<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_14" id="CHAPTER_14"></SPAN>CHAPTER 14</h2>
<p class="noin"><span class="drop">T</span>HE two ships
landed a few miles apart at almost the same time.</p>
<p>They settled to the plane’s surface like whirling
hour-glasses. Fire spouted from them in all directions. Then
their movement stopped. Smoke shrouded them and slowly
drifted away.</p>
<p>They were upon a reddish plain. Above them, the red sun
filled a twelfth of the sky. That sky was one vast swirl of
crimson. Even the few clouds seemed to be on fire. And yet
their instruments showed that the temperature of the thin
air outside was in the sixties.</p>
<p>There were no mountains or valleys. The giant planet had
weathered down to one great curving plain. It was mostly red
sandstone, but here and there were reddish carpets of moss
and grass. In the distance were a few gaunt trees. They had
seen no
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_111" id="Page_111"></SPAN></span>
rivers or seas before they landed. Odin learned later that
there were many muddy ponds left upon the surface from the
remains of stagnant seas. He also learned later that huge
reservoirs were underground.</p>
<p>With the exception of the trees, the only thing that broke
the monotonous line of the horizon was one great dome of
violet stone or metal. It flashed like an amethyst in the
red glare of the sun—and it was certainly man-made.</p>
<p>But on that occasion Jack Odin had little time to look at
the scenery. They had hardly settled to the planet’s
surface before Grim Hagen trained his guns upon them and
began to fire. Flame enveloped them. Bombs of acid and steel
shook The Nebula. The battle-stations were already manned,
and Ato gave orders to return fire. For nearly an hour, the
holocaust continued. Both ships rocked upon their steady
foundations. They were bathed in flame, acid streamed down
their sides, and rockets tore at them. Shells burst upon
them. And then it was over.</p>
<p>The two ships, scarred and blackened; glared at each other
across a three-mile expanse that had now turned to cinders.
And that was all. Practically indestructible, and evenly
matched, they had fought to a standstill. Neither ship had
lost a man.</p>
<p>“See how it is, Nors-King?” Gunnar said as he
drew his fingers across the shaft of his sword. “It is
as I told you before. We have the same weapons. The same
defenses. I will use the Blood-Drinkers yet, before this is
over.”</p>
<p>There was a demanding buzz from the loudspeaker.</p>
<p>Ato turned the dial. A strange, harsh voice was calling.
“You there, on the Second ship. You on the second
ship. Answer.”</p>
<p>“Yes!” Ato replied gruffly. “Who are
you?”</p>
<p>“I am the head man of the city—the city within the
dome.”</p>
<p>“How did you know our language?”</p>
<p>“We have known it for thirty years. For that long have
we been in contact with Grim Hagen.”</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>Jack Odin was never quite able to cope with the passing of
time on these planets, while the ships scurried through
Trans-Space in what appeared to be a matter of a few days.</p>
<p>The voice continued. “We invited Grim Hagen to our
world. We did not invite you. Go away.”</p>
<p>“I don’t think I like his tone,” Gunnar
interrupted. “Some day I will catch the owner of that
voice and make him eat his ears.”</p>
<p>“We are not going away,” Ato told the voice
stubbornly.</p>
<p>“Then you can stay where you are. We have just
witnessed the battle. We do not have weapons such as yours.
But we do have a defense. An electric screen nearly half a
mile across has been placed about you. Watch.”</p>
<p>They looked at the screen, and a tiny drone-torpedo came
winging
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_112" id="Page_112"></SPAN></span>
its way from the violet dome. It came to within a thousand
yards of them and suddenly crashed into an unseen barrier.
Broken and blazing, it came falling down like a crippled
bird.</p>
<p>“There,” the voice said triumphantly.
“That is what will happen to you. Why don’t you
leave us? You are not wanted. Leave us.”</p>
<p>“Faith, he’s a hospitable soul,” Odin
murmured.</p>
<p>Ato’s voice was shaking in wrath when he answered.
“We can find a way to smash that curtain. We want Grim
Hagen and his prisoners. When we have them we will
depart.”</p>
<p>“Grim Hagen is our ally. We have already sworn our
allegiance. I have no more words for you.”</p>
<p>There was a clicking sound and the loudspeaker died with a
sputter of static.</p>
<p>It sputtered again, and this time Grim Hagen’s voice
mocked them. “There, Ato. You have your answer. You
are wasting your time. But I am a reasonable man. You can
have Maya. You can have the ship. You can have the
prisoners—the few that are left. I will trade all these for
Wolden’s secret.”</p>
<p>“Greed has you in its hand, Grim Hagen. I know nothing
of my father’s secret. I do not even know if he
succeeded—”</p>
<p>“Then summon him and let him decide for himself. You
are young, but two-thirds of my life is gone now—”</p>
<p>“Your calculation is wrong,” Gunnar shouted.
