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1058 lines
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Plaintext
The Project Gutenberg eBook of Stalemate
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This ebook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
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most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
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whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
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of the Project Gutenberg License included with this ebook or online
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at www.gutenberg.org. If you are not located in the United States,
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you will have to check the laws of the country where you are located
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before using this eBook.
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Title: Stalemate
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Author: Basil Wells
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Illustrator: Leo Summers
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Release date: May 30, 2010 [eBook #32594]
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Language: English
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Credits: Produced by Greg Weeks, Mary Meehan and the Online
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Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
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*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK STALEMATE ***
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Produced by Greg Weeks, Mary Meehan and the Online
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Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
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STALEMATE
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BY BASIL WELLS
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_Illustrated by Leo Summers_
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[Transcriber Note: This etext was produced from If Worlds of Science
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Fiction November 1954. Extensive research did not uncover any evidence
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that the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
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[Sidenote: _The rules of a duel between gentlemen are quite different
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from the rules of war between nations. Is it because gentlemen do not
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fight wars, or is it that men in war cease to be gentlemen?_]
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The bullet slapped rotted leaves and dirt into Gram Treb's eyes. He
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wormed backward to the bole of a small tree.
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"Missed!" he shouted. He used English, the second tongue of them both.
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"Throw away your carbine and use rocks."
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"You tasted it anyhow," Harl Neilson's shrill young voice cried. "How
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was the sample?"
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"That leaves you two cartridges," taunted Treb. "Or is it only one?"
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The sixth sense that had brought him safely through two of these bloody
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war duels here in space made him fling his body to the left. He rolled
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over once and lay huddled in a shallow depression. He knew all the tiny
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hollows and ridges--they were his insurance on this mile-wide island
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high above Earth.
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Something thudded into the tree roots behind him. He hugged the ground,
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body flattened. His breath eased raggedly outward, and caught. The
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waiting--the seconds that became hours! If the grenade rolled after him,
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down the slope into his shelter, he was finished.
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There was nothing he could do. His palms oozed sweat....
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The grenade exploded. It was like a fist slammed against his skull. He
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was numbed for a long instant. Then he checked.
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Unharmed. The depression had saved his neck this time. He wanted to
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shout at Neilson, tell him he was down to a lone grenade, but that was
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poor strategy. Now he must withdraw, make Neilson think him injured or
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dead, and trap him in turn.
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They were the last of the belligerents here within Earth Satellite. For
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two months, since what would be May on Earth, they had carried on this
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mad duel. Of the other eighteen who had started the war in November of
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the preceding year, only four had survived their wounds. The United
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Nations' supervisory seconds had transported them to their homes in
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Andilia and in Baryt....
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Treb wormed his way as noiselessly as possible into the undergrowth,
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sprawling at last in the shelter of an earthen mound thirty feet from
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the grenade's raw splash. He waited--and thought.
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Memories can be unpleasant. He could see his comrades of the three
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battles as they had fallen, wounded or gray with death. Too many of them
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had he helped bury. He remembered the treasured photos.
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The draining wound in his right forearm throbbed....
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The enemy dead too. He had killed several of them--more than his share,
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he thought savagely. They too were young despite the ragged beards some
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of them cultivated.
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Treb felt like an old man. And he _was_ old. He was twenty-nine. He had
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a son also named Gram, a boy of five, and little Alse, who was two. Had
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little Alse's mother lived he would never have volunteered for this
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third United Nations' war duel.
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He would have been with her in the mountain valley of Krekar working
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hard, and gradually erasing those other ugly episodes here on Earth
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Satellite One....
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Minutes crawled by, lumped together into hours. Birds sang in the trees
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so laboriously maintained here in the satellite's disk-shaped heart.
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And, a hundred feet overhead, where the true deck of the man-made island
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in space began, other birds nested in the girders.
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An ant crawled over Treb's earth-stained hand and passed under his
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outstretched carbine's barrel.
