Read Dorsai Page 11


  He watched the four from other ships leave the control room.

  “Better feed and rest the crews,” Donal said, turning to Bannerman. “And get some rest yourself. I intend to. Have a couple of meals sent to my quarters.”

  “Sir,” acknowledged Bannerman. Donal turned and left the control room, followed by Lee as by a shadow. The Cobyman was silent until they were in the stateroom; then he growled: “What did that scarface mean by calling you shy?”

  “Shy?” Donal turned about in surprise.

  “Shaey, shy—something like that.”

  “Oh,” Donal smiled at the expression on the other’s face. “That wasn’t an insult, Lee. It was a pat on the back. Shai was what he said. It means something like—true, pure, the actual.”

  Lee grunted. Then he nodded.

  “I guess you can figure on him,” he said.

  The food came, a tray for each of them. Donal ate lightly and stretched himself out on the couch. It seemed he dropped instantly into sleep; and when he awoke at the touch of Lee’s hand on his shoulder he knew he had been dreaming—but of what, he could not remember. He remembered only a movement of shapes in obscurity, as of some complex physics problem resolving itself in terms of direction and mass, somehow given substance.

  “Practice about to start,” said Lee.

  “Thank you, orderly,” he said automatically. He got to his feet and headed toward the control room, shedding the druggedness of his sleep as he went. Lee had followed him, but he was not aware of this until the Cobyman pushed a couple of small white tablets into his hand.

  “Medication,” said Lee. Donal swallowed them automatically. Bannerman, over by the control board, had seen him come in, and now turned and came across the floor.

  “Ready for the first practice run, sir,” he said. “Where would you like to observe—controls, or Eye?”

  Donal looked and saw they had a chair set up for him in both locations.

  “Eye,” he said. “Lee, you can take the other chair, as long as there does not seem to be one for you.”

  “Captain, you—”

  “I know, Bannerman,” said Donal, “I should have mentioned the fact I meant to have my orderly up here. I’m sorry.”

  “Not at all, sir.” Bannerman went over and fitted himself into his own chair, followed by Lee. Donal turned his attention to the Eye.

  The five ships were in line, in deep space, at thousand-kilometer intervals. He looked at their neat Indian file and stepped up the magnification slightly so that in spite of the distance that should have made even the nearest invisible, they appeared in detail, in-lighted by the Eye.

  “Sir,” said Bannerman; and his quiet voice carried easily across the room. “I’ve arranged a key-in. When we make our phase shift, that library tape will replace the image in the Eye, so you can see what our approach will actually look like.”

  “Thank you, captain.”

  “Phase shift in ten seconds—”

  The count-down ticked off like the voice of a clock. Then, there was the sensation of a phase shift; and abruptly Donal was sweeping closely over a planet, barely fifty thousand kilometers distance from its surface. “Fire—” and “Fire—” spoke the speaker in the control room ceiling. Again, the indescribable destruction and rebuilding of the body. The world was gone and they were again in deep space.

  Donal looked at the four other ships in line. Abruptly the leading one disappeared. The rest continued, seemingly, to hang there, without motion. There was no sound in the control room about him. The seconds crept by, became minutes. The minutes crawled. Suddenly—a ship appeared in front of Bannerman’s craft.

  Donal looked back at the three behind. Now, there were only two.

  The run continued until all the ships had made their pass.

  “Again,” ordered Donal.

  They did it again; and it went off without a hitch.

  “Rest,” said Donal, getting out of the chair. “Captain, pass the word for all ships to give their personnel a break of half an hour. Make sure everyone is fed, rested, and supplied with medication. Also supply every person with extra medication to be taken as needed. Then, I’d like to talk to you, personally.”

  When Bannerman had accomplished these orders and approached Donal, Donal took him aside.

  “How about the reactions of the men?” he asked.

  “Fine, captain,” Bannerman said; and Donal was surprised to read a true enthusiasm in his voice, “We’ve got good crews, here. High level-ratings, and experience.”

