The Legion of Lazarus Read online

Page 5


  CHAPTER V

  The minutes slid past, sections of eternity arbitrarily measured by thestandards of another planet and having no relevance at all on this tinywhirling rock. The beam of light from the small aperture moved visiblyacross the opposite wall. Hyrst watched it, blinking. Outside,Bellaver's men were drawn up in a wide crescent across the hill in frontof the catafalque. They waited.

  "No mercy," said Hyrst softly. "No mercy, is it?" He bent over and beganto loosen the clamps that held the lead weights to the soles of hisboots.

  "It isn't mercy we need," said Shearing. "It's time."

  "How much?"

  "Look for yourself."

  Hyrst shifted his attention to space. There was a ship in it, headingtoward the asteroid, and coming fast. Hyrst frowned, doing in his headwithout thinking about it a calculation that would have required acomputer in his former life.

  "Twenty-three minutes and seventeen seconds," he said, "inclusive of thefour remaining."

  He finished getting the weights off his boots. He handed one toShearing. Then he half-climbed, half-floated up the wall and settledhimself above the entrance, where there was a slight concavity in therock to give him hold.

  "Shearing," he said.

  "What?" He was settling himself beside the mouth of the crack, where aman would have to come clear inside to get a shot at him.

  "A starship implies the intention to go to the stars. Why haven't you?"

  "For the simplest reason in the world," said Shearing bitterly. "Thedamn thing can't fly."

  "But--" said Hyrst, in astonishment.

  "It isn't finished. It's been building for over seventy years now, and along and painful process that's been, too, Hyrst--doing it bit by bit insecret, and every bit having to be dreamed up out of whole cloth, andoften discarded and dreamed up again, because the principle of aworkable star-drive has never been formulated before. And it still isn'tfinished. It can't be finished, unless--"

  He stopped, and both men turned their attention to the outside.

  "Bellaver's looking at his chrono," said Hyrst. "Go ahead, we've got aminute."

  Shearing continued, "unless we can get hold of enough Titanite to buildthe hyper-shift relays. Nothing else has a fast enough reaction time,and the necessary load-capacity. We must have burned out a thousanddifferent test-boards, trying."

  "Can't you buy it?" asked Hyrst. The question sounded reasonable, but heknew as he said it that it was a foolish one. "I mean, I know the stuffis scarcer than virtue and worth astronomical sums--that's whatMacDonald was so happy about--but--"

  "The Bellaver Corporation had a corner on the stuff before our ship waseven thought of. That's what brought this whole damned mess about. Someof our people--not saying why they wanted it, of course--tried to buysome from Bellaver in the usual way, and one of them must have beenincautious about his shield. Because a Lazarite working for Bellavercaught a mental hint of the starship, and the reason for the Titanite,and that was it. Three generations of Bellavers have been after us forthe star-drive, and it's developed into a secret war as bitter as anyever fought on the battlefield. They hold all the Titanite, we hold theship, and perhaps now you're beginning to see why MacDonald was killed,and why you're so important to both sides."

  "Beginning to," said Hyrst. "But only beginning."

  "MacDonald found a Titanite pocket. And as you know, a Titanite pocketisn't very big. One man can break the crude stuff, fill a sack with it,and tote it on his own back if he doesn't have a power-sled."

  "MacDonald had a sled."

  "And he used it. He cleaned out his pocket, afraid somebody else wouldtrack him to it, and he hid the wretched ore somewhere. Then he began todicker. He approached the Bellaver Corporation, and we heard of it andapproached _him_. He tried playing us off against Bellaver to boost theprice, and suddenly he was dead and you were accused of his murder. Wethought you really had done it, because no Titanite turned up, and weknew Bellaver hadn't gotten it from him. We'd watched too closely. Itwasn't until some years later that one of our people learned thatMacDonald had threatened a little too loudly to sell to us unlessBellaver practically tripled his offer--and of course Bellaver didn'tdare do that. A price so much out of line even for Titanite would havestirred all the rival shipbuilders to unwelcome curiosity. So, wefigured, Bellaver had had him killed."

  "But what happened to the Titanite?"

  "That," said Shearing, "is what nobody knows. Bellaver must have figuredthat if his tame Lazarites couldn't find where MacDonald had put it, wecouldn't either. He was right. With all our combined mental probes andconventional detectors we haven't been able to track it down. And wehaven't been able to find any more pockets, either. Bellaver Corporationgot exclusive mineral rights to the whole damned moon. They even own therefinery now."

