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Chapter 30




Stripped, prone on his bunk. Grimes submitted to the ministrations of Su Lin.

He murmured, “What did I ever do to deserve you? Devoted handmaiden . . . Highly efficient bodyguard . . . And now masseuse . . .”

Under her kneading fingers the soreness and stiffness were dissipating. But there was another stiffness, of which he was becoming embarrassedly conscious. As long as she doesn’t ask me to turn over . . . he thought.

But she did not.

She slapped his naked buttocks and said cheerfully, “You’ll survive, Commodore. But you usually do, don’t you?”

“If I didn’t,” he told her, “I shouldn’t be here.” He flexed his legs experimentally. “Thanks to you, I shall be able to stand my watch.”

“All part of the PAT service,” she told him. “And, talking of watches, it’s almost time that I was relieving Raoul. You’ll be fit to take over at midnight, will you? Good. Then you had better get some sleep.”

“I’ll do just that,” he said.

Sleep was a long time coming—and when it did he was plagued by nightmares—or, rather, by a recurring nightmare. In it he would be standing there, helpless, on the hot road, under a blazing sun, while the madman came at him with bloody machete upraised. Each time he woke up just as the sharp, gleaming blade was descending on his unprotected head.

And then Su Lin was there, switching on the light, putting the tea tray down on his bunkside table.

“Are you all right, Commodore?” she asked. “Do you feel fit enough to take over? If not, Raoul and I can manage between us.”

“I’m feeling fine, Su Lin.”

“You don’t look it.”

“I’m a little tired, that’s all. The tea will perk me up. Get back to control like a good girl. I’ll be with you shortly.”

“As you say, Commodore,” she said doubtfully.

The tea did refresh him.

He dressed, then made his way forward and then down into the cab. Fat Susie was ambling along at cruising speed, almost silently, only the occasional click and whine of servo-mechanisms telling that the auto-pilot was functioning, maintaining course and adjusting attitude and altitude as requisite.

He looked at the chart and at the dotted line of the extrapolated track ahead of the airship’s actual position, a trace that, astern of her, was unbroken.

“We’re flying over the Unclaimed Territory, as they call it, now,” said Su Lin. “No doubt, eventually, it will be tamed—with wheatfields and vineyards and . . . dreamweed plantations. It all depends, I suppose, on what sort of influx of refugee labor—slave labor—there is over the next few years. . . .”

“Assuming, of course,” Grimes said, “that things continue going on as they have been going on. But aren’t we supposed to be throwing a spanner into that machinery?”

She grinned. “We are, Commodore.”

“Just what is down there, anyhow?” asked Grimes.

“In places, a jumble of rocks. Deep canyons. Savage animals. Even more savage plants.”

“Savage plants? You have to be kidding, Su Lin.”

“I’m not. I thought that you had been given a thorough briefing on this planet before you were sent here, Governor.”

“I was given a fine collection of spools to study on the way out. I studied them. But they were all concerned with history, politics, economics and sociology.”

“I’ll see to it that you get a briefing on Liberia’s natural ecology when we get back to the Residence. Who knows? It might come in useful some day. It will be interesting, at least.”

“As you say.” Grimes was still looking at the chart. “I suppose that these names given to the various natural features should tell me something. Mount Horrible . . . Bloodsuckers Canyon . . . Shocking Valley . . . But that sounds more comic than sinister . . .”

He was interrupted by an insistent beeping from the radar. He went to the console, looked into the PPI. Yes, there was a target, an airborne target, just abaft the starboard beam, all of forty kilometers distant. He pushed the extrapolation button. The airship, as he assumed that it must be, was flying on an almost parallel course in the same direction. Su Lin had gone to the radio telephone transceiver. “Fat Susie to unidentified aircraft to my starboard. Do you read me?”

The reply came with no delay.

“Citizen Marat to Fat Susie. I read you loud and clear. Where bound, Fat Susie?”

“Cruising, Citizen Marat. Where are you bound? Over.”

“Libertad to Rousseauville with mail and passengers. Over.” Grimes, now, was staring out through the starboard window of the cab, binoculars to his eyes. He realized that he could not see the line of the land horizon against the dark luminosity of the sky. And, at this range, he should be able to see the other airship’s running lights—but there was nothing there. And something seemed to have blotted out those stars at lower altitudes. He looked ahead. There the stars were dimming, were being obscured.

