He contracted for a charter trip but
the man
who hired his spacer wasn’t quite a man,
it
turned out and he wanted more than
service!
Gefty Rammer came along the narrow passages between
the Silver Queen’s
control compartment and the staterooms, trying to
exchange the haggard
look on his face for one of competent self-assurance.
There was nothing
to gain by letting his two passengers suspect that
during the past few
minutes their pilot, the owner of Rammer Spacelines,
had been a bare
step away from plain and fancy gibbering.
He opened the door to Mr. Maulbow’s stateroom
and went inside. Mr.
Maulbow, face very pale, eyes closed, lay on his back
on the couch,
still unconscious. He’d been knocked out
when some unknown forces
suddenly started batting the Silver Queen’s
turnip-shape around as the
Queen had never been batted before in her eighteen
years of
spacefaring. Kerim Ruse, Maulbow’s secretary,
knelt beside her employer,
checking his pulse. She looked anxiously up at
Gefty.
“What did you find out?” she asked in
a voice that was not very steady.
Gefty shrugged. “Nothing definite as yet.
The ship hasn’t been
damaged she’s a tough tub. That’s
one good point. Otherwise ... well, I
climbed into a suit and took a look out the escape
hatch. And I saw the
same thing there that the screens show. Whatever
that is.”
“You’ve no idea then of what’s happened
to us, or where we are?” Miss
Ruse persisted. She was a rather small girl with
large, beautiful gray
eyes and thick blue-black hair. At the moment,
she was barefoot and in a
sleeping outfit which consisted of something soft
wrapped around her
top, soft and floppy trousers below. The black
hair was tousled and she
looked around fifteen. She’d been asleep
in her stateroom when something
smacked the Queen, and she was sensible enough
then not to climb out
of the bunk’s safety field until the ship finally
stopped shuddering and
bucking about. That made her the only one of
the three persons aboard
who had collected no bruises. She was scared,
of course, but taking the
situation very well.
Gefty said carefully, “There’re a number
of possibilities. It’s obvious
that the Queen has been knocked out of normspace,
and it may take some
time to find out how to get her back there. But
the main thing is that
the ship’s intact. So far, it doesn’t
look too bad.”
Miss Ruse seemed somewhat reassured. Gefty could
hardly have said the
same for himself. He was a qualified normspace
and subspace pilot. He
had put in a hitch with the Federation Navy, and for
the past eight
years he’d been ferrying his own two ships about
the Hub and not
infrequently beyond the Federation’s space territories,
but he had never
heard of a situation like this. What he saw in
the viewscreens when the
ship steadied enough to let him pick himself off the
instrument room
floor, and again, a few minutes later and with much
more immediacy, from
the escape hatch, made no sense seemed
simply to have no meaning. The
pressure meters said there was a vacuum outside the
Queen’s skin.
That vacuum was dark, even pitch-black but here and
there came
momentary suggestions of vague light and color.
Occasional pinpricks of
brightness showed and were gone. And there had
been one startling
phenomenon like a distant, giant explosion, a sudden
pallid glare in the
dark, which appeared far ahead of the Queen
and, for the instant it
remained in sight, seemed to be rushing directly towards
them. It had
given Gefty the feeling that the ship itself was plowing
at high speed
through this eerie medium. But he had cut the
Queen’s drives to the
merest idling pulse as soon as he staggered back to
the control console
and got his first look at the screens, so it must
have been the light
that had moved.
But such details were best not discussed with a passenger.
Kerim Ruse
would be arriving at enough disquieting speculations
on her own; the
less he told her, the better. There was the matter
of the ship’s
location instruments. The only set Gefty had
been able to obtain any
reading on were the direction indicators. And
what they appeared to
indicate was that the Silver Queen was turning
on a new heading
something like twenty times a second.
Gefty asked, “Has Mr. Maulbow shown any signs
of waking up?”
Kerim shook her head. “His breathing and
pulse seem all right, and that
bump on his head doesn’t look really bad, but
he hasn’t moved at all.
Can you think of anything else we might do for him,
Gefty?”
“Not at the moment,” Gefty said.
“He hasn’t broken any bones. We’ll
see
how he feels when he comes out of it.”
He was wondering about Mr.
Maulbow and the fact that this charter had showed
some unusual features
from the beginning.
Kerim was a friendly sort of girl; they’d got
to calling each other by
their first names within a day or two after the trip
started. But after
that, she seemed to be avoiding him; and Gefty guessed
that Maulbow had
spoken to her, probably to make sure that Kerim didn’t
let any of her
employer’s secrets slip out.
Maulbow himself was as aloof and taciturn a client
as Rammer Spacelines
ever had picked up. A lean, blond character of
indeterminate age, with
pale eyes, hard mouth. Why he had selected a
bulky semifreighter like
the Queen for a mineralogical survey jaunt
to a lifeless little sun
system far beyond the outposts of civilization was
a point he didn’t
discuss. Gefty, needing the charter money, had
restrained his curiosity.
If Maulbow wanted only a pilot and preferred to do
all the rest of the
work himself, that was certainly Maulbow’s affair.
And if he happened to
be up to something illegal though it was
difficult to imagine
what Customs would nail him when they got
back to the Hub.
But those facts looked a little different now.
Gefty scratched his chin, inquired, “Do you
happen to know where Mr.
Maulbow keeps the keys to the storage vault?”
Kerim looked startled. “Why, no! I
couldn’t permit you to take the keys
anyway while he ... while he’s unconscious!
You know that.”
Gefty grunted. “Any idea of what he has
locked up in the vault?”
“You shouldn’t ask me ”
Her eyes widened. “Why, that couldn’t
possibly
have anything to do with what’s happened!”
He might, Gefty thought, have reassured her a little
too much. He said,
“I wouldn’t know. But I don’t
want to just sit here and wonder about it
until Maulbow wakes up. Until we’re back
in normspace, we’d better not
miss any bets. Because one thing’s sure if
this has happened to anybody
else, they didn’t turn up again to report it.
You see?”
Kerim apparently did. She went pale, then said
hesitantly, “Well ... the
sealed cases Mr. Maulbow brought out from the Hub
with him had some very
expensive instruments in them. That’s all
I know. He’s always trusted me
not to pry into his business any more than my secretarial
duties
required, and of course I haven’t.”
“You don’t know then what it was he brought
up from that moon a few
hours ago those two big cases he stowed
away in the vault?”
“No, I don’t, Gefty. You see, he
hasn’t told me what the purpose of this
trip is. I only know that it’s a matter
of great importance to him.”
Kerim paused, added, “From the careful manner
Mr. Maulbow handled the
cases with the cranes, I had the impression that whatever
was inside
them must be quite heavy.”
“I noticed that,” Gefty said. It
wasn’t much help. “Well, I’ll
tell
you something now,” he went on.
“I let your boss keep both sets of
keys to the storage vault because he insisted on it
when he signed the
charter. What I didn’t tell him was that
I could make up a duplicate set
any time in around half an hour.”
“Oh! Have you ?”
“Not yet. But I intend to take a look at
what Mr. Maulbow’s got in that
vault now, with or without his consent. You’d
better run along and get
dressed while I take him up to the instrument room.”
“Why move him?” Kerim asked.
“The instrument room’s got an overall
safety field. I’ve turned it on
now, and if something starts banging us around again,
the room will be
the safest place on the ship. I’ll bring
his personal luggage up too,
and you can start looking through it for the keys.
You may find them
before I get a new set made. Or he may wake up
and tell us where they
are.”
Kerim Ruse gave her employer a dubious glance, then
nodded, said, “I
imagine you’re right, Gefty,” and pattered
hurriedly out of the
stateroom. A few minutes later, she arrived,
fully dressed, in the
instrument room. Gefty looked around from the
table-shelf where he had
laid out his tools, and said, “He hasn’t
stirred. His suitcases are over
there. I’ve unlocked them.”
