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+ The Project Gutenberg eBook of Planet Of The Gods, by Robert Moore Williams.
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Planet of the Gods, by Robert Moore Williams
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Planet of the Gods
+
+Author: Robert Moore Williams
+
+Release Date: June 5, 2010 [EBook #32696]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PLANET OF THE GODS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Greg Weeks, Mary Meehan and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/cover.jpg" alt=""/>
+</div>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h1>PLANET OF THE GODS</h1>
+
+<h2>By Robert Moore Williams</h2>
+
+<p>[Transcriber Note: This etext was produced from Amazing Stories December
+1942. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
+copyright on this publication was renewed.]</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2>CONTENTS</h2>
+
+<!-- Autogenerated TOC. Modify or delete as required. -->
+<h3>
+<a href="#CHAPTER_I"><b>CHAPTER I</b></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_II"><b>CHAPTER II</b></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_III"><b>CHAPTER III</b></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_IV"><b>CHAPTER IV</b></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_V"><b>CHAPTER V</b></a><br />
+<a href="#CHAPTER_VI"><b>CHAPTER VI</b></a><br />
+</h3>
+<!-- End Autogenerated TOC. -->
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_I" id="CHAPTER_I"></a>CHAPTER I</h2>
+
+
+<p>"What do you make of it?" Commander Jed Hargraves asked huskily.</p>
+
+<div class="sidenote">Two planets circling Vega! But a more amazing discovery
+waited the explorers when they landed!</div>
+
+<p>Ron Val, busy at the telescope, was too excited to look up from the
+eye-piece. "There are at least two planets circling Vega!" he said
+quickly. "There may be other planets farther out, but I can see two
+plainly. And Jed, the nearest planet, the one we are approaching, has an
+atmosphere. The telescope reveals a blur that could only be caused by an
+atmosphere. And&mdash;Jed, this may seem so impossible you won't believe
+it&mdash;but I can see several large spots on the surface that are almost
+certainly lakes. They are not big enough to be called oceans or seas.
+But I am almost positive they are lakes!"</p>
+
+<p>According to the preconceptions of astronomers, formed before they had a
+chance to go see for themselves, solar systems were supposed to be rare
+birds. Not every sun had a chance to give birth to planets. Not one sun
+in a thousand, maybe not one in a million; maybe, with the exception of
+Sol, not another one in the whole universe.</p>
+
+<p>And here the first sun approached by the Third Interstellar Expedition
+was circled by planets!</p>
+
+<p>The sight was enough to drive an astronomer insane.</p>
+
+<p>Ron Val tore his eyes away from the telescope long enough to stare at
+Captain Hargraves. "Air and water on this planet!" he gasped. "Jed, do
+you realize what this may mean?"</p>
+
+<p>Jed Hargraves grinned. His face was lean and brown, and the grin,
+spreading over it, relaxed a little from the tension that had been
+present for months.</p>
+
+<p>"Easy, old man," he said, clapping Ron Val on the shoulder. "There is
+nothing to get so excited about."</p>
+
+<p>"But a solar system&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"We came from one."</p>
+
+<p>"I know we did. But just the same, finding another will put our names in
+all the books on astronomy. They aren't the commonest things in the
+universe, you know. And to find one of the planets of this new system
+with air and water&mdash;Jed, where there is air and water there may be
+life!"</p>
+
+<p>"There probably is. Life, in some form, seems to be everywhere. Remember
+we found spores being kicked around by light waves in the deepest depths
+of space. And Pluto, in our own system, has mosses and lichens that the
+biologists insist are alive. It won't be surprising if we find life out
+there." He gestured through the port at the world swimming through space
+toward them.</p>
+
+<p>"I mean intelligent life," Ron Val corrected.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't bet on it. The old boys had the idea they would find intelligent
+life on Mars, until they got there. Then they discovered that
+intelligent creatures had once lived on the Red Planet. Cities, canals,
+and stuff. But the people who had built the cities and canals had died
+of starvation long before humans got to Mars. So it isn't a good bet
+that we shall find intelligence here."</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>The astronomer's face drooped a little. But not for long. "That was true
+of Mars," he said. "But it isn't necessarily true here. And even if Mars
+was dead, Venus wasn't. Nor is Earth. If there is life on two of the
+planets of our own solar system, there may be life on one of the planets
+of Vega. Why not?" he challenged.</p>
+
+<p>"Hey, wait a minute," Hargraves answered. "I'm not trying to start an
+argument."</p>
+
+<p>"Why not?"</p>
+
+<p>"If you mean why not an argument&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I mean, why not life here?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know why not," Hargraves shrugged. "For that matter, I don't
+know <i>why</i>, either." He looked closely at Ron Val. "You ape! I believe
+you're hoping we will find life here."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course that's what I'm hoping," Ron Val answered quickly. "It would
+mean a lot to find people here. We could exchange experiences, learn a
+lot. I know it's probably too much to hope for." He broke off. "Jed, are
+we going to land here?"</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly we're going to land here!" Jed Hargraves said emphatically.
+"Why in the hell do you think we've crossed thirty light years if we
+don't land on a world when we find one? This is an exploring
+expedition&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Hargraves saw that he had no listener. Ron Val had listened only long
+enough to learn what he wanted to know, then had dived back to his
+beloved telescope to watch the world spiraling up through space toward
+them. That world meant a lot to Ron Val, the thrill of discovery, of
+exploring where a human foot had never trod in all the history of the
+universe.</p>
+
+<p>New lands in the sky! The Third Interstellar Expedition&mdash;third because
+two others were winging out across space, one toward Sirius, the other
+toward Cygnus&mdash;was approaching land! The fact also meant something to
+Jed Hargraves, possibly a little less than it did to Ron Val because
+Hargraves had more responsibilities. He was captain of the ship,
+commander of the expedition. It was his duty to take the ship to Vega,
+and to bring it safely home.</p>
+
+<p>Half of his task was done. Vega was bright in the sky ahead and the
+tough bubble of steel and quartz that was the ship was dropping down to
+rest on one of Vega's planets. Hargraves started to leave the nook that
+housed Ron Val and his telescope.</p>
+
+<p>The ship's loudspeaker system shouted with sudden sound.</p>
+
+<p>"Jed! Jed Hargraves! Come to the bridge at once."</p>
+
+<p>That was Red Nielson's voice. He was speaking from the control room in
+the nose of the ship. Nielson sounded excited.</p>
+
+<p>Hargraves pushed a button under the loudspeaker. The system was two-way,
+allowing for intercommunication.</p>
+
+<p>"Hargraves speaking. What's wrong?"</p>
+
+<p>"A ship is approaching. It is coming straight toward us."</p>
+
+<p>"A ship! Are you out of your head? This is Vega."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't give a damn if it's Brooklyn! I know a space ship when I see
+one. And this is one. Either get up here and take command or tell me
+what you want done."</p>
+
+<p>Discipline among the personnel of this expedition was so nearly perfect
+there was no need for it. Consequently there was none. Before leaving
+earth, skilled mental analysts had aided in the selection of this crew,
+and had welded it together so artfully that it thought, acted, and
+functioned as a unit. Jed Hargraves was captain, but he had never heard
+the word spoken, and never wanted to hear it. No one had ever put "sir"
+after his name. Nor had anyone ever questioned an order, after it was
+given. Violent argument there might be, before an order was given, with
+Hargraves filtering the pros and cons through his rigidly logical mind,
+but the instant he reached a decision the argument stopped. He was one
+of the crew, and the crew knew it. The crew was one with him, and he
+knew it.</p>
+
+<p>He might question Nielson's facts, once, in surprise. But not twice. If
+Nielson said a ship was approaching, a ship <i>was</i> approaching.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>"I'm coming," Hargraves rapped into the mike. "Turn full power into the
+defense screen. Warn the engine room to be ready for an emergency. Sound
+the call to stations. And Red, hold us away from this planet."</p>
+
+<p>Almost before he had finished speaking, a siren was wailing through the
+ship. Although he had used the microphone in the nook that housed the
+telescope, Ron Val had been so interested in the world they were
+approaching that he had not heard the captain's orders. He heard the
+siren.</p>
+
+<p>"What is it, Jed?"</p>
+
+<p>Hargraves didn't have time to explain. He was diving out the door and
+racing toward the bridge in the nose of the ship. "Come on," he flung
+back over his shoulder at Ron Val. "Your post is at the fore negatron."</p>
+
+<p>Ron Val took one despairing glance at his telescope, then followed the
+commander.</p>
+
+<p>As he ran toward the control room, Hargraves heard the ship begin to
+radiate a new tempo of sound. The siren was dying into silence, its
+warning task finished. Other sounds were taking its place. From the
+engine room in the stern was coming a spiteful hiss, like steam escaping
+under great pressure from a tiny vent valve. That was the twin atomics,
+loading up, building up the inconceivable pressures they would feed to
+the Kruchek drivers. A slight rumble went through the ship, a rumble
+seemingly radiated from every molecule, from every atom, in the vessel.
+It <i>was</i> radiated from every molecule! That rumble came from the Kruchek
+drivers warping the ship in response to the controls on the bridge. Bill
+Kruchek's going-faster-than-hell engines, engineers called them. A
+fellow by the name of Bill Kruchek had invented them. When Bill
+Krucheck's going-faster-than-hell drivers dug their toes into the
+lattice of space and put brawny shoulders behind every molecule within
+the field they generated, a ship within that field went faster than
+light. The Kruchek drivers, given the juice they needed in such
+tremendous quantities, took you from hell to yonder in a mighty hurry.
+They had been idling, drifting the ship slowly in toward the planet.
+Now, in response to an impulse from Nielson on the bridge, they
+grumbled, and hunching mighty shoulders for the load, prepared to hurl
+the ship away from the planet. Hargraves could feel the vessel surge in
+response to the speed. Then there was a distant thud, and he could feel
+the surge no longer. The anti-accelerators had been cut in, neutralizing
+the effect of inertia.</p>
+
+<p>Shoving open a heavy door, Hargraves was in the control room. A glance
+showed him Nielson on the bridge. Leaning over, his fingers on the bank
+of buttons that controlled the ship, he was peering through the heavy
+quartzite observation port at something approaching from the right.
+Beside him, on his right, a man was standing ready at the radio panel.
+And to the left of the bridge two men had already jerked the covers from
+the negatron and were standing ready beside it.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>Ron Val leaped past Hargraves, dived for a seat on the negatron. That
+was his post. He had been chosen for it because of his familiarity with
+optical instruments. Along the top of the negatron was a sighting
+telescope. Ron Val looked once to see where the man on the bridge was
+looking, then his fingers flew to the adjusting levers of the telescope.
+The negatron swung around to the right, centered on something there.</p>
+
+<p>"Ready," Ron Val said, not taking his eyes from the 'scope.</p>
+
+<p>"Hold your fire," Hargraves ordered.</p>
+
+<p>He was on the bridge, standing beside Red Nielson. Off to the right he
+could see the enemy ship. Odd that he should think of it as an enemy. It
+wasn't. It was merely a strange ship. But there were relics in his mind,
+vague racial memories, of the days when stranger and enemy were
+synonymous. The times when this was true were gone forever, but the
+thoughts remained.</p>
+
+<p>"Shall we run for it?" Nielson questioned, his hands on the controls
+that would turn full power into the drivers.</p>
+
+<p>"No. If we run, they will think we have some reason for running. That
+might be all they would need to conclude we are up to no good. Is the
+defense screen on full power?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes." Nielson pushed the lever again to be sure. "I'm giving it all it
+will take."</p>
+
+<p>Hargraves could barely see the screen out there a half mile from the
+ship. It was twinkling dimly as it swept up cosmic dust.<a name="FNanchor_1_1" id="FNanchor_1_1"></a><a href="#Footnote_1_1" class="fnanchor">[1]</a></p>
+
+<p>The oncoming ship had been a dot in the sky. Now it was a round ball.</p>
+
+<p>"Try them on the radio," Hargraves said. "They probably won't understand
+us but at least they will know we're trying to communicate with them."</p>
+
+<p>There was a swirl of action at the radio panel.</p>
+
+<p>"No answer," the radio operator said.</p>
+
+<p>"Keep trying."</p>
+
+<p>"Look!" Nielson shouted. "They've changed course. They're coming
+straight toward us."</p>
+
+<p>The ball had bobbled in its smooth flight. As though caught in the
+attraction of a magnet it was coming straight toward them.</p>
+
+<p>For an instant, Hargraves stared. Should he run or should he wait? He
+didn't want to run and he didn't want to fight. On the other hand, he
+did not want to take chances with the safety of the men under his
+command.</p>
+
+<p>His mission was peaceful. Entirely so. But the ball was driving straight
+toward them. How big it was he could not estimate. It wasn't very big.
+Oddly, it presented a completely blank surface. No ports. And, so far as
+he could tell, there was no discharge from driving engines. The latter
+meant nothing. Their own ship showed no discharge from the Kruchek
+drivers. But no ports&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>It came so fast he couldn't see it come. The flash of light! It came
+from the ball. For the fractional part of a second, the defense screen
+twinkled where the flash of light hit it. But&mdash;the defense screen was
+not designed to turn light or any other form of radiation. The light
+came through. It wasn't light. It carried a component of visible
+radiation but it wasn't light. The beam struck the earth ship.</p>
+
+<p><i>Clang!</i></p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>From the stern came a sudden scream of tortured metal. The ship rocked,
+careened, tried to spin on its axis. On the control panels, a dozen red
+lights flashed, winked off, winked on again. Heavy thuds echoed through
+the vessel. Emergency compartments closing.</p>
+
+<p>Hargraves hesitated no longer.</p>
+
+<p>"Full speed ahead!" he shouted at Red Nielson.</p>
+
+<p>"Ron Val. Fire!"</p>
+
+<p>This was an attack. This was a savage, vicious attack, delivered without
+warning, with no attempt to parley. The ship had been hit. How badly it
+had been damaged he did not know. But unless the damage was too heavy
+they could outrun this ball, flash away from it faster than light,
+disappear in the sky, vanish. The ship had legs to run. There was no
+limit to her speed. She could go fast, then she could go faster.</p>
+
+<p>"Full speed&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Nielson looked up from the bank of buttons. His face was ashen. "She
+doesn't respond, Jed. The drivers are off. The engine room is knocked
+out."</p>
+
+<p>There was no rumble from Bill Kruchek's going-faster-than-hell engines.
+The hiss of the atomics was still faintly audible. Short of
+annihilation, nothing could knock them out. Energy was being generated
+but it wasn't getting to the drive. Leaping to the controls, Hargraves
+tried them himself.</p>
+
+<p>They didn't respond.</p>
+
+<p>"Engine room!" he shouted into the communication system.</p>
+
+<p>There was no answer.</p>
+
+<p>The ship began to yaw, to drop away toward the planet below them. The
+planet was far distant as yet, but the grasping fingers of its gravity
+were reaching toward the vessel, pulling it down.</p>
+
+<p>Voices shouted within the ship.</p>
+
+<p>"Jed!"</p>
+
+<p>"What happened?"</p>
+
+<p>"Jed, we're falling!"</p>
+
+<p>"That ball, Jed&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Voices calling to Jed Hargraves, asking him what to do. He couldn't
+answer. There was no answer. There was only&mdash;the ball! It was the
+answer.</p>
+
+<p>Through the observation port, he could see the circular ship. It was
+getting ready to attack again. The sphere was moving leisurely toward
+its already crippled prey, getting ready to deliver the final stroke. It
+would answer all questions of this crew, answer them unmistakably. It
+leered at them.</p>
+
+<p><i>Wham!</i></p>
+
+<p>The ship vibrated to a sudden gust of sound. Something lashed out from
+the vessel. Hargraves did not see it go because it, too, went faster
+than the eye could follow. But he knew what it was. The sound told him.
+He saw the hole appear in the sphere. A round hole that opened inward.
+Dust puffed outward.</p>
+
+<p><i>Wham, wham, wham!</i></p>
+
+<p>The negatron! The blood brother of the defense screen, its energies
+concentrated into a pencil of radiation. Faster than anyone could see it
+happen, three more holes appeared in the sphere, driving through its
+outer shell, punching into the machinery at its heart.</p>
+
+<p>The sphere shuddered under the impact. It turned. Light spewed out of
+it, beaming viciously into this alien sky without direction. Smoke
+boiled from the ball. Turning it seemed to roll along the sky. It looked
+like a huge burning snowball rolling down some vast hill.</p>
+
+<p>Ron Val lifted a white face from the sighting 'scope of the negatron.</p>
+
+<p>"Did&mdash;did I get him?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'll say you did!" Hargraves heard somebody shout exultantly. He was
+surprised to discover his own voice was doing the shouting. The sphere
+was finished, done for. It was out of the fight, rolling down the vast
+hill of the sky, it would smash on the planet below.</p>
+
+<p>They were following it.</p>
+
+<p>There was still no answer from the engine room.</p>
+
+<p>"Space suits!" Hargraves ordered. "Nielson, you stay here. Ron Val, you
+others, come with me."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_II" id="CHAPTER_II"></a>CHAPTER II</h2>
+
+<h3>Vegan World</h3>
+
+
+<p>The engine room was crammed to the roof with machinery. The bulked
+housings of the atomics, their heavy screens shutting off the deadly
+radiations generated in the heart of energy seething within the twin
+domes, were at the front. They looked like two blast furnaces that had
+somehow wandered into a space ship by mistake and hadn't been able to
+find their way out again. The fires of hell, hotter than any blast
+furnace had ever been, seethed within them.</p>
+
+<p>Behind the atomics were the Kruchek drivers, twin brawny giants chained
+to the treadmill they pushed through the skies. Silent now. Not
+grumbling at their task. Loafing. Like lazy slaves conscious of their
+power, they worked only when the lash was on them.</p>
+
+<p>Between the drivers was the control panel. Ninety-nine percent
+automatic, those controls. They needed little human attention, and got
+little. There were never more than three men on duty here. This engine
+room almost operated itself.</p>
+
+<p>It had ceased to operate itself, Jed Hargraves saw, as he forced open
+the last stubborn air-tight door separating the engine room from the
+rest of the ship. Ceased because&mdash;Involuntarily he cried out.</p>
+
+<p>He could see the sky.</p>
+
+<p>A great V-shaped notch straddled the back of the ship. Something,
+striking high on the curve of the hull, had driven through inches of
+magna steel, biting a gigantic chunk out of the ship. The beam from the
+sphere! That flashing streak of light that had driven through the
+defense screen. It had struck here.</p>
+
+<p>"Jed! They're dead!"</p>
+
+<p>That was Ron Val's voice, choking over the radio. One of the men in this
+engine room had been Hal Sarkoff, a black-browed giant from somewhere in
+Montana. Engines had behaved for Sarkoff. Intuitively he had seemed to
+know mechanics.</p>
+
+<p>He and Ron Val had been particular friends.</p>
+
+<p>"The air went," Hargraves said. "When that hole was knocked in the hull,
+the air went. The automatic doors blocked off the rest of the ship. The
+poor devils&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>The air had gone and the cold had come. He could see Sarkoff's body
+lying beside one of the drivers. The two other men were across the room.
+A door to the stern compartment was there. They were crumpled against
+it.</p>
+
+<p>Hargraves winced with pain. He should have ordered everyone into space
+suits. The instant Nielson reported the approach of the sphere,
+Hargraves should have shouted, "Space suits" into the mike. He hadn't.</p>
+
+<p>The receiver in his space suit crisped with sound.</p>
+
+<p>"Jed! Have you got into that engine room yet? For cripes sake, Jed,
+we're falling."</p>
+
+<p>That was Nielson, on the bridge. He sounded frantic.</p>
+
+<p>Sixteen feet the first second, then thirty-two, then sixty-four. They
+had miles to fall, but their rate of fall progressed geometrically. They
+had spent many minutes fighting their way through the air tight doors.
