
point, had staked out a claim in tandem to Strang's Omega Twelve volume of the
spiral arm and Leslie Tung had perforce to content himself with a reduced
sovereignty. If Amouf wanted to team up with Strang in breaking Tung, then
Strang would be happy to oblige. That way he'd slip his own knife between the
shoulderblades of two men in rotation instead of trying to do the job in
parallel. His own back would have to be watched, of course. . . .
That
attitude had become a habit. Strang had selected a strong team to guard his
back and tried to infiltrate his opponents' guards. He had always had the most
excellent of reasons for disliking deegees.
Out here in the Omega Twelve sector he had
that old familiar itchy feeling that events were brewing to a climax;
men
would die, careers would be smashed, the course of humanity's destiny in the
galaxy would reach a nodal point. Whatever happened, Stephen Strang meant to
come out at the other end whole, with enhanced prestige—and with a large slice of his future insured.
Colin
Copping had proved a surprise. The young man with the bitter face and hot eyes
had explained frankly that he did not agree with Simon's attitudes and did not
care for his friends.
"You
probably don't remember Jethro," he said harshly. "Jethro?"
"I
was bom there. Gerban Amouf came and took the planet—and you tried to
intervene—"
"I
remember," said Strang viciously. He gestured to a formfit and Copping sat down with the edgy
nervousness of a big cat. "But Amouf took Jethro anyway."
"I
know. I remember thinking you looked like a god when you came down and told us
we needn't worry any more, that the planet would not be moved, that we wouldn't
lose our homes— And we believed you."
"I tried. I couldn't do any more."
Copping
lowered his eyelids. Then he looked up and around Strang's apartments.
"You live in some style here—"
"That
is my concern, Copping. Now. You say you wish to work for me."
"Yes. I must send Liberty back to Simon. I can be useful to you."
And so Copping joined Strang's personal
staff. An odd thought occurred to him that, unawares, he must have init-itated
a group of young adherents—and that Colin Copping was the first of Strang's
Young Men.
Craig
Drummond presented a problem of a different magnitude. He had successfully
demonstrated his Split-potential principle by moving planets Sixteen, Seventeen
and Eighteen to their new positions around the G-star Strang had, with
conscious intent, called Shena. The other G-star he called Sally. He had
personally written the names in thick black ink across the official name
listings.
The interview with Drummond took place, to
Strang's acknowledged relief, without Sally.
He
started abruptly, banging home the main purpose of the interview. "I like
your work, Craig. As I shall be using the Split-potential principle a great
deal, and as no other SCS Controller as yet has it, I am calling it the Strang
System. I trust you see the wisdom of that."
Drummond swallowed and
looked apologetic. "Well—"
"Good.
This will be a great help to your career, Craig." He stood up and laid a
fatherly hand on the young man's shoulder. "When the Strang System is
fully in use the limits are boundless. There's a great future ahead in the
galaxy for young men like you."
"Thank you, sir—"
Strang
ushered him out, affable and paternal. He felt no qualms over stealing another
man's ideas. It was done all the time, wasn't it? Anyway, if Sally married him
then it would all be in the family.
On
the threshold Drummond said apologetically, "I'd like to use something a
little larger than a pinnace, sir, for the orbital vehicle. I'm sharpening the
basic compatibility— there were some earthquakes when we shifted Eighteen, that
we can do without—and I need to put in more monitoring
equipment."
"Speak
to Commodore Landsdowne. Tell him you can have what ships you like. Oh—don't
tie up any fighting craft."
"Yes, sir—I mean, no,
sir."
Things were shaping up. Soon there would be a
whole new double solar system swimming here, with good people from the Solarian
worlds populating it, a great fresh hive of humanity. That was man's work.
The speaker said: "The TSC Packet has
arrived, sir."
"Good.
Tell the TSC officer to handle the two-place scouter. I'll see him later."
He went back to his administration work
feeling very cheerful.
The
ident plate lit up and he turned—and his face froze. "Sarah—"
Off
screen, a man's voice asid: "Captain Matlin, TSC, reporting to Chief
Controller Strang. I'd like to speak to you."
Strang
hesitated. Then he released the door and Matlin and Sarah walked in. He thought
she looked fine—a little pale and her hps pinched in—he knew what that meant
"Hullo, Dad."
"I'm
seeing your—ah—husband in line of duty. After that I don't want to see you
again."
Matlin
kept his temper. He said, "Preliminary reports on the TSC scouter indicate
it has been subjected to intense energy—beamed." He wondered briefly if
the old admiral had known the identity of the little scouter when he'd picked
Matlin for the job. "I understand you knew Charlie and Myra
Hastings—"
"No I" said Strang, genuinely shocked. "Not theirs?"
"Yes.
This means we can date exactly when it happened. They'd been down on planet
Seventeen. My technical team from the Packet are running the Globe-Trotter
records now. I thought you would like to see—"
"Yes,
yes." Strang rose, hurling down a file. "Ill come at once."
