Complete Fiction, page 4
“He says the varlu will kill us if we try to escape,” Susan translated the Martian’s chirpings.
Nick decided that if there were any other possible escape route he would not try the doorway.
“Mel nikko ne cho twa Kiev?” Susan asked again.
The Martians conferred, and finally the bluish one made a gesture of reluctant assent. All three withdrew.
“Just who is this Kiev?” Nick demanded. “Why did old Blueface get so bothered whenever you mentioned him?”
“He’s an old, old Martian,” Susan explained. “He was dying of the Plague when Dad’s experiments saved him. He remained our friend even when most of the others turned against us because of the Exploiters.”
“Who’s Blueface?”
“That’s Merlo. He has the Plague and will die soon, just as the Martian who lived here must have died recently.”
“Voras? Plague? What’s it all about?” Nick sank into one of the chairs, suddenly conscious of fatigue. Despite the light gravity the human body tired rapidly in the thin atmosphere of Mars.
“The Martians lived on the surface long ago, in those cities that are still there,” Susan explained. “Dad studied them a long while and said they’re partly like plants, but with blocked electronic and electrostatic charges in their systems that even he didn’t pretend to understand.
“We learned all this bit by bit. Metals have always been scarce on Mars, so the Martians concentrated on biological engineering instead of mechanics, breeding special creatures to fit their needs. Those are voras, their living tools and servants and clothes and weapons. That varlu is just a specialized vora. They respond to thought waves and Martians can control them from quite some distance. Kiev taught us a little about them, but human thought waves are of a different pattern and I have to actually touch them. Like that screen-vora back in the city.”
“Can you—?” Nick interrupted.
SUSAN shook her head. “No. Varlus answer only to their owners, and even another Martian couldn’t pass that one without Merlo’s consent.
“Seven or eight centuries ago,” she continued. “A spaceship crashed on Mars. Dad believed it came from clear outside this solar system. All the creatures inside were dead when the Martians reached the crumpled hull.
“It brought the Plague. Shortly afterward Martians began to turn blue and shrivel and die. For a while they thought water had something to do with the disease, so they developed huge water-voras that could tunnel through solid rock and pump water, and they drained all the surface water down into caverns deep inside the planet. But still the infection spread.
“Finally they discovered that sunlight and the Plague were connected, so they abandoned the surface cities and had their voras carve out this great system of tunnels. The plan worked, somewhat. Darkness stopped the spread of the disease.
“But Martians are partly plants. Without sunlight they die just as surely as though killed by the Plague. So for the last several hundred years they have barely existed in a precarious balance between the Plague and sunlight starvation.
“Nick, they’re a doomed race. In the year Dad and I’ve been here we have seen only two Martian children.”
“But Kiev?”
“Yeast. Just plain yeast. I’d brought one package in the Trailblazer, for cooking. But there is no more yeast on Mars.”
“About the water?” Nick asked. “How come your father didn’t tell Harmon about that? Colonel Hammer had us drilling all over the planet.”
“Luck,” Susan replied seriously. “We didn’t know where it was ourselves until after we came back from Earth, after we learned more of their language.”
“But all our drilling,” Nick protested. “Surely at least one—”
“Twice, at least. But each time the water-voras pumped it to other caves. Martians don’t drink, but they saw, the Exploiters shipping water clear from Earth and realized its importance. We, and they, hoped the Exploiters would eventually give up and leave. Oh, if only Dad had told Harmon that Mars was completely arid!”
Nick got up and prowled restlessly around the room.
“Are they going to starve us?” he asked petulantly. His emergency rations were in his jacket, which Merlo had kept.
“Oh, no.” Susan realized she was hungry too. “There’s food here.”
She led him into the back room, where a series of shelves were carved into the walls. Each shelf was covered with discshaped, fungoid-looking growths.
“When they turn pink like this they’re ready to eat,” she explained.
