Sime breakfasted on one of the juicy
Martian tropical pears, and as he dug into the luscious
fruit with his spoon he looked about the spacious
dining hall, filled with wide-eyed tourists on their
first trip to Mars, blissful and oblivious honeymooners,
and a sprinkling of local residents and officials.
Through broad windows of thick glass
(for on Mars many buildings maintain an atmospheric
pressure somewhat higher than the normal outside pressure)
could be seen the north banks of the canal, teeming
with swift pleasure boats and heavily loaded work barges.
Down the long terraces strolled hundreds of people,
dressed in garments of vivid colors and sheer materials
suitable to the hot and cloudless days. Brilliant
insects floated on wide diaphanous wings, waiting to
pounce on the opening blossoms.
But the terrestrial agent felt that
in this scene of luxury there was a menace. Out
of sight, but instantly available, were frightful
engines of destruction, waiting to be mobilized against
the Earth branch of the human race. And on that
distant green planet were people much like these,
unconscious still of the butchery into which they
were being deftly maneuvered by calculating psychologists,
expert war-makers.
His meal completed, Sime sauntered
out into the wide, clean streets of North Tarog.
He purchased a desert unionall suit, proof against
the heat of day and cold of night, and a wide-brimmed
Martian pith helmet. Hailing a taxi, he relaxed
comfortably in the cushions.
“Nabar mine,” he told the driver.
The driver nosed the vehicle up, over
the domed roofs of the city and over the harsh desert
landscape. The rounded prow cut through the thin
air with a faint whistling, and the fair cultivated
area along the canal was soon lost to sight.
After half an hour the metal mine
sheds grew out of the horizon. But even from
a distance of several miles Sime could see that everything
was not as it should be. There were no moving
white specks of the laborers’ white fatigue
uniforms against the brown rocks, and no clouds of
dust from the borium refuse pile.
The levitator screws of the taxi sank
from their high whine to a groan, and the wheels came
to the ground before the company office. A man
in the Martian army uniform came out. His beetle-browed
face was truculent, and his hand rested on the hilt
of his neuro-pistol.
“No visitors allowed!” snapped the guard.
“I’m not exactly a visitor,”
Sime objected, but making no move to get out of the
taxi. “I’m an engineer sent here by
the board of directors to see why the output of this
mine has dropped. Where’s Mr. Murray?”
“All settled!” the guard
retorted. “Murray’s in jail for mismanagement
of planetary resources, and the mine’s been expropriated
to the government. Now, you off!”
The driver needed no further order
from his fare. The taxi leaped into the air and
tore back toward the city. It was clear that the
military rules of Mars brooked no nonsense from the
civilian population, and that the latter were well
aware of it.
“Fast work!” Sime said
to himself with grudging admiration. Murray was
a trusted agent of the terrestrial government.
It was he who had first uncovered the war cabal.
Sime knew his face well from the stereoscopic service
record a bald, placid man of about forty,
a bonafide engineer, a spy with an unbroken record
of success, until now. And a fighter who asked
no odds, who could manage very well on less than an
even break. Well, he was up against something
now.
They passed the line of shield-ray
projectors, North Tarog’s first line of defense
against an attack of space, hovered over the teeming
streets and parks, and settled on the pavement at the
Hotel of the Republic. Sime wanted to go to his
room and think things over.
From the concealment of a doorway
an officer with a squad of soldiers came up quickly.
“You are under arrest!”
said the officer, placing, his hand on Sime’s
shoulder, while the soldiers rested their hands on
their neuro-pistols.
“Would it be asking too much
to inquire on what charge?” Sime asked politely.
“Military arrests do not require
the filing of charges,” the officer explained
stiffly. “Come out of there now, Mr. Hemingway.”
“I demand to see the terrestrial
consul,” Sime said, getting out.
“How about my fare?” asked the taxi-driver.
Sime put his hand into his pocket,
where he kept a roll of interplanetary script; but
the officer restrained him.
“Never mind now,” he said
ironically. “You are a guest of the government.”
