"You pile one lie on another!” blazed Lana. “You try to cover your own guilt by accusing innocent men!"
"Let's take them out and blast them down now!” cried Brun Abo,
"It's the penalty for treachery among the Companions,” old Stilicho said miserably. “I guess we got to do it."
Lana Cain paled a little. She shook her head.
"No, we'll not kill them now,” she said. “Put them in the brig until morning."
"And why shouldn't we kill them now?” demanded Brun Abo of her. “Is it possible you've a tenderness for this Thorn?"
The girl turned on the Jovian, as though stung,
"I've only hate for such treacherous liars!” she flared. “But we're going to execute them, not murder them.
In the morning is soon enough."
Surprisingly, Jenk Cheerly supported her.
"Lana's right,” the Uranian squeaked and the girl glanced gratefully at him.
Thorn tried to speak again, but Brun Abo snarled an order, and the four pirates covering the Planeteers forced the three comrades to march out of the Council House into the night.
The brig, as the pirates called their prison, was a small, square, metal structure behind the main street of Turkoon Town. It had but one room, into whose dark interior they were rudely thrust. The heavy metal door slammed, and the wave-lock clicked.
"Make the best of your time till morning, Planeteers,” rasped Brun Abo as he and his men left.
"John, they didn't leave any guards outside,” said Sual Av quickly in the darkness. “Maybe we can get out."
They rapidly inspected their prison. But Thorn found that there was no chance whatever of escape from it.
The building was wholly constructed of inertrum, most intractable of metals. The two tiny, barred windows were mere loopholes, and the wave-lock of the door could only be operated by the secret frequencies of its wave-key applied from the outside.
"There's no getting out of here," grunted Gunner Welk. “Damn that fat Jenk Cheerly! It was he who suspected you were up to something, John, and followed you with Kinnel King—"
"Either Cheerly or Brun Abo must be the League spy here!” Sual Av declared tensely. “And it looks to me as though Cheerly is the man. He only joined the pirates recently, and it was he who tipped them off about the Jovian freighters, the League trap that, nearly succeeded in capturing Lana."
"What the devil are we going to do?” demanded the big Mercurian. “We can't break out of this place and we're due to be blasted at dawn."
"There's only one chance left us,” Thorn rapped. “When they take us out in the morning, we'll make a break and try to seize Lana. I don't think the pirates would take a chance of hurting her by firing at us then. We might get away with her."
Gunner Welk's rumbling voice came slowly, “But the girl might get hurt in the fight, John. I thought you were sort of in love with her."
"Yes,” added Sual Av. “and it looked to me as though she was beginning to feel the same way about you."
"Are you two space-struck to say such things?” Thorn demanded fiercely. “Me, in love with that wild pirate girl?"
Then his voice wavered a little. “Even if I did love her, I'd have to forget it. For we have to get that secret out of her somehow, if the Alliance is to have a chance. That is bigger and more important than everybody in the entire zone."
"All right, we'll try it,” rumbled Gunner Welk. “It looks like our last bet."
* * * *
Presently Gunner Welk and Sual Av were sleeping on the floor calmly oblivious to whatever fate the dawn might bring. But John Thorn could not sleep. Restlessly, he paced the darkness of the little metal room. In his mind queerly persisted the image of Lana's white, stunned face and accusing eyes. He tried to drive that reproachful face from his thoughts and couldn't.
White mists from the jungles had seeped into Turkoon Town as the night advanced, a cold fog that nipped the bones.
A little wind moaned through the dark, sleeping pirate stronghold, and at intervals came raucous calls of weird life teeming in the fern-forest.
Thorn heard a ship blasting off from the distant field, the thudding thunder of its tubes rapidly dying away.
He wondered broodingly if ever he and his two comrades would see space again.
Or was the coming dawn to end forever the career of the Planeteers?
Hours dragged past, and finally a faint dawn light began to illumine the swirling gray mists outside.
Suddenly through the fog came a wild, distant cry. It was echoed in a minute by raw shouts in other voices.
