The Space Pioneers

Chapter 28

"Go on!" Bush growled. "Get out of here!"

"Don"t get rough," said Logan, "or I might tell your boss you took a bribe to let us see the cadets!" With a parting wink at the boys, he followed Jane out.

Just as Bush started to close the door, Tom stepped forward. "How about something to eat," he demanded, "and some story tapes to pa.s.s away the time?"

"Yeah," said Roger, picking up Tom"s cue, "and we don"t want anything you"d select either. It might be too infantile! Send Jeff Marshall up here so we can get what we want!"

"I"ll see about it," sneered Bush, slamming the door behind him.

"Are you thinking what I"m thinking?" Roger asked Tom.

"Yes. If there is anyone we can trust, it"s Jeff. Let"s hope that s.p.a.ce jerk outside comes through!"

"Well," growled Astro, "if worse comes to worse, we can always jump him."

"Uh--uh," said Tom, shaking his head. "We wouldn"t get past the first corridor. If we escape, and we will, we"ve got to have help from someone on the outside!"

"But won"t they be watching Jeff too?" asked Astro.

"Sure they will, but we"ve got to take that chance. If Vidac holds us for trial here on Roald, and we"re convicted, the only place for a review of the case will be the Solar Council Chamber back on Earth."

"Well, what"s wrong with that?" asked Astro.

"I"ll tell you what"s wrong with it," said Roger. "Before the case would come up for a review, we would have already spent at least two years on a prison rock!"

Meanwhile, in his office in the Administration Building, Lieutenant Governor Vidac listened with mounting apprehension to a report from the communications control officer of Roald.

"We just received a message from Captain Strong aboard the Solar Guard cruiser _Orion_ requesting landing data here on Roald," the voice crackled impersonally over the teleceiver.

"How far out is he?" asked Vidac, suddenly growing pale.

"He should arrive within four hours."

"All right," said Vidac, regaining his composure. "Give him all the information he needs."

"What about the instrument disturbance?"

"Tell him everything."

"Yes, sir," replied the control officer, and the teleceiver screen went blank.

Vidac got up and began to pace the floor, pondering the reasons for Strong"s sudden unannounced visit. He could be coming to check on the s.p.a.ce Cadets, he thought. Or it might be a routine check of the progress of the colony. Or he might know about the uranium. There had been an investigation of the soil on the satellite by the original expedition.

But if they had known anything about it, reasoned Vidac, it would have been claimed for the Solar Alliance.

No, Vidac shook his head. He"s not here to investigate the uranium, he"s here either to check on the cadets or make a routine inspection of the colony. And if it"s the former, he"d give Strong enough proof to bury the cadets on a prison rock for life.

Vidac turned to the teleceiver. "Get the s.p.a.ceport," he ordered. "Tell the s.p.a.ceport officer to prepare a welcoming party to blast off in ten minutes. They will meet Captain Strong of the Solar Guard in the cruiser _Orion_. Communications control will give them his position." He flipped off the teleceiver and settled back in his chair, smiling. Nothing in the world like a big fuss to throw a man off guard, he thought. And Steve Strong, as the first visitor from Earth since the colony was founded, would get a tremendous welcome!

" ... Are you sure?" asked Tom, his face brightening. "You heard it yourself?"

Jeff Marshall smiled. "Roald is going crazy. They"re preparing the biggest welcome for a s.p.a.ceman since Jon Builker"s return from his first trip in s.p.a.ce!"

"Boy," said Astro, "what a break!" He slapped Roger on the back. "We"ll be out of this can an hour after Captain Strong lands!"

"I knew you wanted me to help you try to escape," said Jeff. "I had already begun to make plans."

"No need for that now," said Tom. "If we tried to escape, we"d be doing the very thing Vidac would want us to do. He could say it was an admission of guilt."

Roger agreed with a nod of his head. "There"s only one thing that bothers me now."

"What"s that?" asked Astro.

"Professor Sykes," he said. "We"ve been so worried about our own necks, we"ve forgotten about him."

"Well," said Astro, "what about him?"

"What really happened to him," mused Roger, "and why?"

"I wish I knew," said Tom. "But I"ll bet Vidac knows."

"Sure," agreed Roger. "But I still say why and what?"

The blond-haired cadet looked around at the faces of his friends. There was no reply to his question.

Every citizen of Roald, man, woman, and child, was at the s.p.a.ceport to watch the giant cruiser _Orion_ settle slowly to the ground. Vidac watched it through squinting eyes. He had secretly hoped that the uranium disturbances would cause the ship to crash, thus eliminating his difficulties before they could begin, but he couldn"t help admiring the way the big cruiser was handled. When the hatch opened and Captain Strong stepped out, resplendent in his black-and-gold uniform, there was a spontaneous roar of welcome from the ground. Vidac stepped forward immediately to greet the Solar Guard officer.

"I"m Paul Vidac, Captain Strong. Lieutenant governor of Roald. Governor Hardy is very busy and asked me to welcome you and to convey his apologies for not greeting you personally."

"Thank you," said Strong and shook hands with Vidac. He turned around and looked over the crowd. "But I seem to be missing several other welcomers."

"Ah, I presume you mean the s.p.a.ce Cadets," stammered Vidac.

Strong looked at the lieutenant governor. "Yes, I mean the s.p.a.ce Cadets.

Where are they?"

Vidac tried to meet Strong"s level gaze, but his eyes fell away. "They are under arrest!" he said finally.

"Arrest!" cried Strong. "For what?"

"The murder of Professor Sykes."

"Murder? Professor Sykes?" asked Strong. "Explain yourself!"

"This is hardly the place to discuss it. Shall we go to my office?"

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