  Hyrst shook his head. "Latent impressions or not, I don't see how I canhelp on that. If MacDonald had given the killer any clue--"

  * * * * *

  A beam of bright blue light no thicker than a pencil struck in throughthe mouth of the passage. It touched the side of the large stone block.The stone turned molten and ran, and then the beam flicked off, leavinga place that glowed briefly red. Shearing said, "I guess our ten minutesare up."

  They were. For a second or two nothing more happened and then Hyrst sawsomething come sailing in through the crack. His mind told him what itwas just barely in time to shut his eyes. There was a flash that dazzledhim even through his closed lids, and the flash became a glare that didnot lessen. Bellaver's men had tossed in a long-term flare, and almostat once someone followed it, in the hope of catching Hyrst and Shearingblinded and off guard. The eyes of Hyrst's mind, unaffected by light,clearly showed him the suited figure just below him, with its bubblehelmet covered by a glare-shield. They directed him with perfectaccuracy in the downward sweep of the lead weight he had taken from hisboot, and which he still held in his hand. The bubble helmet was verystrong, and the gravity very light, but the concussion was enough todrop the man unconscious. Just about thought Hyrst, what happened to methere in the hoist tower, when MacDonald died. Shearing, who had by nowadjusted his own glare-shield stooped quickly and took the man's gun.

  He said aloud, over the helmet communicator, "The next one that stepsthrough here gets it. Do you hear that, Bellaver?"

  Bellaver's voice answered. "Listen, Shearing, I was wrong. I admit it.Let's calm down and start over again. I--"

  "Ten minutes ago it was no mercy."

  "It's hard for me to behave reasonably about this business. You knowwhat it means to me, what it meant to my father and _his_ father. ButI'm willing to do anything, Shearing, if you'll make a deal."

  "I'll make a deal. Readily. Eagerly. Give back what your grandfatherstole from us, and we'll call it square."

  "Oh no we won't," said Hyrst grimly, breaking in. "Not until I find whokilled MacDonald."

  "All right," said Bellaver. "Wilson, break out the grenades."

  The entire surface of Hyrst's body burst into a flaring sweat. For onepanic-stricken second he wanted to rush out the crack pleading formercy. Then he got his feet against the wall and pushed hard, and wentplunging across the chamber in a sort of floating dive. Shearing gotthere at the same time and helped to pull him down. They huddledtogether on the floor, with the coffin-shaped block between them and thecrack. Hyrst sent out a frantic mental call to hurry, directed at thespaceship of the brotherhood.

  "They're all going to hurry," said Shearing. "Vernon has found the shipnow. He's telling Bellaver. Here comes the grenade--"

  Small round glittering thing of death, curving light and gracefulthrough the airless gloom. It comes so slowly, and the flesh shrinksquivering upon itself until it is nothing more than a handful of simplefear. Outside the men are running away, and the one who has thrown thegrenade from the cramped, constructing vantage of the crack is runningafter them, and Shearing is crying with his mind Will it to fall short,_will it to fall sh_--

  There is a great
brilliance, and the rock leaps, but there is not theslightest sound.

 

