Cave-Dwellers of Saturn

By John Wiggin

The Project Gutenberg EBook of Cave-Dwellers of Saturn, by John Wiggin

This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
almost no restrictions whatsoever.  You may copy it, give it away or
re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license


Title: Cave-Dwellers of Saturn

Author: John Wiggin

Release Date: April 5, 2020 [EBook #61759]

Language: English


*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CAVE-DWELLERS OF SATURN ***




Produced by Greg Weeks, Mary Meehan and the Online
Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net









                        Cave-Dwellers of Saturn

                            By JOHN WIGGIN

              Across Earth's radiant civilization lay the
            death-shot shadows of the hideous globe-headed
              dwarfs from Mars. One lone Earth-ship dared
             the treachery blockade, risking the planetoid
                 peril to find Earth's life element on
             mysterious Saturn of the ten terrible rings.

           [Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
                      Planet Stories Winter 1939.
         Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
         the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]


It was a crisp, clear morning in the city of Copia. A cold winter's
sun glinted on the myriad roof tops of the vast spreading metropolis.
To the north, snow-covered hills gleamed whitely, but the streets
of Copia were dry and clean. There were not many people stirring at
such an early hour. The dozen broad avenues which converged like the
spokes of a great wheel on Government City in the center of Copia were
quite deserted. There was little apparent activity around and about the
majestic Government buildings, but the four mammoth gates were open,
indicating that Government City was open for business.

At the north gate the sentry, sitting behind his black panel with its
clusters of little lights, switches, and push-buttons, glanced upward.
There was a faint humming and a man was circling downward about a
hundred feet above him. The rays of the early sun flashed off a helmet
and the sentry knew that this man was a soldier. The newcomer dropped
rapidly, the stubbed wings on his back a gray blur. Then the humming
ceased as the soldier switched off his oscillator and landed lightly on
the ground before the sentry.

The sentry's swift glance took in the immensely tall, broad-shouldered
figure, covered to the ankles in the green cloak. He took in also the
pink, smiling face and merry blue eyes, and the lock of bright red hair
which showed as the soldier pushed his helmet backward off his forehead.

"Your business?" asked the sentry.

"I have orders to report to the Commander-in-Chief," said the soldier,
with a pleasant smile.

"Let's see," said the sentry, glancing at the insignia on the helmet,
"you're a decurion of the Eightieth Division. And the name?"

"Dynamon," said the soldier.

"Oh, yes," said the sentry, with a recollective smile, "I remember you
as an athlete. Didn't I see you in the Regional Games two years ago?"

"Yes," said the soldier, with pleased surprise. "I was on the team from
North Central 4B."

"I thought so," the sentry chuckled. "As I remember you walked away
with practically everything but the stadium. Hold on a minute now and
I'll clear the channels for you."

The sentry bent over the panels, punched some buttons, threw a switch,
and recited a few words in a monotone. He listened for a moment, then
threw the switch back and looked up.

"It seems you're expected," he said, "third building to the right and
they'll take care of you there."

Ten minutes later Dynamon stood in the doorway of a large, beautiful
room and saluted. The salute was answered by a grizzled, dark-skinned
man sitting behind an enormous desk. This man was Argallum,
Commander-in-Chief of the Armies of the World. He rose and beckoned to
the young soldier.

"This way, Dynamon," said he, opening a small door. "What we have to
talk about requires platinum walls."

Dynamon's face was a mask as he followed the Commander-in-Chief into
the little room, but his heart was pounding and his mind working fast.
The platinum room! That meant that he was about to learn a secret of
the most vital importance to the world. He remembered now, that there
was a delegation of Martians in Copia. They had arrived about a week
before, ostensibly to carry on negotiations in an effort to avert
the ugly crisis that was developing between Earth and Mars. But the
conviction was growing among the citizens of Copia that the chief
object of the Martian delegation was to spy. It was a well-known fact
that the grotesque little men from the red planet had a superhuman
sense of hearing that seemed to enable them to tune in on spoken
conversations miles away, much as human beings tuned radio sets. They
could hear through walls of brick, stone or steel; the one substance
they could not hear through was platinum. Hence the little room off
the Commander-in-Chief's office which was entirely sheathed in this
precious metal.

       *       *       *       *       *

Argallum sat down heavily behind a little desk and gestured Dynamon to
be seated opposite him.

"On the basis of your fine record," said Argallum, "I have selected
you, Dynamon, to lead a dangerous expedition. You may refuse the
assignment after you hear about it, and no blame will attach to you
if you do. It is dangerous, and your chances of returning from it are
unknown. But here it is, anyway.

"The situation with Mars is growing worse each month. They are making
demands on us which, if we accepted them, would destroy the sovereign
independence of the World-State. We would become a mere political
satellite of Mars. But if we don't accept their demands, we are liable
to a sudden attack from them which we could not withstand. They have
got us in a military way and they know it. We might be able to stand
them off for a while with our fine air force, but if they ever got a
foothold with their land forces, then it's good-bye. They have a new
weapon called the Photo-Atomic Ray against which we have absolutely no
defense. It's a secret lethal ray which far outranges our voltage-bombs
and which penetrates any armor or insulation we've got."

"Now, of course, our Council of Scientists has been working on the
problem of a defense against the Ray. But the only thing they've come
up with is a vague idea. They believe that there is a substance which
they call 'tridium,' which would absorb or neutralize the Photo-Atomic
Ray. They don't know what tridium looks like, but by spectro-analysis
they know that it exists on the planet Saturn. So I am sending you with
an expedition to Saturn to find, if you can, the substance known as
'tridium,' and bring some of it back if possible."

"Saturn!" gasped the decurion.

"I said it would be dangerous," Argallum said, bleakly. "No human being
has ever set foot on the planet, and very little is known about it.
But that's where you'll find tridium, if we're to believe Saturn's
spectrum. You will have the latest, fastest Cosmos Carrier. You will
have a completely equipped expedition. You will have for assistants
the best young men we can find. As head of the expedition, you will be
promoted to the rank of centurion. Do you accept the assignment?"

"Yes, sir," said Dynamon, unhesitatingly, "I accept the assignment."

       *       *       *       *       *

Dynamon walked thoughtfully out of Government city by the North Gate.
The sentry noticed that his helmet was now adorned with the badge
of centurion, and came to a smart salute. Dynamon went past him
without seeing him, and the sentry glared after the new centurion
disapprovingly. Lost in thought, Dynamon kept on walking until he
came to with a start, and found himself in the middle of the shopping
district.

The sun was getting uncomfortably warm and Dynamon switched off the
electric current that heated his long cloak and looked around him. A
sign in a shop window said, "Only fourteen more shopping days before
the Twenty-fifth of December." Dynamon sighed. He wouldn't be around on
this Twenty-fifth and it was going to be a very gay one. It was to be
the nine hundredth anniversary of the Great Armistice--from which had
come the unification of all the peoples of the Earth. Dynamon sighed
again.

The long peace was threatened.

The Earth, in this year of grace 3057, was a wonderful place to live
in, and Copia was the political and cultural center of the Earth.
For nine hundred years now, the peoples of the Earth had lived at
peace with one another as members of a single integrated community.
The World-State had grown into something which that war-torn handful
of people back in 1957 could scarcely have imagined. No longer did
region war against region, or group against group, or class against
class. Humanity had finally united to fight the common enemies--death,
disease, old age, starvation.

