The Sunsprite throbbed steadily
through the vast, dangerous wilderness of the asteroidal
zone. To the eye, the cruiser moved in a black
void starred by creeping crumbs of light. In reality
those bright, crawling specks were booming asteroids
or whirling meteor-swarms rushing in complicated,
unchartable orbits and constantly threatening destruction.
For three days now, the cruiser had
cautiously groped deeper into this most perilous region
of the System. Now a bright, tiny disk of white
light was shining far ahead like a beckoning beacon.
It was the asteroid Vesta their goal.
Kenniston, leaning against the glassite
deck-wall, somberly eyed the distant asteroid.
“We’ll reach it by tomorrow,”
he thought. “Then what? I suppose John
Dark will hold these rich youngsters for ransom.”
Kenniston knew that the pirate leader
would instantly see the chance of extorting vast sums
by holding this group of wealthy young people as captives.
“I wish to God I hadn’t
had to bring them into this,” Kenniston sweated.
“But what else could I do? It was the only
way I could get back to Vesta with the materials.”
His mind was going back over the disastrous
events since the day three weeks before, when the
Patrol had caught up to John Dark at last.
Dark’s pirate ship, the Falcon,
had been gunned to a helpless wreck. It had,
fortunately for the pirates, drifted off into a region
of perilous meteor-swarms where the Patrol cruisers
dared not follow. The Patrol thought everybody
on the pirate ship dead anyway, Kenniston knew.
But John Dark and most of his crew
were still alive in the drifting wreck. They
had fought the battle wearing space-suits, and that
had saved them. They had clung grimly to the
wreck as it drifted on and on until it finally fell
into the feeble gravitational pull of Vesta.
Kenniston could still remember those
tense hours when the wreck had fallen through the
satellite swarm of meteors onto the World with a Thousand
Moons. They had managed to cushion their crash.
John Dark, always the most resourceful of men, had
managed to jury-rig makeshift rocket-tubes that had
softened the impact of their fall.
But the wrecked Falcon had
been marooned there in the weird asteroidal jungle,
with the alien, menacing Vestans already gathering
around it. The ship would never fly space again
until major repairs were made. And they could
not be made until quantities of material and equipment
were brought. Someone must go for those materials
to Mars, the nearest planet.
John Dark had superintended construction
of a little two-man rocket from parts of the ship.
Kenniston and Holk Or were to go in it.
“You must be back with
that list of equipment and materials within two weeks,
Kenniston,” Dark had emphasized. “If
we stay castaway here longer than that, either the
Vestans will get us or the Patrol discover us.”
The pirate leader had added, “The
moon-jewels I’ve given you will more than pay
for a small cruiser, if you can buy one at Mars.
If you can’t buy one, get one any way you can but
get back here quickly!”
Well, Kenniston thought grimly, he
had got a cruiser in the only way he could. Down
in its hold were the berylloy plates and spare rocket-tubes
and new cyclotrons he had had loaded aboard at
Syrtis.
But he was also bringing back to Vesta
with him a bunch of thrill-seeking, rich, young people
who believed they were going on a romantic treasure-hunt.
What would they think of him when they discovered
how he had betrayed them?
“That’s Vesta, isn’t
it?” spoke a girl’s eager voice behind
him, interrupting his dark thoughts.
Kenniston turned quickly. It
was Gloria Loring, boyish in silken space-slacks,
her hands thrust into the pockets.
There was a naïve eagerness in her
clear, lovely face as she looked toward the distant
asteroid, that made her look more like an excited
small girl than like the bored, jewelled heiress of
that night at Syrtis.
“Yes, that’s the World
with a Thousand Moons,” Kenniston nodded.
“We’ll reach it by tomorrow. I’ve
just been up on the bridge, telling your Captain Walls
the safest route through the meteor swarms.”
Her dark eyes studied him curiously.
“You’ve been out here on the frontier
a long time, haven’t you?”
“Twelve years,” he told
her. “That’s a long time in the outer
planets. Most space-men don’t last that
long out here wrecks, accidents or gravitation-paralysis
gets them.”
“Gravitation-paralysis?”
she repeated. “I’ve heard of that
as a terrible danger to space-travelers. But
I don’t really know what it is.”
