Dard cringed at the sound of the vicious attack the ‘copter riders were still centering behind him—an attack delivered without any call to surrender. All that blind hatred which had boiled over during the purge was still smoldering in those who were now hunting them. He had always known that anyone of proven scientist blood would have little chance if the Peacemen tracked him down, but now the last faint hope of mercy for the helpless was gone.
Pulling Dessie he reached the end of the thicket in which they bad taken refuge. By some blind chance they had come out on the side which faced the peak. But before them lay a wide open sweep of ground, impossible to cross undetected. Dard faced it bleakly. The brightness of the sunlight somehow made that last blow harder.
But, even as his misery and despair weakened him, he suddenly noted again flashes of light on the peak—coming in too regular a pattern to be sun fostered. While he was still gaping up at that, a shadow swept over. The ‘copter landed directly on that virgin expanse of snow before him. He sagged and his arms tightened about Dessie who gave a muffled cry as his grip hurt her. This was the end—the could not run any more.
The Peacemen were taking their time about leaving the ‘copter. It looked as if they were still reluctant to approach that thicket. What had Sach done that made them so wary?
Two of them crept around the tail of the machine, and Dard saw the gun mounted on the ‘copters’ roof swing about to cover them. The men crawled slowly through the snow. But before they had reached beyond the length of the ‘copter, that blink of light on the peak stepped up into a steady glow. Dard’s eyes dropped from it to the Peacemen and so he did not see deliverance arrive.
There was a swish of sound followed by a tinkle as if glass had splintered. Green fog bellowed out about the machine—the same fatal green of the ray Sach had used on the cave slope.
Without knowing why, he threw himself face down, carrying Dessie with him, as traces of the fog wafted slowly toward the thicket. It must be gas, and those men were now floundering in it. Then the world went black and Dard fell into deep space, a place where Dessie, too, was swept away from him.
4. AD ASTRA
DARD LAY ON HIS back staring up into unfamiliar gray reaches. Then a pinkish globe swam into position over him and he concentrated upon it. Eyes, nose, a mouth that was opening and shutting, took proper place.
“How is it, fella?”
Dard considered the question. He had been face down in the snow, there had been Peacemen creeping after him and—Dessie! Dessie! He struggled to sit up and the face of that figure above him moved.
“The little girl, she’s all right. You’re both all right now. You are the Nordis kids?”
Dard nodded. “Where is here?” he formed the inquiry slowly. The face crinkled into laughter.
“Well, at least that’s a variation on the old ‘Where am I?’ You’re in the Cleft, kid. We saw you trying to make it across the river valley with that ‘copter after you. You managed to delay them long enough for us to lay down the fog. Then we gathered you in. Also we’re a ‘copter and some assorted supplies to the good, so you’ve more than paid your admittance fee-even if you weren’t Lars Nordis’ kin.”
“How did you discover who we are?” Dard asked.
Dark brown eyes twinkled. “We have our little ways of learning what is necessary for us to know. And it is a painless process—done while you’re asleep.”
“I talked in my sleep? But I don’t!”
“Maybe not under ordinary circumstances. But let our medico get the digester on you and you do. You’ve had a pretty hard pull, kid, haven’t you?”
Dard levered himself up on his elbows and the other slipped extra support behind him. Now he could see that he was stretched out on a narrow cot in a room which seemed to be part cave, for three of its walls were bare rock, the fourth a smooth gray substance cut by a door. There were no windows, and a soft light issued from two tubes in the rock ceiling. His visitor perched on a folding stool and there was no other furniture in the cell-like chamber.
But there were coverings over him such as he had not seen for years, and he was wearing a clean, one piece coverall over a bathed body. He smoothed the top blanket lovingly. “Where is here—and what is here?” he expanded his first question.
“This is the Cleft, the last stronghold, as far as we know, of the Free Men.” The other got to his feet and stretched. He was a tall lean-waisted man, with dark brown skin, against which his strong teeth and the china-white of his eyeballs made startling contrast. Curly black hair was cropped very close to his round skull, and he had only a slight trace of beard. “This is the gateway to Ad Astra—“ he paused, eyeing Dard as if to assess the effect those last two words had on the boy.
“Ad Astra,” Dard repeated. “Lars spoke of that once.”
“Ad Astra means ‘to the Stars.’ And this is the jumping off place.”
Dard frowned. To the stars! Not interplanetary—but galactic flight! But that was impossible!
“I thought that Mars and Venus—“ he began doubtfully.
“Who said anything about Mars or Venus. kid? Sure, they’re impossible. It would take most of the resources of a willing Terra to plant a colony on either of them—as who should know better than I? No, not interplanetary flight- stellar. Go out to take our pick of waiting worlds such as earth creepers never dreamed of, that’s what we’re going to do! Ad Astra!”
Galactic flight—his first wild guess had been right
“A star ship here!” In spite of himself Dard knew a small thrill far inside his starved body. Men had landed on Mars and Venus back in the days before the Burn and the Purge, discovering conditions on both planets which made them almost impossible for human life without a vast expenditure which Terra was not willing to make. And, of course, Pax had forbidden all space flight as part of the program for stamping out scientific experimentation. Rut a star ship—to break the bounds of Sol’s system and go out to find another sun, other planets. It sounded like a very wild dream but he could not doubt the sincerity of the man who had just voiced it.
“But what did Lars have to do with this?” he wondered aloud. Lars’ field had been chemistry, not astronomy or the mechanics of space flight. Dard doubted whether his brother could have told one constellation from another.
“He had a very important part. We’ve just been waiting around for you to wake up to get the report of his findings.”
“But I thought you got the full story out of me while I was unconscious.”
“What you personally did in the past few days, yes. But you do carry a message from Lars, don’t you?” For the first time some of the dark man’s lightheadedness vanished.
Dard smoothed the blanket and then plucked at it with nervous fingers. “I don’t know—I hope so—“
His companion ran his hands across his tight cap of hair.
“Suppose we have Tas in. He’s only been waiting for you to come around.” He crossed the room and pushed a wall button.
“By the way,” he said over his shoulder, “I’m forgetting introductions. I’m Simba Kimber, Pilot-astrogator Simba Kimber,” he repeated that title as if it meant a great deal to him. “And Tas is First Scientist Tas Kordov, biological division. Our organization here is made up of survivors from half a dozen Free Scientist teams as well as quite a few just plain outlaws who are not Pax-minded. Oh, come in, Tas.”
The man who entered was short and almost as broad as he was tall. But sturdy muscle, not fat, thickened his shoulders and pillared his arms and legs. He wore the faded uniform of a Free Scientist with the flaming sword of First Rank still to be picked out on the breast. His eyes and broad cheek bones had Tartar contour and Dard believed that he was not a native of the land in which he now lived.
“Well, and now you are awake, oh?” he smiled at Dard.
“We have been waiting for you to open those eyes—and that mouth of yours—young man. What word do you bring from Lars Nordis?”
Dard could hesitate about telling the full truth no longer.
“I don’t know whether I have anything or not. The night the roundup gang came Lars said he had finished his job—“
“Good!” Tas Kordov actually clapped his hands.