And on this nine hundredth anniversary of the Great Armistice, the
people of the World would have a great deal to celebrate. Disease was
now unknown, as was starvation. Arduous physical labor was abolished,
for now, the heaviest and the slightest tasks were performed by
machines. Pain had been reduced, both physical and mental. Helpless
senility was a thing of the past. Death alone remained. But even death
had been postponed. Human beings now lived to be almost three hundred
years old.

All in all, Dynamon mused, as he strolled along the broad avenue, the
human race had evolved a pretty satisfactory civilization. More was
the pity, then, that human restlessness and vaulting ambition should
have led to the construction of the great Cosmos Carriers. If Man had
been content to stay on his own little planet, then communication would
never have been established with the jealous little men of Mars, and
this beautiful civilization would not now be threatened by a visitation
of the terrible Martians and their frightful Photo-Atomic Ray.
Dynamon's deep chest swelled a little with pride at the thought that he
had been selected by the Commander-in-Chief to take an important part
in the coming conflict.

       *       *       *       *       *

He turned the corner and found himself standing before an imposing
building. Across the top of the facade in block letters was the legend,
"State Theater of Comedy." A few minutes later he stood in front of a
doorway at the side of the great theater building. The door opened and
a tall, lovely girl appeared.

"Dynamon!" she exclaimed, "I didn't expect to see you for another
ten days." She stepped out of the doorway, and reached her arms up
impulsively, kissing Dynamon.

The tall young soldier gripped her shoulders hard for a minute, and
then stepped back and looked down into her soft brown eyes.

"Yes, I know, Keltry," he said soberly. "I had to report on short
notice."

"Oh!" said the girl called Keltry, "are you here on duty?"

"Very secret duty," said Dynamon with a meaning look. He twiddled an
imaginary radio-dial in his ear and looked around mysteriously.

The smile died on Keltry's smooth brown face, to be replaced by an
expression of concern.

"You mean--them?" she whispered.

Dynamon nodded. "Yes, I am being transferred to a new post," he said
slowly, "and I thought, if you had no objections, I would ask to have
you transferred along with me."

"Do you need to ask a question like that?" said Keltry. "You know
perfectly well I'd have a lot of objections if you didn't ask for my
transfer."

"There may be some danger," he said, giving her an eloquent look.

"All the more reason why I should be with you," Keltry said quietly.

       *       *       *       *       *

Four days later, a conference was breaking up in the platinum room
behind the Commander-in-Chief's office. Argallum stood up behind his
desk and carefully folded a number of big charts. He laid one on top of
another, making a neat stack on the desk, then he looked keenly at the
four young men standing before him.

"Once more, gentlemen," Argallum said, "for the sake of emphasis,
I repeat--Dynamon has complete authority over the expedition. You,
Mortoch"--looking at a lean, hawk-nosed man in a soldier's helmet--"are
in command of the soldiers. And you, Thamon"--turning to a studious,
stoop-shouldered man--"are in charge of civilian activities. And
Borion"--glancing at a stocky, broad-shouldered figure--"you are
responsible for the Carrier. But in the last analysis, you are all
under Dynamon's orders. This is a desperate venture you're going on and
there can be no division of authority."

There was a moment of silence. Argallum seemed satisfied with the set,
determined expressions on the four men in the room with him. "Are there
any further questions?" he said.

Dynamon shifted his feet uneasily. "Is the decision--on Keltry, final?"
he said huskily.

"I'm afraid it is, Dynamon," said Argallum, gently. "I had the director
of the theater over here for half an hour trying to talk him around,
but it was no good. He said he would under no circumstances spare
Keltry. He said she was the most promising young actress in Copia,
and that he would forbid her to go on any dangerous trip. Inasmuch as
Keltry is still an apprentice, the Director has full authority over
her. I can do nothing."

Dynamon drew himself up to his full height and squared his shoulders.
"Yes, sir," he said briefly.

"Very well then," said Argallum, "I won't see you again. You will take
off from Vanadium Field promptly at four o'clock tomorrow morning.
Every one of the one hundred and twenty-nine people on the expedition
has his secret orders to be there at three. Dynamon, you have a
hand-picked personnel and every possible resource that our scientists
could think of to help you. May you succeed in your mission."

"Thank you, sir," they chorused.

Argallum shook hands separately with each of the four men, after which
they filed out of the platinum room.

Outside the War Building, Mortoch, the decurion, and Borion, the
Navigator, took their leave of Dynamon and strolled away toward the
West Gate. But Thamon, the scientist, fell in stride with Dynamon.

"For your sake, I'm sorry," said the stoop-shouldered scientist shyly,
"I mean--about Keltry."

"Thanks, Thamon," said the centurion. "It was a nasty blow. I don't
know how I'm going to get along without her. I guess I'll just have to."

"Well--I just wanted you to know," said Thamon, "that I sympathized."

       *       *       *       *       *

In the middle of Vanadium Field a great gray shape, like a vast
slumbering whale, could be indistinctly seen in the soft half-light
of the false dawn. No lights showed on the field and no sound was
heard. But scores of people clustered around the sides of the Cosmos
Carrier, dwarfed to ant-like proportions by its great size. Inside the
Carrier, standing near the thick double doors in the Carrier's belly,
was Dynamon, near him his three chief lieutenants, Mortoch, Thamon, and
Borion. The members of the little expeditionary force filed past the
youthful Commander, each one halting before him for a brief inspection.
One hundred brawny soldiers, divided into squads of ten, stepped
through the double doors, each squad led by its decurion. Dynamon ran a
practiced eye over the equipment of each man and then for good measure
turned him over to the scrutiny of the Chief Decurion, Mortoch. Then
came twenty-five civilians, including ten engineers, four dieticians,
five administrators, and six scientists. But for a cruel prank of
fate, Dynamon reflected, his own dear Keltry would be a member of the
expedition.

But there was no time for regretting that which could not be. Dynamon
turned and walked toward Borion.

"Are you satisfied?" he asked the navigator. Borion nodded, and
Mortoch and Thamon likewise nodded in answer to Dynamon's unspoken
question.

"All right," said the young centurion. "Stations!"

A moment later the great outer door of the Cosmos Carrier swung
silently shut, after which the thick inner door was secured and the
great ship hermetically sealed. Dynamon followed the navigator into the
control room.

"This is a gorgeous ship!" said Borion. "It's absolutely the last word.
There's a cluster of magnets underneath our feet that are brutes and
yet they can be so finely controlled, I'll guarantee you won't feel
a bump at any time. Dynamon, these magnets are so strong that this
ship will go at least ten times faster than anything that has yet been
built. Once we get up out of the stratosphere, beyond the danger of
friction, we can go almost twenty miles a second. You ready for the
take-off? If you want to use the loud speaker system just throw that
switch."

Dynamon nodded; a moment later his voice was heard in every compartment
of the Cosmos Carrier.

"Men, we are taking off. Hold your stations for five minutes, after
which you may take your ease until further commands."

"Come and watch the altimeter," Borion said after Dynamon closed the
loud speaker switch. "You won't believe we're off the ground, these
controls are so smooth." The centurion watched the needle creep gently
upward a few feet at a time. But he could feel no trace of motion.

