"An opening to tramp ice at the pole for the rest of your life!"
"All right. I"ll chance it!"
They consented, without very much argument, to let Wasil have the dangerous responsibility. At 2:30, two and a half hours after sunrise by the Martian reckoning, he signed a release acknowledging all circuits to be in proper order, and was locked behind the heavy doors, alone with a maze of complicated apparatus and cables that filled the large room from floor to ceiling.
Now it was done! Chance had thrown Wasil into a position where he could, without great danger of failure, carry out his plan. But at the same time things had so fallen that he, Wasil, must now die, regardless of the outcome!
If he succeeded in broadcasting the proceedings of the convention, and if they had the effect of arousing the public against Wilc.o.x, there would still be no escape for Wasil. Wilc.o.x, or Scar Balta, would come straight for this prison, neuro-pistol or needle-ray in hand!
Even if he should fail, death would be his portion for the attempt.
So thinking, Wasil sat down and carefully re-checked the circuits. The filler broadcast from central office must be sent to the twin cities of Tarog. Otherwise the convention would learn too soon what was happening, and would interrupt its business. The thousands who waited outside on the broad terraces must be regaled with entertainment, as had been originally planned.
But as for the rest of Mars, and Earth, they would get the truth for once. Those bankers would speak frankly, in the snug isolation of the hall. No supervision here. Conventions, empty politeness, would be forgotten. Sharp tirades, biting facts, threats, veiled and open, would pa.s.s across the table between these masters of money and men.
But this time they would be pitilessly bared to the worlds!
Feverishly, Wasil inspected the repeater. It was a little-used device that would, an hour or two later, as desired, give out the words and pictures fed into it. Although Tarog would not learn the convention"s secrets as quickly as the rest of Mars, or Earth, Tarog would learn.
Wasil threw over the links and clamped down the bolts with a grunt of satisfaction. When a man is about to die, he wants to do his last job well.
Suddenly a red light glowed, and a voice spoke.
"Special broadcast. Tarog circuit only!"
"Mornin", Lennings," Wasil remarked to the face in the screen. "All set? Go ahead."
The central office man held up a thick bundle of I. P. scrip, smiled pleasantly, saying:
"Somebody in North or South Tarog, or in the surrounding territory, is going to be 100,000 I. P. dollars richer by to-morrow. How would you like to have 100,000 dollars? You all would like this reward. It represents the price of a snug little s.p.a.ce cruiser for your family; a new home on the ca.n.a.l; maybe an island of your own. It would take you on a trip to the baths of Venus and leave you some money over. Of course you all want this reward!
"Now, if you"ll excuse me a moment--"
The man"s picture faded, and the screen glowed with the life and beauty of Princess Sira--Sira, smiling and alluring.
"You all know this young lady," the announcer"s voice went on. "The beloved and lovable Sweetheart of Mars, the bride of Scar Balta--"
The Martian"s sleek and well-groomed head appeared beside that of the girl.
"--Scar Balta, whose services to Mars have been great beyond his years; who, in the threatening war with Earth, would be one of our greatest bulwarks of security."
The announcer"s face appeared again, stern and sorrowful.
"A great disaster has befallen these lovers--and all the world loves a lover, you know. Some thugs, believed by the police to be terrestrial spies, have kidnapped the princess from the palace of her uncle, Prince Joro of Hanlon. It is believed that they had drugged her and hypnotized her, so that she has forgotten her duty to her lover and her country."
The green light flashed, and Wasil broke the circuit. The central man lingered a moment, favoring Wasil with a long wink.
"What a liar you"re getting to be!" Wasil remarked coldly. But the central man, not offended, laughed.
So they were offering a reward! And urging further treachery as an act of patriotism! Wasil was not too much excited, however. The disguise the princess had chosen would probably serve her well. Besides, she had promised to keep in retirement as much as possible.
_Clack! Clack!_ The electrically controlled lock of the door was opening. Only Wilc.o.x knew the wave combination. Wasil felt a chill of apprehension as the door opened and Scar Balta strode in. He was fully armed, dressed in the military uniform; but the former colonel was now wearing on his shoulder straps the concentric rings denoting a general"s rank.