  “I’m glad to hear it,” said Donal, thankfully. “Now ... about the time interval—”

  “Five minutes exactly, sir.” Bannerman looked at him inquiringly. “We can shorten slightly, or lengthen as much as you want.”

  “No,” said Donal. “I just wanted to know. Do you have battle dress for me and my orderly?”

  “It’s coming up from stores.”

  The half hour slid by quickly. As it approached its end and they prepared to tie into their chairs, Donal noticed the chronometer on the control room wall. It stood at 23:10 and the half hour would be up at 23:12.

  “Make that start at 23:15,” he directed Bannerman. The word was passed to the other ships. Everyone was in battle dress in their chairs and at their posts, waiting. Donal felt a strange metallic taste in his mouth and the slow sweat began to work out on the surface of his skin.

  “Give me an all-ship hookup,” he said. There was a few seconds pause, and then a Third Officer spoke from the control panel.

  “You’re hooked in, sir.”

  “Men,” said Donal. “This is Captain Graeme.” He paused. He had no idea what he had intended to say. He had asked for the hookup on impulse, and to break the strain of the last few moments which must be weighing on all the rest as much as him. “I’ll tell you one thing. This is something Newton’s never going to forget. Good luck to all of you. That’s all.”

  He wigwagged to the Third Officer to cut him off; and looked up at the clock. A chime sounded softly through the ship.

  It was 23:15.

  Sub-Patrol Chief II

  Newton was not to forget.

  To a world second only to Venus in its technical accomplishments—and some said not even second—to a world rich in material wealth, haughty with its knowledge, and complacent in the contemplation of its lavish fighting forces, came the shadow of the invader. One moment its natives were secure as they had always been behind the ringing strength of their ninety ships in orbit—and then enemy craft were upon them, making runs across the skies of their planet, bombing them with—what?

  No, Newton was never to forget. But that came afterward.

  To the men in the five ships, it was the here and now that counted. Their first run across the rich world below them seemed hardly more than another exercise. The ninety ships were there—as well as a host of other spacecraft. They—or as many of them as were not occluded by the body of the planet—registered on the instruments of the Freilander ships. But that was all. Even the second run was almost without incident. But by the time Donal’s leading ship came through for the start of the third run, Newton was beginning to buzz like a nest of hornets, aroused.

  The sweat was running freely down Donal’s face as they broke into the space surrounding the planet; and it was not tension alone that was causing it. The psychic shocks of five phase shifts were taking their toll. Halfway in their run there was a sudden sharp tremor that shook their small white-walled world that was the control room, but the ship continued as if unhurt, released its second torpedo and plunged into the safety of its sixth phase shift.

  “Damage?” called Donal—and was surprised to hear his voice issue on an odd croaking note. He swallowed and asked again, in a more normal, controlled tone. “Damage?”

  “No damage—” called an officer sharply, from the control panel. “Close burst.”

  Donal turned his eyes almost fiercely back onto the scene in the Eye. The second ship appeared. Then the third. Th
e fourth. The fifth.

  “Double up this time!” ordered Donal harshly. There was a short minute or two of rest and then the sickening wrench of the phase shift again.

  In the Eye, its magnification jumping suddenly, Donal caught sight of two Newtonian ships, one planetward, the other in a plane and at approximately two o’clock to the line of the bombing run they had begun.

  “Defensive—” began Donal; but the gun crews had waited for no order. Their tracking had been laid and the computers were warm. As he watched, the Newtonian ship which was ahead and in their plane opened out like a burst balloon in slow motion and seemed to fall away from them.

  —Another phase shift.

  The room swam for a second in Donal’s blurred eyes. He felt a momentary surge of nausea; and, on the heels of it, heard someone over at the panel, retching. He blazed up inside, forcing an anger to fight the threatening sickness.

  It’s in your mind—it’s all in your mind—he slapped the thought at himself like a curse. The room steadied; the sickness retreated a little way.

