The Star Road

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The Star Road Page 13

by Gordon R. Dickson


  Maury said, “You’ll be all right, Joe.”

  The words seemed to trip a trigger in his mind. Suddenly the implications of his damaged leg burst on him. He was the Leader!

  “Help me!” he gritted, trying to sit up.

  “You ought to lie still.”

  “Help me up, I said!” The leg was a dead weight. Maury’s hands took hold and helped raise his body. He got the leg swung off the edge of the surface on which he had been lying, and got into sitting position. He looked around him.

  The magnetic bubble had been set up to make a small, air-filled addition of breathable ship’s atmosphere around the airlock entrance of the Harrier, It enclosed about as much space as a good-sized living room. Its floor was the mountain hillside’s rock and gravel. A mattress from one of the ship’s bunks had been set up on equipment boxes to make him a bed. At the other end of the bubble-enclosed space something as big as a man was lying zippered up in a gray cargo freeze-sack.

  “What’s that?” Joe demanded. “Where’s everybody?”

  “They’re checking equipment in the damaged sections,” answered Maury. “We shot you full of medical juices. You’ve been out about twenty hours. That’s about three-quarters of a local day-and-night cycle locally, here.” He grabbed the wounded man’s shoulders suddenly with both hands. “Hold it! What’re you trying to do?”

  “Have a look in that freeze-sack there,” grunted the Team Leader between his teeth. “Let go of me, Maury. I’m still in charge here!”

  “Sit still,” said Maury. “I’ll bring it to you.”

  He went over to the bag, taking hold of one of the carrying handles he dragged it back. It came easily in the lesser gravity, only a little more than eight-tenths of Earth’s. He hauled the thing to the bed and unzipped it.

  Joe stared. What was inside was not what he had been expecting.

  “Cute, isn’t it?” said Maury.

  They looked down at the hard-frozen gray body of a biped, with the back of its skull shattered and burnt by the flare of a signal pistol. It lay on its back. The legs were somewhat short for the body and thick, as the arms were thick. But elbow and knee joints were where they should be, and the hands had four stubby gray fingers, each with an opposed thumb. Like the limbs, the body was thick—almost waistless. There were deep creases, as if tucks had been taken in the skin, around the body under the armpits, around the waist and around the legs and arms.

  The head, though, was the startling feature. It was heavy and round as a ball, sunk into thick folds of neck and all but featureless. Two long slits ran down each side into the neck and shoulder area. The slits were tight closed. Like the rest of the body, the head had no hair. The eyes were little pockmarks, like raisins sunk into a doughball, and there were no visible brow ridges. The nose was a snout-end set almost flush with the facial surface. The mouth was lipless, a line of skin folded together, through which now glinted barely a glimpse of close-set, large, tridentated teeth.

  “What’s this?” said Joe. “Where’s the thing that attacked us?”

  “This is it,” said Maury. “One of the aliens from the other ship.”

  Joe stared at him. In the brighter, harsher light from the star K94 overhead, he noticed for the first time a sprinkling of gray hairs in the black shock above Maury’s spade-shaped face. Maury was no older than Joe himself.

  “What’re you talking about?” said Joe. “I saw that thing that attacked me. And this isn’t it!”

  “Look,” said Maury and turned to the foot of the bed. From one of the equipment boxes he brought up eight by ten inch density photographs. “Here,” he said, handing them to the Survey Team Leader. “The first one is set for bone density.”

  Joe took them. It showed the skeleton of the being at his feet . . . and it bore only a relative kinship to the shape of the being itself.

  Under the flesh and skin that seemed so abnormally thick, the skull was high-forebrained and well developed. Heavy brown ridges showed over deep wells for the eyes. The jaw and teeth were the prognathous equipment of a carnivorous animal.