“It’s the most dreaded
danger of all out here,” Kenniston answered.
“A paralysis that hits you when you change from
very weak to very strong gravities or vice versa,
too often. It locks all your muscles rigid by
numbing the motor-nerves.”
Gloria shivered. “That sounds ghastly.”
“It is,” Kenniston said
somberly. “I’ve seen scores of my
friends stricken down by it, in the years I’ve
sailed the outer System.”
“I didn’t know you’d
been a space-sailor all that time,” the heiress
said wonderingly. “I thought you said you
were a meteor-miner.”
Kenniston woke up to the fact that
he had made a bad slip. He hastily covered up.
“You have to be a good bit of a space-sailor
to be a meteor-miner, Miss Loring. You have to
cover a lot of territory.”
He was thankful that they were interrupted
at that moment by some of the others who came along
the deck in a lively, chattering group.
Robbie Boone was the center of the
group. That chubby, clownish young man, heir
to the Atomic Power Corporation millions, had garbed
himself in what he fondly believed to be a typical
space-man’s outfit. His jacket and slacks
were of black synthesilk, and he wore a big atom-pistol.
“Hiya, pal!” he grinned
cherubically at Kenniston. “When does this
here crate of ours jet down at Vesta?”
“If you knew how silly you looked,
Robbie,” said Gloria devastatingly, “trying
to dress and talk like an old space-man.”
“You’re just jealous,”
Robbie defied. “I look all right, don’t
I, Kenniston?”
Kenniston’s lips twitched.
“You’d certainly create a sensation if
you walked into the Spaceman’s Rendezvous in
Jovopolis.”
Alice Krim, a featherheaded little
blonde, eyed Kenniston admiringly. “You’ve
been to an awful lot of planets, haven’t you?”
she sighed.
“Turn it off, Alice,”
said Gloria dryly. “Mr. Kenniston doesn’t
flirt.”
Arthur Lanning, the sulky, handsome
youngster who always had a drink in his hand, drawled.
“Then you’ve tried him out, Gloria?”
The heiress’ dark eyes snapped,
but she was spared a reply by the appearance of Mrs.
Milsom. That dumpy, fluttery woman, the nominal
chaperone of the group, immediately seized upon Kenniston
as usual.
“Mr. Kenniston, are you sure
this asteroid we’re going to is safe?”
she asked him for the hundredth time. “Is
there a good hotel there?”
“A good hotel there?”
Kenniston was too astounded to answer, for a moment.
Into his mind had risen memory of
the savage, choking green jungles of the World with
a Thousand Moons; of the slithering creatures slipping
through the fronds, of the rustling presence of the
dreaded Vestans who could never quite be seen; of
the pirate wreck around which John Dark and half a
hundred of the System’s most hardened outlaws
waited.
“Of course there’s no
hotel there, Aunty,” Gloria said disgustedly.
“Can’t you understand that this asteroid’s
almost unexplored?”
Holk Or had come up, and the big Jovian
had heard. He broke into a booming laugh.
“A hotel on Vesta! That’s a good one!”
Kenniston flashed the big green pirate
a warning glance. Robbie Boone was asking him,
“Will there be any good hunting there?”
“Sure there will,” Holk
Or declared. His small eyes gleamed with secret
humor. “You’re going to find lots
of adventure there, my lad.”
When Mrs. Milsom had dragged the others
away for the usual afternoon game of “dimension
bridge,” the Jovian looked after them, chuckling.
“This crowd of idiots hadn’t
ought to have ever left Earth. What a surprise
they’re going to get on Vesta!”
“They’re not such a bad
bunch, at bottom,” Kenniston said halfheartedly.
“Just a lot of ignorant kids looking for adventure.”
“Bah, you’re falling for
the Loring girl,” scoffed Holk Or. “You’d
better keep your mind on John Dark’s orders.”
Kenniston made a warning gesture.
“Cut it! Here comes Murdock.”
Hugh Murdock came straight along the
deck toward them, and his sober, clean-cut young face
wore a puzzled look as he halted before them.
“Kenniston, there’s something
about this I can’t understand,” he declared.
“Yes? What’s that?” returned
Kenniston guardedly.
