TheFantaynodded briefly. His pad-like hands moved over Jarl, probing the plumes, the wrist-bands, the girdle.
A trickle of sand spilled to the ground.
TheFantaybrushed it off, unheeding. He reached up; started to fumble at the catches of the metal mask.
Jarl's heart leaped. He knocked away the officer's hand and hurled an angry cascade of gutturals at the creature.
TheFantayfell back a step, startled and even more uncertain; and an Earthman clipped, "Leave that tin hat alone, Beyno! This thing's a primitive. Maybe he thinks it's bad luck or something to take off his mask in front of strangers."
"Yes; that could be it." The officer swung around. "Gundre will be up in the control section. Let's take thischitzathere."
Taking Jarl's arm, he led him forward, centered amid the little knot of crewmen. Across the spreading ring of light they moved, and up the ramp intoreyGundre's mighty flagship ... through echoing corridors ... in and out of a lift that whisked them a dozen levels higher in as many seconds ... down still another gleaming metal passage, till at last they faced the door of the craft's control section.
The officer let go of Jarl and stepped forward; touched the signal button.
The intercom plate glowed.reyGundre's voice blared: "Yes! What is it?" He sounded tense and angry.
TheFantayclipped, "Sir, we've got one of the primitives. He came in of his own free will, but we can't understand what he's trying to say. We thought maybe you'd want to put him on the vocodor."
"A primitive—!" There was a moment's hesitation. Then: "All right. Just a minute."
The intercom plate went blank.
Jarl's knees were suddenly weak again. He swayed a little. Already, so soon, he was here. It had been incredibly simple.
But the next step—
Abruptly, the door to the control section opened part way. The high commissioner himself looked out. His lean, handsome face was haggard, the dark hair so rumpled that the white blaze was almost lost.
His deep-set eyes flicked to Jarl Corvett. Then he snapped, "Two guards will be enough," and drew back a fraction to let them enter.
They filed in—first theFantayofficer, then Jarl. The guards brought up the rear.
Behind them,reyGundre closed and locked the door.
It was a bare, bleak room—the navigation unit, with its globes and astrocharts and viziscreens. Through a half-open door to the right, Jarl could see the switches and dial-studded panels of the operating cubicle; the empty pilot-chair.
Tight-drawn as allorin'sbow-string, he shifted, seeking the spot best suited to his purpose. Wry, mocking wordsKtarWassreck once had spoken rang in his brain: "You'll live longer if you pick a place to run to before you have to run."
Even now, as he faced certain death, it was good advice. Disregarding the others, he moved almost to the cubicle's doorway.
For the first time, then, as he swung round to face his captors, he saw the plate of the long-range viziscreen.
Saw it ... rocked ... almost cried out.
For there, in stark detail, were the familiar outlines of tiny Ceres: the bare expanse that was Ceresta's sprawling port ... the geometric patterns of the town.
And there, too, in the upper scanner, shone clusters of tiny, crawling pinpoints—the mighty Federation fleet hurtling through the void, poising in this moment to lance down upon their distant prey.
It dragged through a thousand years, that awful instant; an instant so terrible that it made the navigation room swim and dissolve before Jarl Corvett's eyes.
Why had his fate brought him here at this final moment? Why must he take his stand just in time to see the Federation fleet blast his one last dream?
Desperately, fists clenched and sweating, he tried to calculate how long it would take the racing ships to reach a range where they could use Wassreck's deadly force projectors. Five minutes—? Three?
But what did it matter? Whatever the time, it still would be too short.
Unless fate had brought him here now for a purpose; unless the gods of the void themselves were riding at his side....
His stomach writhed. With a will born of utter frenzy, he tore his eyes from the screen.
The guards and theFantayofficer still stood waiting.reyGundre was studying him with narrowed eyes.
Cold as death, Jarl made himself stride forward. Thrusting stiff hands between the girdle and his belly, once again he spat a stream of crackling gutturals at his foes.
But then, the high commissioner was suddenly tensing, backing. "What is this?" he cried sharply. "You're no primitive!" His voice went high and raw. "Guards! Seize him—!"
TheFantaylunged. The guards clawed for their ray-guns.