Despite
the feelings of bitterness between them, they recognized the importance of
this find. A small scouter from a terran ship, floating derelict in space for
year after light-less year—and then she had been picked up again and now men
would read in the records the dark story of that old tragedy.
A small select group settled down in the laboratory's tiny
auditorium to watch
projected on the screen the records taken from the damaged Globe-Trotter
salvaged from the wreck of the Hasting's scouter. A great deal of work had been
done in restoration, interpretation, in basic
forensic science to bring up what little remained.
They
saw the sharp-edged, hostile crystalline world of Planet Seventeen. On the
screen before them, flickering in and
out of detailed vision as the charred ends of tape and the damaged memory tanks
yielded their knowledge, the brief excursion and tragedy unfolded.
Clarity
had been lost. As the Globe-Trotter rounded a yellow jasper trail with
chingling fronds of chrysoprase sliding and twirling over its back the scene
in the icy valley below clouded and attenuated, came back to focus patchily,
tantalized with visions of gargantuan structures shifting and merging in pearly
mist.
"This
is the interesting section." Matlin gestured and the film slowed to
flicker a frame at a time and finally to stop. "There. That's the best
image we can achieve."
Strang
stooped forward. "It's just damnably out of focus. Can't you bring it any
clearer?"
Matlin
shook his head. He had no inclination to be more than civil to his
father-in-law.
"That's
a building—I think." Strang rubbed a finger across his eyes. "Can't
the scanners build up the picture?"
"No
better than this. I agree it seems to be a building. The valley is deep and the
Globe-Trotter came around this quartz bluff and saw this. Then—"
The
frames moved swiftly now and an orange flare spread all over the film.
"That was when he was beamed. How he got back to the scouter well never
know. He was in a hell of a mess."
"Go back to the valley," Strang
ordered savagely. "If someone was on planet then—where are they now? We
just shifted that planet into orbit around Shena."
The
film spun back. Again they studied that enigmatic crystal valley with the
spires of chalcedony and camelian rising sparkling and between them—what? A
building? Something rounded and domed in a world of harsh angularity,
something out of place, something made by an intelligence.
"Can you get a fix on
that valley?" demanded Strang.
"There's
absolutely no way of telling in the Globe-Trotter's records." Matlin felt
a kinship with that icy world of jagged edges—that was the way he felt to this
autocratic old man at his side.
Strang swung on Landsdowne. "Get your
men down there, Morley. I want that planet gone over inch by inch. We've got to
find that valley."
"Yes, sir," said Landsdowne. He
rose at once.
As he went Colin Copping
rose and left also.
"There's
no more here for me." Strang lumbered to his feet. He turned his back on
Matlin. "After all, this all happened a long time ago. I'm creating solar
systems and that's happening now."
"The Hastings were my
friends," Matlin said softly.
Strang
refused to rise to the bait. He left abruptly. Sarah glanced helplessly at her
husband. He forced a smile and said, "One day, dear, one day he'll see
reason."
Susan
was saying the same thing to Bruce Oquendo as they came aboard Anaxagoras. When word of their arrival was brought to Strang he was speaking to
Craig Drummond on screen from the planet Vicksburg and he refused curtly to
speak to his daughter. "I had to see Sarah because duty compelled me to
deal with her husband. But I do not wish to see or hear of them again—any of
them." He flicked angrily for the com robot to wheel the second screen
away and went on with his conversation with Drummond.
"My
son's a ninny," he said, chomping on the words. "And my two elder
daughters married so far beneath them it hurts—at least you, Craig, in marrying
Sally can carry on the Christopher Strang traditions."
"Uh—yes, sir," said Craig, with the
feeling he had been caught up in a whirlwind. "We're doing well on
Vicksburg. Should be moving day after tomorrow—" "I'll be there."
"Right, sir—ah—yes,
thank you."
Strang
flicked for the com robot without saying good-bye. If only Simon had a half the
steely strength of that man Matlin, Sarah had married. . . . Ü only Bruce
Oquendo wasn't so dominated by his family and now, it seemed, by Susan. . . . He
had to believe in Craig Drummond. He had to. His wife Shena had gone through
her allotted number of eggs—medicine these days did not allow the waste of a
woman's reproduction capabilities in losing an ovum a month; they cherished
them carefully so that a women of eighty— with the physical characteristics of
a woman of twenty-five —could bear children with ease. But there was a limit.
He could expect no more children from Shena. Grandchildren, now . . . But Susan
and Sarah showed no inclination to rush into parenthood.
He
was creating an empire, but that would mean nothing if he could not see clearly
a firm future for the Strang family within his creation.
