“Or know who it is,” said Joan.
“I’ve got to get this information to Connel right away!” said Strong. “Can I have this paper?”
“Yes. I made copies. I was just going to take one to the commander when I saw you.”
“I’ll try to locate Major Connel and you go on and tell the commander what you’ve found. And Joan—” Strong hesitated.
“Yes?”
“Put in a good word for the cadets, will you?” Strong pleaded. “Both Connel and Commander Walters are all set to blast them right out of the service.”
“I’ll do what I can—” Suddenly Dr. Dale stopped, her eyes widening with fright. She pointed down the walk behind Strong.
Steve turned around and gasped. Connel was striding toward them grimly, followed by four guards carrying a stretcher covered by a blanket. Strong quickly recognized the outline of a human form beneath the blanket.
“Major,” exclaimed Steve, “what—who—?”
“It’s getting thicker by the hour, Steve!” said Connel in a low voice. “This is the first time in the history of the Academy that there has been what looks like”—he paused and turned to look at the draped body being carried past them—“an attempt at murder,” he finished.
“Murder!” said Strong. “But—”
“Who is it?” demanded Joan.
“A little man who can tell us a great deal if and when he regains consciousness! Pat Troy!”
CHAPTER 11
“Vroom-m-m!”
As the shattering blast of noise pounded against his eardrums, Tom Corbett opened his eyes, blinked, and stared around him. By the dim light from a small window in the wall over his head, he saw that he was in some sort of metal enclosure. Suddenly the floor trembled and again the shocking, shattering noises rang through his aching head. He tried to sit up but found that his hands were tied behind his back. The ropes were so tight, his hands were almost completely numb. Slowly he clenched his fingers, then opened them again, repeating the process over and over again while needlelike pains shot through his hands. Finally there was feeling in his fingers again and he struggled to a sitting position.
Again the metal enclosure vibrated and there was another thunderous blast. This time Tom recognized the sound.
“A jet!” exclaimed the cadet aloud. “I’m in the van of a jet truck.”
When Tom tried to stand up, he found that his feet were bound. Again he went through the slow, painful process of restoring circulation in his legs and feet, gritting his teeth against the needles of pain. Finally he felt strong enough to push his back against the wall and inch his way upright.
The noise around him continued. Again and again, he could hear the shattering explosions of the exhausts and the screaming whine of the jets. Looking around carefully for the first time, he saw that the van was empty except for a pile of heavy quilted rugs in one corner which he knew were used to protect and cushion cargo.
Hopping to the corner, he flopped down on the blankets and, one by one, he began dragging them out. There was nothing else in the van that would aid him in cutting the thick ropes around his wrists and he hoped to find something under the heap.
Suddenly he felt something hard and boxlike under the last blanket and he tore it off quickly.
He nearly screamed for joy when he recognized a heavy metal toolbox. Sitting on the floor of the van, he maneuvered the top open, then spun around and hopefully looked inside. There was nothing in the box but a dirty cloth, and Tom slumped back in bitter disappointment.
Suddenly the cadet became aware of the intense heat inside the van. He was sweating, and he found it difficult to breath. He inched over to the side of the huge truck and touched the metal paneling. It was blisteringly hot.
“The New Sahara,” he thought, a vision of the desolate sun-baked wasteland of the Martian desert flashing through his mind.
He looked around again desperately. The only thing in the van that might cut through the rope was the edge of the toolbox. He inched his way back to the box and began rubbing the rope across the edge of the box, but it was too smooth.
Tom knew that he would have to roughen the edge of the box, so that it would cut the thick fibers of the rope, and in sudden inspiration, he inspected the floor of the van. The heavy-gauge metal was scarred and roughened from the many heavy loads dragged across it. He turned the box over, and with great difficulty, rubbed it back and forth across the floor. Every few minutes he tested the edge of the box with his finger. It was losing its slick surface, but there was a long way to go.
It got hotter inside the van and Tom’s uniform was soaked with sweat. He found it difficult to breathe and the continuous roar of the jets tortured his ears.
