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The Tom Corbett Space Cadet Megapack: 10 Classic Young Adult Sci-Fi Novels

Page 49

by Norton, Andre


  “It’s easy enough to figure,” Strong replied, his voice dull and lifeless. “Coxine is using more than one ship now. And when this one was damaged, he simply transferred to another one. He’s outfoxed us again!”

  Slowly, with wooden legs, he walked over to the teleceiver.

  “Attention all ships! Resume former search stations. All we’ve caught here is a red herring!”

  And as the powerful engines of the Polaris picked up speed, Strong imagined he could hear Gargantuan laughter echoing in space around him.

  CHAPTER 17

  “Spaceman’s luck, sir,” said Tom, shaking Captain Strong’s hand.

  Silently the other two cadets in turn gripped their skipper’s hand tightly.

  “Thanks, boys,” said Strong. “If we’re going to get that space crawler, we have to trap him. And the best bait I know is a twenty-million-credit pay roll.”

  “But won’t you take at least one man with you, sir?” pleaded Tom. “Sitting up there in space in a decoy ship waiting for Coxine is like—” Tom paused. “Well, you won’t have much of a chance, sir, if Coxine opens fire before asking questions.”

  “That’s the risk I’ve got to take, Tom,” said Strong. “It took a lot of talking to get Commander Walters’ permission to try this. But we’ve got to force Coxine to come out far enough from the asteroid belt to catch him before he can run back in and lose himself again.” The young captain smiled wanly and added, “Don’t think that your job is unimportant!”

  Tom, Roger, and Astro nodded. On their return from the unsuccessful attempt to capture Coxine, they had been suddenly faced with the routine duty of transporting a twenty-million-credit pay roll from Atom City to the satellite of Titan for the crystal miners.

  Thinking one sure way to catch any rat was to use a lure, Tom suggested that the Titan armored freighter be used as a decoy to capture the pirate, and the cadets could carry the pay roll in the Polaris.

  Commander Walters had considered the plan, and then realizing that Coxine might fire on the freighter before seizing it, disapproved of placing a full crew aboard the lightly armed ship. Instead, he would send only one man. Strong had volunteered for the assignment and had persuaded the commander to allow him to man the decoy ship.

  Now, the two ships, the Polaris and the armed freighter stood side by side at the Academy spaceport, and the three cadets and their commanding officer waited for the signal to blast off.

  “You have your course for your trip out to Titan, Tom?” asked Strong.

  “Yes, sir,” replied Tom. “We’re to blast off later to-night and take a course through the asteroid belt, traveling on the plane of the ecliptic. As soon as we get through, we are to proceed under full emergency thrust to our destination.”

  Strong nodded his head, satisfied.

  “Do you think Coxine will come out after you, sir?” asked Roger.

  “We’ve tried to make sure that he will, Roger,” replied Strong. “It’s pretty common knowledge that the Titan pay-roll ship leaves every month, and that it travels a different route each time. Sometimes it goes through the asteroid belt on the plane of the ecliptic and sometimes it goes over. We believe Coxine knows this, and with the thinly guised messages we’ve sent to Titan, we’re hoping he’ll try for it.”

  “But how will you get him, sir?” asked Astro, puzzled. “I mean, with no armor on the freighter to speak of, and no crew aboard, how can you nail him before he gets you?”

  “Hyperdrive,” replied the captain laconically.

  “Hyperdrive?” echoed Tom quizzically.

  “I’m going to take the decoy ship through the asteroid belt too, but through a different area, closer to the part we think Coxine is operating in. Seven full squadrons have blasted off ahead of me and taken up positions in that area. When and if Coxine attacks, I’ll alert the waiting ships, who’ll come in on hyperdrive. By the time Coxine spots them on his radar, they’ll be on top of him.”

  “Then,” ventured Tom, “you’re staking your life on the ships arriving before Coxine can attack.”

  “That’s right, Tom,” said Strong. “If our plan works, we catch Coxine. If it doesn’t, at least we know that the Titan pay roll is safe. That’s why your job is as important as mine.”

  They were interrupted by the ground-crew chief who reported the decoy ship ready to blast off.