Once
he had the Head of the House of Christopher in his grasp, once he had that
power—then he might be able to influence events more directly. He would do so. He felt a profound psychic conviction that he was destined to be
remembered as the founder of a dynasty that would take mankind to the farthest
reaches of the galaxy.
XIV
Susan and Sarah flung their arms around each other and kissed
and hugged with the intensity of shared misfortune. Oquendo and Matlin shook
hands a little distantly, sizing each other up, awkward at their wives'
display.
"Welcome
aboard, Oquendo," said Matlin. He led the way from the airlock up to the
bridge of the TSC Packet.
Lieutenant
Commander Penkowski smiled. "We have the Hastings' scouter aboard,
sir," he said. "We're all ready to space out."
"Good work, Commander. But I'd rather
like to go across to Vicksburg. They're moving it today. Quite a sight."
"Yes, sir!" said Penkowski eagerly.
And
so hanging in space off the planet Vicksburg, Captain and Mrs. Matlin, and Mr.
and Mrs. Oquendo joined Chief Controller Strang and his teams, Colin Copping,
and Craig Drummond and Sally Strang. Many ships of the Solarían Confederation gathered, each with a special
function or as observers. Strang saw his daughter and Drummond off.
He
stood bluffly on the lip of Anaxagoras's airlock
as they prepared to enter the pinnace.
"No,
Craig, I won't be coming down with you this time. You can handle Vicksburg—the
Strang System has proved highly successful. We're moving more planets than
Amouf or Tung dreamed of I"
"Right,
then, sir." Drummond coughed and moved back. Sally kissed her father. She
wore a simple, short white shift-dress, as innocent as the dawn. "Cheerio,
Dad. I'll bet you're pleased you don't have to go through the teleport down to
the center of a planet any morel Craig's a real genius—"
"I
know, Sally. I'll see you when you reach 'Sally.' " He smiled fondly on
the last daughter left to him. "That sounds good, somehow."
"Sounds
pompous to me, DadI You should have called the sun 'Stephen,' or something
like. That would have been in keeping with what you're trying to do."
He
kissed her again and let her fingers slide through his own as she went through
the airlock into the pinnace.
The
pinnace jetted from the spaceship's flank and fell away towards the
fully-illuminated ball below. Watching the monitor screen, Strang felt the
strength of purpose in him heightened and justified by his daughter Sally. A
shadow flicked past and Landsdowne from the bridge said, "That was Copping
aboard Simon's yacht Liberty, sir. Looks as though he's going down,
too."
"Humph," said Strang. "I
thought he was supposed to send that yacht back to Simon."
He
stumped back to the bridge where he could be in the center of events.
Landsdowne
greeted him and nodded towards the side screens. "That's the Survey Corps
packet craft out there, sir. Captain Matlin—"
"I'm not interested, Morley. If they
want a grandstand view of moving a planet I won't stop them." He lowered
himself down into his own command chair, set back and above Landsdowne's.
There had been changes incorporated when Anaxagoras had
been built, lessons he had learned from Archimedes. "I
wanted Copping here at this time. Send out a call for him, Morley."
"Yes, sir."
Sally's
remark rankled in Strang's mind. Sure he didn't have to go down into the
white-hot guts of a planet any more. He hadn't had to go down to control chamber for a long time, since the days when he'd
started out as a Lan-sen tech, freshly joined from the TSC, and with Shena as a
luscious prize within his grasp. But he knew well enough, and was courageous
enough to admit it to himself, that Craig Drummond had come along with his
Split-potential principle at the right time. Strang had shrugged off the
experience; but those claustrophobic hours down in Vesta had left a scar.
"Can't
raise Copping, sir." Landsdowne reported briefly. "We're still
calling out."
"Check,"
said Strang. He sat back. No matter how many times he grasped a planet and
wrenched it from the orbit it had followed since it coalesced from primeval
hydrogen-no matter how many times he re-arranged the galactic structure—he
experienced a deep and shudderingly satisfying thrill of pure enjoyment of the
power vested in him.
Down
on the surface of Vicksburg, Drummond carried out the last checks of the north
polar tower. Vicksburg was a pleasant world; the cycle of evolution had here
reached what on Earth had been called the Later Palaeozoic, where a lush
surface teemed with fish, clumsy amphibia and the multifarious wonderments of
widespread swamp forests. What men knew of the cycle of evolution as epitomized
by Earth had been well-documented; against it the mere ninety-eight volumes of Patrick
Tait Tait's century-old, An Outline of Evolution on the Planets of
Variant Stars, showed
how much there was yet to learn, and understand, of the course of living
evolution in the galaxy.
North
and south poles here on Vicksburg were not as cold as they might have been and
Drummond could wear normal planetary-proofs. Sally, too, had merely donned
planetary-proofs over her white dress. They stood looking up at the tower.
Carver, the scientist in charge, beckoned them across and they went into the
domed building nested against the base of the tower. Here the controls waited
the signal to go.
