IX
Barathrum was a grim land, naked black and gray. Spines and crags of bare rock jutted up, lava-flows like black glaciers twisting among them. It was split by faults and fissures, pimpled with ash-cones. Except for the seabirds that nested among the cliffs and the few thin patches of green where seeds windblown from the mainland had taken root, it was as lifeless as when some ancient convulsion had thrust it up from the sea, Barathrum was a dead Inferno, untenanted even by the damned; by comparison, the Badlands seemed lushly fertile.
The four craft crossed above the line of white breakers that marked the division of sea and land; the gunboat Goblin in the lead, her sisters, Vampire and Dragon to right and left and a little behind, and the Lester Dawes a few miles in the rear. Fred Karski was at the Goblinâs controls; Conn, beside him, was peering ahead into the teleview screen and shifting his eyes from it to the map and back again.
Somebody behind him was saying that it would be a nice place to be air-wrecked. Somebody else was telling him not to joke about it. From the radio, his father was asking: âCan you see it, yet?â
âNot yet. Weâre on the right map-and-compass direction; we should before long.â
âWeâre picking up radiation,â Fred Karski said. âWay above normal count. I hope the place isnât hot.â
âWeâre getting that, too,â Rodney Maxwell said. âLooks like power radiation; something must be on there.â
After forty years, that didnât seem likely. He leaned over to look at the omnigeiger, then whistled. If that was normal leakage from inactive power units, there must be enough of them to power ten towns the size of Litchfield.
âSomethingâs operating there,â he said, and then realized what that meant. Somebody had beaten them to the spaceport. That would be one of the new companies formed after the opening of Force Command. He was wishing, now, that he hadnât let himself be talked out of coming here first. Older and wiser heads indeed!
Fred Karski whistled shrilly into his radio phone. âAttention everybody! General alert. Prepare for combat; prepare to take immediate evasive action. We must assume that the spaceport is occupied, and that the occupants are hostile. Captain Poole, will you please make ready aboard your ship? Reduce both speed and altitude, and ready your guns and missiles at once.â
âWell, now, wait a minute, young fellow,â Poole began to argue. âYou donât knowâ ââ
âNo. I donât. And I want all of us alive after we find out, too,â Karski replied.
Rodney Maxwellâs voice, in the background, said something indistinguishable. Poole said ungraciously, âWell, all right, if you think soââŚâ
The Lester Dawes began dropping to the rear and going down toward the ground. Conn returned to the teleview screen in time to see the truncated cone of the extinct volcano rise on the horizon, dwarfing everything around it. Fred Karski was talking to Colonel Zareff, back at Force Command, giving him the radiation count.
âThatâs occupied,â the old soldier replied. âMass-energy converter going. Now, Fred, donât start any shooting unless you have to, but donât get yourself blown to MC waiting on them to fire the first shot.â
The dark cone bulked higher and higher in the screen. It must be seven miles around the crater, and a mile deep; when that thing blew out, ten or fifteen thousand years ago, it must have been something to see, preferably from a ship a thousand miles off-planet. It was so huge that it was hard to realize that the jumbled foothills around it were themselves respectably lofty mountains.
When they were within five miles of it, something twinkled slightly near the summit. An instant later, the missileman, in his turret overhead, shouted:
âMissile coming up; counter-missile off!â
âGrab onto something, everybody!â Karski yelled, bracing himself in his seat.
Conn, on his feet, flung his arms around an upright stanchion and hung on. Fredâs hand gave a twisting jerk on the steering handle; the Goblin went corkscrewing upward. In the rearview screen, Conn saw a pink fireball blossom far below. The sound and the shock-wave never reached them; the Goblin outran them. Dragon and Vampire were spiraling away in opposite directions. The radio was loud with voices, and a few of the words were almost printable. A gong began clanging from the command post on top of the mesa on the mainland.
âBe quiet, all of you!â Klem Zareff was bellowing. âAnd get back from there. Back three or four miles; close enough so they wonât dare use thermonuclears. Take cover behind one of those ridges, where they canât detect you. Then we can start figuring what the Gehenna to do next.â
That made sense. And get it settled whoâs in command of this Donnybrook, while weâre at it, Conn thought. He looked into the rear and sideview screens, and taking cover immediately made even more sense. Two more fireballs blossomed, one dangerously close to the Dragon. Guns were firing from the mountaintop, too, big ones, and shells were bursting close to them. He saw a shell land on and another beside one of the enemy gun positionsâ â115-mmâs from the Lester Dawes, he supposed. He continued to cling to the stanchion, and the Goblin shot straight up, and he was expecting to see the sky blacken and the stars come out when the gunboat leveled and started circling down again. The mountainside, he saw, was sending up a lightning-crackling tower of smoke and dust that swelled into a mushroom top.
Klem Zareff, on the radio, was demanding to know whoâd launched that.
