Its coming had been observed.
Men wearing the uniforms of the Martian army dashed
out, their pistols ready. A man dropped out of
a gaping hole in the ship’s skin, sat down unsteadily.
Others dribbled out.
“Crazy man in there!”
one of them shouted. “Look out, he’s
murderous!” The pistols came up. The soldiers
began to close in, showing a certain professional
eagerness.
They were perhaps within ten feet
when a metal plate, sheared off from the pilot’s
cabin in the fall, lifted up. Barely visible under
it was a pair of large, running feet. One soldier,
trying to oppose it with his hands, was knocked senseless
and bleeding. He might as well have tried to
stop an oncoming rocket ship.
Neuro-pistols, bearing from every
side, spanged briskly. They partly neutralized
one another. Their charges were partly reflected
by the metal and partly absorbed by Tolto’s
great bulk. He was thoroughly confused now.
Every way he looked in this glaring wilderness of desert
and rocks were enemies.
But there! An opening loomed,
cool and dark. The fortress entrance. Tolto
dashed into it. There was the sharp challenge
of a guard, unanswered; the futile hiss of a weapon.
The improvised shield wedged on a
narrowing stairway. Tolto let it stick, ran up
alone. The stairway went round and round, climbing
ever higher. The fugitive’s lungs were
bursting.
At last he came to an airlock.
He did not know how to operate it, so smashed through.
There was no rush of air, because the pressure had
already been equalized in the rush to the wreck at
ground level. Panting, listening for pursuers,
Tolto looked around.
He found himself on a circular roof,
bare except for the airlock and a number of upright
posts, whitened by the Sun.
It was some moments before he saw
the unconscious figure of a man lying on the very
edge of the lofty tower on which he was standing a
man naked and blackened. He was lying on his face,
one arm and one foot hanging over space as though
he had fallen unconscious at the very edge of the
abyss.
Tolto collected his excited wits.
This, at least was no enemy. His enemies were
in power here. This must be a victim, a possible
ally.
The man was stirring. The overhanging
arm was feebly trying to grasp something. If
he were to roll over
He did not have time. Tolto dragged
him in to the safety of the airlock opening, where
he could watch.
There were sounds of pursuit, faint and cautious.
Tolto grinned at the naked stranger.
“Who are you, little bug?” he asked.
Sime Hemingway tried to tell him but
his swollen tongue would not behave. Instead,
he waved in the general direction of the Sun.
Tolto understood. “From Earth? Good
guy, prob’ly. Want this dingus?”
Sime was able to take the neuro-pistol.
He knew what was expected of him, and strove to collect
his faculties so he could obey orders. He crawled
a little way into the lock, where he could be in comparative
darkness, setting the little focalizer wheel at the
side of the pistol for maximum concentration.
Such a beam would require good aiming, being narrow,
but if it touched a vital center would be infallibly
fatal.
Meanwhile Tolto appraised one of the
posts on the roof. It was firmly set in masonry,
but he found he could loosen it a little by shaking
it. Presently he had it uprooted. It made
a splendid battering ram, a war club fit for a giant
such as he.
“Here they come!” Sime
croaked, and, peering around a corner, took careful
aim at the foremost attacker. At the first whispering
impact of the beam the Martian sprawled, dead.
The soldiers were caught at a disadvantage.
They were expecting club or fist, but not the neuro-beam.
Nevertheless Sime had no more easy opportunities.
The Martians flung themselves down behind the bulge
of the curved stairway, and the air became acrid under
the malignant neuro-beams.
None of them reached Sime directly,
but the stone walls reflected them to some extent,
and even under their greatly weakened power he become
cold and sick.
The situation was by no means to his
liking. There were other weapons to be reckoned
with, and he tried to keep consciousness from slipping
away from him. When at last his breathing became
easier and his diaphragm moved without pain, Sime
knew that danger was greatest. For this relief
meant that the Martians had withdrawn down the stairway.
“Good-by, boys!” he thought,
as he sprinted up into the comparative safety of the
open. He motioned to Tolto, who stood hopefully
waiting with his great war club, to stand clear.
