<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_12" id="CHAPTER_12"></SPAN>CHAPTER 12</h2>
<p class="noin"><span class="drop">H</span>E HAD been drowned.
He was floating in a sea of light, and
now and then shining little fishes swam inquisitively up to
him and stared. They would look at him with wide, cold eyes
and then dart off into space, leaving a flashing wake behind
them. They hurtled through the murky light like shooting
stars. And once two of them dashed together and burst like a
rocket. The sparks came falling down through a billion miles
of space, and as they fell they built up planets and
systems of their own. Until a dark coil that had the shape
of a dragon slithered across the milky way and began to
devour them one by one. The sparks disappeared into its dark
maw. Then it turned about and came snuffling the air as it
looked for him. It found him and buried its long fangs in
the back of his skull.</p>
<p>Jack Odin groaned in pain and awoke. The pain hit him again
and he thrust out with his arms. But strong hands were
holding him down.</p>
<p>He became conscious of a buzzing, murmuring sound. It was
neither sad nor glad. Something like the sound that the last
bee of autumn makes as it hovers above the last ball of
clover.</p>
<p>Something was falling across the back of his neck and
spreading out across his shoulders. Like a woman’s
hair, he thought. Perhaps it was a bit coarser. But not
much. But then, just as the strange soothing feeling was
putting him back to sleep, the hairs changed their soft
caress and a dozen of them plunged into his spinal cord and
upward into that small old-brain where all the bogies of the
stone age still cowered.</p>
<p>Odin yelled in pain and fought. But the hands held him
tight. In his ears he could hear someone else screaming and
cursing—threatening all sorts of vengeance. The voice was
Gunnar’s.</p>
<p>Three times more the soft mane of hair caressed him and
three times more just as he was
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_103" id="Page_103"></SPAN></span>
getting ready to go back to sleep the torture began. And all
the while he was lying upon his belly, his face thrust into
a pillow. He could see little as he writhed from one side to
the other. The hands held him securely. And once when he
almost struggled clear, a strong knee was thrust into his
back and forced him down.</p>
<p>At intervals, he could hear Gunnar’s voice—and his
own—crying, pleading, threatening.</p>
<p>Then at last it was over. The hands turned Odin upon his
back and he lay there, gasping and hurting, like one who has
just come up from deep water.</p>
<p>The lights were so bright that at first he could see
nothing. Then his vision cleared and he knew where he
was—in the surgery room of the Nebula.</p>
<p>Ato was standing nearby, trying to reassure him. Beside Odin
on another bed was Gunnar, lying flat on his back and
stripped to the waist. Gunnar was howling curses and kicking
like a frog.</p>
<p>A doctor and a nurse were there. And completing the group
was Nea holding a round object in each hand—round things
with unkempt, trailing hair. He was not completely
conscious—and for a second she looked like a high priestess
of the Amazon, holding two mummified heads before her—</p>
<p>The pain left him. His mind cleared and he lay there gasping
from the ordeal.</p>
<p>Ato and Nea smiled at them. So cheerfully that he almost
expected them to write out a bill for surgical fees.</p>
<p>“God, that was a close one,” Ato said, and wiped
his forehead. “Five hours of it. And it was touch and
go all the time.”</p>
<p>“What happened?” Odin asked. He remembered
something about a glittering tomb and Maya awakening from
her long sleep and Grim Hagen. He even remembered the Bron
carelessly swinging Piper’s head by the hair. But
these were mere scenes that flashed before his mind. He
could not fit them together, as yet.</p>
<p>“Tell him, Nea,” Ato said.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>She smiled proudly. “It was my invention that saved
you. You see, I have two of them now. I told you that they
are as near as we can get to making living things. And I
also told you that there is much more to them than you saw.
They are destroyers and they are builders. We found you
dead—or nearly so. Hagen had sent volt after volt through
your bodies. You were electrocuted.”</p>
<p>“We hurried you back to the ship. And all this time,
while Ato steered us back into space, the Kalis and I—for
that is what I have decided to call them—have been working
over you. You might say that we are master electronicians,
rebuilding circuits, repairing transistors and
condensers—”</p>
<p>“You were plenty rough,” Gunnar grumbled.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_104" id="Page_104"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>“We had to be. Do you remember a story about the
bush-men dying from a curse? Here.” She held her two
precious Kalis in one arm while she tapped the base of her
skull. “In here is a bulb, the old brain, not even an
idiot’s brain, that brought you up from the jungle. It
is a simple, worrying brain. Easily frightened. Easily
convinced. It was convinced that you were dead. We had to
arouse it.”</p>
<p>Odin fancied that he could hear the two Kalis purring
contentedly like cats. Well, they had done a good job. Let
them purr. He would like to have thanked them, but how can
you thank two bowling balls with scalps of cat’s
whisker wire?</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>Gunnar sat up and began grumbling anew: “Well, thanks.