+One hundred and twenty-eight feet the fourth second. Jed's mind was
+racing.</p>
+
+<p>No, by thunder, that was acceleration under an earth gravity. They
+didn't know the gravity here. It might be less.</p>
+
+<p>It might be more.</p>
+
+<p>Ron Val had run forward and was kneeling beside Sarkoff.</p>
+
+<p>"Let them go," Hargraves said roughly. "Ron Val, you check the drivers.
+You&mdash;" Swiftly he assigned them tasks, reserving the control panel for
+himself.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>They were specialists. Noble, the blond youth, frantically examining the
+atomics, was a bio-chemist. Ushur, the powerfully built man who had
+stood at Ron Val's right hand on the negatron, was an archeologist.</p>
+
+<p>They were engineers now. They had to be.</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing seems to be wrong here." That was Ron Val, from the drivers.</p>
+
+<p>"The atomics are working." That was Noble reporting.</p>
+
+<p>"Then what the hell is wrong?" At the control panel, Hargraves saw what
+was wrong. The damned controls were automatic, with temperature and air
+pressure cut-offs. When the air had gone from the engine room, that
+meant something was wrong. The controls had automatically cut off the
+drivers. The ship had stopped moving.</p>
+
+<p>A manual control was provided. Hargraves shoved the switch home. An
+oil-immersed control thudded. The loafing giants grunted as the lash
+struck them, roared with pain as they got hastily to work on their
+treadmill.</p>
+
+<p>The ship moved forward.</p>
+
+<p>"We're moving!" That was Red Nielson shouting. The controls on the
+bridge were responding now. "I'm going to burn a hole in space getting
+us away from here."</p>
+
+<p>"No!" said Hargraves.</p>
+
+<p>"What?" There was incredulous doubt in Nielson's voice. "That damned
+sphere came from this planet."</p>
+
+<p>"Can't help it. We've got to land."</p>
+
+<p>"Land here, now!"</p>
+
+<p>"There's a hole as big as the side of a house in the ship. No air in the
+engine room. Without air, we can't control the temperature. If we go
+into space, the engine room temperature will drop almost to absolute
+zero. These drivers are not designed to work in that temperature, and
+they won't work in it. We have to land and repair the ship before we
+dare go into space."</p>
+
+<p>"But&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"We land here!"</p>
+
+<p>There was a split second of silence. "Okay, Jed," Nielson said. "But if
+we run into another of those spheres&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"We'll know what to do about it. Ron Val. Ushur. Back to the bridge and
+man the negatron. If you see anything that even looks suspicious, beam
+it."</p>
+
+<p>Ron Val and Usher dived through the door that led forward.</p>
+
+<p>"Stern observation post. Are you alive back there?"</p>
+
+<p>"We heard you, Jed. We're alive all right."</p>
+
+<p>Back of the engine room, tucked away in the stern, was another negatron.</p>
+
+<p>"Shoot on sight!" Hargraves said.</p>
+
+<p>The Third Interstellar Expedition was coming in to land&mdash;with her fangs
+bared.</p>
+
+<p>Jed Hargraves called a volunteer to hold the switch&mdash;it had to be held
+in by hand, otherwise it would automatically kick out again&mdash;and went
+forward to the bridge. Red Nielson gladly relinquished the controls to
+him.</p>
+
+<p>"The sphere crashed over there," Nielson said, waving vaguely to the
+right.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>Not until he stepped on the bridge did Jed Hargraves realize how close a
+call they had had. The fight had started well outside the upper limits
+of the atmosphere. They were well inside it now. Another few minutes and
+they would have screamed to a flaming crash here on this world and the
+Third Interstellar Expedition would have accomplished only half its
+mission, the least important half.</p>
+
+<p>He shoved the nose of the ship down, the giants working eagerly at their
+treadmill now, as if they realized they had been caught loafing on the
+job and were trying to make amends. The planet swam up toward them. He
+barely heard the voice of Noble reporting a chemical test of the air
+that was now swirling around the ship. "&mdash;oxygen, so much; water vapor;
+nitrogen&mdash;" The air was breathable. They would not have to attempt
+repairs in space suits, then.</p>
+
+<p>Abruptly, as they dropped lower, the contour of the planet seemed to
+change from the shape of a ball to the shape of a cup. The eyes did
+that. The eyes were tricky. But Jed knew his eyes were not tricking him
+when they brought him impressions of the surface below them.</p>
+
+<p>A gently rolling world sweeping away into the distance, moving league
+after league into dim infinities, appeared before his eyes. No
+mountains, no hills, even. Gentle slopes rolling slowly downward into
+plains. No large rivers. Small streams winding among trees. Almost
+immediately below them was one of the lakes Ron Val had seen through
+his telescope. The lake was alive with blue light reflected from
+the&mdash;No, the light came from Vega, not Sol. They were light years away
+from the warming rays of the friendly sun.</p>
+
+<p>Jed lowered the ship until she barely cleared the ground, sent her
+slowly forward seeking what he wanted. There was a grove of giant trees
+beside the lake. Overhead their foliage closed in an arch that would cut
+out the sight of the sky. This was what he wanted. He turned the ship
+around.</p>
+
+<p>"Hey!" said Nielson.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm going to back her out of sight among those trees," Hargraves
+answered. "I'm hunting a hole to hide in while we lie up and lick our
+wounds."</p>
+
+<p>Overhead, boughs crashed as the ship slid out of sight. Gently he
+relaxed the controls, let her drop an inch at a time until she rested on
+the ground. Then he opened the switches, and grunting with relief, the
+giants laid themselves down on their treadmill and promptly went to
+sleep. For the first time in months the ship was silent.</p>
+
+<p>"Negatron crews remain at your posts. I'm going to take a look."</p>
+
+<p>The lock hissed as it opened before him. Hargraves, Nielson, Noble,
+stepped out, the captain going first. The ground was only a couple of
+feet away but he lowered himself to it with the precise caution that a
+twenty-foot jump would have necessitated. He was not unaware of the
+implications of this moment. His was the first human foot to tread the
+soil of a planet circling Vega. The great-grand-children of his
+great-grand-children would tell their sons about this.</p>
+
+<p>The soil was springy under his feet, possessing an elasticity that he
+had not remembered as natural with turf. Opening his helmet, he sniffed
+the air. It was cool and alive with a heady fragrance that came from
+growing vegetation, a quality the ship's synthesizers, for all the
+ingenuity incorporated in them, could not duplicate. Tasting the air,
+the cells of his lungs eagerly shouted for more. He sucked it in, and
+the tensions that kept his body all steel springs and whipcord relaxed a
+little. A breeze stirred among the trees.</p>
+
+<p>"Sweet Pete!" he gasped.</p>
+
+<p>"That's what I was trying to tell you as we landed," Nielson said. "This
+is not a forest. This is a grove. These trees didn't just grow here in
+straight orderly lines. They were <i>planted</i>! We are hiding in what may
+be the equivalent of somebody's apple orchard."</p>
+
+<p>The trees were giants. Twenty feet through at the butt, they rose a
+hundred feet into the air. Diminishing in the distance, they moved in
+regular rows down to the shore of the lake, forming a pleasant grove
+miles in extent. A reddish fruit, not unlike apples, grew on them.</p>
+
+<p>If this was an orchard, where was the owner?</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_III" id="CHAPTER_III"></a>CHAPTER III</h2>
+
+<h3>The Four Visitors</h3>
+
+
+<p>"Somebody coming!" the lookout called.</p>
+
+<p>Jed Hargraves dropped the shovel. Behind him the hiss of an electric
+cutting torch and the whang of a heavy hammer went into sudden silence.
+Back there, a hundreds yards away, they had already begun work on the
+ship, attempting to repair the hole gouged in the stout magna steel of
+the hull. They had heard the call of the lookout and were dropping tools
+to pick up weapons. Jed's hand slid down to his belt to the compact
+vibration pistol holstered there. He pulled the gun, held it ready in
+his hand. Ron Val and Nielson did the same.</p>
+
+<p>Vega, slanting downward, was near the western horizon. The grove was a
+mass of shadows. Through the shadows something was coming.</p>
+
+<p>"They're human!" Ron Val gasped.</p>
+
+<p>Hargraves said nothing. His fingers tightened around the butt of the
+pistol as he waited. He saw them clearly now. There were four of them.
+They looked like&mdash;old men. Four tribal gray-beards out for a stroll in
+the cool of the late afternoon. Each carried a staff. They were walking
+toward the ship. Then they saw the little group that stood apart and
+turned toward them.</p>
+
+<p>"The teletron. Will you go get it, please, Ron Val?"</p>
+
+<p>Nodding, the astro-navigator ran back to the ship. The teletron was a
+new gadget, invented just before the expedition left earth. Far from
+perfection as yet, it was intended to aid in establishing telepathic
+communication between persons who had no common language. Sometimes it
+worked, a little. More often it didn't. But it might be useful here. Ron
+Val was panting when he returned with it.</p>
+
+<p>"Are you going to talk to them, Jed?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm going to try."</p>
+
+<p>The four figures approached. Hargraves smiled. That was to show his good
+intentions. A smile ought to be common language everywhere.</p>
+
+<p>The four strangers did not return his smile. They just stopped and
+looked at him with no trace of emotion on their faces.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/illus1.jpg" alt=""/>
+</div>
+
+<h3>What strange thing was this? Who were these people and
+what was their power?</h3>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p>They looked human. They weren't, of course. Parallel evolution accounted
+for the resemblance, like causes producing like results.</p>
+
+<p>Nielson was watching them like a hawk. Without making an aggressive
+move, the way he held his gun showed he was ready to go into action at a
+moment's notice. Behind them, the ship was silent, its crew alert.
+Hargraves bent to manipulate the complicated tuning of the teletron.</p>
+
+<p>"I am Thulon," a voice whispered in his brain. "No need for that."</p>
+
+<p>Jed Hargraves' leaped to his feet. He caught startled glances from Ron
+Val and Nielson and knew they had heard and understood too. Understood,
+rather. There had been nothing for the ears to hear.</p>
+
+<p>"Thulon! No need for&mdash;<i>I understood you without</i>&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Thulon smiled. He was taller than the average human, and very slender.
+"We are natural telepaths. So there is no need to use your instrument."</p>
+
+<p>"Uh? Natural telepaths! Well, I'm damned!"</p>
+
+<p>"Damned? I cannot quite grasp the meaning of the word. Your mind is
+radiating on an emotional level. Do you wish to indicate surprise? I
+cannot grasp your thinking."</p>
+
+<p>Hargraves choked, fought for control of his mind. For a minute it had
+run away with him. He brought it to heel.</p>
+
+<p>"What are you doing here?" Thulon asked.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>Hargraves blinked at the directness of the question. They certainly
+wasted no time getting down to business. "We&mdash;" He caught himself. No
+telling how much they could take directly from his mind!</p>
+
+<p>"We came from&mdash;far away." He tried to force his thoughts into narrow
+channels. "We&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"There is no need to be afraid." Thulon smiled gently. Or was there
+wiliness in that smile? Was this stranger attempting to lure him into a
+feeling of false security?</p>
+
+<p>"I meant, what are you doing <i>here</i>?" Thulon continued. His eyes went
+down to the ground.</p>
+
+<p>There was only one shovel on the ground. One shovel was all there had
+been in the ship. Thulon's glance went to it, went on.</p>
+
+<p>There were three mounds. The soft mould had dug easily. It had all been
+patted back into place. On the middle mound Ron Val had finished placing
+a small cross that he had hastily improvised from the ship's stores.
+Scratched in the metal was a name: Hal Sarkoff.</p>
+
+<p>"We had an outbreak of buboes," Hargraves said. "That's a disease. Three
+of our companions died and we landed here to bury them. We had just
+finished doing this when you arrived."</p>
+
+<p>"Died! Three of you died? And you hid them under these mounds?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. Of course. There was nothing else we could&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"You are going to leave them here in the ground!"</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly." Hargraves was wondering if this method of disposing of the
+dead violated some tribal taboo of this people. Different races disposed
+of their dead in different ways. He did not know the customs of the
+inhabitants of this world. "If we have offended against your customs, we
+are sorry."</p>
+
+<p>"No. There was no offense." Thulon blanketed his thoughts. Hargraves
+could almost feel the blanket slip into place.</p>
+
+<p>"You came in that ship?" Thulon pointed toward the vessel.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes." It was impossible to conceal this fact.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah." Thulon hesitated, seemed to grope through his mind for the exact
+shade of expression he wished to convey. Hargraves was aware that the
+stranger's eyes probed through him, measured him. "It would interest us
+to examine the vessel. Would you permit this?"</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly." Hargraves knew that Red Nielson jerked startled eyes toward
+him.</p>
+
+<p>"Jed!" Nielson spoke in protest.</p>
+
+<p>"Shut up!" Hargraves snapped. His body and his mind was a mass of
+tightly wound springs but his face was calm and his voice was suave. He
+turned to Thulon. "I will be glad to take you through our ship. However,
+I do not recommend it."</p>
+
+<p>"No?"</p>
+
+<p>"It might be dangerous, for you and your companions. We have had three
+cases of buboes, resulting in three deaths. All of us have had shots of
+immunizing serum and we hope we will have no more cases. However, the
+germs are unquestionably present in the atmosphere of the ship. Since
+you probably have no immunity to the disease, to breathe the tainted air
+would almost certainly result in an attack. This disease is fatal in
+nine cases out of ten. I therefore suggest you do not enter the ship. In
+fact," Hargraves concluded, "I was about to say that it might not be
+wise for you and your companions even to come near us, because of the
+possibility that you might contract the disease."</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>Had he gotten the story over it? Was it convincing? Out of the corner of
+his eyes he saw Ron Val glance at him. When he had said their companions
+had died of buboes, Ron Val had looked as if he thought he was out of
+his mind. Now Ron Val understood. "Good going, Jed," his glance seemed
+to say.</p>
+
+<p>"Hargraves&mdash;" This was Nielson speaking. His face was black.</p>
+
+<p>"I suggest," said Jed casually, "that you let me handle this."</p>
+
+<p>Nielson gulped. "Yes. Yes, sir," he said.</p>
+
+<p>Thulon's companions had been paying attention to the conversation. But
+all the time they were stealing glances at the ship. With half their
+minds, they seemed to be listening to what was being said. But the other
+half of their minds was interested in that silent ship hidden under the
+trees. Were they merely curious, such as any savage might be? Or was
+this group making a reconnaissance? Hargraves did not know. It did not
+look like a reconnaissance in force.</p>
+
+<p>"Do you really think we might contract this disease?" Thulon asked.</p>
+
+<p>Hargraves shrugged. "I'm not certain. You might not. It would all depend
+on the way your bodies reacted to the organism causing the disease."</p>
+
+<p>"Under such circumstances, you show little consideration for our welfare
+by bringing a plague ship to land here."</p>
+
+<p>"We didn't know you existed. I assure you, however, that if you will
+remain away from the ship until we have an opportunity to disinfect it
+thoroughly, any danger to your people will be very slight. On the other
+hand, if you wish to look our vessel over, to assure yourselves that we
+are not a menace to you&mdash;which we are not&mdash;I shall be glad to take you
+through the ship."</p>
+
+<p>Was he drawing it too fine? He spoke clearly and forcefully. The words,
+of course, would carry no meaning. But the thought that went along with
+them would convey what he wanted to say.</p>
+
+<p>"Ah." The thought came from Thulon. "Perhaps&mdash;" Again the blanket came
+over his mind and Hargraves had the impression Thulon was conferring
+with his companions.</p>
+
+<p>The silent conference ended.</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps," Thulon said. "It would be better if we returned to visit you
+tomorrow, or the day after tomorrow."</p>
+
+<p>He bowed. Without another word he and his silent companions turned and
+began to walk slowly away. Not until he saw the little group slipping
+away into the dusk did Jed realize he had been holding his breath.</p>
+
+<p>"Hargraves!" Nielson's voice was harsh. "Are you going to let them get
+away? You fool! That sphere came from this world. Have you forgotten?"</p>
+
+<p>"I have forgotten nothing, I hope."</p>
+
+<p>"But you offered to take them through the ship! They would have seen how
+badly damaged she is."</p>
+
+<p>"Of course I offered to take them through the ship, then made it
+impossible for them to accept. We can't stick up 'No Trespassing' signs
+here. This is their world. We don't know a damned thing about it, or
+about them. We can't run and we don't want to fight, if we can help it.
+Furthermore, Nielson, I want you to learn to control your tongue.
+Remember that in the future, will you?"</p>
+
+<p>For a second, Nielson glared at him. "Yes, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"All right. Go on back to the ship."</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>Nielson went clumping back toward the vessel. Hargraves turned to Ron
+Val.</p>
+
+<p>"What do you make of it?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know, Jed. There is something about it that I don't like a
+little bit. They can read minds. Maybe that is what I don't like because
+I don't know how to react to it. Jed, it may be that we are in great
+danger here."</p>
+
+<p>"There is little doubt about <i>that</i>," Hargraves answered. "Tonight we
+will stand watches. Tomorrow we will make a reconnaissance of our own."</p>
+
+<p>Dusk came over the grove. Vega hesitated on the horizon as though trying
+to make up its mind, then abruptly took the plunge and dived from sight
+beyond the rim of the world. Night came abruptly, hiding the ship and
+its occupants. In the sky overhead, stars twinkled like the eyes of
+watchful wolves.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_IV" id="CHAPTER_IV"></a>CHAPTER IV</h2>
+
+<h3>The Monster</h3>
+
+
+<p>They blacked out the ship before they moved it, carefully covering each
+port with paper, then showing no lights. Hargraves handled the controls
+himself, slowly turning current into the drivers so their grunting would
+not reveal what was happening.</p>
+
+<p>"Are we going to take her up high for tonight?" Ushur, the archeologist
+asked. "She will fly all right as long as we stay in the atmosphere. We
+would be safer up high, it seems to me."</p>
+
+<p>"Safer from ground attack, yes," Hargraves said thoughtfully. "However,
+I'm afraid we would be more exposed to attack from a ship."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh! That damned sphere. I had forgotten about it."</p>
+
+<p>Hargraves moved the ship less than a mile, carefully hid her among the
+trees. Then he posted guards outside all the ports. He took the first
+watch himself, in the control room. Ron Val was waiting for him there.
+The astro-navigator's face was grave. "Jed," he said. "I've been talking
+to several of the fellows. They don't believe you are taking a
+sufficiently realistic view of our situation. They don't believe you are
+facing the facts."</p>
+
+<p>"Um. What facts have I been evading?"</p>
+
+<p>"You apparently don't realize that it will take months&mdash;if it can be
+done at all&mdash;to repair the damage to the ship."</p>
+
+<p>Hargraves settled deep into his chair. He looked at the astro-navigator.
