<h2>XII</h2>
<p>I was taken wholly by surprise. There was an instant when I stood
numbed, fumbling for a weapon at my belt, undecided whether to run or
stand my ground. Miko was no more than twenty feet from me. He checked
his forward rush. The light from an overhead tube was on him: I saw in
his hand the cylinder projector of his paralyzing ray.</p>
<p>I plucked my heat cylinder from my belt, and fired without taking aim.
My tiny heat beam flashed. I must have grazed Miko's hand. His roar of
anger and pain rang out over the turmoil. He dropped his weapon; then
stooped to pick it up. But Moa forestalled him. She leaped and seized
it.</p>
<p>"Careful! Fool, you promised not to harm him!"</p>
<p>A confusion of swift action. Rankin had turned and darted away. I saw
George Prince stumbling half in front of the struggling Miko and Moa.
And I heard footsteps beside me. A hand gripped me, jerked at me.</p>
<p>Over the turmoil, Prince's voice sounded: "Gregg Haljan!"</p>
<p>I recall that I had the impression that Prince was frightened; he had
half fallen in front of Miko. And there was Miko's voice: "Let go of
me!"</p>
<p>It was Balch gripping me. "Gregg! This way—run! Get out of here!
He'll kill you with that ray!"</p>
<p>Miko's ray flashed, but George Prince had knocked his arm.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_62" id="Page_62"></SPAN></span> I did not
dare fire again. Prince was in the way. Balch, who was unarmed, shoved
me violently back.</p>
<p>"Gregg! The chart room!"</p>
<p>I turned and ran, with Balch after me. Prince had fallen or been
felled by Miko. A flash followed me from Miko's weapon, but again it
missed. He did not pursue me. Instead he ran the other way, through
the portside door of the library.</p>
<p>Balch and I found ourselves in the library. Shouting, frightened
passengers were everywhere. The place was in wild confusion, the whole
ship ringing now with shouts.</p>
<p>"To the chart room, Gregg!"</p>
<p>I called to the passengers, "Go back to your rooms!"</p>
<p>I followed Balch. We ran through the archway to the deck. In the
starlight I saw figures scurrying aft, but none were near us. The deck
forward was dim with heavy shadows. The oval windows and door of the
chart room were blue-yellow from the tube lights inside. No one seemed
on the deck there. And then as we approached, I saw further forward in
the bow, the trap door to the cage standing open. Johnson had been
released.</p>
<p>From one of the chart room windows a heat ray sizzled. It barely
missed us. Balch shouted, "Carter—don't!"</p>
<p>The Captain called, "Oh you, Balch—and Haljan—"</p>
<p>He came out on the deck as we rushed up. His left arm was dangling
limp.</p>
<p>"God—this—" He got no further. From the turret overhead a tiny
search beam came down and disclosed us. Blackstone was supposed to be
on duty up there, with a course master at the controls. But, glancing
up, I saw, illumined by the turret lights, the figure of Ob Hahn in
his purple-white robe, and Johnson, the purser. And on the turret
balcony, two fallen men—Blackstone and the course master.</p>
<p>Johnson was training the spotlight on us. And Hahn fired a Martian
ray. It struck Balch beside me. He dropped.</p>
<p>Carter was shouting, "Inside—Gregg! Get inside!"</p>
<p>I stopped to raise up Balch. Another beam came down. A heat ray this
time. It caught the fallen Balch full on the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_63" id="Page_63"></SPAN></span> chest, piercing him
through. The smell of his burning flesh rose to sicken me. He was
dead. I dropped his body. Carter shoved me into the chart room.</p>
<p>In the small, steel-lined room, Carter and I slid the door closed. We
were alone here. The thing had come so quickly it had taken Captain
Carter, like us all, wholly unawares. We had anticipated spying
eavesdroppers, but not this open brigandage. No more than a minute or
two had passed since Miko's siren in his stateroom had given the
signal for attack. Carter had been in the chart room. Blackstone was
in the turret. At the outbreak of confusion, Carter dashed out to see
Hahn releasing Johnson from the cage. From the forward chart room
window now I could see where Hahn with a torch had broken the cage
seal. The torch lay on the deck. There had been an exchange of shots;
Carter's arm was paralyzed; Johnson and Hahn had escaped.</p>
<p>Carter was as confused as I. There had simultaneously been an
encounter up in the turret. Blackstone and the course master were
killed. The lookout had been shot from his post in the forward
observatory. The body dangled now, twisted half in and half out the
window.</p>
<p>We could see several of Miko's men—erstwhile members of our crew and
steward corps—scurrying from the turret along the upper bridge toward
the dark and silent radio room. Snap was up there. But was he? The
radio room glowed suddenly with dim light, but there was no evidence
of a fight there. The fighting seemed mostly below the deck, down in
the hull corridors. A blended horror of sounds came up to us. Screams,
shouts and the hissing and snapping of ray weapons. Our crew—such of
them as were loyal—were making a stand below. But it was brief.
