DAWN WAS HINTED at with a light in the east, and still the
Queen’s beacon had not changed its hue. The watchers did not
expect it to now. Something had gone wrong—Rip had never
reached the ship.
Unable to stand inaction longer, Dane crept from the improvised
shelter and started along the cliff on which they had set up their
lookout. It formed a wall between the entrances to two of the
tongue-shaped valleys—the one in which Wilcox and Kosti were
encamped, the other unknown territory.
Dane sighted a trickle of stream in the second. The presence of
water heralded, or had heralded, other life in his experience of
Limbo. And here and now that pattern held. For he counted ten of
the small checkerboard spice fields.
But this time the fields were not deserted. Two of the globe
creatures worked among the plants. They stirred the ground about
the roots of the spice ferns with their thread like tentacles,
their round backs bobbing up and down as they moved.
Then both of them stood upright. Since they lacked any
discernible heads or features, it was difficult for Dane to guess
what they were doing. But their general attitude suggested they
were either listening or watching.
Three more of the globes came noiselessly into sight. Between
two of them swung a pole on which was tied the limp body of an
animal about the size of a cat. No audible greeting passed between
the hunters and the farmers. But they gathered in a group, dropping
the pole. Through the glasses Dane saw that their finger tentacles
interlocked from globe to globe until they formed a circle.
“Sooo—” The words hissed out of the early
morning murk and Dane, who had been absorbed in the scene below, gave a
start, as Mura’s hand closed on his shoulder.
“There is a crawler coming this way—” the
steward whispered.
Once more the group of globes had an aura of expectancy. They
scattered, moving with a speed which surprised the Terrans. In
seconds they had taken cover, leaving the fields, the stream bank
deserted.
The crunch of treads on loose stone and gravel was clear to hear
as a vehicle crept into the vision range of the two on the cliff.
Just as Kamil had been the first to discover, the crawler was not
the usual type favoured by Federation men. It was longer, more
narrow, and had a curious flexibility when it moved, as if its body
was jointed.
One man sat behind its controls. An explorer’s helmet
shielded his face, but he wore the same mixture of outer garments
as Rich and his men had affected.
Mura’s hand on Dane’s shoulder applied pressure. But
Dane, too, was aware of the trap about to be sprung. Masked by a
line of brush, there was stealthy movement. A globe thing came into
the Traders’ sight, clasping close to its upper ball body a
large stone. One of its fellows joined it, similarly armed.
“—trouble.” Mura’s voice was a thin
whisper.
The crawler advanced at a steady pace, crunching over the
ground, splashing through the edge of the water. It had reached the
first field now, and the driver made no effort to avoid the
enclosure. Instead he drove on, the wide treads rolling flat first
the low wall, and then the carefully tended plants that it
guarded.
The globe things hidden from their enemy, scuttling on a course
which paralleled that of the vehicle. Their stones were still
tightly grasped and they moved with a lightning speed. By all the
signs the man on the crawler was heading into an ambush.
It was when the machine ploughed into the third field that the
infuriated owners struck. A rain of stones, accurately hurled, fell
on both crawler and driver. One crashed on the man’s helmet.
He gave a choked cry and half arose before he slumped forward limply over the controls. The machine ground on for a moment
then stopped, one tread tilted up against a boulder at an angle
which threatened the stability of the whole vehicle.
Dane and Mura climbed down the side of the cliff. The driver
might have deserved just what he had received. But he was human and
they could not leave him to some alien vengeance. They could see
nothing of the globes. But they took the precaution, when they had
reached the valley floor, of spraying the bushes around the crawler
with their sleep rays. Mura remained on guard, ready to supply a
second dose of the harmless radiation while Dane ran forward to
pull free the driver.
He lugged him back in a shoulder carry to the edge of the cliff
where they could stand off an attack of the globes if
necessary.
But either the sleep ray or the appearance on the scene of two
more Terrans discouraged a second sortie. And the valley might well
have been completely deserted as the two from the Queen stood
ready, the limp body of the rescued at their feet.
“Shall we try it—” Dane nodded at the wall
behind them. Mura contrived to look amused.
