Legion Of Space 03 - One Against The Legion (1939), page 9
It has always been very difficult to discover anything about the affairs of the New Moon Syndicate, sir. They are handled by very devious means. The Legion has exerted pressure, however, upon several brokers. The reports indicate, almost surely, that the buyer is Gaspar Hannas!
Eh? Old Giles Habibula started. But Hannas is the New Moons master, already.
He is head of the syndicate, Jay Kalam told him. Originally he was sole owner of the enterprise. But the cost of constructing the New Moon, while the actual sum has never been revealed, must have been staggeringfar beyond the resources of Hannas. He was forced to sell a vast amount of stock, and the syndicate incurred tremendous obligations. Out of that situation comes the chief reason for suspecting that Hannas himself is the Basilisk.
Eh, Jay? Giles Habibula turned pale and began to perspire. And here were hi the New Moon, hi the very clutch of his mortal power! But why Hannas, Jay?
Even through the cloud of legal confusion that is always kept around the dealings of the syndicate, its clear that Caspar Hannas was about to lose the New Moon. Now the activities of the Basilisk have enabled him to buy back control at his own price. Therein the difference between bankruptcy and the Systems greatest fortune you have motive enough, I think.
Aye, agreed Giles Habibula. But you said this Basilisk must be a scientistand Caspar Hannas is no scientist.
But he has a very able oneif Brelekko told the truthcompletely under his thumb. John Comaine. Jay Kalam rubbed abstractedly at his jaw, and then his dark eyes went abruptly to Giles Habibula. However, he said, all the weight of evidence still rests against Chan Derron.
For Chan Derron took Dr. Eleroids inventionwhich is probably the very scientific agency that makes possible the feats of the Basilisk. He has been connected with every crime. He was here, loaded down with concealed instruments, when little Davian was taken. And once more he has mysteriously escaped.
I was for a long time reluctant to believe that so fine a Legionnaire as Captain Derron was, could have turned to such a monster as the Basilisk. But the presence of the female android accounts for that. It may be that Luroa was the mysterious spy who first frightened Dr. Eleroid! And then she met Chan Derron.
Somberly, his dark eyes looked far away.
He would not be the first man degraded and destroyed by the fatal allure of those inhuman things.
So, Jay, sighed Giles Habibula, some of them were mortal beautiful! Jay Kalams glance came back to the old man, suddenly intent. Giles, he said softly, Ive an idea! Eh, Jay! The fishy eyes blinked uneasily. Youre getting too many ideas about a
poor crippled old hero of the Legion, Jay. You are ordered, Giles, to find Chan Derron. But were all looking for Derron. So we are. Jay Kalams lips tightened sternly. But Im afraid you havent been
exerting your full capacities. His low voice lifted slightly. Giles, as Commander of the Legion, I order you to find Derron and the woman with him. By any means you can. You will work alonebut keep in touch with us by ultrawave and call for any aid you need.
Find the Basilisk? Giles Habibula paled and squirmed. How do you think? Use your own methods, Jay Kalam told him. But youve been boasting enough of your cloudy pastyou might pretend to be another criminal. Whatever you do, learn
everything you can. Discover the location of the Basilisks headquartersfind a target for the keeper of the peace. Trap Derron and the android. Giles Habibula licked his fat blue lips. He gulped. His seamed face turned greenish-yellow, and glittered with sweat. He gasped for breath, and mopped with a trembling
hand at his bald brow. Jay! he wheezed at last. Are you out of your mind? In all these years, hasnt Giles given enough to the Systemaye, given all his precious genius!without being flung into this web of fearful horror?
His pudgy fingers quivered on Jay Kalams arm. In lifes name, Jay, stay your cruel command! Ah, think, Jay! Poor old Giles might
be snatched from beside you at this very momentto be found perhaps in the black Euthanasia vault, with the blade of the Basilisk in his poor dead back! Remember, Jay Kalam said gravely, that its for the keeper. Giles Habibula caught a sobbing breath. For the keeper, he wheezed, sadly. For her, JayIll go. Then the Commander of the Legion went suddenly tense, and his lean face went a
little white.