"Pleased to see you, Craig."
"All set?"
"Waiting for the tremblers to
synchronoize and then it's all systems go."
"Fine.
I put up a shuttle here. Managed to cram in all the gear
quite well. A pinnace is far too small."
Carver,
although probably two hundred years older than Drummond, had no side in taking
orders. He knew first-order brain power when he met it. The shuttle orbiting
the planet around the equator took in signals from north and south pole towers,
synchronized them, set up the trembler responses that would make and maintain
the Split-potential at each pole exactly in phase. Landlines were out of the
question and planetary radio was an anachronism when men used space for every
communications use.
"We
should do better than last time." Drummond looked cheerful, composed yet
alert. On the job like this, he shed his vague nervous air. Sally looked at him
and noticed the change and knew in a few
years he would be as poised as the most sophisticated of career scientists.
That, she worked for. Now she waited as her man went about the job he knew best
in all the galaxy. She thought of that ball of mud back on Solishtar and she
smiled. They had come a long way since the memorial service to the Hastings.
And then to find their old s.couter like that. . . strange. . . .
Power
flowed into the Strang System and Vicksburg's sun dimmed and fluctuated.
Drummond watched everything with the cool eyes that reported back to a brain
in complete command of everything that was taking place.
"We ought to make transit without
shifting so much as a ton
of the crust," he said conversationally. "We can put out more power
than the Lansen generators, and we operate that power from the surface, holding
the planet between the poles like a ball between finger and thumb."
"I
have no hesitation in saying I'm pleased we don't have to go down to a
chamber." Carver followed Drum-mond's lead. "And we cut out six to
nine month's effort boring."
"All set!" called a tech from his
board. "Potential is high —and matching!"
"It's all yours, Craig." Carver
nodded to the main board.
Drummond
did not reply. To him the grandeur and mystique in moving a planet bodily
through hyperspace and popping it out the other end into orbit represented a
mathematical problem, a physics problem, even a psychological problem if you
counted the human element. Geopolitics, for Craig Drummond, meant less than
nothing. Although his future father-in-law had given him cogent reasons for
calling the principle the Strang System he accepted that decision because
Strang had made it.
Sally
put an arm on his shoulders. Then she withdrew and sat down demurely to wait
while he moved a planet. There was no skylarking now over a ball of mud.
Everything
looked good. The split-potential matched exactly and the automatics would keep
it matched, sending their multitudes of signals via the shuttle orbiting the
planet, from north to south poles and back again.
All systems go . . .
Aboard
Simon Strang's space yacht Liberty, Colin
Copping sat before bis fully automated controls, alone in the ship, and he
laughed. The laugh echoed eerily in the metal hull The sound carried a bestial
ring of imbalance, of a mind relieved of the tether of conscience and human
feeling.
"I
made you suffer a little on Vesta, Strang," Copping said, aloud, to
himself. "You sweated a little. But you got out of it. You knew you would.
I knew you would. But you didn't like it, did you, Mister stinking Chief filthy
Controller rotten Stephen Strang? Oh, no, you didn't enjoy that."
Copping
reached for the gun controls. He thought of Rainscarfe and Dirk Tiamat, of
Gunderson and his father, Arthur Copping, as they had stood and listened there
in their town of Happy Landings, to the smooth lies of this man Strang. They
had believed him. But then, they had been naive innocents in the galaxy. Then
they had thought that man would help man along the starways. Well—Colin Copping
had quickly found out the truth.
He
set up a firing pattern and swung the sights across. This time he was going to
settie with Strang in a way that would make Strang writhe, would tear the heart
and guts out of him, would cripple him mentally, would make him suffer as
Copping and all the people of Jethro of the sun Jezreel had suffered.
Then
a little whisper to reach the ears of Gerban Arnouf —and then, dallied with and
played upon but to follow with certainty—a Smeeson, or a Carpenter—never a
Lee-Johns—something to cause a hurtful and painful end. Arnouf had come to
Jethro and set about stealing the planet. But Strang had told the lies and
buoyed hope when all hope was dead. Amouf had been the executioner. Strang had
been the torturer.
The
shuttle orbiting around Vicksburg swam up over the far limb of the planet.
Copping gave a final check. His escape into hyperspace must be made swiftly,
before the gathered ships could react. He centered the sights on the shuttle.
He activated the automatic firing pattern and then sat back, one hand poised
above the hyperspace control, waiting for the guns to fire and release the
years of hate within him.
Among
that gathered assemblage, Major General Jelal rode an army ferret in towards Anaxagoras. He felt the impending moment of triumph when he would lay before Strang
the results of patient and fanatically dedicated forensic science. From
infinitesimal clues scrutinized with all the rigor of a scientific technology
his men had at last told him, with a ninety-nine point nine percent predicated
accuracy, the name of the man responsible for the debacle on Vesta and Firedrake. Colin Copping. Well. The young squirt had been getting too friendly with
Strang lately. Jelal relished his position as confidant of the Chief
Controller. Another obstacle removed and a smart piece of detection into the
bargain— Oh, yes, Major General Jelal felt very pleased as his ferret blasted
space towards the flagship.