  Strong nodded and the three cadets gripped their captain’s hand again. Turning, he climbed into the freighter and five minutes later the Solar Guard officer blasted off from the Academy spaceport while Tom, Roger, and Astro watched from the traffic-control tower.

  “Come on,” said Tom. “It’ll be two hours before we can blast off. We might as well get some sleep. We’ll need it.”

  Reluctantly, Roger and Astro followed their unit-mate from the traffic tower, their eyes full of concern for their skipper. Each was grimly aware that they might never see their skipper alive again.

  * * * *

  “Now shut your traps!” roared Bull Coxine. “The next crawler that opens his mouth gets taken apart!” He stood on top of a table and faced his crew of pirates who were sitting about swilling large cups of rocket juice.

  The room in which the giant pirate spaceman had gathered his men was one of many in a building constructed since their arrival from the prison asteroid. Hidden from even the closest inspection by the smaller bodies circling around the main asteroid, Coxine had expanded the small hut used by Wallace and Simms into a huge rambling building containing armories, machine shops, and storage rooms packed with everything he and his murderous crew might need.

  Now with a string of successful raids behind them and their personal pocketbooks bulging with stolen credits and valuables, the crew of pirates waited attentively while their cruel but brilliant leader outlined the most daring plan of all.

  “Now listen,” roared Coxine. “There’s a few things I want to say before we start on the plans of the next strike!”

  The big spaceman paused and glared at the men in front of him. “Ever since that space-crawling cadet pulled a fast one on me there’s been talk about voting for another leader!” He spat the word as if it had left a foul taste in his mouth. “Well, get this. There’ll be no voting! I’m the boss of this outfit! Any man who thinks he can take over my job,” Coxine’s voice dropped to a deadly whisper, “just let him try!”

  Stony silence greeted the huge spaceman, a silence inspired by fear.

  “Now!” roared Coxine, his coarse features changing from a scowl to a broad grin. “The strike!”

  This was greeted with a roar of approval. The men demanded action after a week of idleness on the asteroid.

  “Wallace!” yelled Coxine.

  “Yes, sir,” answered the spaceman, stepping up to the table and facing Coxine.

  “We’ll take up a position in the asteroid belt, here!” He placed a finger on a map of the belt. “Simms!” roared the giant spaceman.

  “Yes, sir!” the wizened space pirate stepped forward.

  “You remember that rocket scout we blasted? The one that got our other ship?”

  “I sure do, sir.”

  “It’s drifting around in orbit near asteroid seventeen. Take a crew of men and a few jet boats and go get her. Bring her back here and fix her up. Strip every pound of excess weight off her. I want a ship that’ll fly faster than anything in the system and I want it in twenty-four hours.”

  “Yes, sir,” gulped Simms. “But then what’ll I do with her?”

  “After you’ve done what I’ve already told you to do,” snapped Coxine, “I’ll tell you more!”

  Simms’ face turned red, and he nodded curtly.

  “Now as for the rest of you crawlers,” said Coxine, facing the room full of men. “Repair crews have been assigned for work on the rocket scout and the rest of you will work on the Avenger and prepare her for a long flight. I want the three-inch blasters, every paralo-ray gun and rifle, the fuel tanks, food supplies, oxygen circulators, in fact everything ch
ecked, rechecked, and double-checked!”

  Joe Brooks, who had become a favorite of Coxine’s, rose and faced the pirate captain. “Where are we going to strike next, skipper?”

  Coxine looked at the man with a half-smile playing on his lips. “This operation will have two parts, Joe. The first—well—” his smiled broadened—“the Titan pay-roll ship just blasted off from Space Academy. For the last ten years, the Titan pay-roll ship has been blasting off from Atom City. Now why do you think it would suddenly leave from Space Academy, the home of the Solar Guard?”

  The crowd of men murmured their bewilderment.

  “I’ll tell you why!” bawled Coxine. “Either they have that ship so packed with blasters it would take a fleet to stop it, or it’s a trap!”

  “But if you think it’s a trap,” exclaimed Wallace, “you’re not going to hit it, are you?”