Km! Krrr! Km!
The tiny sound, peculiarly penetrating and insistent, was humming from the communicator hung by its thin chain about his neck. The Commanders lean deliberate hands, drawing the little black disk from under his clothing, trembled slightly.
Its Legion Intelligence, he told Giles Habibula. An emergency call.
Giles Habibula watched apprehensively as he touched the dial, whispered a code response, and lifted the little disk to his ear. The straining ears of the old Legionnaire failed to hear anything. And the face of Jay Kalam didnt lose its grave, contained reserve. But his failure to breathe, and his frozen stiffness, betrayed enough.
Youve had bad news, Jay, whispered Giles Habibula, when at last the Commander lowered the disk and broke communication. Aye, mortal bad!
Jay Kalam nodded, very slowly. His lean face, beneath that one white lock on his forehead, looked the oldest that Giles Habibula had ever seen it.
That was one of the subordinate officers calling from the depot of the cometary expedition at Contra-Saturn. His voice was very quiet. The depot has been robbed, Giles. All our files and specimens rifled.
Eh, Jay! Giles Habibula blinked at him. The secrets of the Cometeers!
All our most valuableor most dangerousnotes were taken, Giles. Weapons and instrumentalities that we had planned to guard for centuries until our civilization might be mature enough to assimilate them safely. All gone!
Was itthe Basilisk?
The stricken head nodded again.
A little black clay snake was found on Bob Stars desk, inside the vaultsnone of the locks on the vaults, by the way, were disturbed. As usual, there was a clue. Dropped on the floor was a yellow reservation check from the New Moon. It was dated yesterday. And the name on it was Dr. Charles Derrel.
Derrel? gasped Giles Habibula. But, Jay, it isnt six hours since I picked that check out of Chan Derrons pocketand Contra-Saturn, by the swiftest cruiser, is three days away!
The best proof yet, Jay Kalam said gravely, that the Basilisk is Chan Derron. His lean hand gestured sternly. Get him, Giles.
ButBob? Giles Habibula was wheezing anxiously. You say a subordinate was speaking? Where was Bob Star?
The face of Jay Kalam had stiffened bleakly.
The office said that Captain Robert Star is mysteriously missing from the depot, he said faintly. Giles, Im afraid Bob Star is already in the hands of the Basilisk. Alive or notIm. afraid to guess.
Giles Habibula lifted himself laboriously to his feet with the cane.
Bob, the poor lad! he sobbed. Now my dutys plain enough but how am I to find the Basilisk? His head shook hopelessly. How can one poor old man track down the monster that strikes here at midnight and a billion miles away before the dawn?
His pale eyes rolled.
Orin lifes precious namewhat if I do find him? And the mortal android? One poor old soldier, to face the Systems two most frightful criminals. Aye, to face all the evil power of the Basilisk! And that woman, whose very beauty is a false mirage and a consuming flame and a poisoned blade!
He blinked, and caught a gasping breath.
But for all that, I must go. Farewell, Jay. Farewell! And please tell the keeper that poor old Giles Habibula was loyal to the end. He thrust out a trembling hand, and the Commander grasped it. For it is mortal likely, Jay, that Giles Habibula will never be seen alive again.
And he waddled slowly out into the corridors of the New Moon.
11 The Unearthly Robot
Back in the rich, soft-toned simplicity of his hidden, ray-armored apartments aft the chart rooms of the mighty Inflexible, once more in the trim gold-and-green of his uniform, Jay Kalam sat waiting impatiently. The deep muffled song of the geodynes reached him briefly, as a door was opened. And Hal Samdu came stalking in, looking worried.
Well, Hal? The Commanders quiet reserve did not conceal his eagerness. What is your report on the robot?
