“What was that stuff?” Victor asked.
“I’m afraid,” Barnett said, “that our alien friend considered it a breathable atmosphere.”
Agee shook his head. “Can’t be, Captain. He was here on an oxygen world, walking around with no helmet—”
“Air requirements vary tremendously,” Barnett pointed out “Let’s face it—our friend’s physical makeup was quite different from ours.”
“That’s not so good,” Agee said.
The three men looked at each other. In the silence that followed, they heard a faint, ominous sound.
“What was that?” Victor yelped, yanking out his blaster.
“Shut up!” Barnett shouted.
They listened. Barnett could feel the hairs lift on the back of his neck as he tried to identify the sound.
It came from a distance. It sounded like metal striking a hard non-metallic object.
The three men looked out the port. In the last glow of sunset, they could see the main port of Endeavor I was open. The sound was coming from the ship.
“It’s impossible,” Agee said. “The freeze-blasters—”
“Didn’t kill him,” Barnett finished.
“That’s bad,” Agee grunted. “That’s very bad.”
Victor was still holding his blaster. “Captain, suppose I wander over that way—”
Barnett shook his head. “He wouldn’t let you within ten feet of the lock. No, let me think. Was there anything on board he could use? The piles?”
“I’ve got the links, Captain,” Victor said.
“Good. Then there’s nothing that—”
“The acid,” Agee interrupted. “It’s powerful stuff. But I don’t suppose he can do much with that stuff.”
“Not a thing,” Barnett said. “We’re in this ship and we’re staying here. But get it off the ground now.”
Agee looked at the instrument panel. Half an hour ago, he had almost understood it. Now it was a cunningly rigged death trap—a booby trap, with invisible wires leading to destruction.
The trap was unintentional. But a spaceship was necessarily a machine for living as well as traveling. The controls would try to reproduce the alien’s living conditions, supply his needs.
That might be fatal to them.
“I wish I knew what kind of planet he came from,” Agee said unhappily. If they knew the alien’s environment, they could anticipate what his ship would do.
All they knew was that he breathed a poisonous yellow gas.
“We’re doing all right,” Barnett said, without much confidence. “Just dope out the drive mechanism and we’ll leave everything else alone.”
Agee turned back to the controls.
Barnett wished he knew what the alien was up to. He stared at the bulk of his old ship in the twilight and listened to the incomprehensible sound of metal striking non-metal.
Kalen was surprised to find that he was still alive. But there was a saying among his people—“Either a Mabogian is killed fast or he isn’t killed at all.” It was not at all—so far.
Groggily, he sat up and leaned against a tree. The single red sun of the planet was low on the horizon and breezes of poisonous oxygen swirled around him. He tested at once and found that his lungs were still securely sealed. His life-giving yellow air, although vitiated from long use, was still sustaining him.
But he couldn’t seem to get oriented. A few hundred yards away, his ship was resting peacefully. The fading red light glistened from its hull and, for a moment, Kalen was convinced that there were no aliens. He had imagined the whole thing and now he could return to his ship….
He saw one of the aliens loaded down with goods, enter his vessel. In a little while, the airlocks closed.
It was true, all of it. He wrenched his mind back to grim realities.
He needed food and air badly. His outer skin was dry and cracked, and in need of nutritional cleaning. But food, air and cleansers were on his lost ship. All he had was a single red kerla nut and the thetnite bomb in his body pouch.
If he could open and eat the nut, he could regain a little strength. But how could he open it?
It was shocking, how complete his dependence on machinery had been! Now he would have to find some way of doing the most simple, ordinary, everyday things—the sort of things his ship had done automatically, without the operator even thinking about them.
Kalen noticed that the aliens had apparently abandoned their own ship. Why? It didn’t matter. Out on the plain, he would die before morning. His only chance for survival lay inside their ship.
He slid slowly through the grass, stopping only when a wave of dizziness swept over him. He tried to keep watch on his ship. If the aliens came after him now, all would be lost. But nothing happened. After an eternity of crawling, he reached the ship and slipped inside.
It was twilight. In the dimness, he could see that the vessel was old. The walls, too thin in the first place, had been patched and repatched. Everything spoke of long, hard use.
He could understand why they wanted his ship.
Another wave of dizziness swept over him. It was his body’s way of demanding immediate attention.
Food seemed to be the first problem. He slipped the kerla nut out of his pouch. It was round, almost four inches in diameter, and its hide was two inches thick. Nuts of this sort were the main ingredient of a Mabogian spaceman’s diet. They were energy-packed and would last almost forever, sealed.
He propped the nut against a wall, found a steel bar and smashed down on it. The bar, striking the nut, emitted a hollow, drum-like sound. The nut was undamaged.
Kalen wondered if the sound could be heard by the aliens. He would have to chance it. Setting himself firmly, he flailed away. In fifteen minutes, he was exhausted and the bar was bent almost in half.
The nut was undamaged.
He was unable to open the nut without a Cracker, a standard device on every Mabogian ship. No one ever thought of opening a nut in any other way.
It was terrifying evidence of his helplessness.