"I'm going to take her up vertically to two thousand feet," said
Borion. "Then we'll be clear of all obstacles and can pick up our
course horizontally--"

"Yes, good," Dynamon broke in quickly, "but don't tell me your course
until we are out of the stratosphere."

"Aye, aye, sir," said Borion with a wink, "little pitchers have big
ears, don't they?"

"How soon will we get out of the stratosphere?" Dynamon asked.

"Well, I'm lifting her very slowly," answered the navigator, "I don't
want to take any chances on friction. I would say in about three hours
from now we will be ready to go."

"I will be with you then," said Dynamon, and walked out the door.

       *       *       *       *       *

The young centurion had in mind to make a thorough inspection of the
entire ship, but he had scarcely been ten minutes away from the control
room when the loud-speaker system boomed forth.

"Centurion Dynamon is requested to come to the control room." Dynamon
hurried up a metal staircase and then through a companionway. As he
threw open the door to the control room, Borion turned quickly and
laid a finger on his lips. Then the navigator gestured Dynamon toward
a series of glass panels. There were six of these panels, each about a
foot square, and ranged in two vertical rows of three each. One word,
"periscopes," was stenciled at the top, and beside each mirror were
other labels, "port bow," "port beam," "port quarter." The other three
panels were labeled in the same way, designating their location on
the starboard side. Borion flicked the switch beside the "starboard
quarter" panel and it become dimly illuminated. Dynamon threw a swift
glance at the altimeter, and saw that it said two thousand feet. Then
he bent over and peered into the periscope panel. A wide panorama of
twinkling lights spread out before him, the street lights of Copia.
But the pale blue of approaching dawn was creeping fast over the city,
shedding just enough light to reveal a dark shape a mile behind the
Cosmos Carrier, and perhaps a thousand feet below. As Dynamon stared
into the periscope screen, he thought he could detect a faint glow of
red in the following shape. He turned questioningly to Borion. The
navigator was writing rapidly on a piece of paper. A second later he
handed the paper to Dynamon. It said:

"I queried Headquarters and was told that the conference with the
Martian delegation is still officially going on. But that Carrier
following us is bright red, the color of the Martian Carriers."

       *       *       *       *       *

Dynamon held the piece of paper in his hand for a minute and gazed
doubtfully into the periscope screen. Then he took the pencil from
Borion and, bending over, wrote the following:

"I don't like the looks of this. Can we out-run them once we get out of
the atmosphere?"

Borion nodded slowly.

"As far as I know, we can," he said, "unless--" he reached for the
paper in Dynamon's hand and wrote "--unless they have developed a new
wrinkle in their Carriers that we don't know anything about."

"Well," said Dynamon, "we won't waste time worrying about things over
which we have no control. Proceed as usual."

There followed some anxious hours, which Dynamon spent with his eyes
glued to the periscope mirror. In a short time the early golden
rays of the sun appeared, and the Martian Carrier followed behind
inexorably, glowed an ugly menacing crimson. Once Dynamon instructed
his communications officer to speak to the Martian ship.

"Lovely morning, Mars. Where are you bound for?" was the casual message.

There came back a terse answer, "Test flight, and you?"

"We're testing, too," Dynamon's communications officer said. "We'll
show you some tricks up beyond the stratosphere."

All so elaborately casual, Dynamon thought grimly. It was fairly
evident that the Martian ship intended to follow the Earth Carrier to
find out where it was going. Those inhuman devils! Why did the Earth's
people ever have to come in contact with them?

Dynamon's thoughts went back to his childhood, to that terrible
time when the men of Mars had abruptly declared war and descended
suddenly onto the Earth in thousands of Cosmos Carriers. Only the
timely invention of that remarkable substance, Geistfactor, had saved
Earth then. It was a creamy liquid, which spread over any surface,
rendered the object invisible. The principle underlying Geistfactor was
simplicity itself, being merely an application of ultra high-frequency
color waves. But it saved the day for Earth. The World Armies, cloaked
in their new-found invisibility, struck in a dozen places at the
ravaging hordes from Mars. The invaders, in spite of their prodigious
intellectual powers, could not defend themselves against an unseen
enemy, and had been forced to withdraw the remnants of their army and
sue for peace.

But the unremitting jealousy and hatred of the little men with the
giant heads for Earth's creatures was leading to new trouble. It
enraged the Martians to think that human beings, whom they despised as
inferior creatures, should have first thought of spanning the yawning
distances between the planets of the solar system. It was doubly
humiliating to the Martians that when they, too, followed suit and
went in for interplanetary travel, they could do no better than to
copy faithfully the human invention of the Cosmos Carrier. It was only
too evident that Mars was gathering its strength for another lightning
thrust at the Earth. This time, with the Photo-Atomic Ray, there was
no doubt that they intended to destroy or subjugate Earth's peoples
for good. And to that end the Martians had been inventing new bones of
contention and had been contriving new crises. A peace-minded World
Government had been trying to stave off the inevitable conflict with
conference after conference. But to those on the inside it was only too
evident that the Martians could invent pretexts for war faster than
Earth could evade them.

       *       *       *       *       *

Dynamon, watching the blood-red Carrier in the periscope mirror, felt a
surging bitterness at the Martians. If they could only be reasonable,
he reflected, if only they could be _human_, then he, Dynamon, would
not now be floating away on a dangerous mission far from the Earth and
the woman he loved. He tried to imagine what Keltry was doing at that
moment. In his mind's eye he could see her on the stage of the Theater
of Comedy, enthralling audiences with her youthful charm as she played
a part in the latest witty comedy, or sang a gay ballad in a new revue.

He broke out of his reverie and tossed a glance at the altimeter. The
needle was moving much faster now, climbing steadily toward seventy
thousand feet.

"It's about time to go now, isn't it?" he asked Borion.

The navigator nodded. "Just about," he said, and put his hand on a
lever marked "gravity repellor."

As the navigator pushed the lever smoothly forward, Dynamon turned back
to the periscope mirror and saw the red ship behind suddenly dwindle in
size. The new Cosmos Carrier was beginning to show its speed.

Apparently, the Martians were momentarily caught off guard. The red
Carrier diminished to a tiny speck against the dark background of
the Earth. But then it began to grow in size again as the Martians
unleashed the power in their great magnets.

"Borion, how about friction?" Dynamon asked.

"We don't have to worry about that yet," was the answer, "we're not
going fast enough. And the temperature outside is about sixty-five
below."

Dynamon nodded and glanced again at the altimeter. The needle was
steadily climbing, a mile every ten seconds. Once again he looked into
the screen of the periscope. The Earth was now far enough away so that
the young centurion could begin to make out the broad arc which was
a part of the curving circumference of the globe. Silently he said a
final good-bye to Keltry and turned to speak to Borion. At that moment
the door of the control room burst open and an engineer stepped in and
saluted the navigator.

"Stowaway, sir," the engineer said. "Just found her in the munitions
compartment."

Dynamon stared out through the open door at the woman who stood out
there between two soldiers.

It was Keltry.

       *       *       *       *       *

It was a harried and heartsick centurion who, a few minutes later,
called a conference in his own quarters. Borion and Thamon sat
regarding him gravely, while Mortoch, the second in command, lounged
against the wall, a faint, derisive smile on his lean face.

