<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1><big>Raiders of the Universes</big></h1>
<h2>By Donald Wandrei</h2>
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">It</span> was in the thirty-fourth
century that the dark star
began its famous conquest,
unparalleled in stellar annals.
Phobar the astronomer discovered
it. He was sweeping
the heavens
with one of the
newly invented
multi-powered
Sussendorf comet-hunters
when something caught
his eye—a new star of great brilliance
in the foreground of the
constellation Hercules.</p>
<p>For the rest of the night, he cast
aside all his plans
and concentrated
on the one star.
He witnessed an
unprecedented
event. Mercia's
nullifier had just been invented, a curious
and intricate device, based on
four-dimensional geometry, that
made it possible to see occurrences
in the universe which had hitherto
required the hundreds of years
needed for light to cross the intervening
space before they were visible
on Earth. By a hasty calculation
with the aid of this invention,
Phobar found that the new star was
about three thousand light-years
distant, and that it was hurtling
backward into space at the rate of
twelve hundred miles per second.
The remarkable feature of his discovery
was this appearance of a
fourth-magnitude star where none
had been known to exist. Perhaps
it had come into existence this
very night.</p>
<p>On the succeeding night, he was
given a greater surprise. In line
with the first star, but several
hundred light-years nearer, was a
second new star of even more
brightness. And it, too, was hurtling
backward into space at approximately
twelve hundred miles
per second. Phobar was astonished.
Two new stars discovered within
twenty-four hours in the same part
of the heavens, both of the fourth
magnitude! But his surprise was as
nothing when on the succeeding
night, even while he watched, a
third new star appeared in line
with these, but much closer.</p>
<p>At midnight he first noticed a
pin-point of faint light; by one
o'clock the star was of eighth magnitude.
At two it was a brilliant
sun of the second magnitude blazing
away from Earth like the others
at a rate of twelve hundred miles
per second. And on the next evening,
and the next, and the next,
other new stars appeared until
there were seven in all, every one
on a line in the same constellation
Hercules, every one with the same
radiance and the same proper motion,
though of varying size!</p>
<hr />
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">Phobar</span> had broadcast his discovery
to incredulous astronomers;
but as star after star appeared
nightly, all the telescopes
on Earth were turned toward one
of the most spectacular cataclysms
that history recorded. Far out in
the depths of space, with unheard-of
regularity and unheard-of precision,
new worlds were flaming up
overnight in a line that began at
Hercules and extended toward the
solar system.</p>
<p>Phobar's announcement was immediately
flashed to Venus, Mars,
Jupiter, and Saturn, the other members
of the Five World Federation.
Saturn reported no evidence of the
phenomena, because of the interfering
rings and the lack of Mercia's
nullifier. But Jupiter, with a
similar device, witnessed the phenomena
and announced furthermore
that many stars in the neighborhood
of the novæ had begun to
deviate in singular and abrupt
fashion from their normal positions.</p>
<p>There was not as yet much popular
interest in the phenomena.
Without Mercia's nullifier, the stars
were not visible to ordinary eyes,
since the light-rays would take
years to reach the Earth. But every
astronomer who had access to Mercia's
nullifier hastened to focus his
telescope on the region where extraordinary
events were taking
place out in the unfathomable gulf
of night. Some terrific force was at
work, creating worlds and disturbing
the positions of stars within a
radius already known to extend
billions and trillions of miles from
the path of the seven new stars.
But of the nature of that force,
astronomers could only guess.</p>
<hr />
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">Phobar</span> took up his duties
early on the eighth night. The
last star had appeared about five
hundred light-years distant. If an
eighth new star was found, it
should be not more than a few
light-years away. But nothing happened.
All night Phobar kept his
telescope pointed at the probable
spot, but search as he might, the
heavens showed nothing new. In
the morning he sought eagerly for
news of any discovery made by
fellow-watchers, but they, too, had
found nothing unusual. Could it be
that the mystery would now fade
away, a new riddle of the skies?</p>
<p>The next evening, he took up his
position once more, training his
telescope on the seven bright stars,
and then on the region where an
eighth, if there were one, should
appear. For hours he searched the
abyss in vain. He could find none.