There it was! Sime saw the faint
phosphorescent reflection against the stone where
the stairway curved. He did not wait to see the
tiny pellet of the atomic bomb floating up, but threw
himself flat on the roof, tugging at Tolto, who understood
and followed suit.
Even lying prone, and below the edge
of the explosion cone, they were nearly blown off
the roof. Though no larger than a pinhead, the
bomb had the power of a thousand times its weight
in fulminate of mercury. When the rain of small
stones and dust had subsided, they rubbed their eyes
and saw that the airlock was no more. In its place
was a shallow pit, ending with the top of the battered
stairway.
“Down after ’em!”
Sime husked out of a raw throat. “Before
they think it’s safe to come after us!”
He led the way, the giant after him,
carrying his club and a huge rock fragment. Sime
saw a cautious peering head, and that Martian died
instantly. Then they were around the bend and
in the middle of a fight. Sime deflected a hand
that held a pistol, and its beam killed another Martian
who was about to let Tolto have it at close range.
There was a light-wand affixed to
the wall a trifle further down. Tolto waded through
the ruck of smaller men, tore it from its socket and
hurled it up the stairs. A short sword bit into
Sime’s shoulder, but there was no force in the
stroke, for in that instant Sime paralyzed his enemy’s
heart with the beam.
An officer barked a command, and the
spang of neuro-beams ceased, to be followed by the
lethal rustling of swords. The passage was too
crowded for the neuro-pistols, giving the outnumbered
prisoners the advantage.
Tolto could not swing his club, but
he hurled it, like a battering ram, into the middle
of twenty or twenty-five of the garrison who were
still below him on the steps, trying to get closer.
The heavy timber cleared a lane and the two stumbled
down over crushed bodies. Sime was now the only
one to use his pistol, for he had no friends there
to kill accidentally.
The Martians, were putting up a game
battle. They were heirs to the traditions and
the spirit of Earth’s best fighting men.
Science had given them deadly and powerful weapons
that could kill over long distances, but they preferred
to get close to their adversaries.
But Tolto was a Martian too.
He had seized a sword from a dying hand and was wielding
it with aptitude and power. No formal thrust and
parry for him, but merely a savage sweep that sent
swords, arms and heads flying indiscriminately.
Sime, following him, his neuro hissing
death from side to side, marveled at his ferocity.
He saw a bare-bodied, bleeding fighter leap to Tolto’s
back, his sword poised for a downward stab for the
jugular. Kicking viciously at the man who was
just then coming at him, Sime tried to bring Tolto’s
would-be killer down. But Tolto himself attended
to him, dashing him to his death with the elbow of
his sword arm.
That diversion nearly cost Sime his
life. Fortunately for him he tripped, and the
sword-thrust that was to disembowel him merely gashed
his side. Sime was beginning to enjoy the fight.
The exercise was loosening up his cramped muscles,
and the shaky feeling due to the reflected beams of
the neuro-pistols was leaving him.
Tolto had smashed down the light-wands
as they fought their way down the steps, so that now
they were in almost complete darkness. One could
still see the occasional rise and fall of a glinting
sword and the dark shadow of an arm or head.
They were almost clear when Tolto received his first
serious wound, a stab in the abdomen that let out a
sticky stream of blood.
There was an interval of silence,
broken only by the groans of the wounded. The
air was thick with the odor of raw blood and pungent
with ozone. They had fought their way down perhaps
two hundred feet of the stairway, and due to its curve
they could see neither top nor bottom.
“I’m stuck!” Tolto muttered.
“Bad?” Sime edged to his
side, stepping, in the darkness, on the body of the
man who had succeeded in delivering that sword-stroke
before Tolto’s own blade had cleft him.
He felt the edges of the wound, but in the darkness
could not tell how serious it was.
“Feel sick? Any retching?” he croaked
anxiously.
“Tolto’s all right,” the giant assured
him. “I just said I was stuck.”
Sime managed to make a hurried bandage
out of the slashed fragment of Tolto’s blouse,
and again they resumed their descent. Strangely,
their enemies further up made no move to attack, although
there were many left alive.
Sime laid his hand on Tolto’s arm.
“Something wrong here.
There’s somebody at the bottom of the steps,
and the fellows above want to give him elbow room.