He lifted the bar for another whack and found that his limbs were stiffening. He dropped the bar and took stock.
His chilled outer hide was hampering his motions. The skin was hardening slowly into impervious horn. Once the hardening was completed, he would be immobilized. Frozen in position, he would sit or stand until he died of suffocation.
Kalen fought back a wave of despair and tried to think. He had to treat his skin without delay. That was more important than food. On board his own ship, he would wash and bathe it, soften it and eventually cure it. But it was doubtful whether the aliens carried the proper cleansers.
The only other course was to rip off his outer hide. The second layer would be tender for a few days, but at least he would be mobile.
He searched on stiffening limbs for a Changer. Then he realized that the aliens wouldn’t have even this piece of basic apparatus. He was still on his own.
He took the steel bar, bent it into a hook and inserted the point under a fold of skin. He yanked upward with all his strength.
His skin refused to yield.
Next, he wedged himself between a generator and the wall and inserted the hook in a different way. But his arms weren’t long enough to gain leverage, and the tough hide held stubbornly.
He tried a dozen different positions, unsuccessfully. Without mechanical assistance, he couldn’t hold himself rigidly enough.
Wearily, he dropped the bar. He could do nothing, nothing at all. Then he remembered the thetnite bomb in his pouch.
A primitive part of his mind which he had not previously known existed said that there was an easy way out of all this. He could slip the bomb under the hull of his ship, while the aliens weren’t looking. The light charge would do no more than throw the ship twenty or thirty feet into the air, but would not really damage it.
The aliens, however, would undoubtedly be killed.
Kalen was horrified. How could he think such a thing?
The Mabogian ethic, ingrained in the fiber of his being, forbade the taking of intelligent life for any reason whatsoever. Any reason.
“But wouldn’t this be justified?” that primitive portion of his mind whispered. “These aliens are diseased. You would be doing the Universe a favor by getting rid of them and only incidentally helping yourself. Don’t think of it as murder. Consider it extermination.”
He took the bomb out of his pouch and looked at it, then hastily put it away. “No!” he told himself, with less conviction.
He refused to think any more. On tired, almost rigid limbs, he began to search the alien ship, looking for something that would save his life.
Agee was crouched in the pilot’s compartment, wearily marking switches with an indelible pencil. His lungs ached and he had been working all night Now there was a bleak gray dawn outside and a chill wind was whipping around Endeavor II. The spaceship was lighted but cold, for Agee didn’t want to touch the temperature controls.
Victor came into the crew room, staggering under the weight of a heavy packing case.
“Barnett?” Agee called out.
“He’s coming,” Victor said.
The captain wanted all their equipment up front, where they could get at it quickly. But the crew room was small and he had used most of the available space.
Looking around for a spot to put the case, Victor noticed a door in one wall. He pressed its stud and the door slid smartly into the ceiling, revealing a room the size of a closet Victor decided it would make an ideal storage space.
Ignoring the crushed red shells on the floor, he slid the case inside.
Immediately, the ceiling of the little room began to descend.
Victor let out a yell that could be heard throughout the ship. He leaped up—and slammed his head against the ceiling. He fell on his face, stunned.
Agee rushed out of the pilot’s compartment and Barnett sprinted into the room. Barnett grabbed Victor’s legs and tried to drag him out, but Victor was heavy and the captain was unable to get a purchase on the smooth metal floor.
With rare presence of mind, Agee up-ended the packing case. The ceiling was momentarily stopped by it.
Together, Barnett and Agee tugged at Victor’s legs. They managed to drag him out just in time. The heavy case splintered and, in another moment, was crushed like a piece of balsa wood.
The ceiling of the little room, descending on a greased shaft, compressed the packing case to a six-inch thickness. Then its gears clicked and it slid back into place without a sound.
Victor sat up and rubbed his head. “Captain,” he said plaintively, “can’t we get our own ship back?”
Agee was doubtful of the venture, too. He looked at the deadly little room, which again resembled a closet with crushed red shells on the floor.
“Sure seems like a jinx ship,” he said worriedly. “Maybe Victor’s right.”
“You want to give her up?” Barnett asked.
Agee squirmed uncomfortably and nodded. “Trouble is,” he said, not looking at Barnett, “we don’t know what she’ll do next. It’s just too risky, Captain.”
“Do you realize what you’d be giving up?” Barnett challenged. “Her hull alone is worth a fortune. Have you looked at her engines?
There’s nothing this side of Earth that could stop her. She could drill her way through a planet and come out the other side with all her paint on. And you want to give her up!”
“She won’t be worth much if she kills us,” Agee objected.
Victor nodded emphatically. Barnett stared at them.
“Now listen to me carefully,” Barnett said. “We are not going to give up this ship. She is not jinxed. She’s alien and filled with alien apparatus. All we have to do is keep our hands off things until we reach drydock. Understand?”
Agee wanted to say something about closets that turned into hydraulic presses. It didn’t seem to him a promising sign for the future. But, looking at Barnett’s face, he decided against it.
“Have you marked all the operating controls?” Barnett asked.
“Just a few more to go,” Agee said.