Kerim gazed at what showed in the screens about the
control console and
shivered slightly. She said, “I was thinking,
Gefty ... isn’t there
something they call Space Three?”
“Sure. Pseudospace. But that isn’t
where we are. There’re some
special-built Navy tubs that can operate in that stuff
if they don’t
stay too long. A ship like the Queen ...
well, you and I and
everything else in here would be frozen solid by now
if we’d got sucked
somehow into Space Three.”
“I see,” Kerim said uncomfortably.
Gefty heard her move over to the
suitcases. After a moment, she asked, “What
do the vault keys look
like?”
“You can’t miss them if he’s just
thrown them in there. They’re over six
inches long. What kind of a guy is this Maulbow?
A scientist?”
“I couldn’t say, Gefty. He’s
never referred to himself as a scientist.
I’ve had this job a year and a half. Mr.
Maulbow is a very considerate
employer ... one of the nicest men I’ve known,
really. But it was simply
understood that I should ask no questions about the
business beyond what
I actually needed to know for my work.”
“What’s the business called?”
“Maulbow Engineering.”
“Big help,” Gefty observed, somewhat sourly.
“Those instruments he
brought along ... he build those himself?”
“No, but I think he designed some of them probably
most of them. The
companies he had doing the actual work appeared to
have a terrible time
getting everything exactly the way Mr. Maulbow wanted
it There’s
nothing that looks like a set of keys in those first
two suitcases,
Gefty.”
“Well,” Gefty said, “if you don’t
find them in the others, you might
start thumping around to see if he’s got secret
compartments in his
luggage somewhere.”
“I do wish,” Kerim Ruse said uneasily,
“that Mr. Maulbow would regain
consciousness. It seems so ... so underhanded
to be doing these things
behind his back!”
Gefty grunted noncommittally. He wasn’t
at all certain by now that he
wanted his secretive client to wake up before he’d
checked on the contents of the Queen’s
storage vault.
Fifteen minutes later, Gefty Rammer
was climbing down to the storage deck in the Queen’s
broad stern, the newly fashioned set of vault keys
clanking heavily in his coat pocket. Kerim had
remained with her employer who was getting back his
color but still hadn’t opened his eyes.
She hadn’t found the original keys. Gefty
wasn’t sure she’d tried too hard, though
she seemed to realize the seriousness of the situation
now. But her loyalty to Mr. Maulbow could make
no further difference, and she probably felt more
comfortable for it.
Lights went on automatically in the
wide passage leading from the cargo lock to the vault
as Gefty turned into it. His steps echoed between
the steel bulkheads on either side. He paused
a moment before the big circular vault doors, listening
to the purr of the Queen’s idling engines
in the next compartment. The familiar sound was
somehow reassuring. He inserted the first key,
turned it over twice, drew it out again and pressed
one of the buttons in the control panel beside the
door. The heavy slab of steel moved sideways with
a soft, hissing sound, vanished into the wall.
Gefty slid the other key into the lock of the inner
door. A few seconds later, the vault entrance
lay open before him.
He stood still again, wrinkling his
nose. The area ahead was only dimly illuminated the
shaking-up the Queen had undergone had disturbed
the lighting system here. And what was that odor?
Rather sharp, unpleasant; it might have been spilled
ammonia. Gefty stepped through the door into
the wide, short entrance passage beyond it, turned
to the right and peered about in the semidarkness
of the vault.
Two great steel cases the
ones Maulbow had taken down to an airless moon surface,
loaded up with something and brought back to the Queen were
jammed awkwardly into a corner, in a manner which
suggested they’d slid into it when the ship was
being knocked around. One of them was open and
appeared to be empty. Gefty wasn’t sure
of the other. In the dimness beside them lay
the loose coils of some very thick, dark cable And
standing near the center of the floor was a thing
that at once riveted his attention on it completely.
He sucked his breath in softly, feeling chilled.
He realized he hadn’t really
believed his own hunch. But, of course, if it
hadn’t been an unheard-of outside force that
plucked the Queen out of normspace and threw
her into this elsewhere, then it must be something
Maulbow had put on board. And that something had
to be a machine of some kind
It was.
About it he could make out a thin
gleaming of wires a jury-rigged safety
field. Within the flimsy-looking protective cage
was a double bank of instruments, some of them alive
with the flicker and glow of lights. Those must
be the very expensive and difficult-to-build items
Maulbow had brought out from the Hub. Beside them
stood the machine, squat and ponderous. In the
vague light, it looked misshaped and discolored.
A piece of equipment that had taken a bad beating of
some kind. But it was functioning. As he
stared, intermittent bursts of clicking noises rose
from it, like the staccato of irregular gunfire.
For a moment, questions raced in disorder
through his mind. What was it? Why had it
been on that moon? Part of another ship, wrecked
now ... a ship that had been at home here?
Was it some sort of drive?
Maulbow must know. He’d
known enough to design the instruments required to
bring the battered monster back to life. On the
other hand, he had not foreseen in all detail what
could happen once the thing was in operation, because
the Queen’s sudden buck-jumping act had
surprised him and knocked him out.
The first step, in any event, was
to get Maulbow awake now. To tamper with a device
like this, before learning as much as one could about
it, would be lunatic foolhardiness. It looked
like too good a bet that the next serious mistake
made by anybody would finish them all
Perhaps it was only because Gefty’s
nerves were on edge that he grew aware at that point
in his reflections of two minor signals from his senses.
One was that the smell of ammonia, which he had almost
stopped noticing, was becoming appreciably stronger.
The other was the faintest of sounds a
whispering suggestion of motion somewhere behind him.
But here in the storage vault nothing should have
moved, and Gefty’s muscles were tensing as his
head came around. Almost in the same instant,
he flung himself wildly to one side, stumbling and
regaining his balance as something big and dark slapped
heavily down on the floor at the point where he had
stood. Then he was darting up through the entrance
passage, turning, and knocking down the lock switches
on the outside door panel.
It came flowing around the corner
of the passage behind him as the vault doors began
to slide together. He was aware mainly of swift,
smooth, oiling motion like that of a big snake; then,
for a fraction of a second, a strip of brighter light
from the outside passage showed a long, heavy wedge
of a head, a green metal-glint of staring eyes.
The doors closed silently into their
frames and locked. The thing was inside.
But it was almost a minute then before Gefty could
control his shaking legs enough to start moving back
towards the main deck. In the half-dark of the
vault, it had looked like a big coiled cable lying
next to the packing cases. Like Maulbow, it might
have been battered around and knocked out during the
recent disturbance; and when it recovered, it had
found Gefty in the vault with it. But it might
also have been awake all the while, waiting cunningly
until Gefty’s attention seemed fixed elsewhere
before launching its attack. It was big enough
to have flattened him and smashed every bone in his
body if the stroke had landed.
Some kind of guard animal a
snakelike watchdog? What other connection could
it have with the mystery machine? Perhaps Maulbow
had intended to leave it confined in one of the cases,
and it had broken loose
Too many questions by now, Gefty thought.
But Maulbow had the answers.
He was hurrying up the main deck’s
central passage when Maulbow’s voice addressed
him sharply from a door he’d just passed.
“Stop right there, Rammer! Don’t
dare to move! I ”
The voice ended on a note of surprise.
Gefty’s reaction had not been too rational,
but it was prompt. Maulbow’s tone and phrasing
implied he was armed. Gefty wasn’t, but
he kept a gun in the instrument room for emergencies.