But already Jarl was pivoting, whipping a fistful of sand into the officer's eyes. He leaped back as he threw it, so that one guard was between him and the other. Savagely, he hammered home a blow; crowded close and caught the ray-gun's barrel as it cleared the holster, levering it up till it tore free from the creature's tortured grasp.
Then the other guard was upon him, smashing him to his knees.
But the metal mask broke the force of the blow. Jarl triggered the ray-gun. The beam lanced out, struck home at the base of the bulging jaw.
The guard fell backward.
Jarl fired again. TheFantaydied.
But nowreyGundre's own weapon was out. The remaining guard came charging in.
Jarl dropped flat as the high commissioner fired. The beam passed over him; blasted the lunging guard.
Jarl shot forreyGundre's weapon.
The ray-gun flew out of the high commissioner's hand.
Panting, Jarl lurched to his feet. His whole body trembled. For an instant he thought he was going to faint.
Then, out of the depths of his will, new strength came. He leveled the ray-gun; held it steady.
reyGundre went white to the lips. Unsteadily, he moved backward, till his body, the palms of his hands, were pressed flat against the wall. He could not seem to tear his eyes from the hideous metal mask Jarl wore.
"Is the high commissioner afraid, then—?" Jarl laughed harshly. "Forget it, Gundre, I've things for you to do before you die."
"Jarl Corvett—!" The commissioner's eyes went wide with shock, mirror-bright with fear.
Jarl laughed again, a bleak and mirthless sound. With his free hand, he unclamped the mask; dropped it to the floor.
Tightly, he said: "Get a cross on your fleet, Commissioner. Give them their true orders—that Ceres is to be spared."
The panic that flared inreyGundre's eyes was a frightful thing to see. His face sagged, grey as lead. "No, Corvett—! Not that! I can't—!"
"Then you can die," Jarl said.
He raised the ray-gun.
The high commissioner's mouth worked. "No, no...." Tottering, he stumbled towards the viziscreen.
Jarl followed him, grim as death.
The clustered pinpoints were closer to Ceres now, slashing through the void like streaks of light.
With trembling fingers,reyGundre fumbled at the dials.
"Faster!" Jarl clipped. "Your life depends on it, Gundre! If they strike, you die!"
A new voice, behind them, said, "No, Jarl."
By sheer reflex, Jarl whirled.
A man stood in operation unit's doorway ... a tall man with a gaunt, pain-twisted body, and high-domed head, and burning eyes.
A man Jarl Corvett knew so well—
"Wassreck—!"
"Yes, Jarl. Wassreck." The other's voice was almost gentle. The wry mouth twisted with the thin ghost of a smile.
Jarl's knees went weak as water. His gun-hand sagged. He clutched a chair to keep from falling.
Still smiling,KtarWassreck moved forward, into the navigation room. "Did I surprise you, Jarl?"
"I—thought you dead."
"And Sais, too—?" The other chuckled softly, and half-turned. "Come, my dear...."
And of a sudden, there was dark Sais, framed in the open doorway—radiant, lips half-parted, eyes aglow.
KtarWassreck said, "I know how much she means to you, my comrade. I brought her here, from Karrel's ship, to wait till you should come." His pain-warped shoulders twisted. "Because I knew you'd come, Jarl, sometime. Loyalty is a thing you understand."
"I called him on theKnife'sscreen, Jarl," Sais broke in. Her voice was warm and eager. "The crew didn't think to guard me. After that, I ran away, into the desert, and waited till the flagship came."
Jarl swayed. His brain was reeling, and everything had a queer, distorted look. He wondered if perhaps he'd finally fainted ... if this were all a dream, somehow, or death.
But he made himself speak, because he had to learn the truth ... find answers to the questions that kept tumbling and jumbling....
"You ... were aboard the flagship—?"
"Of course, Jarl," Wassreck nodded. "I wasn't captured, nor yet did I surrender. All this has been a careful plan, worked out between the high commissioner and me."
"A—plan—?"
"Yes!"KtarWassreck's voice rang. With sudden eagerness, he leaned forward, and his eyes burned with a strange new light. "Jarl, with the power that's in these robots, the universe is ours to rule! What force is there that can stand against them? What planet could defy their might?"
