Although Gunnar had spent most of
the past four days in grumbling and polishing his
sword, there had been hours and hours when Odin had
not seen him. The little man had a secret, but
what it was he would not tell. “For,”
he said to Odin, “then it would not be my secret.
It would be mine and yours, and I would own but half
of it. Does a man give half of his flocks away?”
Odin was a bit hurt over his friend’s
behavior. He even wondered if Gunnar had taken
a liking to one of the white-skinned slave-girls for
they were beautiful. Still, that did not seem
like Gunnar. But you could never tell. After
all, he found himself quoting, there’s no fool
like an old fool.
Mixed up in this secret was a buckskin
bag that Gunnar had brought with him from the ship.
When Odin had inquired about it, Gunnar had replied:
“Magic. A very old magic.”
That too was not like Gunnar.
He relied upon his sword, since the Norse gods were
usually busy with their own affairs. Those gods
ate their rejuvenating apples every day and then went
out like healthy boys to see what was happening; and
though they meant well they usually were somewhere
else when they were needed. Therefore, the use
of magic bags and incantations was a lot of foolishness.
But here was Gunnar fondling a tightly-drawn buckskin
bag as though it held eternity’s secrets.
“You ought to get yourself a
witch-doctor’s mask and a couple of hollowbones
to whistle through,” Odin had told him scathingly.
“Never mind. Never mind.
Old Gunnar will be there when they put out the fire
and call the dogs. Now, you stay here in this
room, Odin. And don’t go looking after
any of these slave-girls. They are too pretty.
And you are young. After all, there’s no
fool like a young fool. So don’t go wandering
off. Just stay here and polish your sword and
wait until I return. I think my magic will do
a great deal this afternoon.”
“Touche!” Jack Odin
thought as Gunnar departed. “So he’s
been worrying about me and the girls, has he?”
Odin polished his sword and looked
at the paintings. But the entire palace seemed
to be whispering. An air of tension hung over
it. The halls were quiet, where servants usually
were busily going back and forth.
Once he heard shouts and the sound
of fighting far off. There was a loud shot and
a scream of pain. After that, the unusual quiet
returned.
This was the sixth afternoon that
he had spent on this enslaved world. Odin did
not enjoy it. He tried to make plans to rescue
Maya, but he had gone over those same plans many times
before. The Taj Mahal was well-guarded.
There was an unshaded road that went from the city
to it. Also, the road was usually crowded with
pilgrims. He never knew whether they went out
there in some strong belief that here was a goddess
from outer space, or whether they were forced to go.
After all, Grim Hagen was clever
He took a bath and changed clothes.
Then Jack Odin read one of those books that Grim Hagen
had stolen. It was a first edition of the Rubaiyat,
the one with the jeweled peacock cover, and it would
have been worth a fortune back home. But here
it was just another of Grim Hagen’s treasures it
was dusty and neglected, and Odin wondered if he were
not the first to take a look at it since Hagen had
brought it here.
The windows were dark when Gunnar
returned. Jack Odin sat by a single tiny light,
and greeted his old friend in a glum and sour fashion.
But Gunnar was in a gay mood.
“Look, I told you that my magic
would do great tricks. See, the bag is nearly
empty.” He held the buckskin bag high and
it was much thinner than before. “You waited,
did you? Good, Nors-King. I had to make sure
that no one came here while I was gone.”
“Just myself,” Odin replied. “Now
what ”
“Oh, I told you I had great
magic in that bag. You shall see.”
Gunnar returned to the door, opened it, and led a
tall white-skinned slave into the room. A man
of about thirty dressed in white uniform with some
sort of insignia upon his shoulders. Odin had
never bothered to learn the different gradations in
Grim Hagen’s slave-world.
“This man goes by the name of
Piper,” Gunnar announced simply.
The man bowed and smiled nervously.
“And he is a Bro-Stoka among the slaves,”
Gunnar continued.
Odin was about to reply that he didn’t
give a damn if the man were a colonel or a two star
general. But Gunnar hurried on to explain.
“A Stoka is a captain of a hundred. But
a Bro-Stoka is a captain over ten Stokas and all their
men. Not often does one advance so at an early
age ”
Gunnar seemed to be buttering up the
man for some reason or other so Jack Odin decided
to go along. “I have never seen a Bro-Stoka
so young,” he admitted. This was true,
Odin thought, since this was the first Bro-Stoka who
had ever been identified to him. And he wondered
if maybe Bro-Stoka were not a local term for “Ninety
Day Wonder.” God knows he had seen too
many of them.
Gunnar seated himself comfortably
and swung the nearly empty bag to and fro. “Ah,
I told you that I carried great magic in the bag.