He’d been through a whole series of unnerving
experiences, winding up with being shagged out of
his storage vault by something that stank of ammonia
and looked like a giant snake. To have one of
the Queen’s passengers order him to stand
where he was topped it off. Every other consideration
was swept aside by a great urge to get his hands on
his gun.
He glanced back, saw Maulbow coming
out of the half-opened door, something like a twenty-inch,
thin, white rod in one hand. Then Gefty went
bounding on along the passage, hunched forward and
zigzagging from wall to wall to give Maulbow if
the thing he held was a weapon and he actually intended
to use it as small and erratic a target
as possible. Maulbow shouted angrily behind him.
Then, as Gefty came up to the next cross-passage,
a line of white fire seared through the air across
his shoulders and smashed off the passage wall.
With that, he was around the corner,
and boiling mad. He had no great liking for gunfire,
but it didn’t shake him like the silently attacking
beast in the dark storage had done. He reached
the deserted instrument room not many seconds later,
had his gun out and cocked, and was faced back towards
the passage by which he had entered. Maulbow,
if he had pursued without hesitation, should be arriving
by now. But the passage stayed quiet. Gefty
couldn’t see into it from where he stood.
He waited, trying to steady his breathing, wondering
where Kerim Ruse was and what had got into Maulbow.
After a moment, without taking his eyes from the passage
entrance, he reached into the wall closet from which
he had taken the gun and fished out another souvenir
of his active service days, a thin-bladed knife in
a slip-sheath. Gefty worked the fastenings of
the sheath over his left wrist and up his forearm under
his coat, tested the release to make sure it was functioning,
and shook his coat sleeve back into place.
The passage was still quiet.
Gefty moved softly over to one of the chairs, took
a small cushion from it and pitched it out in front
of the entrance.
There was a hiss. The cushion
turned in midair into a puff of bright white fire.
Gefty aimed his gun high at the far passage wall just
beyond the entrance and pulled the trigger. It
was a projectile gun. He heard the slug screech
off the slick plastic bulkhead and go slamming down
the passage. Somebody out there made a startled,
incoherent noise. But not the kind of a noise
a man makes when he’s just been hit.
“If you come in here armed,”
Gefty called, “I’ll blow your head off.
Want to stop this nonsense now?”
There was a moment’s silence.
Then Maulbow’s voice replied shakily from the
passage. He seemed to be standing about twenty
feet back from the room.
“If you’ll end your thoughtless
attempts at interference, Rammer,” he said,
“there will be no trouble.” He was
speaking with the restraint of a man who is in a state
of cold fury. “You’re endangering
us all. You must realize that you have no understanding
of what you are doing.”
Well, the last could be true enough.
“We’ll talk about it,” Gefty said
without friendliness. “I haven’t done
anything yet, but I’m not just handing the ship
over to you. And what have you done with Miss
Ruse?”
Maulbow hesitated again. “She’s
in the map room,” he said then. “I
... it was necessary to restrict her movements for
a while. But you might as well let her out now.
We must reach an agreement without loss of time.”
Gefty glanced over his shoulder at
the small closed door of the map room. There
was no lock on the door, and he had heard no sound
from inside; this might be some trick. But it
wouldn’t take long to find out. He backed
up to the wall, pushed the door open and looked inside.
Kerim was there, sitting on a chair
in one corner of the tiny room. The reason she
hadn’t made any noise became clear. She
and the chair were covered by a rather closely fitting
sack of transparent, glistening fabric. She stared
out through it despairingly at Gefty, her lips moving
urgently. But no sound came from the sack.
Gefty called angrily, “Maulbow ”
“Don’t excite yourself,
Rammer.” There was a suggestion of what
might be contempt in Maulbow’s tone now.
“The girl hasn’t been harmed. She
can breathe easily through the restrainer. And
you can remove it by pulling at the material from
outside.”
Gefty’s mouth tightened.
“I’ll keep my gun on the passage while
I do it ”
Maulbow didn’t answer.
Gefty edged back into the map room, tentatively grasped
the transparent stuff above Kerim’s shoulder.
To his surprise, it parted like wet tissue. He
pulled sharply, and in a moment Kerim came peeling
herself out of it, her face tear-stained, working desperately
with hands, elbows and shoulders.
“Gefty,” she gasped, “he ...
Mr. Maulbow ”
“He’s out in the passage
there,” Gefty said. “He can hear you.”
His glance shifted for an instant to the wall where
a second of the shroudlike transparencies was hanging.
And who could that have been intended for, he thought,
but Gefty Rammer? He added, “We’ve
had a little trouble.”
“Oh!” She looked out of
the room towards the passage, then at the gun in Gefty’s
hand, then up at his face.
“Maulbow,” Gefty went
on, speaking distinctly enough to make sure Maulbow
heard, “has a gun, too. He’ll stay
there in the passage and we’ll stay in the instrument
room until we agree on what should be done. He’s
responsible for what’s happened and seems to
know where we are.”
He looked at Kerim’s frightened
eyes, dropped his voice to a whisper. “Don’t
let this worry you too much. I haven’t found
out just what he’s up to, but so far his tricks
have pretty much backfired. He was counting on
taking us both by surprise, for one thing. That
didn’t work, so now he’d like us to co-operate.”
“Are you going to?”
Gefty shrugged. “Depends
on what he has in mind. I’m just interested
in getting us out of this alive. Let’s
hear what Maulbow has to say ”
Some minutes later Gefty was trying
to decide whether it was taking a worse risk to believe
what Maulbow said than to keep things stalled on the
chance that he was lying.
Kerim Ruse, perched stiffly erect
on the edge of a chair, eyes big and round, face almost
colorless, apparently believed Maulbow and was wishing
she didn’t. There was, of course, some supporting
evidence ... primarily the improbable appearance of
their surroundings. The pencil-thin fire-spouter
and the sleazy-looking “restrainer” had
a sufficiently unfamiliar air to go with Maulbow’s
story; but as far as Gefty knew, either of them could
have been manufactured in the Hub.
Then there was the janandra the
big, snakish thing in the storage which Maulbow had
brought back up from the moon along with the battered
machine. It had been, he said, his shipboard companion
on another voyage. It wasn’t ordinarily
aggressive Gefty’s sudden appearance
in the vault must have startled it into making an
attack. It was not exactly a pet. There
was a psychological relationship between it and Maulbow
which Maulbow would not attempt to explain because
Gefty and Kerim would be unable to grasp its significance.
The janandra was essential, in this unexplained manner,
to his well-being.
That item was almost curious enough
to seem to substantiate his other statements; but
it didn’t really prove anything. The only
point Gefty didn’t question in the least was
that they were in a bad spot which might be getting
worse rapidly. His gaze shifted back to the screens.
What he saw out there, surrounding the ship, was, according
to Maulbow, an illusion of space created by the time
flow in which they were moving.
Also according to Maulbow, there was
a race of the future, human in appearance, with machines
to sail the current of time through the universe to
run and tack with the winds of time, dipping in and
out of the normspace of distant periods and galaxies
as they chose. Maulbow, one of the explorers,
had met disaster a million light-years from the home
of his kind, centuries behind them, his vehicle wrecked
on an airless moon with damaged control unit and shattered
instruments. He had made his way to a human civilization
to obtain the equipment he needed, and returned at
last with the Silver Queen to where the time-sailer
lay buried.
Gefty’s lip curled. No,
he wasn’t buying all that just yet but
if Maulbow was not lying, then the unseen stars
were racing past, the mass of the galaxy beginning
to slide by, eventually to be lost forever beyond
a black distance no space drive could span. The
matter simply had to be settled quickly. But
Maulbow was also strained and impatient, and if his
impatience could be increased a little more, he might
start telling the things that really mattered, the
things Gefty had to know. Gefty asked slowly,
as if hesitant to commit himself, “Why did you
bring us along?”