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There was a movement in the clustering trees off to his right. Neilson
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had circled and was coming in from an opposite angle. Treb thumbed off
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the safety and waited.
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An earth-colored helmet, with a trace of long pale hair around its rim,
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came slowly into view. Could be a dummy, Neilson was clever at rigging
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them to draw fire. And he had exactly two cartridges. After that it
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would be his three grenades, his two-foot needle-knife, that doubled as
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a bayonet, and the steel bow he had contrived from a strip of spring
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steel.
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He held his fire. The trees made grenade lobbing a touchy business. And
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his bow was back in one of the dozens of foxholes he had spotted in both
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the inner and outer rings of trees.
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In the fantasy stories of adventure in space that he enjoyed reading,
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the hero could always whip up a weird paralysis ray, a deadly, invisible
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robot bullet, or an intelligent gaseous ally from the void would appear.
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And out of scrap glass, metal and his shoestrings he could contrive a
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solar-powered shell that stopped any missile, deadlier than a
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marshmallow, cold.
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In actual life he was finding it difficult enough to contrive a
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primitive sort of bow, a knife-lashed spear, and snares for the
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increasingly wary rabbits. Lack of sleep and lack of food supplies were
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sapping his lanky body of the whiplash swiftness and wiry strength it
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once possessed. Nor was the week-old wound any aid to his dulled
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wits....
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The helmet advanced; he could almost see the twig-stuffed gray shirt's
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pockets, and he let his nostrils expand as he sucked in a steadying
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breath. Now, a yard behind the fake Andilian, he could see the moving
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shoulders and skull of Harl Neilson--or so his bloodshot eyes told him.
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He squeezed the trigger. There was a subdued yip, and then a derisive
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jeer. Missed again--or had he?
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"Sour rocketing, Grampaw," Neilson laughed. "Try again. And then I'm
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coming after you."
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Only Neilson wouldn't. Unless he'd miscalculated the number of grenades,
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he wouldn't come charging at Treb. And he couldn't be sure of the number
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of cartridges Treb possessed. He was just talking to keep his nerve up.
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Especially if he was wounded now. That sudden yip....
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* * * * *
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It was night again, an artificial night as artificial as the central
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ten-acre pool of water, the ring of flowering green trees and grasses,
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and the final outer ring of forest trees. It was here that the two
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thousand UN employees and soldiers on Earth Satellite One normally took
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their recreation periods.
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Only the supervised war-duels, that since 1969 had been the only
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blood-letting permitted between nations, could long keep a Terran from
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visiting the green meadows and trees of this lowest of the three
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levels....
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"I'd give half that quarter million," Neilson groaned, across the
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darkness, "for a cigarette."
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"You mean," corrected Gram Treb, "half your ten thousand."
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"It's the winner's grant or nothing, Treb. I promised Jane I'd hand it
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to her. Then we'll marry."
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"But not if you are the loser?"
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"I wouldn't--she wouldn't--it's impossible to think of asking her to
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share poverty and disgrace."
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"I'd hardly say that. We lost our first war here on the Satellite. Baryt
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was obligated to cede a thousand square miles to Tarrance. Most of my
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ten thousand paid off my family's debts.
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"Yet I married. I married Nal who had nursed me back to health. And we
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were happy. Until the second war with Duristan. I wanted money for
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her--for the children--for my impoverished valley."
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Treb broke off. He backed away several feet and shifted noiselessly to a
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new position. Every night, and sometimes in the artificial sunlight,
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they talked together. But they never forgot that they were sworn foes.
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"So you won it didn't you?" From his voice Neilson had shifted closer
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and to the left.
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"Sure. And I wish I were as poor as before. For Nal was kicked to
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death--by the horse I should have been using--while I fought here."
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Neilson made a sympathetic sound. Treb felt his lips twitch into a thin
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crooked line. This is what it meant to be human. To feel sorrow for
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another man's misfortunes--and then kill him!
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Sure, Neilson was a good sort. Only twenty-four and in love with a girl,
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a woman really, widow of a dead lunar explorer. And he was a
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clean-living sort, nothing dishonorable or hateful about him. They even
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honored the same God.