On
his forward screen the familiar shape of Simon Strang's spaceyacht Liberty swam up, crossing ahead of him, vectors and courses automatically
computed and adjusted so that the rarity of a space collision should never
occur. Jelal had no time for Simon Strang. Then he pondered. Surely Copping had
sent the yacht back to Solishtar? Odd.
Jelal
had spaced in from Vesta and obviously Copping had not returned the yacht. He
went back to thinking of his coming moment of triumph. Around the curve of the
planet, Vicksburg, the shuttle that Drummond put up squirted into view, far
below the horizon from Liberty.
Drummond,
too, represented a problem. He seemed to do as he pleased. Strang gave him what
he wanted. Well-maybe something could be worked out there, too.
Then
the military mind tightened up. But before Jelal's thoughts had time to sort
themselves out, his hands flew above the controls of the army ship.
Fire jetted from Liberty.
The shuttle vaporized.
Jelal's ferret fired.
Liberty exploded.
At
the north pole of Vicksburg men and women saw the telltale dials and
desperately tried to halt the flow of stupendous energy pouring in from the
sun. Some screamed. Drummond saw Sally in her white dress start toward him—
Vicksburg shattered.
Like a ball of mud it flew
apart.
But
this ball contained within itself the raging fury of molten metals and
white-hot magma that exploded outwards with the shattering force of millions
upon millions of nuclear bombs.
Gobbets
of streaming lava boiled out into space. Rocks hissing with liberated energy
solidified and coruscated out in an expanding balloon of death.
A whole world disintegrated.
Strang saw that stupendous
sight.
Sitting at the hub of his spatial .empire, he
sat and watched, and he shriveled.
"Sally ..."
he whispered.
To
Captain Matlin that monstrous eruption came as a stunning shock and then as an ugly blasphemy.
Instinctively,
acting with the speed of thought of the bom-and-bred Survey Corpsman, he said,
"Activate force shields."
• Penkowski, just as automatically, said,
"Wilco, sir."
The force shields slapped across.
Almost
at once chunks of white-hot rock and writhing half-solidified streamers of lava
began to coruscate and sparkle against the shell of force cradling the little
packet. Mere material matter however hot would take a very long time to
penetrate those screens. The lethal flare of energy weapons was another thing
entirely. Matlin looked on as the planet spewed itself out into space,
stripping off layer after layer of molten magma, peeling away its substance,
revealing the inner core which struck at vision with shrewd white-hot pincers
of fire.
He
felt numbed. Susan and Sarah gripped each others' hands. Bruce Oquendo
swallowed nervously. The sight exerted a chill of foreboding on them all. The
fears they felt were not mirrored in fears for their own safety; the mere sight
of a whole planet blowing-up, although terrifying and heart-breaking, could not
account for this very personal peril they all experienced. Matlin, of them
all, guessed that a world—any world—represented home and safety and the comfort
of a broad bosom.
A
world—any world—to be thus summarily destroyed awoke the hackles of a man's
racial heritage. The fear of solid earth cracking up under a man's feet went
back so far into the mists of antiquity that perhaps no other fear had such
powerful terror-stimulating responses.
"My God!"
whispered Penkowski. "It's awful!"
The
sound died in the shocked silence, punctuated only by the never-ending unheard
click and hum of equipment maintaining human beings alive in space.
Then
the radar officer said unsteadily, "Would you mind coming over here a
minute, sir."
Penkowski and Matlin responded together.
Ideas of rank and precedence were out of place now. On the radar screen a trace
showed, hard and clear-cut, bright and near.
"That's
not rock, sir, and it's not the semi-molten metals coming out of—out of the
planet." The signals officer let the tear-stains lie on her cheeks. She
was not the only one.
"Bring
in the scanners, optics, step up the magnification." Matlin forced the
hard grimness of his voice to stay steady and hating, turning his anger and
sorrow into the channels of familiar duty. That was the easiest way. . ..
Bruce
Oquendo cast one last look at the awful splendor of the death of a world and
then he escorted Susan and Sarah from the bridge. Matlin was relieved by their
departure.
"Magnification coming up now, sir."
The
sharp-edged metallic object snapped into fine focus on the screens. Lights
ruddied the swelling bulge and star-glimmer glinted from ports and turrets.
"That's
no ship I've ever seen!" Penkowski slid into the exec's chair and the exec
stood behind him, both well content to let Matlin handle this.
"I
don't believe it is a ship." Matlin jogged his memory. Somewhere and
recently he had seen a domed shape like that—the Globe-Trotter's
damaged records! That
terrible idea formed in his mind even as flame sparkled from the alien shape.
