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<div class="titlepage">
<h1>VENUS HAS GREEN EYES</h1>
<h2>By CARL SELWYN</h2>
<p>from<br/>
Planet Stories Fall 1940.<br/>
</p>
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<hr class="chap" />
<p>Charlie Mead, trapper, and Flip Miller, ex-prospector, started a
forty-day drunk. Charlie just liked the idea. Flip had reasons.</p>
<p>"In a few hours it'll be wetter'n a swamp duck's gullet," said Charlie,
grinning behind his whiskers. "And darker'n West Pluto!" Charlie
had been trapping otters here for five years and accepted the long
nights as resignedly as the mud, the eternal fog and the heat. He
poured another glass of <i>loku</i>, squinted at its blue sparkle in the
tube-light. The gray mists swirled through the open door and the raw
wind whistled through the rusty holes in the wall.</p>
<p>Flip leaned back against the bundles of fur and held up four fingers.</p>
<p>"To hell with the following," he counted, "I.M.C., radios, fuel
tanks, and this soggy planet of yours, Venus!"</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>Noted for his wild-goose chases and wilder ideas, Flip Miller was
always running into trouble. In fact it was just two months ago that
the Space Patrol found him marooned on Pallas. He had one pint of air
left when they found him, said he fell out of his plane while looking
for diamonds. The Patrol took him to Mars. There, he immediately got
in a poker game and made a fortune—and immediately got in another and
lost it all. That is, all except a doubtful map of a Venusian xanite
mine which nobody else would accept as stakes. Which was his reason for
being here, if Flip ever needed a sane reason for being anywhere.</p>
<p>For once however his screwball ventures panned out.</p>
<p>"And I've been here all these years without knowing a billion dollars
was in my back yard," said Charlie who considered the matter very
funny. "Leastwise it was a billion till—"</p>
<p>"Shut up, you blinking old veedle-chaser," said Flip. People always
laughed at his misfortunes. Maybe it was because he did too....</p>
<p>Charlie's island was in the middle of the Black Swamp. The mine was
a few hundred miles east. Fused with asphalt and deep in the mire,
thousands of miles from nowhere, it was small wonder it had lain there
unvisited since its original discovery. The map had passed through the
hands of sundry dissolute, short-lived sourdoughs till the location
became as dubious as other bar-room talk. It was Flip's luck that the
map eventually got around to him. He was probably the only man in the
system who would have believed in it.</p>
<p>Filled with quick visions, he'd figured his treasure up on the spot. It
would cost about fifty dollars a ton to get it out of the swamp, smelt
the asphalt and ship the ore to Earth. On Earth xanite ore was worth
over a thousand dollars a ton.</p>
<p>Then the fates ran amuck.</p>
<p>His plane's fuel tank sprang a leak. Flip lost every drop of the
reserve that was to carry him back to the mainland. The mainland was
25,000 miles away. Then his sending set blew a transformer and he
couldn't radio for help. Last, while trying to ascertain his position
on the receiving set, he heard that I.M.C.—Interstellar Metallurgical
Company—had just opened a gigantic xanite deposit on Mars. The Market
quoted xanite now at twenty dollars a ton. Venusian xanite suddenly
wasn't worth swamp water.</p>
<p>"It shore is too bad," continued Charlie with smiling sympathy.</p>
<p>"You probably wished it on me," said Flip, "so you could have company
on this mildewed damn island."</p>
<p>That was the one blessing in his barrage by malevolent fates—he'd
glided to Charlie's island and the old fellow, one of many of his kind
in the Venusian swamps, had placed his metal shack, his canned beans
and his <i>loku</i> at Flip's disposal. To all of which he was doomed till
the supply ship came around after the rains—forty days ahead.</p>
<p>"I wish one of your pirates would show up," mused Flip. "I might could
bum a ride out of here."</p>
<p>"Don't wish that, boy," said Charlie with quick seriousness. "I've been
pretty lucky so far but I told you about the fellow who used to be
here—he's buried out yonder in the mud. These here Venusian pirates're
about the meanest critters you find anywheres."</p>
<p>"They come around during the nights, huh."</p>
<p>"Yeah, when the season's catch is ready for packing. They kill the
fellow and take his pelts. You quit talking about pirates, boy. They'd
just as soon skin you as an otter."</p>
<p>"Say! What about this female pirate I heard about on the mainland?"</p>
<p>"Captain Vixen? I never seen her—never knew nobody that had. She
don't come out here and the natives won't talk about her. But you can
bet your Sunday space-togs she's behind this swamp raiding—she runs
everything on the mainland, about ruined the big industries there.