"But the high commissioner...." Jarl gestured, stumbled. "Why would he aid the outlaw worlds—?" And then, in sudden panic, whirling: "Quick—! The Federation fleet—it's headed down for Ceres! We've got to stop them! It may already be too late!"
But Wassreck's voice said, "No, Jarl."
It was flat this time, no longer gentle.
Slowly, slowly Jarl turned from the scanner, with its clustered, crawling pinpoints. A seeping emptiness was rising in him—an ugly, hollow feeling he'd never felt before.
Wassreck still stood in the same spot as before. But now, his right hand was at waist-level.
It held a blaster.
In a voice not even remotely resembling his own, Jarl asked, "What do you mean?"
Wassreck's eyes were burning coals. His gaunt face seemed even thinner than before.
He said: "I mean the outlaw worlds must die!"
Jarl nodded slowly. "I guessed that would be it."
"Don't you see, Jarl—?" Sais cried, coming to him. "The raiders will never lose their idiot dreams of freedom! Always, everywhere, they'll make trouble! It would be madness to leave them with Ceresta and their fleet. The Federation planets know what it means to bow before a ruler—"
Wordless, Jarl looked down at her.
Hand on his arm, she rushed on—glowing, eager: "At first my father thought of you as dangerous. But always, I've loved you. That's why I came to you on Ceres, saying he was captured—so that you would prove your loyalty to him. Now, he knows; and the two of you can rule together. You and I—we'll have each other...."
She pressed against Jarl—body warm, hair soft and fragrant.
Wassreck broke in: "Jarl, you saw what happened today when I tried out that robot on Bor Legat's ships! And once the raider fleet is smashed, there'll be no opposition."
The numb emptiness filled Jarl to overflowing. "And if I say no—?"
He could see the other stiffen.
"Is there a choice?" Wassreck's laugh was suddenly savage. "Your ray-gun's down, and my blaster's on you. Even if you could kill me, the crew knows you're here; they'd be waiting for you."
And Sais whispered, "Jarl, why should you die for nothing? What can it gain you, or anyone else?" Her cool fingers caressed him. "Jarl, don't you understand? I love you! I want us to be together, now and forever...."
Jarl stood very still.
How many nights had he lain in a chill, lonely bunk far out in space, and dreamed of Sais beside him? How many times had he cursed the raider way, the blood and iron, and longed instead for power and booty?
Now he could have those things. What made him hang back? Why did he hesitate?
Why indeed, when refusal meant death without gain, without meaning?
Only then he thought of other things, and pain came in a rush to fill the emptiness.
For he thought of those who lived, and those who'd died, whether they lived or died for good or evil. Of Bor Legat and Ungo, Tas Karrel and Ylana, a thousand fallen crewmen.
Of Ceresta's teeming hives, and Pallas, and of the raider fleet.
Of freedom.
Perhaps there was still a place in this mad universe for a man who did not fear to die.
Again, he looked down into Sais' dark, lovely face. Again, her hair's fragrance rose like perfume in his nostrils.
But as he stared, somehow, the lines and contours kept shifting, changing, till it was as if he were gazing at one of the primitives' hideous, leering masks.
Bleakly, he pushed her away.
Her face sagged, incredulous. But it wasKtarWassreck himself who spoke: "You know what this means, Jarl—?"
"I know."
"Then it doesn't count that I came for you on Horla? Loyalty means nothing...?"
"Loyalty—?" Jarl laughed a bitter laugh. "And what are you loyal to, then, Wassreck? Your friends who'll die down on Ceresta?"
The gaunt man's face grew cold and bleak. He did not answer.
Jarl turned his head; slashed out atreyGundre, still standing by the viziscreen: "You, Commissioner! What are you loyal to? The Federation, that you betray? Ylana, your own daughter, who'd rather die in the desert than live here with you?"
A trace of color came to the high commissioner's grey, sagging face. Unspeaking, he looked away.
"Loyalty—!" Jarl spat. "How can any of you even pretend to know what it means? Because a man's first loyalty is to his own conscience—and conscience is a thing you neither have nor understand!"
Wassreck's gaunt face contorted. "A pretty speech—to die with."
His finger went white on the blaster's trigger.
Jarl Corvett whipped up his ray-gun.