Thorn leaped to the little window, but could see nothing through the mists. He heard his comrades scrambling up,
"What's happened?” exclaimed Sual Av, rubbing his eyes sleepily.
"I don't know!” Thorn cried. “But something's wrong."
He could hear a babel of raging shouts and calls crackling like flame through Turkoon Town, waking everyone. And men were running through the clearing mists toward the field of ships.
"Stilicho!” yelled Thorn through the window as he glimpsed the old Martian pirate running painfully along the street.
The old man hesitated, then hobbled quickly over to the window of the little prison. He was buckling on his atom-pistols with trembling hands, and his wrinkled face was wild.
"What's happened?” Thorn demanded tensely.
"Lana—she's been kidnapped!” hissed the old Martian. “Jenk Cheerly did it some time last night."
"Lana kidnapped?” Thorn yelled wildly, his brown face suddenly haggard. “How do you know Cheerly did?"
"This morning one of our men found our guards at the ship-field lying murdered!” babbled the raging old man. “And one of Cheerly's Uranian crew, too, fatally wounded and left for dead. The Uranian boasted about what Cheerly had done, before he died.
"He said that Cheerly was not any pirate at all, like he pretended, but a League spy—the head of Haskell Trask's secret service! He said Cheerly had planned the trap that nearly captured Lana in the attack on them freighters, and that when that failed, Cheerly had used another plan to kidnap Lana last night. He used you in his plan, John Thorn!"
"Cheerly used me to kidnap Lana?” Thorn gasped. “My God, man, what are you talking about?"
"Lana's soft on you,” spat old Stilicho. “She didn't want to see you blasted this morning, and Cheerly knew it. So, according to that dying Uranian, Cheerly told Lana that he'd help you Planeteers escape if she released you. He got Lana to start secretly with him to this brig to let you out, and once he had her alone like that, he and his men grabbed her. They blasted down the field-guards and took her in his ship.
He's taking her to Saturn!"
The raging old pirate turned from the window. “We're going to follow Cheerly's ship. And God help that Uranian when we catch up with him!"
"Stilicho, wait—” Thorn cried wildly, but the old pirate was already hobbling urgently away in the mists., A few moments later came the thunderous roar of many ships taking off in the distance. As it died away, Thorn turned to his comrades, his face stricken.
"She was going to help us escape,” he said in a slow, choked voice. “Even after I'd tried to steal her secret, she was going to help us get away. And because of that, she's in the hands of Haskell Trask's spymaster now!"
His eyes were wild. “Think of what Trask and that fat fiend Cheerly will do to her to wring the secret out of her! And all because of me. She'd never have been kidnapped if she hadn't tried to help me!"
"It's not your fault, John,” rumbled Gunner Welk, his hard face showing his emotion. “Cheerly would have found one way or another to get hold of her, even if we'd never come here."
"And Stilicho and Kinnel King and all the rest of those pirates are trailing him now,” Sual Av added quickly. “They'll catch him and bring the girl back all right."
"I hope to heaven they do,” muttered the big Mercurian. “For if they fail, and Cheerly gets that girl to Saturn, it mea
ns that the League, and not the Alliance, will get that radite from Erebus."
Thorn started violently. For the moment, in his first wild concern for Lana's safety, he had forgotten the larger issue.
"The last hope of the Alliance is gone if that happens!” he exclaimed. His fists clenched convulsively.
“And we're locked up here! Isn't there something we can do?"
"Nothing but wait,” answered Gunner heavily.
* * * *
The long hours of that day were a torture infinitely prolonged to John Thorn. Pacing the little room, peering tensely from the window, he waited in terrible suspense. They were not brought any food or water. They had been completely forgotten for the time being in the greater catastrophe. They could see the street of Turkoon Town thronged with excited pirate women and men who had been left behind by the hasty expedition that had thundered forth in chase of Jenk Cheerly.
Night came, and more hours dragged past. Then from the distance came the thudding thunder of many ships landing.
"They're back!” Thorn cried tautly. “But did they rescue Lana?"
"We'll soon know,” muttered Sual Av.