“Right Finish up and those are the only ones we’ll touch. If we leave the rest of the ship alone, she’ll leave us alone. There’s no danger if we just keep hands off.”
Barnett wiped perspiration from his face, leaned against a wall and unbuttoned his coat.
Immediately, two metal bands slid out of openings on either side of him and circled his waist and stomach.
Barnett stared at them for a moment, then threw himself forward with all his strength. The bands didn’t give. There was a peculiar clicking sound in the walls and a slender wire filament slid out. It touched Barnett’s coat appraisingly, then retreated into the wall.
Agee and Victor stared helplessly.
“Turn it off,” Barnett said tensely.
Agee rushed into the control room. Victor continued staring. Out of the wall slid a metal limb, tipped with a glittering three-inch blade.
“Stop it!” Barnett screamed.
Victor unfroze. He ran up and tried to wrench the metal limb out of the wall. It twisted once and sent him reeling across the room.
With the precision of a surgeon, the knife slit Barnett’s coat down the middle, not touching the shirt underneath. Then the limb slid out of sight
Agee was punching controls now and the generators whined, the locks opened and closed, stabilizers twitched, lights flickered. The mechanism that held Barnett was unaffected.
The slender filament returned. It touched Barnett’s shirt and paused an instant The internal mechanism chittered alarmingly. The filament touched Barnett’s shirt again, as if unsure of its function in this case.
Agee shouted from the control room, “I can’t turn it off! It must be fully automatic!”
The filament slid into the wall. It disappeared and the knife- tipped limb slid out.
By this time, Victor had located a heavy wrench. He rushed over, swung it above his head and smashed it against the limb, narrowly missing Barnett’s head.
The limb was not even dented. Serenely, it cut Barnett’s shirt from his back, leaving him naked to the waist.
Barnett was not hurt, but his eyes rolled wildly as the filament came out Victor put his fist in his mouth and backed away. Agee shut his eyes.
The filament touched Barnett’s warm living flesh, clucked approvingly and slid back into the wall. The bands opened. Barnett tumbled to his knees.
For a while, no one spoke. There was nothing to say. Barnett stared moodily into space. Victor started to crack his knuckles over and over again, until Agee nudged him.
The old pilot was trying to figure out why the mechanism had slit Barnett’s clothing and then stopped when it reached living flesh. Was this the way the alien undressed himself? It didn’t make sense. But then, the press-closet didn’t make sense, either.
In a way, he was glad it had happened. It must have taught Barnett something. Now they would leave this jinxed monstrosity and figure out a way of regaining their own ship.
“Get me a shirt,” Barnett said. Victor hurriedly found one for him. Barnett slipped it on, staying clear of the walls. “How soon can you get this ship moving?” he asked Agee, a bit unsteadily.
“What?”
“You heard me.”
“Haven’t you had enough?” Agee gasped.
“No. How soon can we blast out?”
“About another hour,” Agee grumbled. What else could he say? The captain was just too much. Wearily, Agee returned to the control room.
Barnett put a sweater over the shirt and a coat over that It was chilly in the room and he had begun to shiver violently.
Kalen lay motionless on the deck of the alien ship. Foolishly, he had wasted most of his remaining strength in trying to rip off his stiff outer hide. But the hide grew progressively tougher as he grew weaker. Now it seemed hardly worthwhile to move. Better to rest and feel his internal fires burn lower….
Soon he
was dreaming of the ridged hills of Mabog and the great port of Canthanope, where the interstellar traders swung down with their strange cargoes. He was there in twilight, looking over the flat roofs at the two great setting suns. But why were they setting together in the south, the blue sun and the yellow? How could they set together in the south? A physical impossibility…Perhaps his father could explain it, for it was rapidly growing dark.
He shook himself out of the fantasy and stared at the grim light of morning. This was not the way for a Mabogian spaceman to die. He would try again.
After half an hour of slow, painful searching, he found a sealed metal box in the rear of the ship. The aliens had evidently overlooked it. He wrenched off the top. Inside were several bottles, carefully fastened and padded against shock. Kalen lifted one and examined it.
It was marked with a large white symbol. There was no reason why he should know the symbol, but it seemed faintiy familiar. He searched his memory, trying to recall where he had seen it.
Then, hazily, he remembered. It was a representation of a humanoid skull. There was one humanoid race in the Mabogian Union and he had seen replicas of their skulls in a museum.
But why would anyone put such a thing on a bottle?
To Kalen, a skull conveyed an emotion of reverence. This must be what the manufacturers had intended. He opened the bottle and sniffed.
The odor was interesting. It reminded him of—
Skin-cleansing solution!
Without further delay, he poured the entire bottle over himself. Hardly daring to hope, he waited. If he could put his skin back into working order….
Yes, the liquid in the skull-marked bottle was a mild cleanser! It was pleasantly scented, too.
He poured another bottle over his armored hide and felt the nutritious fluid seep in. His body, starved for nourishment, called eagerly for more. He drained another bottle.
For a long time, Kalen just lay back and let the life-giving fluid soak in. His skin loosened and became pliable. He could feel a new surge of energy within him, a new will to live.
He would live!
Citizen in Space Page 9