Jeff didn"t bat an eyelash. The fact that he had found no entry of Tom"s report to Captain Strong in the log, and the unreasonable annoyance Vidac expressed over his having looked into the logbook, convinced him that the cadets were not wrong in their suspicions concerning the lieutenant governor.
Vidac dismissed him and the enlisted sergeant was escorted to the _Polaris_" brig by two hastily summoned crewmen.
When the cadets learned of Jeff"s punishment they immediately went to Vidac"s quarters and requested permission to speak with him. After making them wait for nearly three hours, Vidac finally received them.
"Well, what now?" demanded Vidac.
"We would like to ask a question, sir," said Tom.
"Speak up!" snorted Vidac impatiently.
"It"s about Sergeant Marshall, sir," said Tom.
"What about him?"
"We would like to know, sir, under what article of the s.p.a.ce code was Sergeant Marshall sentenced to the brig?"
Vidac"s eyes sharpened. He spoke quickly and crisply. "I suspected that there was some connection between Marshall looking in the log and your coming here to see me. I don"t know what you have in mind, Corbett, but I"m going to lay it on the line. This is the last time you will question my authority. From this moment on, and until you are released from my jurisdiction, _I_ am the s.p.a.ce code. Do I make myself clear?"
"Very clear, sir," said Tom tightly. "Then will the lieutenant governor please put in writing any further orders he might have for us?"
"I will not!" snarled Vidac. "But I tell you what I will do. I"ll confine you to your quarters for ten days for that impertinent request!
And if I so much as see your noses outside your quarters, I"ll really get tough! Dismissed!"
[Ill.u.s.tration]
CHAPTER 8
"This is highly irregular, Logan," said Vidac to the Venusian farmer, "but I guess you can see the cadets. Perhaps a little advice from you will help them mend their ways."
Logan nodded. "I have a boy of my own, Governor," he said, "and I know how rambunctious they can get."
Vidac smiled thinly. "You"ll find them in their quarters. The first ladder to your right and down two decks."
"Thank you, sir," replied Logan. He left Vidac"s quarters and two minutes later stepped through the hatch leading into the cadet"s room.
After seven days of confinement, the three boys greeted Logan with a yell of pure joy.
"We have guests!" bellowed Astro, grabbing Roger who was asleep in his bunk and then banging on the shower door where Tom was taking a shower.
Roger tumbled out of the bunk and Tom came rushing out of the shower wrapped in a towel. They all began talking at once.
"How"d you know we were confined to quarters, sir?" asked Tom.
"It"s a wonder Vidac allowed you to come see us!" yelled Roger.
"Never mind the questions, sir," said Astro. "It"s just plain good to see a different face besides these two s.p.a.ce jokers. One more game of s.p.a.ce chess with Manning and I think I"d--"
Logan laughed at the cadets" enthusiasm, holding up both hands to stem their eager babbling questions. After Tom had dressed hastily and Roger had cleared off a bunk, they began to talk calmly.
"I didn"t know you boys were in trouble," said Logan, "until I came over to the _Polaris_ to see you. Then Vidac told me all about it."
"Was there any special reason why you wanted to see us, sir?" asked Tom.
"Well, as a matter of fact, there was a little reason. Billy, my son, has been pestering me to get some of your Academy books and audioscripts so he can study to become a s.p.a.ce Cadet when he gets old enough."
The three cadets grinned at each other and soon the Venusian farmer was piled high with manuals, audioscripts, tapes, and general information about the Academy.
"Thank you, boys," said Logan. "That"s real nice of you, but--"
"But what, sir?" asked Tom.
"That was the little reason for coming to see you. I have a big reason too."
"What"s that, sir?" asked Roger.
"I don"t know how to say it exactly," began Logan, his voice low and hesitant, "but do you remember when you three came over to inspect Number Twelve?"
The boys all nodded and Logan continued in a hushed voice.
"Well, I told you then that everything was as nice as it could be. At that time it was. But now--"
"What"s happened, sir?" asked Tom.
"What hasn"t happened you mean!" snorted Logan. "The very next day we had a visit from Vidac himself. He made a routine check of all the departments, stopped and talked to some of the colonists, and he seemed, in general, like a nice fellow. Then all of a sudden it started."
"What?" asked Astro.
"Our skipper Winters and another fellow, Ed Bush, began treating us like--well, like prisoners!"
"Prisoners!" cried Tom.
"Yes!" said Logan. "They began to tell us when we couldn"t go to the workshop and to the stereos, and made us eat our meals together in the main a.s.sembly room, with the wives taking turns doing all the cooking.
And the schooling has been cut altogether."
"Why, why--" Tom was floored by the information. "But how can that be?"
"I don"t know," said Logan, "but that"s the way it is. I came over to tell you boys about it, since you were the only ones I knew. You struck me as being honest and I felt I could trust you."
"What else have Winters and Bush done?" asked Astro tensely.
"I guess the worst of all is the fact that we"re having to pay for everything we eat," said Logan.
"Pay!" exclaimed Roger. "But, but--how can you? You don"t have any credits. The Solar Council decided to let the colony work on a barter basis--share and share alike--until it could take its place in the over-all economy of the Solar Alliance."