Well, we’ll soon see!”
They crawled up a short distance,
began to haul inert bodies down, dragging them as
far as the last curve, until they had formed a barricade
of nineteen or twenty of their late enemies. It
was unpleasant work, but justified by following events.
“Can you just see the loom of it?” Sime
asked.
“Yes.”
“Watch!”
Sime felt about until he found a small
fragment broken from the stone steps. Keeping
well within the shelter of the convex wall, he crept
toward the bend.
“Dig your fingers into a joint
and hold on,” he instructed Tolto, locating
a crack for himself. Then he tossed the fragment
gently over the barricade of bodies.
There was the click of its fall, and
a moment later things seemed to turn around.
Clinging like leeches to the wall, the two men resisted
the warped gravitational drag that would have flung
them down upon their waiting enemies below. They
seemed to be hanging in a well. Sime had a confused
impression of piled-up bodies hurtling down down.
Thereafter everything was normal again,
and they were running down the normal steps.
Both had swords in their hands now, and within a hundred
feet they were upon the “gravitorser” gun.
It was a rather cumbersome weapon, comprising a great
deal of electrical apparatus, with a D-solenoid surmounting,
whose object was to twist the normal lines of gravitation.
It was intended for large-scale operations in the open;
the few men remaining below had tried a rather risky
experiment, for they might have brought the whole
fortress down upon them. Now they were untangling
themselves from the corpses that had flown at them
as iron flies to a magnet.
Sime and Tolto struck them like a
tempest. The light was good and the battle short
and sweet. Tolto was slowed up a little, but was
irresistible, nevertheless. There is nothing surprising
about the seeming immunity of a reckless man in battle.
He fights by instinct, taking short-cuts that are
not as dangerous as they look because the enemy is
not expecting them. So Sime and Tolto fought their
way down, until there was no one able to oppose them.
Sime pressed a neuro-pistol into Tolto’s
hand, warned him to sweep the stairs with it, while
he coursed around for some of the pellet bombs.
He found them, and two of them closed that avenue of
attack with a mass of jumbled ruins.
Now they had a breathing spell.
A combination of blind luck and foolhardiness had
given them temporary possession of this desert outpost.
That was their pawn in the game of life and death the
chance to get back and hide among the millions in
the cities of the industrial belt. Certain routine
precautions had to be taken. They destroyed the
radio apparatus, picked a few days supply of food,
threw a couple more bombs and made a search for means
of transportation: for there was a desert wilderness
of four or five hundred miles to be traversed.
They discovered the egg-shaped hull
of an enclosed levitator car in the covered courtyard.
It was distinguished by the orange and green stripes
which are the Martian army standard. Like all
army equipment, it was in excellent condition.
The hydrogen gages showed a full supply of fuel.
“We’re getting the breaks,”
Sime crowed to Tolto at they surfeited themselves
with water before starting. He had covered his
nakedness with an ill-fitting fatigue suit.
“Yeh,” Tolto agreed, referring
to their numerous wounds with sly humor: “lots
of ’em.”
Nevertheless, they felt pretty happy
when the levitator screws took up their melancholy
whine. The rocky valley floor dropped away, and
the windowless stone walls of the fortress slid down
past them. Now they were even with the top.
Through the ports they could see a
group of their late adversaries on the roof, standing
in strained attitudes. Their immobility was explained
a moment later by an electric blue spark from something
in the shadow of their bodies.
Instantly Sime, who was at the controls,
threw her hard-a-port, dived, looped up. The
first explosion of the tiny projectile tossed them
up like a monstrous wave, allowed them to drop sickeningly.
The exhaust tubes poured out a dense haze as Sime
sought for distance. But they were following
him. He was five miles away when they finally
got the range. The vessel was jarred as if it
had hit a rock. One of the atomic pellets had
exploded within a few feet of it. There was a
dismaying lurch. Sime picked himself up from the
floor and dashed to the controls.
“Everything’s all right!” he shouted
excitedly.
Tolto, however, was listening anxiously.
There was a sharp crackling at the stern, where, in
a narrow space, the reaction motors provided the forward
motive power. In moments of excitement he referred
to himself in the third person. He did so now.
