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

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The Tom Corbett Space Cadet Megapack: 10 Classic Young Adult Sci-Fi Novels Page 111

by Norton, Andre


  The stop before the Academy was a small village that catered to the wants of the hundreds of civilian workers at the Academy spaceport. Tom had been there many times with Astro and Roger, and knew of a small hotel where he could hide out until he could contact his unit mates.

  It was early evening when Tom registered at the hotel under the name of Joseph Cazippi, an engineer from Titan Colony. Safely in his room, Tom turned to the window and stared longingly at the Tower of Galileo in the distance, as it caught the last of the sun’s rays and gleamed proudly against the gathering night sky.

  He whirled away from the window and froze as someone knocked on the door and a young voice called:

  “Lemme in, Tom!”

  The young cadet gulped in fear. Someone had recognized him! He wondered if he should open the door or slip out of the window and leave.

  “Hey, Tom!” the voice called. “This is Tiny! Come on, lemme in.”

  “Tiny!” shouted Tom in swift relief. He opened the door and a small boy of about twelve stepped inside.

  “Hiya, Tom,” greeted the boy enthusiastically.

  Tom grinned his welcome. He and Roger and Astro had met the youngster on several of their trips to the village and had become great friends. They always had to tell him stories about the Cadet Corps.

  “How did you know I was here, Tiny?” asked Tom.

  “I followed you from the monorail station,” replied the boy. “You couldn’t fool me in those civvies. Where’s your uniform?”

  “Never mind that now,” said Tom, kneeling before him. “Look, Tiny, can you keep a secret?”

  “Sure!” said the boy gleefully. “Sure I can, Tom.”

  “Well, I’m on a secret assignment, see?” whispered the cadet with a conspiratorial air. “And I need someone like you to help me. But you can’t tell anyone I’m here!”

  “Sure, I understand, Tom. Whatcha want me to do?”

  “Go to the Academy and find Astro and Roger. Tell them to come here at nine o’clock tonight. But remember, don’t talk to anyone else!”

  “O.K.!” replied the youngster. “I getcha! You going to catch spies, Tom?”

  “I don’t know yet, Tiny. But you do what I told you and then hurry right back to me and tell me what they said!”

  The boy nodded and hurried off. From the window, Tom watched him climb on his jet bike and roar off into the gathering darkness toward the Academy.

  It was nearly two hours before he heard the jet bike return and he hurried to the door, waiting impatiently for the boy to come in. When the door opened and Tiny stepped in, Tom sensed immediately that something was wrong.

  “Tom!” gasped Tiny, his eyes wide with shock. “You know what happened?”

  “What?”

  “Roger and Astro—” the boy stopped, seemingly unable to go on.

  “Didn’t you see them?” demanded Tom.

  “Naw, I couldn’t. They wouldn’t let me.”

  “Who wouldn’t let you?”

  “The guards.”

  “What guards? What are you talking about, Tiny?”

  “The guards at the jail! Roger and Astro are on the enlisted man’s work gang for six months!” said Tiny.

  Hiding his shocked surprise, Tom hurriedly gave the boy a ten-credit note and swore him to silence.

  “Now you hurry home, Tiny, and don’t tell anyone you’ve seen me!” he said.

  “O.K., Tom,” replied the boy. “But what does it all mean?”

  “I wish I knew,” said Tom grimly. “And when I find out, Tiny, I promise you I’ll let you know.”

  When Tom was finally alone, he stood at the window, staring at the gleaming tower, now lighted and shining brilliantly in the darkness. He suddenly felt that he would never see the tower again.

  CHAPTER 14

  “Stand clear!”

  Professor Hemmingwell’s voice rang over the roar of activity in the hangar as the huge new control panel was lifted along the hull to a large hole that had been cut into the side of the experimental ship at the control-deck level.

  “Easy does it!” called the professor, standing on the deck and peering through the hole. “Careful now!”