"We are faced with a situation," Dynamon said heavily. "I would like to
hear some opinions."

"Flagrant case of indiscipline," Mortoch said promptly; "that is, if
we can regard this impersonally."

"Personalities," said Dynamon sharply, "will have no influence on my
final decision."

"In that case," said Mortoch harshly, "it seems to me, you are bound
to put back to Earth and hand the woman over to the right people for
corrective action."

"Good heavens!" cried Borion, "I hope we don't have to do that. We
already have a problem on our hands in the shape of that Martian
Carrier."

"What do you say, Thamon?" the centurion asked after a significant
pause.

"Well," said the scientist quietly, "you can't altogether regard the
situation without considering personalities. Keltry stowed away for a
very personal reason, and one which it is hard to condemn entirely. I
think we are over-emphasizing the official breach of discipline. I,
personally, can't see that it makes so much difference. After all,
we on this expedition are on our own and are likely to remain so for
some time to come. I am in favor of going along about our business and
forgetting how Keltry came aboard."

"Spoken like a civilian," said Mortoch sourly, "and I hold to my
opinion. Just because Dynamon was promoted over my head, I see no
reason for trying to curry favor with him."

There was an awkward silence during which Dynamon's face grew very pink
and his blue eyes grew cold.

"I'm going to forget what you just said, Mortoch," he said. "You are a
valued member of this expedition, and you are much too good a soldier
to overlook the danger that lies in that kind of talk. Without my
participation, you are out-voted two to one. We will not turn back."

He stood up with a gesture of dismissal and the three lieutenants filed
out of the door. He paced the floor of his quarters for a few minutes,
then walked to the door and gave orders for the prisoner to be sent in.

"Ah, Keltry darling," he said after the guard had left the two of them
alone, "you have put me in an impossible position."

"I don't see why it should be that bad," Keltry answered. "It was an
inhuman thing to do to separate us and I just wasn't going to permit
it."

"Yes, but don't you see?" said Dynamon, "I will be accused of playing
favorites because I don't turn around and take you back to Earth."

"I'm not asking favors," Keltry retorted calmly, "I just want to be a
member of this expedition."

Whatever Dynamon was going to answer to that, it was interrupted by the
loud-speaker booming:

"Centurion Dynamon is requested at the control room."

Dynamon leapt to his feet, crushed Keltry to him in a swift brief
embrace and then opened the door.

"Escort the prisoner to the scientist's quarters," he ordered, "and
release her."

       *       *       *       *       *

Dynamon walked into the control room and saw that Borion's face was
gray. The navigator was standing in front of the periscope screens
looking from one to another. The centurion walked over and stood beside
him.

"The Martians are showing their hand finally," said Borion. "They have
decided that we're headed for another planet, and I don't think that
they want to let us carry out our intention. See, here and here?"
Dynamon peered into the port and starboard bow panels. He could see
dozens of little red specks rapidly growing larger.

"They will try and surround us," Borion said, "and blanket our magnets
with their own."

"That's not so good, is it?" Dynamon murmured. "What is our altitude
from Earth?"

"Forty miles," was the reply, "and I think they still may be able to
overhear our conversation."

"Let them," said Dynamon quietly, "We have no secrets from them and
they may as well know that we're going to out-run them. Full speed,
Borion!"

The Navigator advanced the "repellor" lever as far as it would go.
There was a slight jerk under foot. Then he adjusted a needle on a
large dial and moved the "attractor" lever to its full distance. There
was another jerk as the great Carrier lunged forward through space.
Borion smiled.

"I put the attractor beam on the moon," he said, "and we'll be hitting
it up close to nineteen miles a second in a few minutes. We should walk
away from those drops of blood, over there."

"Are we pointing away from them enough?" Dynamon asked. "What's to
prevent them from changing their course and cutting over to intercept
us? See, that's what they appear to be doing now."

The navigator peered critically at the forward periscope screens. "It
may be a close shave at that," he admitted. "But please trust me,
Dynamon, I'll make it past them."

       *       *       *       *       *

The tiny red specks in the periscope screens were growing shockingly
fast, indicating the frightful speed at which the Earth-Carrier was
traveling. Bigger and bigger they grew under Dynamon's fascinated gaze.
The centurion darted a glance at Borion. In this fantastic encounter,
every second counted. Could the navigator elude the pursuing red
Carriers? Borion haunched tensely over the control levers, his eyes
glued to the screens. The Martian ships were as big as cigars now and
tripling their size with every heartbeat. Dynamon clenched his fist
involuntarily and fought down an impulse to shout a warning. That would
be worse than useless now--the fate of the expedition was entirely in
the hands of Borion.

Dynamon held his breath as a flash of red flicked across the port bow
periscope screen. The Carrier heaved under his feet for a second then
quickly settled to an even keel again. The sweat stood out in little
drops on Borion's forehead.

"Too close for comfort," muttered the navigator. His eyes widened as
another huge red shape loomed up in the starboard bow screen. Borion's
hands flicked over a dial spinning a needle around. Then he hung
desperately back on the repellor. There was a momentary shock. The
Carrier seemed to bounce off something. Borion staggered and Dynamon
hurled forward and crashed into the forward bulkhead of the control
room.

Then Borion shouted, "We're through!"

Dynamon picked himself up off the floor with a rueful smile. "I thought
we were _all_ through for a minute," he observed.

"Well! That was a bad minute there!" said Borion excitedly. "I thought
that one fellow was going to get us, but I kicked him off by throwing
the beam on him and giving him the repellor. But you can see for
yourself, they are far behind now, and they'll never in the world be
able to catch up."

Dynamon peered into the port and starboard quarter screens and saw a
group of rapidly diminishing red specks. He looked up with a sigh of
relief.

"Good work, Borion," he said, and the navigator grinned.

"I don't think we will have to worry any more about the Martian ships
from now on, if we're careful," Borion said. "I'm going to run for
the shadow of the moon and from there I'll plot a course straight for
Jupiter, avoiding Mars entirely."

       *       *       *       *       *

The door to the control room opened, and a smiling, spectacled face
peered in. It was Thamon, the scientist.

"That was quite a bump," Thamon observed. "Were we trying to knock down
an asteroid?"

Dynamon gave a short laugh. "No, that was merely some of our friends
from Mars trying to head us off. But they're far behind now and we
don't anticipate any trouble for a good many days."

"Ah, round one to the Earth people," Thamon observed. "In that case,
Dynamon, have you decided how you are going to conduct affairs within
the Carrier in the immediate future?"

"Not quite," Dynamon replied. "Suppose we discuss that, in my quarters?"

Thamon nodded. "I'm at your disposal, Centurion."

Dynamon led the way down the little stair and into the compartment that
served as his office. Once there, he threw off his long military cloak
and sat down at a little table, his great bronzed shoulders gleaming in
the soft artificial light.

"I suppose the first question," said Thamon, sitting down opposite the
centurion, "is whether to institute suspended animation on board?"

"I think we'd better, don't you?" said Dynamon.

"It would save a lot of food and oxygen," the scientist replied. "You
see, even at our tremendous rate of speed now, it will take two hundred
and twenty-six days to reach the outer layer of Saturn's atmosphere.
Until we actually land the ship, there is no conceivable emergency that
couldn't be handled by a skeleton crew."

