"Chapter 04" - читать интересную книгу автора ((novel) (ebook) - Perry Rhodan 0126 - (117b - 118b) The Shadows Attack [HTML])4/ GHOST SHIP Iltu’s hour of trial had come. When the special troop carriers landed in the giant hangar
and the commandos leapt out with ready weapons to swarm into the corridors, she
was immediately spotted by Maj. Borovski who led the mission. "Oh there you are, Pucky!" he cried out as he ran
past her. "I am Iltu!" she chirped indignantly, trying in
vain to keep up with the towering major. "Wait a minute! I have something
important to say to you!" Borovski stopped. "Oh—Iltu?" he said wonderingly.
"The other mousebeaver!" "A girl mousebeaver!" she corrected him, coming to
a stop beside him. "Pucky is fetching Germa. I’m here in his place." "Fine!" retorted Borovski. "Then do it!" He was about to take off again but Iltu furiously grasped him
by the leg of his trousers. "Wait, I said! Do you want to listen to me or don’t
you? Pucky has left some instructions for you. They have to do with the
invisible enemies who are here on the ship. Borovski kept a straight face and stood still. The men
running passed him were seen to grin as they noted Iltu holding him by the pants
of his combatsuit. Only a few of them came to a stop. "Alright, Iltu, tell me." She gave him a brief report on her experiences with the
shadow people and how they could be combatted. She advised Borovski to keep his
men in groups of at least 5 and to keep their screens turned on. As soon as
anyone fired at them out of the emptiness they should set up a crossfire. They
should keep it up until the enemy became visible and died. Then of course he
would vanish back into the nothingness he had emerged from. Maj. Borovski had a good faculty of perception. "And you
can pick up their thoughts? I mean—you can tell when some of them are close
by?" "Yes." "Good!" he decided. "Then you come with me.
You can ride up here on my arm." Iltu didn’t hesitate long. She climbed up his lanky form
and established herself in the crook of his left arm. Borovski carried his
beamer in his right hand. He turned on his defence screen and then beckoned to
the men who had remained with him. The search of the robotship began. Not everyone had come equipped with combatsuits so they
formed in groups around those who were so protected. They sent the protected men
ahead of them to lure the phantoms out of hiding. As soon as there was any
firing out of the air, the others were to close in and join in the answering
fire. Maj. Borovski’s group achieved the first results although
he was honest enough later to explain that it was actually due to Iltu. There
were 7 men in the group. The major was leading the way with his activated
defence screen. Iltu sat on his arm and searched for the enemy’s thought
impulses, which she knew must be able to come through their own protective
screens. The other 6 men were a few steps behind and covered all sides with
their weapons ready to fire. The first impulses that came to Iltu were very weak. The
aliens were approaching slowly but steadily. It seemed as if they were
especially attracted by Iltu’s own brainwave patterns. The small commando group was moving along a wide passageway.
To their right and left were the doors of the empty cabins. The dim emergency
lights were still coming on automatically as they progressed but all they
revealed were the naked deckplates of the corridor, since on such ships there
was no plastic floor coating or carpeting. Borovski came to a cross passage and stopped. "Where to?" "To your right," whispered Iltu and pointed into
the narrower corridor. "The impulses come from there. We should be meeting
them any minute." "Let’s go!" the major whispered to his men. Iltu felt the impulses getting stronger. She wondered
anxiously if she would be safe here under Borovski’s defence screen. What
would Pucky have felt in her place? Was he really as fearless as he always acted
or could he also sense fear? "Stop!" Maj. Borovski complied at once. "Do you see
something?" "You can’t see them," she whispered tensely.
"But I sense somebody. One of them is here." The 6 other men had come to a stop and taken cover. At the
first sign of attack they would charge forward. Borovski couldn’t rid himself
of a very uneasy feeling. He was accustomed to facing an enemy he could see but
here there was no one visible. Iltu couldn’t even tell him where the phantom
was standing. She only knew that he was here—that was all. "He’s thinking—hate! Now it’s still more hate! He’s
going to attack!" She had hardly spoken before a blue-white energy beam flashed
out directly in front of Borovski. It struck his screen and was deflected
harmlessly in a spray of pyrotechnics. The major aimed his weapon and pressed
the trigger. Simultaneously the other men joined him and opened a furious
counterfire against the phantom. Within fractions of a second his outlines
became visible under that sheet of flame but the Terrans kept on firing. As the
figure sank to the floor they followed it with their beams and saturated it with
energy. During the fighting a fairly human outline had been seen. It
was a colourless silhouette against the background of the wall and then the
floor except that it was 3-dimensional and seemingly material since the energy
beams virtually encircled it as it went down. Borovski closely observed the
phenomenon while he was firing. Now the thing lay on the deck. The blue-white
flashes from its weapon had ceased. The phantom offered no further resistance
because it was dying. Then if faded back into invisibility. Iltu could sense that the thought impulses also died away. At
first they had been emanations of pure hate, then rage and a will to attack.