“Tolto’s afraid that something’s
wrong! Smells hot, too!”
“Here, take the wheel!”
Sime ordered. The explosions of the shells were
becoming less dangerous; they were getting too far
away.
Sime burned his hand opening the narrow
door. The paint was already blistering off it.
The trouble was immediately apparent. One of the
integrator chambers, in which atomic hydrogen was integrated
to form atomic iron and calcium (sometimes called
the Michelson effect), had sprung a leak. The
heat escaping into the little room was not the comparatively
negligible heat of burning hydrogen, but the cosmic
energy of matter in creation. Sime slammed the
door. The radiated light was so intense that
it stung even his hardened skin.
Looking through the rear range-finding
periscope, he saw that they were about twenty miles
from the fort. They had ceased firing.
“Won’t be long, Tolto,”
he said, taking over the controls himself again, “before
our tail’s going to drop off. Got to make
time.”
It was, in fact, about ten minutes
when, without warning, their nose dropped.
“Tail’s gone!” Sime announced.
Their momentum, under the destructive
rate of speed they had been making, was great, and
as the levitators, with independent power supply,
still held them up, Sime continued to steer a course
for the twin cities of Tarog. He was aided by
a light breeze, and the Sun was nearing the western
horizon by the time their rate of motion had become
negligible.
“Might at well land,”
Sime decided. “Conserve fuel. If we
get a favorable wind to-morrow we can go up and drift
with it.”
But Tolto, who had been narrowly scanning
the terrain, advised continuing a little longer.
“I thought I saw a little smoke,
a few miles ahead. Seems to be gone now.
But we’re still drifting slow.”
Sime searched the indicated spot in
the ground glass of the forward magnifying periscope.
After a few minutes he discovered a blackened spot
which might be the remains of a fire. It was surrounded
by huge blocks of orange rock, the igneous rock which
is the outstanding feature of the Martian desert landscape.
“Looks like he built the fire
around there so nobody on the same level would see
him,” he hazarded. He set the altitude control
to fifty feet. There was part of the globular
skeleton of a desert hog in the fire; whoever had
built it had dined most satisfyingly not long before,
and as the fugitives looked their stomachs contracted
painfully.
“I could eat a whole one of
them myself,” Tolto said wistfully.
The urge to descend here was strong
upon Sime too. He realized that the fire might
have been made by some dangerous criminal a
fugitive from justice; but dangerous men are no novelty
to the I. F. P. On the other hand, there was a possibility
that it was just some political offender, driven into
the desert by persecution. Or a prospector.
At any rate, he would have food, or would know where
it could be procured.
They had drifted some hundreds of
yards farther and the ground was getting constantly
more broken, so the best time to land was as soon
as possible. Slowly the little ship settled, scraped
on a rock and arrested its slight forward motion,
crunching solidly in the stony soil.
“Take a neuro, Tolto,”
Sime advised. “Whoever’s here, if
he or they are dangerous, we won’t get close
enough to touch ’em with a sword.”
Tolto took the weapon without a word.
They locked the door of the ship. Men have been
marooned for neglecting that little precaution.
They walked in a spiral course, making
an ever-widening circle, looking sharply from left
to right. Presently they came to the remains
of the fire. The ashes were hotter than the ground,
proving that they had been recently made.
But nowhere was there any sign of
men. They shouted, but only weird echoes answered.
The ship was now out of sight, and
solitude pressed upon them. They felt an uneasy
desire to get within comfortable constricting walls.
They found the ship without difficulty.
“Well, whoever it was has lammed,”
Sime concluded. “Tolto, you climb on top
of that rock. Watch me. If you see anybody
after me, let ’em have it. I’m going
to see if I can scare up a desert hog somewhere.”
Neither had stirred from his place,
however, before they were suddenly stricken to the
ground. They felt the familiar sensation of cold
and suffocation the paralysis caused by
a diffused beam from a neuro-pistol. Tolto was
a little slower to fall, but he only lasted a second
longer. They knew that someone was taking the
weapons out of their helpless hands. Then life
returned.
“Get up,” said a languid
voice back of them, “and let’s have a look
at the looks of ye.”