Then to the driver he added:
“Get on, now! Get on!
File your claim at the divisional office.”
The driver departed, outwardly meek
before the power of the military, and Sime was hustled
into an official car. He had little hope that
his demand to see the terrestrial consul would be
complied with, and this opinion was verified when
the car rose into the air and sped over the waters
of the canal to South Tarog. It did not pause
when it came over the military camps there the
massive ordnance depots in which were stored new and
improved killing tools that had long been idle in that
irksome interplanetary peace.
They flew on, over the desert, until
the Gray Mountains loomed on the horizon. On,
over the tumbled rocks, interspersed with the strange
red thorny vegetation common in the Martian desert.
Far below them, in a ravine, a cylindrical
building was now visible, and toward this the car
began to drop. It landed on a level space before
the structure. A sliding gate opened, and the
car wheeled into a sort of courtyard, protected from
the cold of night by an arching roof of glass.
Sime was hustled out and led into
an office located on the lower floor of the fortification,
or whatever the structure was.
As he saw the man who sat at the desk
he gave a startled explanation.
“Colonel Barkins!”
The elderly, white-haired man smiled.
He brushed back his hair with a characteristic gesture,
and his twinkling blue eyes bored into those of the
I. F. P. special officer. The colonel wore the
regular uniform of the service; his little skullcap,
with the conventionalized sun symbol denoting his
rank, was on the table before him. He put out
his lean, strong hand.
“Surprised to see me, eh, Hemingway?”
he inquired pleasantly.
Sime managed an awkward salute.
“I don’t quite understand, sir. You
gave me my instructions at the Philadelphia space port
just before I made the Pleadisia. She’s
the fastest passenger liner in the solar system:
I’ve barely landed here, and it seems you got
here before me. It don’t seem right!”
Sime watched the colonel narrowly,
a vague suspicion in his mind, and he thought he saw
a slight flicker in the man’s eye when Sime spoke.
But the colonel answered smoothly,
with a hint of reproof.
“Never mind questioning me now,
Hemingway. The mission is important. I want
to know if you remember every detail of what I told
you.” He nodded to the men, and they filed
out of the room. “Repeat your orders.”
“Nothing doing, Colonel!”
Sime replied promptly and respectfully. “In
fact, Colonel, you can go to hell! This is the
first time that a man of the I. F. P. has turned traitor,
and if your men hadn’t so thoughtfully taken
my neuro I’d be pleased to finish you right now!”
“But you observe I have a neuro
in my hand,” remarked the colonel pleasantly,
“and so you will remain standing where you are.”
So saying, he slipped off the white
wig he was wearing, wiped his face so that the brown
powder came off, and sat, obviously pleased with the
success of his masquerade, useless though it was.
He was a typical Martian, dark, sleek-haired, coral-skinned.
“I hate to send a man to his
death mystified,” said the Martian after a moment,
“so I’ll explain that I am Scar Balta!”
“Scar Balta!”
“You’ve heard of me?”
“Uh yes and no,”
Sime suddenly remembered the girl of the evening before the
imperious little Martian. She had warned him of
Scar Balta.
“If I do say it,” said
the Martian, “I am the best impersonator in the
service of the interests I represent. I did not
expect to get information of great value from you,
but we do not neglect even the most unpromising leads.”
He pressed a button; two Martian soldiers
answered promptly.
“Take this man to the cell,”
Balta ordered. “Provide him with writing
materials so that he can write a last message to his
family. In the morning take him to the end of
the ravine and finish him with your short sword.”
“Yes, Colonel!”
“The fellow’s a colonel, anyway,”
Sime thought as they led him away.
They led him downward, along a straight
corridor that evidently went far beyond the boundaries
of the ravine fortress. In places the walls,
adequately lit by the glow-wands the guards carried,
were plainly cut out of the solid rock; in others
they were masonry, as though the channel were passing
through pockets of earth; or the thought
electrified him through faults or natural
caverns.
At last they came to the end.