Nick found them tasteless and unsatisfying. She saw his grimace.
“Dad and I lived on them ever since the Exploiters came,” she declared.
“No wonder you’re thin,” he retorted ungraciously, chewing on the pulpy mass.
It was only at his remark that she realized her face and hands were grimy and her clothing totally inadequate. She blushed.
“Don’t stare at me like that!” she snapped.
Nick found the queer faucet-like arrangement in one corner.
“Water!” he said, gulping thirstily.
They both drank and washed, cleaning their skins of the powder-fine sand that could work its way into the pores and cause a tormenting rash.
“What were you and your father doing on the surface when you tried to scrag me?” he asked without rancor. He had been shot at so often in his short life that he bore no ill feelings. It was a normal incident.
“Dad was desperate. He was going to get an Exploiter’s uniform and try to sneak in and steal the supply ship. But poor Dad wouldn’t shoot from ambush and that Exploiter got his gun out as he died.”
“Oh!” Nick was astounded and somewhat puzzled by the quixotic idealism of the scientist. A gunman with Gravinol-speeded reactions was no joke, and Nick, trained to kill in the most efficient manner possible, would have fired from ambush without hesitation.
They sat for a while, each immersed in his own thoughts. Nick tried to lay multiple plans for whatever might happen, but his thoughts grew blurred and fuzzy. He threw himself down upon the couch.
“Let’s sleep,” he said. “There’s nothing we can do now, and we’d better be in shape when things do start popping.”
“Well!” Susan gasped. He showed no intention of giving her the single bed. Evidently he had never heard of chivalry.
“Are you coming to sleep or not?” he demanded in irritation.
She considered carefully, and at last lay down as far away from him as possible. The chairs were uncomfortable and the stone floor was cold.
As she settled herself a brown roll at the foot of the couch unfolded and flowed up over them like a cover. For a moment Nick threshed, remembering the varlu, but when it did not squeeze or numb him he quieted.
“Another vora?” he asked, still uneasy.
Susan nodded.
For a minute or two he squirmed restlessly, but the vora was warm, with a surprising fleecy texture. Then he was sound asleep. The girl lay awake a minute longer, revising her estimate of his age as his face relaxed and lost its tense, hawklike look.
III
HE WOKE TO INSTANT ALERTNESS as Susan’s fingers encountered the bruise his pistol had left on his ribs. “Kiev is here,” she said.
He sat up, and as he did so the living blanket rolled back. Both shivered in the sudden chill.
Two Martians stood in the doorway, with Merlo in the lead. The greenish face of the other was seamed and wrinkled, and the crest atop his head was shrunken and tattered at the edges. He walked with a stoop, his movements slow and deliberate. Under his arm he carried a bundle of Earth clothing.
“Kiev,” Susan called. “Tec qua hala mo.”
Kiev raised one hand in greeting and spoke to Merlo. The blue-faced one answered in surly fashion and chirped to his waiting varlu. Kiev entered.
Susan noticed Nick shivering and said something to Kiev, who returned to the doorway and spoke once more to Merlo. The blue-faced Martian produced Nick’s jacket with obvious reluctance.
Quickly Nick ran his hands through the pockets. The oxygen sniffer bottle, half empty now, and the kit of emergency rations were still there, but everything which could conceivably be used as a weapon had been removed. He had only the knife at his belt. He started to don the jacket, but the girl stopped him with a quick gesture.
“Rip off the insignia first,” she urged.
Nick saw the point, and sat in one of the peculiar chairs cutting out the stitches while Kiev and Susan talked. Merlo stayed in the hallway, beyond the varlu, watching and listening.
At first the Martian asked brief questions and Susan answered in his chirping, twittering language. Nick could see Kiev’s bulging eyes turn toward him now and then, and would have given much to understand the thoughts in that alien brain.
Without understanding a word of the conversation he knew when Susan told of her father’s death by the break in her voice. Kiev looked at him angrily for a moment, until she shook her head and continued her explanations.