  “Time—” It was Bannerman, calling in a half-gasping voice from the panel. Donal blinked and tried to focus on the scene in the Eye. The rank odor of his own sweat was harsh in his nostrils—or was it simply that the room was permeated with the stink of all their sweating?

  In the Eye he could make out that four ships had come through on this last run. As he watched, the fifth winked into existence.

  “Once more!” he called, hoarsely. “In at a lower level, this time.” There was a choked, sobbing-like sound from the direction of the panel; but he deliberately did not turn his head to see who it was.

  Again the phase shift.

  Blur of planet below. A sharp shock. Another.

  Again the phase shift.

  The control room—full of mist? No—his own eyes. Blink them. Don’t be sick.

  “Damage?”

  No answer.

  “Damage!”

  “—Light hit. Aft. Sealed—”

  “Once more.”

  “Captain—” Bannerman’s voice, “we can’t make it again. One of our ships—”

  Check in the Eye. Images dancing and wavering—yes, only four ships.

  “Which one?”

  “I think—” Bannerman, gasping, “Mendez.”

  “Once more.”

  “Captain, you can’t ask—”

  “Give me a hookup then.” Pause. “You hear me? Give me a hookup.”

  “Hookup—” some officer’s voice. “You’re hooked up, captain.”

  “All right, this is Captain Graeme.” Croak and squeak. Was that his voice speaking? “I’m calling for volunteers—one more run. Volunteers only. Speak up, anyone who’ll go.”

  Long pause.

  “Shai Dorsai!”

  “Shai El Man!—any others?”

  “Sir—” Bannerman—“The other two ships aren’t receiving.”

  Blink at Eye. Focus. True. Two of three ships there yawning out of line.

  “Just the two of us then. Bannerman?”

  “At”—croaking—“your orders, sir.”

  “Make the run.”

  Pause ...

  Phase shift!

  Planet, whirling—shock—dark space. Can’t black out now—

  “Pull her out of it!” Pause. “Bannerman!”

  Weakly responding: “Yes sir—”

  Phase Shift

  —Darkness ...

  “—Up!”

  It was a snarling, harsh, bitter whisper in Donal’s ear. He wondered, eyes-closed, where it was coming from. He heard it again, and once again. Slowly it dawned on him that he was saying it to himself.

  He fought his eyes open.

  The control room was still as death. In the depths of the eye before him three small tiny shapes of ships could be seen, at full magnification, far-flung from each other. He fumbled with dead fingers at the ties on his suit, then bound them to his chair. One by one they came free. He pushed himself out of the chair and fell to his knees on the floor.

  Swaying, staggering, he got to his feet. He turned himself toward the five chairs at the control panel, and staggered to them.

  In four of the chairs, Bannerman and his three officers sagged unconscious. The Third Officer seemed more than unconscious. His face was milkish white and he did not seem to be breathing. All four men had been sick.

  In the fifth chair, Lee hung twisted in his ties. He was not unconscious. His eyes were wide on Donal as he approached, and a streak of blood had run down from one corner of the orderly’s mouth. He had apparently tried to break his ties by main strength, like a mindless animal, and go directly to Donal. And yet his eyes were not insane, merely steady with an unnatural fixity of purpose. As Donal reached him Lee tried to speak; but all he was able to manage for a second was a throttled sound, and a little more blood came out of the corner of his mouth.

  “Y’arright?” he mumbled, finally.

  “Yes,” husked Donal. “Get you loose in a minute. What happened to your mouth?”

  “Bit tongue—” mumbled Lee thickly. “M’arright.”

  Donal unfastened the last of the ties and, reaching up, opened Lee’s mouth with his hands. He had to use real strength to do so. A little more blood came out, but he was able to see in. One edge of Lee’s tongue, halfway back from the tip, had been bitten entirely through.

  “Don’t talk,” directed Donal. “Don’t use that tongue at all until you can get it fixed.”