With Piper’s help, Maya will be ours before
midnight.”
Odin’s lethargy was gone now.
“Gunnar, old friend! What magic was in that
bag of yours?”
“The oldest magic in the world.
Pieces of gold, diamonds, and rubies. When we
left the Nebula I said to myself that if Grim Hagen
owned everything here, it was quite possible that
many would be eating very little. Knowing Grim
Hagen, I said to myself, there will be a mad scramble
for money and position. It would be the only
kind of a world that Grim Hagen could fashion.”
Odin slapped him on the back.
“Gunnar, you are a genius, a sheer genius.”
“Not at all. When I was
a young man I learned such strategy from studying
the world above me.”
Odin winced.
Gunnar continued. “Well,
it has turned out even as I figured. Only more
so. When traveling in far countries you should
try to learn how the people live, Odin. It is
enlightening. I had an old uncle who always said
that travel broadens one. It must have, for he
weighed nearly two-hundred when he died.”
“Please, Gunnar. When will we see Maya ”
“So, I have been working ever
since we arrived. A jewel here. A bit of
gold there. It is amazing how a diamond can make
a man see just what you tell him to see. Much
better than ordinary glasses. Then I found Piper
here. And Piper is ambitious. Do you know
what it costs to become head-man and chief tax-gatherer
of a town of five-thousand, Odin?”
“Gunnar, I know nothing of these
matters. Tell me about Maya ”
“Well, Piper has been paid.
The town will be his if our plan works out tonight.
Otherwise, I will twist his neck.” And Gunnar
paused to scowl at the young man in the white uniform
until poor Piper began sweating.
“Many others have been paid.
They are to stay away from their posts. They
will see nothing and hear nothing at certain times
tonight. Here, hand me your book.”
Odin obliged and Gunnar produced a
ragged bit of pencil and started drawing a map upon
the fly-leaf. “Here,” he said, “is
the city. And here is the river. Now, if
you remember, there is a deep bend in the river, and
this tomb that Grim Hagen has built is within the
bend of the river. There is a good road that
goes from the city to the tomb, but it is guarded.
The Nebula is on the other side of the bend.
So the answer is quite simple. We go up the river.
Piper has a boat waiting for us ”
“I have already paid many and
have sworn them to silence,” Piper interrupted.
“But it will be a dangerous business. I
would not dare it at all except that it will be five
years before I am eligible for tax-gatherer, and the
waiting is killing me. A city of my own ”
Piper, Jack Odin gathered, was a very ambitious man.
The boat moved up-river in darkness.
There were beacons upon the shore, turning this way
and that, but they seemed to be trained a bit high
this night.
Once a motor-boat passed them, going
at a fast clip, and somebody called out that he saw
a shadow over toward the far side of the river.
And another voice answered. “You’re
always seeing things. A log, maybe. Didn’t
I tell you that I found some money in the street?
And aren’t we going to have the best meal that
money can buy? Do you want to stay here with an
empty belly on this cold river all night? Our
watch is nearly over. I’m tired. Let’s
get along ”
Later, some one hailed them from the
bank and threatened to shoot if they did not pull
in. Then there was a loud scream that died in
a weltering gurgle. They heard a splash as something
hit the water and then all was still.
They waited. A peculiar little whistle sounded
three notes from the darkness.
As though reassured, Piper took up his oars.
“That was the last guard,”
Gunnar whispered. “It took a ruby the size
of a sparrow’s egg to get him killed. Oh,
well, blame Grim Hagen. He shouldn’t have
gouged these people so hard ” And
then, to Piper: “You’re bright enough,
I guess, but you don’t know how to row a boat.
Give me the oars.”
He took them and slid them into their
hole-pins. “Now, give Gunnar room.”
He bowed his broad head, leaning forward almost to
his toes. Then he dug the oars into the water
and straightened up and bent backward like a machine.
Noiselessly the oars came up again. He bent forward
and dipped them into the river again. And as
he worked faster he began to count to himself in a
panting whisper: “Huh huh huh huf!”
The boat streaked across the river’s
surface like a water-bug.
At last they slid into some thick
cat-tails. Gunnar got a hand-hold and propelled
them forward until the prow grounded in the shallows.
“This is as far as I can go,”
Piper told them in a sweating voice. “Over
there is the tomb.”
Odin and Gunnar scrambled ashore.
Piper pushed the boat back into the river and was
gone. Three thin sickles of moons were cleaving
their way across the sky. A few unfamiliar stars
were out. There was enough light now for them
to see Maya’s tomb not far away. It seemed
to be fashioned of moonbeams. It was such a perfect
copy of the Taj Mahal that here both death and sleep
were brothers and a nirvana of peace hung
over it in an aura of silver light.