They heard the pirate crews and captains trooping back into town, heard a loud uproar of voices. They waited tensely.
Then a thin, snow-haired figure approached their window in the starlight. It was old Stilicho, Keene, moving slowly.
"Did you bring Lana back?” Thorn cried.
The old man's cracked voice was unsteady and choking with emotion as, he answered.
"No, we didn't.” His accents became shrill and wild. “We were only a few hours behind Cheerly's ship.
We could see it in our ‘scopes and were sure to overtake him. And then he was joined by a force of fifty League cruisers, as an escort.
"He must have had secret arrangements with them cruisers to be waiting for him, damn him!” Stilicho continued. “We only had twenty ships. I wanted to keep after them anyway, and fight it out, but Brun Abo and the rest said it would be suicide."
Stilicho's old voice broke. “I guess they were right, maybe. Getting ourselves all killed wouldn't have saved Lana. Nothing can save her now—and I don't want to live any more, with the lass gone."
Tremulous tears were glistening on the old Martian's starlit face. He wiped them with a quivering hand.
Thorn felt a cold, ghastly shock from what he had heard. Blind emotion surged in him. And then the instinct to fight back, to persevere, rose to dominate him.
"Are you going to give up Lana for dead?” he demanded fiercely of the old man outside. “Are you just going weep like a woman for her, or are you going to do something?"
"What can I do?” Stilicho quavered. “I'd give my life for the lass, but there's nobody can save her now.
She's in Haskell Trask's dungeons on Saturn, by now, and a thousand men couldn't get her out of there."
"A thousand men. Might not, but three men could!” Thorn flashed fiercely. “We three—we Planeteers!"
Stilicho stared hopelessly. “How could even you Planeteers hope to snatch her from the claws of Haskell Trask?"
"We've done things as seemingly impossible as that in the past, haven't we?” Thorn demanded. “Give us the chance, Stilicho, and we'll get her out of there or die trying!"
The old Martian's eyes widened. “If anybody could do it, you Planeteers could,” he muttered. He stared doubtfully at Thorn's starlit face. “But you Planeteers are only after the secret Lana knows, the same as Cheerly."
"We want that secret, yes,” Thorn said tensely. “But the only way we can hope to get it is by rescuing Lana! Can't you see that? I'm hoping that if we save her, she'll tell us the secret. But whether she does or not, she'll have been saved, and that's all that you care for!"
And as Stilicho still hesitated, Thorn hissed a grim reminder.
"Think what Cheerly will do to Lana to wring the secret from her! Haskell Trask isn't above torture!"
The old man's figure quivered at that.
"She'll never tell them,” he muttered, “even though they kill her. I know Lana."
Then the old pirate stiffened with decision, and he spoke rapidly to the tensely waiting three.
"I'm going to take the chance you Planeteers can save her. It looks like the only chance the lass has got.
I'm going to release you, and we'll head out in my ship for Saturn, before Brun Abo and the rest find out what I've done."
"Will the crew of your ship follow you?” Thorn asked quickly, his pulses pounding with excitement and hope.
"Hell, they'd sail straight into the sun if I laid the course!” exclaimed the old pirate. His cracked voice throbbed with eagerness as he continued. “I'll have to steal the wave key of this brig from the Council House to let you out. And I'll pass a whisper to my crew to gather in the Venture at once."
The old Martian hastened away through the starlight. John Thorn swung round to his comrades.
"It's a fighting chance we've got now, at least!” he exclaimed.
"A pretty slim one,” said Gunner Welk somberly. “How in hell's name are we to get that girl away from Saturn in the teeth of all the League forces? An army couldn't do it."
"We'll have to do what an army couldn't, then,” Thorn said grimly. “There must be some way."
Presently they glimpsed Stilicho Keene hastening back to their prison. At the old Martian's heels followed a great, gray shape with blazing green eyes, Lana's space dog, Ool.
Stilicho turned the wave-key's beam on the lock. The frequencies actuated the delicate mechanism, and the door opened.
