Forward gestured peremptorily. Angel slid out of his seat. Forward slid in and fastened the thick seat belt Neither had spoken a word.
A second ship burned fiercely red, then expanded in a pink cloud.
The third ship was fleeing.
Forward worked the controls.
"I have it in the ma.s.s indicator," he rasped.
"We have but one chance."
So did I. I peeled the other slipper off with my toes. Over our heads the jointed arm of the Grabber began to swing... and I suddenly realized what they were talking about.
Now there was little to see beyond the dome. The swinging Grabber, and the light of Hobo Kelly"s drive, and the two tumbling wrecks, all against a background of fixed stars.
Suddenly one of the tugs winked bluewhite and was gone. Not even a dust cloud was left behind.
Ausfaller must have seen it. He was turning, fleeing. Then it was as if an invisible hand had picked up Hobo Kelly and thrown her away. The fusion light streaked off to one side and set beyond the dome"s edge.
With two tugs destroyed and the third fleeing, the black hole was falling free, aimed straight down our throats.
Now there was nothing to see but the delicate motions of the Grabber. Angel stood behind Forward"s chair, his knuckles white with his grip on the chair"s back.
My few pounds of weight went away and left me in free fall. Tides again. The invisible thing was more ma.s.sive than this asteroid beneath me. The Grabber swung a meter more to one side... and something struck it a mighty blow.
The floor surged away from beneath me, left me head down above the Grabber. The huge soft-iron puppy dish came at me; the jointed metal arm collapsed like a spring. It slowed, stopped.
"You got it!" Angel crowed like a rooster and slapped at the back of the chair, holding himself down with his other hand. He turned a gloating look on us, turned back just as suddenly.
"The ship! It"s getting away!"
"No." Forward was bent over the console.
"I see him. Good, he is coming back, straight toward us. This time there will be no tugs to warn the pilot."
The Grabber swung ponderously toward the point where I"d seen Hobo Kelly disappear.
It moved centimeters at a time, pulling a ma.s.sive invisible weight.
And Ausfaller was coming back to rescue us. He"d be a sitting duck, unless-- I reached up with my toes, groping for the first and fourth b.u.t.tons on my falling jumper.
The weaponry in my wonderful suit hadn"t helped me against Julian"s strength and speed.
But flatlanders are less than limber, and so are Jinxians. Forward had tied my hands and left it at that.
I wrapped two sets of toes around the b.u.t.tons and tugged.
My legs were bent pretzel-fashion. I had no leverage. But the first b.u.t.ton tore loose, and then the thread. Another invisible weapon to battle Forward"s portable bottomless hole.
The thread pulled the fourth b.u.t.ton loose. I brought my feet down to where they belonged, keeping the thread taut, and pushed backward. I felt the Sinclair molecule chain sinking into the pillar.
The Grabber was still swinging.
When the thread was through the pillar I could bring it up in back of me and try to cut my bonds. More likely I"d cut my wrists and bleed to death; but I had to try. I wondered if I could do anything before Forward launched the black hole.
A cold breeze caressed my feet.
I looked down. Thick fog boiled out around the pillar.
Some very cold gas must be spraying through the hair-fine crack.
I kept pushing. More fog formed. The cold was numbing. I felt the jerk as the magic thread cut through. Now the wrists-- Liquid helium?
Forward had moored us to the main superconducting power cable.
That was probably a mistake. I pulled my feet forward, carefully, steadily, feeling the thread bite through on the return cut.
The Grabber had stopped swinging. Now it moved on its arm like a blind, questing worm, as Forward made fine adjustments. Angel was beginning to show the strain of holding himself upside down.
My feet jerked slightly. I was through. My feet were terribly cold, almost without sensation. I let the b.u.t.tons go, left them floating up toward the dome, and kicked back hard with my heels.
Something shifted. I kicked again.
Thunder and lightning flared around my feet.
I jerked my knees up to my chin. The lightning crackled and flashed white light into the billowing fog. Angel and Forward turned in astonishment. I laughed at them, letting them see it. Yes, gentlemen, I did it on purpose.
The lightning stopped. In the sudden silence Forward was screaming, "Do you know what you"ve done?"
There was a grinding crunch, a shuddering against my back. I looked up.
A piece had been bitten out of the Grabber.
I was upside down and feeling heavier. Angel suddenly pivoted around his grip on Julian"s chair. He hung above the dome, above the sky. He screamed.
My legs gripped the pillar hard. I felt Carlos" feet fumbling for a foothold, and heard Carlos" laughter.
Near the edge of the dome a spear of light was rising. Hobo Kelly"s drive, decelerating, growing larger. Otherwise the sky was clear and empty. And a piece of the dome disappeared with a snapping sound.
Angel screamed and dropped. Just above the dome he seemed to flare with blue light.
He was gone.
Air roared out through the dome--and more was disappearing into something that had been invisible. Now it showed as a blue pinpoint drifting toward the floor. Forward had turned to watch it fall.
