RATHER poor prospects, but Dowland’s information was that after a year and a half the better prospects were regarded as nearly exhausted, and hadn’t produced the slightest results, putting the various divisions of the Interstellar Police Authority in the discouraging position of now having to suspect almost anybody. If there was no sign of Miguel Trelawney’s presence here by sundown, he decided, he would move on to the next check point. Trelawney’s pets would be cared for by automatic machinery; it might be several weeks before their owner showed up to look them over.
His gaze shifted briefly around the plain out of which the mesa loomed. It was turbulent today; gusty winds shook the car and electric storms were boiling along the northern mountain ranges. Below, sand and dust whirled up the mesa’s steep flanks. Picking up the hunting-scope again, Dowland began moving the visibeam almost at random and with low magnification over the back of the tableland. Dense masses of trees swept past, shouldered aside here and there by wind-scarred rock. A thoroughly wild place. He brought the glasses back to the ranch area, suddenly checked them there . . .
Somebody was in sight, moving toward the edge of the mesa nearest him. He caught a flash of something white. Centering carefully on the figure, Dowland turned on full magnification, and in the lenses, the image of a young woman appeared at close-up range.
She had come to a stop; and for an instant Dowland was startled to realize she was peering back at him through a pair of binoculars. But lacking the visibeam of the IPA, her glasses couldn’t, of course, do much more than show her there was a grid-car up there. Now her free hand lifted the long white cloth it was holding, and began swinging it in swift, vigorous gestures through the air above her head.
In spite of the binoculars, Dowland was immediately sure of the woman’s identity—having, in the past few days, studied a number of pictures of her. She was Jill Trelawney, the youngest of the three surviving members of the Trelawney Freeholders. Miguel and Paul were her uncles—and if she was here, one or the other of the men must certainly be here also.
It was obvious that she was signaling to the car. Dowland glanced at the communicator in the panel before him, saw it was turned on but registering no local calls. His eyes narrowed with speculation. This suddenly looked just a little bit interesting. If the Trelawneys were expecting a visitor but preferred not to address him over the open communication system, it indicated that they intended to be hard to find.
Which might mean a number of things of no interest at all to the IPA. But . . .
Dowland took his police gun from the pocket of his hunting jacket, and began checking it by touch, as he swung the car’s nose about toward the ranch and went slanting down toward the air. Either of the brothers might decide to make trouble, particularly if they had something to conceal—but, at any rate, they couldn’t claim he hadn’t been invited down.
Picking up the girl in the scope again, he saw that she realized he was coming in. She had dropped the cloth but was still gazing up toward the car, her free hand shielding her eyes from the setting sun.
In the next instant, without the slightest preliminary warning, every instrument in the panel before Dowland went dead. Then the grid-car began to drop like a stone.
* * *
THE world-wide gravity grid was Terra’s general power source. It had been an idiotically expensive installation; actually, no other planet could have afforded it at present. Once installed, it was drawn on for idiotically minor services. There weren’t enough human beings on Terra to begin to make a significant use of the grid.
But, there were compensating features. The grid was esthetically unobtrusive, and available everywhere. It supplied power for anything from personal wrist watches on up through the giant docking machines at the spaceports. And it was reliable. There had been no power failures and no accidents connected with the grid recorded in its eighty years of operation.
That shining safety record, Dowland thought, manipulating the flight controls with desperate haste, might become seriously marred in something like three-quarters of a minute now. He’d be lucky to get down alive. And another thought was clamoring for a different kind of action with almost equal urgency—unusual and unexplained physical phenomena of any kind were one of the things the YM searchers were alerted to look out for; and he’d certainly run into one of them here. He shot a glance down to his camouflaged wrist communicator. Just a few seconds to spare, and he could get a private-beam alarm in to the Solar Police Authority representative at the Columbia spaceport.