"I had a time stealing the wave-key!” panted the old man as Thorn and his comrades emerged. “Brun Abo and the rest are up in the Council House. As soon as they remember you three, they'll be here to have you executed."
"Why did you bring the space dog?” Gunner asked.
"I didn't bring him—he followed me,” Stilicho said. “He's been wild since Lana was kidnapped, and I think he senses we're going after her. The critters are a little telepathic, you know."
"Let him come along. We don't want to arouse any commotion,” Thorn said swiftly. “Is your crew waiting at the ship?"
"All ready, by now,” the old pirate replied. “Follow me. We'll have to slip out to the field without being seen."
He led the Planeteers through the starlight, close against the towering, dark wall of fern-jungle that encircled Turkoon Town. By that circuitous route they reached the field where the massed pirate ships lay glinting under the meteor-blazoned sky, The big space dog padded beside them as they approached the Venture.
They climbed hastily into the long black ship, the animal following them. Stilicho's motley crew were waiting. The doors were already grinding shut as the Planeteers followed the old pirate up to the control-room.
A few moments later, with a thunderous blast of fire, the Venture shot skyward on its desperate mission.
CHAPTER X
Under Saturn's Rings
A harp-string tenseness gripped the four men in the Ven ture's control-room as they peered ahead into space.
So far, so good,” muttered old Stilicho Keene, leaning forward over the bank of firing-keys to gaze with faded eyes. “We're past the outer League patrols. Now if we can only slip through the inner."
"We're in their zone now,” John Thorn warned tautly. “See anything in the ‘scope, Gunner?"
"Not yet,” the big Mercurian rumbled without taking his eyes from the eyepiece.
The Venture moved steadily on through the void, its rockets cut down to a low, soft purr. The aura-chart was dead. They were running blind so their own aura would not cut the aura of any vigilant patrol cruiser and give them away unnecessarily.
Saturn bulked colossal in the star-gemmed vault ahead, an enormous, yellowish sphere encircled by its immense, sweeping white rings. Even from this distance of a few million miles, the mighty rings looked quite solid. The thin black gap between the two outermost rings, Cassini's division, stood out sharp a
nd clear. It was hard to realize that those great, solid seeming white bands were really vast swarms of tiny satellites circling the planet.
Out beyond even the huge rings marched the planet's nine brilliant moons. Titan was a bright little disk far on the other side of the spinning monster world. Tethys and Rhea shone to the left. And Iapetus, a bright white moon almost as large as Mercury, lay close ahead on the right.
"The Saturnian Navy has a big outer base on Iapetus,” warned Thorn. “It'll be alive with cruisers now that the navies of all four League planets are concentrated here."
"I know, but we got to run close to Iapetus if we're going to slip around to the night side of Saturn,” quavered the old Martian pirate.
"Keep at least two million miles out, to clear the auras of the base,” Thorn told him.
The Venture purred on, and the big white moon began to march slowly past on their right. The Planeteers and the old pirate were silent and strained.
Sual Av scratched his head irritably. “Curse me if I can get used to this wig,” he muttered.
The Venusian's appearance was curiously changed. His bald pate had been covered by a wig of short, coarse black hair, and his face and skin had been stained pale green. John Thorn and Gunner Welk were similarly transformed. Their faces too were now a livid green, and the Mercurian's bristling yellow hair was dyed black.
The people of Saturn, and also of Uranus and Neptune, had acquired their peculiar green complexion during the past thousand years. Their worlds, like all the others in the system, had first been colonized by pioneering Earthmen in the 21st century, though a few centuries later all those seven colonized worlds had seceded from Earth and become independent planets. In the generations since the first colonization, environment had gradually changed the original Earth stock.
The men of Jupiter had grown into a squat, great-boned race, because of the dragging gravitation of their world. The men of Mars had acquired their red skin because of the predominance of certain metallic elements in their air and food. And similarly, the men of Saturn and Uranus and Neptune, because of a lack of certain elements on their worlds, had acquired their characteristic jaundiced green complexion.
The Worlds of Edmond Hamilton Page 43