Within a minute it died away. The passengers, amidships in the
superstructure, were still shouting. Then above them Miko's roar
sounded.</p>
<p>"Be quiet! Go in your rooms—you will not be harmed."</p>
<p>The brigands in these few minutes were in control of the ship. All but
this little chart room, where, with most of the ship's weapons, Carter
and I were entrenched.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_64" id="Page_64"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"God, Gregg, that this should come upon us!"</p>
<p>Carter was fumbling with the chart room weapons. "Here, Gregg. Help
me. What have you got? Heat ray? That's all I had ready."</p>
<p>It struck me then as I helped him make the connections that Carter in
this crisis was at best an inefficient commander. His red face had
gone splotchy purple; his hands were trembling. Skilled as Captain of
a peaceful liner, he was at a loss now. But I could not blame him. It
is easy to say we might have taken warning, done this or that, and
come triumphant through the attack. But only the fool looks backward
and says, "I would have done better."</p>
<p>I tried to summon my wits. The ship was lost to us unless Carter and I
could do something. Our futile weapons! They were all here—four or
five heat ray hand projectors that could send a pencil ray a hundred
feet or so. I shot one diagonally up at the turret where Johnson was
leering down at our rear window, but he saw my gesture and dropped
back out of sight. The heat beam flashed harmlessly up and struck the
turret room. Then across the turret window came a sheen of
radiance—an electrobarrage. And behind it, Hahn's suave, evil face
appeared. He shouted down:</p>
<p>"We have orders to spare you, Gregg Haljan—or you would have been
killed long ago!"</p>
<p>My answering shot hit his barrage with a shower of sparks, behind
which he stood unmoved.</p>
<p>Carter handed me another weapon. "Gregg, try this."</p>
<p>I leveled the old explosive projector; Carter crouched beside me. But
before I could press the trigger, from somewhere down the starlit deck
an electro beam hit me. The little rifle exploded, broke its breech. I
sank back to the floor, tingling from the shock of the hostile
current. My hands were blackened from the exploded powder.</p>
<p>Carter seized me. "No use. Hurt?"</p>
<p>"No."</p>
<p>The stars through the dome windows were swinging. A long swing—the
shadows and patterns on the starlit deck<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_65" id="Page_65"></SPAN></span> were all shifting. The
<i>Planetara</i> was turning. The heavens revolved in a great round sweep
of movement, then settled as we took our new course.</p>
<p>Hahn at the turret controls had swung us. The Earth and the Sun showed
over our bow quarter. The sunlight mingled red-yellow with the
brilliant starlight. Hahn's signals were sounding; I heard them
answered from the mechanism rooms down below. Brigands there—in full
control. The gravity plates were being set to the new positions: We
were on our new course. Headed a point or two off the Earthline. Not
headed for the Moon? I wondered.</p>
<p>Carter and I were planning nothing. What was there to plan? We were
under observation. A Martian paralyzing ray—or an electronic beam,
far more deadly than our own puny weapons—would have struck us the
instant we tried to leave the chart room.</p>
<p>My thoughts were interrupted by a shout from down the deck. At a
corner of the cabin superstructure some fifty feet from our windows
the figure of Miko appeared. A radiance barrage hung about him like a
shimmering mantle. His voice sounded: "Gregg Haljan, do you yield?"</p>
<p>Carter leaped up from where he and I were crouching. Against all
reason of safety he leaned from the low window, waving his hamlike
fist.</p>
<p>"Yield? No! I am in command here, you pirate! Brigand—murderer!"</p>
<p>I dragged him back sharply. "For God's sake—"</p>
<p>He was spluttering; and over it Miko's sardonic laugh sounded. "Shall
we argue about it?"</p>
<p>I stood up. "What do you want to say, Miko?"</p>
<p>Behind him the tall, thin figure of his sister showed. She was
plucking at him. He turned violently. "I won't harm him! Gregg
Haljan—is this a truce? You will not shoot?" He was shielding Moa.</p>
<p>"No," I called. "For a moment, no. A truce. What is it you want to
say?"</p>