Apparently the phenomena were
ended. At midnight he took a last
glance before entering on some
tedious calculations. It was there!
In the center of the telescope a
faint, hazy object steadily grew in
brightness. All his problems were
forgotten as Phobar watched the
eighth star increase hourly. Closer
than any other, closer even than
Alpha Centauri, the new sun appeared,
scarcely three light-years
away across the void surrounding
the solar system. And all the while
he watched, he witnessed a thing
no man had ever before seen—the
birth of a world!</p>
<hr />
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">By</span> one o'clock, the new star
was of fifth magnitude; by
two it was of the first. As the faint
flush of dawn began to come toward
the close of that frosty,
moonless November night, the new
star was a great white-hot object
more brilliant than any other star
in the heavens. Phobar knew that
when its light finally reached Earth
so that ordinary eyes could see, it
would be the most beautiful object
in the night sky. What was the
reason for these unparalleled births
of worlds and the terrifying mathematical
precision that characterized
them?</p>
<p>Whatever the cosmic force behind,
it was progressing toward the
solar system. Perhaps it would even
disturb the balance of the planets.
The possible chance of such an
event had already called the attention
of some astronomers, but the
whole phenomenon was too inexplicable
to permit more than speculation.</p>
<p>The next evening was cloudy.
Jupiter reported nothing new except
that Neptune had deviated from
its course and tended to pursue an
erratic and puzzling new orbit.</p>
<p>Phobar pondered long over this
last news item and turned his attention
to the outermost planet on
the succeeding night. To his surprise,
he had great difficulty in locating
it. The ephemeris was of
absolutely no use. When he did
locate Neptune after a brief search,
he discovered it more than eighty
million miles from its scheduled
place! This was at one-forty. At
two-ten he was thunderstruck by a
special announcement sent from the
Central Bureau to every observatory
and astronomer of note throughout
the world, proclaiming the discovery
of an ultra-Plutonian planet.
Phobar was incredulous. For centuries
it had been proved that no
planet beyond Pluto could possibly
exist.</p>
<hr />
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">With</span> feverish haste, Phobar
ran to the huge telescope
and rapidly focused it where the
new planet should be. Five hundred
million miles beyond Neptune was
a flaming path like the beam of a
giant searchlight that extended exactly
to the eighth solar planet.
Phobar gasped. He could hardly
credit the testimony of his eyes.
He looked more closely. The great
stream of flame still crossed his
line of vision. But this time he
saw something else: at the precise
farther end of the flame-path
a round disk—dark!</p>
<p>Beyond a doubt, a new planet of
vast size now formed an addition
to the solar group. But that planet
was almost impervious to the illuminating
rays of the sun and was
barely discernible. Neptune itself
shone brighter than it ever had,
and was falling away from the sun
at a rate of twelve hundred miles
per second.</p>
<p>All night Phobar watched the
double mystery. By three o'clock,
he was convinced, as far as lightning
calculations showed, that the
invader was hurtling toward the
sun at a speed of more than ten
million miles an hour. At three-fifteen,
he thought that vanishing
Neptune seemed brighter even than
the band of fire running to the invader.
At four, his belief was certainty.
With amazement and awe,
Phobar sat through the long, cold
night, watching a spectacular and
terrible catastrophe in the sky.</p>
<p>As dawn began to break and the
stars grew paler, Phobar turned
away from his telescope, his brain
awhirl, his heart filled with a great
fear. He had witnessed the devastation
of a world, the ruin of a member
of his own planetary system
by an invader from outer space.