The big gnarled hands of the Admiral-General laid a thick green envelope on the desk. They clenched, as he raised them, with a savage force.
If I could only get my fingers on this Derron His great voice was thick with an agony of frustration. To think, Jay, that all the Legion can give the keeper no promise of safety!
I know its appalling. The Commander nodded, white-lipped. But your report?
In the envelope, said Hal Samdu. I got together twenty men, half of them veterans of the cometary expedition, all of them specialists in some field of science. They took the robot-thing apart, and studied every piece of it, by every possible means. The lab work was finished, twelve hours ago, at base. Since, theyve been discussing and checking the meaning of their discoveries, and writing up the report.
Jay Kalam leaned forward, anxiously.
What did they find?
Hal Samdu shook his rugged white head.
Im no scientist, Jay. You know that. Its all in the envelope.
But, the Commander asked, in brief
As you surmised, Jay, its an illegal robot. It makes use of biophysical principles forbidden in the same Green Hall statutes that outlawed the androids. The most similar illicit model in the museum was taken shortly after the war with the Medusae. It was built by a young Dr. Enos Clagg, who was run down by the Legion and sentenced to three years on Ebron.
The details?
Scowling with a painful effort to be clear, Hal Samdu touched one big knobby finger with another.
First, Jay, he rumbled, they concluded that the thing was designed by a human engineera man trained on Earth or Mars.
Jay Kalam nodded. Why?
Because so many familiar engineering principles were used in its construction. There were none of those strange freaks of design strange to usthat we found hi the machines of the Cometeers.
The thing was driven by an atomic power tube. There were pinions, shafts, cams, cables, leversall used precisely as a supremely good human engineer would use them, if you set him to build a mechanical imitation ofof whatever monster the thing was copied from.
Jay Kalam was rubbing reflectively at his jaw.
That fits Derron well enough, he said. He took high honors in the engineering section at the academy. But, for that matter, it also fits the female android, or Hannas, or Brelekko, or Comaine. What else, Hal?
The gigantic Captain-General bent down another gnarled finger.
Second, he said, they agreed that the thing was built outside the System.
Jay Kalam nodded again, without surprise. Where?
On a planet somewhat larger than the Earth, they concluded, comparatively near a dying red suna star of the type designated as K9e. The surface gravitation of the planet is about 1.250 gabout one and a quarter times Earth-gravity. The atmosphere is denser than Earths. It contains sufficient free oxygen to sustain human life but also enough free chlorine to be very unpleasant.
The Commander was listening intently.
The basis of those conclusions
The metals of the robot, in the first place. They are mostly aluminum and beryllium bronzes. They are alloyed according to standard metallurgical formulae. But spectrographic analysis proves that they were not smelted from any ores mined in the System. The impurities are small in quantity, yet the metallurgists declare that the evidence is conclusive.
The deposits of corrosion, in the second place, on the body of the thing. They contained chlorides, due to the action of free chlorine. And you recall the stink of chlorine in the air, when the thing appeared?
Jay Kalam nodded, frowning intently.
In the third place, Jay, there is the sort of life they found in the green slime clinging to the thing. Microorganisms of types unknown in the System. Im no bacteriologist,
and youll find details in the report. But those are queer things. They perish, in the normal conditions of the System, for want of chlorine. And thrive on the chlorine in some of the common bactericides. Some varieties break down chlorides, and liberate free chlorine. If such organisms ever get established in the oceans of Earth Hal Samdus rugged face set grimly. I hope Derron doesnt think of that!
The Commander was asking, What else?
They attacked the problem from another angle, Hal Samdu continued. The robot-thing was obviously a mechanical reproduction of a living original. It has many features, such as the scales, beak, teeth, gill, and nostril-vents, which, being useless to a machine, prove that conclusively. And those things also tell a great deal about the alien environment in which the original lived.
Jay Kalam held up a lean hand.