Finally there had been anguish and pain—followed by the calm of death. At any rate, the uncanny foe could be conquered. That is—on
an individual basis, for the invaders as a whole were far from being beaten. Nor
was it all to be as easy as this. * * * * Maj. Borovski learned over the radio that the enemy was not
present on the other robotships. According to plan, each vessel was taken over
and manned. They waited within 2 km of the Caesar for the further
instructions of Col. Sukril. But the colonel did not respond to any of their radio calls.
The Caesar hovered silently and motionlessly in space. It seemed as if
Sukril had withdrawn from the operation and preferred to leave everything in the
hands of the commando leaders. Maj. Borovski gave up trying to make contact with the
commander; he had more important things to do. With help from Iltu he was able
to track down 3 more phantoms and kill them but then there were no more
impulses. It was as if the invaders had been swallowed up by the ethers of
Eternity. On the other hand, up in the Control Central the troops of
Sgt. Bering ran into a well-prepared death trap. Bering was no telepath so he was not sensitive to the thought
emanations of the aliens. Unsuspectingly he came into the Control Central and
occupied it with his men. There was no sign of hostiles here so they began to
feel took over the radio console and reported in to the Caesar. He
received no answer. Bering deployed his men in groups so as to offer the required
defensive pattern. The only mistake he made was to think in terms of only one
attacker. It was thus a deadly surprise to see blue energy beams emerging
simultaneously from 3 different directions. Iltu had slipped out of Maj. Borovski’s arm when she picked
up the thoughts of the hard-pressed men. She oriented herself swiftly and cried
out: "In the Control Central—it’s a concentrated attack! I’ll jump
ahead —you follow!" And with that she vanished. Borovski comprehended at once. He and his men stormed into
the nearest antigrav lift and arrived 2 minutes later in the Control Central.
What he saw there he would never forget. 3 men in the pastel green service uniforms of the Terran
spacefleet were lying on the floor. There could be no doubt that they were dead.
Out of sheer nothingness the blue energy beams were sweeping through the room in
search of new victims. Under cover of their defence screens, Sgt. Bering and
Iltu opened fire on the invisible enemy but their 2 weapons were not enough to
kill them or even to drive them away. Three or 4 men had thrown themselves to
the deck and crept into various niches, from which cover they fired haphazardly
at the invaders. "Get the one on the left!" yelled Borovski and he
signalled his men to take cover before retaliating. Bering caught on. He concentrated on the spot, in the middle
of the air, where an energy beam was emanating from the left. Seconds later the
enemy became visible under their combined attack. He sank to the floor and
ceased firing. The second one was also put out of harm’s way but the third
phantom disappeared without leaving a trace. Nobody knew it but at that moment
all of the aliens withdrew at once. It was as if they had obeyed a silent
command to retreat. It came 5 minutes too late because 3 Terrans lay dead in the
Control Central of the vast robotship. The enemy casualties were both invisible and immaterial. They
could not be counted but it was certain that their losses had been greater than
those of the Terrans. It was a poor consolation in spite of their victory. "Call the Caesar!" shouted Borovski after
the various group leaders reported that there were no further signs of attack.
"Looks like the ship is ours." He signalled into the Com Room at the
operator who had already turned on the equipment again. "Make contact with
Col. Sukril—on the double!" After that he paced restlessly back and forth
while his men took care of the fallen ones. "Sir, the Caesar still doesn’t answer!" Borovski’s brows shot up. "What the devil’s that
supposed to mean? Are they sleeping over there? Try it again!" Iltu felt strangely alerted by this. In the past few minutes
she had gained still more self-confidence and knew that she could depend on her
faculties. Pucky had been an excellent task-master. She tried to establish
contact with Sukril’s mind but was blocked by the confusion of hundreds of
other impulses. For a moment she thought she caught an emanation from Pucky but
then she lost it again. It was equivalent to trying to pick out one person’s
voice in the shout of a thousand-man multitude—and also attempting to identify
him. The Com Man came back. "No contact, sir. They don’t
answer." Iltu spoke up. "Should I have a look, Major? All I have
to do is teleport." Borovski looked about him uncertainly. "And if they show
up again—the shadow people?" "I can be back right away." He nodded. "Alright—but hurry it up! If I only knew
where Pucky was! He ought to be here." Iltu said nothing. She was beginning to worry about her
fellow mousebeaver. She concentrated and vanished without attempting to answer
the major’s unexpressed question. No one could say that she was a weak and
uncertain teleporter. She had only to think of the Caesar’s Command
Central—and there she materialized. Col. Sukril was slumped motionlessly in his flight seat
before the controls. The Nav Officer, Capt. Henderson, also seemed to be
unconscious or dead. His head was resting on the chart table. The finger of his
right hand was curled around the butt of his weapon. Three other officers were
stretched out flat on the deck. The door of the Com Room was standing wide open.