Now, get me some clothes. Freida would not like it if I sat
here half-undressed before a young lady. And tell me where
we are?”</p>
<p>It was Ato’s turn to talk. “I threw The Nebula
into the Fourth Drive some time ago. That may have helped to
save your lives too. We should check on that, Nea.”</p>
<p>“Will you please tell me where we are?” Gunnar
demanded.</p>
<p>“Give me time, little man,” Ato retorted.
“We are back in Trans-Einsteinian space, and Aldebaran
and its worlds are far behind us. Ahead of us is Grim Hagen
and the Old Ship. Maya is with him. So are at least a
hundred of the white-skinned captains from the planet we
just left. Also, a dozen Brons. Maybe more, but not many.
What we saw at the council that day when Rama defied Grim
Hagen was just a sample of what was to follow. The people
were bled white. Graft, corruption, and patronage had taken
its toll. Some of the Brons were older and wanted to rest.
But injustice couldn’t stop until the last tear had
washed away the last drop of blood. A few of the Brons and
most of the slaves revolted. They won, of course. Grim Hagen
should have known the result. He and his men were in flight
when they found you and took Maya. They gathered at the Old
Ship and took off. Meanwhile, we fought our way out of the
city. We decided to have one last try for Maya. But we found
you two and a dead Bron and the head of a native. We brought
you here and took off. All this time I have had a fix on
Hagen.”</p>
<p>“Can’t we overtake him?” Odin asked.</p>
<p>“We are trying to. He seems to be heading for a huge
dust-cloud. He also sent us a message. Some nonsense about
having contacted some race at the edge of creation who would
go with him to plunder the stars. He demanded the secret of
Wolden’s invention again. I think his mind is going
fast.”</p>
<p>“Not as fast as he will go if I ever get my hands on
him,” Gunnar promised.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_105" id="Page_105"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>“But Maya is awake now,” Ato explained.
“We had time on our side before. Now, if he gets away
from us he can live out his days on some obscure planet. The
years will pass like a whirlwind—while we go dashing this
way and that, and in a surprisingly short time our willing
and unwilling fugitives will have lived out their lives.
They have the vagaries of time, space, and speed upon their
side.”</p>
<p>Nea laughed. “Even as I said before.” She gave
Jack Odin a searching look, but Odin avoided her gaze—</p>
<p>“Then, what have you done?” Odin asked.</p>
<p>“All that I could do under the circumstances. I have a
fix upon him. We sapped all the energy from Aldebaran that
we could. We have power enough, but there are no stars
nearby. As I said before, he is heading for a dust-cloud.
There, both ships can replenish their energy. After that we
will have to stick close by him and see what happens. After
all, we are behind him. By the old Airmen’s rule of
thumb, a ship with another upon its tail is a hundred
percent loss.”</p>
<p>“Only at that moment,” Odin corrected. “If
not destroyed, it has a chance to improve its percentage
when the pursuer has made its pass.”</p>
<p>“True enough,” Ato admitted. “That is why
I propose to stay close behind it. I can’t seem to
find that dust cloud on any map. It must be far, far
away.”</p>
<p>Nea laughed again. “What is far? What is near? You do
not even have catch-words for Trans-Space. You are looking
into the books of the advanced classes, and you have not yet
opened the primers of space.”</p>
<p>Ato flushed in anger. “Nea, I was my father’s
helper for years and years. I know as much about space as
any man.”</p>
<p>She shrugged. “Oh, you can cover blackboards with
formulas, and I don’t doubt that they will be right.
But living things and living emotions demand something to
cling to. A measuring stick. Grim Hagen tried to give them
something substantial back there: A system of brutality and
graft that worked for the last-minute Caesars. He even threw
in a goddess. Did he succeed?”</p>
<p>She paused to caress the two things she held in her arms.
“My pets know more about time and space and energy
than all of you, don’t you, dears?” She kissed
one of them and gave Odin a mysterious smile.</p>
<p>The Kalis began purring contentedly, as though space were no
more than a huge living room, and they were beside a
comfortable fireplace, looking up at their all-powerful
mistress.</p>
<p class="toclink"><SPAN href="#CONTENTS">Table of Contents</SPAN></p>
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