One question, Hal. Why should the robot have been copied after such an original?
The scientists discussed that, Jay. Besides any possible intention to deceive other creatures of that world, or to mislead and terrify the people of this
The rugged brow of the Admiral-General furrowed with a frown of concentrated effort.
Besides that, Jay, there is the general speculation that machines designed to operate efficiently, under any given set of conditions, must frequently follow the same principles that life has found most efficient under those conditionsthe very words of the report! Why dont you just read it, Jay?
But the Commander motioned silently for him to go on.
From the dimensions of the thing, and the amount of power provided for the functioning of its limbs and wings, Hal Samdu resumed laboriously, particularly from the size, strength, weight and camber of the wings themselves, in relation to the total weight from all that, the scientists arrived at fairly precise data on the atmospheric density and surface gravity.
From a study of the cooling system, insulation, and lubricants usedall checked against the optimum temperature conditions for those chlorine-loving microorganisms they closely estimated the temperature of the planet.
The photo-cells that served as eyes for the thing revealed a good deal. From their sensitivity, the adjustment of their iris diaphragms, and the nature of the color filters used, it was possible to determine very exactly the intensity and the color of light to which they were adaptedthe light of a K9e sun, within a certain range of distances.
One deduction checked against another, to verify and refine the first approximations. Ive been able to give you but a clumsy sketch of it, Jay. Aye, the science of the System has become a fine and powerful instrument!
Too powerful, Jay Kalam said, in the hands of the Basilisk! But what else, Hal? Anything on how the robot arrived in the New Moonand how Davian was taken away?
Hal Samdu shook his shaggy white head.
There was no real evidence, Jay, but one of the geodesic physicists has a theory. He thinks the Basilisk must be using some application of the same achronic forces the visiwave doesthe same sort of warp in the geodesic lines that brought Kay Nymidee out of the comet. Youll find his whole report in the envelope, but he admits that his idea is too vague to be of any practical use. With our data from the cometary expedition, we might have worked out something but thats gone.
Then, Jay Kalam demanded, have you anything on the location of this star?
Its in the envelope, Jay, Hal Samdu continued desperately. The astrophysicists did another remarkable piece of work. They listed all the K9e stars hi telescopic rangethey are not very luminous, you know, with a surface temperature just above three thousand, and therefore the number known is relatively small.
They checked off nearly half which are binaries, and hence could have no planets. Most of the rest were eliminated because spectrographic studies revealed no trace whatever of absorption by free atmospheric chlorine. When they were done, Jay, only one star was left.
The Commander rose abruptly. What star is that?
They showed it to me in the telescopeand showed me the faint dark lines of free chlorine in the spectrograms. Its a faint red star in the constellation Draco, known as Ulnar XIV. Its distance is eighty light-years.
Eighty light-years! Jay Kalams thin lips pursed. No man has been so farnone except the Basilisk! It would take us two years to reach it, at the full power of the Inflexibleand we should arrive without any fuel left for action or return.
His dark head shook slowly. Thin, unconscious fingers combed the one white lock back from his forehead. His dark eyes stared at Hal Samdu, with a fixed intensity.
Hal he whispered suddenly, hoarsely. HalI see but one thing to do. Its a terrible thingit is terrible for life, the child of a star, to destroy a star. And weve no certainty that even that would end the Basiliskwe may have spun our assumptions out too far.
He caught his breath, as if with an effort.
However, Im going to order the destruction of the star Ulnar XIV. His dark eyes closed for a moment, as if against some dreadful sight. Another time, I waited too longto urge the keeper to annihilate the green comet. Great as a star may be, the life of the System matters somewhat more to us.
Aye, Hal Samdu rumbled solemnly. Strike!
The Commander of the Legion found the small black disk of his communicator. His thin, trembling fingers turned the tiny dials, and tapped out a code signal. His thin lips whispered into it. Hal Samdu sat watching, his face rigid as a statues.