He did not know how long he had worked, but eventually, he felt that the edge of the box was sufficiently rough to try to cut the ropes. He righted the box, placed the ropes on the edge again and, with a silent prayer, began scraping them across the metal.
After a few minutes there was a tug at the bonds. The cadet pushed harder. There was another tug and the rope seemed to give a little. Working frantically, he sawed back and forth. The sweat poured from his forehead, his arms and back ached unbearably, and soon he felt something warm and wet begin to trickle down the palms of his hands. He knew it was blood, but he kept on grimly, and suddenly he was rewarded. With a snap, the ropes parted. His hands were free!
Tom hastily untied his feet, and giving the toolbox an affectionate pat, rose to his feet to begin the next step in his plan to escape.
The young cadet examined the entire surface of the inside paneling of the van with his finger tips. He could find no opening other than the back door, which he knew was locked by an electronic beam. Without the proper light-key adjustment, the door could not be opened. And the vent high in the wall was much too small to help him.
He sat down, disheartened. He was still no better off than before. And there was no way of telling where he was, whether it was day or night, and how long he had been riding in the jet truck.
He rested on the floor of the van, the bumpy ride cushioned by the soft blankets, and tried to recall the events that had led him into this trap. He remembered the two men, Cag and Monty, and grimly vowed to repay them if he ever met them again.
Suddenly remembering something more immediate, Tom sat bolt upright. He got up and went to the front of the huge van. There he knelt down in one corner and felt the floor with his hands. He found exactly what he had been hoping for. A large grate, and it was cool! He jumped up, grinning, grabbed the heavy toolbox and carried it back to the corner where he let it drop on the grate. It sagged slightly, near the corner. He picked up the box and dropped it again. The grate sagged a little more. Tom got down on his knees and felt along the edge of the floor. The grate was giving way.
He really began to hammer in earnest then. And each time the heavy box thudded on the grate, he thanked his lucky stars that he had lived near a garage when he was a boy back in New Chicago. Time and time again, he had slipped inside the huge vans after the produce had been taken out, to find a piece of fruit. He had gotten into the sealed vans, through the refrigerating compartment, a huge unit beneath the van and connected to the cab. Opening the outside hatch to the unit, he had squeezed inside and then unscrewed the grate from the bottom.
With a final hard smash, the grate gave way, clattering into the recesses of the refrigerating unit. Now Tom was grateful for the roar of the jets. It covered the sound of his escape.
Quickly reaching down into the unit, Tom began tearing the mechanism apart; ripping out coils of copper tubing and rubber connections. Disconnecting a pipe, he used it to pry apart the rest of the unit, and finally, after removing the broken parts, there was room enough for his body.
Stuffing the heavy pipe in his tunic, Tom dropped into the unit and opened the outside hatch. A blast of cool air struck him. The sun was setting and the cadet knew that soon the near-zero temperatures of night would settle over the desert. Tom poked hi
s head out and the air stream hit him like a solid wall. He looked back past the spinning wheels and saw a long stretch of deserted road bordering a canal. His view forward was blocked by the overhanging cab of the truck. The small step up to the cab was a foot away. Tom eased back into the compartment again and sat back against the wall to consider his next move. He would have a better chance of not being seen if he waited for darkness. On the other hand, they might reach their destination before that and he would be caught. Tom made up his mind quickly.
Moving back to the hatch, he eased himself through the opening. There was a ticklish moment when he had to let go of the side of the compartment and swing over on the step. He took a deep breath and lurched forward.
Behind him, the huge thick wheels spun over the road. A slip now would mean instant, crushing death. His fingers reached for and grasped the door handle. Seconds later, he stood balanced on the step, swaying in the wind.
He dared a glance into the window of the cab, wondering why he had not been noticed before. He saw Cag and Monty inside, Cag driving and Monty asleep. The driver was on the opposite side from Tom, and Monty was slumped against the door.