He didn’t have a few seconds to spare. The gird-car was a lousy glider—ponderous, sickeningly slow to respond. The rim of the mesa swayed up. If he missed that stretch of cleared ground around the Trelawney ranch, the car would either tear itself to pieces in the forest beyond or do a ditch into the piled rubble at the mesa’s foot. He hauled back on the controls again, felt the car actually begin to rise for an instant—
“I’m sorry,” Jill Trelawney was crying, running up the slope toward him. “I’m so terribly sorry. I tired to warn you. I simply didn’t realize—are you hurt?”
Her face, Dowland thought, was probably no whiter than his own. The canopy had caved in around him, and a jagged chunk of engine was nestling in the passenger seat to his right. As he tried to stand up, a section of the plastic floorboard collapsed; his foot followed it through and struck solid ground. He worked himself out of the seat. The grid-car creaked tiredly and settled another six inches. Dowland shoved a piece of canopy aside and found he could straighten out.
He cleared his throat. “I don’t think I’m hurt. Anyway, not much.”
“Your face—it’s bleeding!”
Dowland probed at a cut lip with his tongue and winced. “Didn’t notice it happen . . . a lot of stuff flying around there for a moment. Now, just what’s going on?”
The girl swallowed nervously, staring at him. “The power’s off.”
“That I noticed.” Something occurred to Dowland. “That’s why you couldn’t call me on the communicator.”
“Yes. I . . .”
“How long has it been off here?”
“Since this morning.”
He looked at her thoughtfully, and a quick flush spread up into her face. “I know,” she said. “It was terribly stupid of me to—to get you to come down. It just didn’t occur to me that . . .”
“It’s all right,” Dowland said. “I’m here now.” She was very good-looking, though her face was strained at the moment. Strained and scared. “You could not know how far the failure area extended.” He glanced over at the buildings. The crash of his landing hadn’t brought anyone into sight. “You’re not alone here, are you?”
“No.” She hesitated, went on half apologetically, “I’m sure I should remember you, but I don’t.”
“Well, you wouldn’t,” Dowland said. “I’m not a Freeholder.”
THE flicker of reaction in her eyes brought a prickling to the hairs at the back of his neck. The thing looked hot, all right. He continued, “You just may have heard of me by name, though. Frank Dowland, of Dowland Animal Exports.”
“Oh, yes.” Apparently she did recognize the name. “I’m Jill Trelawney, Dowland. I . . . there’s been an accident. A bad one, I’m afraid.”
“Another accident? What kind?”
She shook her head. “I don’t know. Do you have a medical kit with you?”
“Of course. Who’s hurt?”
“My uncle. Miguel Trelawney. He’s up in the house.”
“What’s wrong with him?”
“That’s what I don’t know, looks—I think he’s terribly sick. In some way.”
“How long has he been sick?”
She hesitated. “This morning.”
“Since the time the grid-power went off?”
Jill looked startled. “Why, yes.”
And that about cinched it, Dowland thought. He said, “You two were alone here?”
“No. I’m sure this all sounds very crazy, but—” She nodded
at one of the buildings down the slope from them, a long wooden structure identified as a feed barn in Dowland’s pictures of the ranch. “My other uncle, Paul Trelawney—he’s locked up in there.”
“Locked up?” Dowland repeated.
“Yes. There’s a key to the door somewhere, but I can’t find it.”
“Would Miguel know where it is?”
“I think so.”
“Then we’ll try to get him conscious again at least long enough to tell us. You’d better get back to the house, Miss Trelawney. I’ll dig out the kit. Be up there in a minute.”
He watched the tall supple figure start back across the slope, shook his head a little, and turned to the wrecked car. She was either somewhat stupid, or being cagey with a non-Terran. The last seemed a little more likely. Too bad if she turned out to be involved with something like the YM business, but that was out of his hands. He’d have to report immediately, and the Over-government specialists would be here in an hour. It wasn’t his job.
He climbed cautiously back into the car. Out of sight of the house, he pressed a key on the wrist communicator, said, “Chris? This is Dowland. Emergency,” and waited for the hum of response from the instrument.