As dawn cut short his observations,
he knew at last the cause of Neptune's
brightness, knew that it was
now a white-hot flaming sun that
sped with increased rapidity away
from the solar system. Somehow,
the terrible swathe of fire that
flowed from the dark star to Neptune
had wrenched it out of its
orbit and made of it a molten inferno.</p>
<hr />
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">At</span> dawn came another bulletin
from the Central Bureau. Neptune
had a surface temperature of
3,000° C, was defying all laws of
celestial mechanics, and within three
days would have left the solar system
for ever. The results of such
a disaster were unpredictable. The
entire solar system was likely to
break up. Already Uranus and
Jupiter had deviated from their
orbits. Unless something speedily
occurred to check the onrush of the
dark star, it was prophesied that
the laws governing the planetary
system would run to a new balance,
and that in the ensuing chaos the
whole group would spread apart
and fall toward the gulfs beyond
the great surrounding void.</p>
<p>What was the nature of the great
path of fire? What force did it
represent? And was the dark star
controlled by intelligence, or was
it a blind wanderer from space that
had come by accident? The flame-path
alone implied that the dark
star was guided by an intelligence
that possessed the secret of inconceivable
power. Menace hung in the
sky now where all eyes could see
in a great arc of fire!</p>
<p>The world was on the brink of
eternity, and vast forces at whose
nature men could only guess were
sweeping planets and suns out of
its path.</p>
<p>The following night was again
cold and clear. High in the heavens,
where Neptune should have been,
hung a disk of enormously greater
size. Neptune itself was almost invisible,
hundreds of millions of
miles beyond its scheduled position.
As nearly as Phobar could estimate,
not one hundredth of the sun's rays
were reflected from the surface of
the dark star, a proportion far below
those for the other planets.
Phobar had a better view of the
flame-path, and it was with growing
awe that he watched that
strange swathe in the sky during
the dead of night. It shot out from
the dark star like a colossal beam
or huge pillar of fire seeking a
food of worlds.</p>
<p>With a shiver of cold fear he
saw that there were now three of
the bands: one toward Neptune, one
toward Saturn, and one toward the
sun. The first was fading, a milky,
misty white; the second shone almost
as bright as the first one previously
had; and the third, toward
the sun, was a dazzling stream of
orange radiance, burning with a
steady, terrible, unbelievable intensity
across two and a half billions
of miles of space! That gigantic
flare was the most brilliant
sight in the whole night sky, an
awful and abysmally prophetic flame
that made city streets black with
staring people, a radiance whose
grandeur and terrific implication of
cosmic power brought beauty and
the fear of doom into the heavens!</p>
<hr />
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">Those</span> paths could not be explained
by all the physicists
and all the astronomers in the
Five World Federation. They possessed
the properties of light, but
they were rigid bands like a tube
or a solid pillar from which only
the faintest of rays escaped; and
they completely shut off the heavens
behind them. They had, moreover,
singular properties which could not
be described, as if a new force
were embodied in them.</p>
<p>Hour after hour humanity watched
the spectacular progress of the
dark star, watched those mysterious
and threatening paths of light that
flowed from the invader. When
dawn came, it brought only a great
fear and the oppression of impending
disaster.</p>
<p>In the early morning, Phobar
slept. When he awoke, he felt refreshed
and decided to take a short
walk in the familiar and peaceful
light of day. He never took that
walk. He opened the door on a
kind of dim and reddish twilight.
Not a cloud hung in the sky, but
the sun shone feebly with a dull
red glow, and the skies were dull
and somber, as if the sun were
dying as scientists had predicted
it eventually would.</p>
<p>Phobar stared at the dull heavens
in a daze, at the foreboding atmosphere
and the livid sun that
burned faintly as through a smoke
curtain. Then the truth flashed on
him—it was the terrible path of
fire from the dark star! By what
means he could not guess, by what
appalling control of immense and
inconceivable forces he could not
even imagine, the dark star was
sucking light and perhaps more
than light from the sun!</p>
<hr />
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">Phobar</span> turned and shut the
door. The world had seen its
last dawn. If the purpose of the
dark star was destruction, none of
the planets could offer much opposition,
for no weapon of theirs was
effective beyond a few thousand
miles range at most—and the dark
star could span millions. If the invader
passed on, its havoc would
be only a trifle smaller, for it had
already destroyed two members of
the solar system and was now striking
at its most vital part. Without
the sun, life would die, but even
with the sun the planets must rearrange
themselves because of the
destruction of balance.</p>
<p>Even he could hardly grasp the
vast and abysmal catastrophe that
without warning had swept from
space. How could the dark star
have traversed three thousand light-years
of space in a week's time?