  Now even with the hole, the panel was slowly pulled into the ship by the workers. Even Major Connel and Steve Strong lent a hand, setting it into place. When it had been securely anchored, a team of technicians swarmed over the panel to begin the intricate work of connecting all the controls to the various parts of the ship, and Hemmingwell and the two Solar Guard officers stepped back to watch them.

  “This puts us back on schedule now,” said the professor, turning, red-eyed and tired, to Connel and Strong. “It was a good idea of yours, Steve, to prefabricate the panel and have it put into position all at once. If we had tried to install it piece by piece, we’d be weeks behind.”

  “Good work, Steve,” Connel chimed in.

  Strong merely nodded his thanks. He was tired. More tired than he had ever been in his life. Not only had he supervised the construction of the new control panel, but he had been working on a special report to present to the Solar Guard Review Board requesting another trial for Astro and Roger. And he had spent every spare minute haunting the MP headquarters of the Solar Guard for word of Tom. So, he accepted the compliments of Connel and Professor Hemmingwell with little enthusiasm.

  “You better get some rest, Steve,” said Connel, aware of Strong’s attitude. “I know how hard you’ve been working these past few days. So knock off and I want your word that you will go back to your quarters and get some sleep!”

  “Sorry, Major,” replied Strong, “I can’t give you my word about that.”

  Connel’s face darkened with anger. “All right! Then do what you want. Get out!” he shouted.

  Strong merely nodded and left the ship.

  Outside the hangar, he stopped suddenly when he saw Dave Barret step off the slidewalk from the Academy and stride toward him. The young captain clenched his teeth in sudden anger. He had talked to Astro and Roger many times since they had been put on the work gang and they swore that their story of their ill-fated flight was true. Strong could not believe that they would lie. He had been too close to them and had, many times, put his very life into their hands. But there seemed to be no way to break Barret’s story. He waited for the man to pass him.

  “Good morning, Strong,” said Barret, as though surprised. “Well, how’s the genius? Get the control panel in this morning?”

  Barret was annoyed that Strong’s plan to replace the control panel had been accepted over his own. The captain returned his cold stare and nodded.

  “It’s in,” he said, and then added, “I would like to ask you a few questions, Barret.”

  “Sorry, haven’t got time!” replied Barret curtly as he tried to brush past Strong. But the young captain grabbed him by the arm and spun him around.

  “Make time!” he snarled. “I want the straight story about that so-called test flight!”

  Barret glared at Strong. “I suggest that you let go of my arm, Captain,” he threatened, “or I will be forced to bring charges of assault against you!”

  Realizing an open fight would be useless, Strong released his grip on the man’s arm and turned away quickly. Barret’s mocking laugh echoed in his ears as he stepped on the slidewalk and glided away toward the Academy. Behind him, the big hangar buzzed with the sound of men working in high gear again. The mighty ship and its specially designed equipment seemed at last to be ready for testing. But Strong felt none of the excitement. It mattered little to the Solar Guard captain whether the project was a success or failure. His thoughts were of the three cadets in his unit, who were, first and foremost, his responsibility.

  With double guards around the hangar area and even tighter security restrictions than before, the unknown saboteur was unable to attack the precious ship again. But he struck elsewhere. The single track monorail that Barret had run into the area was blocked by an explosion in the mouth of the tunnel. Nearly a thousa
nd tons of rock and earth had fallen on the hangar side, blocking delivery of vital equipment.

  With powerful earth-moving machinery, the tunnel was cleared of the heavy rocks and dirt, and all that remained was a general cleaning up, and the enlisted man’s work gangs had been assigned to that job.

  Nearly a hundred tough, battle-scarred spacemen from the enlisted ranks of the Solar Guard worked in the area, stripped to the waist, their bodies burned brown from the sun. Sent to the work gang for petty offenses, rather than for criminal acts, the enlisted men as a whole did not mind the work. They were under guard, watched by a squad of Space Marines armed with paralo-ray guns, but there was no attempt to make the men feel as if they were criminals. Most of the sentences were short, usually running from five to thirty days, with some extreme cases serving as long as three months. But no one had ever remembered a Space Cadet working on the squad, and particularly for six months! It was an extraordinary situation and the guards, as well as the men on the work details, sympathized with Roger and Astro. They realized that nothing really serious had been done, or the boys would have been sent to the prison asteroid, where all true criminals were sent. So a true spirit of comradeship developed between the cadets and the enlisted men.