There was no hum.
Half a minute later, he had the communicator off his wrist and opened. He couldn’t remember having struck his wrist hard enough against anything to have damaged it, but the delicate mechanisms inside were a crystal shambles. There was a portable communicator packed in with his camping equipment. But it operated on grid power.
It looked like it was going to remain his job for a while, after all.
* * *
MIGUEL Trelawney, in Dowland’s unvoiced opinion, was a man who was dying. He was big-boned and heavily muscled, but on the low couch in the living room he looked shrunken. Lead-colored skin and thready pulse. Internal bleeding at a guess—an informed layman’s guess. Radiation burns.
Dowland looked over at the girl. She was disturbed and tense, but nowhere near hysteria. “We might bring him around,” he said bluntly. “But it will take some hours at least. He’s in bad shape.”
Her hands, clasped together in her lap, went white around the knuckles. “Will he . . . can you save . . .”
Dowland shook his head. “I don’t know if we can save him here. If we got him to one of your hospitals tonight, he should have a very good chance. But we can’t do that—unless the grid-power cuts in again.”
She said faintly, “What’s happened to him?”
“Lady, that’s fairly obvious. He’s been ray-burned.”
“Ray-burned? But how?”
“I wouldn’t know.” Dowland opened the medical kit, slid out several of the tiny containers, turned one of them over in his hand. He asked, “Where was he when you found him?”
“Lying outside the door of the lab.”
“Lab?”
Jill Trelawney bit her lip. “The building I showed you.”
“Where Paul Trelawney’s locked up?”
“Yes. They call it a lab.”
“Who are they?”
“Miguel and Paul.”
“What kind of lab is it?” Dowland asked absently.
“I don’t know. They’re building something there. Some sort of a machine.”
“Are your uncles scientists?”
“Yes.” Her tone had begun to harden—a Freeholder lady rebuffing a non-Terran’s prying.
Dowland said, “If we knew whether they had radiation suits in that lab . . .”
“I believe they do.”
He nodded. “That might account for Miguel.”
He took a minute hypodermic syringe from the kit, inserted the needle through a penetration point on the container he had selected, filled it slowly. Jill stirred uneasily, asked, “What are you giving him?”
Dowland glanced over at her. “I don’t know exactly. The brand name’s ‘medic.’ There are around thirty other names for what’s probably the same preparation. They’re all very popular wherever good doctors and good hospitals aren’t readily available. I haven’t run into medic on Terra, but I bring along my own supply—”
“What will it do for him?”
“Well, as I understand it, as soon as I inject this into his arm, it will spread through his body and start looking things over. Medic appears to know what a healthy human body should be like. So it diagnoses what’s wrong—cold symptoms, burned-out lung, hangover, broken ankle—and then tries to bring the situation back to normal.”
HE SLID up Miguel Trelawney’s sleeve, inserted the needle tip into the thick, flaccid biceps, slowly depressed the plunger. “Medic’s supposed to be in the class of a virus—a very well-intentioned virus when it comes to human beings.” He removed the needle, glanced at his watch. “Almost six-thirty . . . A hangover’d get knocked out in three minutes. But judging from the condition your uncle seems to be in, it might be four or five hours now before the stuff really begins to take hold with him. If it can bring him back to consciousness by itself, it probably won’t happen much before morning. Might be earlier; but I don’t think we should wait for that before trying to get your Uncle Paul out of the lab. If he hasn’t come out on his own, he may be in the same shape as Miguel. Or worse.”
Jill’s face paled slightly. “Yes. I’ve been thinking of that.” Dowland stood looking down at her, chewing on his lower lip. “You know, Miss Trelawney, there’s something very odd about the fact that you found Miguel lying outside the lab when the door was locked.”
She nodded. “I know. I don’t have any explanation for it.”
“Isn’t there a storeroom of some kind around—where they might be keeping radiation suits, for instance?”
