Rip replied formally, "This is Lieutenant Foster, Federation Special Order Squadrons, in charge on the asteroid. Your landing party is in our hands, as prisoners, two wounded, none dead. If you agree to withdraw, we will send the wounded men back to you in one boat. The rest will remain here as hostages for your good behavior."
"Stand by," the voice said. There was silence for several moments, then a new voice said, "This is the cruiser commander. We make a counteroffer.
If you release our men and surrender to them, we will spare the lives of you and your men."
Rip listened incredulously. The commanding officer didn"t understand. He, Rip, held the whip hand, because the lives of the Connie prisoners were in his hands. He repeated his offer.
"And I repeat," the commander retorted. "Surrender or die. Choose now."
"I refuse," Rip stated flatly. "Try anything, and your men will suffer, not us."
"You are mistaken," the harsh voice said. "We will sweep the asteroid clean with our exhaust, but this time we will be more thorough. When we have finished, we will hammer you with guided missiles. Then we will send snapper-boats with rockets to hunt down any who remain. We intend to have that thorium. You had better surrender."
Rip couldn"t believe it. The cruiser commander had no hesitation in sacrificing his own men! And it was not a bluff. He knew instinctively that the Connie commander meant it. Instantly he unplugged the radio connection from his belt and spoke urgently. "Koa, get everyone under cover in the cave. Hurry! Collect all the Connies and take them with you."
Then he plugged in again. "Commander, I must have time to think this over."
"You have one minute."
He watched his chronometer, planning the next move. When the minute ended, he asked, "Commander, how do we know you will spare our lives if we surrender?" Through the transparent sh.e.l.l of the snapper-boat he saw lights moving toward the horizon and knew Koa was following orders.
"You don"t know," the cruiser answered. "You must take our word for it.
But if you surrender, we have no reason to wish you harm."
Rip remained silent. The seconds ticked past until the commander snapped, "Quickly! You have no more time."
"Sir," Rip said plaintively, "two of my men do not wish to surrender."
"Shoot them, fool! Are you in command or not?"
Rip grinned. He made his voice whine. "But, sir, it is against the law of the Federation to shoot men without a trial."
The commander lapsed into his own language, caught himself, then barked, "You are no longer under Federation law. You are under the Consolidation of People"s Governments. Do you surrender or not? Answer at once, or we take action anyway. Quick!"
Rip knew he could stall no longer. He said coolly, "If you had brains in your head instead of high vacuum, you"d know that Planeteers never surrender. Blast away, you filthy s.p.a.ce pirate!"
He jerked the plug loose, hesitated for a second over whether or not to take the snapper-boat, and decided against it. He wasn"t familiar with Connie controls, and there wasn"t time to experiment. He headed for the cave.
The Connie cruiser lost no time. Its stern tubes flamed, then its steering tubes. It was going to drive directly at the asteroid without making a long run! Rip estimated quickly and realized that the Connie would get to the asteroid at the same time that he reached the cave--if he made it.
He speeded up as fast as he dared. With little gravity on the asteroid, he couldn"t fall, but a false step could lift him into s.p.a.ce and make him lose time while he got out an air bottle to propel him down again.
The thought gave him an idea. Without slowing he took two bottles from his belt, turned them so the openings pointed backward, squeezed the release valves.
The Connie was gaining speed, blasting straight toward him. Rip sped forward and crossed to the sun side, intent on the cave entrance but no longer sure he would make it. The Connie"s nose tube shot a cylinder of flame forward, reaching for the asteroid. He saw the fire lick downward and sweep toward him with appalling speed as he put everything he had into a frantic dive for the cave entrance. The flaming rocket exhaust seemed to s.n.a.t.c.h at him as a dozen hands pulled him to safety, then beat the sparks from his suit.
He was safe. He leaned against Koa, his heart thumping wildly. For a moment or two he couldn"t speak; then he managed, "Thanks."