The voice from the passage snapped,
“Because my resources were nearly exhausted,
Rammer! I couldn’t obtain a new ship.
Therefore I chartered yours; and you came with it.
As for Miss Ruse in spite of every precaution,
my activities may have aroused suspicion and curiosity
among your people. When I disappeared, Miss Ruse
might have been questioned. I couldn’t
risk being followed to the wreck of the sailer, so
I took her with me. And what does that mean against
what I have offered you? The greatest adventure followed,
I give you my solemn word, by a safe return to your
own place and time, and the most generous compensations
for any inconvenience you may have suffered!”
Kerim, looking up at Gefty, shook
her head violently. Gefty said, “We find
it difficult to take you on trust now, Maulbow.
Why do you want to get into the instrument room?”
Maulbow was silent for some seconds.
Then he said, “As I told you, this ship would
not have been buffeted about during the moments of
transfer if the control unit were operating with complete
efficiency. Certain adjustments will have to
be made in the unit, and this should be done promptly.”
“Where do the ship instruments come in?”
Gefty asked.
“I can determine the nature
of the problem from them. When I was ... stranded
... the unit was seriously damaged. My recent
repairs were necessarily hasty. I ”
“What caused the crack-up?”
Maulbow said, tone taut with impatience,
“Certain sections of the Great Current are infested
with dangerous forces. I shall not attempt to
describe them ...”
“I wouldn’t get it?”
“I don’t pretend to understand
them very well myself, Rammer. They are not life
but show characteristics of life even of
intelligent life. If you can imagine radiant
energy being capable of conscious hostility....”
There was a chill at the back of Gefty’s
neck. “A big, fast-moving light?”
“Yes!” Sharp concern showed
suddenly in the voice from the passage. “You
... when did you see that?”
Gefty glanced at the screens.
“Twice since you’ve been talking.
And once before immediately after we got
tumbled around.”
“Then we can waste no more time,
Rammer. Those forces are sensitive to the fluctuations
of the control unit. If they were close enough
to be seen, they’re aware the ship is here.
They were attempting to locate it.”
“What could they do?”
Maulbow said, “A single attack
was enough to put the control unit out of operation
in my sailer. The Great Current then rejected
us instantly. A ship of this size might afford
more protection, which is the reason I chose it.
But if the control unit is not adjusted immediately
to enable it to take us out of this section, the attacks
will continue until the ship and we have
been destroyed.”
Gefty drew a deep breath. “There’s
another solution to that problem, Maulbow. Miss
Ruse and I prefer it. And if you meant what you
said that you’d see to it we got
back eventually you shouldn’t object
either.”
The voice asked sharply, “What do you mean?”
Gefty said, “Shut the control
unit off. From what you were saying, that throws
us automatically back into normspace, while we’re
still close enough to the Hub. You’ll find
plenty of people there who’ll stake you to a
trip to the future if they can go along and are convinced
they’ll return. Miss Ruse and I don’t
happen to be that adventurous.”
There was silence from the passage.
Gefty added, “Take your time to make up your
mind about it, if you want to. I don’t like
the idea of those lights hitting us, but neither do
you. And I think I can wait this out as well
as you can....”
The silence stretched out. Presently
Gefty said, “If you do accept, slide that fire-shooting
device of yours into the room before you show up.
We don’t want accidents.”
He paused again. Kerim was chewing
her lips, hands clenched into small fists in her lap.
Then Maulbow answered, voice flat and expressionless
now.
“The worst thing we can do at
present,” he said, “is to prolong a dispute
about possible courses of action. If I disarm,
will you lay aside your gun?”
“Yes.”
“Then I accept your conditions, disappointing
as they are.”
He was silent. After a moment,
Gefty heard the white rod clatter lightly along the
floor of the passage. It struck the passage wall,
spun off it, and rolled into the instrument room,
coming to rest a few feet away from him. Gefty
hesitated, picked it up and laid it on the wall table.
He placed his own gun beside it, moved a dozen steps
away. Kerim’s eyes followed him anxiously.
“Gefty,” she whispered, “he might
...”
Gefty looked at her, formed the words
“It’s all right” with his mouth
and called, “Guns have been put aside, Maulbow.
Come on in, and let’s keep it peaceable.”
He waited, arms hanging loosely at
his side, heart beating heavily, as quick footsteps
came up the passage. Maulbow appeared in the entrance,
glanced at Gefty and Kerim, then about the room.
His gaze rested for a moment on the wall table, shifted
back to Gefty. Maulbow came on into the room,
turning towards Gefty, mouth twisting.
He said softly, “It is not our
practice, Rammer, to share the secrets of the Great
Current with other races. I hadn’t foreseen
that you might become a dangerous nuisance. But
now ”
His right hand began to lift, half
closed about some small golden instrument. Gefty’s
left arm moved back and quickly forwards.
The service knife slid out of its
sheath and up from his palm as an arrow of smoky blackness
burst from the thing in Maulbow’s hand.
The blackness came racing with a thin, snarling noise
across the floor towards Gefty’s feet.
The knife flashed above it, turning, and stood hilt-deep
in Maulbow’s chest.
Gefty returned a few minutes later
from the forward cabin which served as the Queen’s
sick bay, and said to Kerim, “He’s still
alive, though I don’t know why. He may
even recover. He’s full of anesthetic, and
that should keep him quiet till we’re back in
normspace. Then I’ll see what we can do
for him.”
Kerim had lost some of her white,
shocked look while he was gone. “You knew
he would try to kill you?” she asked shakily.
“Suspected he had it in mind he
gave in too quick. But I thought I’d have
a chance to take any gadget he was hiding away from
him first. I was wrong about that. Now we’d
better move fast ...”
He switched the emergency check panel
back on, glanced over the familiar patterns of lights
and numbers. A few minor damage spots were indicated,
but the ship was still fully operational. One
minor damage spot which did not appear on the panel
was now to be found in the instrument room itself,
in the corner on which the door of the map room opened.
The door, the adjoining bulkheads and section of flooring
were scarred, blackened, and as assortedly malodorous
as burned things tend to become. That was where
Gefty had stood when Maulbow entered the room, and
if he had remained there an instant after letting
go of the knife, he would have been in very much worse
condition than the essentially fireproof furnishings.
Both Maulbow’s weapons the
white rod lying innocently on the wall table and the
round, golden device which had dropped from his hand
spitting darts of smoking blackness had
blasted unnervingly away into that area for almost
thirty seconds after Maulbow was down and twisting
about on the floor. Then he went limp and the
firing instantly stopped. Apparently, Maulbow’s
control of them had ended as he lost consciousness.
It seemed fortunate that the sick
bay cabin’s emergency treatment accessories,
gentle as their action was, might have been designed
for the specific purpose of keeping the most violent
of prisoners immobilized let alone one
with a terrible knife wound in him. At the angle
along which the knife had driven in and up below the
ribs, an ordinary man would have been dead in seconds.
But it was very evident now that Maulbow was no ordinary
man, and even after the eerie weapons had been pitched
out of the ship through the instrument room’s
disposal tube, Gefty couldn’t rid himself of
an uncomfortable suspicion that he wasn’t done
with Maulbow yet wouldn’t be done
with him, in fact, until one or the other of them
was dead.
He said to Kerim, “I thought
the machine Maulbow set up in the storage vault would
turn out to be some drive engine, but apparently it
has an entirely different function. He connected
it with the instruments he had made in the Hub, and
together they form what he calls a control unit.
The emergency panel would show if the unit were drawing
juice from the ship. It isn’t, and I don’t
know what powers it. But we do know now that
the control unit is holding us in the time current,
and it will go on holding us there as long as it’s
in operation.