“Unless you are a crax seed chewer, I do not see how you
are going to climb with our friend draped across your broad
shoulders—”
Dane, now that it was called to his attention, could share that
doubt. The cliff climbing act was one which required both hands and
feet, and one could never do it with a dead weight to support.
The unconscious man groaned and moved feebly. Mura went down on
one knee and studied the face framed by the dented helmet. First he
unhooked the fellow’s blaster belt and added it to his own
armament. Then he loosened the chin strap, took off the battered
headcovering and proceeded to slap the stubbled face
dispassionately.
The crude resuscitation worked. Eyes blinked up at them and then
the man tried to lever himself up, an operation Mura assisted with
a jerk at his collar.
“It is time to go,” the steward said. “This
way—”
Together they got the man on his feet, and urged him along the wall, rounding the spur on which they had been perched all
night, so coming to the hidden point where the other two of their
party were camped.
The driver showed little interest in them, he was apparently
concentrating on his uncertain balance. But Mura’s grip was
about his wrist and Dane guessed that that grasp was but the
preliminary of one of the tricks of wrestling in which the steward
was so well versed that no other of the Queen’s crew could
defeat him.
As for Dane, he kept an eye behind, expecting any moment to be
the target of a hail of those expertly thrown rocks. In a way this
move they had just made would lead the Limbians to believe them one
with the outlaws, and might well ruin any hopes they had cherished
of establishing Trade relations with the queer creatures. And yet
to leave a human at the mercy of the aliens was more than either of
the Terrans could do.
Their charge spit a glob of blood and then spoke to Mura:
“You one of the Omber crowd? I didn’t know they’d
been called in—”
Mura’s expression did not change. “But this a
mission of importance, is it not? They have called many of us
in—”
“Who beamed me back there? Those damned bogies?”
“The natives, yes. They threw stones—”
The man snarled. “We ought to roast ’em all! They
hang around and try to crack our skulls every time we have to come
through these hills. We’ll have to use the blasters
again—if we can catch up with ’em. Trouble is they move
too fast—”
“Yes, they provide a problem,” Mura returned
soothingly. “Around here now—” He urged their
captive around the point of the cliff into the other valley. But
for the first time the man seemed to sense that something was
wrong.
“Why go in here?” he asked, his pale eyes moving
from one to the other of the Traders. “This isn’t a
through valley.”
“We have our crawler here. It would be better for you to
ride—in your shaken condition, would it not?” Mura
continued persuasively.
“Huh? Yes, it might! I’ve a bad head, that’s
sure.” His hand arose to his head and he winced as it touched a point above his
right ear.
Dane let out his breath. Mura was running this perfectly. They
were going to be able to get the fellow back where they wanted him
without any trouble at all.
Mura had kept his clasp on their charge’s arm, and now he
steered him around a screen of boulders to face the crawler, Kosti
and Wilcox. It was the machine that gave the truth away.
The captive stiffened and halted so suddenly that Dane bumped
into him. His eyes shifted from the machine to the men by it. His
hands went to his belt, only to tell him that he was unarmed.
“Who are you?” he demanded.
“That works two ways, fella,” Kosti fronted him.
“Suppose you tell us who you are—”
The man made as if to turn and looked over his shoulder down the
valley as if hoping to see a rescue party there. Then Mura’s
grip screwed him back to his former position.
“Yes,” the steward’s soft voice added,
“we greatly wish to know who you are.”
The fact that he was fronted by only four must have triggered
the prisoner’s courage. “You’re from the
ship—” he announced triumphantly.
“We are from a ship,” corrected Mura,
“there are many ships on this world, many, many
ships.”
He might have slapped the fellow with his open hand, for the
effect that speech had. And Dane was inspired to add:
“There is a Survey ship—”
The prisoner swayed, his bloodstained face pale under space tan,
his lower lip pinched between his teeth as if by that painful
gesture he could forego speech.
Wilcox had seated himself on the crawler. Now he calmly drew his
blaster, balancing the ugly weapon on his knee pointing in the
general direction of the prisoner’s middle.
“Yes, there are quite a few ships here,” he said.
They might have been speaking of the weather, but for the set of
the astrogator’s jaw. “Which one do you think we hail
from?”