"Quite right," said Dynamon. "I'll have Mortoch take charge of the
arrangements, if you will stand by to supervise the technical side."

"It's as good as done," said Thamon. "We have the newest type of
refrigeration system in the main saloon. I can drop the temperature one
hundred and fifty degrees in one-fifth of a second. By the way, I was a
little worried by that outburst of Mortoch's when we were talking about
Keltry."

"Oh, well," said Dynamon, "Mortoch is only human. He was a Senior
Decurion and I was passed over him for this job. He couldn't help but
be a little jealous. But he will be all right, he's a soldier, after
all."

"I hope so," said Thamon, doubtfully.

"Why certainly," Dynamon affirmed. "As a matter of fact, I wish he had
been given the command in the first place. Between you and me, I'm
not too keen about this expedition to a comparatively unknown planet.
Thamon, why on earth weren't human beings content to stay at home? Why
did they have to go to such endless pains to construct these Cosmos
Carriers? Before these things were invented, the inhabitants of Earth
and the inhabitants of Mars didn't know that each other existed, and
they were perfectly happy about it. But when they both began spinning
around through space between the planets, all of a sudden the Solar
System was not big enough to hold both Peoples."

"It's some fatal restlessness in the make-up of human beings," Thamon
replied. "Do you realize how far back Man has been trying to reach out
to other planets?"

"Well, the first successful trip in a Cosmos Carrier was made
seventy-eight years ago," said Dynamon.

Thamon chuckled.

"As far as we _know_, that was the first successful trip," the
scientist corrected. "As a matter of fact, the first Cosmos Carrier was
anticipated hundreds of years ago. Just the other day in the library,
I found a very interesting account of an archaeological discovery made
up in North Central 3A--the island that the ancients called Britain. A
complete set of drawings and building plans was found in an admirable
state of preservation. The date on the plans was 1956, and as you will
remember from your school history, all of North Central by that time
had been terribly ravaged by the wars. The inventor, whose name was
Leonard Bolton, called his contrivance a 'space ship.' Wonderful, those
old names, aren't they? But the most remarkable thing of all, is, that
the designs for that 'space ship' were very practical. If the man ever
had a chance to build one, which he probably didn't, it might very well
have been a successful vehicle."

"That's very interesting," said Dynamon. "Were there any clues as to
what happened to Leonard Bolton?"

"None at all," the scientist replied. "All we know about him is that
he designed the 'space ship' and then was presumably blotted out by
the savage weapons used in the warfare of those days. But, as I say,
the remarkable thing is that when we got around to building a Cosmos
Carrier eighty years ago, we were able to use several of Leonard
Bolton's ideas. Which all goes to show, I suppose, there's nothing new
under the sun."

"I'm not so sure about that," said Dynamon with a smile. "I've an idea
that we're going to bump into several things new to us on the planet
Saturn."

"As to that," Thamon nodded, "I shouldn't be surprised if you are
right. Now I suppose I'd better go and make arrangements for the
refrigeration job. Will Mortoch be responsible for providing each
individual with a hypodermic and return-to-life tablets?"

"That will be taken care of," said Dynamon. "I'll see you later."

       *       *       *       *       *

Dynamon stood beside Borion in the control room, staring fascinatedly
at the periscope screens. The images that were reflected in the six
panels made up a composite scene that was awe-inspiring and fearsome.
The great Cosmos Carrier was finally arriving at the end of its seven
months' journey. In front of the Earthcraft, a vast, barren expanse,
uniformly dark gray in color spread for thousands of miles. To one side
of the Carrier a wide belt of mist and shimmering particles stretched
upward from the planet out toward space. Dynamon realized that this was
a small section of the great ring encircling Saturn, that could be seen
in the powerful telescopes from Earth. Glancing at the stern vision
screens, Dynamon saw the sun twinkling. So far away it was now, that it
was hardly bigger than a large star and gave off not much more light.
Even though they were coming to Saturn in the middle of a Saturnian
day, there was no more than a gloomy half-light to illumine their way.

"Saturn revolves on its axis with such speed," observed Borion, "that
I should imagine there will be tremendous prevailing winds on the
surface. I think I can see a range of steep mountains down there; it
might not be a bad idea if we landed in the lee of them."

"Yes," agreed Dynamon, "I think that would be a good idea. As a matter
of fact, we may have to dig below the surface entirely to prevent being
blown away. How is the gravitation pull?"

"It's a curious thing," Borion replied. "It should be tremendous but
the centrifugal force is so strong that it counterbalances to a certain
extent. The ship is handling very easily."

"How soon do you think we'll make the surface?" said Dynamon.

"I should estimate somewhere around six hours from now," the navigator
answered. "I could make it sooner but I'm feeling my way."

"That suits me," said Dynamon. "That will give us just time to turn off
the refrigeration and bring our people back to life. Lucky devils to be
able to sleep through this trip--have you ever been so bored in your
life?"

"Never," agreed Borion. "But I am not bored now."

Dynamon walked across the control room and threw a large switch in the
wall panel.

"Decurion Mortoch and Scientist Thamon," he said into the loud-speaker
system. "Proceed at once to remove the suspension-of-life condition
in the main saloon. As soon as everyone is revived, stand by to take
landing stations."

As the centurion closed the switch and turned away, Borion called him
over again to the periscope screens.

"That _is_ a range of mountains," said the navigator. "I can see it
more clearly now. I think I'll slow up our descent a little bit so
that by the time we're ready to land it will be midday again. As you
probably know, Saturn makes a complete revolution in only a little more
than ten hours."

"That sounds sensible," said Dynamon. "We'll need all the light we can
get to make a safe landing."

Borion nodded and reached toward the repellor lever. He pushed it
gently forward and then looked at his altimeter. He seemed to be
dissatisfied with the altimeter reading and pushed forward the
repellor lever a little more. Then he looked again at the altimeter,
and an expression of bewilderment came over his face. With a muttered
exclamation he jammed the repellor lever as far ahead as it would go,
at the same time watching the altimeter. Dynamon sensed that something
was wrong as he watched the color drain out of the navigator's face.

"The Saints preserve us!" the navigator cried hoarsly. "Something has
gone terribly wrong--the repellor isn't working! We're dropping at a
frightful rate of speed--!"

Borion leapt to the loud-speaker system and issued rapid orders to the
navigating engineers.

"What's going to happen to us?" Dynamon demanded.

"I don't know," Borion said, his face ashen. "I think it is just a
simple mechanical failure in the controls from the repellor lever down
to the magnets. I don't know how soon my workers can discover the
trouble and repair it. In the mean time--"

"In the mean time," Dynamon broke in gloomily, "we may all be spattered
all over that gray landscape."

"Either that," Borion gritted, "or we burn to a crisp from the
atmospheric friction. I can feel it getting warmer in here already."

       *       *       *       *       *

Dynamon fought down the sickening sensation of panic that was starting
to creep over him.

"How long do you think we have got?" he said with an effort.

"At the most," said Borion staring, white lipped, at the altimeter, "at
the most, I should say a half an hour."

The door to the control room burst open and Thamon rushed in closely
followed by Keltry.

"I heard you talking to your engineers, Borion," the scientist said
rapidly. "Are we in trouble?"

