"(novel) (ebook) - Perry Rhodan 0091 - (83) Ernst Ellert Returns" - читать интересную книгу автора (Perry Rhodan)RESISTANCE was useless. They came in such overwhelming numbers that he abandoned the idea of fighting back. Their airships landed by the dozens on the hard, rocky surface of the desert. They aimed their energy guns at the cliff walls behind which his subterranean laboratory was concealed. He could see them in his telescopic viewscreens. How they had found the place was beyond him. The hideout had been carefully chosen and no one besides himself had known about it. His speculations were suddenly interrupted as the outside microphone pickups brought the voices of the besiegers into the laboratory. They were sounds that no human ear would have been able to perceive because they were above the normally audible frequency range. But he whom they sought and had now discovered was able to understand them. "You're surrounded, Onot! If you come unarmed to the surface we'll listen to what you have to say. If not, we'll destroy you and your laboratory." Onot shrugged mentally. He had suspected something like this would happen. In the past his life had not always turned out the way he would have preferred. He had often done things that were against his better judgement and for that reason they had seemed to be incomprehensible. Sometimes he had acted as though he were an enemy to his own people and a friend of his bitterest foe. It had really been his fault alone that the combat robots of the attackers had been able to destroy the great computer centre-and later the special space station. "I'll come up there," he said into his microphone as he looked somewhat sadly at his surroundings. It was a giant rocky chamber which heavy-duty raybeams had once gouged out of the mountain. The only access to the surface was a narrow corridor that led upward like a ramp. This had been his secret laboratory where he had always come to work when he needed quiet and seclusion for his researches and discoveries. And since he was the most outstanding and capable scientist of his race he had made some very significant inventions. But for the moment all that seemed to have been forgotten. All that mattered now was his treason. Treason which he had committed! He felt of his clumsy-seeming and rather misshapen wrist. There he could detect a tiny protuberance that no one else would have noticed. With a slight pressure he activated the 1нcelled battery of the tiny micro-transmitter that lay beneath his skin. For a fleeting moment Onot pondered why he possessed this transmitter and to whom he might be sending a distress call. But then he shrugged his giant shoulders and went to the exit ramp in order to give himself over to the police. Meanwhile the airship crews had swarmed out around the cliff and covered the area with their weapons. In the deep-hued sky were other aircraft which hovered in readiness to support the surprise raid on the rebellious scientist's hideout. These police troops were not human. Towering about 10 feet in height, their squarish, unwieldy frames were supported by heavy, pillar-like legs. Their hairless skin was like thick leather. Their huge round heads, almost a foot and a half in diameter, possessed 4 eyes with a good 300░ of vision. Their ears and noses were not outwardly visible. Although appearances were deceptive in this case, the Druufs had evolved from the insect phylum. In fact they communicated on an ultrasonic level. The high-pitched soundwaves were sent out and received by natural antennas which were a part of their bodies. Another feature was their ungainly-looking arms, especially because of their hands which were well-shaped with finely articulated fingers and seemed to be unrelated to the rest of their bodies. A crevice appeared in the wall of rock and quickly widened, after which Onot stepped out onto the desolate plateau. He opened his arms in a wide gesture to show that he was unarmed. On his face was a mixed expression, a sort of embarrassed perplexity with perhaps a touch of curiosity. "Here I am," he announced. "What do you want of me?" A police lieutenant emerged from cover with his beamer aimed at the scientist. "Do you surrender?" "Would I be standing here otherwise?" retorted Onot somewhat sarcastically. The officer gave a signal to his men. "Search him for weapons," he ordered. They found nothing, overlooking the micro-transmitter that was buried under his skin. "May I ask what I'm charged with?" inquired Onot. The lieutenant shrugged. "You'll find out soon enough. But this much I can tell you: you're going to have a hard time clearing yourself of a suspicion of treason. We have you to thank for the destruction of the computer centre. But that was just for starters. Then there was the space station... but enough for now! Follow me!" Onot appeared as though he were about to say something but then thought better of it. His triangular mouth closed tightly as he walked away with the lieutenant. A glance at the sky revealed a lowering sun and he knew that it would soon be night. It was a giant red sun that shone down on the dreary landscape but it did not rule this system alone. Close beside it was a smaller, greenish companion which was almost lost to view in the greater orb's baleful red glow. After a half-hour's flight the police aircraft landed at the spaceport of the capital city. An armoured car brought Onot to the building of the Supreme Tribunal. The scientist had an opportunity to observe his surroundings through a small window. To his amazement he noted that most of the buildings and houses in the city exhibited heavy signs of damage. Some of them had been fully