Time travel omnibus, p.224

Time Travel Omnibus, page 224

 

Time Travel Omnibus
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  He pointed to the empty sand-truck outside the labs, “They got the stuff alright.”

  Allen fell to quietly. George wiped his lips with the back of his hand and said, “Say, All’n, How’d y’ find the city. I’ve been sitting here, trying t’ figure it all out.”

  “It was the bonfires,” came the muffled answer. “It was the only way they could get heat and fires over square miles of land create a whole section of heated air which rises, causing the cold surrounding air of the hills to sweep in.” He suited his words with appropriate gestures. “The wind in the hills was heading for the city to replace warm air and we followed the wind.—Sort of a natural compass, pointing to where we wanted to go.”

  George was silent, kicking with embarrassed vigor at the ashes of the bon-fire of the night before.

  “Lis’n, All’n, Eve had y’ a’wrong. Y’ were an Airthman tanderfoot t’ me till—” He paused, drew a deep breath and exploded with, “Well, by Jupe ‘n’ domn, y’r my twin brother and I’m proud o’ it. All Airth c’dn’t drown out the Carter blood.

  The Earthman opened his mouth to reply but his brother clamped one palm over it, “Y’ keep quiet, till Em finished. After we get back, y’ can fix up that mechanical picker or anything else y’ want. I drop my veto. If Airth and machines c’n tairn out y’r kind o’ man, they’re alright. But just the same,” there was a trace of wistfulness in his voice, “y’ got t’ admit that everytime the machines broke down—from irrigation-trucks and rocket-ships to ventilators and sand-trucks—‘twas men who had t’ pull through in spite o’ all that Mars could do.”

  Allen wrenched his face from out behind the restraining palm.

  “The machines do their best,” he said, but not too vehemently.

  “Sure, but that’s all they can do. When the emairgency comes, a man’s got t’ do a damn lot better than his best or he’s a goner.”

  The other paused, nodded, and gripped the other’s hand with sudden fierceness, “Oh, we’re not so different. Earth and Ganymede are plastered thinly over the outside of us, but inside—”

  He caught himself.

  “Come on, let’s give out with that old Gannie quaver.”

  And from the two fraternal throats tore forth a shrieking eldritch yell such as the thin, cold Martian air had seldom before carried.

  THE END

  TIME WANTS A SKELETON

  Ross Rocklynne

  Six people thrown hack in Time knew that one of them had to supply a skeleton to lie a million years on an asteroid—

  ASTEROID No. 1007 came spinning relentlessly up.

  Lieutenant Tony Crow’s eyes bulged. He released the choked U-bar frantically, and pounded on the auxiliary underjet controls. Up went the nose of the ship, and stars, weirdly splashed across the heavens, showed briefly.

  Then the ship fell, hurling itself against the base of the mountain. Tony was thrown from the control chair. He smacked against the wall, grinning twistedly. He pushed against it with a heavily shod foot as the ship teetered over, rolled a bit, and then was still—still, save for the hiss of escaping air.

  He dived for a locker, broke out a pressure suit, perspiration pearling his forehead. He was into the suit, buckling the helmet down, before the last of the air escaped. He stood there, pained dismay in his eyes. His roving glance rested on the wall calendar.

  “Happy December!” he snarled.

  Then he remembered. Johnny Braker was out there, with his two fellow outlaws. By now, they’d be running this way. All the more reason why Tony should capture them now. He’d need their ship.

  He acted quickly, buckling on his helmet, working over the air lock. He expelled his breath in relief as it opened. Nerves humming, he went through, came to his feet, inclosed by the bleak soundlessness of a twenty-mile planetoid more than a hundred million miles removed from Earth.

  To his left the mountain rose sharply. Good. Tony had wanted to put the ship down there anyway. He took one reluctant look at the ship. His face fell mournfully. The stern section was caved in and twisted so much it looked ridiculous. Well, that was that.

  He quickly drew his Hampton and moved soundlessly around the mountains shoulder. He fell into a crouch as he saw the gleam of the outlaw ship, three hundred yards distant across a plain, hovering in the shadow thrown by an overhanging ledge.

  Then he saw the three figures leaping toward him across the plain. His Hampton came viciously up. There was a puff of rock to the front left of the little group. They froze.