Yet even in that moment, Jarl knew the truth: that his strength had gone; that he was too slow. Before he could even fire himself, Wassreck would kill him.
But he didn't dare to die—not whileKtarWassreck still lived and held the secret of the mighty warrior robots. Too much was at stake. Too many could suffer.
Only now, there was nothing he could do. At last, the gods of the void had ridden on their way without him.
But then, incredibly, another figure hurtled across his field of vision.
The figure of High CommissionerreyGundre.
For a split second, Wassreck's eyes wavered.
Jarl dived to one side as the blaster roared. The bolt seared a flaming path diagonally along his ribs.
But now, Jarl, too, was firing—lancing a ray-beam into Wassreck's midriff.
The gaunt body stiffened ... straightened ... fell.
Jarl threw himself round, searching for Sais andreyGundre.
They lay in a tumbled heap near the farthest wall. The commissioner was twitching, moaning faintly.
Jarl stumbled across to where he lay, tried to help him to turn over.
A blaster bolt had taken the man high in the chest. Blood already was trickling from his mouth. "Ylana—!" he gasped, then choked on the blood.
A moment later, he died.
Jarl turned to Sais.
She, too, was dead. She held a blaster in her hand—and her neck was broken.
Dully, head throbbing, Jarl rememberedreyGundre's mad, unexplained rush.
Now it needed no explanation.
Outside, someone was pounding on the door. Dim sounds of tumult sifted through the portal.
So the guards had come already....
Struggling to his feet again, Jarl made his way to the viziscreen. He had lost all track of time. He half expected to find Ceres already blasted, broken.
It still was there. But the clustered pinpoints that were the Federation fleet had begun converging high above, readying for the final plunge.
With trembling fingers, Jarl set a cross for the lead ship; switched on the communicator unit. Harshly, inreyGundre's name, he rasped out orders.
The wheeling ships veered; peeled off on a different course.
Ceres was saved.
Jarl sagged against the screen. He felt incredibly old, incredibly weary.
The pounding on the door grew louder.
Jarl thought:Another minute and they'll break in....
And he would die.
Only all at once, he didn't care. His job was done. What difference did it make, what happened now?
His only regret was that Ylana would never know that at the last, when the crisis came, her father had broken clean and died to save him.
And Sais.... What things had been in her mind when she raised that blaster to try to kill the man she claimed to love?
It was strange, though: he felt no hatred towards her.
But, neither did he feel love, or sorrow, or pity. It was as if she were an utter stranger, some passer-by he'd never known.
So different from Ylana....
Ylana the golden. He spoke her name aloud, and liked its sound.
Ylana the golden. Red lips, grey eyes, and rippling hair.
Such queer things to be thinking about at a time like this. But then, his whole state of mind just now was somewhat queer.
Out in the hall, some heavy object smashed against the door. Soon, he knew the panel would crash down.
Why wait for it? Why not go out and meet death as a raider should?
Jarl laughed drunkenly. Reeling, he stumbled to the door; with a clumsy jerk threw back the bolt and braced himself to take the blasts.
Then the door burst open. Beings of half-a-dozen planets charged in upon him—and Big Ungo of Jupiter was in their van.
Jarl knew then that this was a nightmare—the delirium of a fevered, over-weary brain. He closed his eyes and let himself go limp; slumped to the floor.
But when he looked up again, Ungo was still there, and now Ylana, too, knelt beside him, whispering, "Jarl—! Jarl Corvett...." while the red lips quivered and tears spilled from the cool grey eyes.
Ungo said: "She made us come, Jarl—all of us that were left from Bor Legat's ships. With her to talk for us, we didn't even have to fight to get in here."
"You're lying!" Jarl accused him, twisting as pain stabbed along his wounded side. "You're not here. I'm just dreaming. When I wake up, if I'm not dead, you'll all be gone."
"No, Jarl. This isn't dreaming. This is real." All at once Ylana was smiling through her tears. "Sleep, now, Jarl. I'll still be here when you waken—or forever, if you want me...."
As she spoke, she reached out and gently closed his eyes.
He didn't mind. As a matter of fact, of a sudden he wanted to let sleep come, and quickly.
For now he knew that waking would be better than any dream.