"We are," said Borion, "and it may be the last trouble any of us ever
have. Our repellor has gone out for some reason. And we're heading for
the surface of Saturn like a meteorite."

"Can't anything be done?" said Thamon.

"My engineers are doing all they can to find the source of the
trouble," Borion replied. "But until they do, I can't slow the ship up."

Keltry's great brown eyes were enormous as she moved over beside
Dynamon and took his right hand in hers.

"As long as I'm with you, Dynamon," she said in a low voice, "I'm not
afraid to die. But I hate to see your expedition fail. Perhaps the fate
of the Earth depends on us here in this Carrier."

"I know," said Dynamon, squeezing her hand. His eyes followed Borion as
the navigator went to the loud-speaker system again. But apparently the
news from below was not encouraging, and Borion's shoulders sagged as
he turned to face the other three people in the control room.

"They haven't found the source of the trouble yet," he said dully,
"and there's not a thing to be done until they do. I'm sorry that, as
navigator of this Carrier, I am plunging you all to your death. But
it's a case of a simple mechanical failure which I couldn't foresee."

Keltry stepped forward impulsively and laid her hand on the navigator's
wrist.

"Nobody could blame you, Borion," she said gently. "It isn't your fault
if the attractor or the repellor lever, whichever it is, gets broken.
You are already--"

"Wait a minute!" Borion shouted, eyes darting out of his head. "The
attractor! In my excitement I forgot!"

The navigator leapt to the control levers, spun the dial and put his
hand on the attractor lever.

"If--I'm only--on time!" he muttered agonizedly. "It's just
possible--the counter-attraction of Jupiter--Lord it's hot!"

The control room was silent as death as the navigator eased the
attractor lever carefully forward. Dynamon whipped a glance at the
periscope screens. The ground was rushing up at a terrific rate, and
out behind the Carrier, a dense cloud of black smoke was forming. The
veins were standing out in Borion's forehead as he inched the attractor
lever forward. The girl and the two men watched him with bated breath
as he slowly raised his eyes to the altimeter. A wild incredulous
expression appearing on the navigator's face.

"_It's--it's working!_" Borion muttered hoarsly, "_the attractor beam
from Jupiter is slowing us up!_"

       *       *       *       *       *

Dynamon's heart leapt and he sprang back to the periscope screens.
The column of smoke behind them was still there but it seemed to be
thinning out. But the surface of Saturn seemed to be rushing upward
just as fast as ever. Dynamon twisted his head around to look at
Borion. A feverish smile was lighting up the navigator's face as he
pressed forward on the attractor lever.

"We may just make it!" he breathed, and Dynamon said a little prayer.

In the screen a range of dark gray mountains stood out in bold relief
and seemed to reach claw-like peaks toward the speeding Carrier. But
the smoke had ceased to whip past, and only a small black cloud far
behind served to remind Dynamon of the fearful friction that the
surface of the ship had been subjected to. At the same time Dynamon
felt an invisible force dragging him toward the front bulkhead of the
control room, and he knew that the Carrier was slowing up its forward
speed. Through the bow periscopes the jagged range of mountains seemed
so close that Dynamon almost felt he could reach out and touch them.
Miraculously, they rose up to one side of the ship. A moment later a
voice sounded in the loud-speaker system.

"The magnet room calling the navigator. A break in the control shaft
has been discovered and repaired. Throw the repellor lever into neutral
and then advance it."

Borion gave a little sob, flicked back the repellor and then pushed
it forward again. The floor of the control room heaved for a minute
and then settled on an even keel, Dynamon stared unbelievingly at the
starboard midship's periscope screens and saw that the great Carrier
was resting immobile not more than twenty feet above the gray soil of
Saturn.

"Saved!" cried Borion hysterically, "and it was Keltry who did it! In
my excitement I would have let all of us plunge to our death, if Keltry
hadn't reminded me that there was such a thing as an attractor lever!
Dynamon, Thamon, we should get down on our knees and thank our stars
that Keltry was in here!"

The door of the control room opened and Mortoch stepped in.

"Do you have to toss us around like that?" the lean decurion said. "I
had a near-panic on my hands with some of those people just coming out
of their suspended animation. Oh!--" Mortoch smiled ironically--"I
begin to see why we had such a rough passage. If beautiful stowaways
are given the run of the control room, I should imagine it would be
hard for the navigator to keep his mind on his work."

Borion started forward with a snarl but Dynamon's voice cracked like a
whip.

"Attention! Both of you! Try and remember that you are modern,
civilized men, not twentieth century brutes."

Borion's hands fell to his sides, and he began to laugh.

"You're absolutely right, Dynamon," he said, "I don't know why I should
let myself be annoyed by this crude soldier. After all, the cream of
the joke is that Mortoch would never have been able to come in here and
make sarcastic remarks about Keltry, if Keltry hadn't been here for the
past half hour."

"What do you mean by that?" said Mortoch suspiciously.

"I mean," said Borion, "that if Keltry had not been in here, you and
everybody else aboard this Carrier would now be dead."

"Now!" said Dynamon. "I think we have had enough of personalities.
Suppose we get a little work done. Mortoch, prepare the First Decuria
for reconnaissance duty. Each man should be equipped with cloak, oxygen
mask, counter-gravity helmets, and a supply of voltage bombs, and each
man's radio should be set at eighty-one thousand meters. Have them
ready at the main door in fifteen minutes. I will lead them on a short
tour of exploration and Thamon will accompany me. In the mean time,
Mortoch, you will remain in charge of the Carrier until I get back."

       *       *       *       *       *

Dynamon's heart was pounding with excitement as he and Thamon walked
through the main saloon toward the group of cloaked figures standing
by the big round door. As far as he knew he was going to be the first
human being ever to step foot on the planet Saturn. He mentally
checked over his own equipment and made sure that it was all in place,
including the hard rubber box slung over his shoulder on a strap. That
box contained his supply of voltage bombs--little glass spheroids,
smaller than golf balls, which, when hurled at an enemy, burst
releasing a tremendous electric charge. There was little likelihood
that these bombs would be needed, because the periscope screens had
shown no sign of life anywhere in the gray, arid valley in which the
Cosmos Carrier was lying. However, Dynamon was taking no chances.
He glanced briefly at Thamon beside him. The scientist was unarmed,
carrying the light metal staff which was the badge of his profession.

Dynamon stepped forward and ran his eyes quickly over the masked,
muffled figures of the First Decuria. Then he signed to an engineer who
quickly unfastened the great door. Dynamon then stepped through and his
party followed him crowding into the air lock between the inner and
outer doors. Thamon stepped forward, maneuvered a lever, the outer door
swung open and Saturn lay waiting for the touch of Dynamon's foot.

It was not an especially inviting prospect. A blast of unbelievably
cold air swirled through the open door, carrying with it particles of
fine, gray sand. In the dim, murky twilight, tall gray mountains loomed
ominously across the valley floor. Dynamon shivered and turned up the
heat in his electric cloak. Then with one hand on the knob of his
counter-gravity helmet he stepped gingerly out on to the ground.

Instantly he sank to his knees in gray sand that was as light and
powdery as fresh snow. With a quick twist of the knob on his helmet he
kicked his feet free and stood lightly on the surface again.