But their captive was not yet beaten. “You’re from
the one out there—the SolarQueen.”
“Why? Because no one survived in the others?” Mura
asked quietly. “You had better tell us what you know, my
friend.”
“That’s right.” Kosti moved forward a pace
until his many inches loomed over the battered driver. “Save
us time and you trouble, if you speak up now, flyboy. And the more
time it takes, the more impatient we’re going to
get—understand?”
It was plain that the prisoner did. The threat which underlay
Mura’s voice was underlined by Kosti’s reaching
hands.
“Who are you and what are you doing here?” Wilcox
began the interrogation for the second time.
The knockout delivered by the bogies had undoubtedly softened up
the driver to begin with. But Dane was inclined to believe that it
was Mura and Kosti who finished the process.
“I’m Lav Snall,” he said sullenly. “And
if you’re from the SolarQueen, you know what I’m doing
here. This isn’t going to get you anywhere. We’ve got
your ship grounded for just as long as we want.”
“This is most interesting,” Wilcox drawled.
“So that ship out on the plain is grounded for as long as you
want, it it? Where’s your maul—invisible?”
The prisoner showed his teeth in a grin which was three-quarters
sneer. “We don’t need a maul—not here on Limbo.
This whole world’s a trap—when we want to use
it.”
Wilcox spoke to Mura. “Was his head badly injured?”
The steward nodded. “It must have been—to addle his
wits so. I can not judge truly, I am no medic.”
Snall rose to the bait. “I’m not space-whirly if
that’s what you mean. You don’t know what we found
here—a Forerunner machine and it still operates! It can pull
ships right out of space—brings ’em here to crash.
When that’s running your Queen can’t lift—not
even if she were a Patrol Battlewagon she couldn’t. In fact
we can pull in a battlewagon if and when we want
to—!”
“Most enlightening,” was Wilcox’s comment.
“So you’ve got some sort of an installation which can
pull ships right out of space. That’s a new one for me. Did the Whisperers tell
you all about it?”
Snall’s cheeks showed a tinge of dark red.
“I’m not whirly, I tell you!”
Kosti laid his hands on the prisoner’s shoulders and
forced him to sit down on a rock. “We know,” he
repeated in a mock soothing tone. “Sure—there’s a
great big machine here with a Forerunner running it. It reaches out
and grabs—just like this!” He clutched with his own big
fist at the empty air an inch or two beyond Snall’s nose.
But the prisoner had recovered a little of his poise. “You
don’t have to believe me,” he returned. “Just
watch and see what happens if that pigheaded captain of yours tries
to upship here. It won’t be pretty. And it won’t be
long before you’re gathered up, either—”
“I suppose you have ways of running us down?”
Wilcox’s left eyebrow slanted up under his helmet.
“Well, you haven’t contacted us yet and we’ve
done quite a bit of travelling lately.”
Snall looked from one to the another. There was a faint
puzzlement in his attitude.
“You’re wearing Trade dress,” he repeated
aloud the evidence gathered by his eyes. “You have to be from
the Queen.”
“But you’re not quite sure, are you?” prodded
Mura. “We may be from some other spacer you trapped with this
Forerunner device. Are you certain that there are no other
survivors of crashes roaming through these valleys?”
“If there are—they won’t be walking about
long!” was Snall’s quick retort.
“No. You have your own way of dealing with them,
don’t you? With this?” Wilcox lifted the blaster so
that it now centred upon the prisoner’s head rather than his
middle. “Just as you handled some of those aboard the
Rimbold.”
“I wasn’t in on that!” Snall gabbled. In spite
of the morning chill there were drops of moisture ringing his
hairline.
“It seems to me that you are all outlaws,” Wilcox
continued, still in a polite, conversational tone. “Are you
sure you haven’t been Patrol Posted?”
That did it. Snall jumped. He got about a foot away before Kosti
dragged him back.
“All right—so I’ve been posted!” he
snarled at Wilcox as the jetman smacked him down on the rock once
more. “What are you going to do about it? Burn me when
I’m unarmed? Go ahead—do it!”
