The Marooner

: The Marooner

Wordsley and Captain DeCastros

crossed half a universe--suffered

hardship--faced unknown dangers;

and all this for what--a breath

of rare perfume?







Steadily they smashed the mensurate battlements, in blackness beyond

night and darkness without stars. Yet Mr. Wordsley, the engineer, who

was slight, balding and ingenious, was able to watch the firmament from

his engine room as it drifted from bow to beam to rocket's end. This was

by virtue of banked rows of photon collectors which he had invented and

installed in the nose of the ship.



And Mr. Wordsley, at three minutes of the hour of seventeen over four,

tuned in a white, new star of eye-blinking magnitude and surpassing

brilliance. Discovering new stars was a kind of perpetual game with Mr.

Wordsley. Perhaps more than a game.



"I wish I may, I wish I might ..." Mr. Wordsley said.



* * * * *



The fiddly hatch clanged. DeCastros, that gross, terrifying clown of a

man, clumped down the ladder from the bridge to defeat the enchantment

of the moment. DeCastros held sway. He was captain. He did not want Mr.

Wordsley to forget that he was captain.



The worst of Captain DeCastros was that he had moods. Just now he was

being a sly leprechaun, if one can imagine a double-chinned,

three-hundred pound leprechaun. He came over and dug his fingers into

Mr. Wordsley's shoulder. A wracking pain in the trapezius muscle.



"The ertholaters are plugged," he said gently. "The vi-lines are giving

out a horrible stink."



"I'll attend to it right away," Mr. Wordsley said, wincing a little as

he wriggled free.



"Tch, tch," DeCastros said, "can anyone really be so asthenic as you

seem, Mr. Wordsley?"



"No, sir," Mr. Wordsley said, uncertain of his meaning.



The captain winked. "Yet there was that ruffled shirt that I found in

the laundromat last week. It was not my shirt. There are only the two of

us aboard, Mr. Wordsley."



"It was my shirt," Mr. Wordsley said, turning crimson. "I bought it on

Vega Four. I--I didn't know--that is, they wear them like that on Vega

Four."



"Yes, they do," DeCastros said. "Well, well, perhaps you are only a

poet, Mr. Wordsley. But should you happen to be a little--well, maggoty,

you positively do not have to tell me. No doubt we both have our

secrets. Naturally."



"I haven't," Mr. Wordsley said desperately.



"No? Then you certainly will not mind that I am recommending an Ab Test

for you when we get home."



Mr. Wordsley's heart stopped beating for several seconds. He searched

Captain DeCastros' face for a sign that he might be fooling. He was not.

He looked too pleasant. Mr. Wordsley had always managed to pass the

Aberrations Test by the skin of his teeth, but he was sure that, like

most spiritual geniuses, he was sensitively balanced, and that the power

and seniority of a man like DeCastros must influence the Board of

Examination.



"You might be decommed. Or even committed to an institution. We wouldn't

want that to happen, would we, Mr. Wordsley?"



"Why are you doing this to me?" Mr. Wordsley asked strickenly.



"To tell the truth, I do not propose to have any more of my voyages

blighted with your moon-calfing, day-dreaming and letting the

ertholaters stink up the bridge. Besides--" Captain DeCastros patted his

shoulder almost affectionately. "--besides, I can't stand you, Mr.

Wordsley."



Mr. Wordsley nodded. He went over to the screen that was like a window

of blessed outer night and sank down on his knees before it.



Have the wish I wish tonight.



"Ah, ha!" DeCastros exclaimed with sudden ice frozen around the rim of

his voice. "What have we here?"



"A new nova," Mr. Wordsley answered sullenly.



"It is common knowledge that no engineer can tell a nova from the D.R.

blast of an Iphonian freighter. Let me see it." He shoved Mr. Wordsley

out of the way and examined the screen intently.



"You fool," he said at last, "that's a planet. It is Avis Solis."



* * * * *



Now the name of Avis Solis tingled in Mr. Wordsley's unreliable memory,

but it would not advance to be recognized. What planet so bright, and

yet so remote from any star by angular measurement?



"Turn it off," DeCastros ordered.



Mr. Wordsley turned on him in a sudden fury. "It's mine," he cried. "I

found it! Go back to your bridge." Then, aghast at what he had said, he

clapped his hand over his mouth.



"Dear me," said Captain DeCastros silkily. Suddenly he seemed to go

quite berserk. He snatched a pile-bar from its rack and swung it at the

screen. The outer panel shattered. The screen went dead.