Tom realized that if he opened the door, Monty would fall out and probably be killed, but he had no choice. He reached up for the handle and tested it gently before swinging down on it to make sure it would open. It gave a little. Then bracing himself, he pulled hard.
The door swung open and Monty fell out, hitting the pavement and rolling off into the sand to lie still. Tom paid no attention to him. With a mighty effort, he swung into the cab and confronted a startled, wild-eyed Cag.
“You!” cried Cag.
“Stop this crate, or so help me, I’ll break your head!” Tom shouted, brandishing the short length of pipe.
In reply, Cag suddenly swerved the big truck to one side of the road, hoping to throw Tom out of the open door. Tom managed to grab hold just in time. He swung back into the cab and struck out with the pipe.
Cag ducked and swung the heavy truck to the opposite side of the road, trying to throw Tom off balance, but the cadet was not to be denied. He swung the heavy pipe again and again, landing hard, telling blows on the arms and shoulders of the burly truck driver. Finally a solid blow caught Cag on the side of the head and he slumped over unconscious. Tom leaned over him, grabbed the wheel, and maneuvered the big truck back onto a straightaway course. A minute later he brought the truck to a stop.
Tom jumped out and pulled Cag after him, taking a bottle of water from the small compartment behind the driver’s seat. He splashed some on the man’s face, and while Cag moaned and came to, Tom drank his fill. He hadn’t realized that he was so thirsty.
“Cag,” said Tom coldly, when he knew the man could understand him, “I’ll beat your ears off if you don’t tell me who put you up to this!”
Cag was silent. Tom stepped in and slapped the man across the face.
“Come on! Talk!” he snarled.
Dirty, his clothes ripped, his hands bloody, Cadet Tom Corbett did not look like the carefree young cadet that Cag had met a few hours ago. He was frightened and began to whine.
“Talk or I’ll slap you silly!” Tom growled.
Cag saw the wild rage in Tom’s eyes and began to stutter.
“The trucking outfit! Just find out who owns this trucking outfit and who would gain if the projectiles failed.”
Tom was back in the cab in a flash. He started the mighty jets and began to engage the clutch.
Cag leaped up. “You can’t leave me here in the desert! I’ll die.”
Tom looked at the man, threw out the rest of the food and water from the compartment, and gunned the huge truck down the highway.
Eight hours later Tom rolled into Marsport, stopping the big truck at the first Solar Guard substation he could find.
He raced inside without cutting the jets of the truck and reported to a sergeant seated behind the desk, reading.
“I’m Cadet Tom Corbett!” he shouted. “I’ve got to get in touch with Commander Walters at the Academy right away.”
“Stand where you are, Corbett!” said the sergeant, jumping up and leveling a paralo-ray gun at him. “You’re under arrest!”
Tom stared, and then, spinning on his heels, dashed out of the station, the guard’s ray blasts spitting at his heels. Jumping into the truck, he gunned the jets and roared off into the dark Martian night.
CHAPTER 12
“Aw, shut your big Venusian mouth!”
As Roger’s voice roared over the intercom loud-speaker of the speedy rocket scout, down on the power deck Astro’s face turned red.
“Manning,” he growled into the intercom microphone, “if I didn’t need you to get me back to Mother Earth, I’d come up there and take you apart!”
For four days the two cadets had been aboard the rocket scout, circling in an orbit between Mars and Earth, conducting equipment tests for Dave Barret. They had become bored with the routine work and spent most of their time needling each other, but as Roger said, at least they were in space.
“O.K., let’s knock off the space gas!” called Roger over the intercom. “It’s time to run another test. Want to come up topside and take a hand?”
“Be right there, Roger!” said Astro. He set the power-deck controls on automatic, and then, with a quick look around to make sure everything was shipshape, he climbed the ladder to the control deck.
Roger was standing at the chart table, audiophones on his ears, listening for the automatic astral chronometer time-check broadcast on a suprahigh-frequency audio channel from the giant electronic clock in the Tower of Galileo. All spaceship chronometers were checked against this huge clock regularly, in order to maintain constant uniform time so necessary for the delicate art of astrogation between celestial bodies.