Koa spoke for the Planeteers. "We"re the ones to say thanks, sir. If you hadn"t thought of stalling the cruiser, and if you hadn"t stayed behind to give us time, we"d have some casualties, and so would the Connies we captured."
"There wasn"t anything else I could do," Rip replied. "Come on, Koa.
Let"s see what the cruiser is doing."
They stepped outside. The metal was already cold again. Things didn"t stay hot in the vacuum of s.p.a.ce.
They didn"t see the Connie until the fire of its exhaust suddenly blasted above the horizon, and then they ducked for cover. The cruiser had taken a swing at the other side of the asteroid. They peered out again and saw it turning.
"He won"t get us," Rip said confidently. "Our tough time will come when he sends a fleet of snapper-boats."
"We"ll get a few," Koa replied grimly. "Wait! What"s he doing?"
The cruiser had started for the asteroid. Suddenly jets flamed from every quarter of the ship. He was using all steering jets at once! Rip watched, bewildered, as the great ship spun slowly, advanced, then settled to a stop just at the horizon.
"He can"t be launching boats already," he said worriedly. "What"s he up to?"
They ran forward a short distance until they could see below the cave"s horizon level. The cruiser released exhausts from both sides of the ship, the outer ones the slightest bit stronger. Rip exclaimed, "Great Cosmos, he"s cuddling right up to the asteroid! Why?"
"Hiding," Koa said. "By Gemini! Come on, sir!"
Rip saw his meaning instantly, and they raced to the side of the asteroid away from the ship. As they crossed into the dark half, Rip looked back.
He couldn"t see the cruiser from here. But he looked out into s.p.a.ce, across the horizon, and knew that Koa"s guess had been right. The distinctive glow of a nuclear drive cruiser was clear among the stars.
The _Scorpius_ had returned!
"The Connie saw it," Rip said worriedly, "but didn"t blast away. That means he"s intending to ambush the _Scorpius_. Koa, if he does, that means war."
The tall officer shook his head. "Sir, the Connie has guided missiles with atomic warheads, just as our ship has. If he can launch one from ambush and hit our ship, that"s the end of it. The _Scorpius_ will be nothing but s.p.a.ce junk. Commander O"Brine will never have time to get off a message, because he"ll be dead before he knows there is danger."
The logic of it sent a chill down Rip"s spine. The Connie could get the _Scorpius_ with one nuclear blast and then clean up the asteroid at leisure. The Federation would suspect, but it would be unable to prove anything, because there would be no witnesses. If the Connie took time to tow the remains of the _Scorpius_ deep into the asteroid belt, it likely would never be found, no matter how the Federation searched.
They had to warn the ship. But how? Their helmet communicators wouldn"t reach it until it was right at the asteroid, and that would be too late.
They had no other radio. If only the radios in the snapper-boats were on a Federation frequency.... Hey! They could take one of the boats and intercept the cruiser!
He was hurrying toward them before Koa understood what he was saying. He tried to make his legs go faster, but they were unsteady. He knew he was losing blood. He had lost plenty. He gritted his teeth and kept going.
The snapper-boats seemed miles away to Rip, but he plugged ahead until his belt light picked them up. He took a long look, then turned away, heartsick. The Connie"s exhaust had charred them into wreckage.
"Now what?" he asked.
"I don"t know, sir," Koa answered somberly.
They went back to the cave, not hurrying because Rip no longer had the strength to hurry. Weakness and a deep desire to sleep almost overcame him, and he knew that he was finished, anyway. His wound must be too deep to clot, which meant it would bleed until he bled to death. Whether he warned the _Scorpius_ or not, his end was the same.
Back in the cave, he leaned against the wall and asked tiredly. "How is Dominico?"
"I am fine, sir. My wound stopped bleeding."
"How is the Connie I got?"
"Unconscious, sir," Santos replied. "He must be bleeding badly, but we can"t tell. The one you landed on is all right now, but he may have a broken rib or two."