+Ron Val wasn't angry. Nor was he mutinous. He wasn't challenging
+authority. He was just scared.</p>
+
+<p>"Ron," he said, "according to the agreement under which we sailed, any
+time the majority of the members of this expedition wants a new captain,
+they can have him."</p>
+
+<p>"It isn't that."</p>
+
+<p>"I know. You fellows are scared. Hells bells, man! What do you think I
+am?"</p>
+
+<p>Ron Val's eyes popped open. "Jed! Are you? You don't show it. You don't
+seem even to appreciate the spot we're in."</p>
+
+<p>Hargraves slowly lit a cigarette. The fingers holding the tiny lighter
+did not shake. "If I had been the type to show it, do you think I would
+have been selected to head this expedition?"</p>
+
+<p>"No. But&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Because I haven't made an official announcement that we may not be able
+to repair the ship, you seem to think I don't realize the fact. I know
+how big a hole has been ripped in our hull. I know the ship is made of
+magna steel, the toughest, hardest, most beautiful metal yet invented. I
+know the odds are we can't repair the hole in the hull. We don't have
+the metal. We don't have the tools to work it. I know these things. When
+I didn't call it to your attention, I assumed it was equally obvious to
+everyone else that we may never leave this planet."</p>
+
+<p>"Jed! Never leave this planet! Never&mdash;go home! That can't be right."</p>
+
+<p>"See," said Hargraves. "When you get the truth flung in your face, even
+you crack wide open. Yes, it's the truth. The fact you fellows think I'm
+not facing&mdash;the one you don't dare face&mdash;is that we may be marooned here
+for the rest of our lives."</p>
+
+<p>That was that. Ron Val went aft. Hargraves took up his vigil on the
+bridge. At midnight Ron Val came forward to relieve him.</p>
+
+<p>"I told them what you said, Jed," the astro-navigator said. "We're back
+of you one hundred per cent."</p>
+
+<p>Hargraves grinned a little. "Thanks," he said. "We were selected to work
+together as a unit. As long as we remain a unit, we will have a chance
+against any enemy."</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>Dog-tired, he went to his bunk and rolled in. It seemed to him he had
+barely closed his eyes before a hand grabbed him by the shoulder and a
+shaken voice shouted in his ear. "Jed! Wake up."</p>
+
+<p>"Who is it? What's wrong?" The room was dark and he couldn't see who was
+shaking him.</p>
+
+<p>"Ron Val." The astro-navigator's voice was hoarse with the maddest,
+wildest fright Hargraves had ever heard. "The&mdash;the damnedest thing has
+happened!"</p>
+
+<p>"What?"</p>
+
+<p>"Hal Sarkoff&mdash;" That was as far as Ron Val could get.</p>
+
+<p>"What about him?"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>He's outside trying to get in!</i>"</p>
+
+<p>"Have you gone insane? Sarkoff is dead. You helped me bury him."</p>
+
+<p>"I know it. Jed, he's outside. He wants in."</p>
+
+<p>Hargraves had gone to bed without removing even his shoes. He ran
+forward to the control room, Ron Val pounding behind him. Lights had
+been turned on here, in defiance of orders. Someone had summoned the
+crew. They were all here, all eighteen who remained alive. The inner
+door of the lock was open. A dazed guard, who had been on watch outside
+the lock, was standing in the door. He had a pistol in his hand but he
+looked as if he didn't know what to do with it.</p>
+
+<p>In the center of a group of men too frightened to move was a
+black-haired, rugged giant.</p>
+
+<p>"Sarkoff!" Hargraves gasped.</p>
+
+<p>The giant's head turned until his gaze was centered on the captain. "You
+moved the ship," he said accusingly. "I had the damnedest time finding
+it in the dark. What did you move the ship for, Jed?"</p>
+
+<p>If some super-magician had cast a spell over the little group he could
+not have produced a more complete stasis. No one moved. No one seemed to
+breathe. All motion, all action, all thinking, had stopped.</p>
+
+<p>Sarkoff's face went from face to face.</p>
+
+<p>"What the heck is the matter with you guys?" he demanded. "Am I poison,
+or something?"</p>
+
+<p>He seemed bewildered.</p>
+
+<p>"Where&mdash;where are the others?" Ron Val stammered.</p>
+
+<p>"What others? What the heck are you talking about, Ron?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nevins and Reese. We&mdash;we buried them with you. Where are they?"</p>
+
+<p>"How the hell do I kn&mdash;&mdash;<i>You buried them with me?</i>" Sarkoff's face went
+from bewilderment to inexplicable good nature. "Trying to pull my leg,
+huh? Okay. I can go along with a gag." He looked again at Hargraves.
+"But I can't go along with that gag of moving the ship after you sent me
+out scouting. Why didn't you wait for me? Wandering around among all
+these trees, I might have got lost and got myself killed. Why did you do
+that, Jed?" he finished angrily.</p>
+
+<p>"We were&mdash;ah&mdash;afraid of an attack," Hargraves choked out. "Sorry, Hal,
+but we&mdash;we had to move the ship. We would have&mdash;hunted you up,
+tomorrow."</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>Sarkoff was not a man who was ever long angry about anything. The
+apology satisfied him. He grinned. "Okay, Jed. Forget it. Jeepers! I'm
+so hungry I could eat a cow. How about a couple of those synthetic
+steaks we got in the ice-box?" His eyes went around the group, came to
+rest on the astro-navigator. "How about it, Ron? How about me and you
+fixing us up some chow?"</p>
+
+<p>"Sure," said Hargraves. "Go on back to the galley and start fixing
+yourself whatever you want. You go with him, Ron. I'll handle your job
+up here while you're gone."</p>
+
+<p>Nodding dumbly, Ron Val started to follow Sarkoff toward the galley.
+"One minute," Hargraves called after him. "I want to check something
+with you before you go!"</p>
+
+<p>Sarkoff kept going. Ron Val returned. "Take your cues from him,"
+Hargraves said. "You know him better than anyone else. Whatever he says,
+you agree. Casually bring up past events and watch his reaction. <i>Your
+job is to find out if that is really Hal Sarkoff!</i>"</p>
+
+<p>The astro-navigator, his face white, clumped toward the galley.</p>
+
+<p>Hargraves faced a torrent of questions.</p>
+
+<p>"Jed! We buried him."</p>
+
+<p>"Jed. He had been in that engine room without air for at least ten
+minutes before we got there. He can't be alive."</p>
+
+<p>"No air. Temperature diving toward absolute zero. He was frozen stiff,
+Jed, before we moved him. We left him where he was until long after we
+landed."</p>
+
+<p>"I know," Hargraves said. "There is no doubt about it. I used a
+stethoscope on him as soon as I could get to it after we landed. <i>He was
+dead.</i> There wasn't a sign of life."</p>
+
+<p>Frightened faces looked at him. Awed faces. Bewildered faces.</p>
+
+<p>"What did you mean when you told Ron Val to find out if that is really
+Sarkoff?"</p>
+
+<p>"Just what I said. That may be Sarkoff. It may be something that looks
+like Sarkoff, acts like him, talks like him&mdash;<i>but isn't he</i>!"</p>
+
+<p>"That&mdash;that's impossible."</p>
+
+<p>"How do we know what is possible here and what isn't?"</p>
+
+<p>"What are we going to do?"</p>
+
+<p>"We're going to act just as we would if that were Sarkoff. We're going
+to pick up our cues from him? You remember he said he was out scouting.
+That is his story. We will not question it. We will act as though it
+were true, until we know what is happening. Now everybody back to his
+post. Act as if nothing had happened. And for the love of Pete, don't
+ask me what is going on. I don't know any more than you do."</p>
+
+<p>They didn't want to obey that order. They had just seen a dead man
+walking, had heard him talking, had spoken to him. There was comfort in
+just being with each other. Hargraves walked to the bridge, waited.
+Eventually, discipline sent them back to their posts. He kept on
+waiting. Ron Val returned.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know, Jed. I just don't know. We were in school together. I
+brought up incidents that happened in school, things that only Hal and I
+knew. <i>Jed, he knew them.</i>"</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>With the exception of a hooded blue lamp on the bridge, all lights had
+been turned off again. The control room was in darkness. Ron Val was an
+uneasy shadow talking from dim blackness.</p>
+
+<p>"Then you think that it is really Sarkoff?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know."</p>
+
+<p>"But if he remembers things that only Hal could know&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"He remembers things that he can't know."</p>
+
+<p>"Um. What things?"</p>
+
+<p>"He asked me how much progress had been made in repairing the ship. Jed,
+he must have died before he knew the ship had been damaged."</p>
+
+<p>"Not necessarily," said Hargraves thoughtfully. "He might have been
+conscious for one or two minutes after the beam struck us. He would know
+that the ship had been damaged. What did you tell him?"</p>
+
+<p>"I changed the subject."</p>
+
+<p>"Good for you. If he isn't Sarkoff, the one thing he might want to know
+is whether the ship has been repaired. What else?"</p>
+
+<p>"Jed, he remembers <i>everything</i> that happened after the ship was
+attacked. We almost crashed before we got the engines started. He
+remembers that. He remembers hiding the ship among the trees."</p>
+
+<p>Hargraves stirred. The keen logic of his mind was being blunted by facts
+that would not fit into any logical pattern. He tried to think. His mind
+refused the effort. Dead men ought not to remember things that happened
+after they died. But a dead man had remembered!</p>
+
+<p>For an instant panic walked through the captain's mind. Then he got it
+under control. There was always an answer to every question, a solution
+to every problem. Or was there? He went hunting facts.</p>
+
+<p>"Does he remember being buried?"</p>
+
+<p>Even in the darkness he could feel Ron Val shiver. "No," Ron Val said.
+"He doesn't remember. Just as soon as we landed, he thinks you sent him
+out, to scout the surrounding territory for possible enemies."</p>
+
+<p>"Does he know that we had visitors in his absence?"</p>
+
+<p>"No. Or if he does, he didn't mention it, and I didn't ask. He says he
+was returning when he saw the ship being moved. He says he tried to
+follow, but lost it in the darkness. He says he had the devil's own time
+finding it again, and he's still hot about being left behind."</p>
+
+<p>Again Hargraves had to fight the panic in his mind. This much seemed
+obvious. Sarkoff's memory was accurate&mdash;until the ship landed. Then it
+went into fantasy, into error. If one thing was certain, he had not been
+sent out to scout for enemies. If there was another fact that was
+immutable, he had been buried.</p>
+
+<p>"Where is he now?" Hargraves asked abruptly.</p>
+
+<p>"In his bunk, snoring. He ate enough for two men, yawned, said he was
+sleepy. He was sound asleep almost as soon as he touched the blankets."</p>
+
+<p>Ron Val's voice relapsed into silence. The whole ship was silent.</p>
+
+<p>"Jed, what are we going to do?"</p>
+
+<p>"You bunk with him, don't you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. Jed! You don't mean&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Hargraves cleared his throat. "This is not an order. You don't have to
+do it if you don't want to. But Sarkoff must be watched. Are you willing
+to go back to the room you two shared together and get into the upper
+deck of your bunk just as if nothing has happened?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Ron Val.</p>
+
+<p>"Somebody must be with him&mdash;all the time. You stay awake. When he gets
+up, you get up. Whatever he does, you stay with him. I'll have you
+relieved as soon as possible. And, Ron&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes."</p>
+
+<p>"You have something a man could use for courage."</p>
+
+<p>Silently, Ron Val walked out of the control room. He fumbled his way
+through the door and his steps echoed down the corridor that led to the
+sleeping quarters.</p>
+
+<p>Hargraves sat in thought. Then he, too, left the control room.</p>
+
+<p>"Noble, you're a bio-chemist. You come with me. Nielson, you take over
+here in the control room. In my absence you are in command."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes sir," Nielson said. "But what are you going to do?"</p>
+
+<p>"See what is in a grave we dug yesterday," Hargraves answered.</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_V" id="CHAPTER_V"></a>CHAPTER V</h2>
+
+<h3>What the Graves Revealed</h3>
+
+
+<p>Hargraves carried the shovel. He and Noble were armed, and very much
+alert.</p>
+
+<p>"When you ask me if it is chemically possible for a man&mdash;or an
+animal&mdash;to freeze, die, be buried, then rise again and live, I cannot
+answer," Noble said. "So far as I know, it is not possible. The physical
+act of freezing will involve tremendous and seemingly irreversible
+changes in the body cells. Thawing will produce almost immediate
+bacterial action, which also seems irreversible. All I can say is, if
+Hal Sarkoff is alive, we have seen a miracle that contradicts chemical
+laws as we know them."</p>
+
+<p>"And if he is not alive, we face a miracle of duplication. Whatever it
+is that is sleeping back in the ship, it looks, talks, acts, like Hal
+Sarkoff, even to memory. Can you suggest any method by which flesh and
+bone could be so speedily moulded into a living image of a man whom we
+know died?"</p>
+
+<p>"No," said Noble bluntly. "Jed, do you realize all the possible
+implications of this situation?"</p>
+
+<p>"Probably not," Hargraves answered. "Some that I do recognize, I exclude
+from my thoughts."</p>
+
+<p>His tone was so harsh that Noble said nothing more.</p>
+
+<p>Dawn was already breaking over this Vegan world. The sky in the east was
+the color of pearl. In the trees over them, creatures that sounded like
+birds were beginning to chirp.</p>
+
+<p>They reached the place where they had buried Hal Sarkoff and his two
+companions.</p>
+
+<p>The graves were empty.</p>
+
+<p>No effort had been made to conceal the fact that the graves had been
+opened. The dirt had been shoveled out again and had not been shoveled
+back.</p>
+
+<p>There were marks in the dirt, the tracks of sandaled feet. "Thulon, the
+three who were with him, wore sandals!" Hargraves rasped. "They came
+back here. They opened these graves."</p>
+
+<p>"But what happened after that? Are you suggesting those primitive
+gray-beards resurrected Hal Sarkoff?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not suggesting anything because I don't know anything," Hargraves
+answered. "I am just remembering that Thulon and the three who were with
+him <i>looked human too</i>! I am also remembering that the sphere which
+attacked us seemingly was without a crew. Our beams blasted it wide
+open. It was seemingly filled with machinery. Nothing else. If there
+were any intelligent creatures in it, they were in no form that we
+recognize. Come on!" Hargraves started running toward the ship.</p>
+
+<p>The ship, badly damaged as it was, represented their sole hope of
+survival. Without it, they would be helpless.</p>
+
+<p>Hal Sarkoff was with the ship. Or the thing that was masquerading as
+Sarkoff. Thulon had looked human too. Possibly Sarkoff and his two dead
+comrades had been removed from their graves in order to make possible a
+perfect duplication of their bodies, the probing of cell structure, both
+body and brain. Perhaps the things that lurked here on this world could
+read memories from dead minds. That might be the explanation of
+Sarkoff's memory.</p>
+
+<p>The important fact was that Sarkoff's body was not in its grave. Where
+so much was unknown, this was one indisputable fact. The thing that was
+on the ship must be placed not only under heavy guard but in a cage from
+which escape was impossible. Then an examination could begin.</p>
+
+<p>There was evil on this world. The trees, the vegetation, the ground
+under his racing feet, was evil. In his calmer moments Jed Hargraves
+would have said that evil was another word for danger. He wasn't calm
+now. The panic he had been rigidly excluding from his mind had burst the
+dam he had built before it. He could feel danger in the air. It was in
+the dawn, in the light of the sky. It was everywhere. He and his
+companions were aliens on this world, and the planet was striking at
+them, striving to eliminate them, contriving to destroy them.</p>
+
+<p>He heard it before he saw it.</p>
+
+<p>Something was grunting in the air. Above the tops of the trees something
+was grunting. He needed seconds to recognize the sound. Then he
+recognized it. And jerked himself to a halt, his eyes wildly probing
+upward.</p>
+
+<p>He saw it.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>The ship. The grunting roar had come from the Kruchek drivers fighting
+the gravity of the planet.</p>
+
+<p>The ship had taken off without them.</p>
+
+<p>Had Nielson gone mad? Had he seen danger approaching and jumped the ship
+into the sky to escape it?</p>
+
+<p>"Wait! Nielson! Pick us up!"</p>
+
+<p>The ship flew on. Gaining speed, it passed over their heads. They caught
+another glimpse of it as it passed over an opening in the branches of
+the trees. Then it was gone, the throb of the drivers dying quickly
+away.</p>
+
+<p>"Nielson will come back for us." Noble's voice, usually poised and
+assured, was garbled. "He'll return and pick us up. He won't leave us
+here."</p>
+
+<p>"He had some reason for taking off," Hargraves heard himself saying.
+"He'll come back. He has to." Subconsciously he knew that this, at the
+very best, was wishful thinking.</p>
+
+<p>The ship had no more than vanished until another sound came to their
+ears, that of men shouting. A group came into sight among the trees,
+following along the ground the course the ship had taken through the
+air.</p>
+
+<p>"They're our fellows!" Hargraves heard Noble gasp.</p>
+
+<p>"What happened?" the captain demanded, as the group approached.</p>
+
+<p>Nielson was in the lead. There was a bruise on his cheek and his right
+eye was already beginning to turn black. "I'll tell you what happened!"
+he said savagely. "Sarkoff and Ron Val took over the ship, that's what
+happened!"</p>
+
+<p>"Ron Val!"</p>
+
+<p>"That's what I said. Ron Val was helping him. They pulled guns. Before
+we knew what was happening, they had herded us together and were shoving
+us outside. I tried to stop it and Sarkoff took a poke at me."</p>
+
+<p>"It wasn't really Sarkoff, then?" Noble whispered.</p>
+
+<p>"Any damned fool would have known that!" Nielson answered. He spoke to
+the bio-chemist but his eyes were on Hargraves. "I'm going to repeat
+that, so there won't be any misunderstanding of my meaning. Any damned
+fool would have known that a dead man doesn't get up out of his grave
+and come to life again. Except you, Hargraves. You always were a sucker
+for fairy stories."</p>
+
+<p>Jed Hargraves winced with every word that was spoken. They kept on
+coming.</p>
+
+<p>"You ought to have known that thing wasn't Hal Sarkoff. Any man in his
+right senses would have known it instantly. Any man fit to command would
+have taken measures to meet the situation, either by destroying that
+thing, or locking it up. But you were running things, Hargraves. You
+were in charge. And you had to sit back and think before you would act.
+You had to make sure you were right, before you went ahead. Your
+negligence, Hargraves, cost us our only chance of ever returning home."</p>
+
+<p>Nielson's voice was harsh with anger. And&mdash;Hargraves recognized the
+bitter truth&mdash;every word Nielson uttered was correct. Whatever the thing
+was that had come to the ship, he should have recognized it as a source
+of danger. He had so recognized it. But he had not acted.</p>
+
+<p>"I&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Shut up!" Nielson snapped. "According to our agreement, any time you
+are shown to be unfit to command, you may be removed by a vote of the
+majority. There is no question but that you have shown yourself unfit to
+be in charge of this expedition."</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>No time was wasted in reaching a decision. To Nielson's question as to
+whether Hargraves should be removed from command, there was a chorus of
+"Ayes."</p>
+
+<p>"No," said one voice. It was Usher, the archeologist.</p>
+
+<p>"State your objection," Nielson rasped.</p>
+
+<p>"The old one about changing horses in mid-stream," the archeologist
+answered. "Also the old one about not jumping to conclusions before all
+the evidence is in."</p>
+
+<p>"What evidence isn't in?"</p>
+
+<p>"We don't know why Ron Val joined Sarkoff," the archeologist answered.</p>
+
+<p>"What difference does that make? We don't even know that Ron Val was
+still himself. The thing that looked like Ron Val might have been
+another monstrosity like Sarkoff."</p>
+
+<p>"So it might," the archeologist shrugged. "Anyhow my vote is not
+important. I'm just putting it in for the sake of the record, if there
+ever is a record. I would also like to mention that if ever we needed
+discipline and unity, now is the time."</p>
+
+<p>"We will have discipline, I promise you," Nielson said. "Hargraves, you
+are removed from command, understand?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Hargraves steadily.</p>
+
+<p>Only one ballot was needed to put Nielson in charge.</p>
+
+<p>"All right," said Ushur to the new captain. "You're the boss now. We're
+all behind you. What are you going to do?"</p>
+
+<p>"Do? I&mdash;" Nielson looked startled. He glanced at Hargraves.</p>
+
+<p>The former captain sighed. It was easy enough to elect a new leader.
+Vehemently he wished that all problems could be solved so easily.</p>
+
+<p>"I suggest," he said, "&mdash;and this is only a suggestion&mdash;that we attempt
+to find the ship, and if possible, to regain possession of her. She is
+the only tool we have to work with."</p>
+
+<p>"That is exactly what I was going to say," Nielson said emphatically.