Traders could be ruthless if the time and place demanded
ice-cold tactics, but Dane knew now that the last thing Wilcox
would do was to burn Snall down in cold blood. Even if the fact
that he was Patrol Posted as a murderous criminal, with a price on
his head, put him outside the law and absolved his killer from any
future legal complications.
“Why should we kill you?” asked Mura calmly.
“We are Free Traders. I think that you know very well what
that means. A swift death by a blaster is a very easy way into the
Greater Space, is it not? But out on the Rim, in the Wild Worlds,
we have learned other tricks. So you do not believe that, Lav
Snall?”
The steward had made no threatening grimaces, his pleasant face
was as blandly cheerful as ever. But Snall’s eyes jerked away
from that face. He swallowed in a quick gulp.
“You wouldn’t—” he began again, but
there was no certainty in his protest. He must have realized that
the competition he now faced was far more dangerous than he had
estimated. There were tales about Free Traders, they were reputed
to be as tough as the Patrol, and not nearly so bound by
regulation. He believed that Mura meant exactly what he said.
“What do you want to know—”
“The truth,” returned Wilcox.
“I’ve been giving it to you—straight,”
Snall protested. “We’ve found a Forerunner installation
back in the mountains. It acts on ships—pulls them right out
of space to crack up here after they move into the beam, or ray, or
whatever it is. I don’t know how it works. Nobody’s
even seen the thing except a few picked men who know something
about com stuff—”
“Why didn’t it act on the SolarQueen when she came
in?” Kosti asked. “She landed perfectly.”
“’Cause the thing wasn’t turned on. You had
Salzar on board, didn’t you?”
“And who is Salzar?” it was Mura’s turn to ask
the question.
“Salzar—Gart Salzar. He was the first to see what a
sweet thing we found here. He got us all under cover when Survey
was snooping around. We lay low and Salzar knew that if this world
was auctioned off we’d be in real trouble. He took a cruiser
we’d patched up and beat the Griswold back to Naxos, and then
contacted you. So we get a nice trader all empty and waiting to
load our stuff—”
“Your loot? And how did you reach
here—crash?”
“Salzar did ten—twelve years ago. He didn’t
make too bad a landing and he and those men of his who were still
alive went snooping. They found the Forerunnner’s machine and
studied it until they learned a bit about working it. Now they can
switch it off when they want to. It was dead when Survey was
prowling around here because Salzar was off planet and we were
afraid we’d get him when he came in.”
“A pity you didn’t,” Wilcox remarked.
“And where is this machine?”
Snall shook his head. “I don’t know.” Kosti
moved a step closer and Snall added swiftly, “That’s
the truth! Only Salzar’s boys know where it is or how it
works.”
“How many of them?” Kosti asked.
“Salzar, and three, maybe four others. It’s back in
the mountains—there somewhere—” he stabbed a
finger, a shaking finger in the general direction of the range.
“I think you can do better than that,” Kosti was
beginning when Dane cut in:
“What was Snall doing driving that crawler in
here—if he didn’t know where he was going?”
Mura’s eyelids dropped as he adjusted the buckle of his
helmet. “I think we have been slightly remiss. We should have
a sentry aloft. There may be one of Snall’s friends
along.”
Snall studiously studied the toes of his boots. Dane went to the
cliff.
“I’ll take a look-see,” he offered.
To his first sight the situation on the plain had not changed.
The Queen, all hatches sealed, rested just as she had at twilight
the night before. With his glasses he could make out the small
encampments of outlaws. But close to his own post he saw something
else.
One of the strange crawlers had pulled away from the nearest
camp. Seated behind the driver were two others and between them a
fourth passenger, his brown Trade tunic not to be mistaken.
“Rip!” though Dane could not see that
prisoner’s face he was sure the captive was Shannon. And the
crawler was headed towards the valley where the bogies had ambushed
the first!
Now was their chance to not only rescue Rip but make a bigger
gap in the besiegers’ force. Dane crawled to the edge of the
cliff and, not daring to call, waved vigorously to attract the
attention of those below. Mura and Wilcox nodded and Kosti headed
the prisoner into greater seclusion. Then Dane sought a vantage
point and waited with rising excitement for the enemy crawler to
enter the valley.