Then Kiev talked, while Susan grew more and more agitated with each sentence. Finally Nick could stand it no longer.
“What’s he saying?” he interrupted.
“Oh, Nick,” she said unhappily. “Representatives of all eleven of the underground cities are gathering now to plan a mass attack on the Exploiters’ camp.”
“But they haven’t ever fought back. They can’t hope to—”
“They haven’t always hidden underground like rabbits,” she corrected. “Once they were a proud race, and even though the Plague and lack of sunlight have left them weakened and barely alive some of that old spirit remains.
“But they haven’t any proper weapons, and they’ll all be killed, and that’s just what the Exploiters want. And, Nick, Merlo is going to take us before the Council for trial. He’s the leader of the group that wants to fight, to make one last attempt to kill all Earthmen on Mars.”
“What will the Council do?”
“Kiev doesn’t know. They have their own special laws but he isn’t sure how they will interpret them. He’s against the attack.”
Kiev spoke again, gesturing toward Nick.
“What’s he saying now?”
She translated hesitantly. “He says I shouldn’t have brought you down here. He can’t seem to understand that you’ve left the Exploiters.’
“Damn it, tell him it wasn’t your idea.”
“Useless. We came together.”
“But the Council—”
THE prospect of being tried by a council of these alien creatures was more terrifying to Nick than any combat. In a fight one at least had a chance to influence the outcome.
“Ask the old one if there’s any way to escape,” he demanded. “Hell, we can’t just sit here and take whatever Blueface dishes out.”
She spoke softly to Kiev, and the ancient Martian shook his head regretfully. “Then we’ve got to wait?”
“I’m afraid so. But Kiev says he will speak to the Council, and try to get others to speak for us too.”
“But you, Sue. You didn’t—’
“I’m an Earth woman,” she sighed. “Most of them think now that all Earth people are like those Gravinol-doped killers.”
Her mention of the drug brought the old craving once more into Nick’s thoughts, but this time not too strongly. Resolutely he put it aside.
“Dad and I are to blame,” the girl lamented. “If we’d broadcast our story when we returned to Earth instead of making a private report to that Harmon monster, all this could never have happened.”
The situation looked hopeless, but Nick felt no self-pity. He had been trained as a fighter in an environment in which fighters were inevitably killed. But for the first time since childhood he felt shame. Shame that because of him and his kind this girl had lost even her uncertain refuge.
Kiev rose, patted Susan’s shoulder with a long-fingered hand, and walked to the doorway where Merlo waited.
“He says he’ll see if he can find anyone else to speak for us,” she translated his farewell.
She took the bundle of clothing Kiev had brought and went into the back room. A few minutes later he heard her sobbing and glanced through the archway. She was holding up a pair of ragged brown coveralls much too large for her slender form, the clothes her father had left behind when he made his last trip to the surface.
He grew restless under the enforced inactivity and at last moved experimentally toward the doorway. The varlu allowed him to approach within a few feet, and then Nick jumped back just in time to avoid a rubbery tentacle that lashed out at him. A vague hope of escape died as he realized the superhuman speed of which the creature was capable.
Sue was silent and withdrawn the rest of the day. Several times her grey eyes filled with tears, but each time she brushed them away before they overflowed.
And then the waiting ended. This time Merlo was accompanied by half a dozen other Martians who stationed themselves in the tunnel as guards. Merlo touched his varlu. It contracted about his hand and the Martian lifted it to his shoulders, where it flattened out and draped itself like a short cloak.
“He says we should follow him,” Susan translated his chirps.
Once during their short walk Nick hesitated and looked back as though planning a break, but the ominous fluttering of half a dozen varlus told him escape was impossible for the present.
AN ANGRY buzzing filled the vaulted room and fully a hundred Martians turned to stare as the humans were led into the council chamber. Merlo motioned them to the center and addressed an ancient Martian who occupied a dais at the far end. The presiding Martian answered at length, as though Merlo were a person of consequence, and then Merlo launched into his speech.