âWe did, sir; Dragon,â Stefan Jorisson was replying. âWe had to get rid of it. We took a hit. Gun turretâs smashed, Milt Hennantâs dead, and Abe Samuels probably will be before Iâm done talking, and if we get this crate down in one piece, itâll do for a miracle till a real one happens.â
âWell, be careful how you shoot those things off,â his father implored, from the Lester Dawes. âGet one inside the crater and we wonât have any spaceport.â
The Lester Dawes vanished behind a mountain range a few miles from the volcano. The Dragon, still airborne but in obvious difficulties, was limping after her, and the Vampire was covering the withdrawal, firing rapidly but with doubtful effect with her single 90-mm and tossing out counter-missiles. There was another fireball between her and the mountain. Then, when the Dragon had followed the Lester Dawes to safety, she turned tail and bolted, the Goblin following. As they approached the mountains, something the shape of a recon-car and about half the size passed them going in the opposite direction. As they dropped into the chasm on the other side, another nuclear went off at the volcano.
When Conn and Fred left the Goblin and boarded the ship, they found Rodney Maxwell, Captain Poole, and a couple of others on the bridge. Charley Gatworth, the skipper of the Vampire, Morgan Gatworthâs son, was with them, and, imaged in a screen, so was Klem Zareff. One of the other screens, from a pickup on the Vampire, showed the Dragon lying on her side, her turret crushed and her gun, with the muzzle-brake gone, bent upward. A couple of lorries from the Lester Dawes were alongside; as Conn watched, a blanket-wrapped body, and then another, were lowered from the disabled gunboat.
âFred, how are you and Charley fixed for counter-missiles?â Zareff was asking. âGet loaded up with them off the ship, as many as you can carry. Charley, you go up on top of this ridge above, and take cover where you can watch the mountain. Transmit what you see back to the ship. Fred, you take a position about a quarter way around from where you are now. Donât let them send anything over, but donât start anything yourselves. Iâm coming out with everything I can gather up here; Iâll be along myself in a couple of hours, and the rest will be stringing in after me. In the meantime, Rodney, youâre in command.â
Well, that settled that. There was one other point, though.
âColonel,â Conn said, âI assume that this spaceport is occupied by one of these new prospecting companies. We have no right to take it away from them, have we?â
âThey fired on us without warning,â Karski said. âThey killed Milt, and itâs ten to one Abe wonât live either. We owe them something for that.â
âWe do, and weâll pay off. Conn, you assume wrong. This gangâs been at the spaceport long enough to get the detection system working and put the defense batteries on ready. They didnât do that since this morning, and up to last evening they neglected to file claim. Iâll assume theyâre on the wrong side of the law. Theyâre outlaws, Conn. All the raids along the east coast; everybodyâs blamed them on the Badlands gangs. Iâll admit theyâre responsible for some of it, but Iâll bet this gang at the spaceport is doing most of it.â
That was reasonable. Barathrum was closer to the scene of the worst outlaw depredations than the Badlands, not more than an hour at Mach Two. And nobody ever thought of Barathrum as an outlaw hangout. People rarely thought of Barathrum at all. He liked the idea. The only thing against it was that he wanted so badly to believe it.
They brought the body of Milt Hennant aboard, and Abe Samuels, swathed in bandages and immobilized by narcotic injections. A few more of the Dragonâs six-man crew had been injured. Jorrisson, the skipper, had one trouser leg slit to the belt and his right thigh splinted and bandaged; he took over the Lester Dawesâ missile controls, which he could manage sitting in one place. Fred Karski and Charley Gatworth went aboard their craft and lifted out.
For a long time, nothing happened. Conn got out the plans of the volcano spaceport and the photomaps of the surrounding area. The principal entrance, the front door of the spaceport, was the crater of the extinct volcano itself. It was ringed, outside, with launching-sites and gun positions, and according to the data he had, some of the guns were as big as 250-mm. How many outlaws there were to man them was a question a lot of people could get killed trying to answer. The ship docks and shops were down on the level of the crater floor, in caverns, both natural and excavated, that extended far back into the mountain. There were two galleries, one above the other, extending entirely around the inside of the crater near the top; passages from them gave access to the outside gun and missile positions.
With a dozen ships the size of the Lester Dawes, about five thousand men, and a CO who wasnât concerned with trivialities like casualties, they could have taken the place in half an hour. With what they had, trying to fight their way in at the top was out of the question.
There was another way in. He had known about it from the beginning, and he was trying desperately to think of a way not to utilize it. It was a tunnel two miles long, running into some of the bottom workshops and storerooms back of the ship berths from a big blowhole or small crater at the foot of the mountain. According to the fifty-year-old plans, it was big enough to take a gunboat in, and on paper it looked like a royal highway straight to the heart of the enemyâs stronghold.
To Conn, it looked like a wonderful place to commit suicide. Heâd only had a short introductory course, in one semester, in military and protective robotics, just enough to give him a foundation if he wanted to go into that branch of the subject later. It was also enough to give him an idea of the sort of booby-traps that tunnel could be filled with. He knew what heâd have put into it if heâd been defending that place.