DAWN WAS HINTED at with a light in the east, and still the
Queen’s beacon had not changed its hue. The watchers did not
expect it to now. Something had gone wrong—Rip had never
reached the ship.
Unable to stand inaction longer, Dane crept from the improvised
shelter and started along the cliff on which they had set up their
lookout. It formed a wall between the entrances to two of the
tongue-shaped valleys—the one in which Wilcox and Kosti were
encamped, the other unknown territory.
Dane sighted a trickle of stream in the second. The presence of
water heralded, or had heralded, other life in his experience of
Limbo. And here and now that pattern held. For he counted ten of
the small checkerboard spice fields.
But this time the fields were not deserted. Two of the globe
creatures worked among the plants. They stirred the ground about
the roots of the spice ferns with their thread like tentacles,
their round backs bobbing up and down as they moved.
Then both of them stood upright. Since they lacked any
discernible heads or features, it was difficult for Dane to guess
what they were doing. But their general attitude suggested they
were either listening or watching.
Three more of the globes came noiselessly into sight. Between
two of them swung a pole on which was tied the limp body of an
animal about the size of a cat. No audible greeting passed between
the hunters and the farmers. But they gathered in a group, dropping
the pole. Through the glasses Dane saw that their finger tentacles
interlocked from globe to globe until they formed a circle.
“Sooo—” The words hissed out of the early
morning murk and Dane, who had been absorbed in the scene below, gave a
start, as Mura’s hand closed on his shoulder.
“There is a crawler coming this way—” the
steward whispered.
Once more the group of globes had an aura of expectancy. They
scattered, moving with a speed which surprised the Terrans. In
seconds they had taken cover, leaving the fields, the stream bank
deserted.
The crunch of treads on loose stone and gravel was clear to hear
as a vehicle crept into the vision range of the two on the cliff.
Just as Kamil had been the first to discover, the crawler was not
the usual type favoured by Federation men. It was longer, more
narrow, and had a curious flexibility when it moved, as if its body
was jointed.
One man sat behind its controls. An explorer’s helmet
shielded his face, but he wore the same mixture of outer garments
as Rich and his men had affected.
Mura’s hand on Dane’s shoulder applied pressure. But
Dane, too, was aware of the trap about to be sprung. Masked by a
line of brush, there was stealthy movement. A globe thing came into
the Traders’ sight, clasping close to its upper ball body a
large stone. One of its fellows joined it, similarly armed.
“—trouble.” Mura’s voice was a thin
whisper.
The crawler advanced at a steady pace, crunching over the
ground, splashing through the edge of the water. It had reached the
first field now, and the driver made no effort to avoid the
enclosure. Instead he drove on, the wide treads rolling flat first
the low wall, and then the carefully tended plants that it
guarded.
The globe things hidden from their enemy, scuttling on a course
which paralleled that of the vehicle. Their stones were still
tightly grasped and they moved with a lightning speed. By all the
signs the man on the crawler was heading into an ambush.
It was when the machine ploughed into the third field that the
infuriated owners struck. A rain of stones, accurately hurled, fell
on both crawler and driver. One crashed on the man’s helmet.
He gave a choked cry and half arose before he slumped forward limply over the controls. The machine ground on for a moment
then stopped, one tread tilted up against a boulder at an angle
which threatened the stability of the whole vehicle.
Dane and Mura climbed down the side of the cliff. The driver
might have deserved just what he had received. But he was human and
they could not leave him to some alien vengeance. They could see
nothing of the globes. But they took the precaution, when they had
reached the valley floor, of spraying the bushes around the crawler
with their sleep rays. Mura remained on guard, ready to supply a
second dose of the harmless radiation while Dane ran forward to
pull free the driver.
He lugged him back in a shoulder carry to the edge of the cliff
where they could stand off an attack of the globes if
necessary.
But either the sleep ray or the appearance on the scene of two
more Terrans discouraged a second sortie. And the valley might well
have been completely deserted as the two from the Queen stood
ready, the limp body of the rescued at their feet.
“Shall we try it—” Dane nodded at the wall
behind them. Mura contrived to look amused.
