"At least as good as we have!"
"I thought so, too! If a Solar Guard squadron tried to attack this base now, they"d be spotted and blasted out of s.p.a.ce!"
"What about stores, sir?" asked Tom. "I didn"t see anything like a supply depot."
Connel told him of the small buildings which he believed housed the elevator shafts to underground storerooms. "Only one thing is missing!"
he concluded.
"What"s that, sir?"
"The nuclear chambers where they produce ammunition for their fleet."
"It must be underground too, sir," said Tom. "There isn"t a building in the canyon that"s made of concrete and steel."
"Right. Either that, or it"s back up there in the cliffs in one of those tunnels!" The officer snorted. "By the stars, Corbett, this place is an atom bomb ready to go off in the lap of the Solar Alliance."
"What are we going to do, sir?" asked Tom. "So far, it looks as if it"s going to be tough to get out again."
"We"ll have to wait for a break, Tom," sighed Connel.
"I hope they"ve taken good care of Roger," said the cadet in a low voice. "And I hope they"ve got Astro."
"Watch it," warned Connel. "Drifi"s coming back. Remember, if we"re separated and you do manage to escape, get back to Sinclair"s. Contact Commander Walters and tell him everything that"s happened. The code name for direct emergency contact through Solar Guard communications center in Venusport is Juggernaut!"
"Juggernaut!" repeated Tom in a whisper. "Very well, sir. But I sure hope we aren"t separated."
"Well have to take what comes. _Sh!_ Here he comes."
"All right, let"s go," said the patrol leader.
They continued across the canyon until they reached a four-story wooden structure without windows. Drifi opened a small door and motioned them inside.
"What is this?" Connel demanded.
"This is where you"ll stay until Lactu sends for you. Right now, he is in conference with the Division Leaders."
"Divisions of what? Ships? Men?" asked Connel offhandedly, trying not to show any more than idle curiosity.
"You"ll find out when the Solar Guard comes looking for a fight," said Drifi. "Now get in there!"
Tom and Connel were shoved inside and the door closed behind them. It was pitch black, and they couldn"t see an inch in front of their faces.
But both Tom and Connel knew instantly that they were not alone.
"Come on. Gimme that wrench!" barked Astro. The little man beside him handed up the wrench and leaned over the side of the engine casing to watch Astro pull the nut tight. "Now get over there and throw on the switch," snapped the big cadet.
The little man scurried over to one side of the vast machine shop and flipped on the wall switch. There was an audible hum of power and then slowly the machine Astro had just worked on began to speed up, soon revving up to ten thousand revolutions per minute.
"Is it fixed?" demanded the shop foreman, coming up beside Astro.
"Yeah, she"s fixed. But I don"t work on another job until you give me another helper. That asteroid head you gave me doesn"t know a--" Astro stopped. Something out beyond the double doors caught his eye. It was the sight of Tom and Connel entering the wooden building.
"What"s the matter with him?" demanded the foreman.
"Huh? What? Oh--ah--well, he"s O.K., I guess," Astro stammered. "It"s just that he"s a little green, that"s all."
"Well, get to work on that heater in chamber number one. It"s burned a bearing. Change it, and hurry up about it!"
"Sure--sure!" The big cadet grinned.
"Say, what"s the matter with you?" asked the foreman, staring at him suspiciously.
"I"m O.K.," replied Astro quickly.
The foreman continued to stare at Astro as the big cadet turned to his a.s.sistant nonchalantly. "Come on, genius, get that box of tools over to the heater!" he shouted. As he turned away, the foreman nodded to the green-clad guard, who followed closely behind Astro, his hand on the b.u.t.t of his paralo-ray gun.
Seeing the little a.s.sistant struggling with the heavy box, Astro stopped and picked it out of his arms with one hand. Grinning, he held it straight out and then slowly brought it around in a complete circle over his head, still holding it with only one hand. The guard"s eyes widened behind his plastic helmet at this show of strength.
"You"re very strong, Astro," he said, "but you are altogether too contemptuous of a fellow Venusian." He nodded to the small a.s.sistant.
"That"s right," said Astro. His grin hardened and he leaned forward slightly, balancing on the b.a.l.l.s of his feet. "That goes for you and every other green s.p.a.ce monkey in this place. Drop that ray gun and I"ll tie you up in a knot!"
Frightened, the guard pulled the paralo-ray gun out of its holster, but Astro quickly stepped in and sank his fist deep into the guard"s stomach. The man dropped like a stone. Astro grinned and turned his back to walk toward the heater. He heard the other workers begin to chatter excitedly, but he didn"t pay any attention to them.
"Astro! Astro!" His little a.s.sistant ran up beside him. "You hit a division guard!"
"I did, huh?" replied the big cadet in an innocent tone. "What kind of a division?"
"Don"t you know? Venus has been divided into areas called divisions.
Each division has a chief, and every Venusian citizen in that division is under his personal jurisdiction."
"Uh-huh," said Astro vaguely. He climbed up on to the machine and began taking off the outer casing.
"The best men in the division are made the Division Chief"s personal guards."
"What happens to the second and third and fourth best men?"
"Well, they"re given jobs here according to their knowledge and capacities."
"What was your job before you came here?"
"I was a field worker on my chief"s plantation."
"Why did you join?" asked Astro. "Did you think it better to have Venusians ruling Venus, instead of belonging to the Solar Alliance?"
"I didn"t think about it at all," admitted the little man. "Besides, I didn"t join. I was recruited. My chief just put me on a ship and here I am."