There was no sign of life from the chief operator. Iltu took all this in within seconds. With a shrill whistle
of alarm she pattered over to Col. Sukril. He was breathing weakly but steadily.
His brain convolutions gave out an abstract pattern of dreamlike communications.
At any rate he was alive. Iltu didn’t deliberate for long. For the moment there was
nothing here she could do and Maj. Borovski was waiting for her. He must be
informed of this at once. So she teleported back into the robotship. She briefly
described what she had seen. For about 10 seconds Maj. Borovski stared at her in
disconcerted amazement. Then he turned to the radio operator in Bering’s
detail. "Are you familiar with the com equipment?" "Yessir. It’s the same as on the Caesar." "Including the hypercom?" "Yessir." Borovski took a deep breath before giving his order.
"Make a hypercom connection with Perry Rhodan. Straight to Terrania. But
make it fast—we’ve no time to lose!" He leaned back against the control panels in the Com Room and
waited. In his right hand he still held his de-safetied weapon. Iltu sat on his
left arm and used her esp. She was to warn him if the phantoms were
getting ready to make another attack. But there were no phantoms present. At least not here. * * * * Sgt. Gork ran into some real trouble. When he had panicked and leapt into space he had not given
any thought to how he was going to reach the Caesar. The main thing was
to get out of the terrible ghost ship. He somersaulted slowly and some seconds
went by before he could orient himself. Naturally he had missed his mark and
ended up drifting past the Caesar just as its locks opened up. Laboriously he drew his handgun and fired it carefully. His
turning motion became slower and finally stopped. He had to fire another shot to
get out of the way of the commando craft that were emerging from the Caesar’s
launching locks. His freefall course brought him above the Caesar and
the formation of robotships. He could observe everything quite clearly. In his
helmet phones was a confusion of orders and answering confirmations mixed with
reports and conversations. The special commando details were boarding the
robotships. Gork altered his direction of flight again but just when he
was about to give himself a boost of speed the energy weapon slipped from his
fingers. He tried in vain to reach for the slowly drifting gun but it receded
irretrievably into the void. He himself hovered motionlessly in emptiness.
Beneath him the Caesar reminded him of a vast planet with robotships for
moons. It took him 10 minutes to realize that the warship’s
artificial gravity had caught him in its field and that he was sinking toward it
with exasperating slowness. Another half hour passed before his feet touched the
hull. He moved carefully in order not to launch himself into space again. After
a few steps to the nearest open hatch, he entered the hangar inside. It was empty. Which in itself wasn’t so extraordinary. The commando units
had left the Caesar and gone to man the robotships. Everything appeared
to have operated according to plan and schedule. He, however, had more or less
deserted his post. The thought struck him for the firstime that he could only
have fled from a phantom. In one sense it was a relief to know this but in its
final consequences the possibilities were not so pleasant. An explanation would
be demanded of him. Well, maybe the disappearance of the Gazelle with Lt. Germa
would help to explain it—or the launch gate of the robot battleship. But where the devil were the usual hangar personnel? Gork looked around. He was alone. No other crewmen were in
evidence. Some of the doors leading into the corridors were standing wide open.