<p>I could hear the babble of passengers who were herded in<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_66" id="Page_66"></SPAN></span> the cabin
with brigands guarding them. George Prince, bare-headed, but shrouded
in his cloak, showed in a patch of light behind Moa. He looked my way
and then retreated.</p>
<p>Miko called, "You must yield. We want you, Haljan."</p>
<p>"No doubt," I jeered.</p>
<p>"Alive. It is easy to kill you."</p>
<p>I could not doubt that. Carter and I were little more than rats in a
trap. But Miko wanted to take me alive: that was not so simple. He
added persuasively:</p>
<p>"We want you to navigate us. Will you?"</p>
<p>"No."</p>
<p>"Will you help us, Captain Carter? Tell your cub, this Haljan, to
yield."</p>
<p>Carter roared, "Get back from there. There is no truce!"</p>
<p>I shoved aside his leveled projector. "Wait a minute, Miko. Navigate
where?"</p>
<p>"That is our business. When you come out here, I will give you the
course."</p>
<p>I realized that all this parley was a ruse of Miko's to take me alive.
He had made a gesture. Hahn, watching him from the turret window,
doubtless flashed a signal down to the hull corridors. The magnetizer
control under the chart room was altered, our artificial gravity cut
off. I felt the sudden lightness: I gripped the window casement and
clung. Carter was startled into incautious movement. It flung him out
into the room, his arms and legs flailing.</p>
<p>And across the chart room, in the opposite window, I felt rather than
saw the shape of something. A figure, almost invisible but not quite,
was trying to climb in! I flung the empty rifle I was holding. It hit
something solid in the window. In a flare of sparks a blackhooded
figure materialized. A man climbing in! His weapon spat. There was a
tiny electronic flash, deadly silent. The intruder had shot at Carter:
struck him. Carter gave one queer scream. He had floated to the floor;
his convulsive movement when he was hit hurled him to the ceiling. His
body struck; twitched;<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_67" id="Page_67"></SPAN></span> bounced back and sank inert on the floor grid
almost at my feet.</p>
<p>I clung to the casement. Across the room of the weightless room the
hooded intruder was also clinging. His hood fell back. It was Johnson.</p>
<p>"Killed him, the bully! Now for you, Mr. Third Officer Haljan!"</p>
<p>But he did not dare fire at me. Miko had forbidden it. I saw him reach
under his robe, doubtless for a low-powered paralyzing ray. But he
never got it out. I had no weapon within reach. I leaned into the
room, still holding the casement, and doubled my legs under me. I
kicked out from the window.</p>
<p>The force catapulted me across the space across the room like a
volplane. I struck the purser. We gripped. Our locked, struggling
bodies bounced out into the room. We struck the floor, surged up like
balloons to the ceiling, struck it with a flailing arm or leg and
floated back.</p>
<p>Grotesque, abnormal combat! Like fighting in weightless water. Johnson
clutched his weapon, but I twisted his wrist, held his arm
outstretched so that he could not aim it. I was aware of Miko's voice
shouting on the deck outside.</p>
<p>Johnson's left hand was gouging at my face, his fingers digging at my
eyes. We lunged down.</p>
<p>I twisted his wrists. He dropped the weapon and it sank away, I tried
to reach it but could not.... Then I had him by the throat. I was
stronger than he, and more agile. I tried choking him, I had his thick
bull neck within my fingers. He kicked, scrambled, tore and gouged at
me. Tried to shout, but it ended in a gurgle. And then, as he felt his
breath stopped, his hands came up in an effort to tear mine loose.</p>
<p>We sank again to the floor. We were momentarily upright. I felt my
feet touch. I bent my knees. We sank further. And then I kicked
violently upward. Our locked bodies shot to the ceiling. Johnson's
head was above me. It struck the steel roof of the chart room. A
violent blow. I felt him go<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_68" id="Page_68"></SPAN></span> suddenly limp. I cast him off and,
doubling my body, I kicked at the ceiling. It sent me diagonally
downward to the window, where I clung.</p>
<p>And I saw Miko standing on the deck with a weapon leveled at me!</p>
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