The Science Fiction Novel Super Pack No. 1. David Lindsay

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saw his men go, one by one. Saw them lifted and whisked away, out through the depths of space by the magic touch upon the keyboards. With terror-widened eyes he watched Russ set up the equations, saw him trip the activating lever, saw the men disappear, listened to the thunderous rumbling of the mighty engines.

      Chizzy went to the Outpost, the harsh prison on Neptune’s satellite. Reg went to Titan, clear across the Solar System, where men in the infamous penal colony labored in the frigid wastes of that moon of Saturn. Max went to Vesta, the asteroid prison, which long had been the target of reformers, who claimed that on it 50 per cent of the prisoners died of boredom and fear.

      Max was gone and only Scorio remained.

      “Stutsman’s the one who got us into this,” wailed the gangster. “He’s the man you want to get. Not me. Not the boys. Stutsman.”

      “I promise you,” said Greg, “that we’ll take care of Stutsman.”

      “And Chambers, too,” chattered Scorio. “But you can’t touch Chambers. You wouldn’t dare.”

      “We’re not worrying about Chambers,” Greg told him. “We’re not worrying about anyone. You’re the one who had better start doing some.”

      Scorio cringed.

      “Let me tell you about a place on Venus,” said Greg. “It’s in the center of a big swamp that stretches for hundreds of miles in every direction. It’s a sort of mountain rising out of the swamp. And the swamp is filled with beasts and reptiles of every kind. Ravenous things, lusting for blood. But they don’t climb the mountain. A man, if he stayed on the mountain, would be safe. There’s food there. Roots and berries and fruits and even small animals one could kill. A man might go hungry for a while, but soon he’d find the things to eat.

      “But he’d be alone. No one ever goes near that mountain. I am the only man who ever set foot on it. Perhaps no one ever will again. At night you hear the screaming and the crying of the things down in swamp, but you mustn’t pay any attention to them.”

      *

      Scorio’s eyes widened, staring. “You won’t send me there!”

      “You’ll find my campfires,” Greg told him, “if the rain hasn’t washed them away. It rains a lot. So much and so drearily that you’ll want to leave that mountain and walk down into the swamp, of your own free will, and let the monsters finish you.”

      Scorio sat dully. He did not move. Horror glazed his eyes.

      Greg signed to Russ. Russ, pipe clenched between his teeth, reached out his fingers for the keys. The engines droned.

      Manning walked slowly to a television control, sat down in the chair and flipped over a lever. A face stared out of the screen. It was strangely filled with anger and a sort of half-fear.

      “You watched it, didn’t you, Stutsman?” Greg asked.

      Stutsman nodded. “I watched. You can’t get away with it, Manning. You can’t take the law into your own hands that way.”

      “You and Chambers have been taking the law into your hands for years,” said Greg. “All I did tonight was clear the Earth of some vermin. Every one of those men was guilty of murder ... and worse.”

      “What did you gain by it?” asked Stutsman.

      Greg gave a bitter laugh. “I convinced you, Stutsman,” he said, “that it isn’t so easy to kill me. I think it’ll be some time before you try again. Better luck next time.”

      He flipped the switch and turned about in the chair.

      Russ jerked his thumb at the skylight. “Might as well finish the ship now.”

      Greg nodded.

      An instant later there was a fierce, intolerably blue-white light that lit the mountains for many miles. For just an instant it flared, exploding into millions of brilliant, harmless sparks that died into darkness before they touched the ground. The gangster ship was destroyed beyond all tracing, disintegrated. The metal and quartz of which it was made were simply gone.

      Russ brought his glance back from the skylight, looked at his friend. “Stutsman will do everything he can to wipe us out. By tomorrow morning the Interplanetary machine will be rolling. With only one purpose—to crush us.”

      “That’s right,” Greg agreed, “but we’re ready for them now. Our ship left the Belgium factories several hours ago. The Comet towed it out in space and it’s waiting for us now. In a few hours the Comet will be here to pick us up.”

      “War in space,” said Russ, musingly. “That’s what it will be.”

      “Chambers and his gang won’t fight according to any rules. There’ll be no holds barred, no more feeble attempts like the one they tried tonight. From now on we need a base that simply can’t be located.”

      “The ship,” said Russ.

      Chapter Fourteen

      The Invincible hung in space, an empty, airless hull, the largest thing afloat.

      Chartered freighters, leaving their ports from distant parts of the Earth, had converged upon her hours before, had unloaded crated apparatus, storing it in the yawning hull. Then they had departed.

      Now the sturdy little space-yacht, Comet, was towing the great ship out into space, 500,000 miles beyond the orbit of the Moon. Slowly the hull was being taken farther and farther away from possible discovery.

      Work on the installation of the apparatus had started almost as soon as the Comet had first tugged at the ponderous mass. Leaving only a skeleton crew in charge of the Comet, the rest of the selected crew had begun the assembly of the mighty machines which would transform the Invincible into a thing of unimaginable power and speed.

      The doors were closed and sealed and the air, already stored in the ship’s tanks, was released. The slight acceleration of the Comet’s towing served to create artificial weight for easier work, but not enough to handicap the shifting of the heavier pieces of apparatus. An electric cable was run back from the little yacht and the Invincible took her first breath of life.

      The work advanced rapidly, for every man was more than a mere engineer or spacebuster. They were a selected crew, the men who had helped to make the name of Gregory Manning famous throughout the Solar System.

      First the engines were installed, then the two groups of five massive power plants and the single smaller engine as an auxiliary supply plant for the light, heat, air.

      The accumulators of the Comet were drained in a single tremendous surge and the auxiliary generator started. It in turn awoke to life the other power plants, to leave them sleeping, idling, but ready for instant use to develop power such as man never before had dreamed of holding and molding to his will.

      Then, with the gigantic tools these engines supplied ... tools of pure force and strange space fields ... the work was rapidly completed. The power boards were set in place, welded in position by a sudden furious blast of white hot metal and as equally sudden freezing, to be followed by careful heating and recooling till

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