Colonel Zareff had sent one last message from Force Command when he lifted off with a flight of recon-cars. After that, he maintained a communication blackout. It was an hour and a half before he got close enough to be detected from the outlaw stronghold. Immediately, the volcano began spewing out missiles. Poole hastily took the Lester Dawes ten miles down the rift-valley in sixty seconds, while Stefan Jorisson put out a nuclear-warhead missile and left it circling about where the ship had been. From their respective positions, Fred Karski and Charley Gatworth filled the airspace midway to the volcano with counter-missiles, each loaded with four rockets. There were explosions, fireballs in the air and rising cumulus clouds of varicolored smoke and dust. Only about half the enemy missiles reached the Lester Dawesâ former position.
When their controllers, back at the volcano, couldnât see the ship in their screens, the missiles bunched together. Immediately, Jorisson sent his missile up to join them and detonated it. Including his own, eight nuclear weapons went off together in a single blast that shook the ground like an earthquake and churned the air like a hurricane. Klem Zareff came on-screen at once.
âNow what did you do?â he demanded. âBlew the whole place up, didnât you?â
Rodney Maxwell told him. Zareff laughed. âThey might just think they got the ship; all the pickups would be smashed before they could see what really happened. Youâre about ten miles south of that? Be with you in a few minutes.â
They got a screen on for his rearview pickup. Zareff had with him a dozen recon-cars, some of them under robo-control; six gunboats followed, and behind them, to the horizon, other craft were strung outâ âairboats, troop carriers, and freight-scows. They could see enemy missiles approaching in Zareffâs front screen; counter-missiles got most of them, and a couple of pilotless recon-cars were sacrificed. The Lester Dawes blasted more missiles as they crossed the top of the mountain range. Then Zareffâs car was circling in and entering at one of the shipâs open cargo-ports. Zareff and Anse Dawes got out.
âGunboats are only half an hour behind,â Zareff said. âGet some screens on to them, Anse; you know the combinations. Now letâs see what kind of a mess weâre in here.â
It was almost a miracle, the way the tottering old man Conn had seen on the dock at Litchfield when he had arrived from Terra had been rejuvenated.
The rest of the reinforcements arrived slowly, sending missiles and counter-missiles out ahead of them. Zareff began worrying about the supply; the enemy didnât seem to be running short. By 1300â âConn noted the time incredulously; the battle seemed to have been going on forever, instead of just four hoursâ âthe Lester Dawes had moved halfway around the volcano and was almost due west of it, and the eight gunboats were spaced all around the perimeter. Then one stopped transmitting; in the other screens, there was a rising fireball where she had been. The radio was loud with verbal reports.
âPoltergeist,â Zareff said, naming half a dozen names. One or two of them had been schoolmates of Connâs at the Academy; he knew how heâd feel about it later, but now it simply didnât register.
âTheyâre launching missiles faster than we can shoot them down,â he said.
âThatâs usually the beginning of the end,â Zareff said. âI saw it happen too often during the War. Weâve got to get inside that place. Itâs a lot of harmless fun to send contragravity robots out to smash each other, but it doesnât win battles. Battles are won by men, standing with their feet on the ground, using personal weapons.â
âWeâll have to win this one pretty soon,â Rodney Maxwell said. âThe amount of nuclear energy weâve been releasing will be detectable anywhere on the planet by now. The Government has a ship like the Lester Dawes in commission; if this keeps on, sheâll be coming out for a look.â
âThen weâll have help,â Captain Poole said.
âWe need Government help like we need the polka-dot fever,â Rodney Maxwell said. âIf they get in it, theyâll claim the spaceport themselves, and weâll have fought a battle for nothing.â
Well, that was it, then. The spaceport was essential to the Maxwell Plan. Heâd gotten seven men killedâ âeight, if the recon-car that was taking Abe Samuels to the hospital in Litchfield didnât make it in timeâ âand it was up to him to see that they hadnât died for nothing. He spread the photo-map and the spaceport plans on the chart table.
âLook at this,â he said.
Klem Zareff looked at it. He didnât like it any better than Conn had. He studied the plan for a moment, chewing his cigar.
âYou know, itâs possible they donât know that thing exists,â he said, without too much conviction. âYouâll be betting the lives of at least twenty men; fewer than that couldnât accomplish anything.â
âIâll be putting mine on the table along with them,â Conn said. âIâll lead them in.â
He was wishing he hadnât had to say that. He did, though. It was the only thing he could say.
âYou better pick the men to go with me, Colonel,â he continued. âYou know them better than I do. Weâll need working equipment, too; I have no idea what we may have to take out of the way, inside.â
âI wonât call for volunteers,â Zareff said. âIâll pick Home Guards; they did their volunteering when they joined.â
âLet me pick one man, Colonel,â Anse Dawes said. âIâll pick me.â