Mr. Wordsley grabbed at the bar and got hold of it at the expense of a

broken finger. They strained and tugged. The slippery cadmium finally

eluded both of them, bounded over the railing into the pit, struck a

nomplate far below and was witheringly consumed in a flash of blue

flame.



Then they were down and rolling over and over, clawing and gouging,

until Captain DeCastros inevitably emerged upon top.



Mr. Wordsley's eyes protruded from that unbearable weight, and he wished

that there was no such thing as artificial gravity. He struggled vainly.

A bit of broken glass crunched beneath his writhing heel. He went limp

and began to sob. It was not a very manly thing to do, but Mr. Wordsley

was exercising his poetic license.



"Now then," said DeCastros, jouncing up and down a bit. "I trust that

you have come to understand who is master of this ship, Mr. Wordsley?"



His addressee continued to weep silently.



After awhile it occurred to Captain DeCastros that what he was doing was

expressly forbidden in the Rules of the Way, Section 90-G, and might, in

fact, get him into a peck of trouble. So he got up, helped Mr. Wordsley

to his feet, and began to brush him off.



In a kindly voice he said, "You must have heard of Avis Solis."



"I don't seem to remember it," Mr. Wordsley said.



"It's a solitaire. One of those planets which depend upon dark, dwarf,

satellite suns for heat, you know. It is almost always in eclipse, and

I, for one, have always been glad of it."



"Why is that?" said Mr. Wordsley, not really caring. His chest was

giving him considerable pain.



"Because it holds the darkest of memories for me. I lost a brother on

Avis Solis. Perhaps you have heard of him. Malmsworth DeCastros. He was

quite famous for certain geological discoveries on Titan at one time."



"I don't think so."



"You need not be sorry. The wretch was a murderer and a bad sport as

well. I need not append that my brother and I were as unlike as night

and day--though there is no night and day proper upon Avis Solis, of

course. I imagine you would like to hear the story. Then you will

undoubtedly understand how it is that I was so upset a moment ago by the

sight of Avis Solis, and forgive me."



Mr. Wordsley nodded. A birdlike, snake-charmed nod.



* * * * *



"Avis Solis is a planet absolutely unique, at least in this galaxy. In

addition to being a solitaire, its surface is almost solidly covered to

a depth of several meters with light-gathering layers of crystal which

give it the brilliant, astral glow that you saw just now. Its satellite

suns contribute hardly any light at all. It contains ample oxygen in its

atmosphere, but hardly any water, and so is practically barren. An

ill-advised mineralogical expedition brought us to Avis Solis."



"Us?" Mr. Wordsley said.



"There were six of us, five men and a woman. A woman fine and loyal and

beautiful, with the body of a consummate goddess and the face of a

tolerant angel. I was astrological surveyor and party chief."



"I didn't know that you were once a surveyor."



"It was seventeen years ago, and none of your business besides."



"What happened then?"



"Briefly, we were prospecting for ragnite, which was in demand at the

time. We had already given up hopes of finding one gram of that mineral,

but decided to make a last foray before blasting off. My brother,

Malmsworth, stayed at our base camp. Poor Jenny--that was her

name--remained behind to care for Malmsworth's lame ankle."



Captain DeCastros was lost for several minutes in a bleak and desolate

valley of introspection wherein Mr. Wordsley dared not intrude. There

was a certain grandeur about his great, dark visage, his falciform nose

and meaty jowls as he stood there. Mr. Wordsley began to fidget and

clear his throat.



DeCastros glared at him. "They were gone when we returned. Gone, I tell

you! She, to her death. Malmsworth--well, we found him three hours

later in the great rift which bisects the massive plateau that is the

most outstanding feature of the regular surface of Avis Solis. At the

end of this rift there is a natural cave that opens into the sheer wall

of the plateau. Within it is a bottomless chasm. It was here that we

found certain of Jenny's garments, but of Jenny, naturally, there was no

trace. He had seen to that."



"Terrible," Mr. Wordsley said.



DeCastros smiled reminiscently. "He fled, but we caught him. He really

had a lame ankle, you know."



The mice of apprehension scampered up and down Mr. Wordsley's spine.

"You killed him." It was a statement of certainty.



"No, indeed. That would have been too easy. We left him there with one

portable water-maker and all of that unpalatable but nourishing fungus

which thrives upon Avis Solis that he could eat. I have no doubt that he

lived until madness reduced his ability to feed himself."



"That was drastic," Mr. Wordsley felt called upon to say.

"Perhaps--perhaps it occurred to you later on that, in charity to your

brother, the er--woman might not have been altogether blameless."