The air must have escaped from the pressure-equalizing chambers. That was
completely against regulations and was unexplainable. He stirred himself and, choosing the nearest door, closed it
behind him and turned on the air supply. When the pressure was equalized he took
off his space helmet. Of course he no longer carried a weapon but he didn’t
see any reason why he should need one now. He still didn’t realize what had
happened. Out in the main corridor he ran across the first unconscious
crewmen. They were men from the hangar who must have been called from their
regular posts by the alarm because they had even forgotten to close the outer
launch gate. Some of them had only partially put on their spacesuits before they
had fallen unconscious. Gork sniffed the air testily but could smell nothing
suspicious. Had they all been knocked out with some kind of gas? He bent down to look at several of the men but then gave it
up. There were too many of them and he couldn’t help them right now anyway. It
soon became clear to him that no one was left on board the Caesar who was
still in an able-bodied condition. They were all unconscious—if that was what
one might call a condition that left them still breathing with their eyes
staring wide open. Their limbs were stiff and unmovable. Some of them were
beginning to stir but they seemed not to hear when they were spoken to. Gork scolded himself for his frantic desertion of the
robotship. He had to get to Col. Sukril, to the Commander! He had to reach the
Control Central! He found his way through the passages and corridors and lifts
but it was some minutes before he finally stood before the door of the Inner
Sanctum. He knew that entry here was forbidden. Only the Commander himself could
authorize it. But—was Sukril still the commander of the Caesar …
? Gork pressed his palm against the heat-sensing release. The
door slid to one side into its niche. The hatchway was open. When he entered he saw several figures lying apparently dead
on the floor. Two officers sat slumped motionlessly before their control
consoles. Over at the chart table something moved. The captain there
slowly raised his head. He stared at the instruments with unseeing eyes. His
hands moved laboriously as he uttered a broken sentence … "Course
BJ-97-UK … build up the screens … increase velocity … " Gork clenched his teeth together. He intuited rather than
cognized the fact that he was not facing a whole man. What sat there at the
chart table was Capt. Henderson or at least that was who he looked like. Yet it
couldn’t be he. Just his eyes alone betrayed him! They stared vacantly, just
slightly past him. They were empty of any spark of life. Or else this was the
look of a madman. Gork pulled himself together and acted almost as quickly as
he had when the lock gate had started closing on the robotship. He came to
attention and saluted "Yessir. Increase velocity! Shall I wake up the
Commander?" He received no answer but Col. Sukril began to move. His
right hand picked up his weapon from where it had been lying and shoved it into
his holster. He straightened up. His eyes were exactly as empty and dead as
Henderson’s. Ignoring gork he turned to the controls and prepared for a
flight—which had been ordered by whom? Certainly not by Capt. Henderson?! Gork
began to grasp the whole truth of the situation and he had a prickly sensation
of the scalp. The Commander and the Navigation Officer were being guided by
alien powers and this was the only reason they had been roused from their states
of unconsciousness. The aliens needed them in order to manoeuvre the Caesar. And what about himself? Wasn’t he within this uncanny
sphere of influence? Wasn’t it only due to his belated return that he was
still in command of his senses? Perhaps he was even the only man on board who
was now able to think normally. He had to do something! But in no case must Col. Sukril—or
that which Sukril was now—become aware of his intentions. He had to play along
in order not to appear suspicious. "Your orders, sir?" he asked, coming to attention
again. Col. Sukril turned around slowly and looked at him through
dead eyes. He spoke slowly and tonelessly. "Take over the defence screens
and turn them all on as soon as the Caesar gets underway." Gork nodded. "Very well, sir. Screens on after we get
underway." He went to the designated control console not far from Sukril,
who had already ceased to be concerned with him. As Gork seated himself the
activating levers protruded at him from the cabinet panel. Once he moved them
forward, the Caesar would be hermetically shut off from its outer
environment. None of the commando teams would be able to return. The men
presently on board would be lost if this unknown power were to steal them away
under protection of the screens. He must not turn them on, or at least he’d have to hold off
as long as possible. Sukril waited until Henderson told him that the coцrdinates
had been calculated and fed to the computer. Then he turned on the ship’s mighty engines and started to
accelerate. On the viewscreens the robotships fell from view. Gork saw to his horror that the Caesar was being
guided into the gulf of intergalactic space. Where was this sector BJ-97-UK …
? Col. Sukril looked over at him. Although his eyes still
remained expressionless his physical attitude seemed to be menacing. His right
hand moved slowly toward his gun holster. Gork tensed. Had Sukril’s invisible
controllers gotten suspicious? Were they about to eliminate him? Would it be
better to dash to safety somewhere while he still had a chance or should he
continue his present role so that at least one normal man would be in the
Control Central? Maybe if he betrayed himself they would knock him unconscious
like the others. He took a deep breath and placed his hands on the levers. Sukril remained motionless in his seat. He made no further
move to draw his weapon. Sgt Gork dragged it out another 10 seconds but when he
saw Sukril’s hand start moving again he finally activated the screens of the Caesar. Now inclosed in an impenetrable shell of energy the great
warship hurtled away into the absolute vacuum between the galaxies, increasing
its distance from the robotships and in a direction which was exactly opposed to
that in which Terra lay. Sgt. Gork stared with widened eyes at the viewscreen where a
dim nebula had moved into the cross-hairs of the automatic target sighter. Was that sector BJ-97-UK … ? 4/ GHOST SHIP Iltu’s hour of trial had come. When the special troop carriers landed in the giant hangar
and the commandos leapt out with ready weapons to swarm into the corridors, she
was immediately spotted by Maj. Borovski who led the mission. "Oh there you are, Pucky!" he cried out as he ran
past her. "I am Iltu!" she chirped indignantly, trying in
vain to keep up with the towering major. "Wait a minute! I have something
important to say to you!" Borovski stopped. "Oh—Iltu?" he said wonderingly.