One of the guards unlocked a metal door, motioned
his prisoner into the prison cell. A light-wand,
badly run down and feeble, with only a few active
cells left, gave the only light. As the door
slammed behind him, Sime took in the depressing scene.
The stone walls were mildewed, leprous.
The only ventilation was through small holes in the
door. Chains, fastened to huge staples in the
uneven stone floor, with smooth metal wrist and ankle
cuffs, were spaced at regular intervals, and musty
piles of canal rushes showed where some forgotten
prisoner had dragged out his melancholy last days.
Sime was glad they had not chained him down. Probably
didn’t consider it necessary unless there were
many prisoners, who might rush the guards.
“Ho, there, sojer!”
The voice was startling, so hearty
and natural in this sad place. Sime saw something
coming out of a far corner. It was a man in the
blouse and trousers of civilian wear; a bald and good-natured
man, with a shocking growth of beard.
“Murray’s the name,”
said this apparition with mock ceremony. “And
you?”
“I’m Hemingway, Sime Hemingway.
Sergeant Sime Hemingway, to be exact. Suppose
you’d like to hear my orders?”
“I don’t get you,” said Murray,
shaking hands.
“I mean,” Sime explained
elaborately, “that I’d like to know if
you’re Scar Balta, or really Murray, as you
say you are.”
The other laughed.
“I’m Murray, all right.
Feel this scalp. Natural, ain’t it?
That’s one thing Balta won’t do shave
off his hair. Too vain. He’d hate to
have the Princess Sira see him that way. Ever
hear of her? Say, she’s a raving beauty.
This Balta’d like to be elected planetary president,
see to succeed Wilcox, who has bigger plans.
There’s always been a strong sentiment for the
old monarchy, anyway. The oligarchy never did
go big. Follow me?”
“Yeh; go on.”
“Well, this Princess Sira has
ideas. She wouldn’t mind sitting on the
throne again. Her great-great-grandpa was jobbed
and murdered, and the nobles who did it formed a closed
corporation and called it a republican government.
So Sira started holding audiences, and gained a lot
of power. Among the people even among
some of the nobles.
“Get the idea? Scar Balta
is one of the electors. If he married Sira he’d
have the backing of the monarchists, and of course
he’s done a lot for the bosses. They’d
elect him to head off the monarchists, anyway.
Then heigh-ho for a war with the Earth, to kill off
a lot of the kickers and soft pickins in
a lot of ways. Neat, huh?”
“Very neat!” Sime assented
drily. “But we won’t live to see it.
Anyway, I won’t. They’re going to
bump me off in the morning.”
“As they have a lot of our men,”
Murray agreed. “But they won’t do
it in the morning. Or for several days.
Look here!”
He held up his hand. On the back
of it was what appeared to be a boil.
“But it isn’t a boil,”
Murray explained. “That was done by a stream
of water, fine as a needle, under a thousand pounds
pressure. They held it there for a minute at
a time I don’t know how many times,
because I keeled over. Any time I was willing
to give them the information they wanted they’d
turn it off. Wasn’t important info, either.
But what is it to them, how much they make me suffer
for a trifle?”
Sime couldn’t help the lump
that rose in his throat. Men like Murray certainly
justified the world’s faith in the service.
“Listen, old man,” Sime
said in a low voice, “out in the corridor ”
But Murray squeezed his hand warningly,
pulled him to the floor.
“Might as well get some sleep,”
the old man said in ordinary tones. “Plenty
cool here. Let’s lie together.”
He kept his hold on Sime’s wrist,
and, by alternately squeezing and releasing, began
to talk in a silent telegraphic code.
“Don’t say anything of
importance,” he spelled out. “They
have mikes in here to pick up all we say. Probably
infra-red telenses too, so they can see what we do.”
So Sime told him, as they huddled
together in simulated sleep, about the walled passages,
and they speculated on the possibility of felling
the guards and breaking their way to freedom through
some underground cavern. But at last they slept
soundly to await the tortures of the next morning.