“Unless you are a crax seed chewer, I do not see how you
are going to climb with our friend draped across your broad
shoulders—”
Dane, now that it was called to his attention, could share that
doubt. The cliff climbing act was one which required both hands and
feet, and one could never do it with a dead weight to support.
The unconscious man groaned and moved feebly. Mura went down on
one knee and studied the face framed by the dented helmet. First he
unhooked the fellow’s blaster belt and added it to his own
armament. Then he loosened the chin strap, took off the battered
headcovering and proceeded to slap the stubbled face
dispassionately.
The crude resuscitation worked. Eyes blinked up at them and then
the man tried to lever himself up, an operation Mura assisted with
a jerk at his collar.
“It is time to go,” the steward said. “This
way—”
Together they got the man on his feet, and urged him along the wall, rounding the spur on which they had been perched all
night, so coming to the hidden point where the other two of their
party were camped.
The driver showed little interest in them, he was apparently
concentrating on his uncertain balance. But Mura’s grip was
about his wrist and Dane guessed that that grasp was but the
preliminary of one of the tricks of wrestling in which the steward
was so well versed that no other of the Queen’s crew could
defeat him.
As for Dane, he kept an eye behind, expecting any moment to be
the target of a hail of those expertly thrown rocks. In a way this
move they had just made would lead the Limbians to believe them one
with the outlaws, and might well ruin any hopes they had cherished
of establishing Trade relations with the queer creatures. And yet
to leave a human at the mercy of the aliens was more than either of
the Terrans could do.
Their charge spit a glob of blood and then spoke to Mura:
“You one of the Omber crowd? I didn’t know they’d
been called in—”
Mura’s expression did not change. “But this a
mission of importance, is it not? They have called many of us
in—”
“Who beamed me back there? Those damned bogies?”
“The natives, yes. They threw stones—”
The man snarled. “We ought to roast ’em all! They
hang around and try to crack our skulls every time we have to come
through these hills. We’ll have to use the blasters
again—if we can catch up with ’em. Trouble is they move
too fast—”
“Yes, they provide a problem,” Mura returned
soothingly. “Around here now—” He urged their
captive around the point of the cliff into the other valley. But
for the first time the man seemed to sense that something was
wrong.
“Why go in here?” he asked, his pale eyes moving
from one to the other of the Traders. “This isn’t a
through valley.”
“We have our crawler here. It would be better for you to
ride—in your shaken condition, would it not?” Mura
continued persuasively.
“Huh? Yes, it might! I’ve a bad head, that’s
sure.” His hand arose to his head and he winced as it touched a point above his
right ear.
Dane let out his breath. Mura was running this perfectly. They
were going to be able to get the fellow back where they wanted him
without any trouble at all.
Mura had kept his clasp on their charge’s arm, and now he
steered him around a screen of boulders to face the crawler, Kosti
and Wilcox. It was the machine that gave the truth away.
The captive stiffened and halted so suddenly that Dane bumped
into him. His eyes shifted from the machine to the men by it. His
hands went to his belt, only to tell him that he was unarmed.
“Who are you?” he demanded.
“That works two ways, fella,” Kosti fronted him.
“Suppose you tell us who you are—”
The man made as if to turn and looked over his shoulder down the
valley as if hoping to see a rescue party there. Then Mura’s
grip screwed him back to his former position.
“Yes,” the steward’s soft voice added,
“we greatly wish to know who you are.”
The fact that he was fronted by only four must have triggered
the prisoner’s courage. “You’re from the
ship—” he announced triumphantly.
“We are from a ship,” corrected Mura,
“there are many ships on this world, many, many
ships.”
He might have slapped the fellow with his open hand, for the
effect that speech had. And Dane was inspired to add:
“There is a Survey ship—”
The prisoner swayed, his bloodstained face pale under space tan,
his lower lip pinched between his teeth as if by that painful
gesture he could forego speech.
Wilcox had seated himself on the crawler. Now he calmly drew his
blaster, balancing the ugly weapon on his knee pointing in the
general direction of the prisoner’s middle.
“Yes, there are quite a few ships here,” he said.
They might have been speaking of the weather, but for the set of
the astrogator’s jaw. “Which one do you think we hail
from?”
