<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_15" id="CHAPTER_15"></SPAN>CHAPTER 15</h2>
<p class="noin"><span class="drop">V</span>AL and his men had
brought along enough of the
umbrella-shaped defenses to get them through the barrier.</p>
<p>They held a short council of war. It was agreed that every
able-bodied man would go into the city. Nea and a few of the
older men were detailed to stay by The Nebula and take care
of the women and children.</p>
<p>Nea had screamed and protested against that. She had only
agreed to stay upon one condition: That she be left one of
the umbrella-skeletons.</p>
<p>The nights, Odin learned, were about sixteen hours long on
this dying planet. It was toward midnight when they started
out from the ship toward the violet dome. The strange
half-light still hovered over the ground. In the sky,
splinters of mauve tore at curtains of purplish flame.
Something like northern lights, they glinted and gleamed,
wrestled and writhed. There was no peace up there in that
abandoned sky. But there was enough of that unearthly light
glimmering below for him to watch his footsteps.</p>
<p>They had brought every kind of weapon that they could lug
with them. Atomic machine-guns. Needle-nosed things that
spat blobs of flame. Anti-gravitational bombs. Bombs that
swirled slowly toward the enemy and cut him down with
scythe-blades.</p>
<p>Gunnar had laughed at that. “Hang on to your sword and
knife, Nors-King. We will need them yet.”</p>
<p>With the umbrella frames held over them, as though
protecting them from a flood, they went through the barrier.
Beyond it, thousands of men rose up from the scarred plain
to join them. Val had a much larger following than Odin had
ever guessed. These men were swathed in long coats and
capes. Similar items of apparel were hastily furnished the
crew of The Nebula—for when they were through the barrier
the temperature dropped to about thirty. Once they passed
through a thin swirl of snow.</p>
<p>Then something screamed at them out there in the night and
came at them like a juggernaut. It must have stood nearly
fifty feet high, and came rushing at them on a score of
legs, with dozens of eyes flashing green as it hurtled
forward.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_117" id="Page_117"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>The men of Loren were not greatly worried. They began to
fire at it with the pistol-shaped weapons. There was only a
popping noise, but Odin could hear the bullets smashing into
the onrushing thing. Others used the tulip-flared guns,
which made no noise at all, but bolts of lightning sank into
the sides of the behemoth.</p>
<p>After it was dead its furious drive sent it nearly a score
of yards forward. It slid into a clump of twisted trees and
tore them to splinters before it stopped quivering. Finally
the way was clear.</p>
<p>They waited there for a time to see if they had attracted
any attention from the city of the violet dome. Nothing
happened, so they advanced again. At least five thousand men
now made up this little army. Val guessed that there were a
hundred thousand fighters left in the city, not counting the
experienced ruffians that Grim Hagen had brought with him.</p>
<p>They had advanced not over half a mile before the pale glow
of the night turned to utter darkness. Something that looked
like a vast sea-nettle was slowly sinking down toward them
from the sky. Its tentacles glowed faintly as it fell—and
it must have been a hundred yards across at the top. Once
more bullets, lightning bolts and sheets of flame were
hurled at the descending thing. It fell apart and came
writhing down. Men rushed to get away from the reach of
those flailing arms. They laid low and watched while the
thing died.</p>
<p>“Listen,” Gunnar warned.</p>
<p>From far away came the sound of shots and an eerie whine
that seemed faintly familiar. The shots died down. The whine
continued, louder and louder, almost to the top peak of
sound, as though a tiger was growling to itself as it
feasted.</p>
<p>Then all was still.</p>
<p>“It was from the Old Ship,” Gunnar said.
“I wonder—”</p>
<p>But there was no time left to wonder. As the thing died, the
phosphor glow faded from its lashing tentacles. Finally it
was still. They picked themselves up and went on toward the
dome.</p>
<p>The dome was propped upon miles of forty-foot columns, all
carved and decorated like those from the Hall of Kings.
Below the dome, the same barrier came pouring down like an
unseen waterfall. Again they used their protective
umbrella-frames. Then, sweating and cursing and grunting,
they hauled their weapons of war into the city.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>Val the Loren had explained that the city was not a city as
Ato and Odin understood the words. Being domed, there was no
use for rooms of any kind. The temperature stayed constant.
There were wide streets, paved with blocks of pink and black
marble. These streets were flanked by sidewalks and walls.
At intervals of a hundred feet the huge columns were placed.
They were minutely decorated and
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_118" id="Page_118"></SPAN></span>
carved. These supported a silver and clear-plastic framework
that held up the violet dome. Looking upward, Odin had the
impression that he was standing beneath a vast spider-web.</p>
<p>There were many hedges, all neatly trimmed. Some resembled
privet, but most of them were like pomegranate with larger
reddish blossoms that seemed to drip blood.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>Here and there were railings with steps going down. Like
subway entrances, Odin thought, except they were more
elaborately carved. These steps went down to tier after tier
of labyrinths. It was a skyscraper-city turned upside down,
Odin gathered from Val’s explanations. The first level
below the city was made up of factories and machine shops.