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But tomorrow, or the next day, or a month from now, he would kill or
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wound Neilson. Unless, as might well happen, Neilson got to him first.
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He pushed aside a thought that came more and more often of late. Why not
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surrender, or let Neilson capture him? He did not consider
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suicide--little Gram and Alse needed him--although he had not been
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thinking of them when he signed for this ugly miniature battle in space.
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His wife's death had been too vivid yet.
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But, why not surrender? He had enough money. The valley people could
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struggle along without the machines and the dam he had hoped to grant
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them with victory. And Baryt could lose the island of Daafa to Andilia
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without crippling herself. The three hundred and fifty inhabitants could
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be transferred to the mainland.
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Treb laughed silently, a laugh that cut off with a twinge of drawing
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ugly pain from his wounded forearm. He knew that he could no more
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surrender without a fight than he could command his breathing to stop
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forever. He was a man, and men cannot give up dishonorably....
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"I'd like to see those two kids sometime, if you're still around, Treb."
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Neilson had moved again. His voice was lower but he was nearer.
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"Stop around anytime, Harl." Treb moved a few feet deeper into a
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thicket. "We'll show you what real Baryt hospitality is."
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"That's a promise, Treb."
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Killing. That's what war was. So you had to kill. Or you volunteered to
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kill. But you didn't have to like it. All these little wars under UN
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supervision were needless--arbitration would serve as well. But the
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people, the leaders--someone--wanted blood. So ten or twelve or fifteen
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citizens of one nation fought an equal number of the other state's sons.
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Doubtless it was an improvement over the mass bombings of innocent city
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dwellers, and the horror of atomic dusts and sprays. No overwhelming
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army could sweep, unchecked, over a helpless neighbor. It was fairer,
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too, for those involved. Equal numbers of men, guns, supplies. Wealth if
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your side won, and a fair sum if you lost.
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The United Nations saw to that. After all the avenues to peaceful
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settlement had been explored and turned down they finally permitted
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bloodshed. Much against their better judgement, perhaps.
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So he could destroy likeable young Andilians like Neilson.
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"Why don't you send up a rocket?" Neilson kidded, his voice coming from
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a changed direction again. "So I can see you."
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"Anything to oblige."
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Neilson was circling out around, as though to drive him into a trap or
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trick him. They were getting back to the primitive now. Soon it would be
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knives, spears, and deadfalls.
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"Come on over and I'll show you Jane's picture, Treb," invited Neilson.
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He laughed hoarsely. "If we weren't where we are, I'd mean that."
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"I know. I feel that way myself sometimes. We've been here alone too
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long. Hate hasn't lasted."
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"Why aren't you a wrongo, Treb?" The young voice was cracked and savage.
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"Why'd you have to tell me about--Gram and Alse?"
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Treb was backing away again, cautiously. He scented a trap. No doubt
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Neilson's words were sincere, at the moment, but in a second's time he
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could change into a cold-blooded executioner. He knew. He had seen the
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gentlest of men suddenly turn killer....
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And then his foot struck a yielding branch and his aroused suspicion
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sent him lunging forward.
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A heavy something fell with a sickening thud, brushing as it struck the
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sole of his disintegrating shoe. A cleverly rigged deadfall of small
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trees and rock, doubtless.
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"You're slipping, Harl," he shouted.
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But he could feel the sudden sweat damping his palms, and the muscles
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twitched unsteadily in his arms and across his stomach.
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* * * * *
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With morning he was half a mile away, in a foxhole less than sixty yards
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from the massive outer perimeter of the arena. Two of his snares had
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yielded a rabbit each, and so he was supplied for several days.
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The foxhole had two entrances, both well-concealed, and he had rigged
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elaborate warning devices should the vicinity be approached. So he was
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sleeping.
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His dreams were unpleasant.