  Tony left his place of concealment, snapping his headset on.

  “Stay where you are!” he bawled.

  The reaction was unexpected. Braker’s voice came blasting back.

  “The hell you say!”

  A tiny crater came miraculously into being to Tony’s left. He swore, jumped behind his protection, came out a second later to send another projectile winging its way. One of the figures pitched forward, to move no more, the balloon rotundity of its suit suddenly lost. The other two turned tail, only to halt and hole up behind a boulder gracing the middle of the plain. They proceeded to pepper Tony’s retreat.

  TONY SHRANK back against the mountainside, exasperated beyond measure. His glance, roving around, came to rest on a cave, a fault in the mountain that tapered out a hundred feet up.

  He stared at the floor of the cave unbelievingly.

  “I’ll be double-damned,” he muttered.

  What he saw was a human skeleton.

  He paled. His stomach suddenly heaved. Outrageous, haunting thoughts flicked through his consciousness. The skeleton was—horror!

  And it had existed in the dim, unutterably distant past, before the asteroids, before the human race had come into existence!

  The thoughts were gone, abruptly. Consciousness shuddered back. For a while, his face pasty white, his fingers trembling, he thought he was going to be sick. But he wasn’t. He stood there, staring. Memories! If he knew where they came from—His very mind revolted suddenly from probing deeper into a mystery that tore at the very roots of his sanity!

  “It existed before the human race,” he whispered. “Then where did the skeleton come from?”

  His lips curled. Illusion! Conquering his maddening revulsion, he approached the skeleton, knelt near it. It lay inside the cave. Colorless starlight did not allow him to see it as well as he might. Yet, he saw the gleam of gold on the long, tapering finger. Old yellow gold, untarnished by atmosphere; and inset with an emerald, with a flaw, a distinctive, ovular air bubble, showing through its murky transparency.

  He moved backward, away from it, face set stubbornly. “Illusion, he repeated.

  Chips of rock, flaked off the mountainside by the exploding bullets of a Hampton, completed the transformation. He risked stepping out, fired.

  The shot struck the boulder, split it down the middle. The two halves parted. The outlaws ran, firing back to cover their hasty retreat. Tony waited until the fire lessened, then stepped out and sent a shot over their heads.

  Sudden dismay showed in his eyes. The ledge overhanging the outlaw ship cracked—where the bullet had struck it.

  “What the hell—” came Braker’s gasp. The two outlaws stopped stock-still.

  The ledge came down, its ponderousness doubled by the absence of sound. Tony stumbled panting across the plain as the scene turned into a churning hell. The ship crumbled like clay. Another section of the ledge descended to bury the ship inextricably under a small mountain.

  Tony Crow swore blisteringly. But ship or no ship, he still had a job to do. When the outlaws finally turned, they were looking into the menacing barrel of his Hampton.

  “Get ’em up,” he said impassively.

  WITH studied insolence, Harry Jawbone Yates, the smaller of the two, raised his hands. A contemptuous sneer merely played over Braker’s unshaved face and went upward to his smoky eyes.

  “Why should I put my hands up? Were all pals, now—theoretically.” His natural hate for any form of the law showed in his eyes. “You sure pulled a prize play, copper. Chase us clear across space, and end up getting us in a jam it’s a hundred-to-one shot we’ll get out of.”

  Tony held them transfixed with the Hampton, knowing what Braker meant. No ship would have reason to stop off on the twenty-mile mote in the sky that was Asteroid 1007.

  He sighed, made a gesture. “Hamptons over here, boys. And be careful.” The weapons arced groundward. “Sorry. I was intending to use your ship to take us back. I won’t make another error like that one, though. Giving up this early in the game, for instance. Come here, Jawbone.”

  Yates shrugged. He was blond, had pale, wide-set eyes. By nature, he was conscienceless. A broken jawbone, protruding at a sharp angle from his jawline, gave him his nickname.

  He held out his wrists. “Put ’em on.” His voice was an effortless affair which did not go as low as it could; rather womanish, therefore. Braker was different. Strength, nerve, and audacity showed in every line of his heavy, compact body. If there was one thing that characterized him it was his violent desire to live. These were men with elastic codes of ethics. A few of their more unscrupulous activities had caught up with them.

