The Last Run Of The Scavenger

: Gold In The Sky

To Greg Hunter the siege of the orbit-ship had been a nerve-wracking

game of listening and waiting for something to happen.



In the darkness of the control cabin he stretched his fingers, cramped

from gripping the heavy Markheim stunner, and checked the corridor

outside again. There was no sound in the darkness there, no sign of

movement. Somewhere far below he heard metal banging on metal; minutes

before
e thought he had heard the sharp ripping sound of a stunner

blast overhead, but he wasn't sure. Wherever the fighting was going on,

it was not here.



He shook his head as his uneasiness mounted. Why hadn't Johnny come

back? He'd gone off to try and disable the Ranger ship leaving Greg to

guard the control cabin. Why no sign of the marauders in the control

cabin corridor? This should have been the first place they would head

for, if they planned to take the ship, but there had been nothing but

silence and darkness. Johnny had been gone near 15 minutes already. Greg

became more uneasy.



He waited. Suddenly, bitterly, he realized the hopelessness of it. Even

if Johnny did manage to damage the Ranger ship, what difference would it

make? They had been fools to come out here, idiots to ignore Tawney's

warning, the three of them. Tawney had told them in so many words that

there would be trouble, and they had come out anyway, just begging for

it.



Well, now they had what they'd begged for. Greg slammed his fist into

his palm angrily. What had they expected? That the big company would

step humbly aside for them, with a fortune hanging in the balance? If

they had even begun to think it through before they started....



But they hadn't, and now it was too late. They were under attack; Johnny

was off on a fool's errand, gone too long for comfort, and Tom ... Greg

glanced at his watch. It had been ten minutes since Tom's call. What had

he meant by it? A plan, he said. A long chance.



He couldn't shake off the cold feeling in his chest when he thought

about Tom. What if something happened to him....



Greg remembered how he had grown to resent his brother. The time when

they were very young and Tom had been struck by the sickness, a native

Martian virus they called it. He remembered the endless nights of

attention given to Tom alone. From then on somehow they weren't friends

any more. But now all that seemed to disappear and Greg only wished that

Tom would appear down the corridor....



A sound startled him. He tensed, gripping the stunner, peering into the

darkness. Had he heard something? Or was it his own foot scraping on

the deck plate? He held his breath, listening, and the sound came

again, louder.



Someone was moving stealthily up the corridor.



Greg waited, covered by the edge of the hatchway. It might be Johnny

returning, or maybe even Tom ... but there was no sign of recognition.

Whoever it was was coming silently....



Then a beam of light flared from a headlamp, and he saw the blue crackle

of a stunner. He jerked back as the beam bounced off the metal walls.

Then he was firing point blank down the corridor, his stunner on a tight

beam, a deadly pencil of violent energy. He heard a muffled scream and a

bulk loomed up in front of him, crashed to the deck at his feet.



He fired again. Another crash, a shout, and then the sound of footsteps

retreating. He waited, his heart pounding, but there was nothing more.



The first attempt on the control cabin had failed.



* * * * *



Five minutes later the second attempt began. This time there was no

warning sound. A sudden, ear-splitting crash, a groan of tortured metal,

and the barricaded hatchway glowed dull red. Another crash followed. The

edge of the hatch split open, pouring acrid Murexide fumes into the

cabin. A third explosion breached the door six inches; Greg could see

headlamps in the corridor beyond.



He fired through the crack, pressing down the stud until the stunner

scorched his hand. Then he heard boots clanging up the other corridor.

He pressed back against the wall, waited until the sounds were near,

then threw open the hatch. For an instant he made a perfect target, but

the raiders did not fire. The stunner buzzed in his hand, and once again

the footfalls retreated.



They were being careful!



Silence then, and blackness. Minutes passed ... five, ten.... Greg

checked the time again. It was over twenty minutes since Tom had talked

to him. What had happened? Whatever Tom had planned must have misfired,

or something would have happened by now. For a moment he considered

leaving his post and starting down the dark corridor to search ... but

where to search? There was nothing to do but wait and hope for a

miracle.



Then suddenly the lights blazed on in the control cabin and the corridor

outside. An attention signal buzzed in Greg's earphones. "All right,

Hunter, it's all over," a voice grated. "You've got five minutes to get

down to No. 3 lock. If you make us come get you, you'll get hurt."



"I'll chance it," Greg snapped back. "Come on up."



"We're through fooling," the voice said. "You'd better get down here.

And bring your brother with you."



"Sure," Greg said. "Start holding your breath."



The contact broke for a moment, then clicked on again. This time it was

another voice. "We've got Johnny Coombs down here," it said. "You want

him to stay alive, you start moving. Without your stunner."