“You life is nearly all gone, Grim Hagen.”</p>
<p>“The dwarf still lives,” Grim Hagen answered
with a curse. “But so does Maya, my slave. I had to
beat her the other day. My boots were not polished very
well—”</p>
<p>“Talk on, Grim Hagen,” Odin growled. “I am
here. And I intend to kill you—Just as I promised.”</p>
<p>“Like most of your race, you talk too loud, Odin.
Well, Ato, Gunnar, and Odin, I am going now. Please
don’t get in my way or I will hatchet the flesh from
your bones.”</p>
<p>Another click and the loudspeaker was silent.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>They had landed on the giant, worn planet very early in the
day. Now, as time went on, they watched Grim Hagen’s
ship and tried to make plans.</p>
<p>Gunnar was in favor of hazarding an attack on the barrier
and then going on to the city.</p>
<p>Ato and Odin voted in favor of waiting, although they
admitted that they could think of no better plan. Ato was
sure that The Nebula could plunge through any curtain, but
he wanted to try that as a last resort.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_113" id="Page_113"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>Meanwhile, a steady stream of tractors and men was going
back and forth from the Old Ship to the city. Odin watched
them on the screen. They were mostly the white-skinned
people of Aldebaran. The Brons who had gone out into space
with Grim Hagen had dwindled away. Odin saw a few
white-headed ones. And once he saw a captain stop to lash a
worn, gray-haired Bron who must have been one of the
original prisoners. The poor fellow looked so old and
frazzled that Odin could not recognize him. His heart grew
heavy as he thought of those prisoners. They had done no
harm. Their lives had been wasted away because of their
loyalty to Maya. And the words of an old poet came to his
mind: “Think of man’s inhumanity to man and
write your poem if you can.”</p>
<p>The day passed wearily by.</p>
<p>Odin felt that it was one of the worst days of his life.
They had spanned thousands of light-years and time had slid
by like a stream of quicksilver while they hunted through
space. And now, at the last, they were pinned down on a
gaunt planet while a triumphant Grim Hagen went back and
forth from the Old Ship to the violet dome. Welcomed like a
conqueror, and holding every card, Grim Hagen was the man of
the hour.</p>
<p>Yes, it was certainly Grim Hagen’s day.</p>
<p>Night fell quite suddenly. But the sky above them turned to
the faintest mauve, and there was still a pale ghost of a
light hovering over the plain. There were no stars. No moon.
Jack Odin learned later that the people of this planet had
fed their moon to the dying sun long before.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>They ate supper—as Gunnar called it—and then Ato and Odin
studied some photo-maps which they had taken just before
they landed. Meanwhile, Gunnar busied himself with the
sword. And Nea, who stayed in her lab most of the day,
brought in a few calculations on the barrier that prisoned
them.</p>
<p>“It’s an old idea,” she told them quietly.
“It can be broken by a steadily increasing force.
Twenty days, perhaps, after I rig up the machine—”</p>
<p>Odin groaned. “In twenty days Grim Hagen will be back
among the stars—”</p>
<p>She smiled quietly. And now he saw how tired her face and
eyes were. Like the face of a child that has worked too
hard. “I think not,” she answered him simply.
“Gunnar is always talking about fate. I do not believe
in such. But all day I have felt that the end is drawing
near. Remember, I still have my Kalis. With them I could
have been a huntress on some greener planet—another Diana,
perhaps. Oh!” She stamped her foot in worriment.