  Tony put cuffs over Yates’ wrist.

  “Now you, Braker.”

  “Damned if I do,” said Braker.

  “Damned if you don’t,” said Tony. He waggled the Hampton, his normally genial eyes hardening slightly. “I mean it, Braker,” he said slowly.

  Braker sneered and tossed his head. Then, as if resistance was below his present mood, he submitted.

  He watched the cuffs click silently. “There isn’t a hundred-to-one chance, anyway,” he growled.

  Tony jerked slightly, his eyes turned skyward. He chuckled.

  “Well, what’s so funny?” Braker demanded.

  “What you just said.” Tony pointed. “The hundred-to-one shot—there she is!”

  Braker turned.

  “Yeah,” he said. “Yeah. Damnation!”

  A ship, glowing faintly in the starlight, hung above an escarpment that dropped to the valley floor. It had no visible support, and, indeed, there was no trace of the usual jets.

  “Well, that’s an item!” Yates muttered.

  “It is at that,” Tony agreed.

  The ship moved. Rather, it simply disappeared, and next showed up a hundred feet away on the valley floor. A valve in the side of the cylindrical affair opened and a figure dropped out, stood looking at them.

  A metallic voice said, “Are you the inhabitants or just people?”

  The voice was agreeably flippant, and more agreeably feminine. Tony’s senses quickened.

  “We’re people,” he explained. “See?” He flapped his arms like wings. He grinned. “However, before you showed up, we had made up our minds to be—inhabitants.”

  “Oh. Stranded.” The voice was slightly chilly. “Well, that’s too bad. Come on inside. We’ll talk the whole thing over. Say, are those handcuffs?”

  “Right.”

  “Hm-m-m. Two outlaws—and a copper. Well, come on inside and meet the rest of us.”

  AN HOUR later, Tony, agreeably relaxed in a small lounge, was smoking his third cigarette, pressure suit off. Across the room was Braker and Yates. The girl, whose name, it developed, was Laurette, leaned against the door jamb, clad in jodhpurs and white silk blouse. She was blond and had clear, deep-blue eyes. Her lips were pursed a little and she looked angry. Tony couldn’t keep his eyes off her.

  Another man stood beside her. He was dark in complexion and looked as if he had a short temper. He was snapping the fingernails of two hands in a manner that showed characteristic impatience and nervousness. His name was Erie Masters.

  An older man came into the room, fitting glasses over his eyes. He took a quick look around the room. Tony came to his feet.

  Laurette said tonelessly, “Lieutenant, this is my father. Daddy, Lieutenant Tony Crow of the IPF. Those two are the outlaws I was telling you about.”

  “Outlaws, eh?” said Professor Overland. His voice seemed deep enough to count the separate vibrations. He rubbed at a stubbled jaw. “Well, that’s too bad. Just when we had the DeTosque strata 1007 fitting onto 70. And there were ample signs to show a definite dovetailing of apex 1007 into Morrell’s fourth crater on Ceres, which would have put 1007 near the surface, if not on it. If we could have followed those up without an interruption—”

  “Don’t let this interrupt you,” Masters broke in. His nails clicked. “We’ll let these three sleep in the lounge. We can finish up the set of indications we’re working on now, and then get rid of them.”

  Overland shook his graying head doubtfully. “It would be unthinkable to subject those two to cuffs for a full month.”

  Masters said irritably, “We’ll give them a parole. Give them their temporary freedom if they agree to submit to handcuffs again when we land on Mars.”

  Tony laughed softly. “Sorry. You can’t trust those two for five minutes, let alone a month.” He paused. “Under the circumstances, professor, I guess you realize I’ve got full power to enforce my request that you take us back to Mars. The primary concern of the government in a case like this would be placing these two in custody. I suggest if we get under way now, you can devote more time to your project.”

  Overland said helplessly, “Of course. But it cuts off my chances of getting to the Christmas banquet at the university.” Disappointment showed in his weak eyes. “There’s a good chance they’ll give me Amos, I guess, but it’s already December third. Well, anyway, we’ll miss the snow.”