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In his latest dream an extremely shapely and smiling young woman with
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dark hair was heaving a grenade into a pit where he lay bound and
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helpless. The grenade swelled until it became a space ship heading
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directly toward the frail scout craft he piloted....
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And a tiny blob of dislodged mud from the dugout spatted his face. He
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sat up.
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Another day to hunt or be hunted. Or to lie here and try to rest and
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make plans. There was slight possibility that Neilson could find him
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here.
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He gnawed at the scantly-fleshed ribs of the first rabbit, savoring the
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raw meaty smell and flavor. Hunger was his salt.
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Now that they had lost contact with one another it might require several
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days to find Neilson. A wooded platter, a mile in diameter, can afford
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many hiding places for one creature hiding from another hunting beast.
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It was time to set some of the traps he had been contriving.
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There were the two nooses, attached to bent-down triggered young trees
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that could not be set until darkness fell again. The net, too, would
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need darkness to conceal the four rough pulleys, and the rocks that a
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tug on his rope would spill.
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But the almost invisible nylon cords, set at ankle height across the
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paths, and the ugly little pits with their sharpened stakes set three
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feet below, could trip up a man and cripple him. He must put out several
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of those.
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He had no wish to kill Neilson. If he could capture him, very good. He
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could go back to Andilia and perhaps his Jane would be glad to take him.
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If she did not--it was worth knowing how little she really cared, was it
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not?
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So he would try to trap the younger man and save his life.
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It would be difficult. The other man had grenades, a carbine and a keen
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needle-knife. Perhaps, before the end, he would be forced to kill after
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all. But regretfully.
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Treb dumped the last of the _tsaftha_ antibiotic into his wound and lay
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back for a few more hours of rest before going out to prepare the traps.
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His head was not clear. And his eyes drew together from exhaustion....
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* * * * *
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Another night and another day, and it was night again.
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His traps were set and ready. All through the day he had prowled the
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trees, watching for some sign of Neilson. He found he was muttering to
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himself, hungry for the sound of spoken words.
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It was nervous work. His muscles were jumping in faint spastic
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explosions. Neilson could have been lying in ambush in any of a hundred
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leafy coverts, resting there and waiting....
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He had covered less than two miles of inching, crawling paths, his eyes
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ever alert for deadfalls, pits and spear-traps that might flash across
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the way to impale him.
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And he had caught no sight of Neilson.
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Now it was night again. Time to check on his traps. The rabbit traps as
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well as the human traps.
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He was approaching the net. And the awareness that this furtive game of
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hide-and-seek might go on for weeks oppressed him. He might lie here
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close by the net for days without sight of Neilson. They were too evenly
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matched--and Neilson was younger. It was Neilson's youth against his
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experience.
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He found the thin rope of knotted nylon and plastic scraps that led to
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the four balanced rocks. One stout yank and the net would jerk upward
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four feet and tighten around its victim.
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But, in the dim starlight from the small globes spotting the Satellite's
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ceiling, the path was an indistinct blur. A moving body's exact
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position.... And at fifty feet....
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He saw Neilson--it could only be Neilson.
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Moving on hands and knees, he was keeping low and to the side of the
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little-used trail--but within the width of the hand-patched net. And he
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moved slowly, probing before him with a stick or his needle-knife; Treb
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could not tell which.
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Another two feet and he could trip the net. Neilson would be captured,
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alive, and the stalemate ended.
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Now!
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The net flung into the air, snapped tight about Neilson's thrashing
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body! He heard the pop of parting strands as Neilson slashed with his
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knife. And then he swung the butt of his carbine, twice, against the
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trapped man's skull.
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Neilson went limp. It was finished. He could take his prisoner to the
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lock, summon the UN guards, and go home to the Krekar Hills. And an end
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to all blood-letting for him.
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He set about binding tight the arms and legs of Neilson, and had barely
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completed his task when the prisoner groaned and struggled.
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"So this is it, Treb?"
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"Yes."
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"You win again. And I--I lose everything."
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"So?" Treb touched his pocket torch to a heap of shredded dry twigs.