For a moment he thought that Captain DeCastros was about to strike him

again. He did not. Instead he spat at Mr. Wordsley. He had the speed of

a cobra. There was not time to get out of the way. Mr. Wordsley employed

a handkerchief on his face.



"She was my wife, you know, Mr. Wordsley," Captain DeCastros said

pleasantly.



At nineteen-over-four the contamination buzzers sounded their dread

warning.



* * * * *



Mr. Wordsley got the alarm first. He had been furtively repairing the

viewscreen and thinking dark thoughts the while. There was sick dread

for him in the contemplation of the future, for after this last

unfortunate blunder DeCastros would be certain to keep his promise and

have him examined. This might very well be his last voyage, and Mr.

Wordsley had known for quite a long time that he could not live anywhere

except out here in the void.



Only in space, where the stars were like diamonds. Not in the light of

swirling, angry, red suns, not upon the surface of any planet, so drab

when you drew too near. Only in the sterile purity of remote space

where he could maintain and nourish the essential purity of his

day-dreams. But of course one could not explain this to the Board of

Examiners; least of all to Captain DeCastros.



Moreover, he was afraid that Avis Solis, which he had been permitted to

behold for only a few seconds, would be out of range before he got the

scanner to working again. The aspect of this magnificent gem diminishing

forever into the limitless night brought a lump to his throat.



But then, at last, the screen came alive once more, and there it loomed,

more brilliant than ever, now so huge that it filled the screen, and it

had not become drab, neither gray-green or brown. No, it was cake

frosting, and icicles, and raindrops against the sun, and all of the

bright, unattainable Christmas tree ornaments of his childhood.



So rapt was he that he scarcely heard the alarm. Yet he responded

automatically to the sound that now sent him scrambling into his

exposure suit. He fitted one varium-protected oxy-tank to his helmet and

tucked another one under his arm for Captain DeCastros.



This was superfluous, for DeCastros not only had donned his rig; he had

managed to recall to memory a few dozen vile, degrading swear words

gleaned from the sin-pits of Marronn, to hurl at Mr. Wordsley.



No one could have helped it, really. Ships under the Drive are insulated

from contamination clouds and everything else in normal space. The

substance polluting the ventilation system, therefore, must have been

trapped within their field since Vega. Now it had entered the ship

through some infinitesimal opening in the hull.



It was the engineer's job to find that break. It was not easy,

especially with DeCastros breathing down one's neck. Mr. Wordsley began

to perspire heavily, and the moisture ran down and puddled in his boots.



An hour passed that was like an age. The prognosis became known and was

not reassuring. This was one of the toxic space viruses, dormant at

absolute zero, but active under shipboard conditions. A species, in

fact, of the dread, oxygen-eating dryorus, which multiplies with

explosive rapidity, and kills upon penetration of the human respiratory

system.



Because of the leak in the hull, the decontaminators could not even hold

their own. Mr. Wordsley shuddered to note that ominous, rust-colored

cobwebs--countless trillions of dryori--already festooned the

stringers of the hull.



Another precious hour was taken from them. Mr. Wordsley emerged wearily

from the last inspection hole.



* * * * *



"Well?" DeCastros snapped. "Well--well?" His face was greenish from the

effects of the special, contamination resistant mixture that they were

breathing.



"I found the leak," Mr. Wordsley said.



"Did you fix it?"



"It was one of the irmium alloy plugs in the outer hull beneath the

pile. They were originally placed there, I believe, for the installation

of a radiation tester. The plug is missing, and I am sorry to say that

we have no extras. Anything other than irmium would melt at once, of

course."



"We have less than eight hours of pure air in the tanks," DeCastros

said. "Have you thought of that, you rattle-head?"



"Yes, sir," Mr. Wordsley said. "And if I might be allowed to speculate,

Captain, I would say that we are finished unless we can make a

planetfall. Only then would I be able to remove the lower port tube,

weld the cavity, seal the ship and fumigate."



"We're four weeks from the nearest star, Fomalhaut; you know that as

well as I do."



"I was thinking," said Mr. Wordsley, with a sudden, suffused glow in his

cheeks, "of Avis Solis."



Mr. Wordsley shut his eyes as they were going down, because he wanted to

open them and surprise himself, at the moment of landing. But the cold,

white glare was more intense than he had expected, and he had to shut

them again and turn on the polarizer.



He buckled on his tools and the carbo-torch, and went down the ladder.