It was unthinkable! So stupendous
a control of power, so gigantic a
manipulation of cosmic forces, so
annihilating a possession of the
greatest secrets of the universe, was
an unheard-of concentration of
energy and knowledge of stellar
mechanics. But the evidence of his
own eyes and the path of the dark
star with flaming suns to mark its
progress, told him in language
which could not be refuted that the
dark star possessed all that immeasurable,
titanic knowledge. It
was the lord of the universe. There
was nothing which the dark star
could not crush or conquer or
change. The thought of that immense,
supreme power numbed his
mind. It opened vistas of a civilization,
and a progress, and an unparalleled
mastery of all knowledge
which was almost beyond conception.</p>
<hr />
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">Already</span> the news had raced
across the world. On Phobar's
television screen flashed scenes of
nightmare; the radio spewed a
gibberish of terror. In one day
panic had swept the Earth; on the
remaining members of the Five
World Federation the same story
was repeated. Rioting mobs drowned
out the chant of religious fanatics
who hailed Judgment Day. Great
fires turned the air murky and
flame-shot. Machine guns spat regularly
in city streets; looting, murder,
and fear-crazed crimes were
universal. Civilization had completely
vanished overnight.</p>
<p>The tides roared higher than they
ever had before; for every thousand
people drowned on the American
seaboards, a hundred thousand
perished in China and India. Dead
volcanoes boomed into the worst
eruptions known. Half of Japan
sank during the most violent earthquake
in history. Land rocked, the
seas boiled, cyclones howled out
of the skies. A billion eyes focused
on Mecca, the mad beating of tom-toms
rolled across all Africa, women
and children were trampled to death
by the crowds that jammed into
churches.</p>
<p>"Has man lived in vain?" asked
the philosopher.</p>
<p>"The world is doomed. There is
no escape," said the scientist.</p>
<p>"The day of reckoning has come!
The wrath of God is upon us!"
shouted the street preachers.</p>
<p>In a daze, Phobar switched off
the bedlam and, walking like a man
asleep, strode out, he did not care
where, if only to get away.</p>
<p>The ground and the sky were
like a dying fire. The sun seemed
a half-dead cinder. Only the great
swathe of radiance between the sun
and the dark star had any brilliance.
Sinister, menacing, now
larger even than the sun, the invader
from beyond hung in the
heavens.</p>
<p>As Phobar watched it, the air
around him prickled strangely. A
sixth sense gave warning. He turned
to race back into his house. His
legs failed. A fantastic orange light
bathed him, countless needles of
pain shot through his whole body,
the world darkened.</p>
<hr />
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">Earth</span> had somehow been
blotted out. There was a brief
blackness, the nausea of space and
of a great fall that compressed eternity
into a moment. Then a swimming
confusion, and outlines which
gradually came to rest.</p>
<p>Phobar was too utterly amazed
to cry out or run. He stood inside
the most titanic edifice he could
have imagined, a single gigantic
structure vaster than all New York
City. Far overhead swept a black
roof fading into the horizon, beneath
his feet was the same metal
substance. In the midst of this
giant work soared the base of a
tower that pierced the roof thousands
of feet above.</p>
<p>Everywhere loomed machines,
enormous dynamos, cathode tubes
a hundred feet long, masses and
mountains of such fantastic apparatus
as he had never encountered.
The air was bluish, electric. From
the black substance came a phosphorescent
radiance. The triumphant
drone of motors and a terrific
crackle of electricity were everywhere.
Off to his right purple-blue
flames the size of Sequoia trees
flickered around a group of what
looked like condensers as huge as
Gibraltar. At the base of the central
tower half a mile distant Phobar
could see something that resembled
a great switchboard studded with
silver controls. Near it was a series
of mechanisms at whose purpose
he could not even guess.</p>
<hr />
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">All</span> this his astounded eyes
took in at one confused glance.