"Give it everything you can, commander!" he shouted. Then: "Get
away from here!"
He grabbed a handmike, felt the little packet
lurch and saw a menacing orange glow coalesce around the edges of the screens.
He steadied himself against the control position. "Put me through to Anaxagoras! Double quick! Emergency band! Move!"
"Wilco,
sir." The signals officer thrashed into her techs and emergency relays
clicked. "Through."
"Anaxagoras! Commodore Landsdowne! Emergency!"
The packet lurched again and on the screen
the splintering shards of light festooned that alien fort with a halo of
lethal light. Somewhere aft an alarm gonged. The nauseating smell of burning
insulation tainted the air.
"Commodore
Landsdowne! Emergency! All fighting ships to action stations! Come on, Anaxagoras! Get with it!"
Some
of the Survey Corps packet's screens went dead and the gunnery officer cursed
and set up his own emergency firing circuits. A packet, designed for rapid
interstellar transportation, possessed peashooters and popguns for armament.
But he went on firing with everything he had left.
"This is Anaxagoras! What's your trouble?"
"Tell Landsdowne the Sharks have forts
coming up out of Vicksburgl He'll have to use all the force he has I We're being knocked out of space . . ."
The
emergency bands went dead and the handmike clicked on emptiness.
"I
hope that's us and not the flagship I" Matlin
said and hurled the handmike from him.
Penkowski
looked elated and scared. This was his first time in action.
"Take
your ship out of this, commanderl" Matlin started to stand up and was
hurled full length as the tiny ship shuddered under the impact of massive
energy bolts. They were down to their last two shields, now, and any second
that ravening alien energy would eat its way clean through and devour the ship
and all those who sailed in her. -
"But—" said
Penkowski.
"Now, commanderl Now!"
The
TSC packet catapulted away from that domed fort spewing alien energy among the
exploding debris of a world.
The
shuddering stopped. Shakily, Matlin picked himself up and studied the last
remaining live screen. It showed the massive outpouring of molten rock and
magma ballooning into space. Dots of light wheeled and circled as the SCS ship
took violent evasive maneuvers. Shields glowed in momentary energy-release as rocks struck them.
"What communications
have you?"
"I'm trying to regain
contact with Anaxagoras, sir."
On
the screen those wheeling dots of light steadied and fire wreathed them as
their weapons went into action. Shark forts, spraying up out of the wreckage of
a world, flamed and struggled—and died.
"Someone's caught on, then," said
Matlin thankfully.
"They
must have been waiting for us." Penkowsld still hadn't caught on. He shook
his head. Matlin felt a quick amused stab of pity for the young man. His first
command, his first action—and now it was no wonder he failed to understand
what was really happening.
"Commander."
Matlin put the old snap into his voice.
"Kindly take us alongside the flagship.
I have to speak to Commodore Landsdowne." "Wilco, sir."
The
packet curved, steadied and then thrashed away on a course that would bring her
nuzzling up against Anaxa-goras.
"Ask
for assistance, commander. The SCS owe us that, at least."
"Yes,
sir. But those Shark forts—they were waiting for us . . . But where did they
come from?"
Matlin
did not answer. He jerked his head at the screen. Penkowski, all of them in the
control room, dazedly recovering their wits, looked. They were passing the
dead, seared and disfigured globe of a Shark fort. A Solarian cruiser whickered
past on an opposite course, heading down like an iron-beaked galley to the
holocaust of fighting ships and forts, spewing molten magma, and tumbling
whirling debris littering space beyond. A pinnace cut from the cruiser's flank,
arced across, braked hard and nuzzled up to the lifeless fort.
"They're
investigating already. Keep on course for the flagship."
"That
Shark fort must have been half a mile in diameter, a globe, studded with
weaponry, ports, all the paraphernalia of a fighting arsenal. It would have
been fully automatic," Matlin said grimly. "Programmed to come to
life and shoot up everything it didn't like as soon as it was exposed to
space."
"But—" said Penkowski.
"Come with me aboard Anaxagoras. Listen."
"Yes, sir," said
Penkowski, weakly.
Aboard
the flagship Matlin strode briskly for the bridge, Penkowski trailing. He
looked for Strang but the Chief Controller was not in the control room.
Commodore Landsdowne was. He had grown. He sat at his command post, face grave
and calm, methodically dealing with every Shark fort to have come up out of the
ruins of Vicksburg. The physical aura of power and professional competence
radiating from him had a visibly calming and heartening effect on everyone.
"Thanks
for your warning, Dick." Landsdowne gestured to a seat at his board.
"Yours was the first to come in." Matlin nodded and sat down.
"It's a hell of a
mess, Morley."
"Yes. Who knows how
long it's been going on?"
"Since
Charlie and Myra Hastings stumbled on a glimmering of it on Planet
Seventeen—and that's a long time ago."