“If we could shut it off, the
Queen would be ‘rejected’ by the
current, like Maulbow’s sailer was. In other
words, we’d get knocked back into normspace which
is what we want. And we want it to happen as
soon as possible because, if Maulbow was telling the
truth on that point, every minute that passes here
is taking us farther away from the Hub, and farther
from our own time towards his.”
Kerim nodded, eyes intent on his face.
“Now I can’t just go down
there and start slapping switches around on the thing,”
Gefty went on. “He said it wasn’t
working right, and even if it were, I couldn’t
tell what would happen. But it doesn’t seem
to connect up with any ship systems it
just seems to be holding us in a field of its own.
So I should be able to move the whole unit into the
cargo lock and eject it from there. If we shift
the Queen outside its field, that should have
the same effect as shutting the control unit off.
It should throw us back into normspace.”
Kerim nodded again. “What
about Mr. Maulbow’s janandra animal?”
Gefty shrugged. “Depends
on the mood I find it in. He said it wasn’t
usually aggressive. Maybe it isn’t.
I’ll get into a spacesuit for protection and
break out some of the mining equipment to move it along
with. If I can maneuver it into an empty compartment
where it will be out of the ...”
He broke off, expression changing,
eyes fastened on the emergency panel. Then he
turned hurriedly, reached across the side of the console
for the intership airseal controls. Kerim asked
apprehensively, “What’s the matter, Gefty?”
“Wish I knew ... exactly.”
Gefty indicated the emergency panel. “Little
red light there, on the storage deck section it
wasn’t showing a minute ago. It means that
the vault doors have been opened since then.”
He saw the same half-superstitious
fear appear in her face that had touched him.
“You think he did it?”
“I don’t know.”
Maulbow’s control of the guns had seemed uncanny
enough. But that was a different matter.
The guns were a product of his own time and science.
But the vault door mechanisms? There might have
been sufficient opportunity for Maulbow to study them
and alter them, for some purpose of his own, since
he’d come aboard....
“I’ve got the ship compartments
and decks sealed off from each other now,” Gefty
said slowly. “The only connecting points
from one to the other are personnel hatches they’re
small air locks. So the janandra’s confined
to the storage deck. If it’s come out of
the vault, it might be a nuisance until I can get
equipment to handle it. But that isn’t too
serious. The spacesuits are on the second deck,
and I’ll get into one before I go on to the
storage. You wait here a moment, I’ll look
in on Maulbow again before I start.”
If Maulbow wasn’t still unconscious,
he was doing a good job of feigning it. Gefty
looked at the pale, lax face, the half-shut eyes, shook
his head and left the cabin, locking it behind him.
It mightn’t be Maulbow’s doing, but having
the big snake loose in the storage could, in fact,
make things extremely awkward now. He didn’t
think his gun would make much impression on anything
of that size, and while several of the ship’s
mining tools could be employed as very effective close-range
weapons, they happened, unfortunately, to be stored
away on the same deck.
He found Kerim standing in the center
of the instrument room, waiting for him.
“Gefty,” she said, “do
you notice anything? An odd sort of smell....”
Then the odor was in Gefty’s
nostrils, too, and the back of his neck turned to
ice as he recognized it. He glanced up at the
ventilation outlet, looked back at Kerim.
He took her arm, said softly, “Come
this way. Keep very quiet! I don’t
know how it happened, but the janandra’s on the
main deck now. That’s what it smells like.
The smell’s coming through the ventilation system,
so the thing’s moving around in the port section.
We’ll go the other way.”
Kerim whispered, “What will we do?”
“Get ourselves into spacesuits
first, and then get Maulbow’s control unit out
of the ship. The janandra may be looking around
for him. If it is, it won’t bother us.”
He hadn’t wanted to remind Kerim
that, from what Maulbow said, there might be more
than one reason for getting rid of the control unit
as quickly as possible. But it had been constantly
in the back of his mind; and twice, in the few minutes
that passed after Maulbow’s strange weapons
were silenced, he had seen a momentary pale glare appear
in the unquiet flow of darkness reflecting in the
viewscreens. Gefty had said nothing, because
if it was true that hostile forces were alert and
searching for them here, it added to their immediate
danger but not at all to the absolute need to free
themselves from the inexorable rush of the Great Current
before they were carried beyond hope of return to
their civilization.
But those brief glimpses did add to
the sense of urgency throbbing in Gefty’s nerves,
while events, and the equally hard necessity to avoid
a fatally mistaken move in this welter of unknown
factors, kept blocking him. Now the mysterious
manner in which Maulbow’s unpleasant traveling
companion had appeared on the main deck made it impossible
to do anything but keep Kerim at his side. If
Maulbow was still capable of taking a hand in matters,
there was no reasonably safe place to leave her aboard
the Queen.
And Maulbow might be capable of it.
Twice as they hurried up the narrow, angled passages
along the Queen’s curving hull towards
an airseal leading to the next compartment, Gefty
caught a trace of the ammonia-like animal odor coming
over the ventilating system. They reached the
lock without incident; but then, as they came along
the second deck hall to the ship’s magazine,
there was a sharp click in the stillness behind them.
Its meaning was disconcertingly apparent. Gefty
hesitated, turned Kerim into a side passage, guided
her along it.
She looked up at his face. “It’s
following us?”
“Seems to be.” No
time for the spacesuits in the magazine now something
had just emerged from the air lock through which they
had entered the second deck not many moments before.
He helped the girl quickly down a section of ladderlike
stairs to the airseal connecting the second deck with
the storage, punched a wall button there. As the
lock door opened, there was another noise from the
passage they had just left, as if something had thudded
briefly and heavily against one of the bulkheads.
Kerim uttered a little gasp. Then they were in
the lock, and Gefty slapped down two other buttons,
stood watching the door behind them snap shut and,
a few seconds later, the one on the far side open on
the dark storage deck.
They scrambled down another twelve
feet of ladder to the floor of a side passage, hearing
the lock snap shut behind them. As it closed,
they were in complete darkness. Gefty seized
Kerim’s arm, ran with her up the passage to
the left, guiding himself with his fingertips on the
left bulkhead. When they came to a corner, he
turned her to the left again. A few seconds later,
he pulled open a small door, bundled the girl through,
came in himself, and shut the door to a narrow slit
behind them.
Kerim whispered shakily, “What will we do now,
Gefty?”
“Stay here for the moment. It’ll
look for us in the vault first.”
And it should go to the storage vault
first where it had been guarding Maulbow’s machine,
to hunt for them there. But it might not.
Gefty eased the gun from his pocket on the far side
of Kerim. Across the dark compartment was another
door. They could retreat a little farther here
if it became necessary but not very much
farther.
They waited in a silence that was
complete except for their unsteady breathing and the
distant, deep pulse of the Queen’s throttled-down
drives. He felt Kerim trembling against him.
How did Maulbow’s creature move through the
airseal locks? The operating mechanisms were simple a
dog might have been taught to use them. But a
dog had paws....
There came the soft hiss of the opening
lock, the faintest shimmer of light to the right of
the passage mouth he was watching through the door.
A heavy thump on the floor below the locks followed,
then a hard click as the lock closed and complete
darkness returned.
The silence resumed. Seconds
dragged on. Gefty’s imagination pictured
the thing waiting, its great, wedge-shaped head raised
as its senses probed the dark about it for a sign
of the two human beings. Then a vague rushing
noise began, growing louder as it approached the passage
mouth, crossing it, receding rapidly again to the left.
Gefty let his breath out slowly, eased
the door open and stood listening again. Abruptly,
there was reflected light in the lock passage, coming
now from the left. He said in a whisper, “It’s
moving around in the main hall, Kerim. We can
go on the other way now, but we’ll have to be
fast and keep quiet. I’ve thought of how
we can get rid of that thing.”