Supposed to be a native queen back in the hills; hates foreigners. They
say she's nursed scorpions and killed men with her fingernails."</p>
<p>"Pretty tough date, huh."</p>
<p>And now the twilight was coming on, it was starting to rain—and soon
it would be blackness and constant rain for forty dreary days.</p>
<p>"Oh, hell," yawned Flip. "And I didn't bring my bathing suit." He
joined Charlie in a drink.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>The thirty-eighth century Haliburton and the Black Swamp Bacchus were
doing nicely with the sixteenth verse of <i>Lulu Drank Loku on Pluto</i>
when one of the more technical gestures necessary to the famous ditty
caused the bottle to be overturned.</p>
<p>"Now look what you've done," said Flip. "We've got only enough left for
thirty-nine days."</p>
<p>"Sho shorry," said Charlie.</p>
<p>Flip felt in his shirt pocket for a cigarette and found the ill-starred
map which had brought him here. The lines were blurred with sweat but
he could still make out the circle designating the mainland port, the
crow's feet designating the swamp, the large X in the upper left where
the xanite was. He didn't need the map any more; for the location was
stark in his mind. In fact he wished he could forget it.</p>
<p>"Ah, well," he said. He opened the tube-light, held the map over the
hissing jet. It turned brown, then black and he crumbled the ashes in
his fingers. "I sometimes wonder what'll happen to me next...."</p>
<p>He heard something above the wind at the door; probably a stray veedle,
one of the mud-mice which infested the swamp. Then he noticed Charlie's
eyes. They were very big and slowly his mouth fell open. He's gone
<i>loku</i> loco, thought Flip. Charlie was staring past him, over his
shoulder. Flip whirled around.</p>
<p>A woman stood in the door.</p>
<p>Flip dropped his glass. Behind the woman stood three men. The woman
said something in Venusian. Flip couldn't understand and there was a
dumb pause as he stared with eyes that grew wider. The woman wore
hip-high swamp boots, two guns on her belt, a filmy shirt open at the
throat. Her hair, uncovered and flowing, was golden, vaporous as the
mist. Flip heard Charlie replying in the native language. The woman
stepped into the room. Eyes flicking into every corner, the three men
followed her. In the hand of each was an .03 pistol.</p>
<p>She halted before them and Flip rose from his chair like a ghost.
Charlie sat very still. His face was pale, eyes narrow.</p>
<p>"Sit down." It was a command and Flip sank back down helplessly. In his
amazement he'd probably have done anything she said. She spoke English,
in the liquid tones of a native. And she was Venusian, in all its
ancient connotation. Her eyes met Flip's evenly, calmly. Her eyes were
emerald green.</p>
<p>"You are Flip Miller," she said. "You have a map. Give it to me." She
held out her hand, as if refusal to her easy words was unthinkable.