“We held creation in our grasp out here. We could have
forced the last secrets from her. Yes, I will say it! We
could have been as gods. And where is it ending? A mad chase
after a madman. And for all the years and all the lives that
have been spent on these two ships, time and space are the
only winners.”</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>Nea went back to the lab. Odin and Ato continued their study
of the maps. Gunnar was putting a fine edge to his
broadsword.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_114" id="Page_114"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>Then the warning buzzer sounded its alarm. Odin dived for
the screen and turned on the controls.</p>
<p>A long procession of mauve shadows was approaching. Already
inside the barrier, they came single-file and slowly circled
The Nebula.</p>
<p>Even in the pale weird light, they certainly seemed to be
men.</p>
<p>Ato ordered “Battle-Stations” and sirens sounded
all over the ship.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>But the circling host made no offer to attack. Odin turned
the receiver up to its highest point, and speaking brokenly
in the language of the Brons a voice came through.</p>
<p>“Men of the strange ship. Men of the strange
ship—”</p>
<p>“Yes,” Odin answered.</p>
<p>“Good. You hear me. We are those who have been driven
out of the city. We would visit you in peace. We are called
Lorens.”</p>
<p>Within a few minutes, a dozen of the strangers had been
brought aboard The Nebula. Ato summoned Nea and the rest of
the captains.</p>
<p>The leader of the visitors was a man by the name of Val. He
was a tall, lean man with a Norman nose and his dark skin
was drawn so tightly about his face that he looked a bit
like a mummy. Val was over sixty, Odin judged, and though
his wrists were skinny the tendons and muscles on his arms
stood out like taut lengths of cable. He and his men were
dressed alike—a sleeveless shirt of walnut-brown plastic,
dark peg-bottomed trousers of corduroy, and footgear that
looked like engineer’s boots with rippled soles. The
tops of the boots were tight-fitting and the peg-bottomed
trousers were drawn snugly over them. Odin learned later
that what had appeared to be green moss out there on the
weathered plain was a kind of thistle with cat-claw thorns.</p>
<p>Each man wore a heavy black belt about his waist. Attached
to the belt were at least a dozen weapons: several grenades,
a pistol, another pistol with a flaring muzzle, a long
knife, a glassy looking tube fitted to a pistol-butt, and a
blue-black ugly thing which was shaped like an over-sized
toadstool.</p>
<p>In addition to this odd assortment of gear, each man carried
something in his hand which greatly resembled the frame of
an old-fashioned umbrella—except that half a dozen
vari-colored buttons were set into the handles.</p>
<p>“It was nearly thirty years ago,” Val was
explaining, “that the voice of Grim Hagen began to
interfere with our broadcasting system. Some said it was a
god. Some said it was a devil. It came from space. It came
from almost anywhere. We have been an intelligent race, but
we were sore beset. Our sun was dying. All that we had was
our sun and a huge dust-cloud in the distance. In times
past, our astronomers had seen the glow of millions of
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_115" id="Page_115"></SPAN></span>
suns, millions upon millions of miles away. But we were
never able to perfect a telescope that could bring a single
sun into view.</p>
<p>“Nor did we ever have a chance to do this. The
dust-cloud surged out toward us every twenty years, and our
scientists were able to use a gravitational beam to deflect
a part of it toward our sun. In this way we kept it alive
and might have been able to do so for ages. But now the
dust-cloud is gone.”</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>Val paused to sigh, and then resumed his story. “The
voice—I mean the voice of Grim Hagen—promised my people
that if they would accept him he would take them forth into
the stars. They would plunder thousands of worlds and they
would live for centuries while generations died. Also, he
said, he was on the brink of discovering eternal
life—”</p>
<p>“He was playing at being the eternal Loki—the old
mischief-maker—” Gunnar interrupted and went on
edging his sword.</p>
<p>“Well,” Val continued, “I cannot blame my
people too much for believing this story. Our plight was
desperate. But there were those of us who did not believe
him. He seemed to know too much, when according to our
philosophy the only wise man is the one who admits that he
knows nothing—”</p>
<p>“I am not a philosopher,” Gunnar interrupted
again. “I only know that once you have thrust a foot
of steel into a man he does not bother you again.”</p>
<p>“Please, Gunnar,” Ato begged. “Let Val go
on with his story.”</p>
<p>“The rest of the story I do not understand at
all,” Val said with a shake of his grizzled head.
“This Grim Hagen said that he did not age until he
stopped to conquer a planet and replenish his ship’s
energy. It was thirty years ago when he first spoke to us.
He looks like a man of forty-five now. Could he have been an
upstart of fifteen when he first spoke into our
receivers?”</p>
<p>“I will try to explain that later,” Ato
answered.</p>
<p>“Well, there were those of us who could not agree with
the general idea. There are even some of the Lorens in the
Violet Dome who think he is a god. We think he is an evil
man. We have no desire to plunder the stars. If he is so
great, why doesn’t he give new life to our feeble sun?
That is what we really need. Meanwhile, the people of the
Dome are building five new ships, as Grim Hagen directed.
They have been working upon them for years—”</p>
<p>“Good God,” Jack Odin was thinking, “what
a hideous propaganda machine these ships are? To condition
and instruct a whole generation while you flash through
space in the twinkling of an eye!”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_116" id="Page_116"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>“And that is all,” Val finished with a shrug of
his lean shoulders. “Those of us who had never agreed
with the idea were thrown out of the city as soon as Grim
Hagen arrived. We have come to join forces with you.”</p>
<p>“How did you get through the barrier?” Nea
asked.</p>
<p>Val lifted the umbrella-frame. “We have had the
barrier for years. There are strange beasts out there on the
plain. This instrument allows us to go through the barrier
when we please.”</p>
<p>“Then we can go to the city?” Gunnar exclaimed
with a joyful war-whoop. “To kill, and kill, and
kill—”</p>
<p>“You are right,” Ato admitted. “Delay will
only increase Grim Hagen’s advantage. To the city—as
fast as we can—”</p>
<p class="toclink"><SPAN href="#CONTENTS">Table of Contents</SPAN></p>
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