Read Captain Future 02 - Calling Captain Future (Spring 1940) Online

Authors: Edmond Hamilton

Tags: #Sci-Fi & Fantasy

Captain Future 02 - Calling Captain Future (Spring 1940) (6 page)

BOOK: Captain Future 02 - Calling Captain Future (Spring 1940)
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The hissing fire-jet sputtered, then went out. The little tool was exhausted, useless.

Captain Future pressed gently against the door. It did not give. The bar outside still held.

He felt a pang of disappointment. Putting his shoulder against the door, he heaved with all his strength.

The door flew open. The bar had been almost cut through — and his strong push had broken it completely.

“Come on!” Captain Future whispered to the others, his gray eyes snapping with excitement. “There’s a space-boat on the starboard side forward — I noticed it when the ship landed back there at the observatory.”

They started forward in the corridor. Curt was looking for something as he advanced. Then he saw what he sought.

There was a small gun-locker at the side of the corridor, hung with atomic weapons and tools. In there, upon a hook, hung his own gray tungstite belt and proton-pistol.

“I was hoping I could find this,” he exclaimed joyfully, taking a rapid step toward the locker.

“Captain Future!” Joan’s cry was low, agonized.

A stiff-faced Legionary had just entered the corridor from the control-rooms forward. The man reached for his gun.

Curt was already diving for the gun-locker. With the phenomenal speed that Otho the android had taught him, he snatched his proton-pistol, whirled, and fired.

The thin, pale beam lanced down the corridor and dropped the Legionary stunned in his tracks.

“Quick!” cried Captain Future, buckling his belt on hastily. “They’ll find this man in a minute.”

He was leading them into a low, cramped compartment at the starboard side. Outside its wall, bolted to the hull of the cruiser, was one of the little space-boats intended for use as life-boats in case of wreck. A round door gave entrance through the wall of the cruiser into the little craft.

Joan Randall scrambled through into the space-boat.

Kansu Kane was following, when the little astronomer stopped.

“I’ve got to go back to our cell!” he exclaimed. “I left some of my notes on the Andromedan binaries there — I was studying them and left them on the floor.”

The little Venusian actually started back. But Captain Future grabbed him in time.

“Are you crazy?” Curt demanded. “Get in there after Joan.”

Kansu Kane sputtered. “You can’t order me around like a servant, sir! I have rights —”

Curt ended the argument by shoving the irate little astronomer bodily into the space-boat. He leaped in after him, spun shut the round door of the space-boat; and then began hastily unscrewing the bolts that held it to the cruiser hull, With the wrench hung there for the purpose.

 

THE last bolt gave way. Captain Future leaped forward through the single compartment of the space-boat, to the simple controls. He opened one of the throttles carefully.

The space-boat veered aside from the towering wall of the racing cruiser, and began moving off in a course at right angles to that of the larger ship. It was impelled by a subdued blast of its own small rocket-tubes.

The Legion ship, a black, unlighted mass, moved on away through the vast gulf of starry space, rapidly disappearing. Curt turned the space-boat in a course back Sunward.

“We’ve made it!” Joan cried eagerly. “Oh, Captain Future, I never thought —”

Kansu Kane interrupted wrathfully.

“All my notes, all the fruit of weeks of work left in that ship!” he sputtered to Captain Future. “And you dared lay hands on me —”

“Be quiet — we’re not out of danger,” Curt interrupted sternly. “They’ll find that stunned man quickly. When they do, and discover our escape in this boat, they’ll turn back —”

He was opening the throttles to the limit as he spoke. The little space-boat darted Sunward at mounting velocity.

Abruptly it shuddered, bucked wildly, and then righted itself and sped smoothly on again.

“What was that?” Kansu Kane asked startledly.

“Ether-current,” Curt replied briefly. The tanned face of the red-headed scientific wizard tautened. “We’re in a dangerous part of space —”

“Captain Future! They’re after us!” Joan cried.

Curt turned swiftly. Back there against the stars, the black mass of the Legion of Doom cruiser was again rapidly growing visible.