  Laurette Overland said bitterly, “I wish we hadn’t landed on 1007. You’d have got along without us then, all right.”

  Tony held her eyes gravely. “Perfectly, Miss Overland. Except that we would have been inhabitants. And, shortly, very, very dead ones.”

  “So?” She glared.

  Erie Masters grabbed the girl’s arm with a muttered word and led her out of the room.

  OVERLAND grasped Tony’s arm in a friendly squeeze, eyes twinkling. “Don’t mind them, son. If you or your charges need anything, you can use my cabin. But we’ll make Mars in forty-eight hours, seven or eight of it skimming through the Belt.”

  Tony shook his head dazedly. “Forty-eight hours?”

  Overland grinned. His teeth were slightly tobacco-stained. “That’s it. This is one of the new ships—the H-H drive. They zip along.”

  “Oh! The Fitz-Gerald Contraction?”

  Overland nodded absently and left. Tony stared after him. He was remembering something now—the skeleton.

  Braker said indulgently, “What a laugh.”

  Tony turned.

  “What,” he asked patiently, “is a laugh?”

  Braker thrust out long, heavy legs. He was playing idly with a gold ring on the third finger of his right hand.

  “Oh,” he said carelessly, “a theory goes the rounds the asteroids used to be a planet. They’re not sure the theory is right, so they send a few bearded long faces out to trace down faults and strata and striations on one asteroid and link them up with others. The girl’s old man was just about to nail down 1007 and 70 and Ceres. Good for him. But what the hell! They prove the theory and the asteroids still play ring around the rosy and what have they got for their money?”

  He absently played with his ring.

  Tony as absently watched him turning it round and round on his finger. Something peculiar about—He jumped. His eyes bulged.

  That ring! He leaped to his feet, away from it.

  Braker and Yates looked at him strangely.

  Braker came to his feet, brows contracting. “Say, copper, what ails you? You gone crazy? You look like a ghost.”

  Tony’s heart began a fast, insistent pounding. Blood drummed against his temples. So he looked like a ghost? He laughed hoarsely. Was it imagination that suddenly stripped the flesh from Braker’s head and left nothing but—a skull?

  “I’m not a ghost,” he chattered senselessly, still staring at the ring.

  He closed his eyes tight, clenched his fists.

  “He’s gone bats?” said Yates, incredulously.

  “Bats! Absolutely bats!”

  Tony opened his eyes, looked carefully at Braker, at Yates, at the tapestried walls of the lounge. Slowly, the tensity left him. Now, no matter what developed he would have to keep a hold on himself.

  “I’m all right, Braker. Let me see that ring.” His voice was low, controlled, ominous.

  “You take a fit?” Braker snapped suspiciously.

  “I’m all right.” Tony deliberately took Braker’s cuffed hands into his own, looked at the gold band inset with the flawed emerald. Revulsion crawled in his stomach, yet he kept his eyes on the ring.

  “Where’d you get the ring, Braker?” He kept his glance down.

  “Why—’29, I think it was; or ’28.” Braker’s tone was suddenly angry, resentful. He drew away. “What is this, anyway? I got it legal, and so what?”

  “What I really wanted to know,” said Tony, “was if there was another ring like this one—ever. I hope not . . . I don’t know if I do. Damn it!”

  “And I don’t know what you’re talking about,” snarled Braker. “I still think you’re bats. Hell, flawed emeralds are like fingerprints, never two alike. You know that yourself.”

  Tony slowly nodded and stepped back. Then he lighted a cigarette, and let the smoke inclose him.

  “You fellows stay here,” he said, and backed out and bolted the door behind him. He went heavily down the corridor, down a short flight of stairs, then down another short corridor.

  He chose one of two doors, jerked it open. A half dozen packages slid from the shelves of what was evidently a closet. Then the other door opened. Tony staggered backward, losing his balance under the flood of packages. He bumped into Laurette Overland. She gasped and started to fall. Tony managed to twist around in time to grab her. They both fell anyway. Tony drew her to him on impulse and kissed her.

  She twisted away from him, her face scarlet. Her palm came around, smashed into his face with all her considerable strength. She jumped to her feet, then the fury in her eyes died. Tony came erect, smarting under the blow.

 

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