+"Find the ship."</p>
+
+<p>To give him credit, he set about the job in a workmanlike manner,
+sending two scouts ahead of the main group, throwing out a scout on each
+flank. The only way they could hope to find the ship was by following
+the course it had taken through the air. Since Sarkoff, in taking over
+the vessel, had not disarmed them, each possessed a vibration pistol. In
+a fight against ordinary enemies they would be able to give a good
+account of themselves. But would any enemy they met likely be ordinary?</p>
+
+<p>Hargraves drew Usher aside. "I would like to talk to you," he said.
+"What actually happened when the ship was taken?"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know, Jed," the archeologist ruefully answered. "I was in my
+cabin. The first thing I knew I heard a hell of a hullabaloo going on up
+in the control room. I dashed up there to see what was going on."</p>
+
+<p>"What was happening?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nielson, Rodney, Turner, and a couple of others were there. So
+were&mdash;well, they looked like Sarkoff and Ron Val. Nielson was getting up
+off the floor. Sarkoff and Ron Val had both drawn their guns and were
+covering the group. When I came charging in, Sarkoff covered me. Before
+I could recover from my surprise, he and Ron Val had kicked every one of
+us out of the ship. Then they took off." The archeologist shook his
+shaggy head.</p>
+
+<p>"Ron Val was helping?"</p>
+
+<p>"No question about it. Which means, of course, that he was either under
+some subtle form of hypnosis, or <i>it</i> wasn't Ron Val. I would bet my
+life on his loyalty."</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>"So would I," said Hargraves. And the memory came back of how thrilled
+Ron Val had been at the prospect of landing on this, world. "It would
+mean a lot to find people here. We could exchange experiences, learn a
+lot," Ron Val had said, his face glowing at the thought. All the others
+had felt the same way. The Third Interstellar Expedition had no military
+ambitions. It was not bent on conquest. The solar system had outgrown
+military expeditions, war, and the thought of war, and cruisers went out
+from it not to fight but to learn. Knowledge was the thing they sought,
+all knowledge, so the human race could determine its place in the
+cosmos, could know the history of all things past, could possibly
+forecast the shape of things to come.</p>
+
+<p>The landing of the Third Interstellar Expedition on this Vegan world had
+been a part of a vast evolution, a march that, starting on earth so long
+ago that all history of it was forever lost, was now reaching out across
+the cosmos. A new evolution! Ron Val had always been talking about this
+new evolution. It was one of his favorite subjects.</p>
+
+<p>"What do you make of this world?" Hargraves asked abruptly. "The only
+sign of civilization we have seen is this vast grove. No cities, no
+industrial plants, no evidence of progress. Yet the spherical ship that
+attacked us certainly indicates a highly mechanical civilization. Of
+course there may be cities here that we haven't seen, but as we landed
+we saw a large land area. No roads were visible, no canals, not even any
+cultivated fields. What does all this mean to you, as an archeologist?"</p>
+
+<p>"Nothing," Usher answered promptly. "I would say this country is a
+wilderness. But the trees planted in regular rows disprove this. On
+earth, at least, centuries would be required for trees as large as these
+to grow. Forestry, planned centuries in advance, can only come from a
+high and stable culture. However, as you say, all other signs of this
+high culture are absent, no cities, no transportation facilities,
+apparently damned few inhabitants&mdash;we have seen only four. All
+civilizations with which we are familiar move through recognized stages,
+first the nomadic stage, which involves tending flocks and herds. Then
+comes the tilling of the soil, in which farming is the principal
+occupation of most of the people. After that, with industrialization, we
+have cities developing. If there is another stage we have not reached it
+on earth."</p>
+
+<p>"Do you think they might have reached the final stage here?" Hargraves
+questioned.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know what the final stage may be," the archeologist answered.
+"Also, and this is more important, I can't begin to guess at the real
+nature of the inhabitants of this world. Until I do know their real
+nature, what they look like, what they eat, where they sleep, what they
+think, I can't even guess intelligently about them. However," Usher
+broke off with a wry grin, "all these philosophical observations are of
+no importance while our own necks are threatened with the ax."</p>
+
+<p>Vega was straight overhead when they found the ship. One of the advance
+scouts came hurrying back with the information.</p>
+
+<p>"She is lying in a little meadow beside the lake," the scout reported.
+"They're doing something to her. I can't tell what. But the trees extend
+to within fifty yards of her. We can approach that near without being
+seen."</p>
+
+
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<h2><a name="CHAPTER_VI" id="CHAPTER_VI"></a>CHAPTER VI</h2>
+
+<h3>The Capture of the Ship</h3>
+
+
+<p>Nielson made his dispositions with care. The ship lay in a little meadow
+where the trees bent inward from the blue water of the lake to form a
+cove. Her nose was pointed toward the water and her tail was almost in
+the trees. Nielson sent three men on a wide circuit. They were to attack
+from the farther side. It was to be a feint. While the three men drew
+attention to them, the main body was to charge.</p>
+
+<p>"We have every chance of succeeding," Nielson said. "And if we do gain
+the ship again, this time we won't stay here. Vega has at least two
+planets. The ship will fly to the other one without repairs. You should
+have thought of that, Hargraves."</p>
+
+<p>"There are a lot of things I should have thought of and didn't,"
+Hargraves answered. There was no animosity in his tone. "What I would
+like to know is what they are doing there beside the ship?"</p>
+
+<p>Thulon and his three companions were visible beside the vessel. They
+were busily engaged in setting up a device of some kind. Others of their
+species had joined them until there were possibly thirty or forty
+present. Through the the gaping hole in the hull, still others could be
+seen peering out. What they were doing Hargraves could not discern.</p>
+
+<p>"Odd," said Usher beside him.</p>
+
+<p>"What is?"</p>
+
+<p>"It's odd that they should still seem to be human in form," the
+archeologist answered. "Ah. Perhaps there is the reason."</p>
+
+<p>Both locks were open. The thing that looked like Hal Sarkoff had just
+emerged from the nearest one. He went directly to the main group. They
+were erecting something that looked like a tripod. Several were carrying
+pieces of metal from the ship which they were fastening together to form
+the legs of the tripod. At the apex of the tripod something that looked
+like a box was coming into existence.</p>
+
+<p>"They are completely unarmed," Hargraves heard Nielson say. "There isn't
+a weapon in the whole damned bunch. We'll blast them senseless before
+they even know they're being attacked."</p>
+
+<p>"If they don't succeed in manning the negatron," Usher pointed out.</p>
+
+<p>"They don't know how to operate the negatron."</p>
+
+<p>"Don't they? I might mention that they seem to know everything that
+Sarkoff knew. And Hal certainly knew how that negatron operated. He
+could take it apart and put it back together blind-folded."</p>
+
+<p>"That's so," Nielson admitted. For a second unease showed on his lean
+face. "Well, that only means we will have to lick them before they can
+get that negatron into operation. One thing is certain&mdash;we have to have
+the ship."</p>
+
+<p>"You're right on that score," Usher grimly said.</p>
+
+<p>Seconds ticked away into minutes. The group busy about the ship had no
+intimation they were about to be attacked. They were careless to the
+point of foolhardiness. No sentries had been posted, no effort had been
+made to hide the vessel.</p>
+
+<p>"What are they, really?" Hargraves thought. He wondered if they were
+some strange form of water-dwelling life that lived in the lakes of this
+planet. Perhaps that was what they were! Perhaps the transition from the
+fish to the mammal had never been made on this planet, the fish-form
+developing keen intelligence. Certainly there was intelligence on this
+world. But it seemed to be an intelligence humans could not comprehend.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>The signal for the attack sounded. Fierce shouts came from the other
+side of the ship. The shouters were hidden, but there was no mistaking
+the sounds. They came from human throats.</p>
+
+<p>"Give 'em hell, boys!"</p>
+
+<p>"Tear 'em to pieces!"</p>
+
+<p>The harsh throbbing of vibration pistols split the quiet air.</p>
+
+<p>"Steady!" Nielson said. "Wait until they go to see what's happening."</p>
+
+<p>The group busy around the ship raised startled faces from their task.
+They seemed to listen. Then they turned and ran around the bow of the
+vessel.</p>
+
+<p>"Come on!" cried Nielson, leaping from concealment.</p>
+
+<p>There wasn't a person left in sight to oppose them. Fifty yards to
+cross. Fifty yards to the ship! Fifty yards to a fighting chance for
+life!</p>
+
+<p>Under their racing feet the soft turf was soundless.</p>
+
+<p>Twenty-five yards to go now. Ten yards. Ten feet to the open lock.</p>
+
+<p>Thulon appeared in the lock. He looked in surprise at the charging men.</p>
+
+<p>Except for the rough staff that he carried he was weaponless.</p>
+
+<p>Nielson didn't give the command to fire, didn't need to give it. Every
+vibration pistol had been drawn long before the men leaped from cover.
+Every pistol came up at the same instant, every index finger squeezed a
+trigger.</p>
+
+<p>Only Thulon stood between them and a fighting chance for life. They came
+of warrior races, these men. No bugles urged them on. They needed no
+bugles.</p>
+
+<p>A howling vortex of radiation smashed at the figure in the lock.</p>
+
+<p>One vibration pistol would destroy a man, smash him to bloody bits. More
+than a dozen pistols were centered on the figure standing before them.</p>
+
+<p>Thulon stood unharmed.</p>
+
+<p>Staff in front of him he stood facing the fingers of hell reaching for
+him. The flaming fingers grasped, and did not touch him.</p>
+
+<p>The shooting stopped as abruptly as it began. The charge stopped.
+Hargraves saw Nielson staring dazedly from the figure in the lock to the
+pistol in his hand as if the two were irreconcilable. The pistol ought
+to have destroyed Thulon. It hadn't destroyed him. For a mad moment,
+Hargraves felt sorry for the new captain. He, too, had run headlong into
+a logical impossibility.</p>
+
+<p>All sounds were suddenly stilled, all shouting stopped, all noises died
+away.</p>
+
+<p>Around the bow of the ship Hal Sarkoff came running. He saw the group
+and looked bewildered. "Hey! How did you guys get here?"</p>
+
+<p>"Blast him!" Nielson said, centering his pistol on this new target.</p>
+
+<p>From the staff in Thulon's hand came a soft tinkle, a bell-like sound.
+Nothing seemed to happen but Nielson staggered as if he had been hit a
+sharp blow. The pistol flew out of his hand and landed twenty feet away.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>"Listen, you apes," Sarkoff shouted at the top of his voice. "I'm Hal
+Sarkoff. I've always been Hal Sarkoff. I'll never be anybody else but
+Hal Sarkoff. Do you get it?"</p>
+
+<p>They didn't get it.</p>
+
+<p>"If you&mdash;" Nielson whispered. "If you are really Sarkoff, then
+who&mdash;what&mdash;is he?" He pointed toward Thulon still standing in the lock.</p>
+
+<p>"Him?" The grin on the craggy face belonged to Hal Sarkoff and to no one
+else. "Meet a god," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"A god?" That was Usher speaking now, his voice a tense whisper.</p>
+
+<p>Sarkoff continued grinning. "Well, he resurrected me when I was deader
+than hell. I guess that makes him a god."</p>
+
+<p>"You&mdash;you know you were dead?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yep. At least I guess I know it. The last thing I remember is trying to
+get back to the control panel when we got that hole knocked in the ship,
+so I could cut the drivers back in. After that everything gets kind of
+hazy. The next thing I remember is my pal here," he gestured toward
+Thulon, "and a lot of his buddies chirping like sparrows while they
+worked over me. And believe me, they were working me over plenty. I felt
+like I had been turned inside out, wrung out, hung out to dry, then
+stuffed all over again."</p>
+
+<p>"But when you came back to the ship," Hargraves spoke, "you said you
+remembered everything that had happened, the crash of the ship, our
+hiding her. If you were dead, how did you learn these things?"</p>
+
+<p>"He told me," Sarkoff answered, nodding toward Thulon. "He filled out my
+memory for me with dope he had taken from your mind while you were
+talking. Reading minds is one of that old boy's minor accomplishments."</p>
+
+<p>"Then why didn't you tell us the truth?" Hargraves exploded. "You said
+you had been sent out scouting. Why didn't you tell us what had really
+happened?" Mentally he added, "If it happened!"</p>
+
+<p>"Because you apes wouldn't have believed me!" Sarkoff answered. "To your
+knowledge&mdash;mine, too, until it happened&mdash;dead men don't get up out of
+their graves and walk. If I had told you the truth, you wouldn't have
+believed a word of it. If I told you something you knew wasn't true,
+that you had sent me out on a scouting trip, you would know I was lying,
+you would figure it was a trick of some kind, and you would wait around
+and try to discover the trick. While you were waiting around trying to
+catch me, I could get in some missionary work on Ron Val. I knew I could
+convert him, if I had a chance to talk to him. With him on my side, we
+could convince the rest of you. It would have worked too. All it needed
+was a little time for you boys to get used to the idea of a dead man
+coming back to life." He looked at Nielson. "Remind me to black that
+other eye of yours one of these days."</p>
+
+<p>"What?" said Hargraves. "What's this?"</p>
+
+<p>"Our pal Nielson," Sarkoff said. "If <i>you</i> think before you act, <i>he</i>
+acts before he thinks. You had no sooner gone chasing off to see if I
+was really where you had buried me, which was what I thought you would
+do, until Nielson comes poking into where Ron Val and I were holding a
+conference. Nielson had a gun. He had it out ready to use. He figured
+the only safe thing to do was to shoot me. So," Sarkoff shrugged, "I had
+to smack him. He had forced my hand."</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/illus2.jpg" alt=""/>
+</div>
+
+<h3>Fists lashed out, weapons appeared, and cries of fury
+rent the air</h3>
+
+<hr style="width: 65%;" />
+
+<p>There was a slight stir among the group. This was news to all of them.</p>
+
+<p>"Is this true?" Hargraves said.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Nielson defiantly. "And I was right. I should have killed
+him. He isn't Hal Sarkoff. He isn't telling the truth about coming back
+to life. Sarkoff is dead."</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>Sarkoff glanced up at Thulon who was still standing in the lock looking
+down at the men before him. There was a ghost of a smile on his face.</p>
+
+<p>"See!" said Sarkoff, addressing Thulon. "I told you we couldn't tell
+these boys anything. They have to see, they have to feel, they have to
+be shown."</p>
+
+<p>"Well," the thought came from Thulon to everyone. "Why don't you show
+them?"</p>
+
+<p>"Okay," Sarkoff answered. "Nevins!" he shouted. "Reese! Come out of that
+ship."</p>
+
+<p>Nevins and Reese were the two engineers who had died with Sarkoff.</p>
+
+<p>Thulon moved a little to one side. Nevins and Reese came out of the
+ship. They were grinning.</p>
+
+<p>"Feel us!" Sarkoff shouted. "Pinch us. Cut off a slice of skin and
+examine it under a microscope. Make blood tests. Use X-rays. Do whatever
+you damned please." He shoved a brawny arm under Nielson's nose. "Here.
+Pinch this and see if you think it's real."</p>
+
+<p>Nielson shrank away.</p>
+
+<p>Nevins and Reese passed among the men, offering themselves in evidence.
+Startled voices called softly in answer to other startled voices.
+"They're real."</p>
+
+<p>"This is no lie. This is the truth."</p>
+
+<p>"I've known this man for years. This is Eddie Nevins."</p>
+
+<p>"And this is Sam Reese."</p>
+
+<p>Hargraves heard the voices, saw the conclusion they were reaching.</p>
+
+<p>"One moment," he said.</p>
+
+<p>The voices went into silence. Eyes turned questioningly to him.</p>
+
+<p>"Even if these men are really Hal Sarkoff and Eddie Nevins and Sam
+Reese, if they are the companions we knew as dead who have miraculously
+been returned to us, there are still facts that do not fit into a
+logical pattern. Even here on this world the laws of logic must hold
+true."</p>
+
+<p>Silence fell. Men looked at him and at each other. Where there had been
+wonder on their faces, new doubts were appearing.</p>
+
+<p>"What facts, Jed?" Sarkoff questioned.</p>
+
+<p>"The sphere that attacked us, that attempted to destroy us, without
+warning. This is a fact that does not fit."</p>
+
+<p>"The sphere?" Uncertainty showed on Sarkoff's face. Then he grinned
+again and turned to Thulon. "You tell him about that sphere."</p>
+
+<p>"Gladly," Thulon's thoughts came. "As you know, Vega has two planets.
+Long ago we were at war with the inhabitants of this other planet. Part
+of our defenses around our own planet were floating fortresses. The war
+is done but we have left guards in the sky to protect us if we are
+attacked. The sphere that attacked you was one of our automatic forts
+which we had left in the sky."</p>
+
+<p>"Ah!" said Hargraves. The cold logic of his mind sought a pattern that
+would include fortresses in the sky. Presuming war between two planets,
+such fortresses were logical. But&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"The construction of such a sphere indicates vast technical knowledge,
+tremendous workshops. I have seen no laboratories and no industrial
+centers that could produce such a fortress. I have, moreover, seen no
+civilization that will serve as a background for such construction."</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>He waited for an answer. Usher, the archeologist, looked suddenly at
+him, then looked at Thulon.</p>
+
+<p>"The fortresses were built long ago," Thulon said. "In those past
+milleniums we had industrial centers. We no longer need them and we no
+longer have them."</p>
+
+<p>"Then there <i>is</i> another stage!" the archeologist gasped. "You are past
+the city stage in your evolutionary process. You are beyond the metal
+age. What&mdash;" Usher eagerly asked. "What comes after that?"</p>
+
+<p>"We are beyond the age of cities," Thulon answered. "The next but
+possibly not final stage is a return to nature. We live in the groves
+and the fields, beside the lakes, under the trees. We need no protection
+from the elements because we are in unison with them. There are no
+enemies on this world, no dangers, almost no death. In your thinking you
+can only describe us as gods. Our activities are almost entirely mental.
+Our only concession of materialism is this." He lifted the staff. "When
+you fired at me, this staff canceled your beams. It would have canceled
+them if they had been a thousand times stronger. When one of you
+attempted to destroy Sarkoff, force went out from this staff, knocking
+the weapon from his hand. There are certain powers leashed within this
+staff, certain arrangements of crystals that are very nearly ultimate
+matter. Through this staff my will is worked. Some day," he smiled, "we
+will even be able to discard the staff. That is the goal of our
+evolution."</p>
+
+<p>The thoughts went into soft silence and Thulon looked down at them.
+"Does that satisfy you?" His eyes went among the group, came to rest on
+Hargraves. "No, I see it does not. There is still one fact that you
+cannot fit into your pattern."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Hargraves. "If all that you have told us is true, why was
+the ship stolen?"</p>
+
+<p>"Everything has to fit for you?" Sarkoff answered. "Well, that's why you
+are our leader. I can answer this question. I took the ship so I could
+have it repaired. Then, when I brought it back to you, fit to fly again,
+all of us would have evidence that we could not deny. You might doubt my
+identity, you might doubt me, but you would not doubt a ship that had
+been repaired. Thulon," Sarkoff ended, "will you do your stuff?"</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>Standing a little apart from the rest Hargraves watched. Thulon and his
+comrades brought metal from the vessel. How they used the tripod he
+could not see but in some way they seemed to use it to melt the metal.