The cargo lock on the storage deck
had two inner doors. The one which opened into
the side of the vault hall was built to allow passage
of the largest chunks of freight the Queen
was likely to be burdened with; it was almost thirty
feet wide and twenty high. The second door was
just large enough to let a man in a spacesuit climb
in and out of the side of the lock without using the
freight door. It opened on a tiny control cubicle
from which the lock’s mechanisms were operated
during loading processes.
Gefty let Kerim and himself into the
cubicle from one of the passages, steered the girl
through the pitch blackness of the little room to the
chair before the control panel and told her to sit
down. He groped for a moment at the side of the
panel, found a knob and twisted it. There was
a faint click. A scattering of pale lights appeared
suddenly on the panel, a dark viewscreen, set at a
tilt above them, reflecting their gleam.
Gefty explained in a low voice, “Left
side of that screen covers the lock. Right one
covers the big hall outside. No lights in either
at the moment, so you don’t see anything.
Only way the cargo door to the hall can be opened
or closed is with these switches right here. What
I want to do is get the janandra into the lock, slam
the door on it and lock down the control switches.
Then we’ve got it trapped.”
“But how are you going to get it to go in there?”
“No real problem I’ll
be three jumps ahead of it. Then I duck back up
into this cubicle, and lock both doors. And it’ll
be inside the lock. You have the picture now?”
Kerim said unsteadily, “I do.
But it sounds awfully risky, Gefty.”
“Well, I don’t like it
either,” Gefty admitted. “So I’ll
start right now before I lose my nerve. As soon
as I move out into the vault hall, the lighting will
go on. That’s automatic. You watch
the right side of the screen. If you see the
janandra coming before I do, yell as loud as you can.”
He shifted the two inner door switches
to the right. A red spark appeared in the dark
viewscreen, high up near the center. A second
red light showed on the cubicle bulkhead beside Gefty.
Beneath it an oblong section of the bulkhead turned
silently away on heavy hinges, became a door two feet
in thickness, which stood jutting out at a right angle
into the darkness of the cargo lock. A wave of
cold air moved through it into the control cubicle.
On the screen, another red spark appeared
beside the first one.
“Both doors are open now,”
Gefty murmured to the girl. “The janandra
isn’t in the vault hall or the lighting would
have turned on, but it may have heard the door open
and be on its way. So keep watching the screen.”
“I certainly will!” she whispered shakily.
Gefty took an oversized wrench from
the wall, climbed quickly and quietly down the three
ladder steps to the floor of the lock, and walked
across it to the sill of the giant freight door, which
now had swung out and down into the vault hall, fitting
itself into a depression of the flooring. He
hesitated an instant on the sill, then stepped out
into the big dark hall. Light filled it immediately
in both directions.
He stood quiet, intent on the storage
vault entrance far up the hall to his left. He
could see the vault was open. The janandra might
still be inside it. But the seconds passed, and
the dark entrance remained silent and there was no
suggestion of motion beyond it. Gefty glanced
to the right, moved a dozen steps farther out into
the hall, hefted the wrench and spun it through the
air towards the ventilator frame on the opposite bulkhead.
The heavy tool clanged loudly against
the frame, bounced off and thudded to the floor.
Gefty started slowly over to it, heart pounding, with
the vault entrance still at the edge of his vision.
Kerim’s voice screamed, “Gefty, it’s ”
He spun around, sprinted back to the
cargo lock. The janandra had come silently out
of the nearest side passage behind him, was approaching
with the remembered oiling swiftness of motion, its
great head lifted a yard from the floor. Gefty
plunged through the lock, jumped for the top of the
cubicle door steps, came stumbling into the cubicle.
Kerim was on her feet, staring. He swung the
cubicle door switch to the left, slapping it flat
to the panel. The door snapped back into the wall
behind him with a force that shook the floor.
On the screen, the janandra’s
thick, dark worm-shape was swinging around in the
dim lock to regain the open hall. It had seen
the trap. But the freight door switch went flat
beside the other, and the freight door rose with massive
swiftness. The heavy body smashed against it,
went sliding back to the floor as the door slammed
shut and the screen section showing the cargo lock
turned dark.
“Got it got it got
it!” Gefty heard himself whispering exultantly.
He switched on the lock’s interior lights.
Then he swore softly, and, beside
him, Kerim sucked in her breath.
The screen showed the janandra in
violent but apparently purposeful motion inside the
lock ... and it was also apparent now that it was a
more complexly constructed creature than the long worm-body
and heavy head had indicated. The skin, to a
distance of some eight feet back of the head, had
spread out into a wide, flexible frill. From beneath
the frill extended half a dozen jointed, bone-white
arms, along with waving, ribbonlike appendages less
easy to define. The thing was reared half up
along the hall door, inspecting its surface with these
members; then suddenly it flung itself around and
flashed over to the outer lock door. Three arms
shot out; wiry fingers caught the three spin-locks
simultaneously, began to whirl them.
Gefty said, staring, “Kerim, it’s going
to ...”
The janandra didn’t. The
motion checked suddenly, was reversed. The locks
drew tight again. The janandra swung back from
the door, lifting half its length upwards, big head
weaving about as it inspected the tool racks overhead.
An arm reached suddenly, snatched something from one
of the racks. Then the thing turned again; and
in the next instant its head filled the viewscreen.
Kerim made a choked sound of fright, jerking back
against Gefty. The bulging, metal-green eyes seemed
to stare directly at him. And the screen went
black.
Kerim whispered, “Wha ... what happened, Gefty?”
Gefty swallowed, said, “It smashed
the view pickup. Must have guessed we were watching
and didn’t like it....” He added,
“I was beginning to think Maulbow must be some
kind of superman. But it wasn’t any remote-control
magic of his that let the janandra out of the vault,
and opened the intership locks when it came up to
the main deck and followed us down again. It
was doing all that for itself. It’s Maulbow’s
partner, not his pet. And it’s probably
got at least as good a brain as anyone else on board
behind that ugly face.”
Kerim moistened her lips. “Can
it ... could it get out again?”
“Into the ship?” Gefty
shook his head decidedly. “Uh-uh. It
could dump itself out on the other side and
it almost did before it realized where it was and
what it was about to do. But the inner lock doors
won’t open until someone opens them right on
this panel. No, the thing’s safely trapped.
On the other hand ...”
On the other hand, Gefty realized
that he wouldn’t now be able to bring himself
to eject the janandra out of the cargo lock and into
the Great Current. Its intentions obviously hadn’t
been friendly, but its level of intelligence was as
good as his own, and perhaps somewhat better; and at
present it was helpless. To dispose of it as he’d
had in mind would therefore be the cold-blooded murder
of an equal. But so long as that ugly and formidable
shipmate of Maulbow’s stayed in the cargo lock,
the lock couldn’t be used to get rid of the
control unit in the vault.
A new solution presented itself while
Gefty was making a rapid and rather desperate mental
review of various heavy-duty tools which might be
employed as weapons to force the janandra into submission
and haul it off for confinement elsewhere in the ship.
Not impossible, but a highly precarious and time-consuming
operation at best. Then another thought occurred:
the storage vault lay directly against the hull of
the Queen
How long to cut through the hull?
The ship’s mining equipment was on board, and
the tools were self-powered. Climb into a spacesuit,
empty the air from the entire storage deck, leaving
the janandra imprisoned in the cargo lock ... with
Maulbow incapacitated in sick bay, and Kerim back
in the control compartment and also in a suit, for
additional protection. Then cut ship’s
power to this deck to avoid complications with the
Queen’s involved circuitry and work under
space conditions half an hour if he hurried.