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"What have you lost? Your health, your life? And will not the woman
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forget all else and love you?"
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"Hah! She will laugh at me if I come near her. Defeated, and with a
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paltry ten thousand to offer. Better that I died than this."
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"Perhaps you do not--know this woman, Harl. If she is good, she will
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come to you."
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The growing firelight was on Neilson's bearded face. And beneath his
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eyes something glistened and beaded. He laughed bitterly.
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"She's not good, Treb, understand that. She's evil and money-hungry, and
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ambitious. But she is beautiful and I love her. I'd sell my soul and my
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body to possess her.
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"That's why I volunteered. With the winners' grant I would have money.
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Prestige. Honor. There would be a thousand new opportunities for a
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career. And Jane could not refuse me then."
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"It is wrong, Harl Neilson, to so worship a woman. Like alcohol or
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Venerian fire pollen--it is unnatural."
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"I know. I have tried to forget, to put her memory aside. But it is like
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a disease. An incurable disease. I must have Jane."
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Treb threw more wood on the little fire and checked over the lashings
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about Neilson's body.
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"I am going to look at my rabbit snares," he said, "and to spring the
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other traps. We will eat and sleep, and in the morning try to shave and
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look decent before going to the locks."
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Neilson let his head sag between his shoulders, and said nothing. He was
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leaning against a tree, his arms lashed behind him and to it.
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"There is one more thing, Harl, that I wish to discuss. It is about the
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Paul Hubble Foundation Award. Think about it."
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Treb moved off into the darkness.
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* * * * *
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The sunlight from the overhead "suns" of the Satellite revealed a
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greatly changed Treb. He was shaved, his hair combed and hacked off
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above his ears, and he was stitching the last rough patch on his dark
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green trouser leg.
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Now he donned the trousers and went over to the bound Andilian. He cut
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||
the ropes, his carbine ready.
|
||
|
||
"Get down to the lake," he ordered. "You'll find a razor, soap and an
|
||
old shirt to dry yourself with."
|
||
|
||
Harl Neilson was chunky and fair-haired, with a healthy looking
|
||
red-brown skin. His eyes were wide and darkly blue. Now the wide mouth
|
||
under his shapeless nose twisted into a faint grin.
|
||
|
||
"I'll try to get away," he warned. "Aren't you afraid of that?"
|
||
|
||
"I have all the guns, grenades and needle-knives, Harl. I'll shoot you
|
||
if you attempt escape, of course, but I hope you'll listen to what I
|
||
propose first."
|
||
|
||
Neilson slowly stripped off his ragged tunic and trousers. There was the
|
||
scar of a recent bullet's path across his right shoulder blade. It was
|
||
crusted with blackened blood.
|
||
|
||
"I thought I heard you two days back, Harl," said Treb.
|
||
|
||
"Just a scratch." Neilson took up the soap and waded into the nearby
|
||
lake. "Start talking, Treb."
|
||
|
||
"I told you to think about Paul Hubble's Award, Harl. He's the American
|
||
industrialist who opposed violence in settling any issue."
|
||
|
||
"Sure. Heard about him in the lower grades. Fifty million dollars he
|
||
sunk in his worthless Peace Foundation. What about it?"
|
||
|
||
"Hear me out. Did you like what we just went through? Your friends and
|
||
comrades dying--my friends dead and wounded? And all to settle some
|
||
territorial dispute or to wipe out some imagined slur.
|
||
|
||
"Would you like to prevent your kid, or mine, from having to face this
|
||
again?"
|
||
|
||
"Stop sounding off, Treb, and say something." Neilson scrubbed
|
||
vigorously. "Of course I would--if I ever had a kid, I mean."
|
||
|
||
"We could help, Harl. By calling off the duel and making peace right
|
||
here. Of course there might be new balloting--even another battle
|
||
between our countries. But we would crack the theory that victory means
|
||
more than humanity."
|
||
|
||
Neilson snorted. He splashed water into his eyes and over his soapy
|
||
beard and hair.