He was very much on the alert.
Murdock was not a heedless, gullible youngster like
the others. He was, Kenniston had learned, an
already important official in the Loring Radium company.
From the chaffing the others gave
Murdock, it was evident that the young business man
had joined the party only because he was in love with
Gloria. There was something likeable about the
dogged devotion of the sober young man. His very
obvious determination to protect Gloria’s safety,
and his intelligence, made him dangerous in Kenniston’s
eyes.
“I was down in the hold looking
over the equipment you loaded,” Hugh Murdock
was saying. “You know, the stuff we’re
to use to dig out the wreck of Dark’s ship.
And I can’t understand it there’s
no digging machinery, but simply a lot of cyclotrons,
rocket-tubes and spare plates.”
Kenniston smiled to cover the alarm
he felt. “Don’t worry, Murdock, I
loaded just the equipment we’ll need. You’ll
see when we reach Vesta.”
Murdock persisted. “But
I still don’t see how that stuff is going to
help. It’s more like ship-repair stores
than anything else.”
Kenniston lied hastily. “The
cycs are for power-supply, and the rocket-tubes and
plates are to build a heavy duty power-hoist to jack
the wreck out of the mud. Holk Or and I have got
that all figured out.”
Murdock frowned as though still unconvinced,
but dropped the subject. When he had gone off
to join the others, Holk Or glared after him.
“That fellow’s too smart
for his own good,” muttered the Jovian.
“He’s suspicious. Maybe I’d
better see that he meets with an accident.”
“No, let him alone,” warned
Kenniston. “If anything happened to him
now, the others would want to turn back. And we’re
almost to Vesta now.”
But worry remained as a shadow in
the back of Kenniston’s own mind. It still
oppressed him hours later when the arbitrary ship’s-time
had brought the ‘night.’ Sitting
down in the luxurious passenger-cabin over highballs
with the others, he wondered where Hugh Murdock was.
The rest of Gloria’s party were
all here, listening with fascinated interest to Holk
Or’s colorful yarns of adventures on the wild
asteroids. But Murdock was missing. Kenniston
wondered worriedly if the fellow was looking over
that equipment in the hold again.
A young Earth space-man one
of the Sunsprite’s small crew came
into the cabin and approached Kenniston.
“Captain Walls’ compliments,
sir, and would you come up to the bridge? He’d
like your advice about the course again.”
“I’ll go with you,”
Gloria said as Kenniston rose. “I like it
up in the bridge best of any place on the ship.”
As they climbed past the little telaudio
transmitter-room, they saw Hugh Murdock standing in
there by the operator. He smiled at Gloria.
“I’ve been trying to get
some messages through to Earth, but it seems we’re
almost out of range,” he said ruefully.
“Can’t you ever forget
business, Hugh?” the girl said exasperatedly.
“You’re about as adventurous as a fat radium-broker
of fifty.”
Kenniston, however, felt relieved
that Murdock had apparently forgotten about the oddness
of the equipment below. His spirits were lighter
when they entered the glassite-enclosed bridge.
Captain Walls turned from where he
stood beside Bray, the chief pilot. The plump,
cheerful master touched his cap to Gloria Loring.
“Sorry to bother you again,
Mr. Kenniston,” he apologized. “But
we’re getting pretty near Vesta, and you know
this devilish region of space better than I do.
The charts are so vague they’re useless.”
Kenniston glanced at the instrument-panel
with a practiced eye and then squinted at the void
ahead. The Sunsprite was now throbbing
steadily through a starry immensity whose hosts of
glittering points of light would have made a bewildering
panorama to laymen’s eyes.
They seemed near none of those blazing
sparks. Yet every few minutes, red lights blinked
and buzzers sounded on the instrument panel. At
each such warning of the meteorometers, the pilot glanced
quickly at their direction-dials and then touched
the rocket-throttles to change course slightly.
The cruiser was threading a way through unseen but
highly perilous swarms of rushing meteors and scores
of thundering asteroids.
Vesta was now a bright, pale-green
disk like a little moon. It was not directly
ahead, but lay well to the left. The cruiser was
following an indirect course that had been laid to
detour it well around one of the bigger meteor-swarms
that was spinning rapidly toward Mars.