  When Captain Strong arrived to speak to Roger and Astro, he found them in the tunnel, working as a team of a shoveler and a sweeper. Roger would sweep up a little pile of dirt and Astro would shovel it into a handcart nearby.

  “All right, you Venusian pug!” bawled Roger. “Police the joint!”

  Astro scooped up the little pile of dirt neatly and deposited it in the truck.

  “Manning, what made the spaceship cross to Pluto?” he asked.

  “To get to the other side of the universe,” said Roger.

  “All right,” interrupted Strong. “If you two will cut out the comedy, I’d like to talk to you.”

  “Captain Strong!” yelled Roger. “Hey, fellas! Look!” He turned to the other men on the work gang. “We’re special characters! See? We have visitors during working hours!”

  Strong laughed with the others, and then motioning for Roger and Astro to follow him, walked to an isolated corner of the tunnel.

  “How is it going?” he asked.

  “Fine, sir,” said Roger. “We have no complaints.”

  “Yeah,” chimed in Astro with a grin. “The food is better here than at the Academy!”

  “Give this Venusian bum a good kitchen and he’d go to the Rock!” Roger laughed.

  Strong noted their lean, brown bodies and decided that a little work in the sun with a pick and shovel had done them good. But six months of it would interfere with their work at the Academy and could hold them back.

  He told them of the work he had been doing to have their case renewed by the Solar Guard Review Board and asked them for any special details in their relationship with Barret that might lend weight to his plea for outright pardon, rather than just a commutation of sentence. He wanted it clear on their records that they had been accused unjustly, and that, therefore, their sentence was an error.

  But neither Astro nor Roger could add anything to what the young captain already knew. He finally turned to leave, cautioning them both to stay out of trouble, especially Roger.

  “Manning,” he warned, “your mouth is your big weakness. I’m detailing Astro to make sure it stays closed!”

  “You see?” gloated Astro. “You see who the captain trusts!”

  “Listen, you big bum!” began Roger angrily, then stopped and grinned. “O.K., Captain Strong, I’ll keep on the ball.”

  “You’d better,” Astro interrupted, “or I’ll stand you on your head!”

  With a pat on the back, Strong left them. Just as he was about to leave the tunnel, Roger called after him:

  “Have you heard anything about Tom, sir?”

  “Not a word,” replied Strong grimly. “So far as I know, he’s still on Mars.”

  “A—a fugitive?” asked Astro.

  “Yes, Astro. The Solar Guard is still looking for him.”

  Strong watched the two cadets turn back to their work dejectedly, and then, sighing with weariness, he headed back to the slidewalk. In the morning he would check the reports of the Security Section for word of Tom. Then he squared his shoulders determinedly. He would check them now!

  He could not go to bed yet. Not while Tom was still missing and while Astro and Roger were on the work gang. He would not sleep until they were free and the Polaris unit was together again out in space!

  * * * *

  Tom Corbett was also unable to sleep. He had spent the night in the village hotel tossing and turning, his mind seething with plans to aid Roger and Astro.

  Finally, at dawn, he got up and sneaked out of the hotel. Avoiding the convenience of the monorail, he struck out on foot over the rugged countryside for Space Academy. He had a plan, but the plan required that he talk to Roger and Astro first, and then to Captain Strong, but it had to be done secretly. He realized that his knowledge of the identity of the saboteur would be a more effective weapon if everyone still believed he was on Mars.

  After getting close enough to the Academy to use the slidewalk system crisscrossing the huge area, he loitered on the crowded platforms which connected the hangar, the Academy, and the spaceport. He kept his coat collar high and his civilian hat pulled low over his eyes.