Astro started to speak to the blond-haired cadet, but Roger waved him off, listening for the signal. Suddenly he looked up at their own chronometer above the control board and took off the audiophones, smiling his satisfaction.
“Right on the split second, Astro,” he said.
“O.K.,” replied the big Venusian. “Then let’s run that test and get it over with.”
“Right,” said Roger, turning back to the control panel. “Do you want to go outside this time?”
“I might as well,” replied Astro. “Give me a change of scenery.”
The big Venusian turned to a locker, pulled out a bulky space suit, and climbed into it quickly. Adjusting the space helmet, he nodded at Roger and stepped into the air-lock chamber, pulling the hatch closed behind him. While waiting for the oxygen in the small chamber to be pumped back into the ship and the pressure to be equalized with the vacuum of space outside, he checked his helmet intercom to insure a clear line of communication with Roger.
The red hand closed on the zero of the gauge over the door and Astro moved to the outer hatch. He unlocked it, swung the door open, and slowly climbed out into the fantastic beauty of endless space. No sooner was he outside than the synthetic gravity generators lost their pull on his body and he started into space. Tightly grasping two metal handles in the hull, the big cadet performed a quick somersault and planted his feet firmly on the hull. His magnetic-soled space boots held him fast and he called Roger over his helmet intercom.
“I’m outside, Roger,” he reported. “On my way down to the exhaust.”
“Right,” came Roger’s voice over the intercom. “Let me know when you’re ready.”
Without replying, Astro made his way slowly and carefully down the length of the rocket scout toward the main drive rocket assembly. Stopping at the trailing edge of the hull, where it enclosed the four rockets, the big Venusian squatted on his heels, making certain the soles of his space boots stayed in contact with the metal of the hull. He peered over the edge and braced himself in a position where he could observe the individual rocket exhausts.
“O.K., Roger!” he called into his intercom. “Open up number one.”
“Number o
ne, aye,” replied Roger. “And watch yourself, you big baboon. Don’t burn your nose!”
“Go ahead, go ahead!” growled Astro in reply.
A long tongue of flame shot out of the exhaust of the number one tube and, after drawing back momentarily, Astro watched the tube keenly.
“You know,” he commented idly as he kept his eyes fixed on the tube, “I still can’t figure out what’s so different about these tubes. They’re exactly the same as any others I’ve ever seen.”
“That’s how much you know, Astro,” snorted Roger. “Dave Barret said they were using a new duralumin alloy in the tubes.”
“Still doesn’t look any different to me,” persisted Astro. “And for us to spend four whole days out here testing them”—he paused and shook his head—“seems like an awful waste of time,” he concluded.
“What do you care? We’re out in space, aren’t we? Or would you rather be back on guard duty?”
“No, of course not,” replied Astro. “But even space gets dull after a while with nothing to do. Barret sure gave us an old crate. Not even a long-range receiver aboard.”
“What do you want to listen to?” snorted Roger. “Flight orders and all the rest of that rocket wash?”
“Be a relief to listen to somebody else beside you for a change,” snapped Astro. “Anyhow, suppose something important happened. Suppose our orders were changed. How would we know about it?”
“What difference does it make?” replied Roger. “We’ve got our orders—straight from Barret. As long as we follow them, we won’t get into trouble.”
“For a change,” murmured Astro.
“Now cut the griping and finish up out there!”
“O.K.,” sighed Astro. “That’s enough on number one. Give me number two.”
The ship bucked slightly as one rocket tube was cut out and another flared at full power, but Astro clung to the hull tightly, continuing his observations. With troubled eyes he watched all four rocket tubes in operation, unable to understand the difference between these tubes and the standard makes. Finally he shrugged his shoulders, and rising to his feet, called Roger again.
The Tom Corbett Space Cadet Megapack: 10 Classic Young Adult Sci-Fi Novels Page 109