“I thought they would be,” Curt said between his teeth. “And they’ve got more speed than we — our only chance is to duck and dodge until we lose them.”

The old thrill of space-fighting came to Captain Future as he twisted and dodged out here between the stars. But the cruiser had too great an advantage in speed to be shaken off. And twice the space-boat ran into strong ether-currents that tossed it violently, making it lose ground. The Legion cruiser was steadily overtaking them.

Curt wondered why the cruiser didn’t blast them out of space with its atom-guns. They could have done it, he knew. Why had Doctor Zarro been so determined to make them prisoners?

“They’re getting closer,” Joan faltered.

The space-boat was suddenly caught by another and stronger ether-current, that gripped it and swept it away despite the force of its rocket-tubes.

 

CAPTAIN FUTURE fought to break clear of this strong, invisible current, but the rocket-tubes seemed utterly powerless. At appalling speed, the space-boat was whirled through the void.

He realized the terrible peril into which they had fled. Its nearness had been haunting him during all this time.

“The cruiser has given up the pursuit!” Joan cried joyfully. “They’re turning back — leaving us!”

Captain Future’s tanned face was grim.

“They’re doing so because they don’t want to be trapped as we’re trapped.”

“Trapped?” cried Kansu Kane. “What do you mean?”

“We can’t get out of this ether-current,” Curt gritted. “It’s too strong. And its whirling us on into the most dangerous spot in space, one from which no interplanetary ship has ever escaped.”

Joan’s hand went to her throat. “You mean —”

Captain Future nodded grimly.

“Yes. We’re being carried into the Sargasso Sea of Space.”

 

 

Chapter 5: Trail to Pluto

 

WHEN Otho, the android, and his antagonist, were hurled from the speeding ship of the Legion of Doom, the starlit desert was fully fifty feet below.

Plunging down through the darkness, fiercely clutching his opponent, Otho made a supreme effort to twist his own body uppermost.

The synthetic man, the swiftest and most agile of beings, succeeded in his maneuver. In the split-second of fall, he turned his antagonist beneath him, and it was that other man who hit the ground and cushioned Otho’s fall.

Even so, the shock of impact nearly stunned Otho.

Groggily, after a moment, he staggered to his feet. “Devils of space, that was close!” he hissed pantingly.

He bent over his opponent, whose body had been crushed beneath him. The Legionary lay still, instantly killed.

Then Otho’s eyes bulged from his head. He stared down at the dead body as though unable to credit his senses.

“Am I going crazy?” he exclaimed to himself. “How in the name of the nine worlds —”

An incredible, unnervingly fantastic thing had happened.

The Legionary with whom Otho had struggled had been an Earthman. As they had fought up there in the door of the ship, as they had fallen in the starlight, Otho had seen that clearly.

But now, in death, the Legion of Doom man had magically changed into a creature of weird and unheard-of aspect.

His crushed body was now that of a semi-human being covered from head to toe with short, thick white fur! The feet were two-toed, and the grotesque hands two-fingered. The head itself was a flattened, unhuman one, even the face covered with white fur. There were two eyes, huge, black, pupil-less orbs staring in death.

The creature wore a leather harness. To its belt had been attached a cylindrical metal instrument or weapon, but this had been crushed to fragments by the shock of impact.

“Have I gone delirious from the shock?” gasped Otho. “I can’t be seeing this!”

Then a far-off, dying drone of rocket-tubes recalled his attention. He looked up and saw the Legion of Doom cruiser, a tiny black spot, rocketing up into the starry sky and disappearing.

Wild dismay and anger filled the android’s mind at the sight.

“They’re gone — with the chief their prisoner! And there’s no telling where they’re taking him!”

His rubbery body, still in its Martian disguise, was rigid in impotent wrath.

“If I was just in that cursed ship — !”

Otho had one trait that was even stronger than his devil-may-care lust for excitement and adventure. And that was his loyalty to Captain Future. And now he had let Doctor Zarro’s dark Legion take his chief prisoner.