Flip found his voice.</p>
<p>"Who—?" he began. Her eyes were cold, commanding; his ego rebelled and
he stood up quickly. With a swift hand, one of the men pushed him back
down. Flip came up again with fists balled. A pistol was jabbed in his
side.</p>
<p>"Jupiter's jumpers!" cried Flip. "What is this?"</p>
<p>"Captain Vixen...." breathed Charlie.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>The .03 gun was persuasive and Flip sat down. The man was huge,
ugly with a welted blue scar across his cheek. He stepped back and
stood with feet wide apart, the gun pointed at Flip's chest. Another
stationed himself at the door, the other stood behind Charlie. The
woman leaned against the table, crossed her legs.</p>
<p>"The map?" she said and produced a cigarette. Bravado was the word for
Flip, naturally or <i>à la loku</i>, and forgetting his anger he struck a
match for her. She ignored him, lit the cigarette herself. Without
changing his expression, Flip thumped the burning match toward the man
with the gun.</p>
<p>"So you're Captain Vixen," he said, meeting her gaze. "Perhaps I should
ask for your autograph."</p>
<p>"I should brand it on your mouth, Earthman. But the map, please?"</p>
<p>She wasn't beautiful, thought Flip; her eyes were too far apart,
her lips too large—sensual. And her green eyes, her eyebrows long
and slanting, her firm lithe sleekness—they were more feline than
feminine. Which was dangerously feminine, thought Flip, and perhaps she
was beautiful.</p>
<p>"Captain Vixen, the Legend does you an injustice," he observed. "The
complexion! Like swamp lilies in the mist...." Then he laughed, for
lovely women weren't danger to Flip Miller. Quite on the contrary. "Now
what's all this about a map? My xanite mine?"</p>
<p>"Fool, did you think your arrival on Venus was not made known to
me—and your purpose here?"</p>
<p>"You followed me to get that map!" Flip threw back his head with mirth.
Charlie made shushing noises. But it was too funny, Flip thought.
Didn't she know the mine was worthless? She must! But she had come out
here after him in person. Perhaps she didn't know the bottom had fallen
out of the xanite market.</p>
<p>The woman motioned to the man with the scar. "Search him," she said,
smoke curling from her lips. The fellow came forward, reached out a
hairy hand. Flip slapped it aside, annoyed.</p>
<p>"Oh, drop the mask, Viki, and let's be friends," he said. "And I don't
like the company you keep."</p>
<p>"Oh, Lord!" groaned Charlie. The man looked at the woman, waited for
orders.</p>
<p>"I said search him," she repeated.</p>
<p>The man holstered his gun, snatched at Flip's collar. The shirt ripped
and Flip's fist came up as he rose. <i>Spat!</i> The man staggered backward,
hit the wall and slid to the floor. In the same second Flip hurled his
chair at the man in the doorway. The woman was between him and the
other fellow's gun, which probably saved him. He saw Charlie get to his
feet as he whirled upon the woman—to find her pistol only inches from
his belly.</p>
<p>Charlie turned upon the man behind him and was struck in the face by a
gun barrel. He fell across a pile of fur, was struggling up when the
heavy man deliberately placed a foot upon his wrist. Flip heard the
bone snap.</p>
<p>He ground his teeth in rage, started to lunge at the man and felt the
woman's gun press into his ribs. She had not moved from the table and
her face was calm as ever. She had merely changed the cigarette to her
left hand.</p>
<p>Fingering their bruises, the men Flip had dealt with came up. The other
had his gun leveled on Charlie. Flip saw the little trapper get slowly
to his feet, holding his limp arm. His face was very white. It was then
that Flip became quite sober to the situation. Suddenly he forgot this
woman's beauty, and what had been admiration turned to burning hate.</p>
<p>He told her so.</p>
<p>"For the last time," she said, "I'm asking for that map." Her eyes were
green ice and her hand did not waver on the gun.</p>
<p>"I burned the map."</p>
<p>"Then you will tell me the location."</p>
<p>"I will tell you nothing."</p>
<p>"Perhaps we can change your mind," she said. "Bring a rope, Thorg."</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>After being thoroughly searched, they were pushed through the door.
