Plague Ship Andre Norton (book recommendations website .TXT) đ
- Author: Andre Norton
Book online «Plague Ship Andre Norton (book recommendations website .TXT) đ». Author Andre Norton
âAnd that is where?â Ali, who knew the deserts of Mars better than he did the greener planet from which his stock had sprung, pursued the question.
âRight in the middle of the Big Burn!â
Dane, Terra born and bred, realized first what Rip was planning and what it meant. Sealed off was rightâ âthe Queen would be amply protected from investigation. Whether her crew would survive was another matterâ âwhether she could even make a landing there was also to be considered.
The Big Burn was the horrible scar left by the last of the Atomic Warsâ âa section of radiation poisoned land comprising hundreds of square milesâ âland which generations had never dared to penetrate. Originally the survivors of that war had shunned the whole continent which it disfigured. It had been close to two centuries before men had gone into the still wholesome land laying to the far west and the south. And through the years, the avoidance of the Big Burn had become part of their racial instinct as they shrank from it. It was a symbol of something no Terran wanted to remember.
But Ali now had only one question to ask. âCan we do it?â
âWeâll never know until we try,â was Ripâs reply.
âThe Patrolâll be watchingâ ââ That was Weeks. With his Venusian background he had less respect for the dangers of the Big Burn than he did for the forces of Law and order which ranged the star lanes.
âTheyâll be watching the route lanes,â Rip pointed out. âThey wonât expect a ship to come in on that vector, steering away from the ports. Why should they? As far as I know itâs never been tried since Terraport was laid out. Itâll be trickyâ ââ And he himself would have to bear most of the responsibility for it. âBut I believe that it can be done. And we canât just roam around out here. With I-S out for our blood and a Patrol warn-off it wonât do us any good to head for Lunaâ ââ
None of his listeners could argue with that. And, Daneâs spirits began to rise, after all they knew so little about the Big Burnâ âit might afford them just the temporary sanctuary they needed. In the end they agreed to try it, mainly because none of them could see any alternative, except the too-dangerous one of trying to contact the authorities and being summarily treated as a plague ship before they could defend themselves.
And their decision was ably endorsed not long afterwards by a sardonic warning on the comâ âa warning which Ali who had been tending the machine passed along to them.
âGreetings, piratesâ ââ
âWhat do you mean?â Dane was heating broth to feed to Captain Jellico.
âThe word has gone outâ âour raid on the E-Stat is now a matter of history and Patrol recordâ âweâve been Posted!â
Dane felt a cold finger drawn along his backbone. Now they were fair game for the whole system. Any Patrol ship that wanted could shoot them down with no questions asked. Of course that had always been a possibility from the first after their raid on the E-Stat. But to realize that it was now true was a different matter altogether. This was one occasion when realization was worse than anticipation. He tried to keep his voice level as he answered:
âLet us hope we can pull off Ripâs planâ ââ
âWeâd better. What about the Big Burn anyway, Thorson? Is it as tough as the stories say?â
âWe donât know what itâs like. Itâs never been exploredâ âor at least those who tried to explore its interior never reported in afterwards. As far as I know itâs left strictly alone.â
âIs it still all âhotâ?â
âParts of it must be. But allâ âwe donât know.â
With the bottle of soup in his hand Dane climbed to Jellicoâs cabin. And he was so occupied with the problem at hand that at first he did not see what was happening in the small room. He had braced the Captain up into a half-sitting position and was patiently ladling the liquid into his mouth a spoonful at a time when a thin squeak drew his attention to the top of Jellicoâs desk.
From the half open lid of a microtape compartment something long and dark projected, beating the air feebly. Dane, easing the Captain back on the bunk, was going to investigate when the Hoobat broke its unnatural quiet of the past few days with an earsplitting screech of fury. Dane struck at the bottom of its cageâ âthe move its master always used to silence itâ âbut this time the results were spectacular.
The cage bounced up and down on the spring which secured it to the ceiling of the cabin and the blue feathered horror slammed against the wires. Either its clawing had weakened them, or some fault had developed, for they parted and the Hoobat came through them to land with a sullen plop on the desk. Its screams stopped as suddenly as they had begun and it scuttled on its spider-toad legs to the microtape compartment, acting with purposeful dispatch and paying no attention to Dane.
Its claws shot out and with ease it extracted from the compartment a creature as weird as itselfâ âone which came fighting and of which Dane could not get a very clear idea. Struggling they battled across the surface of the desk and flopped to the floor. There the hunted broke loose from the hunter and fled with fantastic speed into the corridor. And before Dane could move the Hoobat was after it.
He gained the passage just in time to see Queex disappear down the ladder, clinging with the aid of its pincher claws, apparently grimly determined to catch up with the thing it pursued. And Dane went after them.
There was no sign of the creature who fled on the next level. But Dane made no move to recapture the blue hunter who squatted at the foot of the ladder staring unblinkingly into space. Dane waited, afraid to disturb the Hoobat. He had not had
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