+This was magna steel. They worked it as if it were pure tin. It didn't
+seem to be hot but they spread sheets of it over the gaping hole in the
+hull. They closed the hole. He knew the ship had been repaired but still
+he did not move. On the ground before him was something that looked like
+an ant hill. He watched this, his mind reaching out and grasping a
+bigger problem. The ants, he could see, were swarming.</p>
+
+<p>Nielson detached himself from the group at the ship and came to him.</p>
+
+<p>"Jed," he said hesitatingly.</p>
+
+<p>"What?"</p>
+
+<p>"Jed, what Hal said about me attacking him was right. I thought&mdash;I
+thought he wasn't Sarkoff. I thought I was doing what was right."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't doubt you," Hargraves answered. His mind was not on what
+Nielson was saying.</p>
+
+<p>"Jed."</p>
+
+<p>"Uh?"</p>
+
+<p>"Jed. I&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"What is it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Jed, will you take over command again?" The words came fast. "I&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Huh? Take over command? Don't you like the job?"</p>
+
+<p>Nielson shivered. "No. I'm not ready for it yet. Jed, will you take it
+over, please?"</p>
+
+<p>"Huh? Oh, sure, if that is what the fellows want."</p>
+
+<p>"They want it. So do I."</p>
+
+<p>"Okay then." Hargraves was scarcely aware that Nielson had left. Nor did
+he notice Ron Val approaching.</p>
+
+<p>"Jed."</p>
+
+<p>"Huh?"</p>
+
+<p>"Jed, I've been talking to Thulon." The astro-navigator's voice was
+trembling with excitement. "Jed, do you know that Thulon and his people
+<i>belong to our race</i>?"</p>
+
+<p>"What?" the startled captain gasped. "Oh, damn it, Ron Val, you're
+dreaming again."</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<p>It would be a wonderful dream come true, Hargraves knew, if it was true.
+The human race had kin folks in the universe! Man did not stand alone.
+There was something breath-taking in the very thought of it.</p>
+
+<p>"Thulon says the tests he ran on Hal Sarkoff proved it. He says his
+people sent out exploring expeditions long ago, just like we are doing,
+only the groups they sent out were more colonists than explorers. He
+says one of these groups landed on earth and that we are the descendants
+of that group, sons of colonists come back to the mother world after
+uncounted centuries of absence&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Ron Val was babbling, the words were tumbling over each other on his
+lips.</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, hell, Ron Val, it doesn't fit," Jed Hargraves said. "We can trace
+our evolutionary chain back to the fish in the seas&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Sure," Ron Val interrupted. "But we don't know that those fish came
+from the seas of earth!"</p>
+
+<p>"Huh?" Hargraves gasped. "Well, I'll be damned! I never thought of that
+possibility." He looked at the lakes dancing in the Vegan sunshine. From
+these lakes, from these seas, had come the original fish-like creature
+that eventually became human in form! The thought was startling.</p>
+
+<p>"The colonists landed on earth thousands of years ago," Ron Val said.
+"Maybe they smashed their ship in landing, had to learn to live off the
+country. Maybe they forgot who they were, in time. Jed, we have legends
+that we are the children of God. Maybe&mdash;Oh, Jed, Thulon says it's true."</p>
+
+<p>Hargraves hesitated, torn between doubt and longing. He looked down. On
+the ground in front of him the ants were still swarming. Hundreds of
+them were coming from the ant hill and were flying off. There were
+thousands of them. Eventually, in the recesses of this vast grove, there
+would be new colonies, which would swarm in their turn. He watched them
+flying away. The air was bright with the glint of their wings.</p>
+
+<p>He looked up. Thulon was coming toward them. Thulon was smiling.
+"Welcome home," his voice whispered in their minds. "Welcome home."</p>
+
+<p>Hargraves began to smile.</p>
+
+<hr style="width: 45%;" />
+
+<div class="footnote"><p><a name="Footnote_1_1" id="Footnote_1_1"></a><a href="#FNanchor_1_1"><span class="label">[1]</span></a> Originally devised as a protection against meteors, it was
+a field of force that would disintegrate any solid particle that struck
+it, always presuming it did not tangle with an asteroid or a meteor too
+big for it to handle. A blood brother of the negatron, it made space
+flight, if not a first-class insurance risk, at least fairly safe.&mdash;Ed.</p></div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Planet of the Gods, by Robert Moore Williams
+
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+</body>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Planet of the Gods, by Robert Moore Williams
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Planet of the Gods
+
+Author: Robert Moore Williams
+
+Release Date: June 5, 2010 [EBook #32696]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PLANET OF THE GODS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Greg Weeks, Mary Meehan and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+ PLANET OF THE GODS
+
+ By Robert Moore Williams
+
+[Transcriber Note: This etext was produced from Amazing Stories December
+1942. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
+copyright on this publication was renewed.]
+
+
+[Sidenote: Two planets circling Vega! But a more amazing discovery
+waited the explorers when they landed!]
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+"What do you make of it?" Commander Jed Hargraves asked huskily.
+
+Ron Val, busy at the telescope, was too excited to look up from the
+eye-piece. "There are at least two planets circling Vega!" he said
+quickly. "There may be other planets farther out, but I can see two
+plainly. And Jed, the nearest planet, the one we are approaching, has an
+atmosphere. The telescope reveals a blur that could only be caused by an
+atmosphere. And--Jed, this may seem so impossible you won't believe
+it--but I can see several large spots on the surface that are almost
+certainly lakes. They are not big enough to be called oceans or seas.
+But I am almost positive they are lakes!"
+
+According to the preconceptions of astronomers, formed before they had a
+chance to go see for themselves, solar systems were supposed to be rare
+birds. Not every sun had a chance to give birth to planets. Not one sun
+in a thousand, maybe not one in a million; maybe, with the exception of
+Sol, not another one in the whole universe.
+
+And here the first sun approached by the Third Interstellar Expedition
+was circled by planets!
+
+The sight was enough to drive an astronomer insane.
+
+Ron Val tore his eyes away from the telescope long enough to stare at
+Captain Hargraves. "Air and water on this planet!" he gasped. "Jed, do
+you realize what this may mean?"
+
+Jed Hargraves grinned. His face was lean and brown, and the grin,
+spreading over it, relaxed a little from the tension that had been
+present for months.
+
+"Easy, old man," he said, clapping Ron Val on the shoulder. "There is
+nothing to get so excited about."
+
+"But a solar system--"
+
+"We came from one."
+
+"I know we did. But just the same, finding another will put our names in
+all the books on astronomy. They aren't the commonest things in the
+universe, you know. And to find one of the planets of this new system
+with air and water--Jed, where there is air and water there may be
+life!"
+
+"There probably is. Life, in some form, seems to be everywhere. Remember
+we found spores being kicked around by light waves in the deepest depths
+of space. And Pluto, in our own system, has mosses and lichens that the
+biologists insist are alive. It won't be surprising if we find life out
+there." He gestured through the port at the world swimming through space
+toward them.
+
+"I mean intelligent life," Ron Val corrected.
+
+"Don't bet on it. The old boys had the idea they would find intelligent
+life on Mars, until they got there. Then they discovered that
+intelligent creatures had once lived on the Red Planet. Cities, canals,
+and stuff. But the people who had built the cities and canals had died
+of starvation long before humans got to Mars. So it isn't a good bet
+that we shall find intelligence here."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The astronomer's face drooped a little. But not for long. "That was true
+of Mars," he said. "But it isn't necessarily true here. And even if Mars
+was dead, Venus wasn't. Nor is Earth. If there is life on two of the
+planets of our own solar system, there may be life on one of the planets
+of Vega. Why not?" he challenged.
+
+"Hey, wait a minute," Hargraves answered. "I'm not trying to start an
+argument."
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"If you mean why not an argument--"
+
+"I mean, why not life here?"
+
+"I don't know why not," Hargraves shrugged. "For that matter, I don't
+know _why_, either." He looked closely at Ron Val. "You ape! I believe
+you're hoping we will find life here."
+
+"Of course that's what I'm hoping," Ron Val answered quickly. "It would
+mean a lot to find people here. We could exchange experiences, learn a
+lot. I know it's probably too much to hope for." He broke off. "Jed, are
+we going to land here?"
+
+"Certainly we're going to land here!" Jed Hargraves said emphatically.
+"Why in the hell do you think we've crossed thirty light years if we
+don't land on a world when we find one? This is an exploring
+expedition--"
+
+Hargraves saw that he had no listener. Ron Val had listened only long
+enough to learn what he wanted to know, then had dived back to his
+beloved telescope to watch the world spiraling up through space toward
+them. That world meant a lot to Ron Val, the thrill of discovery, of
+exploring where a human foot had never trod in all the history of the
+universe.
+
+New lands in the sky! The Third Interstellar Expedition--third because
+two others were winging out across space, one toward Sirius, the other
+toward Cygnus--was approaching land! The fact also meant something to
+Jed Hargraves, possibly a little less than it did to Ron Val because
+Hargraves had more responsibilities. He was captain of the ship,
+commander of the expedition. It was his duty to take the ship to Vega,
+and to bring it safely home.
+
+Half of his task was done. Vega was bright in the sky ahead and the
+tough bubble of steel and quartz that was the ship was dropping down to
+rest on one of Vega's planets. Hargraves started to leave the nook that
+housed Ron Val and his telescope.
+
+The ship's loudspeaker system shouted with sudden sound.
+
+"Jed! Jed Hargraves! Come to the bridge at once."
+
+That was Red Nielson's voice. He was speaking from the control room in
+the nose of the ship. Nielson sounded excited.
+
+Hargraves pushed a button under the loudspeaker. The system was two-way,
+allowing for intercommunication.
+
+"Hargraves speaking. What's wrong?"
+
+"A ship is approaching. It is coming straight toward us."
+
+"A ship! Are you out of your head? This is Vega."
+
+"I don't give a damn if it's Brooklyn! I know a space ship when I see
+one. And this is one. Either get up here and take command or tell me
+what you want done."
+
+Discipline among the personnel of this expedition was so nearly perfect
+there was no need for it. Consequently there was none. Before leaving
+earth, skilled mental analysts had aided in the selection of this crew,
+and had welded it together so artfully that it thought, acted, and
+functioned as a unit. Jed Hargraves was captain, but he had never heard
+the word spoken, and never wanted to hear it. No one had ever put "sir"
+after his name. Nor had anyone ever questioned an order, after it was
+given. Violent argument there might be, before an order was given, with
+Hargraves filtering the pros and cons through his rigidly logical mind,
+but the instant he reached a decision the argument stopped. He was one
+of the crew, and the crew knew it. The crew was one with him, and he
+knew it.
+
+He might question Nielson's facts, once, in surprise. But not twice. If
+Nielson said a ship was approaching, a ship _was_ approaching.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"I'm coming," Hargraves rapped into the mike. "Turn full power into the
+defense screen. Warn the engine room to be ready for an emergency. Sound
+the call to stations. And Red, hold us away from this planet."
+
+Almost before he had finished speaking, a siren was wailing through the
+ship. Although he had used the microphone in the nook that housed the
+telescope, Ron Val had been so interested in the world they were
+approaching that he had not heard the captain's orders. He heard the
+siren.
+
+"What is it, Jed?"
+
+Hargraves didn't have time to explain. He was diving out the door and
+racing toward the bridge in the nose of the ship. "Come on," he flung
+back over his shoulder at Ron Val. "Your post is at the fore negatron."
+
+Ron Val took one despairing glance at his telescope, then followed the
+commander.
+
+As he ran toward the control room, Hargraves heard the ship begin to
+radiate a new tempo of sound. The siren was dying into silence, its
+warning task finished. Other sounds were taking its place. From the
+engine room in the stern was coming a spiteful hiss, like steam escaping
+under great pressure from a tiny vent valve. That was the twin atomics,
+loading up, building up the inconceivable pressures they would feed to
+the Kruchek drivers. A slight rumble went through the ship, a rumble
+seemingly radiated from every molecule, from every atom, in the vessel.
+It _was_ radiated from every molecule! That rumble came from the Kruchek
+drivers warping the ship in response to the controls on the bridge. Bill
+Kruchek's going-faster-than-hell engines, engineers called them. A
+fellow by the name of Bill Kruchek had invented them. When Bill
+Krucheck's going-faster-than-hell drivers dug their toes into the
+lattice of space and put brawny shoulders behind every molecule within
+the field they generated, a ship within that field went faster than
+light. The Kruchek drivers, given the juice they needed in such
+tremendous quantities, took you from hell to yonder in a mighty hurry.
+They had been idling, drifting the ship slowly in toward the planet.
+Now, in response to an impulse from Nielson on the bridge, they
+grumbled, and hunching mighty shoulders for the load, prepared to hurl
+the ship away from the planet. Hargraves could feel the vessel surge in
+response to the speed. Then there was a distant thud, and he could feel
+the surge no longer. The anti-accelerators had been cut in, neutralizing
+the effect of inertia.
+
+Shoving open a heavy door, Hargraves was in the control room. A glance
+showed him Nielson on the bridge. Leaning over, his fingers on the bank
+of buttons that controlled the ship, he was peering through the heavy
+quartzite observation port at something approaching from the right.
+Beside him, on his right, a man was standing ready at the radio panel.
+And to the left of the bridge two men had already jerked the covers from
+the negatron and were standing ready beside it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Ron Val leaped past Hargraves, dived for a seat on the negatron. That
+was his post. He had been chosen for it because of his familiarity with
+optical instruments. Along the top of the negatron was a sighting
+telescope. Ron Val looked once to see where the man on the bridge was
+looking, then his fingers flew to the adjusting levers of the telescope.
+The negatron swung around to the right, centered on something there.
+
+"Ready," Ron Val said, not taking his eyes from the 'scope.
+
+"Hold your fire," Hargraves ordered.
+
+He was on the bridge, standing beside Red Nielson. Off to the right he
+could see the enemy ship. Odd that he should think of it as an enemy. It
+wasn't. It was merely a strange ship. But there were relics in his mind,
+vague racial memories, of the days when stranger and enemy were
+synonymous. The times when this was true were gone forever, but the
+thoughts remained.
+
+"Shall we run for it?" Nielson questioned, his hands on the controls
+that would turn full power into the drivers.
+
+"No. If we run, they will think we have some reason for running. That
+might be all they would need to conclude we are up to no good. Is the
+defense screen on full power?"
+
+"Yes." Nielson pushed the lever again to be sure. "I'm giving it all it
+will take."
+
+Hargraves could barely see the screen out there a half mile from the
+ship. It was twinkling dimly as it swept up cosmic dust.[1]
+
+[Footnote 1: Originally devised as a protection against meteors, it was
+a field of force that would disintegrate any solid particle that struck
+it, always presuming it did not tangle with an asteroid or a meteor too
+big for it to handle. A blood brother of the negatron, it made space
+flight, if not a first-class insurance risk, at least fairly safe.--Ed.]
+
+The oncoming ship had been a dot in the sky. Now it was a round ball.
+
+"Try them on the radio," Hargraves said. "They probably won't understand
+us but at least they will know we're trying to communicate with them."
+
+There was a swirl of action at the radio panel.
+
+"No answer," the radio operator said.
+
+"Keep trying."
+
+"Look!" Nielson shouted. "They've changed course. They're coming
+straight toward us."
+
+The ball had bobbled in its smooth flight. As though caught in the
+attraction of a magnet it was coming straight toward them.
+
+For an instant, Hargraves stared. Should he run or should he wait? He
+didn't want to run and he didn't want to fight. On the other hand, he
+did not want to take chances with the safety of the men under his
+command.
+
+His mission was peaceful. Entirely so. But the ball was driving straight
+toward them. How big it was he could not estimate. It wasn't very big.
+Oddly, it presented a completely blank surface. No ports. And, so far as
+he could tell, there was no discharge from driving engines. The latter
+meant nothing. Their own ship showed no discharge from the Kruchek
+drivers. But no ports--
+
+It came so fast he couldn't see it come. The flash of light! It came
+from the ball. For the fractional part of a second, the defense screen
+twinkled where the flash of light hit it. But--the defense screen was
+not designed to turn light or any other form of radiation. The light
+came through. It wasn't light. It carried a component of visible
+radiation but it wasn't light. The beam struck the earth ship.
+
+_Clang!_
+
+ * * * * *
+
+From the stern came a sudden scream of tortured metal. The ship rocked,
+careened, tried to spin on its axis. On the control panels, a dozen red
+lights flashed, winked off, winked on again. Heavy thuds echoed through
+the vessel. Emergency compartments closing.
+
+Hargraves hesitated no longer.
+
+"Full speed ahead!" he shouted at Red Nielson.
+
+"Ron Val. Fire!"
+
+This was an attack. This was a savage, vicious attack, delivered without
+warning, with no attempt to parley. The ship had been hit. How badly it
+had been damaged he did not know. But unless the damage was too heavy
+they could outrun this ball, flash away from it faster than light,
+disappear in the sky, vanish. The ship had legs to run. There was no
+limit to her speed. She could go fast, then she could go faster.
+
+"Full speed--"
+
+Nielson looked up from the bank of buttons. His face was ashen. "She
+doesn't respond, Jed. The drivers are off. The engine room is knocked
+out."
+
+There was no rumble from Bill Kruchek's going-faster-than-hell engines.
+The hiss of the atomics was still faintly audible. Short of
+annihilation, nothing could knock them out. Energy was being generated
+but it wasn't getting to the drive. Leaping to the controls, Hargraves
+tried them himself.
+
+They didn't respond.
+
+"Engine room!" he shouted into the communication system.
+
+There was no answer.
+
+The ship began to yaw, to drop away toward the planet below them. The
+planet was far distant as yet, but the grasping fingers of its gravity
+were reaching toward the vessel, pulling it down.
+
+Voices shouted within the ship.
+
+"Jed!"
+
+"What happened?"
+
+"Jed, we're falling!"
+
+"That ball, Jed--"
+
+Voices calling to Jed Hargraves, asking him what to do. He couldn't
+answer. There was no answer. There was only--the ball! It was the
+answer.
+
+Through the observation port, he could see the circular ship. It was
+getting ready to attack again. The sphere was moving leisurely toward
+its already crippled prey, getting ready to deliver the final stroke. It
+would answer all questions of this crew, answer them unmistakably. It
+leered at them.
+
+_Wham!_
+
+The ship vibrated to a sudden gust of sound. Something lashed out from
+the vessel. Hargraves did not see it go because it, too, went faster
+than the eye could follow. But he knew what it was. The sound told him.
+He saw the hole appear in the sphere. A round hole that opened inward.
+Dust puffed outward.
+
+_Wham, wham, wham!_
+
+The negatron! The blood brother of the defense screen, its energies
+concentrated into a pencil of radiation. Faster than anyone could see it
+happen, three more holes appeared in the sphere, driving through its
+outer shell, punching into the machinery at its heart.
+
+The sphere shuddered under the impact. It turned. Light spewed out of
+it, beaming viciously into this alien sky without direction. Smoke
+boiled from the ball. Turning it seemed to roll along the sky. It looked
+like a huge burning snowball rolling down some vast hill.
+
+Ron Val lifted a white face from the sighting 'scope of the negatron.
+
+"Did--did I get him?"
+
+"I'll say you did!" Hargraves heard somebody shout exultantly. He was
+surprised to discover his own voice was doing the shouting. The sphere
+was finished, done for. It was out of the fight, rolling down the vast
+hill of the sky, it would smash on the planet below.
+
+They were following it.
+
+There was still no answer from the engine room.
+
+"Space suits!" Hargraves ordered. "Nielson, you stay here. Ron Val, you
+others, come with me."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+Vegan World
+
+
+The engine room was crammed to the roof with machinery. The bulked
+housings of the atomics, their heavy screens shutting off the deadly
+radiations generated in the heart of energy seething within the twin
+domes, were at the front. They looked like two blast furnaces that had
+somehow wandered into a space ship by mistake and hadn't been able to
+find their way out again. The fires of hell, hotter than any blast
+furnace had ever been, seethed within them.