|
||
|
||
"And go home penniless? To have every friend and neighbor avoid us?
|
||
What's eating you? You won. You'll get the quarter of a million."
|
||
|
||
"I want you to share equally. I want our two countries to know that
|
||
friendship means more than glory."
|
||
|
||
"I don't get it. If neither side wins we get nothing."
|
||
|
||
"You forget about the Hubble Award. Two hundred thousand to each member
|
||
of both sides, or their survivors, if they declare an armistice."
|
||
|
||
"I had forgotten. You'd give up fifty thousand so I could get the same
|
||
two hundred thousand! You're a prince, Treb.
|
||
|
||
"But I couldn't do it. Jane would turn against me. The radio, the
|
||
newswires, television and the magazines would crucify me--both of us."
|
||
|
||
"We'd ride it out. None of the participants in the twenty-two duels here
|
||
in Satellite has had the courage to admit he hates war. In years to come
|
||
our stand would be honored."
|
||
|
||
"It means losing Jane. I can't do it."
|
||
|
||
"You've lost her anyway, Harl, if she's the way you say. How about your
|
||
three wounded buddies: Wasson, Clark, and Thomason? Badly cut up aren't
|
||
they? Clark blind. Wasson with no arms.
|
||
|
||
"Couldn't they use the two hundred thousand?"
|
||
|
||
Neilson was coming ashore. A sudden resolve hardened his face, and his
|
||
blue eyes were dark and angry. His jaw jutted through the sandy fairness
|
||
of his draggled beard.
|
||
|
||
Treb felt his vitals knot at what he sensed in Neilson's expression.
|
||
He'd gambled on the essential fairness and sympathy of the Andilian's
|
||
character. But now....
|
||
|
||
"I'll do it," Neilson said tonelessly.
|
||
|
||
"I hope you'll never regret what you are doing, Harl."
|
||
|
||
"Aw, lock valves!" snarled Neilson. "Get ready to go while I finish
|
||
shaving."
|
||
|
||
So that was the way it was to be. Treb turned wearily away. He went back
|
||
through the screen of flowering shrubs and trees to where the coals of
|
||
their fire turned gray.
|
||
|
||
The grenades and the three cartridges, his own and Neilson's, he buried
|
||
in a hasty hole under a tree's sprawled roots. Afterward he tamped sod
|
||
back into place and spread leaves.
|
||
|
||
His needle-knife he laid on the turf. From his pocket he took a long
|
||
strip of cloth and some of the tough nylon cords from the net. Then he
|
||
let his trousers drop about his ankles and set about anchoring the
|
||
needle-knife securely to his upper leg.
|
||
|
||
When he had finished the keen blade projected a foot below his knee-cap.
|
||
And around it, carefully, he wound some of the cloth. He donned his
|
||
battered trousers again. The concealed knife was well hidden, although
|
||
it did impede the freedom of his stride.
|
||
|
||
Then he went down to rejoin Neilson.
|
||
|
||
Neilson was just finishing hacking at his hair with the short-bladed
|
||
safety razor. He scowled at Treb, his eyes on the carbine that the man
|
||
from Baryt yet carried.
|
||
|
||
"Not taking any chances, eh, Treb?"
|
||
|
||
"Just in case you change your mind, Harl."
|
||
|
||
"My friend--my very dear friend--Gram Treb!" Neilson laughed. "What
|
||
trust--what a faith in human nature!"
|
||
|
||
"Yes, Harl. Your friend."
|
||
|
||
They left the lake behind, Neilson in advance. Directly ahead, beyond
|
||
the outer ring of trees, the locks to the upper levels waited. They had
|
||
less than a third of a mile to traverse.
|
||
|
||
The rusting shattered debris of a machine gun, with a spilled clutter of
|
||
empty shell cases, lay just off the trail.
|
||
|
||
"Harok Dann died here," said Treb. Neilson did not turn.
|
||
|
||
"The big man, Manross, was killed by Dann's fire even as he threw the
|
||
grenade," he added.