"The other mousebeaver!" "A girl mousebeaver!" she corrected him, coming to
a stop beside him. "Pucky is fetching Germa. I’m here in his place." "Fine!" retorted Borovski. "Then do it!" He was about to take off again but Iltu furiously grasped him
by the leg of his trousers. "Wait, I said! Do you want to listen to me or don’t
you? Pucky has left some instructions for you. They have to do with the
invisible enemies who are here on the ship. Borovski kept a straight face and stood still. The men
running passed him were seen to grin as they noted Iltu holding him by the pants
of his combatsuit. Only a few of them came to a stop. "Alright, Iltu, tell me." She gave him a brief report on her experiences with the
shadow people and how they could be combatted. She advised Borovski to keep his
men in groups of at least 5 and to keep their screens turned on. As soon as
anyone fired at them out of the emptiness they should set up a crossfire. They
should keep it up until the enemy became visible and died. Then of course he
would vanish back into the nothingness he had emerged from. Maj. Borovski had a good faculty of perception. "And you
can pick up their thoughts? I mean—you can tell when some of them are close
by?" "Yes." "Good!" he decided. "Then you come with me.
You can ride up here on my arm." Iltu didn’t hesitate long. She climbed up his lanky form
and established herself in the crook of his left arm. Borovski carried his
beamer in his right hand. He turned on his defence screen and then beckoned to
the men who had remained with him. The search of the robotship began. Not everyone had come equipped with combatsuits so they
formed in groups around those who were so protected. They sent the protected men
ahead of them to lure the phantoms out of hiding. As soon as there was any
firing out of the air, the others were to close in and join in the answering
fire. Maj. Borovski’s group achieved the first results although
he was honest enough later to explain that it was actually due to Iltu. There
were 7 men in the group. The major was leading the way with his activated
defence screen. Iltu sat on his arm and searched for the enemy’s thought
impulses, which she knew must be able to come through their own protective
screens. The other 6 men were a few steps behind and covered all sides with
their weapons ready to fire. The first impulses that came to Iltu were very weak. The
aliens were approaching slowly but steadily. It seemed as if they were
especially attracted by Iltu’s own brainwave patterns. The small commando group was moving along a wide passageway.
To their right and left were the doors of the empty cabins. The dim emergency
lights were still coming on automatically as they progressed but all they
revealed were the naked deckplates of the corridor, since on such ships there
was no plastic floor coating or carpeting. Borovski came to a cross passage and stopped. "Where to?" "To your right," whispered Iltu and pointed into
the narrower corridor. "The impulses come from there. We should be meeting
them any minute." "Let’s go!" the major whispered to his men. Iltu felt the impulses getting stronger. She wondered
anxiously if she would be safe here under Borovski’s defence screen. What
would Pucky have felt in her place? Was he really as fearless as he always acted
or could he also sense fear? "Stop!" Maj. Borovski complied at once. "Do you see
something?" "You can’t see them," she whispered tensely.
"But I sense somebody. One of them is here." The 6 other men had come to a stop and taken cover. At the
first sign of attack they would charge forward. Borovski couldn’t rid himself
of a very uneasy feeling. He was accustomed to facing an enemy he could see but
here there was no one visible. Iltu couldn’t even tell him where the phantom
was standing. She only knew that he was here—that was all. "He’s thinking—hate! Now it’s still more hate! He’s
going to attack!" She had hardly spoken before a blue-white energy beam flashed
out directly in front of Borovski. It struck his screen and was deflected
harmlessly in a spray of pyrotechnics. The major aimed his weapon and pressed
the trigger. Simultaneously the other men joined him and opened a furious
counterfire against the phantom. Within fractions of a second his outlines
became visible under that sheet of flame but the Terrans kept on firing. As the
figure sank to the floor they followed it with their beams and saturated it with
energy. During the fighting a fairly human outline had been seen. It
was a colourless silhouette against the background of the wall and then the
floor except that it was 3-dimensional and seemingly material since the energy
beams virtually encircled it as it went down. Borovski closely observed the
phenomenon while he was firing. Now the thing lay on the deck. The blue-white
flashes from its weapon had ceased. The phantom offered no further resistance
because it was dying. Then if faded back into invisibility. Iltu could sense that the thought impulses also died away. At
first they had been emanations of pure hate, then rage and a will to attack.