"Attention, First Decuria!" he said into the transmitter of his radio
phone. "Adjust counter-gravitation to approximately plus ten pounds."

Stepping backward, he turned and watched the masked figures of his
command leave the Carrier one by one. Thamon came out first, followed
by the Decurion, and after him the soldiers. Mechanically, Dynamon
counted them. As the tenth soldier stepped out on the gray soil,
Dynamon started to turn away when to his astonishment an eleventh
cloaked figure came out of the door of the Carrier.

"Decurion!" Dynamon said sharply into his transmitter, "since when have
you had eleven men in your command?"

"Never," came back the prompt answer in Dynamon's ears. As the decurion
faced about to count his men, one of them moved over beside Dynamon.

"Forgive me, Dynamon," came a soft feminine voice, "but I had to come
with you. It's Keltry. Please don't send me back, I promise not to be
any trouble."

Dynamon hesitated, then reluctantly agreed to allow her to come along.

"Stay close to Thamon," he warned, and started off down the valley, the
rest of the party following him.

Lightened as they were to keep from sinking deep into the treacherous
powdery sand, the humans made fast progress, accelerated by the strong
breeze that blew at their backs down the valley. At that, Dynamon
realized that the lofty mountains on either side provided protection
against immeasurably stronger winds higher up. From the saw-toothed
peaks on the left, dark streamers of sand stood out for yards,
indicating constant winds of gale proportions up there.

       *       *       *       *       *

The valley itself, as far as Dynamon could see in the dim half-light,
was barren of any kind of life. There was no sign of a creeping,
crawling, or flying creature; nor was there any vegetation, trees or
grass. Dynamon led his column nearly a mile down the unchanging gray of
the valley and then called a halt.

"Thamon," he said, beckoning the scientist to him, "can you see any
possibility of human habitation in this valley?"

"Off-hand, I don't, not on the surface," the scientist replied. "I
would have to test the atmosphere for oxygen, but I doubt if there is a
large enough proportion. My guess is that there is nothing but nitrogen
in this air. That won't support human life, or any other kind of life
except possibly certain kinds of plants."

"What about tridium?" said Dynamon. "How do you go about looking for
it?"

"Electrophysiological tests of all kinds," said Thamon. "I must say
this valley doesn't look very encouraging. It looks like burned out
volcanic ash. Say! What's that up the valley?"

Dynamon gazed back in the direction of the Cosmos Carrier, and felt an
uneasy prickling along his spine. The desert valley floor behind them
seemed suddenly to have sprouted some tall bushes. There were possibly
a dozen of them standing at intervals of twenty yards. They were too
far away--perhaps one eighth of a mile--for Dynamon to see them very
well, but they appeared to consist of a score of leafless branches
radiating outward in all directions from a small core. It was as if a
basket ball was bristling with ten-foot javelins.

"Where did they come from?" Dynamon gasped. "I didn't see them when we
walked over that ground a few minutes ago."

"Nor I," agreed Thamon. "I can't imagine where they came from."

Just then one of the bushes apparently moved a few feet as if blown by
the wind.

"Good Lord!" exclaimed Thamon. "Did you see that? One of those things
rolled forward!"

Then another of the fantastic bushes started to roll, and another, and
another. In a moment all twelve of the extraordinary apparitions were
rolling rapidly down the wind toward the humans. Dynamon felt the hair
on the back of his neck stiffen, and he sprang into action, commanding
his soldiers to converge around him.

"Thamon, what _are_ those things!" Dynamon cried.

"I don't know," the scientist replied. "I don't think they can be
animals. But they might be rootless nitrogen-feeding plants of some
kind. Look! Those branches are covered with long thorns!"

The fantastic creatures were rolling swiftly down on the little group
of humans, and Dynamon could see the sharp thorns around the end of
each branch. He reached into the box at his hip.

"Decuria, ready with voltage bombs," he commanded, and looking around
saw that each man held one of the little glass bombs in his hand. The
bushes were only fifty feet away now, rolling lightly over the gray
sand on their spindly branches.

"Ready?" warned Dynamon, "throw!"

A shower of glistening glass balls flew through the air into the midst
of the menacing apparitions. There was a series of blinding flashes and
loud reports. Some jagged white lines appeared among the black branches
of the monsters, but they kept right on rolling downwind. Dynamon felt
a surge of dismay. Those voltage bombs had been, for years, Man's best
weapon.

"They're plants all right!" came Thamon's voice. "You can't kill them
with electricity any more than you can kill a tree!"

Dynamon looked at the men huddled about him and thought quickly.

"All we can do, men, is to try and dodge them," he announced. "Spread
out and as soon as one of those things passes you run upwind! Keltry!
Thamon! Stay close to me."

       *       *       *       *       *

The line of rolling bushes was almost upon them as the soldiers
deployed in all directions. Seizing Keltry by the hand, Dynamon
leapt to one side dragging her out of the path of one of the spiney
monsters. Thamon gasped a warning, and Dynamon, turning his head, felt
a thrill of horror as he saw another of the creatures almost on top
of them. Acting instinctively, Dynamon snatched the metal staff from
Thamon's hands and flailed frantically at the black, thorny branches.
To his amazement, they shivered and snapped under the metal rod like
matchwood. Hardly daring to believe his eyes, Dynamon struck again and
again at the horrible creature, until in a few minutes it was nothing
but a pile of scattered, broken faggots on the gray sand.

But cries for help and screams of anguish sounded in Dynamon's ear
phones, and he saw that five of the soldiers were on the ground impaled
on the cruel thorns of others of the monsters. He ran toward them and
beat them to pieces with the rod but too late to save the lives of the
men. They lay pierced in a dozen places by long, black thorns. The
rest of the Decuria had managed to dodge the whirling branches of the
other bushes and now stood safely up wind of them. Dynamon summoned the
survivors around him.

"What do you think, Thamon?" he asked. "In your opinion are there
likely to be more of these horrible things around?"

"There may easily be," the scientist replied promptly. "But since the
only defense against them is this one metal rod, I recommend that
we leave our unfortunate comrades here and head immediately for the
mountains over there. Those poor fellows are beyond our help and we
should be able to find better protection from these blood-thirsty
thorn-bushes among the foot hills. When we get there we can work upwind
until we're opposite the Carrier again."

"That sounds like good advice," said Dynamon. "And we'll act on it.
It's getting so dark now that we couldn't see to protect ourselves if
any more of those creatures came rolling down the wind. Everyone join
hands and follow me."

       *       *       *       *       *

After a nerve-racking march of about twenty-five minutes through the
gathering darkness, the party of nine humans felt the ground rising
beneath their feet. Dynamon halted and hurled a voltage bomb forward
and upward. As the bomb exploded, the momentary flash revealed to the
party that they were at the foot of a steep, rock-strewn declivity.
Dynamon led the party upward, feeling his way over the great boulders.
After a few minutes of climbing, he called another halt and again threw
a voltage bomb.

"We'll stay here for a few hours," the centurion announced, "until it
gets light enough to see our way. We will be safe in the lee of these
big rocks, so make yourselves comfortable."

Nine dim figures spread out on the sloping ground. Then one of them
drifted apart from the rest, up hill.

"Who is that?" Dynamon demanded.