“I’ve got to get back to the
Comet!”
he told himself fiercely. And then he groaned. “What Grag will say to me about letting the chief be taken! And I deserve it!”

 

OTHO started across the starlit desert in a swift run, but in a moment he turned and came running back. He had remembered the dead body of the magically transformed Legionary. That weird, furry corpse might be a clue to Doctor Zarro’s Legion. He would take it for the Brain to inspect.

The furred body was heavy, as Otho slung it across his shoulders. But in his throbbing anxiety and anger, he hardly felt its weight. Again he started across the sands, intending to skirt around the city Syrtis to the hiding-place where the
Comet
waited.

Only the stars’ white eyes looked down on him. Only the stars, and the whirling sand-devils that glided before the night winds and whispered of the mysteries of old Mars.

Otho kept well out from the lighted towers of Syrtis. And finally he stumbled up to the gleaming, quiescent bulk of the
Comet,
lying silent between the concealing sand dunes.

He touched the secret button in its side and the door slid open. Otho stumbled in, and dropped the body on the floor.

The compact laboratory in the mid-section of the
Comet
was in semi-darkness. The Brain was peering through the biggest telescope toward Sagittarius, while Grag, the robot, was exposing photographic plates on a smaller telescope at the Brain’s directions.

Grag’s great metal figure turned quickly, and the lens-eyes of the Brain turned to see also, as Otho entered.

“It’s me — Otho!” the android said hastily, seeing that they did not recognize him in the Martian disguise.

Simon Wright guessed instantly from Otho’s battered appearance that something was wrong.

“Where is Curtis?” the Brain rasped sharply.

Otho gulped. “They’ve got him — the Legion of Doom. It was my fault, partly.”

The android told rapidly what had happened. When he had finished, there burst from Grag a booming roar of rage.

The great robot, his photo-electric eyes blazing, advanced ominously toward the crestfallen android.

“You let them take him?” boomed Grag. He clenched huge metal fists furiously. “I told the master you would get him into trouble! I wanted him to take me. But no, you talked him into taking you. I knew this would happen!”

“It wasn’t altogether my fault,” flared Otho defensively. “I waited in the observatory as he ordered, and when the Legion men came in, I delayed them as long as I could, dodging about and not letting them catch me. But then there was an alarm from the ship and they returned to it — I tried to follow, but was pushed off.”

“If I had been there I would have torn that ship apart before I would have let them take away the master in it!” Grag shouted.

The cold, austere, rasping voice of the Brain cut across their argument like an icy sword.

“Be quiet, Grag,” Simon Wright ordered. “This will get us nowhere. We must follow that ship, quickly.”

“I don’t know where it’s heading for,” Otho admitted miserably. Then the android added quickly: “But I did bring back one of the Legion of Doom — dead. And the queerest thing happened to him as he died.”

 

HE TOLD them of the magical transformation of the Earthman Legionary into a strange furred creature, in death.

“I want to see that body,” said the Brain instantly. “Grag, put me down by it.”

The Brain’s lens-eyes moved to and fro on their flexible stalks, keenly inspecting the grotesque corpse.

“I’ve never heard of a race like this before,” muttered Simon. “And I can’t understand how it could look like an Earthman when it was living.”

“It did look just like an Earthman, dressed in a uniform.” Otho affirmed emphatically.

“Did it feel like an Earthman when you were struggling with it?”

Otho hesitated. “I don’t remember very well — yes. I do remember now! It felt furry in my grasp, as we fell. I’d forgotten that.”

“Then,” the Brain declared, “this creature was never an Earthman. It simply had some means of making it appear like one, some strange means of giving the illusion that it was an Earthman.”

“But why should the illusion vanish so suddenly when the thing died?” Otho demanded.

“You see that broken instrument at the creature’s belt?” the; Brain said. “It’s too badly shattered to find out anything from. But I believe it may have been a device to create the illusion that disguised this creature as an Earthman. The instrument was shattered in the fall, and so the illusion vanished.”

BOOK: Captain Future 02 - Calling Captain Future (Spring 1940)
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