“The ranch storehouse is the small square building just south of here. I went through it this morning looking for a key to the lab. There aren’t any radiation suits there.”
“You know what those suits look like?”
“Yes. I’ve worn them when taking part in attack drills.”
“Would you recognize the lab key if you saw it?”
“Yes. Miguel showed me the one he usually carries with him.” She got up, went over to the mantle above the fireplace, took down a circular wedge of metal, a half-inch thick, with smoothly beveled rim. She handed it to Dowland. “The key is very similar to this one, but at least three times as large.”
Dowland hefted the object shook his head. “Lady, by the weight of it, this thing’s metasteel. The stuff they use for bank vaults and the hulls of battleships. And it looks as if the door to your uncles’ laboratory has an atomic lock because that’s what this type of key is made for. Do you know if the building’s lined with steel inside?”
“It might be. Miguel told me that it had been extremely expensive to build, that he had wanted to make sure no one could get into it while he was away.”
“If it’s built of metasteel, he’s done just that,” Dowland said. “And that makes it tough.” He looked at the key in his hand. “What does this key fit into?”
“I don’t know. But I’m sure there’s no other door on the ranch that has an—an atomic lock. I found the key in Miguel’s pocket this morning.”
“Well, it’s probably no good to us,” Dowland said. “Now look, Miss Trelawney. I’m carrying a protection gun that can be stepped up to around six times the shock power of a heavy rifle slug. I’ll try that out at full charge on the lock to the lab, and then around the walls. But if it’s all metasteel, shooting at it won’t get us anywhere. Then we might make another search for that key. Or I could try getting down off the mesa to get help.” Jill looked doubtful. “There’s no easy way down off the mesa even in daylight. And at night it would be worse.”
Dowland said, “That part of it won’t be too much of a problem. I brought mountaineering equipment along this trip—planned to pick up a Marco Polo ram and a few ewes—piton gun, clamp pitons, half-mile of magnetic rope; the works. Question is, how much good will it do? I’ve got a camp communicator, but it’s grid-
powered, and we don’t know how far the power failure extends around here at ground level. Is there anyone down in the plain we could contact? They might have horses.” She shook her head. “I would have heard of that. You could wander around there for weeks before you were seen.”
Dowland was silent a moment. “Well,” he said, “it should be worth a try if we can’t accomplish anything within another few hours. Judging from my car’s position when its power went off, it shouldn’t really be more than a ten-mile hike from the bottom of the mesa before I can start using the communicator. But, of course, it will take up a lot of time. So we’ll see what we can do here first.”
He slipped his jacket on. “You’d better stay with your uncle, Miss Trelawney. I—”
He interrupted himself. An unearthly din had begun suddenly outside the house—whistling squeals, then an angry ear-shattering noise somewhere between a howl and a roar. The girl started, then smiled nervously. Dowland asked, “What is that?”
“Miguel’s pigs. I expect they’re simply hungry. The feeding equipment in the animal house isn’t operating either, of course.”
“Pigs? I’ve heard pigs make a racket, but never anything like that.”
“These,” said Jill, “are rather large. My uncle is interested in experimental breeding. I understand the biggest tusker weighs nearly two tons. They’re alarming beasts. Miguel’s the only one who can get close to the boar.”
OUTSIDE it was early evening, still light, but Dowland went first to the wrecked grid-car to get a flashlight. He’d need it during the night, might even need it immediately if he found he could force an entry into the laboratory. In that case—if the building wasn’t metasteel after all—he probably would find no YM inside it. Which, Dowland admitted to himself, would be entirely all right with him.
But he was reasonably certain it was there. The Overgovernment’s instructions about what to watch for remained annoyingly indefinite, but uniformly they stressed the unusual, in particular when associated with the disastrous. And so far, that described the situation here. The large and uncomfortable question was what kind of disaster might be about to erupt next.
Complete Short Fiction (Jerry eBooks) Page 121