  Lee nodded, with no mark of emotion, and began painfully to work out of the chair.

  By the time he was out, Donal had managed to get the ties loose on the still form of the Third Officer. He pulled the man out of the chair and laid him on the floor. There was no perceptible heartbeat. Donal stretched him out and attempted to begin artificial respiration; but at the first effort his head swam dizzily and he was forced to stop. Slowly he pulled himself erect and began to break loose the ties on Bannerman.

  “Get the Second, if you feel up to it,” he told Lee. The Cobyman staggered stiffly around to the Second Officer and began work on his ties.

  Between the two of them, they got the three Freilanders stretched, out on the floor and their helmets off. Bannerman and the Second Officer began to show signs of regaining consciousness and Donal left them to make another attempt at respiration with the Third Officer. But he found the body, when he touched it. was already beginning to cool.

  He turned back and began work on the First Officer, who was still laxly unconscious. After a while the First Officer began to breathe deeply and more steadily; and his eyes opened. But it was apparent from his gaze that he did not see the rest of them, or know where he was. He stared at the control panel with blank eyes like a man in a heavily drugged condition.

  “How’re you feeling?” Donal asked Bannerman. The Freiland captain grunted, and made an effort to raise himself up on one elbow. Donal helped, and between the two of them they got him, first sitting up, then to his knees, and finally—with the help of the back of a chair to pull him up—to his feet.

  Bannerman’s eyes had gone directly to the control panel, from the first moment they had opened. Now, without a word, he pulled himself painfully back into his chair and began clumsily to finger studs.

  “All ship sections,” he croaked into the grille before him. “Report.”

  There was no answer.

  “Report!” he said. His forefinger came down on a button and an alarm bell rang metallically loud through the ship. It ceased and a faint voice came from the speaker overhead.

  “Fourth Gun Section reporting as ordered, sir—”

  The battle of Newton was over.

  Hero

  Sirius himself had just set, and the small bright disk of that white dwarf companion that the Freilanders and the New Earthmen had a number of uncomplimentary names for was just beginning to show strongly through the wall of Donal’s bedroom, Donal sat, bathed in the in-between light, dressed in only a pair of sport trunks
, sorting through some of the interesting messages that had come his way, recently—since the matter of the raid on Newton.

  So engrossed was he that he paid no attention until Lee tapped him on one brown-tanned shoulder.

  “Time to dress for the party,” said the Cobyman. He had a gray dress uniform of jacket and trousers, cut in the long-line Freiland style, over one arm. It was fashionably free of any insignia of rank. “I’ve got a couple of pieces of news for you. First, she was here again.”

  Donal frowned, getting into the uniform. Elvine had conceived the idea of nursing him after his return from the short hospital stay that had followed the Newton affair. It was her convenient conclusion that he was still suffering from the psychological damage of the overdose of phase-shifting they had all gone through. Medical opinion and Donal’s to the contrary, she had insisted on attaching herself to him with a constancy which lately had led him to wonder if perhaps he would not have preferred the phase shifting itself. The frown now vanished, however.

  “I think I see an end to that,” he said. “What else?”

  “This William of Ceta you’re so interested in,” answered Lee. “He’s here for the party.”

  Donal turned his head to look sharply at the man. But Lee was merely delivering a report. The bony face was empty of even those small signs of expression which Donal had come to be able to read, in these past weeks of association.

  “Who told you I was interested in William?” he demanded.

  “You listen when people talk about him,” said Lee. “Shouldn’t I mention him?”

  “No, that’s all right,” Donal said. “I want you to tell me whenever you find out anything about him you think I might not know. I just didn’t know you observed that closely.”

  Lee shrugged. He held the jacket for Donal to slide his arms into.

  “Where’d he come from?” asked Donal.

  “Venus,” said Lee. “He’s got a Newton man with him—big young drunk named Montor. And a girl—one of those special people from the Exotics.”

  “The Select of Kultis?”

  “That’s right”