+
+Behind the atomics were the Kruchek drivers, twin brawny giants chained
+to the treadmill they pushed through the skies. Silent now. Not
+grumbling at their task. Loafing. Like lazy slaves conscious of their
+power, they worked only when the lash was on them.
+
+Between the drivers was the control panel. Ninety-nine percent
+automatic, those controls. They needed little human attention, and got
+little. There were never more than three men on duty here. This engine
+room almost operated itself.
+
+It had ceased to operate itself, Jed Hargraves saw, as he forced open
+the last stubborn air-tight door separating the engine room from the
+rest of the ship. Ceased because--Involuntarily he cried out.
+
+He could see the sky.
+
+A great V-shaped notch straddled the back of the ship. Something,
+striking high on the curve of the hull, had driven through inches of
+magna steel, biting a gigantic chunk out of the ship. The beam from the
+sphere! That flashing streak of light that had driven through the
+defense screen. It had struck here.
+
+"Jed! They're dead!"
+
+That was Ron Val's voice, choking over the radio. One of the men in this
+engine room had been Hal Sarkoff, a black-browed giant from somewhere in
+Montana. Engines had behaved for Sarkoff. Intuitively he had seemed to
+know mechanics.
+
+He and Ron Val had been particular friends.
+
+"The air went," Hargraves said. "When that hole was knocked in the hull,
+the air went. The automatic doors blocked off the rest of the ship. The
+poor devils--"
+
+The air had gone and the cold had come. He could see Sarkoff's body
+lying beside one of the drivers. The two other men were across the room.
+A door to the stern compartment was there. They were crumpled against
+it.
+
+Hargraves winced with pain. He should have ordered everyone into space
+suits. The instant Nielson reported the approach of the sphere,
+Hargraves should have shouted, "Space suits" into the mike. He hadn't.
+
+The receiver in his space suit crisped with sound.
+
+"Jed! Have you got into that engine room yet? For cripes sake, Jed,
+we're falling."
+
+That was Nielson, on the bridge. He sounded frantic.
+
+Sixteen feet the first second, then thirty-two, then sixty-four. They
+had miles to fall, but their rate of fall progressed geometrically. They
+had spent many minutes fighting their way through the air tight doors.
+One hundred and twenty-eight feet the fourth second. Jed's mind was
+racing.
+
+No, by thunder, that was acceleration under an earth gravity. They
+didn't know the gravity here. It might be less.
+
+It might be more.
+
+Ron Val had run forward and was kneeling beside Sarkoff.
+
+"Let them go," Hargraves said roughly. "Ron Val, you check the drivers.
+You--" Swiftly he assigned them tasks, reserving the control panel for
+himself.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+They were specialists. Noble, the blond youth, frantically examining the
+atomics, was a bio-chemist. Ushur, the powerfully built man who had
+stood at Ron Val's right hand on the negatron, was an archeologist.
+
+They were engineers now. They had to be.
+
+"Nothing seems to be wrong here." That was Ron Val, from the drivers.
+
+"The atomics are working." That was Noble reporting.
+
+"Then what the hell is wrong?" At the control panel, Hargraves saw what
+was wrong. The damned controls were automatic, with temperature and air
+pressure cut-offs. When the air had gone from the engine room, that
+meant something was wrong. The controls had automatically cut off the
+drivers. The ship had stopped moving.
+
+A manual control was provided. Hargraves shoved the switch home. An
+oil-immersed control thudded. The loafing giants grunted as the lash
+struck them, roared with pain as they got hastily to work on their
+treadmill.
+
+The ship moved forward.
+
+"We're moving!" That was Red Nielson shouting. The controls on the
+bridge were responding now. "I'm going to burn a hole in space getting
+us away from here."
+
+"No!" said Hargraves.
+
+"What?" There was incredulous doubt in Nielson's voice. "That damned
+sphere came from this planet."
+
+"Can't help it. We've got to land."
+
+"Land here, now!"
+
+"There's a hole as big as the side of a house in the ship. No air in the
+engine room. Without air, we can't control the temperature. If we go
+into space, the engine room temperature will drop almost to absolute
+zero. These drivers are not designed to work in that temperature, and
+they won't work in it. We have to land and repair the ship before we
+dare go into space."
+
+"But--"
+
+"We land here!"
+
+There was a split second of silence. "Okay, Jed," Nielson said. "But if
+we run into another of those spheres--"
+
+"We'll know what to do about it. Ron Val. Ushur. Back to the bridge and
+man the negatron. If you see anything that even looks suspicious, beam
+it."
+
+Ron Val and Usher dived through the door that led forward.
+
+"Stern observation post. Are you alive back there?"
+
+"We heard you, Jed. We're alive all right."
+
+Back of the engine room, tucked away in the stern, was another negatron.
+
+"Shoot on sight!" Hargraves said.
+
+The Third Interstellar Expedition was coming in to land--with her fangs
+bared.
+
+Jed Hargraves called a volunteer to hold the switch--it had to be held
+in by hand, otherwise it would automatically kick out again--and went
+forward to the bridge. Red Nielson gladly relinquished the controls to
+him.
+
+"The sphere crashed over there," Nielson said, waving vaguely to the
+right.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Not until he stepped on the bridge did Jed Hargraves realize how close a
+call they had had. The fight had started well outside the upper limits
+of the atmosphere. They were well inside it now. Another few minutes and
+they would have screamed to a flaming crash here on this world and the
+Third Interstellar Expedition would have accomplished only half its
+mission, the least important half.
+
+He shoved the nose of the ship down, the giants working eagerly at their
+treadmill now, as if they realized they had been caught loafing on the
+job and were trying to make amends. The planet swam up toward them. He
+barely heard the voice of Noble reporting a chemical test of the air
+that was now swirling around the ship. "--oxygen, so much; water vapor;
+nitrogen--" The air was breathable. They would not have to attempt
+repairs in space suits, then.
+
+Abruptly, as they dropped lower, the contour of the planet seemed to
+change from the shape of a ball to the shape of a cup. The eyes did
+that. The eyes were tricky. But Jed knew his eyes were not tricking him
+when they brought him impressions of the surface below them.
+
+A gently rolling world sweeping away into the distance, moving league
+after league into dim infinities, appeared before his eyes. No
+mountains, no hills, even. Gentle slopes rolling slowly downward into
+plains. No large rivers. Small streams winding among trees. Almost
+immediately below them was one of the lakes Ron Val had seen through
+his telescope. The lake was alive with blue light reflected from
+the--No, the light came from Vega, not Sol. They were light years away
+from the warming rays of the friendly sun.
+
+Jed lowered the ship until she barely cleared the ground, sent her
+slowly forward seeking what he wanted. There was a grove of giant trees
+beside the lake. Overhead their foliage closed in an arch that would cut
+out the sight of the sky. This was what he wanted. He turned the ship
+around.
+
+"Hey!" said Nielson.
+
+"I'm going to back her out of sight among those trees," Hargraves
+answered. "I'm hunting a hole to hide in while we lie up and lick our
+wounds."
+
+Overhead, boughs crashed as the ship slid out of sight. Gently he
+relaxed the controls, let her drop an inch at a time until she rested on
+the ground. Then he opened the switches, and grunting with relief, the
+giants laid themselves down on their treadmill and promptly went to
+sleep. For the first time in months the ship was silent.
+
+"Negatron crews remain at your posts. I'm going to take a look."
+
+The lock hissed as it opened before him. Hargraves, Nielson, Noble,
+stepped out, the captain going first. The ground was only a couple of
+feet away but he lowered himself to it with the precise caution that a
+twenty-foot jump would have necessitated. He was not unaware of the
+implications of this moment. His was the first human foot to tread the
+soil of a planet circling Vega. The great-grand-children of his
+great-grand-children would tell their sons about this.
+
+The soil was springy under his feet, possessing an elasticity that he
+had not remembered as natural with turf. Opening his helmet, he sniffed
+the air. It was cool and alive with a heady fragrance that came from
+growing vegetation, a quality the ship's synthesizers, for all the
+ingenuity incorporated in them, could not duplicate. Tasting the air,
+the cells of his lungs eagerly shouted for more. He sucked it in, and
+the tensions that kept his body all steel springs and whipcord relaxed a
+little. A breeze stirred among the trees.
+
+"Sweet Pete!" he gasped.
+
+"That's what I was trying to tell you as we landed," Nielson said. "This
+is not a forest. This is a grove. These trees didn't just grow here in
+straight orderly lines. They were _planted_! We are hiding in what may
+be the equivalent of somebody's apple orchard."
+
+The trees were giants. Twenty feet through at the butt, they rose a
+hundred feet into the air. Diminishing in the distance, they moved in
+regular rows down to the shore of the lake, forming a pleasant grove
+miles in extent. A reddish fruit, not unlike apples, grew on them.
+
+If this was an orchard, where was the owner?
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+The Four Visitors
+
+
+"Somebody coming!" the lookout called.
+
+Jed Hargraves dropped the shovel. Behind him the hiss of an electric
+cutting torch and the whang of a heavy hammer went into sudden silence.
+Back there, a hundreds yards away, they had already begun work on the
+ship, attempting to repair the hole gouged in the stout magna steel of
+the hull. They had heard the call of the lookout and were dropping tools
+to pick up weapons. Jed's hand slid down to his belt to the compact
+vibration pistol holstered there. He pulled the gun, held it ready in
+his hand. Ron Val and Nielson did the same.
+
+Vega, slanting downward, was near the western horizon. The grove was a
+mass of shadows. Through the shadows something was coming.
+
+"They're human!" Ron Val gasped.
+
+Hargraves said nothing. His fingers tightened around the butt of the
+pistol as he waited. He saw them clearly now. There were four of them.
+They looked like--old men. Four tribal gray-beards out for a stroll in
+the cool of the late afternoon. Each carried a staff. They were walking
+toward the ship. Then they saw the little group that stood apart and
+turned toward them.
+
+"The teletron. Will you go get it, please, Ron Val?"
+
+Nodding, the astro-navigator ran back to the ship. The teletron was a
+new gadget, invented just before the expedition left earth. Far from
+perfection as yet, it was intended to aid in establishing telepathic
+communication between persons who had no common language. Sometimes it
+worked, a little. More often it didn't. But it might be useful here. Ron
+Val was panting when he returned with it.
+
+"Are you going to talk to them, Jed?"
+
+"I'm going to try."
+
+The four figures approached. Hargraves smiled. That was to show his good
+intentions. A smile ought to be common language everywhere.
+
+The four strangers did not return his smile. They just stopped and
+looked at him with no trace of emotion on their faces.
+
+[Illustration: What strange thing was this? Who were these people and
+what was their power?]
+
+They looked human. They weren't, of course. Parallel evolution accounted
+for the resemblance, like causes producing like results.
+
+Nielson was watching them like a hawk. Without making an aggressive
+move, the way he held his gun showed he was ready to go into action at a
+moment's notice. Behind them, the ship was silent, its crew alert.
+Hargraves bent to manipulate the complicated tuning of the teletron.
+
+"I am Thulon," a voice whispered in his brain. "No need for that."
+
+Jed Hargraves' leaped to his feet. He caught startled glances from Ron
+Val and Nielson and knew they had heard and understood too. Understood,
+rather. There had been nothing for the ears to hear.
+
+"Thulon! No need for--_I understood you without_--"
+
+Thulon smiled. He was taller than the average human, and very slender.
+"We are natural telepaths. So there is no need to use your instrument."
+
+"Uh? Natural telepaths! Well, I'm damned!"
+
+"Damned? I cannot quite grasp the meaning of the word. Your mind is
+radiating on an emotional level. Do you wish to indicate surprise? I
+cannot grasp your thinking."
+
+Hargraves choked, fought for control of his mind. For a minute it had
+run away with him. He brought it to heel.
+
+"What are you doing here?" Thulon asked.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Hargraves blinked at the directness of the question. They certainly
+wasted no time getting down to business. "We--" He caught himself. No
+telling how much they could take directly from his mind!
+
+"We came from--far away." He tried to force his thoughts into narrow
+channels. "We--"
+
+"There is no need to be afraid." Thulon smiled gently. Or was there
+wiliness in that smile? Was this stranger attempting to lure him into a
+feeling of false security?
+
+"I meant, what are you doing _here_?" Thulon continued. His eyes went
+down to the ground.
+
+There was only one shovel on the ground. One shovel was all there had
+been in the ship. Thulon's glance went to it, went on.
+
+There were three mounds. The soft mould had dug easily. It had all been
+patted back into place. On the middle mound Ron Val had finished placing
+a small cross that he had hastily improvised from the ship's stores.
+Scratched in the metal was a name: Hal Sarkoff.
+
+"We had an outbreak of buboes," Hargraves said. "That's a disease. Three
+of our companions died and we landed here to bury them. We had just
+finished doing this when you arrived."
+
+"Died! Three of you died? And you hid them under these mounds?"
+
+"Yes. Of course. There was nothing else we could--"
+
+"You are going to leave them here in the ground!"
+
+"Certainly." Hargraves was wondering if this method of disposing of the
+dead violated some tribal taboo of this people. Different races disposed
+of their dead in different ways. He did not know the customs of the
+inhabitants of this world. "If we have offended against your customs, we
+are sorry."
+
+"No. There was no offense." Thulon blanketed his thoughts. Hargraves
+could almost feel the blanket slip into place.
+
+"You came in that ship?" Thulon pointed toward the vessel.
+
+"Yes." It was impossible to conceal this fact.
+
+"Ah." Thulon hesitated, seemed to grope through his mind for the exact
+shade of expression he wished to convey. Hargraves was aware that the
+stranger's eyes probed through him, measured him. "It would interest us
+to examine the vessel. Would you permit this?"
+
+"Certainly." Hargraves knew that Red Nielson jerked startled eyes toward
+him.
+
+"Jed!" Nielson spoke in protest.
+
+"Shut up!" Hargraves snapped. His body and his mind was a mass of
+tightly wound springs but his face was calm and his voice was suave. He
+turned to Thulon. "I will be glad to take you through our ship. However,
+I do not recommend it."
+
+"No?"
+
+"It might be dangerous, for you and your companions. We have had three
+cases of buboes, resulting in three deaths. All of us have had shots of
+immunizing serum and we hope we will have no more cases. However, the
+germs are unquestionably present in the atmosphere of the ship. Since
+you probably have no immunity to the disease, to breathe the tainted air
+would almost certainly result in an attack. This disease is fatal in
+nine cases out of ten. I therefore suggest you do not enter the ship. In
+fact," Hargraves concluded, "I was about to say that it might not be
+wise for you and your companions even to come near us, because of the
+possibility that you might contract the disease."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Had he gotten the story over it? Was it convincing? Out of the corner of
+his eyes he saw Ron Val glance at him. When he had said their companions
+had died of buboes, Ron Val had looked as if he thought he was out of
+his mind. Now Ron Val understood. "Good going, Jed," his glance seemed
+to say.
+
+"Hargraves--" This was Nielson speaking. His face was black.
+
+"I suggest," said Jed casually, "that you let me handle this."
+
+Nielson gulped. "Yes. Yes, sir," he said.
+
+Thulon's companions had been paying attention to the conversation. But
+all the time they were stealing glances at the ship. With half their
+minds, they seemed to be listening to what was being said. But the other
+half of their minds was interested in that silent ship hidden under the
+trees. Were they merely curious, such as any savage might be? Or was
+this group making a reconnaissance? Hargraves did not know. It did not
+look like a reconnaissance in force.
+
+"Do you really think we might contract this disease?" Thulon asked.
+
+Hargraves shrugged. "I'm not certain. You might not. It would all depend
+on the way your bodies reacted to the organism causing the disease."
+
+"Under such circumstances, you show little consideration for our welfare
+by bringing a plague ship to land here."
+
+"We didn't know you existed. I assure you, however, that if you will
+remain away from the ship until we have an opportunity to disinfect it
+thoroughly, any danger to your people will be very slight. On the other
+hand, if you wish to look our vessel over, to assure yourselves that we
+are not a menace to you--which we are not--I shall be glad to take you
+through the ship."
+
+Was he drawing it too fine? He spoke clearly and forcefully. The words,
+of course, would carry no meaning. But the thought that went along with
+them would convey what he wanted to say.
+
+"Ah." The thought came from Thulon. "Perhaps--" Again the blanket came
+over his mind and Hargraves had the impression Thulon was conferring
+with his companions.
+
+The silent conference ended.
+
+"Perhaps," Thulon said. "It would be better if we returned to visit you
+tomorrow, or the day after tomorrow."
+
+He bowed. Without another word he and his silent companions turned and
+began to walk slowly away. Not until he saw the little group slipping
+away into the dusk did Jed realize he had been holding his breath.
+
+"Hargraves!" Nielson's voice was harsh. "Are you going to let them get
+away? You fool! That sphere came from this world. Have you forgotten?"
+
+"I have forgotten nothing, I hope."
+
+"But you offered to take them through the ship! They would have seen how
+badly damaged she is."
+
+"Of course I offered to take them through the ship, then made it
+impossible for them to accept. We can't stick up 'No Trespassing' signs
+here. This is their world. We don't know a damned thing about it, or
+about them. We can't run and we don't want to fight, if we can help it.
+Furthermore, Nielson, I want you to learn to control your tongue.
+Remember that in the future, will you?"
+
+For a second, Nielson glared at him. "Yes, sir."
+
+"All right. Go on back to the ship."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Nielson went clumping back toward the vessel. Hargraves turned to Ron
+Val.
+
+"What do you make of it?"
+
+"I don't know, Jed. There is something about it that I don't like a
+little bit. They can read minds. Maybe that is what I don't like because
+I don't know how to react to it. Jed, it may be that we are in great
+danger here."
+
+"There is little doubt about _that_," Hargraves answered. "Tonight we
+will stand watches. Tomorrow we will make a reconnaissance of our own."
+
+Dusk came over the grove. Vega hesitated on the horizon as though trying
+to make up its mind, then abruptly took the plunge and dived from sight
+beyond the rim of the world. Night came abruptly, hiding the ship and
+its occupants. In the sky overhead, stars twinkled like the eyes of
+watchful wolves.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+The Monster
+
+
+They blacked out the ship before they moved it, carefully covering each
+port with paper, then showing no lights. Hargraves handled the controls
+himself, slowly turning current into the drivers so their grunting would
+not reveal what was happening.
+
+"Are we going to take her up high for tonight?" Ushur, the archeologist
+asked. "She will fly all right as long as we stay in the atmosphere. We
+would be safer up high, it seems to me."
+
+"Safer from ground attack, yes," Hargraves said thoughtfully. "However,
+I'm afraid we would be more exposed to attack from a ship."
+
+"Oh! That damned sphere. I had forgotten about it."
+
+Hargraves moved the ship less than a mile, carefully hid her among the
+trees. Then he posted guards outside all the ports. He took the first
+watch himself, in the control room. Ron Val was waiting for him there.
+The astro-navigator's face was grave. "Jed," he said. "I've been talking
+to several of the fellows. They don't believe you are taking a
+sufficiently realistic view of our situation. They don't believe you are
+facing the facts."
+
+"Um. What facts have I been evading?"
+
+"You apparently don't realize that it will take months--if it can be
+done at all--to repair the damage to the ship."
+
+Hargraves settled deep into his chair. He looked at the astro-navigator.
+Ron Val wasn't angry. Nor was he mutinous. He wasn't challenging
+authority. He was just scared.
+
+"Ron," he said, "according to the agreement under which we sailed, any
+time the majority of the members of this expedition wants a new captain,
+they can have him."
+
+"It isn't that."
+
+"I know. You fellows are scared. Hells bells, man! What do you think I
+am?"
+
+Ron Val's eyes popped open. "Jed! Are you? You don't show it. You don't
+seem even to appreciate the spot we're in."