|
||
|
||
Treb was watching the broad-shouldered figure ahead.
|
||
|
||
"Shut it off, Treb, will you?" Neilson shouted, turning. "Isn't it tough
|
||
enough without you yap-yapping all the way?"
|
||
|
||
Treb's lips thinned. The knife chafed his leg. Already he was limping
|
||
slightly. But they had covered more than half the distance. Once they
|
||
contacted the UN guards and were through the locks he could relax....
|
||
|
||
* * * * *
|
||
|
||
The circular outer face of the lock was before them. And the button that
|
||
summoned the guards jutted redly from a shoulder-high recess. Neilson
|
||
leaned against the lock, his narrowed eyes on Treb as he reached for the
|
||
button.
|
||
|
||
Treb jabbed. And he relaxed inwardly. Too late now for Neilson to
|
||
attempt overpowering him and claiming the victory. He had feared such an
|
||
attempt--with the lust for the woman, Jane Vanne, driving him, Neilson
|
||
might have gone back on his word.
|
||
|
||
It was tough going for the kid. But he wasn't losing anything worth
|
||
keeping. And hundreds of fine young lads like him might be spared going
|
||
through this ordeal in space. They'd....
|
||
|
||
Neilson's fist caught him behind the ear. That split-second of
|
||
inattention was proving costly. Neilson clamped the carbine barrel,
|
||
wrested it away from Treb. He raised it. Treb lifted his hands.
|
||
|
||
"So now it's me at the controls," Neilson said, grinning. "Any reason
|
||
why I should go through with your Hubble Award idea?"
|
||
|
||
"The guards will be here in no more than a minute, Harl. Throw the gun
|
||
away and we'll go through together."
|
||
|
||
Neilson's eyes were shining. He was seeing the crowds waving crazy
|
||
welcome as his space ship grounded. He was seeing the adulation of the
|
||
boys, and the adoring glance of the dark-eyed girl named Jane. He was
|
||
seeing the medals and the banquets and the bundles of money.
|
||
|
||
"You were crazy, Treb," he said, "to ever trust me. In war promises mean
|
||
nothing. Study your history."
|
||
|
||
Treb squared his shoulders, his hands came down.
|
||
|
||
"If that's the way it is," he said, and then, "coming at you, Neilson."
|
||
|
||
Neilson flinched. It was the first time Treb had called him by his last
|
||
name, perhaps that was the reason. Or it could have been the sight of an
|
||
unarmed man walking directly into his carbine's ugly muzzle.
|
||
|
||
He pressed the trigger. The unloaded weapon was silent. Treb wrenched at
|
||
the gun. Neilson kicked him in the crotch. The gun came free. He brought
|
||
it down at Treb's head, but at the last second before impact Treb
|
||
dodged. The barrel smacked into Treb's right shoulder and broke the
|
||
collar bone.
|
||
|
||
Treb came on, his left hand jabbing, and his right arm dangling. Neilson
|
||
chopped at his face with the vertically held carbine, and tore a great
|
||
chunk from his left cheek.
|
||
|
||
And then Treb's knee came up. The shielded razor-sharp blade sliced
|
||
through his trouser. He drove the ugly little dagger into Neilson's
|
||
body.
|
||
|
||
Neilson went down, squirming away from the sudden pain that tore at his
|
||
vitals. The carbine went clattering.
|
||
|
||
Treb knelt beside him; tried to stanch the warm gush of red life, and
|
||
cursed, soundlessly, the ambition that is mankind's greatest boon--and
|
||
curse. He tore off the bloody knife.
|
||
|
||
"You won't die, Neilson," he said gravely. "Not with the surgeon and the
|
||
hospital here on Earth Satellite so near. You'll live to see Andilia
|
||
again.
|
||
|
||
"And about the invitation to visit us--I'm sorry you rejected it like
|
||
this. But the offer still stands. When I can call you Harl again, when
|
||
you are a _man_, visit us."
|
||
|
||
The lock behind them creaked and started to open.
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
|
||
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