Loose objects fell across the chamber, looped around the pinpoint at meteor speed or fell into it with bursts of light. Every atom of my body felt the pull of the thing, the urge to die in an infinite fall. Now we hung side by side from a horizontal pillar. I noted with approval that Carlos" mouth was wide open, like mine, to clear his lungs so that they wouldn"t burst when the air was gone.
Daggers in my ears and sinuses, pressure in my gut.
Forward turned back to the controls. He moved one k.n.o.b hard over. Then--he opened the seat belt and stepped out and up, and fell.
Light flared. He was gone.
The lightning-colored pinpoint drifted to the floor, and into it. Above the increasing roar of air I could hear the grumbling of rock being pulverized, dwindling as the black hole settled toward the center of the asteroid.
The air was deadly thin but not gone. My lungs thought they were gasping vacuum. But my blood was not boiling. I"d have known it.
So I gasped, and kept gasping. It was all I had attention for. Black spots flickered before my eyes, but I was still gasping and alive when Ausfaller reached us carrying a clear plastic package and an enormous handgun.
He came in fast, on a rocket backpack. Even as he decelerated he was looking around for something to shoot. He returned in a loop of fire. He studied us through his faceplate, possibly wondering if we were dead.
He flipped the plastic package open. It was a thin sack with a zipper and a small tank attached. He had to dig for a torch to cut our bonds. He freed Carlos first, helped him into the sack. Carlos bled from the nose and ears. He was barely mobile. So was I, but Ausfaller got me into the sack with Carlos and zipped it up. Air hissed in around us.
I wondered what came next. As an inflated sphere the rescue bag was too big for the tunnels. Ausfaller had thought of that. He fired at the dome, blasted a gaping hole in it, and flew us out on the rocket backpack.
Hobo Kelly was grounded nearby. I saw that the rescue bag wouldn"t fit the airlock either... and Ausfaller confirmed my worst fear. He signaled us by opening his mouth wide. Then he zipped open the rescue bag and half-carried us into the airlock while the air was still roaring out of our lungs.
When there was air again Carlos whispered, "Please don"t do that any more."
"It should not be necessary any more." Ausfaller smiled.
"Whatever it was you did, well done. I have two well-equipped autodocs to repair you.
While you are healing, I will see about recovering the treasures within the asteroid."
Carlos held up a hand, but no sound came. He looked like something risen from the dead: blood running from nose and ears, mouth wide open, one feeble hand raised against gravity.
"One thing," Ausfaller said briskly.
"I saw many dead men; I saw no living ones. How many were there? Am I likely to meet opposition while searching?"
"Forget it," Carlos croaked.
"Get us out of here. Now."
Ausfaller frowned.
"What--"
"No time. Get us out."
Ausfaller tasted something sour.
"Very well. First, the autodocs." He turned, but Carlos" strengthless hand stopped him.
"Futz, no. I want to see this," Carlos whispered.
Again Ausfaller gave in. He trotted off to the control room. Carlos tottered after him. I tottered after them both, wiping blood from my nose, feeling half dead myself. But I"d half guessed what Carlos expected, and I didn"t want to miss it.
We strapped down. Ausfaller fired the main thruster. The rock surged away.
"Far enough," Carlos whispered presently.
"Turn us around."
Ausfaller took care of that. Then, "What are we looking for?"
"You"ll know."
"Carlos, was I right to fire on the tugs?"
"Oh, yes."
"Good. I was worried. Then Forward was the ship eater?"
"Yah."
"I did not see him when I came for you. Where is he?"
Ausfaller was annoyed when Carlos laughed, and more annoyed when I joined him. It hurt my throat. "Even so, he saved our lives," I said.
"He must have turned up the air pressure just before he jumped. I wonder why he did that?"
"Wanted to be remembered," said Carlos.
"n.o.body else knew what he"d done. Ahh--"
I looked, just as part of the asteroid collapsed into itself, leaving a deep crater.
"It moves slower at apogee. Picks up more matter," said Carlos.
"What are you talking about?"
"Later, Sigmund. When my throat grows back."
"Forward had a hole in his pocket," I said helpfully. "He--"
The other side of the asteroid collapsed. For a moment lightning seemed to flare in there.
Then the whole dirty s...o...b..ll was growing smaller.
I thought of something Carlos had probably missed. "Sigmund, has this ship got automatic sunscreens?"
"Of course we"ve got--"
There was a universe-eating flash of light before the screen went black. When the screen cleared there was nothing to see but stars.
There Is a Tide THEN, THE PLANET had no name. It circles a star which in 2830 lay beyond the fringe of known s.p.a.ce, a distance of nearly forty light-years from Sol. The star is a G3, somewhat redder than Sol, somewhat smaller. The planet, swinging eighty million miles from its primary in a reasonably circular orbit, is a trifle cold for human tastes.