CHAPTER XI
_Giant Against Giant_
Although Princess Sira had promised to keep out of the way, she could not resist the powerful attraction of the executive hall, in which, on this day, the fate of two planets was to be decided. As the crowds of people began to drift toward the hall, she joined them, still dressed in her laboring man"s shapeless garments, the broad sun-helmet hiding her face effectively. Her long, black hair was concealed under the clothing. Having nearly been drawn into a brawl the day before, she now carried a stained but still very serviceable short sword that she had purloined from a merc.l.i.te-drunken reveler in a gutter.
Thousands were already on the terraces surrounding the government buildings. They were milling about, for it was still too soon after the night"s chill to sit down or lie on the rubbery red sward. Taxis were bringing swarms over the ca.n.a.l from North Tarog, and water vehicles were crossing over in almost unbroken lines.
Already the merc.l.i.te vendors were busy, making their surrept.i.tious way from group to group, selling the highly intoxicating and legally proscribed gum that would lift the users from the sordid, miserable plane of their daily existence to exalted, reckless heights.
War vessels now began to course overhead, their solid, heavily plated hulls glinting dully in the sun. Their levitator helices moaned dismally, and as their long, slanting shadows slid over the a.s.sembled thousands, it seemed that they cast a prophetic pall; that there was a hush of foreboding.
But the psychological expert high in a nearby tower immediately noted the slump in the psycho-radiation meter whose trumpet-shaped antenna pointed downward. At the turn of the dial the air was filled with throbbing martial music, and the expert noted with contemptuous satisfaction that the needle now stood even higher than before.
Sira, caught like all the rest of the people in that stirring flood of music, felt her own pulse leap. But she thought:
"This is the day! Wasil, could I only be with you!"
She thought sadly of Joro, whose shrewd observations and counsel she missed more than she had ever thought possible.
"Poor, dear Joro! You would be a better king than any man you could ever find! I wish I could have done as you wished me to."
There was a stir near the main entrance of the hall. A large private yacht was slowly descending. She was bedecked with the green and gold bunting of the terrestrial government, the green and orange of Mars.
Her hull glittered goldenly.
"Back!" shouted the captain of a Martian guard detail, the soldiers running with pennant-decked ropes looping after them. The crowd surged against the barrier, but more guards were sent out as reinforcements, until they had cleared a s.p.a.ce for the ship and a lane to the hall entrance.
"Mars greets the distinguished guests from our sister planet!" boomed the giant loudspeaker in the tower. Immediately afterward came the strains of the song--"Terrestria--Fair Green Terrestria"--in a rushing torrent of sound. But the frank and fluent melody was strangely distorted, with unpleasant minor turns and harsh whisperings of menace, and the tower psychologist noted a further rise of the needle.
There was a diversion of interest now. The mob of first arrivals, as well as the ever-freshening stream of newcomers, was moving toward the teletabloids and the more conservative stereo-screens. On this occasion they were both carrying the same message, however. Sira heard the propaganda division"s latest fabrication about her alleged kidnaping by terrestrial agents. She needed no radiation meter to tell her of the intense wave of hatred for the Earth that swept over the densely packed area. And this was followed by another emotion--a wave of cupidity--set up by the offer of 100,000 I. P. dollars reward for her return. She saw about her faces greedy, faces wistful, even compa.s.sionate faces. But outnumbering them by far were faces set in truculent mold.
Sira moved restlessly from place to place, feeling more deeply depressed with every moment. She felt as if she had been left entirely out of life, friendless, alone. Among all these thousands she had no friend. It seemed to her that never before had there been such a paucity of monarchists. Sharp-featured, with a wire-drawn manner of efficiency and resolution about them, they had const.i.tuted almost another race among this practically enslaved people, maintaining for themselves a tolerable position despite the opposition of the oligarchy. Now, however, they seemed to have vanished. All that morning Sira had not seen one. She would not have disclosed her ident.i.ty, but it would have been comforting to see one of those friends of old.
She was stopped by a jam. Looking between the bodies of two large and sweaty men, she realized that someone was standing on a surveyor"s marking block, delivering a speech.