  He was on the main slidewalk, moving toward the Tower building, when his eyes picked out the familiar close-cropped blond hair of Roger and the unmistakable bulk of Astro on the walk leading to the hangar. Changing at the slidewalk intersection, he took off after them, hoping he would not be noticed in the crowd of civilian workers. Roger and Astro were carrying tools over their shoulders and were lagging behind the main body of workers moving toward a huge tunnel opening. Tom saw his chance and moved up quickly beside them.

  “Keep walking and don’t show surprise!” he whispered sharply.

  But it was too much to ask. Astro and Roger jumped in surprise and let out involuntary shouts of joy, which attracted the attention of the guards. They noticed the stranger in civilian clothes and stared at him.

  “Tom!” exclaimed Roger. “What the devil are you—?”

  “Sh!” hissed Tom. “We haven’t got much time.” He saw one of the guards turn and stare at him. “Listen to me,” he continued quickly. “I’ve got important dope about the saboteur!”

  “How?” gasped Astro.

  “Never mind,” replied Tom. “Now, to nail him, I’ve got to get him into the act! I need proof!”

  “But who is it?” asked Roger.

  “I can’t tell you now. Here comes the guard. Are you going to be working around here long?”

  “At least another three days,” said Roger. “But who—?”

  Roger noticed the guard move up to them and he suddenly straightened up and snorted derisively, “Yeah. But why a guy should want to join the Solar Guard is more than I can see. You must be wacky, mister!”

  He and Astro walked away, and after a hesitant look at Tom, the guard followed the two cadets. Tom boarded the slidewalk heading back toward the Academy. So far, so good. He knew where his unit mates were, but up ahead, in the gleaming Tower of Galileo, was his second target, Captain Strong. His skipper had to listen to him, had to be sympathetic and help him catch the saboteur. It was the only way Tom could clear his own name and free Roger and Astro.

  CHAPTER 15

  “Scott!”

  “Here!” bellowed a grizzled spaceman in reply to Major Connel’s call.

  “Augutino!”

  “Here!”

  “Jones!

  “Present!”

  “Smith!”

  “Here!”

  “Albert!”

  “Here!”

  Connel checked the last name on the clipboard and turned to Professor Hemmingwell standing beside him at the base of the ship. “All present and ready, sir.”

  “Fine!” said the professor. He turned and looked aroun
d. “Where is Dave?”

  “Here he comes now,” said Connel.

  They both watched Barret stride toward them, his arms loaded with gear.

  “This is the stuff I told you about, Professor,” he said as Hemmingwell looked at it curiously.

  “What stuff?” asked Connel.

  “Portable heaters for the crew’s space suits, just in case—” Barret paused meaningfully.

  “In case of what?” growled Connel.

  “Why, ask them!” replied Barret, gesturing toward the group of civilian crewmen who had been selected for the test flight of the spaceship.

  Connel turned to look at them, then back at Barret. “Ask them what?” he barked.

  “How they feel about making this flight,” said Barret.

  Connel scowled and turned to the men. “Is there anything to what he says?” he demanded.

  The men shuffled their feet nervously but did not reply.

  “Well?” exploded Connel.

  “See, they’re afraid of you, Connel,” said Barret, deliberately omitting the courtesy of using the major’s title.

  Ignoring Barret’s thrust, Connel continued to face the men. “Is that right, men?” he shouted. “Are you afraid of me?”

  There was a mumble from the group and then the man named Scott, a thick-set individual with black flashing eyes, stepped forward.

  “Speaking for myself,” he said, looking straight at the major, “I’m not afraid of anything that walks. And that includes you, Major Connel. No offense meant, it’s just a statement of fact.” He paused and drew a deep breath. Then he added, “But I am afraid of this ship.”

  “Why?” demanded Connel, who could not help admiring the man for his straightforward approach.

  “She’s junk-jinxed,” said the man, using the expression of spacemen who believed a ship with a suspicious accident record should be junked because it was jinxed.

  “Junk-jinxed!” cried Connel, amazed.

  “Preposterous,” snorted Professor Hemmingwell. “Why, you helped build this ship, Scotty! Do you doubt the work you’ve put into her? Or the work of your friends?”

 

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