He dropped at once to his knees, not because of the gravity, which was

not bad, but because of a compulsion to get his face as near to the

surface of Avis Solis as possible. It was even lovelier than when seen

from space. He trod upon a sea of diamonds. A million tiny winkings and

scintillations emanated from each crystal. A million crystals lay

beneath the sole of his boot. He would rather not have stepped on them,

but it could not be helped. They were everywhere. Mr. Wordsley gloated.



* * * * *



DeCastros dropped like a huge slug from the ladder behind him. "What are

you doing?" he said. "Picnicking?"



"I was tying my shoe," Mr. Wordsley said, and got to work with an

alacrity that was wholly false.



The dark sun-satellites rose by twos and threes over the horizon, felt

rather than clearly seen. There was a dry wind that blew from the

glittering wasteland and whistled around the base of the rockets as Mr.

Wordsley labored on and on.



Captain DeCastros had withdrawn to a level outcropping of igneous rock

and sat staring at the nothing where the greenish-black sky met the pale

gray horizon.



The tube was loosened on its shackles and presently fell, with a

tinkling sound, upon the surface of Avis Solis. The opening was sealed

and welded. Mr. Wordsley was practically finished, but he did not hurry.

Instead, he went around to the opposite side of the ship on a pretense

of inspection, and sat down where DeCastros could not see him.



For awhile he stared at the many-faceted depths of the crystals; then he

leaned over and touched them with his lips. They were smooth and

exciting. They cut his lip.



But he had the distinct feeling that there was something wrong with this

idyll. It seemed to him that he was being spied upon. He sneaked a

furtive glance behind him. DeCastros was still sitting where he had

been, with his back to him.



Mr. Wordsley slowly lifted his gaze to the plateau of shimmering glass

that was before him. At its rim, a hundred feet above him, a silent

figure stood gazing down upon him.



* * * * *



A man even six feet tall might easily have frightened Mr. Wordsley into

a nervous breakdown by staring at him with that gaunt, hollow-eyed

stare, but this creature, though manlike, was fully fifty feet tall,

incredibly elongated, and stark naked. Its hair was long and matted; its

cheeks sunken, its lips pulled back in an expression which might have

been anything from a smile to a cannibalistic snarl.



Mr. Wordsley cried out.



Captain DeCastros heard and came running across the intervening distance

with swiftness incredible in one of his bulk at this gravity. His

blizzer was out. It was one of the very latest models of blizzers. Very

destructive. Mr. Wordsley had always been afraid to touch it.



He fired, and part of the plateau beneath the titan's feet fell away in

a sparkling shower. The creature vanished.



DeCastros was red-faced and wheezing. "That was Malmsworth," he said.

"Now how the devil do you suppose he managed to stick it out all these

years!"



"If that was Malmsworth," Mr. Wordsley said, "he must be a very tall

man."



"That was merely dimensional mirage. Come along. We'll have to hurry if

we catch him."



"Why do we want to catch him?" Mr. Wordsley said.



Captain DeCastros made a sound of sober surprise. Even of pious wonder.

"Malmsworth is my only brother," he said.



Mr. Wordsley wanted to say, "Yes, but you shot at him." He did not,

because there was no time. He had to hurry to catch up with DeCastros,

who was even now scrambling up the steep slope.



From the rim they could see Malmsworth out there on the flat. He was

making good time, but Captain DeCastros proceeded to demonstrate that he

was no mean hiker, himself. Mr. Wordsley's side began to hurt, and his

breath came with difficulty. He might have died, if he had not feared

to incur DeCastros' anger.



At times the naked man was a broad, flat monster upon that shimmering

tableland. Again he seemed almost invisible; then gigantic and tenuous.



Presently he disappeared altogether.



"Oho!" DeCastros said, "If I am not mistaken, old Malmsworth has holed

up in that very same rift where we caught him at his dirty business

seventeen years ago. He's as mad as a Martian; you can lay to that. He'd

have to be."



The rift, when they arrived at its upper reaches, was cool and shadowy.

In its depths nothing sparkled. It was ordinary limestone. The walls

were covered with a dull yellow moss, except for great, raw wounds where

it had been torn off.



"That's Malmsworth's work," Captain DeCastros said. "In seventeen years,

Mr. Wordsley, one will consume a lot of moss, I daresay. Shall we

descend?"



The rift had reached its depth quite gradually, so that Mr. Wordsley

scarcely realized that they were going down until the surface glare was

suddenly gone, and the green-walled gloom surrounded them. It might have

been a pleasant place, but Mr. Wordsley did not like it.



Captain DeCastros was taking his time now, resting frequently. There was

not the slightest chance of Malmsworth's getting away, for at the other

end of the rift lay the cave and the abyss containing, at least, one

ghost of Malmsworth's terrible past.