Greg chewed his lip. They could be bluffing ... but they might not be.

"I want to see Johnny," he said.



On the control panel a viewscreen flickered to life. "Take a look,

then," the voice said in his earphones.



They had Johnny, all right. A burly guard was holding his good arm

behind his back. Greg could see the speaker wires jerked loose from his

helmet.



"It's up to you," the voice said. "You've got three minutes. If you're

not down here by then, this helmet comes off and your friend goes out

the lock. It's quick that way, but it's not very pleasant."



Johnny was shaking his head violently; the guard wrenched at his arm,

and the miner's face twisted in pain. "Two minutes," the voice said.



"Okay," Greg said. "I'm coming down."



"Drop the stunner right there."



He dropped the weapon onto the deck. Three steps out into the corridor,

and two guards were there to meet him, stunners raised. They marched him

up the ramp to the outer level corridor and around to No. 3 lock.



They were waiting there with Johnny. A moment later the guards herded

them through the lock and into the hold of the Ranger ship, stripped off

their suits, and searched them.



A big man with a heavy face and coarse black hair came into the cabin.

He looked at Johnny and Greg and grunted. "You must be Hunter," he said

to Greg. "Where's the other one?"



"What other one?" Greg said.



"Your brother. Where is he?"



"How would I know?" Greg said.



The man's face darkened. "You'd be smart to watch your tongue," he said.

"We know there were three of you, we want the other one."



The man turned to a guard. "What about it?"



"Don't know, Doc. Nobody's reported him."



"Then take a crew and search the ship. We were due back hours ago. He's

in there somewhere."



"Sure, Doc." The guard disappeared through the lock. The man called Doc

motioned Greg and Johnny through into the main cabin.



"What are you planning to do with us?" Greg demanded.



"You'll find out soon enough." Doc's mouth twisted angrily.



A guard burst into the cabin. "Doc, there's just nobody there! We've

scoured the ship."



"You think he just floated away in his space suit?" Doc growled. "Find

him. Tawney only needs one of them, but we can't take a chance on the

other one getting back...." He broke off, his eyes on the viewscreen.

"Did you check those scout ships?"



"No, I thought...."



"Get down there and check them." Doc turned back to the viewscreen

impatiently.



Greg caught Johnny's eye, saw the big miner's worried frown. "Where is

he?" he whispered.



"I don't know. Thought you did...."



"All I know is that he had some kind of scheme in mind."



"Shut up," Doc said to them. "If you're smart, you'll be strapping down

before we...." He broke off in mid sentence, listening.



Quite suddenly, the Ranger ship had begun to vibrate. Somewhere, far

away, there was the muffled rumble of engines.



Doc whirled to the viewscreen. Greg and Johnny looked at the same

instant, and Johnny groaned.



Below them, the Scavenger's jets were flaring. First the pale starter

flame, then a long stream of fire, growing longer as the engines

developed thrust.



Doc slammed down a switch, roared into a speaker. "That scout

ship ... stop it! He's trying to make a break!"



Two guards appeared at the lock almost instantly, but it was too late.

Already she was straining at her magnetic cable moorings; then the

exhaust flared, and the little scout ship leaped away from the

orbit-ship, moving out at a tangent to the asteroid's orbit, picking up

speed, moving faster and faster....



In toward the orbit of Mars.



The man called Doc had gone pale. Now he snapped on the speaker again.

"Frank? Stand by on missile control. He's asking for it."



"Right," the voice came back. "I'm sighting in."



The Scavenger was moving fast now, dwindling in the viewscreen. One

panel of the screen went telescopic to track her. "All right," Doc said.

"Fire one and two."



From both sides of the Ranger, tiny rockets flared. Like twin bullets

the homing shells moved out, side by side, in the track of the escaping

Scavenger. With a strangled cry, Greg leaped forward, but Johnny

caught his arm.



"Johnny, Tom's on ... that thing...."



"I know. But he's got a chance."



Already the homing shells were out of sight; only the twin flares were

visible. Greg stared helplessly at the tiny light-spot of the

Scavenger. At first she had been moving straight, but now she was

dodging and twisting, her side-jets flaring at irregular intervals. The

twin pursuit shells mimicked each change in course, drawing closer to

her every second.



And then there was a flash, so brilliant it nearly blinded them, and the

Scavenger burst apart in space. The second shell struck a fragment;

there was another flash. Then there was nothing but a nebulous powdering

of tiny metal fragments.



The last run of the Scavenger had ended.



Dazed, Greg turned away from the screen, and somewhere, as if in a

dream, he heard Doc saying, "All right, boys, strap this pair down.

We've got a lot of work to do before we can get out of here."



More

;