Finally there had been anguish and pain—followed by the calm of death. At any rate, the uncanny foe could be conquered. That is—on
an individual basis, for the invaders as a whole were far from being beaten. Nor
was it all to be as easy as this. * * * * Maj. Borovski learned over the radio that the enemy was not
present on the other robotships. According to plan, each vessel was taken over
and manned. They waited within 2 km of the Caesar for the further
instructions of Col. Sukril. But the colonel did not respond to any of their radio calls.
The Caesar hovered silently and motionlessly in space. It seemed as if
Sukril had withdrawn from the operation and preferred to leave everything in the
hands of the commando leaders. Maj. Borovski gave up trying to make contact with the
commander; he had more important things to do. With help from Iltu he was able
to track down 3 more phantoms and kill them but then there were no more
impulses. It was as if the invaders had been swallowed up by the ethers of
Eternity. On the other hand, up in the Control Central the troops of
Sgt. Bering ran into a well-prepared death trap. Bering was no telepath so he was not sensitive to the thought
emanations of the aliens. Unsuspectingly he came into the Control Central and
occupied it with his men. There was no sign of hostiles here so they began to
feel took over the radio console and reported in to the Caesar. He
received no answer. Bering deployed his men in groups so as to offer the required
defensive pattern. The only mistake he made was to think in terms of only one
attacker. It was thus a deadly surprise to see blue energy beams emerging
simultaneously from 3 different directions. Iltu had slipped out of Maj. Borovski’s arm when she picked
up the thoughts of the hard-pressed men. She oriented herself swiftly and cried
out: "In the Control Central—it’s a concentrated attack! I’ll jump
ahead —you follow!" And with that she vanished. Borovski comprehended at once. He and his men stormed into
the nearest antigrav lift and arrived 2 minutes later in the Control Central.
What he saw there he would never forget. 3 men in the pastel green service uniforms of the Terran
spacefleet were lying on the floor. There could be no doubt that they were dead.
Out of sheer nothingness the blue energy beams were sweeping through the room in
search of new victims. Under cover of their defence screens, Sgt. Bering and
Iltu opened fire on the invisible enemy but their 2 weapons were not enough to
kill them or even to drive them away. Three or 4 men had thrown themselves to
the deck and crept into various niches, from which cover they fired haphazardly
at the invaders. "Get the one on the left!" yelled Borovski and he
signalled his men to take cover before retaliating. Bering caught on. He concentrated on the spot, in the middle
of the air, where an energy beam was emanating from the left. Seconds later the
enemy became visible under their combined attack. He sank to the floor and
ceased firing. The second one was also put out of harm’s way but the third
phantom disappeared without leaving a trace. Nobody knew it but at that moment
all of the aliens withdrew at once. It was as if they had obeyed a silent
command to retreat. It came 5 minutes too late because 3 Terrans lay dead in the
Control Central of the vast robotship. The enemy casualties were both invisible and immaterial. They
could not be counted but it was certain that their losses had been greater than
those of the Terrans. It was a poor consolation in spite of their victory. "Call the Caesar!" shouted Borovski after
the various group leaders reported that there were no further signs of attack.
"Looks like the ship is ours." He signalled into the Com Room at the
operator who had already turned on the equipment again. "Make contact with
Col. Sukril—on the double!" After that he paced restlessly back and forth
while his men took care of the fallen ones. "Sir, the Caesar still doesn’t answer!" Borovski’s brows shot up. "What the devil’s that
supposed to mean? Are they sleeping over there? Try it again!" Iltu felt strangely alerted by this. In the past few minutes
she had gained still more self-confidence and knew that she could depend on her
faculties. Pucky had been an excellent task-master. She tried to establish
contact with Sukril’s mind but was blocked by the confusion of hundreds of
other impulses. For a moment she thought she caught an emanation from Pucky but
then she lost it again. It was equivalent to trying to pick out one person’s
voice in the shout of a thousand-man multitude—and also attempting to identify
him. The Com Man came back. "No contact, sir. They don’t
answer." Iltu spoke up. "Should I have a look, Major? All I have
to do is teleport." Borovski looked about him uncertainly. "And if they show
up again—the shadow people?" "I can be back right away." He nodded. "Alright—but hurry it up! If I only knew
where Pucky was! He ought to be here." Iltu said nothing. She was beginning to worry about her
fellow mousebeaver. She concentrated and vanished without attempting to answer
the major’s unexpressed question. No one could say that she was a weak and
uncertain teleporter. She had only to think of the Caesar’s Command
Central—and there she materialized. Col. Sukril was slumped motionlessly in his flight seat
before the controls. The Nav Officer, Capt. Henderson, also seemed to be
unconscious or dead. His head was resting on the chart table. The finger of his
right hand was curled around the butt of his weapon. Three other officers were
stretched out flat on the deck. The door of the Com Room was standing wide open.