+
+Hargraves slowly lit a cigarette. The fingers holding the tiny lighter
+did not shake. "If I had been the type to show it, do you think I would
+have been selected to head this expedition?"
+
+"No. But--"
+
+"Because I haven't made an official announcement that we may not be able
+to repair the ship, you seem to think I don't realize the fact. I know
+how big a hole has been ripped in our hull. I know the ship is made of
+magna steel, the toughest, hardest, most beautiful metal yet invented. I
+know the odds are we can't repair the hole in the hull. We don't have
+the metal. We don't have the tools to work it. I know these things. When
+I didn't call it to your attention, I assumed it was equally obvious to
+everyone else that we may never leave this planet."
+
+"Jed! Never leave this planet! Never--go home! That can't be right."
+
+"See," said Hargraves. "When you get the truth flung in your face, even
+you crack wide open. Yes, it's the truth. The fact you fellows think I'm
+not facing--the one you don't dare face--is that we may be marooned here
+for the rest of our lives."
+
+That was that. Ron Val went aft. Hargraves took up his vigil on the
+bridge. At midnight Ron Val came forward to relieve him.
+
+"I told them what you said, Jed," the astro-navigator said. "We're back
+of you one hundred per cent."
+
+Hargraves grinned a little. "Thanks," he said. "We were selected to work
+together as a unit. As long as we remain a unit, we will have a chance
+against any enemy."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Dog-tired, he went to his bunk and rolled in. It seemed to him he had
+barely closed his eyes before a hand grabbed him by the shoulder and a
+shaken voice shouted in his ear. "Jed! Wake up."
+
+"Who is it? What's wrong?" The room was dark and he couldn't see who was
+shaking him.
+
+"Ron Val." The astro-navigator's voice was hoarse with the maddest,
+wildest fright Hargraves had ever heard. "The--the damnedest thing has
+happened!"
+
+"What?"
+
+"Hal Sarkoff--" That was as far as Ron Val could get.
+
+"What about him?"
+
+"_He's outside trying to get in!_"
+
+"Have you gone insane? Sarkoff is dead. You helped me bury him."
+
+"I know it. Jed, he's outside. He wants in."
+
+Hargraves had gone to bed without removing even his shoes. He ran
+forward to the control room, Ron Val pounding behind him. Lights had
+been turned on here, in defiance of orders. Someone had summoned the
+crew. They were all here, all eighteen who remained alive. The inner
+door of the lock was open. A dazed guard, who had been on watch outside
+the lock, was standing in the door. He had a pistol in his hand but he
+looked as if he didn't know what to do with it.
+
+In the center of a group of men too frightened to move was a
+black-haired, rugged giant.
+
+"Sarkoff!" Hargraves gasped.
+
+The giant's head turned until his gaze was centered on the captain. "You
+moved the ship," he said accusingly. "I had the damnedest time finding
+it in the dark. What did you move the ship for, Jed?"
+
+If some super-magician had cast a spell over the little group he could
+not have produced a more complete stasis. No one moved. No one seemed to
+breathe. All motion, all action, all thinking, had stopped.
+
+Sarkoff's face went from face to face.
+
+"What the heck is the matter with you guys?" he demanded. "Am I poison,
+or something?"
+
+He seemed bewildered.
+
+"Where--where are the others?" Ron Val stammered.
+
+"What others? What the heck are you talking about, Ron?"
+
+"Nevins and Reese. We--we buried them with you. Where are they?"
+
+"How the hell do I kn----_You buried them with me?_" Sarkoff's face went
+from bewilderment to inexplicable good nature. "Trying to pull my leg,
+huh? Okay. I can go along with a gag." He looked again at Hargraves.
+"But I can't go along with that gag of moving the ship after you sent me
+out scouting. Why didn't you wait for me? Wandering around among all
+these trees, I might have got lost and got myself killed. Why did you do
+that, Jed?" he finished angrily.
+
+"We were--ah--afraid of an attack," Hargraves choked out. "Sorry, Hal,
+but we--we had to move the ship. We would have--hunted you up,
+tomorrow."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Sarkoff was not a man who was ever long angry about anything. The
+apology satisfied him. He grinned. "Okay, Jed. Forget it. Jeepers! I'm
+so hungry I could eat a cow. How about a couple of those synthetic
+steaks we got in the ice-box?" His eyes went around the group, came to
+rest on the astro-navigator. "How about it, Ron? How about me and you
+fixing us up some chow?"
+
+"Sure," said Hargraves. "Go on back to the galley and start fixing
+yourself whatever you want. You go with him, Ron. I'll handle your job
+up here while you're gone."
+
+Nodding dumbly, Ron Val started to follow Sarkoff toward the galley.
+"One minute," Hargraves called after him. "I want to check something
+with you before you go!"
+
+Sarkoff kept going. Ron Val returned. "Take your cues from him,"
+Hargraves said. "You know him better than anyone else. Whatever he says,
+you agree. Casually bring up past events and watch his reaction. _Your
+job is to find out if that is really Hal Sarkoff!_"
+
+The astro-navigator, his face white, clumped toward the galley.
+
+Hargraves faced a torrent of questions.
+
+"Jed! We buried him."
+
+"Jed. He had been in that engine room without air for at least ten
+minutes before we got there. He can't be alive."
+
+"No air. Temperature diving toward absolute zero. He was frozen stiff,
+Jed, before we moved him. We left him where he was until long after we
+landed."
+
+"I know," Hargraves said. "There is no doubt about it. I used a
+stethoscope on him as soon as I could get to it after we landed. _He was
+dead._ There wasn't a sign of life."
+
+Frightened faces looked at him. Awed faces. Bewildered faces.
+
+"What did you mean when you told Ron Val to find out if that is really
+Sarkoff?"
+
+"Just what I said. That may be Sarkoff. It may be something that looks
+like Sarkoff, acts like him, talks like him--_but isn't he_!"
+
+"That--that's impossible."
+
+"How do we know what is possible here and what isn't?"
+
+"What are we going to do?"
+
+"We're going to act just as we would if that were Sarkoff. We're going
+to pick up our cues from him? You remember he said he was out scouting.
+That is his story. We will not question it. We will act as though it
+were true, until we know what is happening. Now everybody back to his
+post. Act as if nothing had happened. And for the love of Pete, don't
+ask me what is going on. I don't know any more than you do."
+
+They didn't want to obey that order. They had just seen a dead man
+walking, had heard him talking, had spoken to him. There was comfort in
+just being with each other. Hargraves walked to the bridge, waited.
+Eventually, discipline sent them back to their posts. He kept on
+waiting. Ron Val returned.
+
+"I don't know, Jed. I just don't know. We were in school together. I
+brought up incidents that happened in school, things that only Hal and I
+knew. _Jed, he knew them._"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+With the exception of a hooded blue lamp on the bridge, all lights had
+been turned off again. The control room was in darkness. Ron Val was an
+uneasy shadow talking from dim blackness.
+
+"Then you think that it is really Sarkoff?"
+
+"I don't know."
+
+"But if he remembers things that only Hal could know--"
+
+"He remembers things that he can't know."
+
+"Um. What things?"
+
+"He asked me how much progress had been made in repairing the ship. Jed,
+he must have died before he knew the ship had been damaged."
+
+"Not necessarily," said Hargraves thoughtfully. "He might have been
+conscious for one or two minutes after the beam struck us. He would know
+that the ship had been damaged. What did you tell him?"
+
+"I changed the subject."
+
+"Good for you. If he isn't Sarkoff, the one thing he might want to know
+is whether the ship has been repaired. What else?"
+
+"Jed, he remembers _everything_ that happened after the ship was
+attacked. We almost crashed before we got the engines started. He
+remembers that. He remembers hiding the ship among the trees."
+
+Hargraves stirred. The keen logic of his mind was being blunted by facts
+that would not fit into any logical pattern. He tried to think. His mind
+refused the effort. Dead men ought not to remember things that happened
+after they died. But a dead man had remembered!
+
+For an instant panic walked through the captain's mind. Then he got it
+under control. There was always an answer to every question, a solution
+to every problem. Or was there? He went hunting facts.
+
+"Does he remember being buried?"
+
+Even in the darkness he could feel Ron Val shiver. "No," Ron Val said.
+"He doesn't remember. Just as soon as we landed, he thinks you sent him
+out, to scout the surrounding territory for possible enemies."
+
+"Does he know that we had visitors in his absence?"
+
+"No. Or if he does, he didn't mention it, and I didn't ask. He says he
+was returning when he saw the ship being moved. He says he tried to
+follow, but lost it in the darkness. He says he had the devil's own time
+finding it again, and he's still hot about being left behind."
+
+Again Hargraves had to fight the panic in his mind. This much seemed
+obvious. Sarkoff's memory was accurate--until the ship landed. Then it
+went into fantasy, into error. If one thing was certain, he had not been
+sent out to scout for enemies. If there was another fact that was
+immutable, he had been buried.
+
+"Where is he now?" Hargraves asked abruptly.
+
+"In his bunk, snoring. He ate enough for two men, yawned, said he was
+sleepy. He was sound asleep almost as soon as he touched the blankets."
+
+Ron Val's voice relapsed into silence. The whole ship was silent.
+
+"Jed, what are we going to do?"
+
+"You bunk with him, don't you?"
+
+"Yes. Jed! You don't mean--"
+
+Hargraves cleared his throat. "This is not an order. You don't have to
+do it if you don't want to. But Sarkoff must be watched. Are you willing
+to go back to the room you two shared together and get into the upper
+deck of your bunk just as if nothing has happened?"
+
+"Yes," said Ron Val.
+
+"Somebody must be with him--all the time. You stay awake. When he gets
+up, you get up. Whatever he does, you stay with him. I'll have you
+relieved as soon as possible. And, Ron--"
+
+"Yes."
+
+"You have something a man could use for courage."
+
+Silently, Ron Val walked out of the control room. He fumbled his way
+through the door and his steps echoed down the corridor that led to the
+sleeping quarters.
+
+Hargraves sat in thought. Then he, too, left the control room.
+
+"Noble, you're a bio-chemist. You come with me. Nielson, you take over
+here in the control room. In my absence you are in command."
+
+"Yes sir," Nielson said. "But what are you going to do?"
+
+"See what is in a grave we dug yesterday," Hargraves answered.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+What the Graves Revealed
+
+
+Hargraves carried the shovel. He and Noble were armed, and very much
+alert.
+
+"When you ask me if it is chemically possible for a man--or an
+animal--to freeze, die, be buried, then rise again and live, I cannot
+answer," Noble said. "So far as I know, it is not possible. The physical
+act of freezing will involve tremendous and seemingly irreversible
+changes in the body cells. Thawing will produce almost immediate
+bacterial action, which also seems irreversible. All I can say is, if
+Hal Sarkoff is alive, we have seen a miracle that contradicts chemical
+laws as we know them."
+
+"And if he is not alive, we face a miracle of duplication. Whatever it
+is that is sleeping back in the ship, it looks, talks, acts, like Hal
+Sarkoff, even to memory. Can you suggest any method by which flesh and
+bone could be so speedily moulded into a living image of a man whom we
+know died?"
+
+"No," said Noble bluntly. "Jed, do you realize all the possible
+implications of this situation?"
+
+"Probably not," Hargraves answered. "Some that I do recognize, I exclude
+from my thoughts."
+
+His tone was so harsh that Noble said nothing more.
+
+Dawn was already breaking over this Vegan world. The sky in the east was
+the color of pearl. In the trees over them, creatures that sounded like
+birds were beginning to chirp.
+
+They reached the place where they had buried Hal Sarkoff and his two
+companions.
+
+The graves were empty.
+
+No effort had been made to conceal the fact that the graves had been
+opened. The dirt had been shoveled out again and had not been shoveled
+back.
+
+There were marks in the dirt, the tracks of sandaled feet. "Thulon, the
+three who were with him, wore sandals!" Hargraves rasped. "They came
+back here. They opened these graves."
+
+"But what happened after that? Are you suggesting those primitive
+gray-beards resurrected Hal Sarkoff?"
+
+"I'm not suggesting anything because I don't know anything," Hargraves
+answered. "I am just remembering that Thulon and the three who were with
+him _looked human too_! I am also remembering that the sphere which
+attacked us seemingly was without a crew. Our beams blasted it wide
+open. It was seemingly filled with machinery. Nothing else. If there
+were any intelligent creatures in it, they were in no form that we
+recognize. Come on!" Hargraves started running toward the ship.
+
+The ship, badly damaged as it was, represented their sole hope of
+survival. Without it, they would be helpless.
+
+Hal Sarkoff was with the ship. Or the thing that was masquerading as
+Sarkoff. Thulon had looked human too. Possibly Sarkoff and his two dead
+comrades had been removed from their graves in order to make possible a
+perfect duplication of their bodies, the probing of cell structure, both
+body and brain. Perhaps the things that lurked here on this world could
+read memories from dead minds. That might be the explanation of
+Sarkoff's memory.
+
+The important fact was that Sarkoff's body was not in its grave. Where
+so much was unknown, this was one indisputable fact. The thing that was
+on the ship must be placed not only under heavy guard but in a cage from
+which escape was impossible. Then an examination could begin.
+
+There was evil on this world. The trees, the vegetation, the ground
+under his racing feet, was evil. In his calmer moments Jed Hargraves
+would have said that evil was another word for danger. He wasn't calm
+now. The panic he had been rigidly excluding from his mind had burst the
+dam he had built before it. He could feel danger in the air. It was in
+the dawn, in the light of the sky. It was everywhere. He and his
+companions were aliens on this world, and the planet was striking at
+them, striving to eliminate them, contriving to destroy them.
+
+He heard it before he saw it.
+
+Something was grunting in the air. Above the tops of the trees something
+was grunting. He needed seconds to recognize the sound. Then he
+recognized it. And jerked himself to a halt, his eyes wildly probing
+upward.
+
+He saw it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The ship. The grunting roar had come from the Kruchek drivers fighting
+the gravity of the planet.
+
+The ship had taken off without them.
+
+Had Nielson gone mad? Had he seen danger approaching and jumped the ship
+into the sky to escape it?
+
+"Wait! Nielson! Pick us up!"
+
+The ship flew on. Gaining speed, it passed over their heads. They caught
+another glimpse of it as it passed over an opening in the branches of
+the trees. Then it was gone, the throb of the drivers dying quickly
+away.
+
+"Nielson will come back for us." Noble's voice, usually poised and
+assured, was garbled. "He'll return and pick us up. He won't leave us
+here."
+
+"He had some reason for taking off," Hargraves heard himself saying.
+"He'll come back. He has to." Subconsciously he knew that this, at the
+very best, was wishful thinking.
+
+The ship had no more than vanished until another sound came to their
+ears, that of men shouting. A group came into sight among the trees,
+following along the ground the course the ship had taken through the
+air.
+
+"They're our fellows!" Hargraves heard Noble gasp.
+
+"What happened?" the captain demanded, as the group approached.
+
+Nielson was in the lead. There was a bruise on his cheek and his right
+eye was already beginning to turn black. "I'll tell you what happened!"
+he said savagely. "Sarkoff and Ron Val took over the ship, that's what
+happened!"
+
+"Ron Val!"
+
+"That's what I said. Ron Val was helping him. They pulled guns. Before
+we knew what was happening, they had herded us together and were shoving
+us outside. I tried to stop it and Sarkoff took a poke at me."
+
+"It wasn't really Sarkoff, then?" Noble whispered.
+
+"Any damned fool would have known that!" Nielson answered. He spoke to
+the bio-chemist but his eyes were on Hargraves. "I'm going to repeat
+that, so there won't be any misunderstanding of my meaning. Any damned
+fool would have known that a dead man doesn't get up out of his grave
+and come to life again. Except you, Hargraves. You always were a sucker
+for fairy stories."
+
+Jed Hargraves winced with every word that was spoken. They kept on
+coming.
+
+"You ought to have known that thing wasn't Hal Sarkoff. Any man in his
+right senses would have known it instantly. Any man fit to command would
+have taken measures to meet the situation, either by destroying that
+thing, or locking it up. But you were running things, Hargraves. You
+were in charge. And you had to sit back and think before you would act.
+You had to make sure you were right, before you went ahead. Your
+negligence, Hargraves, cost us our only chance of ever returning home."
+
+Nielson's voice was harsh with anger. And--Hargraves recognized the
+bitter truth--every word Nielson uttered was correct. Whatever the thing
+was that had come to the ship, he should have recognized it as a source
+of danger. He had so recognized it. But he had not acted.
+
+"I--"
+
+"Shut up!" Nielson snapped. "According to our agreement, any time you
+are shown to be unfit to command, you may be removed by a vote of the
+majority. There is no question but that you have shown yourself unfit to
+be in charge of this expedition."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+No time was wasted in reaching a decision. To Nielson's question as to
+whether Hargraves should be removed from command, there was a chorus of
+"Ayes."
+
+"No," said one voice. It was Usher, the archeologist.
+
+"State your objection," Nielson rasped.
+
+"The old one about changing horses in mid-stream," the archeologist
+answered. "Also the old one about not jumping to conclusions before all
+the evidence is in."
+
+"What evidence isn't in?"
+
+"We don't know why Ron Val joined Sarkoff," the archeologist answered.
+
+"What difference does that make? We don't even know that Ron Val was
+still himself. The thing that looked like Ron Val might have been
+another monstrosity like Sarkoff."
+
+"So it might," the archeologist shrugged. "Anyhow my vote is not
+important. I'm just putting it in for the sake of the record, if there
+ever is a record. I would also like to mention that if ever we needed
+discipline and unity, now is the time."
+
+"We will have discipline, I promise you," Nielson said. "Hargraves, you
+are removed from command, understand?"
+
+"Yes," said Hargraves steadily.
+
+Only one ballot was needed to put Nielson in charge.
+
+"All right," said Ushur to the new captain. "You're the boss now. We're
+all behind you. What are you going to do?"
+
+"Do? I--" Nielson looked startled. He glanced at Hargraves.
+
+The former captain sighed. It was easy enough to elect a new leader.
+Vehemently he wished that all problems could be solved so easily.
+
+"I suggest," he said, "--and this is only a suggestion--that we attempt
+to find the ship, and if possible, to regain possession of her. She is
+the only tool we have to work with."
+
+"That is exactly what I was going to say," Nielson said emphatically.
+"Find the ship."
+
+To give him credit, he set about the job in a workmanlike manner,
+sending two scouts ahead of the main group, throwing out a scout on each
+flank. The only way they could hope to find the ship was by following
+the course it had taken through the air. Since Sarkoff, in taking over
+the vessel, had not disarmed them, each possessed a vibration pistol. In
+a fight against ordinary enemies they would be able to give a good
+account of themselves. But would any enemy they met likely be ordinary?
+
+Hargraves drew Usher aside. "I would like to talk to you," he said.
+"What actually happened when the ship was taken?"
+
+"I don't know, Jed," the archeologist ruefully answered. "I was in my
+cabin. The first thing I knew I heard a hell of a hullabaloo going on up
+in the control room. I dashed up there to see what was going on."
+
+"What was happening?"
+
+"Nielson, Rodney, Turner, and a couple of others were there. So
+were--well, they looked like Sarkoff and Ron Val. Nielson was getting up
+off the floor. Sarkoff and Ron Val had both drawn their guns and were
+covering the group. When I came charging in, Sarkoff covered me. Before
+I could recover from my surprise, he and Ron Val had kicked every one of
+us out of the ship. Then they took off." The archeologist shook his
+shaggy head.
+
+"Ron Val was helping?"