He turned now and again to address various sections of the assembly, and his voice grew louder and faster as he progressed. The Earthman recognized the sharp, chopping gesture with which he emphasized his points. A gesture of killing, whether on Earth or on Mars. Merlo was demanding their death. At last he paused amid nods of approval and motioned for one side of the room to be cleared.
He waited dramatically as Martians moved out of the way. Then from a pouch at his waist he drew Nick’s pistol, raised it with a clumsy motion, and fired one shot against the blank wall. The sharp bark of the propelling charge and the roar of the explosive bullet blended in a thunderous concussion. Martians leaped to their feet with cries of rage, and even Susan Jones cupped her hands over tingling ears.
Merlo waited for the uproar to subside. Then, pointing at Nick and Susan, he concluded with a threatening shout.
Immediately another Martian leaped up and began to speak, also in an angry manner.
“Damn it, you green-skinned monstrosities,” Nick bellowed in English. “Leave the girl out of this! Can’t you see she’s been trying to help you?”
Half a hundred varlus stirred uneasily on Martian shoulders as the assembly stared uncomprehendingly.
Nick turned to Susan.
“Translate what I said,” he snapped.
She shook her head. “No use. But where’s Kiev?”
Kiev came through the doorway just then, hurrying as fast as his age would permit. Quietly he moved toward a vacant seat, and at once the chairs around it were empty too, Martians moving away as he advanced. They seemed to regard him with distrust, distrust and fear.
He rose and spoke, the pleading note in his voice evident even to Nick. The others had been heard in silence, but time and again Kiev was interrupted by shouts of disapproval.
“He’s speaking for us and at the same time warning against a mass attack on Central Camp,” Susan whispered.
“They don’t seem to go for his ideas,” Nick commented.
At last Kiev finished, and even as he sat down a dozen Martians were shouting angry protests. Merlo was foremost among them.
The presiding Martian asked a question.
Kiev replied shortly and turned in his seat to watch the doorway. The excited conversation of the assembly rose from a mutter to a babble.
After a short wait another Martian hurried in and took the floor.
His address was more pantomime than speech. He raised both arms as though holding a rifle and squinted through imaginary sights. Slowly he lowered the invisible weapon and stooped as though picking up a small object from the floor.
Nick gripped Susan’s arm in sudden astonishment.
“Hell,” he said. “That’s the one who got me outlawed by the Mecs.
The Martian made a throwing gesture and waved his arms as though warning someone to go away. Then he pointed at Nick.
“I spotted him while I was on ground patrol in the city,” Nick told Susan. “Caught him on a roof. But hell, I couldn’t shoot him, not while he just stood there looking helpless and sort of pitiful, with his hands hanging at his sides. He didn’t even try to run. Not without Gravinol, I couldn’t. I chunked a rock at him to scare him away.”
“But—?”
“Standing orders for all Mecs to kill anything that moves, particularly Marties, you know. Some lieutenant with field glasses saw me deliberately let that one get away and radioed in that something was wrong. Within two minutes Colonel Hammer had the orders out to get me.”
The Martian finished, and this time the reaction of the crowd did not indicate any unanimous emotion. One after another rose to his feet and commented, Susan’s head turning as she tried to follow each excited outburst.
At last silence settled over the room as the Martian on the dias raised both arms for silence.
“You and the man,” he spoke directly to Susan and she translated for Nick’s benefit, “will not be executed. That is according to the laws of Mars.
“You will both be taken to the surface and released there. Do not return, under penalty of death.”
A disguised death sentence, but as effective as though they were to be executed on the spot. Nick’s hand streaked toward his knife, but before he could draw it half a dozen varlus had him numb and helpless. His last impression as they were led away was the smugly satisfied expression on Merlo’s bluish face.