There was no sign of life from the chief operator. Iltu took all this in within seconds. With a shrill whistle
of alarm she pattered over to Col. Sukril. He was breathing weakly but steadily.
His brain convolutions gave out an abstract pattern of dreamlike communications.
At any rate he was alive. Iltu didn’t deliberate for long. For the moment there was
nothing here she could do and Maj. Borovski was waiting for her. He must be
informed of this at once. So she teleported back into the robotship. She briefly
described what she had seen. For about 10 seconds Maj. Borovski stared at her in
disconcerted amazement. Then he turned to the radio operator in Bering’s
detail. "Are you familiar with the com equipment?" "Yessir. It’s the same as on the Caesar." "Including the hypercom?" "Yessir." Borovski took a deep breath before giving his order.
"Make a hypercom connection with Perry Rhodan. Straight to Terrania. But
make it fast—we’ve no time to lose!" He leaned back against the control panels in the Com Room and
waited. In his right hand he still held his de-safetied weapon. Iltu sat on his
left arm and used her esp. She was to warn him if the phantoms were
getting ready to make another attack. But there were no phantoms present. At least not here. * * * * Sgt. Gork ran into some real trouble. When he had panicked and leapt into space he had not given
any thought to how he was going to reach the Caesar. The main thing was
to get out of the terrible ghost ship. He somersaulted slowly and some seconds
went by before he could orient himself. Naturally he had missed his mark and
ended up drifting past the Caesar just as its locks opened up. Laboriously he drew his handgun and fired it carefully. His
turning motion became slower and finally stopped. He had to fire another shot to
get out of the way of the commando craft that were emerging from the Caesar’s
launching locks. His freefall course brought him above the Caesar and
the formation of robotships. He could observe everything quite clearly. In his
helmet phones was a confusion of orders and answering confirmations mixed with
reports and conversations. The special commando details were boarding the
robotships. Gork altered his direction of flight again but just when he
was about to give himself a boost of speed the energy weapon slipped from his
fingers. He tried in vain to reach for the slowly drifting gun but it receded
irretrievably into the void. He himself hovered motionlessly in emptiness.
Beneath him the Caesar reminded him of a vast planet with robotships for
moons. It took him 10 minutes to realize that the warship’s
artificial gravity had caught him in its field and that he was sinking toward it
with exasperating slowness. Another half hour passed before his feet touched the
hull. He moved carefully in order not to launch himself into space again. After
a few steps to the nearest open hatch, he entered the hangar inside. It was empty. Which in itself wasn’t so extraordinary. The commando units
had left the Caesar and gone to man the robotships. Everything appeared
to have operated according to plan and schedule. He, however, had more or less
deserted his post. The thought struck him for the firstime that he could only
have fled from a phantom. In one sense it was a relief to know this but in its
final consequences the possibilities were not so pleasant. An explanation would
be demanded of him. Well, maybe the disappearance of the Gazelle with Lt. Germa
would help to explain it—or the launch gate of the robot battleship. But where the devil were the usual hangar personnel? Gork looked around. He was alone. No other crewmen were in
evidence. Some of the doors leading into the corridors were standing wide open.