  “I said it might be a trap!” snapped Coxine. “But it might not and with twenty million credits to be had for the taking, I’m not going to let her breeze through. I’m going to make sure it’s a trap before I try something else!”

  “But how?” persisted Wallace.

  Coxine looked at his lieutenant coldly. He had indulged the man too long. “I’ll tell you when I get good and ready! Now all of you, get out of here and make sure everything, and I mean everything, is ready to raise ship at a moment’s notice!”

  The men got up and shuffled from the room. Coxine turned to his two lieutenants. “All right, Wallace, see that those crawlers do what I told them to do. And you, Simms, get after that rocket scout.”

  The two spacemen saluted their captain and turned away. Coxine watched them leave the room, already planning his next move, a move calculated to be so surprising that the Solar Guard would be absolutely helpless.

  Bull Coxine smiled and turned to study the charts of the asteroid belt.

  * * * *

  Alone aboard the armored decoy ship, Captain Strong blasted steadily on his course through the asteroid belt. The young Solar Guard officer was aware that at any moment after reaching the celestial jungle of small planetoids he could be fired on without warning. And though the Solar Guard patrol ships, well hidden in the belt, would blast Coxine out of existence, it would still be too late for him.

  Grim-faced, his hands gripping the controls, he rocketed through space, determined to put an end, once and for all, to the marauding pirate and old enemy, Bull Coxine.

  * * * *

  When night fell over the Academy spaceport, Tom, Roger, and Astro climbed silently into the giant rocket cruiser Polaris and raised ship for Titan. Their departure from Earth was routine, with no one but Commander Walters and Captain Strong knowing that stowed in the storage compartment of the spaceship was twenty million credits, the pay roll for the miners of Titan.

  Once in space, the rocket ship was put on course and held there by automatic pilot. The three cadets gathered in the messroom and sipped hot tea, staring moodily into their cups. Unable to break audio silence, lest they should betray their position, their first chance of hearing any news lay far ahead of them at Titan. They could only hope that the decoy trap would succeed and that their skipper and friend would return safely. The only comment was Astro’s grim prediction.

  “If anything happens to Captain Strong,” he paused and finished his sentence in a tense whisper, “I’ll search the universe until I find Coxine. And when I do, I’ll break him in two!”

  CHAPTER 18

  “Have you got everything straight?” asked Coxine. Simms nodded his head.

  “All right, blast off,” ordered the pirate. “We’ll follow you and keep you spotted on radar. If it’s a trap, head for asteroid fourteen, bail out in a jet boat, and let the scout keep going. We’ll pick you up later.”

  Simms nodded again and turned to his old partner, Wallace. “So long, Gus.” He smiled. “This is one time the Solar Guard gets it right where it hurts!”

  “Yeah,” agreed Wallace. “See you later. Take it easy on that asteroid and don’t get in trouble with the girls!”

  The two men laughed and Simms turned to climb into the waiting rocket scout. The sleek ship had been stripped down until it was hardly more than a power deck and control panel. She was now capable of more than twice her original speed. As the little spaceman disappeared into the air lock, Coxine turned to Wallace.

  “We’ll give him an hour’s head start and then blast off after him. And remember, the first man that breaks audio silence will get blasted!”

  All eyes were on the tiny rocket scout as its jets, roaring into life, lifted free of the pirate planetoid. When the speedy little ship had disappeared into space, Coxine turned to his crew and ordered an immediate alert. While the criminals readied the armed privateer for blast-off, Coxine and Wallace climbed directly to the radar bridge.

  Joe Brooks was hunched in front of the scanner, staring intently. He looked up when the two pirate officers entered.

  “Just following Lieutenant Simms on the radar, skipper,” said Brooks. “He’s blasting through the asteroid belt faster than I thought he could.”

  “Lemme see!” growled Coxine. The giant pirate stared at the scanner and his mouth twisted into a grin. He turned away and barked several orders. “Wallace, stand by to blast off in two minutes! Brooks, get me a bearing on that ship.”

  “You mean Simms?” asked the radarman.

  “No! I mean that ship, right there,” snapped Coxine. He pointed to a white blip on the scanner. “And after you get the bearing I want a course that’ll intersect it in”—Coxine paused and glanced at the astral chronometer—“ten minutes!”