  But that was only the beginning of the oddities. Bony ridges of gill structures were buried under a long fold on either side of the head, neck and shoulders. The rib cage was enormous and the pelvis tiny, buried under eight or nine inches of the gray flesh. The limbs were literally double-jointed. There was a fantastic double structure of ball and socket that seemed wholly unnecessary. Maury saw the Survey Leader staring at one hip joint and leaned over to tap it with the blunt nail of his forefinger.

  “Swivel and lock,” said Maury. “If the joint’s pulled out, it can turn in any direction. Then, if the muscles surrounding it contract, the two ball joints interlace those bony spurs there and lock together so that they operate as a single joint in the direction chosen. That hip joint can act like the hip joint on the hind leg of a quadruped, or the leg of a biped. It can even adapt for jumping and running with maximum efficiency. —Look at the toes and the fingers.”

  Joe looked. Hidden under flesh, the bones of feet and hands were not stubby and short, but long and powerful. And at the end of finger and toe bones were the curved, conical claws they had seen rip open Sam Cloate with one passing blow.

  “Look at these other pictures now,” said Maury, taking the first one off the stack Joe held. “These have been set for densities of muscle—that’s this one here—and fat. Here. And this one is set for soft internal organs—here.” He was down to the last. “And this one was set for the density of the skin. Look at that. See how thick it is, and how great folds of it are literally tucked away underneath in those creases.

  “Now,” said Maury, “look at this closeup of a muscle. See how it resembles an interlocking arrangement of innumerable tiny muscles? Those small muscles can literally shift to adapt to different skeletal positions. They can take away beef from one area and add it to an adjoining area. Each little muscle actually holds on to its neighbors, and they have little sphincter-sealed tube-systems to hook on to whatever blood-conduit is close. By increased hookup they can increase the blood supply to any particular muscle that’s being overworked. There’s parallel nerve connections.”

  Maury stopped and looked at the other man.

  “You see?” said Maury. “This alien can literally be four or five different kinds of animal. Even a fish! And no telling how many varieties of each kind. We wondered a little at first why he wasn’t wearing any kind of clothing, but we didn’t wonder after we got these pictures. Why would he need clothing when he can adapt to any situation—Joe!” said Maury. “You see it, don’t you? You see the natural advantage these things have over us all?”

  Joe shook his head.

  “There’s no body hair,” he said. “The creature that jumped me was striped like a tiger.”

  “Pigmentation. In response to emotion, maybe,” said Maury. “For camouflage—or for terrifying the victims.”

  Joe sat staring at the pictures in his hand.

  “All right,” he said after a bit. “Then tell me how he happened to get here three or four minutes after we fell down here ourselves? And where did he come from? We rammed that other ship a good five miles up.”

  “There’s only one way, the rest of us figured it out,” said Maury. “He was one of the ones who were spilled out when we hit them. He must have grabbed our hull and ridden us down.” “That’s impossible!”

  “Not if he could flatten himself out and develop suckers like a starfish,” said Maury. “The skin picture shows he could.” “All right,” said Joe. “Then why did he try a suicidal trick like that attack—him alone against the eight of us?”

  “Maybe it wasn’t so suicidal,” said Maury. “Maybe he didn’t see Cal’s pistol and thought he could take the unarmed eight of us.” Maury hesitated. “Maybe he could, too. Or maybe he was just doing his duty—to do as much damage to us as he could before we got him. There’s no cover around here that’d have given him a chance to escape from us. He knew that we’d see him the first
time he moved.”

  Joe nodded, looking down at the form in the freeze-sack. For the aliens of the other ship there would be one similarity with the humans—a duty either to get home themselves with the news of contact, at all costs; or failing that, to see their enemy did not get home.

  For a moment he found himself thinking of the frozen body before him almost as if it had been human. From what strange home world might this individual now be missed forever? And what thoughts had taken place in that round, gray-skinned skull as it had fallen surfaceward clinging to the ship of its enemies, seeing the certainty of its own death approaching as surely as the rocky mountainside?

  “Do we have record films of the battle?” Joe asked.

  “I’ll get them.” Maury went off.