But though it might seem drab after the plateau and the plain, the rift

had its points of interest. Along the walls, everywhere, as high as a

tall man might reach, the moss had been torn or scraped from the

surface. There was no second growth.



* * * * *



Every quarter of a mile or so they came upon the former campsites of the

castaway, each marked by a flat-topped cairn of small stones three or

four feet in height. DeCastros was at a loss to explain this. Mr.

Wordsley supposed that it was one of the marks of a diseased mind.



Not that he actually understood the workings of a diseased mind.

Privately, he suspected that DeCastros was a little mad. Certainly he

was subject to violent, unreasonable tempers which could not be

explained. The unfortunate strain might have cropped up more strongly in

his brother.



Might not these walls have rung with lunatic screams after months and

years of hollow-eyed watching for the ship that never came? It might

have been different, of course, had Malmsworth been able to appreciate

the aesthetic values of life, as Mr. Wordsley did. But doubtless these

lovely miles and miles of crystalline oceans had been but a desert to

the castaway.



Eventually the rift widened a little, and they came to a dead end,

beyond which lay the cave. It must have been formed ages ago by

trickling waters before Avis Solis lost its clouds and rivers.



Here they found the last of the cairns, and the answer to their

construction. The water-maker which the expedition had left with

Malmsworth seventeen years ago rested upon this neat platform, and below

it a delicate basin, eighteen inches or so in depth, had been

constructed of stones and chinked with moss. Fit monument for the god,

machine.



It was filled with water, and quite obviously a bathtub.



* * * * *



Captain DeCastros sneered. This proved beyond doubt that Malmsworth was

mad, for in the old days he had been the very last to care about his

bath. In fact, DeCastros said, Malmsworth occasionally stank.



This was probably not true, but it seemed curious, nonetheless.



Captain DeCastros set to work kicking the tub to pieces. He kicked so

hard that one stone whistled past the head of Mr. Wordsley, who ducked

handily. Soon the basin lay in rubble, and the water-maker, its supports

collapsed, listed heavily to the right.



"He must be in the cave," Captain DeCastros said. He cupped his hands to

his mouth. "Come out, Malmsworth, we know you're in there!"



But there was no answer, and Malmsworth did not come out, so Captain

DeCastros, blizzer in hand, went in, with Mr. Wordsley following at a

cautious interval.



Presently they stood upon the edge of something black and yawning, but

there was still no sign of the exile, who seemed, like Elijah, to have

been called directly to his Maker without residue.



Beyond the gulf, however, Mr. Wordsley had glimpsed a ragged aperture

filled with the purest light. It seemed inconceivable to him--attracted

as he had always been by radiance--that this should be inaccessible.



Accordingly, he lay down upon his belly and stretched his hand as far

down as he could reach. His fingers brushed a level surface which

appeared to extend outwards for two or three feet. Gingerly he lowered

himself to this ledge and began to feel his way along the wall. Nor was

he greatly surprised (for hardly anything surprised Mr. Wordsley any

more) that it neatly circumnavigated the pit and deposited him safely

upon the other side, where he quickly groped toward the mouth of the

cavern and stood gazing out upon a scene that was breathtaking.



From this vantage the easily accessible slope led to the foot of the

plateau. Beyond lay the grandeur of Avis Solis.



Captain DeCastros was soon beside him. "A very clever trick, that

ledge," he said. "Malmsworth thinks to elude us, but he never shall,

eh, Mr. Wordsley?" There were tears of frustration in his eyes.



It embarrassed Mr. Wordsley, who could only point to the pall of

gleaming dust where their ship had lain, and to the silver needle which

glinted for a moment in the sky and was gone.



"Malmsworth would not do that to me," Captain DeCastros said.



But he had.



* * * * *



"We may be here quite a long while," Mr. Wordsley said, and could not

contrive to sound downhearted about it.



But Captain DeCastros had already turned away and was feeling his way

back along the ledge.



Mr. Wordsley waited just a moment longer; then he took from his pocket a

heavy object and dropped it upon the slope and it rolled over and over,

down and down, until its metallic sheen was lost in that superior glare.



It was a spare irmium alloy plug.



He made his way back to the water-maker. They would have to take good

care of it from now on.



He was not concerned with the basin. However, in the soft, damp sand

beside the basin, plainly imprinted there, as if someone's raiding party

had interrupted someone's bathing party, there remained a single,

small and dainty footprint.



One could almost imagine that a faint breath of perfume still lingered

upon the sheltered air of the rift, but, of course, only things which

glittered interested Mr. Wordsley.



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