"And how long before that?"
"It's
a Construction Service problem, Morley. But you know you have all the help the
TSC can give you."
"Thanks.
I may have to use everything in space before we're through."
"Your
boss—Caracci—?"
"I'm
awaiting a signal any minute." Landsdowne shook a grave head. "I don't like to think what
he's going to say."
"When
those forts spewed out—it was like tossing a handful of jumping firecrackers into a jimjah
session."
"Not
elegant—but apt." Landsdowne blew out his cheeks. "We've settled the
last of them. I'm having detailed reports made up. Armament, electronics,
cybers, dates and ages if possible. Major-General Jelal is superintending
that."
Matlin
brought up the sore and wounding question. "What happened to Vicksburg?
How could the Sharks—?"
"Not Sharks, Dick. Colin Copping—you met
him?—shot out the coordinating shuttle. The trembler harmonics ran wild and
long before the automatics could shut down the power from the sun—blooeey." Landsdowne spoke with a personal grief. "Craig Drummond, Carver, a
lot of good men gone. And—and Sally Strang."
"I know. Sarah's badly cut-up—so is
Susan. Oh, what a hell
of a sweet mess!"
"That
broke up Vicksburg. When it broke—out popped the Shark forts. Obviously, they
came alive when the planet ruptured. If it hadn't—"
A harsh grating voice behind them swung them
around.
"We would not have known what we know
now." Stephen
Strang had aged. He stomped in and stood
before them, glowering down. "Is this all you have to do, Commodore
Landsdowne? Chat with your boozing pals?"
"All
the Shark forts have been dealt with, sir. General Jelal is superintending the
investigation. Captain Matlin was the first officer to recognize the danger and
sound the alarm." Landsdowne spoke stiffly. He was remembering those
moments of crisis when, alone on the bridge, he had handled affairs and Stephen
Strang had been closeted in his apartments.
Strang
passed a hand over his face. "The damn Sharks! Don't you understand? All
the planets we've taken from these sectors of space are riddled with time
bombs! Shark forts, Shark installations, Shark nuclear weapons—all buried deep
below the surface. At any time they like, the Sharks can trigger the alarm and
the Solarian Confederation is going to be faced with dozens of its worlds
breaking up, being overrun by automated weapons systems, taken away before they
even know there's a shooting war on!"
"I
understand all that quite well." Matlin stood up. He didn't like to have
to crook his head up to see his father-in-law. "I could suggest that you
carry out a better inspection of the worlds you select. The SCS has long been
antagonistic towards the TSC and we have been denied our old status as
planet-probers. All we are now is an organization dedicated to staking out
planets for you. On Planet Seventeen, when the Hastings died, the orders were
that the planet was suitable and further investigation would be carried out by
the SCS. You've hoed your own furrow. Now you are harvesting the weeds."
Strang
visibly flinched. Then he tightened up his jaw. He began to speak in his cold,
cutting, contemptuous voice, when Matlin interrupted. "I would make a
suggestion. You'd better try to wipe out all traces here of what has happened.
It won't be easy but it can be done. It would not be clever for the Solarian
Confederation if the Sharks discover we have found out their secret plan. You'd
better send cruisers out to cover as large a globe of space as you can manage,
to find and destroy any snoopers."
"When I want your suggestions, Captain,
I may ask for them—"
But
Landsdowne said, "My God!" And at once began to issue orders that
spread a wide and determined net of scouting cruisers ruthlessly seeking any
snooping Sharks.
"I
don't like you, Matlin." Strang spoke with that hard clamping of the jaw
biting off phrases. "My daughter Sally is dead. She was the only one of my
children worth anything in this galaxy. You will get nothing from me. Now, I
have work to do—"
"You're
wrong, Strang. Your daughter Sarah matches any other woman you can put against
her . . . even her sister Susan and she's two hundred percent. You're wrong,
Strang . . . Pitifully wrong!"
A
communications screen lit and a woman's voice spoke. Strang answered at once
without bothering to reply to Matlin.
"This is Chief Controller Strang."
"A
signal from Caracci. He congratulates you in discovering this Shark plot. Now
that we are apprized of the danger we can take steps to inspect and disinfect
every world taken from the plague areas. He wishes you take over responsibility
for the areas of Gerban Amouf and Tung Chi Leslie. They have been remiss in not
uncovering this problem. You have full authority. You will use any means to
your hand. The Space Navy, the Marines, the Army, the police forces, the civil
service—you have overriding authority."
Strang kept his head. He
said, "And the TSC?"
"Caracci
says they have been exempted from his disposal by the Solarian Government. A
shakeup is expected."
"I see."
Landsdowne caught Matlin's eye and pulled a
face.