The next was where plants, flowers, and trees were forced,
producing the city’s food. Below that, for nearly a
thousand feet, were the living quarters of the people.</p>
<p>The ground-level of the city was in reality a beautiful
park. During the day, Val explained, it was busy with
street-vendors, open-air schools, theaters, and thousands
who came up from underground to drink the air and the sun.</p>
<p>Now, it was nearly empty. The columns were evenly spaced
and at a spot exactly between each two columns was a great
cresset of stone. At the top of each cresset were flickering
flames that burned without leaving any smoke. “Like
stone tulips with petals of flame,” Gunnar said as he
looked at them. They stood nearly twelve feet high. Their
pedestals were broad; their stems were nearly a foot thick,
nearly a yard across. Their flames were violet, tipped with
blue. They made a beautiful sight, but it did not matter.
For within less than an hour this lovely park with its
carved columns and tulip-shaped cressets of fire was turned
into a shambles.</p>
<p>They had not gone a quarter of a mile before a guard hailed
them. A score of guns popped like opened bottles and the
guard died before the echo of his voice was gone. But his
cry was taken up by others. And now Odin saw that up there
in the spider-web framework that held the dome were hundreds
of little cubicles—all manned.</p>
<p>Shafts of flame darted through the dim-lit area. Bullets
whizzed. Ato’s needle-nosed machines began to whine
and the metal in the guards’ cubicles grew red-hot and
melted. Charred bodies came tumbling down. Men came pouring
out of the subway entrances. There was a crashing and
grinding as hidden elevators brought weapons of death to the
surface. The fires in the cressets danced higher. They
fought now in mid-day light.</p>
<p>There was a blast nearby that nearly burst Odin’s
eardrums. A crash of flame that half-blinded him. A gun-crew
screamed and died as one of the needle-nosed
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_119" id="Page_119"></SPAN></span>
machines melted into puddles of steel. One by one these guns
exploded, taking their crews with them. But even as they
died, they littered the streets with the bodies of those who
were pouring up from the depths of the city. Even as one
melted, its needle-nose swung upward and its beam cut
through girders as though they were soft cheese. There was
an awful grating sound as the heavy dome sagged a few
inches. Splinters of glass and plastic rained down upon
invader and defender alike.</p>
<p>Guns burst in men’s hands—or turned to soft wax. The
machine guns grew red-hot and melted. Ato sent his swirling
bombs toward the enemy. The scythe-blades dripped as they
cut swaths through massed rows of human flesh. But from far
down the street a swarm of red sparks came rushing at the
bombs like hornets. They swirled about them, humming
angrily. And then the bombs and the hornet-sparks were gone.</p>
<p>Odin learned that the toadstool-shaped weapon which
Val’s men carried was a defense against the lancing
beams from the glassy tubes. So one by one the weapons of
offense and the weapons of defense fell apart. Sirens were
screaming within the city. Hordes were still arriving from
the depths below.</p>
<p>Ato had set up a huge, slowly-whirling globe that was
studded with spines. As it turned upon its axis, it emitted
a strange pulsing light. As the defenders came rushing up
the stairways to the upper world, the guns at their belts
exploded in furious heat. They died by the hundreds at those
entrances. They filled the stairways and the halls below.
Screams from seared throats drowned out the noise of battle.
The stench of burned flesh and blood was now so heavy that
it was hard to breathe. Another wild shell crashed into the
spider-web framework of the dome. It sagged again with a
shriek and a groan of protest. And once more a rain of glass
showered down upon them.</p>
<p>The defenders cleared the choked stairways and came
on—dying at the entrances and falling back and blocking the
stairs again.</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>At the last they unbuckled their belts and their weapons and
threw them aside. Then they plunged through the entrances in
a flood, armed with only knives and clubs.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, Ato’s guns were going out. The last became
a white torch when a magnesium blob struck it.</p>
<p>The side-arms were all gone.</p>
<p>They fought now with sword and knife.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_120" id="Page_120"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>Jack Odin felt a heavy hand upon his arm. Gunnar was at his
side. “It is even as I foretold you, Nors-King. The
weapons are all gone. Stay close by Gunnar’s side now.
We will fight together, as we fought before. Eh, they are
coming up from underground like ants. I think we have lost
the advantage. Hagen’s dead lie thick, though. And now
it is our turn. The old swords and the swinging chant. Ah,
Old Blood-Drinker will not be thirsty tonight. Brace
yourself. Here comes the first assault.”</p>
<p>And with his huge short legs spread wide apart, Gunnar swung
his broadsword. The first wave of attackers went down like
ripe wheat. Gunnar and Odin cut their way through them, and
came out against a smoking hedge. Behind them, Ato and his
Lorens strewed the streets with dead.</p>
<p>Gunnar and Odin went through a hole in the hedge. A defender
was making for it from the other side, and Gunnar broke the
man’s neck. Clinging to the thin shadow of the hedge
they moved forward, killing as they went.</p>
<p class="toclink"><SPAN href="#CONTENTS">Table of Contents</SPAN></p>
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