Charlie didn't say anything and Flip knew his wrist must be agony.</p>
<p>Twilight had come, the long twilight of Venus which precedes the longer
night, and the mist was wet with drizzling rain. Visibility was poor;
Flip could see only a few yards ahead. The sun, never seen on this dank
planet, was now below the horizon leaving a dull gray afterglow—like
false dawn on Earth. He did not know where they were going nor what
mad torture the woman had conceived. He knew only that hate flamed in
his chest and her white throat in his hands would be a great pleasure.
Never before had Flip desired to harm a woman. But never before had he
seen one like this.</p>
<p>They passed a trim strato-plane, vague in the fog, and Flip discovered
how the pirates managed to land so noiselessly. On their craft's
power jets were the slim serpentine coils of Doxim silencers, exhaust
mufflers banned for years by Interstellar Law. If only a veedle would
crawl in one of those tubes, he thought; it might blow up the ship.</p>
<p>Slashing through the rain at Charlie's side, the threatening guns
close behind, Flip was jerked from his heated musings by an .03 shot.
He whirled around, saw smoke curling from the pistol in the woman's
hand. A dead veedle, an exceptionally small mud-mouse, lay at her feet.
Lordy, thought Flip as he was pushed on; the woman was heartless,
mercilessly cruel for the sport of it....</p>
<p>The edge of the little island halted them. Here the rock fell away for
several feet to the sickening ooze. Covering half of Venus, it was the
Black Swamp which stretched off in the dismal fog.</p>
<p>"Tie a rope around his neck and throw him over," came the woman's
impassive voice. "He will become quite loquacious before he sinks...."</p>
<p>So this was it. Flip looked at Charlie and Charlie looked at the swamp.
Flip followed his gaze and the dark viscous mire rippled in a passing
breeze, hissed against the rock and sucked hungrily like a live thing
waiting to feed. The swamps were bottomless.</p>
<p>The man Thorg, the one who had broken Charlie's wrist, threw a loop
over Flip's head, pulled it tight about his neck.</p>
<p>Flip fingered the rope and stared at the woman. Would she really do
this? And would he talk? No! Damned if he would! He'd sink first. But
the mine was worthless. Why not tell her where it was? But he had no
reason to expect a lesser fate if he did. Besides it was a matter of
honor now—and he knew one way to enhance that honor.</p>
<p>"Hold the rope when you shove him in," said the woman, her eyes mere
slits against the mist. "Let him sink slowly." The other two men had
their guns trained upon Flip. He met Thorg's beady eyes.</p>
<p>"Son of a veedle!" Flip said in his face. Suddenly he swooped down and
upward with one long arm. The man was shoved forward, to the brink of
the rock. He tottered there a long second, waving his arms frantically.
Flip sprang toward the woman. Flame burst around him, he wasn't hit.
He heard Thorg scream. He crashed into the woman as he heard a splash,
more screams. Then there was silence and he was struggling on the
wet-rock, the woman fighting like a tiger.</p>
<p>Flip found her gun hand, wrenched the weapon from her. He got to his
knees. The two men stood before him, one holding his gun on Charlie.
They couldn't fire at Flip for fear of hitting the woman. Flip started
to blast them, then turned the pistol upon their Captain Vixen beside
him.</p>
<p>"Drop your guns or I'll kill her," he said. He leveled his pistol, got
to his feet and backed away from the group. "Take their guns, Charlie,"
he grinned. "We're not licked yet."</p>
<p>"No?" said the woman.</p>
<p>His eyes flicked to her. She had a pistol in her hand. Flip had his
sights dead upon her. Damn, he thought; he'd forgotten she carried two
guns. They stared at each other—stalemated. The very wind was still.</p>
<p>"I've never killed a woman—" Flip said.</p>
<p>"I've never killed a man," she said quietly, "before." For the first
time she smiled. Flip's gun was suddenly jerked away, fire streaked
toward him, he heard the crash.</p>
<p>She had shot the gun from his hand.</p>
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