“Shouldn’t take more than
another ten minutes,” he informed Kerim presently
over the suit’s intercom.
“I’m very glad to hear it, Gefty.”
She sounded shaky.
“Anything going on in the screens?” he
asked.
She hesitated a little, said, “No. Not
at the moment.”
Gefty grunted, blinked sweat from
his eyes, and took hold of the handgrips of the heavy
mining cutter again, turning it nose down towards
the vault floor. The guide light found the point
he was working on, and the slice beam stabbed out,
began nibbling delicately away to extend the curving
line it had eaten through the Queen’s
thick skin. He had drawn a twenty-five foot circle
around Maulbow’s battered control unit and the
instruments attached to it, well outside the fragile-looking
safety field. The circle was broken at four points
where he would plant explosives. The explosives,
going off together, should shatter the connecting
links with the hull and throw the machine clear.
If that didn’t release them immediately from
its influence, he would see what putting the Queen’s
drives into action would do.
“Gefty?” Kerim’s voice asked.
“Uh-huh?”
He could hear her swallow over the
intercom. “Those lights are back now.”
“How many?”
“Two,” Kerim said.
“I think they’re only two.
They keep crossing back and forth in front of us.”
She laughed nervously. “It’s idiotic,
of course, but I do get the feeling they’re
looking at us.”
Gefty said hesitantly, “Everything’s
set but I need another minute or two to get this last
connection whittled down a little more. If I blow
the charge too soon, it mightn’t take the gadget
clean out of the ship.”
Kerim said, “I know. I’ll
just watch ... they just disappeared again.”
Her voice changed. “Now there’s something
else.”
“What’s that?”
“You know you said to watch
the cargo lock lights on the emergency panel.”
“Yes.”
“The outer lock door has just been opened.”
“What!”
“It must have been. The
light started blinking red just now as I was looking
at it.”
Gefty was silent a moment, his mind
racing. Why would the janandra open the lock?
From what Maulbow had said, it could live for a while
without air, but it still could gain nothing but eventual
death from leaving the ship
Unless, Gefty thought, the janandra
had become aware in some way that he was about to
blow their machine out of the Queen. There
were grappling lines in the cargo lock, and if four
or five of those lines were slapped to the circular
section of the hull he’d loosened ...
“Kerim,” he said.
“Yes?”
“I’m going to blow the
deal right now. Got your suit snapped to the wall
braces like I showed you?”
“Yes, Gefty.” Her voice was faint
but clear.
He turned the cutter away from the
line it had dug, sent it rolling off towards the far
wall. He hurried around the circle, checking the
four charges, lumbered over to the vault passage,
stopped just around the corner. He took the firing
box from his suit.
“Ready, Kerim?” He opened the box.
“Ready....”
“Here goes!” Gefty reached
into the box, twisted the firing handle. Light
flared in the vault. The deck shook below him.
He came stumbling out from behind the wall.
Maulbow’s machine and its stand
of instruments had vanished. Where it had stood
was a dark circular hole. Nothing else seemed
to have happened. Gefty clumped hurriedly over
to the mining cutter, swung it around, started more
cautiously back towards the hole. He didn’t
have the faintest idea what would come next, but a
definite possibility was that he would see the janandra’s
dark form flowing up over the rim of the hole.
Letting it run into the cutter beam might be the best
way to discourage it from re-entering the Queen.
Instead, a dazzling brilliance suddenly
blotted out everything. The cutter was plucked
from Gefty’s grasp; then he was picked up, suit
and all, and slammed up towards the vault ceiling.
He had a feeling that inaudible thunders were shaking
the ship. He seemed to be rolling over and over
along the ceiling. At last, the suit crashed into
something which showed a total disinclination to yield,
and Gefty blacked out.
The left side of his face felt pushed
out of shape; his left eye wasn’t functioning
too well, and there was a severe pulsing ache throughout
the top of his head. But Gefty felt happy.
There were a few qualifying considerations.
“Of course,” he pointed
out to Kerim, “all we can really say immediately
is that we’re back in normspace and somewhere
in the galaxy.”
She smiled shakily. “Isn’t
that saying quite a lot, Gefty?”
“It’s something.”
Gefty glanced around the instrument room. He had
placed an emergency light on the console, but except
for that, the control compartment was in darkness.
The renewed battering the Queen had absorbed
had knocked out the power in the forward section.
The viewscreens were black, every instrument dead.
But he’d seen the stars of normspace through
the torn vault floor. It was something....
“We might have the light that
slugged us to thank for that,” he said.
“I’m not sure just what did happen there,
but it could have been Maulbow’s control unit
it was attacking rather than the ship. Maulbow
said the lights were sensitive to the unit. At
any rate, we’re here, and we’re rid of
the gadget and of the janandra.”
He hesitated. “I just don’t feel
you should get your hopes too high. We may find
out we’re a very long way from the Hub.”
Kerim’s large eyes showed a
degree of confidence which made him almost uncomfortable.
“If we are,” she said serenely, “you’ll
get us back somehow.”
Gefty cleared his throat. “Well,
we’ll see. If the power shutoff is something
the Queen’s repair scanners can handle,
the instruments will come back on any minute.
Give the scanners ten minutes. If they haven’t
done it by that time, they can’t do it and I’ll
have to play repairman. Then, with the instruments
working, we can determine exactly where we are.”
Unless, he told himself silently,
they’d wound up in a distant cluster never penetrated
by the Federation’s mapping teams. And there
was the other little question of where they now were
in time. But Kerim looked rosy with relief, and
those details could wait.
He took up another emergency light,
switched it on and said, “I’ll see how
Maulbow is doing while we’re waiting for power.
If the first aid treatment has pulled him through
so far, the autosurgeon probably can fix him up.”
Kerim’s face suddenly took on
a guilty expression. “I forgot all about
Mr. Maulbow!” She hesitated. “Should
I come along?”
Gefty shook his head. “I
won’t need help. And if it’s a case
for the surgeon, you wouldn’t like it.
Those things work painlessly, but it gets to be a
mess for a while.”
He shut off the light again when he
reached the sick bay which was running on its independent
power system. As he opened the cabin door from
the dispensary, carrying the autosurgeon, it became
evident that Maulbow was still alive but that he might
be in delirium. Gefty placed the surgeon on the
table, went over to the bed and looked at Maulbow.
To the extent that the emergency treatment
instruments’ cautious restraints permitted,
Maulbow was twisting slowly about on the bed.
He was speaking in a low, rapid voice, his face distorted
by emotion. The words were not slurred, but they
were in a language Gefty didn’t know. It
seemed clear that Maulbow had reverted mentally to
his own time, and for some seconds he remained unaware
that Gefty had entered the room. Then, surprisingly,
the slitted blue eyes opened wider and focused on
Gefty’s face. And Maulbow screamed with
rage.
Gefty felt somewhat disconcerted.
For the reason alone that he was under anesthetic,
Maulbow should not have been conscious. But he
was. The words were now ones Gefty could understand,
and Maulbow was telling him things which would have
been interesting enough under different circumstances.
Gefty broke in as soon as he could.
“Look,” he said quietly, “I’m
trying to help you. I ...”
Maulbow interrupted him in turn, not
at all quietly. Gefty listened a moment longer,
then shrugged. So Maulbow didn’t like him.
He couldn’t say honestly that he’d ever
liked Maulbow much, and what he was hearing made him
like Maulbow considerably less. But he would keep
the man from the future alive if he could.
He positioned the autosurgeon behind
the head of the bed to allow the device to begin its
analysis, stood back at its controls where he could
both follow the progress it made and watch Maulbow
without exciting him further by remaining within his
range of vision. After a moment, the surgeon
shut off the first-aid instruments and made unobtrusive
use of a heavy tranquilizing drug. Then it waited.