“That Piper is a smart lad,”
Gunnar whispered. “He knows what he wants.
He’ll go far maybe.”
They approached. Odin knew that
four guards were stationed here at all times.
They were all gone. The two went in, Gunnar turned
on a little flash.
Had there been time, Odin might have
grudgingly given Grim Hagen a few kind words for the
work he had done and the tribute he had paid Maya.
The best of a planet’s treasures and art had
been brought here. But all he could see was Maya,
lying upon a golden, diamond-set couch. A silk
embroidered coverlet was drawn over her, and it too
seemed to have been spun from moonbeams. She
looked no older. Odin could see no sign of breath.
But he touched her hand and it was warm. He knelt
beside her.
“Here,” Gunnar handed
him the light. “Hold this while I get busy.
Here now, Nors-King. No blubbering.”
He opened his buckskin bag and took
out the last of its treasures a small hypodermic
case. He filled the hypodermic from a little vial
that glittered in the light of the lamp. “Turn
the light upon her forearm, now,” he instructed.
Gunnar slowly counted to sixty after
he had given her the shot. Maya’s breasts
moved. She sighed and raised a hand to her dark
curls. Then her eyes opened in fear
and wonder as a child opens its eyes in a strange
place.
Then her vision cleared and she recognized them.
“Jack Gunnar ”
she gasped. Then she was in Odin’s arms.
And Gunnar, the strong one, was standing over them sniffling.
It was one of those moments that seem
to last forever. And then it was over and she
drew her hand through his light hair, “What happened?
Where are we? I dreamed the strangest dreams.”
“Never mind,” Odin comforted.
“We will explain later. Can you walk now?”
“Walk? Of course I can
walk.” But when Maya tried to sit up, she
moaned in pain. “My whole body is stiff
and sore. Have I been sick?”
Odin helped her to her feet.
As he did so, hundreds of precious stones that had
been heaped upon the couch rolled unnoticed to the
floor.
Maya winced as she stood up.
Reaching down, she rubbed the calves of her legs and
then stood straight with a little gasp of pain.
“Carry her, Nors-King,”
Gunnar muttered. “The night grows old and
we must make our way to the Nebula.”
Odin lifted her easily. She put
her arms around his neck and clung to him. The
perfume of her hair was as faint as the ghost of autumn
flowers. Her breath was warm and caressing against
his throat.
Then the mausoleum turned into a blinding
glare of lights. Gunnar dropped the flash and
his broadsword shrieked against the scabbard as he
drew it. Odin set Maya’s feet upon the
floor. Still holding her with one arm, he drew
his sword and made ready to stand beside Gunnar.
A dozen cloaked figures came into
the room. The first was Grim Hagen, smiling sardonically.
The others were Brons. The last to enter was carrying
poor Piper’s dripping head by a handful of hair.
“So.” Grim Hagen
bowed. “The Princess awakens. And here
is Prince Charming. And here is the last Neebling
that I shall ever kill. I would like to kill
you very slowly, but I am afraid I do not have time.
Hell is bubbling over in that fair city of mine tonight.
I thought I paid my captains well, but some of them
wanted more. Or they wanted what I could not give
them. It doesn’t matter. Let them
fight it out. We have the Old Ship with the New
Drive. Out there at the edge of space a desperate
people are waiting for me. And now I have Maya.
Gunnar, that was a mean trick. You used the science
that your people stole from us to cheat me of my bride
and my slave.”
Gunnar had heard enough. The
huge sword flashed in a circle as he swung it above
his head with both hands. A Bron stepped forward
and Gunnar slashed him from shoulder to stomach-pit.
Odin thrust Maya to the couch as he came forward to
help.
But Grim Hagen had merely stepped
back. Now he was holding a deadly little tube
in his hand. A cold light winked on and off.
Odin felt his muscles harden as though a hundred charley-horses
had struck him at once. He froze, and out of
the corner of his eye he saw Gunnar standing like a
statue, his sword still upraised, a look of agony upon
his face.
“One more flash and you will
be dead.” Grim Hagen mocked. “But
before you plunge into the night, remember that I
watched you so I could get Maya back. You were
not clever at all, Gunnar. Ato can have these
worlds if he wants them. I have the ship and
Maya. And space is mine to ravage as I please.”
Then, at last, while Maya watched
with fear-struck eyes, the tube flashed once more.
Gunnar and Odin stood there for a second. They
fell like unbalanced things of stone.
A Bron stepped forward and drew his
sword. But Grim Hagen waved him aside as he bent
over the two silent forms. “Put up your
sword,” he said quietly. “They are
dead.”