Spacehounds of IPC by E E. Doc Smith

scared sick—but how was I to think that a wonder-girl like you could ever love a guy like

me ? You certainly are the gamest little partner a man ever had. You’re the world’s

straightest shooter, ace—you’re a square brick if there ever was one. Your sheer nerve

in being willing to go the whole route makes me love you more than ever, if such a thing

can be possible, and it certainly puts a new face on the whole cock-eyed Universe for

me. However, I don’t believe it will come to that. After what you’ve just said, I sure will

lick that job, regardless of how many different factories it takes to” make one

armature—I’ll show that mess of scrap-iron what kind of trees make shingles!”

The girl still in his arms, he rose to his feet and released her slowly, reluctantly,

unwilling ever to let her go. Then he shook himself, as though an overwhelming burden

had been lifted from his shoulders, and laughed happily.

“See this cigarette ?” he went on lightly. “The Last of the Mohicans. I’m going to

smoke it in honor of our engagement.” He drew the fragrant smoke deep into his lungs

and frowned at her in mock seriousness.

“This would be a nice world to live on, of course, but the jobs here are too darn

steady. It also seems to be somewhat lacking in modern conveniences, such as steel-

mills and machine tools. Then, too, it is just a trifle too far from the Royal and Ancient for

you really to enjoy living here permanently, and besides, I can’t get my favorite brand of

cigarettes around here. Therefore, after due deliberation, I don’t believe we’ll take the

place—we’ll go back to Tellus. Kiss me just once more, ace, and I’ll make that job think

a cyclone has struck it right on the center of impact. Like Samuel Weller, or whoever it

was, I’m clear full of Vigor, wim, and witality’!”

The specified kiss and several others duly delivered he strode blithely away, and

the little canyon resounded with the blows of his heavy sledge as he attacked with

renewed spirit the great forging, white-hot from his soak-pit, which was to become the

shaft of his turbo-alternator. Nadia watched him for a moment, her very heart in her

eyes, then picked up her spanner and went after more steel, breathing a long and

tremulous, but supremely happy sigh.

CHAPTER 4 Ganymedean Life

Slow, hard, and disheartening as the work had been at first, Stevens had never

slackened his pace, and after a time, as his facilities increased, the exasperating

setbacks decreased in number and severity and his progress became faster and faster.

Large as the Forlorn Hope was, space was soon at a premium, for their peculiarly-

shaped craft became a veritable factory, housing a variety of machinery and equipment

unknown in any single Earthly industrial plant. Nothing was ornamental— everything

was stripped to its barest fundamental necessities—but every working part functioned

with a smooth precision to delight the senses of any good mechanic.

In a cavern under the falls was the great turbine, to be full-fed by the crude but

tight penstock which clung to the wall of the gorge, angling up to the brink of that

stupendous cataract. Bedded down upon solid rock there was a high-tension alternator

capable of absorbing the entire output of the mighty turbine. This turbo-alternator was

connected to a set of converters from which the energy would flow along three great

copper cables—the receptors of the lifeboats being altogether too small to carry the

load—to the now completely exhausted accumulators of the Forlorn Hope. All high-

tension apparatus was shielded and grounded, so that no stray impulses could reveal to

the possible detectors of the Jovians the presence of this foreign power plant. Housings,

frames, spiders, every stationary part, were rough, crude, and massive; but bearings,

shafts, armatures, all moving parts, were of a polished and finished accuracy and

balance that promised months and years of trouble-free operation. Everything ready for

the test, Stevens took off his frayed and torn leather coveralls and moccasins—he never

walked down—and climbed nimbly up the penstock. Opening the head-gate, he poised

sharply upon its extremity and took off in a perfect swan-dive; floating unconcernedly

downward toward that boiling maelstrom two hundred feet below. He struck the water

with a sharp, smooth “slup!” and raced ashore, seizing his suit as he ran toward the

turbo-alternator. It was running smoothly, and, knowing that everything was tight at the

receiving end, he lingered about the power plant until he was assured that nothing

would go wrong and that his home-distilled lubricating oil and grease would keep those

massive bearings cool.

Hunger assailed him, and glancing at the sun he noted that it was well past

dinner-time.

“Wow!” he exclaimed aloud. “The boss just loves to wait meals—she’ll burn me

up for this!”

He ran lightly toward “home”, eager to tell his sweetheart that the long-awaited

moment had arrived—that power was now flowing into their accumulators.

“Hi, Diana of the silver bow!” he called. “How come you no blow the dinner bell?

Power’s on—come give it a look!”

There was no answer to his hail, and Stevens paused in shocked amazement.

He knew that never of her own volition would she be out so late—Nadia was gone! A

rapid tour of inspection quickly confirmed that which he already knew only too well.

Forgotten was his hunger, forgotten the power plant, forgotten everything except the

fact that his Nadia, the buoyant spirit in whom centered his Universe, was lost or . . . he

could not complete the thought, even to himself.

Swiftly he came to a decision and threw off his suit, revealing the body of a

Hercules—a body ready for any demand he could put upon it. Always in hard training,

months of grinding physical labor and of heavy eating had built him up to a point at

which he would scarcely have recognized himself, could he have glanced into a mirror.

Mighty but pliable muscles writhed and swelled under his clear skin as he darted here

and there, selecting equipment for what lay ahead of him. He donned the heavily

armored space-suit which they had prepared months before, while they were still

suspicious of possible attack. It was covered with heavy steel at every point, and the

lenses of the helmet, already of unbreakable glass, had been re-enforced with thick

steel bars. Tanks and valves supplied air at normal pressure, so that his powerful body

could function at full efficiency, not handicapped by the lighter atmosphere of

Ganymede. The sleeves terminated in steel-protected rubber wristlets which left his

hands free, yet sheltered from attack—wristlets tight enough to maintain the difference

in pressure, yet not tight enough to cut off the circulation. He took up his mighty war-

bow and the full quiver of heavy arrows—full-feathered and pointed with savagely

barbed, tearing heads of forged steel—and slipped into their sheaths the long and

heavy razor-sharp sword and the double-edged dirk, which, he had made and ground

long since for he knew not what emergency and whose bell-shaped hilts of steel further

protected his hands and wrists. Thus equipped, he had approximately his normal

Earthly weight; a fact which would operate to his advantage, rather than otherwise, in

case of possible combat. With one last look around the Forlorn Hope, whose every

fitting shrieked aloud to him of the beloved mistress who was gone, he filled a container

with water and cooked food and opened the door.

* * * * *

“It won’t be long now, now it won’t be long,” Nadia caroled happily, buckling on her pack

straps and taking up bow and arrows for her daily hunt. “I never thought that he could

do it, but what it takes to do things he’s got lots of”, she continued to improvise the song

as she left the Hope, with its multitudinous devices whose very variety was a never-

failing delight to her; showing as it did the sheer ability of the man whose brain and

hands had almost finished a next-to-impossible task.

Through the canyon and up a well-worn trail she climbed, and soon came out

upon the sparsely timbered bench that was her hunting grounds. Upon this day,

however, she was full of happy anticipation and her mind was everywhere except upon

her work. She was thinking of Stevens, of their love, of the power which he might turn

on that very day, and of the possible rescue for which she had hitherto scarcely dared to

hope. Thus it was that she walked miles beyond her usual limits without having loosed

an arrow, and she was surprised when she glanced up at the sun to see that half the

morning was gone and that she was almost to the foothills, beyond which rose a

towering range of mountains.

“Snap out of it, girl!” she reprimanded herself. “Go on wool-gathering like this and

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