Bart felt cold. He stirred, moved
his head in drowsy protest; then memory came flooding
back, and in sudden panic he sat up, flinging out
his arms as if to ward away anyone who would lay hands
on him.
“Easy!” said a soothing
voice. A Mentorian not the same Mentorian bent
over him. “We have just entered the gravitational
field of Procyon planet Alpha, Mr. Briscoe. Touchdown
in four hours.”
Bart mumbled an apology.
“Think nothing of it. Quite
a number of people who aren’t used to the cold-sleep
drug suffer from minor lapses of memory. How do
you feel now?”
Bart’s legs were numb and his
hands tingled when he sat up; but his body processes
had been slowed so much by the cold-sleep that he didn’t
even feel hungry; the synthetic jelly he’d eaten
just before going to sleep wasn’t even digested
yet.
When the Mentorian left for another
cabin, Bart looked around, and suddenly felt he would
stifle if he stayed here another minute. He wasn’t
likely to run into Tommy twice in a row, and if he
did, well, Tommy would probably remember the snub
he’d had and stay away from Dave Briscoe.
And he wanted another sight of the stars before
he went into worry and danger.
He went down to the Observation Lounge.
The cosmic dust was brighter out here,
and the constellations looked a little flattened.
Textbook tables came back to him. He had traveled
47 light-years he couldn’t remember
how many billions of miles that was. Even
so, it was only the tiniest hop-skip-and-jump in the
measureless vastness of space.
The ship was streaking toward Procyon,
a sol-type star, bright yellow; the three planets,
Alpha, Beta and Gamma, ringed like Saturn and veiled
in shimmering layers of cloud, swung against the night.
Past them other stars, brighter stars, faraway stars
he would never see, glimmered through the pale dust....
“Hello, Dave. Been space-sick
all this time? Remember me? I met you about
six weeks ago in the lounge down here just
out from Earth.”
Oh, no! Bart turned, with a
mental groan, to face Tommy. “I’ve
been in cold-sleep,” he said. He couldn’t
be rude again.
“What a dull way to face a long
trip!” Tommy said cheerily. “I’ve
enjoyed every minute of it myself.”
It was hard for Bart to realize that,
for Tommy, their meeting had been six weeks ago.
It all seemed dreamlike. The closer he came to
it, the less he could realize that in a few hours
he’d be getting off on a strange world, with
only the strange name Raynor Three as a guide.
He felt terribly alone, and having Tommy close at
hand helped, even though Tommy didn’t know he
was helping.
“Maybe I should have stayed awake.”
“You should,” Tommy said.
“I only slept for a couple of hours at each
warp-drive shift. We had a day-long stopover at
Sirius Eighteen, and I took a tour of the planet.
And I’ve spent a lot of time down here, just
star-gazing not that it did me much good.
Which one is Antares? How do you tell it from
Aldebaran? I’m always getting them mixed
up.”
Bart pointed. “Aldebaran that’s
the big red one there,” he said. “Think
of the constellation Taurus as a necklace, with Aldebaran
hanging from it like a locket. Antares is much
further down in the sky, in relation to the arbitrary
sidereal axis, and it’s a deeper red. Like
a burning coal, while Aldebaran is like a ruby
He broke off in mid-word, realizing
that Tommy was gazing at him in a mixture of triumph
and consternation. Too late, Bart realized he
had been tricked. Studying for an exam, the year
before, he had explained the difference between the
two red stars in almost the same words.
“Bart,” Tommy said in
a whisper, “I knew it had to be you. Why
didn’t you tell me, fella?”
Bart felt himself start to smile,
but it only stretched his mouth. He said, very
low, “Don’t say my name out loud Tom.
I’m in terrible trouble.”
“Why didn’t you tell me? What’s
a friend for?”
“We can’t talk here.
And all the cabins are wired for sound in case somebody
stops breathing, or has a heart attack in space,”
Bart said, glancing around.
They went and stood at the very foot
of the quartz window, seeming to tread the brink of
a dizzying gulf of cosmic space, and talked in low
tones while Alpha and Beta and Gamma swelled like blown-up
balloons in the port.
Tommy listened, almost incredulous.
“And you’re hoping to find your father,
with no more information than that? It’s
a big universe,” he said, waving at the gulf
of stars. “The Lhari ships, according to
the little tourist pamphlet they gave me, touch down
at nine hundred and twenty-two different stars in
this galaxy!”
Bart visibly winced, and Tommy urged,
“Come to Capella with me. You can stay
with my family as long as you want to, and appeal to
the Interplanet authority to find your father.
They’d protect him against the Lhari, surely.
You can’t chase all over the galaxy playing
interplanetary spy all by yourself, Bart!”
But Briscoe had deliberately gone
to his death, to give Bart the chance to get away.
He wouldn’t have died to send Bart into a trap
he could easily have sprung on Earth.
“Thanks, Tommy. But I’ve got to play
it my way.”
Tommy said firmly, “Count me
in then. My ticket has stopover privileges.
I’ll get off at Procyon with you.”
It was a temptation to
have a friend at his back. He put his hand on
Tommy’s shoulder, grateful beyond words.
But fresh horror seized him as he remembered the horrible
puddle of melted robotcab with Briscoe somewhere in
the residue. Protoplasm residue enough for two bodies.
He couldn’t let Tommy face that.
“Tommy, I appreciate that, believe
me. But if I did find my father and his friends,
I don’t want anyone tracing me. You’d
only make the danger worse. The best thing you
can do is stay out of it.”
Tommy faced him squarely. “One
thing’s for sure. I’m not going to
let you go off and never know whether you’re
alive or dead.”
“I’ll try to get a message
to you,” Bart said, “if I can. But
whatever happens, Tommy, stay with the ship and go
on to Capella. It’s the one thing you can
do to help me.”