+
+"No question about it. Which means, of course, that he was either under
+some subtle form of hypnosis, or _it_ wasn't Ron Val. I would bet my
+life on his loyalty."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"So would I," said Hargraves. And the memory came back of how thrilled
+Ron Val had been at the prospect of landing on this, world. "It would
+mean a lot to find people here. We could exchange experiences, learn a
+lot," Ron Val had said, his face glowing at the thought. All the others
+had felt the same way. The Third Interstellar Expedition had no military
+ambitions. It was not bent on conquest. The solar system had outgrown
+military expeditions, war, and the thought of war, and cruisers went out
+from it not to fight but to learn. Knowledge was the thing they sought,
+all knowledge, so the human race could determine its place in the
+cosmos, could know the history of all things past, could possibly
+forecast the shape of things to come.
+
+The landing of the Third Interstellar Expedition on this Vegan world had
+been a part of a vast evolution, a march that, starting on earth so long
+ago that all history of it was forever lost, was now reaching out across
+the cosmos. A new evolution! Ron Val had always been talking about this
+new evolution. It was one of his favorite subjects.
+
+"What do you make of this world?" Hargraves asked abruptly. "The only
+sign of civilization we have seen is this vast grove. No cities, no
+industrial plants, no evidence of progress. Yet the spherical ship that
+attacked us certainly indicates a highly mechanical civilization. Of
+course there may be cities here that we haven't seen, but as we landed
+we saw a large land area. No roads were visible, no canals, not even any
+cultivated fields. What does all this mean to you, as an archeologist?"
+
+"Nothing," Usher answered promptly. "I would say this country is a
+wilderness. But the trees planted in regular rows disprove this. On
+earth, at least, centuries would be required for trees as large as these
+to grow. Forestry, planned centuries in advance, can only come from a
+high and stable culture. However, as you say, all other signs of this
+high culture are absent, no cities, no transportation facilities,
+apparently damned few inhabitants--we have seen only four. All
+civilizations with which we are familiar move through recognized stages,
+first the nomadic stage, which involves tending flocks and herds. Then
+comes the tilling of the soil, in which farming is the principal
+occupation of most of the people. After that, with industrialization, we
+have cities developing. If there is another stage we have not reached it
+on earth."
+
+"Do you think they might have reached the final stage here?" Hargraves
+questioned.
+
+"I don't know what the final stage may be," the archeologist answered.
+"Also, and this is more important, I can't begin to guess at the real
+nature of the inhabitants of this world. Until I do know their real
+nature, what they look like, what they eat, where they sleep, what they
+think, I can't even guess intelligently about them. However," Usher
+broke off with a wry grin, "all these philosophical observations are of
+no importance while our own necks are threatened with the ax."
+
+Vega was straight overhead when they found the ship. One of the advance
+scouts came hurrying back with the information.
+
+"She is lying in a little meadow beside the lake," the scout reported.
+"They're doing something to her. I can't tell what. But the trees extend
+to within fifty yards of her. We can approach that near without being
+seen."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+The Capture of the Ship
+
+
+Nielson made his dispositions with care. The ship lay in a little meadow
+where the trees bent inward from the blue water of the lake to form a
+cove. Her nose was pointed toward the water and her tail was almost in
+the trees. Nielson sent three men on a wide circuit. They were to attack
+from the farther side. It was to be a feint. While the three men drew
+attention to them, the main body was to charge.
+
+"We have every chance of succeeding," Nielson said. "And if we do gain
+the ship again, this time we won't stay here. Vega has at least two
+planets. The ship will fly to the other one without repairs. You should
+have thought of that, Hargraves."
+
+"There are a lot of things I should have thought of and didn't,"
+Hargraves answered. There was no animosity in his tone. "What I would
+like to know is what they are doing there beside the ship?"
+
+Thulon and his three companions were visible beside the vessel. They
+were busily engaged in setting up a device of some kind. Others of their
+species had joined them until there were possibly thirty or forty
+present. Through the the gaping hole in the hull, still others could be
+seen peering out. What they were doing Hargraves could not discern.
+
+"Odd," said Usher beside him.
+
+"What is?"
+
+"It's odd that they should still seem to be human in form," the
+archeologist answered. "Ah. Perhaps there is the reason."
+
+Both locks were open. The thing that looked like Hal Sarkoff had just
+emerged from the nearest one. He went directly to the main group. They
+were erecting something that looked like a tripod. Several were carrying
+pieces of metal from the ship which they were fastening together to form
+the legs of the tripod. At the apex of the tripod something that looked
+like a box was coming into existence.
+
+"They are completely unarmed," Hargraves heard Nielson say. "There isn't
+a weapon in the whole damned bunch. We'll blast them senseless before
+they even know they're being attacked."
+
+"If they don't succeed in manning the negatron," Usher pointed out.
+
+"They don't know how to operate the negatron."
+
+"Don't they? I might mention that they seem to know everything that
+Sarkoff knew. And Hal certainly knew how that negatron operated. He
+could take it apart and put it back together blind-folded."
+
+"That's so," Nielson admitted. For a second unease showed on his lean
+face. "Well, that only means we will have to lick them before they can
+get that negatron into operation. One thing is certain--we have to have
+the ship."
+
+"You're right on that score," Usher grimly said.
+
+Seconds ticked away into minutes. The group busy about the ship had no
+intimation they were about to be attacked. They were careless to the
+point of foolhardiness. No sentries had been posted, no effort had been
+made to hide the vessel.
+
+"What are they, really?" Hargraves thought. He wondered if they were
+some strange form of water-dwelling life that lived in the lakes of this
+planet. Perhaps that was what they were! Perhaps the transition from the
+fish to the mammal had never been made on this planet, the fish-form
+developing keen intelligence. Certainly there was intelligence on this
+world. But it seemed to be an intelligence humans could not comprehend.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The signal for the attack sounded. Fierce shouts came from the other
+side of the ship. The shouters were hidden, but there was no mistaking
+the sounds. They came from human throats.
+
+"Give 'em hell, boys!"
+
+"Tear 'em to pieces!"
+
+The harsh throbbing of vibration pistols split the quiet air.
+
+"Steady!" Nielson said. "Wait until they go to see what's happening."
+
+The group busy around the ship raised startled faces from their task.
+They seemed to listen. Then they turned and ran around the bow of the
+vessel.
+
+"Come on!" cried Nielson, leaping from concealment.
+
+There wasn't a person left in sight to oppose them. Fifty yards to
+cross. Fifty yards to the ship! Fifty yards to a fighting chance for
+life!
+
+Under their racing feet the soft turf was soundless.
+
+Twenty-five yards to go now. Ten yards. Ten feet to the open lock.
+
+Thulon appeared in the lock. He looked in surprise at the charging men.
+
+Except for the rough staff that he carried he was weaponless.
+
+Nielson didn't give the command to fire, didn't need to give it. Every
+vibration pistol had been drawn long before the men leaped from cover.
+Every pistol came up at the same instant, every index finger squeezed a
+trigger.
+
+Only Thulon stood between them and a fighting chance for life. They came
+of warrior races, these men. No bugles urged them on. They needed no
+bugles.
+
+A howling vortex of radiation smashed at the figure in the lock.
+
+One vibration pistol would destroy a man, smash him to bloody bits. More
+than a dozen pistols were centered on the figure standing before them.
+
+Thulon stood unharmed.
+
+Staff in front of him he stood facing the fingers of hell reaching for
+him. The flaming fingers grasped, and did not touch him.
+
+The shooting stopped as abruptly as it began. The charge stopped.
+Hargraves saw Nielson staring dazedly from the figure in the lock to the
+pistol in his hand as if the two were irreconcilable. The pistol ought
+to have destroyed Thulon. It hadn't destroyed him. For a mad moment,
+Hargraves felt sorry for the new captain. He, too, had run headlong into
+a logical impossibility.
+
+All sounds were suddenly stilled, all shouting stopped, all noises died
+away.
+
+Around the bow of the ship Hal Sarkoff came running. He saw the group
+and looked bewildered. "Hey! How did you guys get here?"
+
+"Blast him!" Nielson said, centering his pistol on this new target.
+
+From the staff in Thulon's hand came a soft tinkle, a bell-like sound.
+Nothing seemed to happen but Nielson staggered as if he had been hit a
+sharp blow. The pistol flew out of his hand and landed twenty feet away.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Listen, you apes," Sarkoff shouted at the top of his voice. "I'm Hal
+Sarkoff. I've always been Hal Sarkoff. I'll never be anybody else but
+Hal Sarkoff. Do you get it?"
+
+They didn't get it.
+
+"If you--" Nielson whispered. "If you are really Sarkoff, then
+who--what--is he?" He pointed toward Thulon still standing in the lock.
+
+"Him?" The grin on the craggy face belonged to Hal Sarkoff and to no one
+else. "Meet a god," he said.
+
+"A god?" That was Usher speaking now, his voice a tense whisper.
+
+Sarkoff continued grinning. "Well, he resurrected me when I was deader
+than hell. I guess that makes him a god."
+
+"You--you know you were dead?"
+
+"Yep. At least I guess I know it. The last thing I remember is trying to
+get back to the control panel when we got that hole knocked in the ship,
+so I could cut the drivers back in. After that everything gets kind of
+hazy. The next thing I remember is my pal here," he gestured toward
+Thulon, "and a lot of his buddies chirping like sparrows while they
+worked over me. And believe me, they were working me over plenty. I felt
+like I had been turned inside out, wrung out, hung out to dry, then
+stuffed all over again."
+
+"But when you came back to the ship," Hargraves spoke, "you said you
+remembered everything that had happened, the crash of the ship, our
+hiding her. If you were dead, how did you learn these things?"
+
+"He told me," Sarkoff answered, nodding toward Thulon. "He filled out my
+memory for me with dope he had taken from your mind while you were
+talking. Reading minds is one of that old boy's minor accomplishments."
+
+"Then why didn't you tell us the truth?" Hargraves exploded. "You said
+you had been sent out scouting. Why didn't you tell us what had really
+happened?" Mentally he added, "If it happened!"
+
+"Because you apes wouldn't have believed me!" Sarkoff answered. "To your
+knowledge--mine, too, until it happened--dead men don't get up out of
+their graves and walk. If I had told you the truth, you wouldn't have
+believed a word of it. If I told you something you knew wasn't true,
+that you had sent me out on a scouting trip, you would know I was lying,
+you would figure it was a trick of some kind, and you would wait around
+and try to discover the trick. While you were waiting around trying to
+catch me, I could get in some missionary work on Ron Val. I knew I could
+convert him, if I had a chance to talk to him. With him on my side, we
+could convince the rest of you. It would have worked too. All it needed
+was a little time for you boys to get used to the idea of a dead man
+coming back to life." He looked at Nielson. "Remind me to black that
+other eye of yours one of these days."
+
+"What?" said Hargraves. "What's this?"
+
+"Our pal Nielson," Sarkoff said. "If _you_ think before you act, _he_
+acts before he thinks. You had no sooner gone chasing off to see if I
+was really where you had buried me, which was what I thought you would
+do, until Nielson comes poking into where Ron Val and I were holding a
+conference. Nielson had a gun. He had it out ready to use. He figured
+the only safe thing to do was to shoot me. So," Sarkoff shrugged, "I had
+to smack him. He had forced my hand."
+
+[Illustration: Fists lashed out, weapons appeared, and cries of fury
+rent the air]
+
+There was a slight stir among the group. This was news to all of them.
+
+"Is this true?" Hargraves said.
+
+"Yes," said Nielson defiantly. "And I was right. I should have killed
+him. He isn't Hal Sarkoff. He isn't telling the truth about coming back
+to life. Sarkoff is dead."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Sarkoff glanced up at Thulon who was still standing in the lock looking
+down at the men before him. There was a ghost of a smile on his face.
+
+"See!" said Sarkoff, addressing Thulon. "I told you we couldn't tell
+these boys anything. They have to see, they have to feel, they have to
+be shown."
+
+"Well," the thought came from Thulon to everyone. "Why don't you show
+them?"
+
+"Okay," Sarkoff answered. "Nevins!" he shouted. "Reese! Come out of that
+ship."
+
+Nevins and Reese were the two engineers who had died with Sarkoff.
+
+Thulon moved a little to one side. Nevins and Reese came out of the
+ship. They were grinning.
+
+"Feel us!" Sarkoff shouted. "Pinch us. Cut off a slice of skin and
+examine it under a microscope. Make blood tests. Use X-rays. Do whatever
+you damned please." He shoved a brawny arm under Nielson's nose. "Here.
+Pinch this and see if you think it's real."
+
+Nielson shrank away.
+
+Nevins and Reese passed among the men, offering themselves in evidence.
+Startled voices called softly in answer to other startled voices.
+"They're real."
+
+"This is no lie. This is the truth."
+
+"I've known this man for years. This is Eddie Nevins."
+
+"And this is Sam Reese."
+
+Hargraves heard the voices, saw the conclusion they were reaching.
+
+"One moment," he said.
+
+The voices went into silence. Eyes turned questioningly to him.
+
+"Even if these men are really Hal Sarkoff and Eddie Nevins and Sam
+Reese, if they are the companions we knew as dead who have miraculously
+been returned to us, there are still facts that do not fit into a
+logical pattern. Even here on this world the laws of logic must hold
+true."
+
+Silence fell. Men looked at him and at each other. Where there had been
+wonder on their faces, new doubts were appearing.
+
+"What facts, Jed?" Sarkoff questioned.
+
+"The sphere that attacked us, that attempted to destroy us, without
+warning. This is a fact that does not fit."
+
+"The sphere?" Uncertainty showed on Sarkoff's face. Then he grinned
+again and turned to Thulon. "You tell him about that sphere."
+
+"Gladly," Thulon's thoughts came. "As you know, Vega has two planets.
+Long ago we were at war with the inhabitants of this other planet. Part
+of our defenses around our own planet were floating fortresses. The war
+is done but we have left guards in the sky to protect us if we are
+attacked. The sphere that attacked you was one of our automatic forts
+which we had left in the sky."
+
+"Ah!" said Hargraves. The cold logic of his mind sought a pattern that
+would include fortresses in the sky. Presuming war between two planets,
+such fortresses were logical. But--
+
+"The construction of such a sphere indicates vast technical knowledge,
+tremendous workshops. I have seen no laboratories and no industrial
+centers that could produce such a fortress. I have, moreover, seen no
+civilization that will serve as a background for such construction."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+He waited for an answer. Usher, the archeologist, looked suddenly at
+him, then looked at Thulon.
+
+"The fortresses were built long ago," Thulon said. "In those past
+milleniums we had industrial centers. We no longer need them and we no
+longer have them."
+
+"Then there _is_ another stage!" the archeologist gasped. "You are past
+the city stage in your evolutionary process. You are beyond the metal
+age. What--" Usher eagerly asked. "What comes after that?"
+
+"We are beyond the age of cities," Thulon answered. "The next but
+possibly not final stage is a return to nature. We live in the groves
+and the fields, beside the lakes, under the trees. We need no protection
+from the elements because we are in unison with them. There are no
+enemies on this world, no dangers, almost no death. In your thinking you
+can only describe us as gods. Our activities are almost entirely mental.
+Our only concession of materialism is this." He lifted the staff. "When
+you fired at me, this staff canceled your beams. It would have canceled
+them if they had been a thousand times stronger. When one of you
+attempted to destroy Sarkoff, force went out from this staff, knocking
+the weapon from his hand. There are certain powers leashed within this
+staff, certain arrangements of crystals that are very nearly ultimate
+matter. Through this staff my will is worked. Some day," he smiled, "we
+will even be able to discard the staff. That is the goal of our
+evolution."
+
+The thoughts went into soft silence and Thulon looked down at them.
+"Does that satisfy you?" His eyes went among the group, came to rest on
+Hargraves. "No, I see it does not. There is still one fact that you
+cannot fit into your pattern."
+
+"Yes," said Hargraves. "If all that you have told us is true, why was
+the ship stolen?"
+
+"Everything has to fit for you?" Sarkoff answered. "Well, that's why you
+are our leader. I can answer this question. I took the ship so I could
+have it repaired. Then, when I brought it back to you, fit to fly again,
+all of us would have evidence that we could not deny. You might doubt my
+identity, you might doubt me, but you would not doubt a ship that had
+been repaired. Thulon," Sarkoff ended, "will you do your stuff?"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Standing a little apart from the rest Hargraves watched. Thulon and his
+comrades brought metal from the vessel. How they used the tripod he
+could not see but in some way they seemed to use it to melt the metal.
+This was magna steel. They worked it as if it were pure tin. It didn't
+seem to be hot but they spread sheets of it over the gaping hole in the
+hull. They closed the hole. He knew the ship had been repaired but still
+he did not move. On the ground before him was something that looked like
+an ant hill. He watched this, his mind reaching out and grasping a
+bigger problem. The ants, he could see, were swarming.
+
+Nielson detached himself from the group at the ship and came to him.
+
+"Jed," he said hesitatingly.
+
+"What?"
+
+"Jed, what Hal said about me attacking him was right. I thought--I
+thought he wasn't Sarkoff. I thought I was doing what was right."
+
+"I don't doubt you," Hargraves answered. His mind was not on what
+Nielson was saying.
+
+"Jed."
+
+"Uh?"
+
+"Jed. I--"
+
+"What is it?"
+
+"Jed, will you take over command again?" The words came fast. "I--"
+
+"Huh? Take over command? Don't you like the job?"
+
+Nielson shivered. "No. I'm not ready for it yet. Jed, will you take it
+over, please?"
+
+"Huh? Oh, sure, if that is what the fellows want."
+
+"They want it. So do I."
+
+"Okay then." Hargraves was scarcely aware that Nielson had left. Nor did
+he notice Ron Val approaching.
+
+"Jed."
+
+"Huh?"
+
+"Jed, I've been talking to Thulon." The astro-navigator's voice was
+trembling with excitement. "Jed, do you know that Thulon and his people
+_belong to our race_?"
+
+"What?" the startled captain gasped. "Oh, damn it, Ron Val, you're
+dreaming again."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It would be a wonderful dream come true, Hargraves knew, if it was true.
+The human race had kin folks in the universe! Man did not stand alone.
+There was something breath-taking in the very thought of it.
+
+"Thulon says the tests he ran on Hal Sarkoff proved it. He says his
+people sent out exploring expeditions long ago, just like we are doing,
+only the groups they sent out were more colonists than explorers. He
+says one of these groups landed on earth and that we are the descendants
+of that group, sons of colonists come back to the mother world after
+uncounted centuries of absence--"
+
+Ron Val was babbling, the words were tumbling over each other on his
+lips.
+
+"Oh, hell, Ron Val, it doesn't fit," Jed Hargraves said. "We can trace
+our evolutionary chain back to the fish in the seas--"
+
+"Sure," Ron Val interrupted. "But we don't know that those fish came
+from the seas of earth!"
+
+"Huh?" Hargraves gasped. "Well, I'll be damned! I never thought of that
+possibility." He looked at the lakes dancing in the Vegan sunshine. From
+these lakes, from these seas, had come the original fish-like creature
+that eventually became human in form! The thought was startling.
+
+"The colonists landed on earth thousands of years ago," Ron Val said.
+"Maybe they smashed their ship in landing, had to learn to live off the
+country. Maybe they forgot who they were, in time. Jed, we have legends
+that we are the children of God. Maybe--Oh, Jed, Thulon says it's true."
+
+Hargraves hesitated, torn between doubt and longing. He looked down. On
+the ground in front of him the ants were still swarming. Hundreds of
+them were coming from the ant hill and were flying off. There were
+thousands of them. Eventually, in the recesses of this vast grove, there
+would be new colonies, which would swarm in their turn. He watched them
+flying away. The air was bright with the glint of their wings.
+
+He looked up. Thulon was coming toward them. Thulon was smiling.
+"Welcome home," his voice whispered in their minds. "Welcome home."
+
+Hargraves began to smile.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of Project Gutenberg's Planet of the Gods, by Robert Moore Williams
+
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