The air must have escaped from the pressure-equalizing chambers. That was
completely against regulations and was unexplainable. He stirred himself and, choosing the nearest door, closed it
behind him and turned on the air supply. When the pressure was equalized he took
off his space helmet. Of course he no longer carried a weapon but he didn’t
see any reason why he should need one now. He still didn’t realize what had
happened. Out in the main corridor he ran across the first unconscious
crewmen. They were men from the hangar who must have been called from their
regular posts by the alarm because they had even forgotten to close the outer
launch gate. Some of them had only partially put on their spacesuits before they
had fallen unconscious. Gork sniffed the air testily but could smell nothing
suspicious. Had they all been knocked out with some kind of gas? He bent down to look at several of the men but then gave it
up. There were too many of them and he couldn’t help them right now anyway. It
soon became clear to him that no one was left on board the Caesar who was
still in an able-bodied condition. They were all unconscious—if that was what
one might call a condition that left them still breathing with their eyes
staring wide open. Their limbs were stiff and unmovable. Some of them were
beginning to stir but they seemed not to hear when they were spoken to. Gork scolded himself for his frantic desertion of the
robotship. He had to get to Col. Sukril, to the Commander! He had to reach the
Control Central! He found his way through the passages and corridors and lifts
but it was some minutes before he finally stood before the door of the Inner
Sanctum. He knew that entry here was forbidden. Only the Commander himself could
authorize it. But—was Sukril still the commander of the Caesar …
? Gork pressed his palm against the heat-sensing release. The
door slid to one side into its niche. The hatchway was open. When he entered he saw several figures lying apparently dead
on the floor. Two officers sat slumped motionlessly before their control
consoles. Over at the chart table something moved. The captain there
slowly raised his head. He stared at the instruments with unseeing eyes. His
hands moved laboriously as he uttered a broken sentence … "Course
BJ-97-UK … build up the screens … increase velocity … " Gork clenched his teeth together. He intuited rather than
cognized the fact that he was not facing a whole man. What sat there at the
chart table was Capt. Henderson or at least that was who he looked like. Yet it
couldn’t be he. Just his eyes alone betrayed him! They stared vacantly, just
slightly past him. They were empty of any spark of life. Or else this was the
look of a madman. Gork pulled himself together and acted almost as quickly as
he had when the lock gate had started closing on the robotship. He came to
attention and saluted "Yessir. Increase velocity! Shall I wake up the
Commander?" He received no answer but Col. Sukril began to move. His
right hand picked up his weapon from where it had been lying and shoved it into
his holster. He straightened up. His eyes were exactly as empty and dead as
Henderson’s. Ignoring gork he turned to the controls and prepared for a
flight—which had been ordered by whom? Certainly not by Capt. Henderson?! Gork
began to grasp the whole truth of the situation and he had a prickly sensation
of the scalp. The Commander and the Navigation Officer were being guided by
alien powers and this was the only reason they had been roused from their states
of unconsciousness. The aliens needed them in order to manoeuvre the Caesar. And what about himself? Wasn’t he within this uncanny
sphere of influence? Wasn’t it only due to his belated return that he was
still in command of his senses? Perhaps he was even the only man on board who
was now able to think normally. He had to do something! But in no case must Col. Sukril—or
that which Sukril was now—become aware of his intentions. He had to play along
in order not to appear suspicious. "Your orders, sir?" he asked, coming to attention
again. Col. Sukril turned around slowly and looked at him through
dead eyes. He spoke slowly and tonelessly. "Take over the defence screens
and turn them all on as soon as the Caesar gets underway." Gork nodded. "Very well, sir. Screens on after we get
underway." He went to the designated control console not far from Sukril,
who had already ceased to be concerned with him. As Gork seated himself the
activating levers protruded at him from the cabinet panel. Once he moved them
forward, the Caesar would be hermetically shut off from its outer
environment. None of the commando teams would be able to return. The men
presently on board would be lost if this unknown power were to steal them away
under protection of the screens. He must not turn them on, or at least he’d have to hold off
as long as possible. Sukril waited until Henderson told him that the coцrdinates
had been calculated and fed to the computer. Then he turned on the ship’s mighty engines and started to
accelerate. On the viewscreens the robotships fell from view. Gork saw to his horror that the Caesar was being
guided into the gulf of intergalactic space. Where was this sector BJ-97-UK …
? Col. Sukril looked over at him. Although his eyes still
remained expressionless his physical attitude seemed to be menacing. His right
hand moved slowly toward his gun holster. Gork tensed. Had Sukril’s invisible
controllers gotten suspicious? Were they about to eliminate him? Would it be
better to dash to safety somewhere while he still had a chance or should he
continue his present role so that at least one normal man would be in the
Control Central? Maybe if he betrayed himself they would knock him unconscious
like the others. He took a deep breath and placed his hands on the levers. Sukril remained motionless in his seat. He made no further
move to draw his weapon. Sgt Gork dragged it out another 10 seconds but when he
saw Sukril’s hand start moving again he finally activated the screens of the Caesar. Now inclosed in an impenetrable shell of energy the great
warship hurtled away into the absolute vacuum between the galaxies, increasing
its distance from the robotships and in a direction which was exactly opposed to
that in which Terra lay. Sgt. Gork stared with widened eyes at the viewscreen where a
dim nebula had moved into the cross-hairs of the automatic target sighter. Was that sector BJ-97-UK … ? |
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