The brain could feel pain indeed. It crouched with stiffened arms and legs. The membrane of its great head seemed to bulge with greater distension; the knotted blood-vessels were gorged with purple blood.
The eyes rolled. Then it closed its mouth. Its gaze steadied upon Brayley"s face, so baleful a gaze that as I could see the reflection of its luminous purple glow a shudder of fear and revulsion swept me.
"So you did not like that?" Brayley steadied his voice. "If you don"t want more, you had better speak. How did you get here on Earth? What are you trying to do here?"
There seemed an interminable silence; then Nippor took a menacing step forward. "Speak! We will force it from you!"
And then it spoke. "Do--not--touch--me--again."
Indescribable voice! Human, animal or monster no one could say. But the words were clear, precise; and for all their terror, they seemed to hold an infinite command.
A wave of excitement swept the hall, but Brayley"s gesture silenced it. He leaped forward and bent low over the palpitating brain.
"So you can talk. You came as an enemy. We have given you every chance today for friendship, and you have refused. What are you trying to do to us?"
It only glared.
"Speak!"
"I will not tell you anything."
"Oh, yes, you will."
"No!"
All the men on the platform were crowding close to it now.
"Speak!" ordered Brayley again. "Here in Greater New York is a hiding place. Where is it?"
No answer.
"Where is it? You are perhaps a leader of your world. I lead ours, and I"m going to master you now. Where is this hiding place?"
The thing suddenly laughed, a gruesome, eerie cackle. "You will know when it is too late. I think it is too late already."
"Too late for what?"
"To save your world. Doomed, your three worlds! Don"t touch--me!"
It ended with a scream of apprehension as Nippor grasped the crooked little arm. "Tell us!"
"No!" It screamed again. "Let--me--go!"
"Tell us!" Nippor strengthened his squeezing grip. The thing was writhing, the thin ball of membrane palpitating, heaving. And suddenly it burst. Over all its purpled surface, blood came with a gush.
Nippor and Brayley staggered backward. The scream of the brain ended in a choking gurgle. The little legs and tiny body wilted under it; the round ball of membrane sank to the table. It rolled sidewise upon one arm and ear, and in a moment its palpitation ceased. A purple-red ma.s.s of blood, it lay deflated and flabby.
It was dead.
4
"But see here," I said, "did they mention the Martian, Molo, at all?"
"They were discussing Molo before you arrived," Grantline told us.
We had drawn back from the doorway. The conference, with the dead thing removed, was proceeding. Snap and I had momentarily forgotten Anita and Venza; but now we were in a panic to get back to the Red Spark.
"But you can"t go," said Grantline. "Brayley ordered you here. He"ll want to see you in a moment."
"Well, why doesn"t he see us now?" Snap protested. "I"m not going to cool myself off sitting here."
"Oh yes, you are."
Grantline sent word to Brayley that we were here. In a moment the answer came. We were to wait a short time; he would want to see us.
We swiftly told Grantline what had happened at the Red Spark, and found that already he knew. Francis had relayed it to the conference, and Halsey was in constant communication with the officials here.
"Then what is happening?" I demanded. "Where are the girls? Has Halsey heard from them?"
Again Grantline went to a nearby room.
"Anita sent a message," he said, when he returned. "They are with Molo. Halsey is ordering a squad of men to be ready."
Grantline told us what had been happening in the Red Spark. Anita and Venza, simulating drunkenness with a skill for acting which I knew both of them possessed, had joined Molo"s party. Perhaps if Meka had been there she would have seen through them.
But Molo did not. And they have since told me that the Martian himself was far from sober, although he was probably not aware of it. He yielded to their demands to leave the restaurant with him. He wanted, as we know, to leave un.o.btrusively; and Venza threatened a scene unless she could go.
He took them, leaving openly in a public fare-car. Doubtless he at first intended to de-rail them somewhere, but they convinced him that he was not being followed. Twice he used his detector, and Anita and Halsey were clever enough to throw off their rays in time to avoid it.
Then Halsey lost connection with the fleeing car, and after that Molo changed his mind about ditching the girls.
"But where are they now?" I demanded.
"You," said Grantline sternly, "are out of it. Do you think that Halsey, under Brayley"s orders, will neglect any chance to find out where Molo is hiding? Something is about to happen. This conference is wrestling with it. In Grebhar and Ferrok-Shahn they"re striving to find out what it is. Something impending _now_. Helios are pouring in here from Venus and Mars. They"re mobilizing their s.p.a.ceships, just as we are."
Grantline at last was letting out all his apprehensions on us, with this burst. "Halsey didn"t tell you that the entire resources of his organization are out upon this thing tonight. Here at this conclave there"s a room of information-sorters. That"s just where I came from a moment ago. Every country on our Earth is making ready--for what, n.o.body knows!
"He"s had two fragmentary calls from Anita. He has a hundred men ready to rush to their aid, and to capture Molo"s lair. He expects another message from Anita any moment. This conference here knows every movement that is being made, within ten or twenty seconds of its making. Perhaps upon Anita and Venza the whole outcome of this thing may hang."
We had no answer to that. "Do you know who Molo is? He"s an interplanetary pirate; his ship is the _Star-Streak_."
"Good Lord!"
We had heard of him. For five years past, a gray s.p.a.ceship, with a base supposedly hidden in the Polar deserts of Mars, had been terrorizing interplanetary shipping.
"They think," Grantline went on, "that Molo was cruising with his pirate ship. He has, as you know, a band of criminals drawn from all the three worlds. There are about fifty of them, commanded by his sister and himself. We think that Molo encountered the three ships which that new planet sent out. The _Star-Streak_ was captured, perhaps destroyed. Molo and his band, joined with this new enemy, to save themselves, and because they have been promised rewards."