But their captive was not yet beaten. “You’re from
the one out there—the SolarQueen.”
“Why? Because no one survived in the others?” Mura
asked quietly. “You had better tell us what you know, my
friend.”
“That’s right.” Kosti moved forward a pace
until his many inches loomed over the battered driver. “Save
us time and you trouble, if you speak up now, flyboy. And the more
time it takes, the more impatient we’re going to
get—understand?”
It was plain that the prisoner did. The threat which underlay
Mura’s voice was underlined by Kosti’s reaching
hands.
“Who are you and what are you doing here?” Wilcox
began the interrogation for the second time.
The knockout delivered by the bogies had undoubtedly softened up
the driver to begin with. But Dane was inclined to believe that it
was Mura and Kosti who finished the process.
“I’m Lav Snall,” he said sullenly. “And
if you’re from the SolarQueen, you know what I’m doing
here. This isn’t going to get you anywhere. We’ve got
your ship grounded for just as long as we want.”
“This is most interesting,” Wilcox drawled.
“So that ship out on the plain is grounded for as long as you
want, it it? Where’s your maul—invisible?”
The prisoner showed his teeth in a grin which was three-quarters
sneer. “We don’t need a maul—not here on Limbo.
This whole world’s a trap—when we want to use
it.”
Wilcox spoke to Mura. “Was his head badly injured?”
The steward nodded. “It must have been—to addle his
wits so. I can not judge truly, I am no medic.”
Snall rose to the bait. “I’m not space-whirly if
that’s what you mean. You don’t know what we found
here—a Forerunner machine and it still operates! It can pull
ships right out of space—brings ’em here to crash.
When that’s running your Queen can’t lift—not
even if she were a Patrol Battlewagon she couldn’t. In fact
we can pull in a battlewagon if and when we want
to—!”
“Most enlightening,” was Wilcox’s comment.
“So you’ve got some sort of an installation which can
pull ships right out of space. That’s a new one for me. Did the Whisperers tell
you all about it?”
Snall’s cheeks showed a tinge of dark red.
“I’m not whirly, I tell you!”
Kosti laid his hands on the prisoner’s shoulders and
forced him to sit down on a rock. “We know,” he
repeated in a mock soothing tone. “Sure—there’s a
great big machine here with a Forerunner running it. It reaches out
and grabs—just like this!” He clutched with his own big
fist at the empty air an inch or two beyond Snall’s nose.
But the prisoner had recovered a little of his poise. “You
don’t have to believe me,” he returned. “Just
watch and see what happens if that pigheaded captain of yours tries
to upship here. It won’t be pretty. And it won’t be
long before you’re gathered up, either—”
“I suppose you have ways of running us down?”
Wilcox’s left eyebrow slanted up under his helmet.
“Well, you haven’t contacted us yet and we’ve
done quite a bit of travelling lately.”
Snall looked from one to the another. There was a faint
puzzlement in his attitude.
“You’re wearing Trade dress,” he repeated
aloud the evidence gathered by his eyes. “You have to be from
the Queen.”
“But you’re not quite sure, are you?” prodded
Mura. “We may be from some other spacer you trapped with this
Forerunner device. Are you certain that there are no other
survivors of crashes roaming through these valleys?”
“If there are—they won’t be walking about
long!” was Snall’s quick retort.
“No. You have your own way of dealing with them,
don’t you? With this?” Wilcox lifted the blaster so
that it now centred upon the prisoner’s head rather than his
middle. “Just as you handled some of those aboard the
Rimbold.”
“I wasn’t in on that!” Snall gabbled. In spite
of the morning chill there were drops of moisture ringing his
hairline.
“It seems to me that you are all outlaws,” Wilcox
continued, still in a polite, conversational tone. “Are you
sure you haven’t been Patrol Posted?”
That did it. Snall jumped. He got about a foot away before Kosti
dragged him back.
“All right—so I’ve been posted!” he
snarled at Wilcox as the jetman smacked him down on the rock once
more. “What are you going to do about it? Burn me when
I’m unarmed? Go ahead—do it!”