Maulbow should have lapsed into passive
somnolence thirty seconds afterwards. But the
drug seemed to produce no more effect on him mentally
than the preceding anesthetic. He raged and screeched
on. Gefty watched him uneasily, knowing now that
he was looking at insanity. There was nothing
more he could do at the moment the autosurgeon’s
decisions were safer than any nonprofessional’s
guesswork. And the surgeon continued to wait.
Then, abruptly, Maulbow died.
The taut body slumped against the bed and the contorted
features relaxed. The eyes remained half open;
and when Gefty came around to the side of the bed,
they still seemed to be looking up at him, but they
no longer moved. A thin trickle of blood started
from the side of the slack mouth and stopped again.
The control compartment was still
darkened and without power when Gefty returned to
it. He told Kerim briefly what had happened, added,
“I’m not at all sure now he was even human.
I’d rather believe he wasn’t.”
“Why that, Gefty?” She
was studying his expression soberly.
Gefty hesitated, said, “I thought
at first he was furious because we’d upset his
plans. But they weren’t his plans ... they
were the janandra’s. He wasn’t exactly
its servant. I suppose you’d have to say
he was something like a pet animal.”
Kerim said incredulously, “But
that isn’t possible! Think of how intelligently
Mr. Maulbow ...”
“He was following instructions,”
Gefty said. “The janandra let him know
whatever it wanted done. He was following instructions
again when he tried to kill me after I’d got
away from the thing in the vault. The real brain
around here was the janandra ... and it was a real
brain. With a little luck it would have had the
ship.”
Kerim smiled briefly. “You
handled that big brain rather well, I think.”
“I was the one who got lucky,”
Gefty said. “Anyway, where Maulbow came
from, it’s the janandra’s kind that gives
the orders. And the thing is, Maulbow liked it
that way. He didn’t want it to be different.
When the light hit us, it killed the janandra on the
outside of the ship. Maulbow felt it happen and
it cracked him up. He wanted to kill us for it.
But since he was helpless, he killed himself.
He didn’t want to be healed not by
us. At least, that’s what it looks like.”
He shrugged, checked his watch, climbed
out of the chair. “Well,” he said,
“the ten minutes I gave the Queen to turn
the power back on are up. Looks like the old
girl couldn’t do it. So I’ll ”
The indirect lighting system in the
instrument room went on silently. The emergency
light flickered and went out. Gefty’s head
came around.
Kerim was staring past him at the
screens, her face radiant.
“Oh, Gefty!” she cried softly. “Oh,
Gefty! Our stars!”
“Green dot here is us,”
Gefty explained, somewhat hoarsely. He cleared
his throat, went on, “Our true ship position,
that is ” He stopped, realizing he
was talking too much, almost babbling, in an attempt
to take some of the tension out of the moment.
The next few seconds might not tell them where they
were, but it would show whether they had been carried
beyond the regions of space charted by Federation instruments.
Which would mean the difference between having a chance whether
a good chance or a bad one of getting home
eventually, and the alternative of being hopelessly
lost.
There had been nothing recognizably
familiar about the brilliantly dense star patterns
in the viewscreens, but he gave no further thought
to that. Unless the ship’s exact position
was known or one was on an established route, it was
a waste of time looking for landmarks in a sizable
cluster.
He turned on the basic star chart.
Within the locator plate the green pinpoint of light
reappeared, red-ringed and suspended now against the
three-dimensional immensities of the Milky Way.
It stayed still a moment, began a smooth drift towards
Galactic East. Gefty let his breath out carefully.
He sensed Kerim’s eyes on him but kept his gaze
fixed on the locator plate.
The green dot slowed, came to a stop.
Gefty’s finger tapped the same button four times.
The big chart flicked out of existence, and in the
plate three regional star maps appeared and vanished
in quick succession behind it. The fourth map
stayed. For a few seconds, the red-circled green
spark was not visible here. Then it showed at
the eastern margin of the map, came gliding forwards
and to the left, slowed again and held steady.
Now the star map began to glide through the locator
plate, carrying the fixed green dot with it.
It brought the dot up to dead center point in the
locator plate and stopped.
Gefty slumped a little. He rubbed
his hands slowly down his face and muttered a few
words. Then he shook his head.
“Gefty,” Kerim whispered, “what
is it? Where are we?”
Gefty looked at her.
“After we got hauled into that
time current,” he said hoarsely, “I tried
to find out which way in space we were headed.
The direction indicators over there seemed to show
we were trying to go everywhere at once. You
remember Maulbow’s control unit wasn’t
working right, needed adjustments. Well, all
those little impulses must have pretty well canceled
out because we weren’t taken really far.
In the last hour and a half we’ve covered roughly
the distance the Queen could have gone on her
own in, say, thirty days.”
“Then where ...”
“Home,” Gefty said simply.
“It’s ridiculous! Other side of the
Hub from where we started.” He nodded at
the plate. “Eastern Hub Quadrant.
Section Six Eight. The G2 behind the green dot that’s
the Evalee system. We could be putting down at
Evalee Interstellar three hours from now if we wanted
to.”
Kerim was laughing and crying together. “Oh,
Gefty! I knew you would ...”
“A fat lot I had to do with
it!” Gefty leaned forward suddenly, switched
on the transmitter. “And now let’s
pick up a live newscast. There’s something
else I ...”
His voice trailed off. The transmitter
screen lit up with a blurred jumble of print, colors,
a muttering of voices, music and noises. Gefty
twisted a dial. The screen cleared, showed a newscast
headline sheet. Gefty blinked at it, glanced
sideways at Kerim, grimaced.
“The something else,”
he said, his voice a little strained, “was something
I was also worried about. Looks like I was more
or less right.”
“Why, what’s wrong?”
“Nothing really bad,”
Gefty assured her. He added, “I think.
But take a look at the Federation dateline.”
Kerim peered at the screen, frowned. “But
...”
“Uh-huh.”
“Why, that ... that’s almost ...”
“That,” Gefty said, “or
rather this is the day after we started out
from the Hub, headed roughly Galactic west. Three
weeks ago. We’d be just past Miam.”
He knuckled his chin. “Interesting thought,
isn’t it?”
Kerim was silent for long seconds. “Then
they ... or we ...”
“Oh, they’re us, all right,”
Gefty said. “They’d have to be, wouldn’t
they?”
“I suppose so. It seems
a little confusing. But I was thinking. If
you send them a transmitter call ...”
Gefty shook his head. “The
Queen’s transmitter isn’t too hot,
but it might push a call as far as Evalee. Then
we could arrange for a Com-Web link-up there, and
in another ten minutes or so ... but I don’t
think we’d better.”
“Why not?” Kerim demanded.
“Because we got through it all
safely, so we’re going to get through it safely.
But if we receive that message now and never go on
to Maulbow’s moon ... you see? There’s
no way of knowing just what would happen.”
Kerim looked hesitant, frowned.
“I suppose you’re right,” she agreed
reluctantly at last. “So Mr. Maulbow will
have to stay dead now. And that janandra.”
After a moment she added pensively, “Of course,
they weren’t really very nice ”
Gefty shivered. One of the things
he’d learned from Maulbow’s ravings was
the real reason he and Kerim had been taken along on
the trip. He didn’t feel like telling Kerim
about it just yet, but it had been solely because
of Maulbow’s concern for his master’s creature
comforts. The janandra could go for a long time
without food, but after fasting for several years
on the moon, a couple of snacks on the homeward run
would have been highly welcome.
And the janandra was a gourmet.
It much preferred, as Maulbow well knew, to have its
snacks still wriggling-fresh as it started them down
its gullet.
“No,” Gefty said, “I
couldn’t call either of them really nice.”