He raced for the door. As he entered the room, he saw a figure stretched out on the floor. He stopped still, cold fear clutching at his heart.
"Roger!" he called. The blond-haired cadet didn"t move. Tom jumped to his unit mate"s side and dropped to one knee beside him. It was dark in the room and he couldn"t see very well, but there was no need for light when he felt Roger"s pulse.
"Frozen, by the stars!" he exclaimed. He stepped back, flipped the neutralizer switch on his ray gun, and fired a short burst. Almost immediately Roger groaned, blinked his eyes, and sat up.
"Roger! Are you all right?" asked Tom.
"Yeah--sure. I"m O.K.," mumbled his unit mate. "Those dirty s.p.a.ce rats.
They didn"t know what to do with me when the Marines landed, so they froze me. They were scared to kill me. Afraid of reprisals."
"They sure used their heads that time," said Tom with a grin. "How"s your back?"
"Fine. I just wrenched it a little. It"s better now. But never mind me.
What"s going on? Where"s Astro and Major Connel? And how did you get here?"
Tom gave him a quick run-down on everything that had happened, concluding with, "Major Connel and Astro, with a patrol of Solar Guard Marines, are outside now drawing the Nationalist fire. Time"s running out on us fast. Think you can walk?"
"s.p.a.ceboy," replied Roger, "to get out of this place I"d crawl on my hands and knees!"
"Then come on!" Tom gave the shock rifle to his unit mate and stepped back into the hall. It was quiet. Tom waved at Roger to follow and slipped down the hall toward the stairs. Outside, the Marine patrol continued firing, never letting up for a second. The two boys reached the stairs and had started down when Tom grabbed Roger by the arm.
"There"s someone moving around down there!"
They hugged the wall and held their breath. Tom glanced at his watch.
Only forty-five seconds to go before the Marines would stop firing and retire. They had to get out of the building!
"We"ll have to take a chance, Roger," murmured Tom. "We"ll try to rush them and fight our way out."
"Don"t bother!" said a harsh voice behind them. The two cadets spun around and looked back toward the second floor. Standing at the top of the stairs, Rex Sinclair scowled down at them, ray guns in each hand, leveled at the two cadets.
"By the craters of Luna!" cried Roger. "You!"
"That"s one of the things I forgot to tell you, Roger," said Tom wryly.
"Sinclair belongs to this outfit too!"
"Belongs!" roared Roger. "Look at that white uniform he"s wearing! This yellow rat is Lactu, the head of the whole Nationalist movement!"
Tom gaped at the white-clad figure at the head of the stairs. "The leader!" he gasped.
"Quite right, Corbett," replied Sinclair quietly. "And if it hadn"t been for three nosy cadets, I would have been the leader of the whole planet.
But it"s finished now. All that is left for me is escape. And you two are going to help me do just that!"
Roger suddenly dropped to one knee and leveled the blaster. But the Nationalist leader was too quick. His paralo-ray crackled and Roger was frozen solid.
"Why, you--!" roared Tom.
"Drop your gun, Corbett," warned Sinclair, "and take that blaster away from him."
"I"ll get you, Sinclair," said Tom through clenched teeth, "and when I do--"
"Stop the talk and get busy!" snapped Sinclair.
Tom took the blaster out of Roger"s paralyzed hands and dropped it on the floor. Still holding one ray gun on Tom, Sinclair flipped on the neutralizer of the other gun and released Roger again.
"Now get moving down those stairs!" ordered Sinclair. "One more funny move out of either of you and I"ll do more than just freeze you."
"What are you going to do with us?" asked Roger.
"As I said, you are going to help me escape. This time the Solar Guard has won. But there are other planets, other people who need strong leadership and who like to put on uniforms and play soldier. People will always find reason to rebel against authority, and I will be there to channel their frustrations into my own plans. Perhaps it will be Mars.
Or Ganymede. Or even t.i.tan. Another name, another plan, and once again the Solar Guard will have to fight me. Only next time, I a.s.sure you, it is I who will win!"
"There won"t be any next time," growled Roger. "You"re washed up now.
This base is swarming with Marines. How do you think you"re going to get out of here?"
"You shall see, my friend. You shall see!"
Sinclair motioned them toward a door on the ground floor. "Open it!"
demanded Sinclair. Tom opened it and stepped inside. It was a cleaner"s closet, crammed with old-fashioned mops and pails and dirty rags.
Sinclair pushed Roger inside and was about to follow when several green-clad guards came running down the hall toward them.
"Lactu! Lactu!" they shouted frantically. "They"re pouring into the base! The Solar Guard--they"ve got us surrounded!"
"Keep fighting!" snapped Sinclair. "Don"t surrender! Inflict as much damage as possible!"
"Where--where are you going?" asked one of the men, looking at the closet speculatively.
"Never mind me!" barked Sinclair. "Do as I tell you. Fight back!"
"It looks like we"re losing a leader," observed another of the men slowly. "You wouldn"t be running out on us, would you, Lactu?"
Sinclair fired three quick blasts from the ray guns, freezing the men solid, and then turned back to Tom and Roger. "Stay in that closet and do as I tell you."
Inside the closet, Sinclair kicked a pail out of the way and barked, "Remove the loose plank in the floor and drop it on the floor."
Tom felt around until he found the loose board and lifted it up.
"What"s down there?" asked Roger.
"You"ll see," said Sinclair. "Now step back, both of you!"
Tom and Roger backed up and watched while Sinclair bent over the hole in the floor. He felt around inside with one hand and appeared to turn something. Suddenly the wall opposite the two cadets slid back to reveal a narrow flight of stairs leading down. Sinclair motioned with his gun again. "Get going, both of you."
Tom stepped forward, followed by Roger, and they started down the stairs. At the bottom they found themselves in a narrow tunnel about four hundred feet underground. The floor of the tunnel slanted downward sharply.
[Ill.u.s.tration]
"At the end of this tunnel," announced Sinclair, "is a clearing and in that clearing is a s.p.a.ceship. It is nearly three miles from the canyon.
By the time the Solar Guard learns of my absence, we shall be lost in s.p.a.ce."