    The Sargasso of Space Read onlineThe Sargasso of SpaceThe World with a Thousand Moons Read onlineThe World with a Thousand MoonsThe Man Who Saw the Future Read onlineThe Man Who Saw the FutureThe Legion of Lazarus Read onlineThe Legion of LazarusThe Door into Infinity Read onlineThe Door into InfinityThe Comet Drivers ip-5 Read onlineThe Comet Drivers ip-5Captain Future 24 - Pardon My Iron Nerves (November 1950) Read onlineCaptain Future 24 - Pardon My Iron Nerves (November 1950)The Godmen and The Stars, My Brothers Read onlineThe Godmen and The Stars, My BrothersThe Edmond Hamilton Megapack: 16 Classic Science Fiction Tales Read onlineThe Edmond Hamilton Megapack: 16 Classic Science Fiction TalesFugitives of the Stars [The Two Thousand Centuries] Read onlineFugitives of the Stars [The Two Thousand Centuries]The Cosmic Cloud ip-7 Read onlineThe Cosmic Cloud ip-7The Godmen Read onlineThe GodmenCaptain Future 12 - Planets in Peril (Fall 1942) Read onlineCaptain Future 12 - Planets in Peril (Fall 1942)Captain Future 13 - The Face of the Deep (Winter 1943) Read onlineCaptain Future 13 - The Face of the Deep (Winter 1943)Captain Future 01 - The Space Emperor (Winter 1940) Read onlineCaptain Future 01 - The Space Emperor (Winter 1940)Captain Future 19 - Outlaw World (Winter 1946) Read onlineCaptain Future 19 - Outlaw World (Winter 1946)Battle for the Stars: The Space Opera Classic Read onlineBattle for the Stars: The Space Opera ClassicCaptain Future 09 - Quest Beyond the Stars (Winter 1942) Read onlineCaptain Future 09 - Quest Beyond the Stars (Winter 1942)Starwolf (Omnibus) Read onlineStarwolf (Omnibus)Alien Earth Read onlineAlien EarthCaptain Future 18 - Red Sun of Danger (Spring 1945) Read onlineCaptain Future 18 - Red Sun of Danger (Spring 1945)The Valley of Creation Read onlineThe Valley of CreationCaptain Future 03 - Captain Future's Challenge (Summer 1940) Read onlineCaptain Future 03 - Captain Future's Challenge (Summer 1940)Captain Future 02 - Calling Captain Future (Spring 1940) Read onlineCaptain Future 02 - Calling Captain Future (Spring 1940)Captain Future 26 - Earthmen No More (March 1951) Read onlineCaptain Future 26 - Earthmen No More (March 1951)Battle for the Stars Read onlineBattle for the StarsCaptain Future 21 - The Return of Captain Future (January 1950) Read onlineCaptain Future 21 - The Return of Captain Future (January 1950)Fugitive of the Stars Read onlineFugitive of the StarsCorridor of the Suns Read onlineCorridor of the SunsDoomstar Read onlineDoomstarCaptain Future 11 - The Comet Kings (Summer 1942) Read onlineCaptain Future 11 - The Comet Kings (Summer 1942)The Short Stories of Edmond Hamilton: Volume I Read onlineThe Short Stories of Edmond Hamilton: Volume IWhat's It Like Out There? Read onlineWhat's It Like Out There?Captain Future 10 - Outlaws of the Moon (Spring 1942) Read onlineCaptain Future 10 - Outlaws of the Moon (Spring 1942)Outside the Universe ip-4 Read onlineOutside the Universe ip-4The Star Hunters: A Star Kings Novel [The Two Thousand Centuries] Read onlineThe Star Hunters: A Star Kings Novel [The Two Thousand Centuries]Captain Future 05 - Captain Future and the Seven Space Stones (Winter 1941) Read onlineCaptain Future 05 - Captain Future and the Seven Space Stones (Winter 1941)The Sun Smasher Read onlineThe Sun SmasherReturn to the Stars cotsk-2 Read onlineReturn to the Stars cotsk-2The Man Who Evolved Read onlineThe Man Who EvolvedCaptain Future 25 - Moon of the Unforgotten (January 1951) Read onlineCaptain Future 25 - Moon of the Unforgotten (January 1951)Captain Future 08 - The Lost World of Time (Fall 1941) Read onlineCaptain Future 08 - The Lost World of Time (Fall 1941)The Star Kings cotsk-1 Read onlineThe Star Kings cotsk-1Captain Future 23 - The Harpers of Titan (September 1950) Read onlineCaptain Future 23 - The Harpers of Titan (September 1950)The Star Stealers ip-2 Read onlineThe Star Stealers ip-2Captain Future 27 - Birthplace of Creation (May 1951) Read onlineCaptain Future 27 - Birthplace of Creation (May 1951)Murder in the Void Read onlineMurder in the VoidThe Worlds of Edmond Hamilton Read onlineThe Worlds of Edmond HamiltonA Yank at Valhalla Read onlineA Yank at ValhallaDevolution Read onlineDevolutionCaptain Future 15 - The Star of Dread (Summer 1943) Read onlineCaptain Future 15 - The Star of Dread (Summer 1943)The Sun Smasher: A Space Opera Classic Read onlineThe Sun Smasher: A Space Opera ClassicChildren of the Sun Read onlineChildren of the SunCaptain Future 16 - Magic Moon (Winter 1944) Read onlineCaptain Future 16 - Magic Moon (Winter 1944)Captain Future 07 - The Magician of Mars (Summer 1941) Read onlineCaptain Future 07 - The Magician of Mars (Summer 1941)The Three Planeteers Read onlineThe Three PlaneteersThe Short Stories of Edmond Hamilton: Volume II Read onlineThe Short Stories of Edmond Hamilton: Volume IIA Conquest of Two Worlds Read onlineA Conquest of Two WorldsCaptain Future 04 - The Triumph of Captain Future (Fall 1940) Read onlineCaptain Future 04 - The Triumph of Captain Future (Fall 1940)The Monster-God of Mamurth Read onlineThe Monster-God of Mamurth