Traders could be ruthless if the time and place demanded
ice-cold tactics, but Dane knew now that the last thing Wilcox
would do was to burn Snall down in cold blood. Even if the fact
that he was Patrol Posted as a murderous criminal, with a price on
his head, put him outside the law and absolved his killer from any
future legal complications.
“Why should we kill you?” asked Mura calmly.
“We are Free Traders. I think that you know very well what
that means. A swift death by a blaster is a very easy way into the
Greater Space, is it not? But out on the Rim, in the Wild Worlds,
we have learned other tricks. So you do not believe that, Lav
Snall?”
The steward had made no threatening grimaces, his pleasant face
was as blandly cheerful as ever. But Snall’s eyes jerked away
from that face. He swallowed in a quick gulp.
“You wouldn’t—” he began again, but
there was no certainty in his protest. He must have realized that
the competition he now faced was far more dangerous than he had
estimated. There were tales about Free Traders, they were reputed
to be as tough as the Patrol, and not nearly so bound by
regulation. He believed that Mura meant exactly what he said.
“What do you want to know—”
“The truth,” returned Wilcox.
“I’ve been giving it to you—straight,”
Snall protested. “We’ve found a Forerunner installation
back in the mountains. It acts on ships—pulls them right out
of space to crack up here after they move into the beam, or ray, or
whatever it is. I don’t know how it works. Nobody’s
even seen the thing except a few picked men who know something
about com stuff—”
“Why didn’t it act on the SolarQueen when she came
in?” Kosti asked. “She landed perfectly.”
“’Cause the thing wasn’t turned on. You had
Salzar on board, didn’t you?”
“And who is Salzar?” it was Mura’s turn to ask
the question.
“Salzar—Gart Salzar. He was the first to see what a
sweet thing we found here. He got us all under cover when Survey
was snooping around. We lay low and Salzar knew that if this world
was auctioned off we’d be in real trouble. He took a cruiser
we’d patched up and beat the Griswold back to Naxos, and then
contacted you. So we get a nice trader all empty and waiting to
load our stuff—”
“Your loot? And how did you reach
here—crash?”
“Salzar did ten—twelve years ago. He didn’t
make too bad a landing and he and those men of his who were still
alive went snooping. They found the Forerunnner’s machine and
studied it until they learned a bit about working it. Now they can
switch it off when they want to. It was dead when Survey was
prowling around here because Salzar was off planet and we were
afraid we’d get him when he came in.”
“A pity you didn’t,” Wilcox remarked.
“And where is this machine?”
Snall shook his head. “I don’t know.” Kosti
moved a step closer and Snall added swiftly, “That’s
the truth! Only Salzar’s boys know where it is or how it
works.”
“How many of them?” Kosti asked.
“Salzar, and three, maybe four others. It’s back in
the mountains—there somewhere—” he stabbed a
finger, a shaking finger in the general direction of the range.
“I think you can do better than that,” Kosti was
beginning when Dane cut in:
“What was Snall doing driving that crawler in
here—if he didn’t know where he was going?”
Mura’s eyelids dropped as he adjusted the buckle of his
helmet. “I think we have been slightly remiss. We should have
a sentry aloft. There may be one of Snall’s friends
along.”
Snall studiously studied the toes of his boots. Dane went to the
cliff.
“I’ll take a look-see,” he offered.
To his first sight the situation on the plain had not changed.
The Queen, all hatches sealed, rested just as she had at twilight
the night before. With his glasses he could make out the small
encampments of outlaws. But close to his own post he saw something
else.
One of the strange crawlers had pulled away from the nearest
camp. Seated behind the driver were two others and between them a
fourth passenger, his brown Trade tunic not to be mistaken.
“Rip!” though Dane could not see that
prisoner’s face he was sure the captive was Shannon. And the
crawler was headed towards the valley where the bogies had ambushed
the first!
Now was their chance to not only rescue Rip but make a bigger
gap in the besiegers’ force. Dane crawled to the edge of the
cliff and, not daring to call, waved vigorously to attract the
attention of those below. Mura and Wilcox nodded and Kosti headed
the prisoner into greater seclusion. Then Dane sought a vantage
point and waited with rising excitement for the enemy crawler to
enter the valley.