The thing that gave him unreasoning
terror was the hundred-foot-high
metal monster before him. It
defied description. It was unlike
any color known on Earth, a blinding
color sinister with power and
evil. Its shape was equally ambiguous—it
rippled like quicksilver,
now compact, now spread out in a
thousand limbs. But what appalled
Phobar was its definite possession
of rational life. More, its very
thoughts were transmitted to him
as clearly as though written in his
own English:</p>
<p>"Follow me!"</p>
<p>Phobar's mind did not function—but
his legs moved regularly. In
the grasp of this mental, metal
monster he was a mere automaton.
Phobar noticed idly that he had to
step down from a flat disk a dozen
yards across. By some power, some
tremendous discovery that he could
not understand, he had been transported
across millions of miles of
space—undoubtedly to the dark star
itself!</p>
<p>The colossal thing, indescribable,
a blinding, nameless color, rippled
down the hall and stooped before
a disk of silvery black. In the
center of the disk was a metal seat
with a control board near-by.</p>
<p>"Be seated!"</p>
<p>Phobar sat down, the titan flicked
the controls—and nothing happened.</p>
<p>Phobar sensed that something
was radically wrong. He felt the
surprise of his gigantic companion.
He did not know it then, but the
fate of the solar system hung on
that incident.</p>
<p>"Come!"</p>
<hr />
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">Abruptly</span> the giant stooped,
and Phobar shrank back, but
a flowing mass of cold, insensate
metal swept around him, lifted him
fifty feet in the air. Dizzy, sick,
horrified, he was hardly conscious
of the whirlwind motion into which
the giant suddenly shot. He had a
dim impression of machines racing
by, of countless other giants,
of a sudden opening in the walls of
the immense building, and then a
rush across the surface of metal
land. Even in his vertigo he had
enough curiosity to marvel that
there was no vegetation, no water,
only the dull black metal everywhere.
Yet there was air.</p>
<p>And then a city loomed before
them. To Phobar it seemed a city
of gods or giants. Fully five miles
it soared toward space, its fantastic
angles and arcs and cubes and pyramids
mazing in the dimensions of
a totally alien geometry. Tier by
tier the stupendous city, hundreds
of miles wide, mounted toward a
central tower like the one in the
building he had left.</p>
<p>Phobar never knew how they got
there, but his numbed mind was at
last forced into clarity by a greater
will. He stared about him. His
captor had gone. He stood in a
huge chamber circling to a dome
far overhead. Before him, on a dais
a full thousand feet in diameter,
stood—sat—rested, whatever it might
be called—another monster, far
larger than any he had yet seen,
like a mountain of pliant thinking,
living metal. And Phobar knew he
stood in the presence of the ruler.</p>
<hr />
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">The</span> metal Cyclops surveyed
him as Phobar might have surveyed
an ant. Cold, deadly, dispassionate
scrutiny came from
something that might have been
eyes, or a seeing intelligence locked
in a metal body.</p>
<p>There was no sound, but inwardly
to Phobar's consciousness
from the peak of the titan far
above him came a command:</p>
<p>"What are you called?"</p>
<p>Phobar opened his lips—but even
before he spoke, he knew that the
thing had understood his thought:
"Phobar."</p>
<p>"I am Garboreggg, ruler of Xlarbti,
the Lord of the Universes."</p>
<p>"Lord of the <i>Universes</i>?"</p>
<p>"I and my world come from one
of the universes beyond the reach
of your telescopes." Phobar somehow
felt that the thing was talking
to him as he would to a new-born
babe.</p>
<p>"What do you want of me?"</p>
<p>"Tell your Earth that I want the
entire supply of your radium ores
mined and placed above ground
according to the instructions I
give, by seven of your days hence."</p>
<p>A dozen questions sprang to
Phobar's lips. He felt again that
he was being treated like a child.</p>
<p>"Why do you want our radium
ores?"</p>
<p>"Because they are the rarest of
the elements on your scale, are absent
on ours, and supply us with
some of the tremendous energy we
need."</p>
<p>"Why don't you obtain the ores
from other worlds?"</p>
<p>"We do. We are taking them
from all worlds where they exist.
But we need yours also."</p>
<p>Raiders of the universe! Looting
young worlds of the precious radium
ores! Piracy on a cosmic
scale!</p>
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