“What about it, Mr. Kenniston is
it safe to turn toward Vesta now?” Captain Walls
asked anxiously. “The chart doesn’t
show any more swarms that should be in this region
now, by my calculations.”
Kenniston snorted. “Charts
are all made by planet-lubbers. There’s
a small swarm that tags after that big N mess
we just detoured around. Let me have the ’scopes
and I’ll try to locate it.”
Using the meteorscopes whose sensitive
electromagnetic beams could probe far out through
space, to be reflected by any matter, Kenniston searched
carefully. He finally straightened from the task.
“It’s all right the
tag-swarm is on the far side of N,” he
reported. “It should be safe to blast straight
toward Vesta now.”
The captain’s anxiety was only
partly assuaged. “But when we reach the
asteroid, what then? How do we get through the
satellite-swarm around it?”
“I can pilot you through that,”
Kenniston assured him. “There’s a
periodic break in that swarm, due to gravitational
perturbations of the spinning meteor-moons. I
know how to find it.”
“Then I’ll wake you up
early tomorrow ‘morning’ before we reach
Vesta,” vowed Captain Walls. “I’ve
no hankering to run that swarm myself.”
“We’ll be there in the
morning?” exclaimed Gloria with eager delight.
“How long then will it take us to find the pirate
wreck?”
Kenniston uncomfortably evaded the
question. “I don’t know it
shouldn’t take long. We can land in the
jungle near the wreck.”
His feeling of guilt was increased
by her enthusiastic excitement. If she and the
others only knew what the morrow was to bring them!
He did not feel like facing the rest
of them now, and lingered on the dark deck when they
went back down from the bridge. Gloria remained
beside him instead of going on to the cabin.
She stood, with the starlight from
the transparent deck-wall falling upon her youthful
face as she looked up at him.
“You are a moody creature,
you know,” she told Kenniston lightly.
“Sometimes you’re almost human then
you get all dark and grim again.”
Kenniston grinned despite himself.
Her voice came in mock surprise. “Why,
it can actually smile! I can’t believe my
eyes.”
Her clear young face was provocatively
close, the faint perfume of her dark hair in his nostrils.
He knew that she was deliberately flirting with him,
perhaps mostly out of curiosity.
She expected him to kiss her, he knew.
Damn it, he would kiss her! He did so,
half ironically. But the ironic amusement faded
out of his mind somehow at the oddly shy contact of
her soft lips.
“Why, you’re just a kid,”
he muttered. “A little kid masquerading
as a bored, sophisticated young lady.”
Gloria stiffened with anger.
“Don’t be silly! I’ve kissed
men before. I just wanted to find out what you
were really like.”
“Well, what did you find out?”
Her voice softened. “I
found out that you’re not as grim as you look.
I think you’re just lonely.”
The truth of that made Kenniston wince. Yes, he was
lonely enough, he thought somberly. All his old space-mates, passing one
by one
“Don’t you have anyone?”
Gloria was asking him wonderingly.
“No family, except my kid brother
Ricky,” he answered heavily. “And
most of my old space-partners are either dead or else
worse lying in the grip of gravitation-paralysis.”
Memory of those old partners re-established
Kenniston’s wavering resolution. He mustn’t
let them down! He must go through with delivering
this cruiser’s cargo to John Dark, no matter
what the consequences.
He thrust the girl almost roughly
from him. “It’s getting late.
You’d better turn in like the others.”
But later, in his bunk in the little
cabin he shared with Holk Or, Kenniston found memory
of Gloria a barrier to sleep. The shy touch of
her lips refused to be forgotten. What would she
think of him by tomorrow?
He slept, finally. When he awakened,
it was to realization that someone had just sharply
spoken his name. He knew drowsily it was ‘morning’
and thought at first that Captain Walls had sent someone
to awaken him.
Then he stiffened as he saw who had
awakened him. It was Hugh Murdock. The young
businessman’s sober face was grim now, and he
stood in the doorway of the cabin with a heavy atom-pistol
in his hand.
“Get up and dress, Kenniston,”
Murdock said sternly. “And wake up your
fellow-pirate, too. If you make a wrong move I’ll
kill you both.”