  Quickly calculating the bearing and working up the course as ordered, Brooks handed Coxine a slip of paper. The pirate glanced at it briefly.

  “What would you say Simms’ speed would be if he kept his ship on full thrust, Brooks?” asked Coxine.

  Brooks thought a moment. “I’d say it would be about half of what he’s making now!”

  “Exactly!” roared Coxine. “That’s why the ship on your scanner isn’t Simms’ at all, but another ship!”

  The radarman studied the scanner, where, with each sweep of the thin white line, the blip of the ship appeared. “You mean it might be the Titan pay roll?” he breathed hopefully.

  “Yeah,” breathed Coxine. “I mean it might be the Titan pay roll, and then again it might not!” Coxine turned away, leaving the radarman utterly confused.

  Within the two-minute deadline that Coxine had ordered, the members of his crew were locking the last air lock and securing ship for blast-off. Coxine sat in front of the control panel, ready to give the final order that would send the vessel hurtling into space. In a little while, the evil mind, the twisted brain of Bull Coxine would be pitted against the might of the Solar Guard.

  * * * *

  Captain Strong sat on the control deck of the decoy ship, watching the radar scanner and waiting for the appearance of Bull Coxine and his crew. Again and again, the young Solar Guard officer, too restless to remain in one spot, got up and paced the deck.

  He flipped on a chart screen and studied the positions of the surrounding asteroids, which he knew hid the Solar Guard fleet, ready to pounce on any attacking ship. Schooled for years in facing the tedium of space travel and patrolling the space lanes, Strong nevertheless was anxious for something to happen, as minute after minute slipped past and no attack came.

  Once he thought he saw something move on the scanner and gripped the sides of the instrument tightly as a blip appeared, disappeared, and then reappeared. Finally Strong was able to distinguish what it was and he turned away in disgust. It had been a maverick asteroid, one which, because of its positive gravity, never became a captive of other bodies in space. It wandered aimlessly through the belt, a danger spacemen feared more than any other, since it could not be depended upon to remain in one position.

  Unable to break audio silence and communicate with the hidden Solar Guard fleet around him, lest he give away their po
sitions, Strong found the loneliness driving him into a case of jitters and nerves.

  Suddenly he jumped up and stared unbelievingly at the scanner. There in front of him was a blip, traveling at amazing speed, straight for his ship. From its size and shape, Strong could tell it was a rocket scout. He watched it for a moment dumfounded at the speed of the small ship. When he was certain that it was heading for him, he grabbed the audioceiver microphone and began calling hurriedly.

  “Attention all ships! This is Captain Strong. Spaceship approaching me, starboard quarter, one-one-five degrees. Estimated speed—” Strong paused and watched the moving blip. “Speed unknown. All ships close in immediately!”

  On the scanner, Strong could see the flashes of blips as the squadrons roared out of concealment and closed in on the approaching rocket scout. Over the audioceiver he could hear the squadron commanders snapping orders to their ships as the small ship still headed, unheedingly, for his decoy vessel.

  Suddenly the attacking ship slowed and Strong could see the blip turn in a wide-sweeping curve. But it was too late. The Solar Guard ships had it surrounded from every possible angle. The little scout made a desperate dash straight for Strong’s ship. In a flash, he saw the plan of the ship’s pilot. He was heading for Strong, hoping to use him as a shield from the mighty six-inch blasters trained on him.

  Strong grabbed for the control and fired full thrust on his starboard jets, sending the decoy vessel into a screaming dive. The attacking ship tried to follow, but seeing it couldn’t make it, turned and tried to escape from the surrounding ships. Instinctively Strong shouted a warning to the pilot to surrender, but even as he spoke, he saw the firing flashes sparkle on the hulls of a dozen fleet vessels as they sent their deadly atomic missiles converging like lightning arrows on the speedy rocket scout.

  There was a burst of pure white fire on the scanner and then the young captain gulped as the attacking ship was blasted into a hulk of twisted metal.

  Strong grabbed the audioceiver microphone and shouted orders to the fleet squadron leaders.

 

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