levelled to the ground. A vague sense of guilt assailed him at first but then came that reassuring inner voice again which seemed to maintain that he was completely innocent. What about that inner voice...? He awoke as from a dream when hard hands grasped his arms and jerked him out of the car. He stood in a high-walled courtyard. "You can do your daydreaming later," said the lieutenant scornfully. He seemed to have forgotten how easy the scientist had made his task for him by not putting up any resistance. "The prison cells here are quiet and solitary." "Thank you," replied Onot, still lost in thought. They led him through wide hallways past a countless number of doors and then downstairs into his prison cell. When the cell door finally closed behind him and he was alone, he breathed a sigh of relief. Maybe now they'd give him some time to think in peace. Above on the ceiling there was a grating-the air ventilator. Perhaps also a hidden remote camera eye. In the corner was a narrow cot and next to it were a table and a chair. That was all. Onot sat down. He supported his head in his hands and sought to recapitulate the past. So much time had gone by, perhaps 100 or 200 days. He wasn't sure of anything anymore. Once he had been the celebrated Onot, the leading scientist among the Druufs. He had given them many discoveries and inventions. Inventions...? Onot felt a surge of new hope. Of this he could be sure! He recalled his last piece of scientific work. He had built in the spatial stabilizer on board the giant space station. This apparatus had been unique, his latest invention. It might also be called a time stasis machine. With its help it was possible to build up a force field in which time became stationary. Time stasis...? It seemed to Onot as if a light were being cast into the darkness surrounding the happenings for which he was being held responsible. Perhaps now his memory would return and he would find an explanation. But when the strong headache suddenly returned to him which had hounded him during the past number of months he lost hope again. He knew that this headache phenomenon was his greatest enemy. It was then that the voice had often spoken to him. He remembered that there had been a time when he knew who belonged to that voice but at present it still escaped him. Later perhaps... * * * * Capt. Marcel Rous had really been assigned to a lost outpost. As its name implied, the planet Hades resembled the gates of Hell. It was the 13th planet of the most colossal solar system that human eyes had ever beheld. The giant binary star Siamed possessed a family of 62 planets, almost all of which had their own system of satellites. Planet #16 was Druufon, the home world of the Druufs. Which was also the reason why Capt. Marcel Rous was stationed on Hades, the 13th planet. Terra's military base here had been hollowed out of the solid rock by the energy beams of heavy ship's cannons and now lay deep beneath the surface of the twilight world where life was practically impossible except for the narrow twilight zone between the light and dark hemispheres. But they had nothing to do with the surface areas where they could be spotted by possible patrol units of the Druufs. After their heavy defeat in the Einstein universe the Druufs had retreated into their own time plane and had abandoned all further attempts to expand their power. Their enemy had even taken advantage of the retreat by destroying the space station where Onot's latest weapon had been installed. Just the same, Marcel Rous remained alert. If the Druufs were to discover that a Terranian stronghold existed in their own solar system, they would strike with every force in their possession. So now the base served only a single purpose: it must not allow the connection with Ernst Ellert to be severed. Over 70 years ago Ernst Ellert had been a member of the Mutant Corps. His faculty of being able to project his mind into the future had also shaped his destiny. An accident had separated mind from body. Restlessly his mind had wandered astray in time and space, ever seeking its own plane of the present but never finding it. What it did find, however, was a new present, which was a future plane by comparison to its own time. Now it possessed a body again but it was not his own. The latter lay in a mausoleum on Earth near Terrania. Perry Rhodan, Administrator of the Solar Empire, had kept it preserved there. So the essence of that which was Ellert lingered on Druufon, the chief world of the Druufs. He had promised to send a signal when the time had come for him to leave his host body and when he would be able to return to the Earth. Approximately 1 light-year distant from Hades yawned the great rift in the universe which joined the two time planes with each other. Only by this means was it possible to change from one plane to the other without special technical assistance. But now this rift-a so-called discharge cone-was wavering and becoming narrower. It wouldn't be long before it would be a thing of the past. Then the Druufs would be gone, once and for all, from the time plane of the Terranians, unless they were to discover on their own a method of bridging the time wall. There were 12 matter transmitters at the base on Hades. They had made it possible to build and equip the secret station. From a distance of more than a light-year, weapons, material, provisions and personnel had been transmitted from Terranian ships to Hades. When it became necessary, these same transmitters would bring the Hades personnel back to safety again. At the moment, the time had not yet arrived for it. |
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