The
woman on the screen—a blonde with full lips and high coloring, with rich creamy
shoulders—smiled and said, "Caracci is aware that you understand the full
seriousness of the situation. The Sharks have been pulling away from direct
contact with us. They probably do not have the techniques for moving worlds,
so they have planted nuclear devices and forts on the worlds we are likely to
take. That
way they infiltrate us and when they
trigger—"
"I
know." Strang was back in form now. He always had supposed that Caracci
had liked him—Morley Landsdowne had said so, and this proved it beyond doubt.
Amouf and Tung got the chop. Strang got the prize.
Of course, that was only
right. . . .
Again
the woman on the screen smiled. "Now that the official business is over,
Steve, when are you coming—?"
"I
am on the bridge of my flagship with the fate of a galaxy to decide,"
Strang cut in icily. "I will contact you, Sheila. Good-bye." He
flicked and the screen died.
Matlin sniggered rudely.
Landsdowne—who
had heard and seen it all before— went back to handling the calls coming in for
orders and decisions.
"You'd
better get back to your packet, Matlin." Strang was coming out of the
nightmare now. "Take your two-place scouter and get to hell out of
it."
"I'll
give your regards to Sarah, and to Susan and her husband. If you go on like
this you're hardly likely to meet them again."
"I
don't wish you to tell lies on my behalf. I have nothing to say to my
daughters—either of them—now. . ."
"I'm
sorry about Sally. She was all right." And Matlin nodded to Landsdowne,
turned, bumped into Penkowski, and said, "Come on, commander. Back to
work," and left the bridge.
"We've
a big job to do, Morley." Strang glanced at the work piled on Morley
Landsdowne's control position, the flashing lights, the communications bands screaming
for information and requests for instructions. "You handle this. I want
to catch up on something I should have done a long time ago."
Landsdowne was too busy to answer.
Down in his apartments Strang sat slowly and
awkwardly before his deegee controls. He would have to get used to handling
them from now on. Then he snapped them off and flicked for a com robot. Deegees
would not yet operate satisfactorily over much more than a dozen light-years.
"Get me Solishtar."
Before the com robot could comply another
wheeled a screen across and Gerban Amouf stared out at Strang. "So you're
taking over, Stephen?" "So Caracci says."
Amouf's
thick, beard-fringed face had grown even more bloated over the years. His
hooded eyes were a sullen smolder of hatred. "I suppose you never forgave
me for that Jethro affair?"
Strang
smiled easily. "I hadn't really considered that end of it, Gerban. All the
Jethro affair did for me was to make me understand clearly that there was no
limit to the weapons a man has to use in the galaxy. You follow?"
"Oh,
I follow, all right." The hatred fumed thick from Amouf like incense
before a paunched hunched idol.
"You've
been taking in some very undesirable property, Gerban. You've been sending
worlds riddled with Shark bombs and weaponry right into the Solarian
Confederation—"
"You'd have done the
same if—"
"Don't
believe all your spies tell you, Gerban. I didn't I found out."
"You haven't finished
with me yet—I'll get—"
"No
threats, please, Gerban. They are hardly the sort of thing one expects from
people in our positions ..."
Amouf flicked and the
screen died.
Strang
allowed the luxurious thoughts to roll around in his head. So much for Gerban
Amouf! Smashed Hat.
Now
that Craig Drummond was dead the Strang System would be his, undeniably. The headship of the
House of Christopher would still come to him; old Zeus Drummond
would be badly cut up about
Craig's death; but Strang would still become the Head of the House. It was a
great pity about Sally . . . She had looked so young and innocent in that
white dress . . . Like a sacrificial Iamb. . . .
Shena
was too old. But Strang could still father children; tough sons ready to fare
the starlanes and build on the foundations of the empire Strang was creating.
He
had to go on. He could not go back for there was nowhere in his life that could
help him now. Everything lay in the future. He had to ring Solishtar and tell
Shena that he wanted a wife who could bear sons. She would be hurt—but the
galaxy did that to people. He had to go on.
Nothing was left to him now but that.
To go on.
The com robot brought the
screen in closer and said with metallic deference: "Solishtar, sir. Your
palace. Mrs. Strang on screen."
Around Stephen Christopher
Strang, as he spoke from the heart of his mechanical cybernetic empire, the
pitiless spear-bright stars sang their hypnotic siren song—beckoning.
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WORLD'S
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Selected
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Fifteen outstanding stories selected from the
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others.
"Entertaining and Imaginative"
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Terran
Corps scattered their ships outward into the glittering galaxies. Solterra's
prime objective: orbital reconstruction of the far-flung planets. They had
tightened up Solterra's galaxy and had made mankind secure against alien
threats-or so Terrans believed.
As Chief Commander, Stephen Strang
aggressively explored the cosmos for the glory of his beloved Earth. He could
boast that he had moved more planets into orbit around Sol than any other.
Strang felt smugly safe against alien "sharks" - until he discovered
the vast time-bomb that was planet Vesta's core.