So Fat Susie had driven into a belt of cloud. So what? Radar and radar altimeter were working perfectly. The only traffic was bound in the same direction at the same speed. The extrapolated course was well clear of any mountains.

He heard Su Lin say, “A very good night to you, Citizen

Marat. And bon voyage.”

“Bon voyage to you, Fat Susie.” And then the male voice of the other watchkeeper chuckled. “Are you Fat Susie?

“Just Su,” she replied. “And not fat.”

“I’d like to meet you some time.”

“Good night.” she said firmly. “Over and out.”

“Wolves of the air,” commented Grimes. “Off with you now, Su Lin. Get your head down. I have the watch.”

Grimes, although he had done his share of atmosphere flying, was a spaceman, not an airman. He did not like this pushing ahead through thick fog. (Cloud, he told himself, cloud, not fog. The air would be clear enough at ground level, clear enough if he pushed Fat Susie up and through this vaporous ceiling.) He considered reducing altitude, then decided against it. Airships are not designed for hedge-hopping. Should he lift? But that would mean the dumping of ballast. And Sanchez had set the course, had set it in three dimensions, and might be annoyed, when called to take over the watch, to find that Grimes had been playing silly buggers all over the sky while he slept. All right, all right, Grimes was the pilot’s employer. But he. Grimes, was not the master. Sanchez was.

Should he call Sanchez?

And then. Grimes told himself, he’d have valid grounds for thinking of me as an old woman. Damn it all, I’m a shipmaster. I’ve commanded far bigger vessels than this little gasbag. As commodore, I’ve commanded a flotilla. (And, he thought wryly, made a jesusless balls of it.)

Apart from the visually invisible Citizen Marat there was no other traffic. There would not be, Grimes knew, over this region of the planet. Grimes consulted the radar. The other airship was on a slightly converging course but she was drawing ahead. Furthermore, she was maintaining an altitude at least a thousand meters in excess of Fat Susie’s. She would cross ahead of Fat Susie safely enough and without incident.

The watch wore on. The air in the control cab, from the fumes of Grimes’s pipe, was almost as thick as the air outside. The airship maintained course and altitude without a human hand at the controls. In the PPI the glowing blip that was Citizen Marat was now ahead, was still edging over to port. Grimes stared into the screen, drowsy, hypnotized by the steady rotation of the sweep.

But there was something wrong!

The range was no longer opening; it was closing fast. A glance at the auxiliary screen showed that the other ship was losing altitude rapidly. What the hell was she playing at?

It was one of those occasions when Grimes wished that he had three pairs of hands. Somehow he managed to push the General Alarm button and, a split second later, to initiate the process of switching from automatic pilot to manual control. Fat Susie—the stupid bitch!—seemed reluctant to yield the dominance of her functions to a mere human. It seemed ages before the illuminated sign, AUTO, over the wheel and the gyro compass repeater flickered out to be replaced by manual. And all the time there was the urgent stridency of the alarm bells to engender panic.

Sanchez and Su Lin were in the control cab. Neither had taken time to dress. Sanchez stared out through the windows at nothingness, then went to the radar.

“Holy Bakunin!” he muttered. “How the hell did you . . .?” Then, “Turn away, man! Hard-a-starboard!”

Grimes, at the wheel, spun it rapidly to the right. He felt Fat Susie heel over, heard her creaking protests. From above and abaft the control cab there was a peculiarly muffled crash—and, almost immediately afterwards, a noise that could only be that of the discharge of at least one medium caliber automatic cannon. Fat Susie lurched, shuddered. Grimes, clinging to the now useless wheel, managed to keep his feet. He stared out through the port window, saw that the colliding airships had, fortuitously, found a pocket of clear air in the cloud blanket. By the crimson glare of his own vessel’s port navigation light he could see a great hulk backing away, under reversed thrust, from its victim.

He could read the name . . .

No, not the name. The single letter and the three numerals.

Wherever the real Citizen Marat was, this was not her.

This was the army’s R273, the rigid dirigible that had cast off from the Lopez mooring mast to make room for Fat Susie.

The clouds enveloped her once more and she vanished from sight.

Fat Susie, her main gas cells ruptured, fell almost like a stone.











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