  He brought the films. Joe, feeling the weakness of his condition stealing up on him, pushed it aside and set to examining the pictorial record of the battle. Seen in the film viewer, the battle had a remote quality. The alien ship was smaller than Joe had thought, half the size of the Harrier. The two dropped weights had made large holes in its midships. It was not surprising that it had broken apart when rammed.

  One of the halves of the broken ship had gone up and melted in a sudden flare of green light like their weapons beam, as if some internal explosion had taken place. The other half had fallen parallel to the Harrier and almost as slowly—as if the fragment, like the dying Harrier, had had yet some powers of flight—and had been lost to sight at last on the opposite side of this mountain, still falling.

  Four gray bodies had spilled from the alien ship as it broke

  apart. Three, at least, had fallen some five miles to their deaths. The record camera had followed their dwindling bodies. And Maury was right; these had been changing even as they fell, flattening and spreading out as if in an instinctive effort to slow their fall. But, slowed or not, a five-mile fall even in this lesser-than-Earth gravity was death.

  Joe put the films aside and began to ask Maury questions.

  The Harrier, Maury told him, would never lift again. Half her drive section was melted down to magnesium alloy slag. She lay here with food supplies adequate for the men who were left for four months. Water was no problem as long as everyone existed still within the ship’s recycling system. Oxygen was available in the local atmosphere and respirators would extract it. Storage units gave them housekeeping power for ten years. There was no shortage of medical supplies, the tool shop could fashion ordinary implements, and there was a good stock of usual equipment.

  But there was no way of getting off this mountain.

  III

  The others had come into the bubble while Maury had been speaking. They stood now around the bed. With the single exception of Cal, who showed nothing, they all had a new, taut, skinned-down look about their faces, like men who have been recently exhausted or driven beyond their abilities.

  “Look around you,” said Jeff Ramsey, taking over from Maury when Maury spoke of the mountain. “Without help we can’t leave here.”

  “Tell him,” said Doug Kellas. Like young Jeff, Doug had not shaved recently. But where Jeff’s stubble of beard was blond, Doug’s was brown-dark and now marked out the hollows under his youthful cheekbones. The two had been the youngest of the Team.

  “Well, this is a hanging valley,” said Jeff. Jeff was the sur-

  face man geologist and meterologist of the Team. “At one time a glacier used to come down this valley we’re lying in, and over that edge there. Then the valley subsided, or the mountain rose or the climate changed. All the slopes below that cliff edge—any way down from here—brings you finally to a sheer cliff.”

  “How could the land raise that much?” murmured Maury, looking out and down at the green too far below to tell what it represented. Jeff shrugged.

  “This is a bigger world than Earth—even if it’s lighter,” he said. “Possibly more liable to crustal distortion.” He nodded at the peaks above them. “These are young mountains. Their height alone reflects the lesser gravity. That glacier up there couldn’t have formed on that steep a slope on Earth.”

  “There’s the Messenger,” said Cal.

  His deeper-toned voice brought them all around. He had been standing behind the rest, looking over their heads. He smiled a little dryly and sadly at the faint unanimous look of hostility on the faces of all but the Survey Leader’s. He was unusual in the respect that he was so built as not to need their friendship. But he was a member of the Team as they were and he would have liked to have had that friendship—if it could have been had at any price short of changing his own naturally individualistic character.

  “There’s no hope of that,” said Doug Kellas. “The Messenger was designed for launching from the ship in space. Even in spite of the lower gravity here, it’d never break loose of the planet.”

  The Messenger was an emergency device every ship carried. It was essentially a miniature ship in itself, with drive unit and controls for one shift through no-time and an attached propulsive unit to kick it well clear of any gravitic field that might inhibit the shift into no-time. It could be set with the location of a ship wishing to send a message back to Earth, and with the location of Earth at the moment of arrival—both figured in terms of angle and distance from the theoretical center-point of the galaxy, as determined by ship’s observations. It would set off, translate itself through no-time in one jump back to a reception area just outside Earth’s critical gravitic field, and there be picked up with the message it contained.