A warning bell rang in the ship.
He broke sharply away from Tommy, saying over his
shoulder, “It’s all you can do to help,
Tom. Do it please? Just stay
clear?”
Tommy reached out and caught his arm.
“Okay,” he said reluctantly, “I
will. But you be careful,” he added fiercely.
“You hear me? And if I don’t hear
from you in some reasonable time, I’ll raise
a stink from here to Vega!”
Bart broke away and ran. He was
afraid, if he didn’t, he’d break up again.
He closed the cabin door behind him, trying to calm
down so that the Mentorian steward, coming to strap
him in for deceleration, wouldn’t see how upset
he was. He was going to need all his nerve.
He went through another decontamination
chamber, and finally moved, with a line of passengers,
out of the yawning airlock, under the strange sun,
into the strange world.
At first sight it was a disappointment.
It was a Lhari spaceport that lay before him, to all
appearances identical with the one on Earth:
sloping glass ramps, tall colorless pylons, a skyscraper
terminus crowded with men of all planets. But
the sun overhead was brilliant and clear gold, the
shadows sharp and violet on the spaceport floor.
Behind the confines of the spaceport he could see
the ridges of tall hills and unfamiliarly colored
trees. He longed to explore them, but he got a
grip on his imagination, surrendering his ticket stub
and false papers to the Lhari and Mentorian interpreter
who guarded the ramp.
The Lhari said to the Mentorian, in
the Lhari language, “Keep him for questioning
but don’t tell him why.” Bart felt
a cold chill icing his spine. This was it.
The Mentorian said briefly, “We
wish to check on the proper antibody component for
Aldebaran natives. There will be a delay of about
thirty minutes. Will you kindly wait in this
room here?”
The room was comfortable, furnished
with chairs and a vision-screen with some colorful
story moving on it, small bright figures in capes,
curious beasts racing across an unusual veldt; but
Bart paced the floor restlessly. There were two
doors in the room. Through one of them, he had
been admitted; he could see, through the glass door,
the silhouette of the Mentorian outside. The
other door was opaque, and marked in large letters:
DANGER HUMANS MUST NOT
PASS WITHOUT SPECIAL LENSES TYPE X.
ORDINARY SPACE LENSES
WILL NOT SUFFICE DANGER! LHARI OPENING!
ADJUST X LENSES BEFORE
OPENING!
Bart read the sign again. Well,
that was no way out, for sure! He had
heard that the Lhari sun was almost 500 times as bright
as Earth’s. The Mentorians alone, among
humans, could endure Lhari lights he supposed
the warning was for ordinary spaceport workers.
A sudden, rather desperate plan occurred
to Bart. He didn’t know how much light
he could tolerate he’d never
been on Mentor but he had inherited
some of his mother’s tolerance for light.
And blindness would be better than being burned down
with an energon-gun! He went hesitantly toward
the door, and pushed it open.
His eyes exploded into pain; automatically
his hands went up to shield them. Light, light he
had never known such cruelly glowing light. Even
through the lids there was pain and red afterimages;
but after a moment, opening them a slit, he found
that he could see, and made out other doors, glass
ramps, pale Lhari figures coming and going. But
for the moment he was alone in the long corridor beyond
which he could see the glass ramps.
Nearby, a door opened into a small
office with glass walls; on a peg, one of the silky
metallic cloaks worn by Mentorians doing spaceport
work was hanging. On an impulse, Bart caught
it up and flung it around his shoulders.
It felt cool and soft, and the hood
shielded his eyes a little. The ramp leading
down to what he hoped was street level was terribly
steep and there were no steps. Bart eased himself
over the top of the ramp and let go. He whooshed
down the slick surface on the flat of his back, feeling
the metal of the cloak heat with the friction, and
came to a breathless jarring stop at the bottom.
Whew, what a slide! Three stories, at least!
But there was a door, and outside the door, maybe,
safety.
A voice hailed him, in Lhari. “You, there!”
Bart could see well now. He made
out the form of a Lhari, only a colorless blob in
the intense light.
“You people know better than
to come back here without glasses. Do you want
to be blinded, my friend?” He actually sounded
kind and concerned. Bart tensed, his heart pounding.
Now that he was caught, could he bluff his way out?
He hadn’t actually spoken the Lhari language
in years, though his mother had taught it to him when
he was young enough to learn it without a trace of
accent.
Well, he must try. “Margil
sent me to check,” he improvised quickly.
“They were holding someone for questioning, and
he seems to have gotten away somehow, so I wanted
to make sure he didn’t come through here.”
“What is the matter that one
man can give us all the slip this way?” the
Lhari said curiously. “Well, one thing is
sure, he’s Vegan or Solarian or Capellan, one
of the dim-star people. If he comes through here,
we’ll catch him easily enough while he’s
stumbling around half blind. You know that you
shouldn’t stay long.” He gestured.
“Out this way and don’t come
back without special lenses.”
Bart nodded, jerking the cloak around
his shoulders, forcing himself not to break into a
run as he stepped through the door the Lhari indicated.
It closed behind him. Bart blinked, feeling as
if he had stepped into pitch darkness. Only slowly
did his eyes adapt and he became aware that he was
standing in a city street, in the full glow of Procyon
sunlight, and apparently outside the Lhari spaceport
entirely.
He’d better get to cover!
He took off the Mentorian cloak, thrust it under his
arm. He raised his eyes, which were adjusting
to ordinary light again, and stopped dead.
Just across the street was a long,
low, rainbow colored building. And the letters Bart
blinked, thinking his eyes deceived him spelled
out:
EIGHT COLORS TRANSSHIPPING
CORPORATION
CARGO, PASSENGERS, MESSAGES,
EXPRESS
A. RAYNOR ONE, MANAGER