  For the Harrier team, this message could tell of the aliens and call for rescue. All that was needed was the precise information concerning the Harrier's location in relation to Galactic Centerpoint and Earth’s location.

  In the present instance, this was no problem. The ship’s computer log developed the known position and movement of Earth with regard to Centerpoint, with every shift and movement of the ship. And the position of the second planet of star K94 was known to the chartmakers of Earth recorded by last observation aboard the Harrier.

  Travel in no-time made no difficulty of distance. In no-time all points coincided, and the ship was theoretically touching them all. Distance was not important, but location was. And a precise location was impossible—the very time taken to calculate it would be enough to render it impossibly inaccurate. What ships travelling by no-time operated on were calculations approximately as correct as possible—and leave a safety factor, read the rulebook.

  Calculate not to the destination, but to a point safely short enough of it, so that the predictable error will not bring the ship out in the center of some solid body. Calculate safely short of the distance remaining . . . and so on by smaller and smaller jumps to a safe conclusion.

  But that was with men aboard. With a mechanical unit like the Messenger, a one-jump risk could be taken.

  The Harrier had the figures to risk it—but a no-time drive could not operate within the critical area of a gravitic field like this planet’s. And, as Jeff had said, the propulsive unit of the Messenger was not powerful enough to take off from this mountainside and fight its way to escape from the planet.

  “That was one of the first things I figured,” said Jeff, now.

  “We’re more than four miles above this world’s sea-level, but it isn’t enough. There’s too much atmosphere still above us.”

  “The Messenger’s only two and a half feet long put together,” said Maury. “It only weighs fifteen pounds earthside. Can’t we send it up on a balloon or something? Did you think of that?”

  “Yes,” said Jeff. “We can’t calculate exactly the time it would take for a balloon to drift to a firing altitude, and we have to know the time to set the destination controls. We can’t improvise any sort of a booster propulsion unit for fear of jarring or affecting the destination controls. The Messenger is meant to be handled carefully and used in just the way it’s designed to be used, and that’s all.” He looked around at them. “Remember, the first rule of a Survey Ship is that it
never lands anywhere but Earth.”

  “Still,” said Cal, who had been calmly waiting while they talked this out, “we can make the Messenger work.”

  “How?” challenged Doug, turning on him. “Just how?”

  Cal turned and pointed to the wind-piping battlemented peaks of the mountain looming far above.

  “I did some calculating myself,” he said. “If we climb up there and send the Messenger off from the top, it’ll break free and go.”

  None of the rest of them said anything for a moment. They had all turned and were looking up the steep slope of the mountain, at the cliffs, the glacier where no glacier should be able to hang, and the peaks.

  “Any of you had any mountain-climbing experience?” asked Joe.

  “There was a rock-climbing club at the University I went to,” said Cal. “They used to practice on the rock walls of the bluffs on the St. Croix River—that’s about sixty miles west of Minneapolis and St. Paul. I went out with them a few times.”

  No one else said anything. Now they were looking at Cal.

  “And,” said Joe, “as our nearest thing to an expert, you

  think that—” he nodded to the mountain—“can be climbed carrying the Messenger along?”

  Cal nodded.

  “Yes,” he said slowly. “I think it can. I’ll carry the Messenger myself. We’ll have to make ourselves some equipment in the tool shop, here at the ship. And I’ll need help going up the mountain.”

  “How many?” said Joe.

  “Three.” Cal looked around at them as he called their names. “Maury, Jeff and Doug. All the able-bodied we’ve got.”

  Joe was growing paler with the effort of the conversation.

  “What about John?” he asked looking past Doug at John Martin, Number Nine of the Survey Team. John was a short, rugged man with wiry hair—but right now his face was almost as pale as Joe’s, and his warmsuit bulged over the chest.

 

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