"Keltry," came the answer. "I am just going up hill a little distance.
When you exploded that last bomb I thought I saw something that looked
like the edge of a volcanic crater."

"You can't see anything in this darkness," said Dynamon. "Wait till it
gets light again before you do any exploring."

"Oh, I won't go far," said Keltry. "Really, I won't."

"Well, be sure that you don't," Dynamon smiled into his transmitter.
Then he said, "Thamon, where are you?"

"Right here," and a figure moved over beside the centurion.

Dynamon's question was casual.

"Did you see anything that looked like a volcanic crater?"

"Come to think of it," the scientist replied, "I think I did. It's just
up here a few yards."

"Shall we go along and have a look at it too, then?" said Dynamon,
getting up on his feet. Just then, he stood rooted with horror as a
piercing scream rang in his ear phone.

"Dynamon! Dynamon, I'm falling!"

"Keltry!" the centurion exclaimed. "What's the matter? Has something
happened to your helmet?"

"Yes!" Keltry's voice was fainter. "I've lost it! It was unfastened,
and when I stumbled, it rolled off!" Fainter and fainter grew the
voice. "I'm falling down a black hole a mile a minute!" With a muttered
sob, Dynamon scrambled up the slope. A moment later, his foot stepped
out on empty space. He started to fall into nothingness.

"Keltry!" he cried into his transmitter. "Where are you? Answer me!"

Straining his ears Dynamon heard a tiny voice far away saying, "I'm
still falling."

"I'm coming after you, Keltry!" the centurion yelled, and reaching
up to the knob on his helmet, twisted frantically. By doing that, he
multiplied the gravitational pull of the planet and was now falling
much more swiftly than Keltry. How deep this black pit was, Dynamon had
no idea, but he prayed it would be deep enough so that he could catch
up with Keltry before she hit the bottom. It was a desperate chance but
Dynamon was willing to take it.

"Keltry!" he shouted into the transmitter. "Can you hear me? I'm coming
for you."

"Yes, I hear you, Dynamon," came the answer, and Dynamon's heart leapt
as it seemed to him that the voice sounded a little stronger.

"Keep your courage up, Keltry," he said, trying to sound calm. "I'm
falling faster than you are. There doesn't seem to be any bottom to
this pit so I'm bound to catch up with you."

"Oh, Dynamon! You shouldn't have jumped after me. There's--there's
only--one chance in a million that we don't crash."

       *       *       *       *       *

Keltry was bravely trying to hide the despair and terror in her
voice, but most important of all to Dynamon was the fact that she
sounded--still nearer! He resolutely put out of his mind the frightful
probability that at any second, first Keltry and then he, would be
dashed to pieces at the bottom of the pit. It seemed to him that he had
been falling for miles, and he thought that there was beginning to be
more air resistance now. He bent his head and peered downward, trying
to pierce the inky blackness with his eyes, but he could see nothing.
It was a fantastic sensation or, better still, a lack of all sensation.
He seemed to be resting immobile in a black nothingness, with only the
rushing air tearing at his cloak to indicate that he was falling.

"Keep talking, Keltry," he cried.

"Oh, you sound so much nearer!" There was a note of incredulous hope
in Keltry's voice.

"I told you I'd catch up with you!" Dynamon exulted.

Suddenly, his heart gave a great bound. He was still peering downward
and it seemed to him that far away he could see a tiny pin point of
light.

"Keltry!" he cried, "am I seeing things? Or is there something that
looks like a star; way down there?"

"Oh, I think I see it!" Keltry answered breathlessly. "Dynamon, what
could that mean?"

"I don't know," said Dynamon, "but it seems to be growing larger, and
I'm getting much nearer to you."

Under his fascinated eyes, the star grew bigger and brighter by the
second. In a few moments Dynamon, hardly daring to believe his eyes,
thought he could make out the outlines of a flying figure between him
and the light.

"Keltry!" he shouted. "I've almost caught up with you! Hold your hands
up over your head."

"Oh Dynamon! I think I can see you."

The point of light which Dynamon thought was a star, was growing into
a larger, brighter disk. Keltry's body was sharply outlined against
it now, and she seemed to be scarcely ten feet away. Dynamon bent
himself into a jack-knife dive and kicked his feet up behind him.
The air pressure was tremendous now, and Dynamon began to realize
that it was no star, or sun, or planet down below but the bottom
of the pit. Rays of light spread upward, illuminating the smooth,
shiny sides of the shaft. A few more agonizing seconds went past and
Dynamon's hands grazed the tips of Keltry's upraised fingers. Dynamon
dared not estimate how far above the bottom of the pit they were, but
concentrated on gaining the few inches he needed to get a grip on one
of Keltry's wrists.

"We've--almost--made it!" he panted. "Here--grab my right arm and hang
on for dear life!"

An involuntary shout of relief came from Dynamon's lips as he felt
Keltry's strong fingers close over his arm.

"Hang on!" he shouted, and his left hand flew up to his helmet and
carefully turned the counter-gravitation knob. At the same time, he
twisted his back around and fought his feet downward. A moment later,
he gripped Keltry's torso under the arms with his knees. Frantically,
he tried to estimate how far above the bottom of the pit they were.
They might be five thousand feet--or five hundred feet. Slowly he
turned the dial on his helmet, resisting the almost insuperable impulse
to twist the knob too fast. If he tried to stop their fall too quickly
it would tear their bodies apart.

Slowly, ever slowly, the air-rush diminished. By now, they were well
down into the area illuminated from the bottom of the pit. And they
could see that they were falling through a round shaft perhaps one
hundred feet in diameter. Dynamon judged that they were less than one
hundred feet off the bottom.

"Look out, Keltry," he said. "I've got to put on the brakes hard."

He gritted his teeth, and flicked the knob on his helmet. He stifled a
groan as invisible ropes attached to his feet and hands seemed to be
trying to pull him apart. But gradually the terrific pressure released.
He moved the knob a shade, and released the grip of his knees on Keltry.

"There!" he grunted as they both landed lightly on solid ground. "There
wasn't two seconds to spare."

       *       *       *       *       *

Keltry drew a shuddering sigh and put a hand on Dynamon's arm for
support.

"Oh, Dynamon!" she whispered, "if I weren't such a well brought-up girl
I would break down and cry from sheer relief."

"I don't blame you," said Dynamon in a voice that shook a little. "That
was quite an experience, but we came out of it all right. Now, where do
you suppose we are? How do you suppose this pit was ever formed?"

The two Earth-people stared around them curiously. They were bathed in
a bright light, and yet there was no apparent source of illumination.
It began to dawn on them that the rocks which formed the side walls
at the base of the shaft, were themselves luminous, glowing with a
curious greenish light. Dynamon tilted his head back and stared up into
the darkening shaft. Suddenly, he uttered an exclamation and, seizing
Keltry by the wrist dragged her to one side. A few seconds later, a
round object dropped out of the shaft and bounced on the ground. It was
Keltry's counter-gravity helmet.

Dynamon reached down and picked it up. "It's a good thing that these
things are well built," he remarked with a smile, "or this would be
smashed to bits. The knob is still set for plus ten pounds, and that
was quite a fall. I wonder whether it still works."

He twisted the knob experimentally and the helmet started to sail
upward.

"Say!" Dynamon cried. "It works, all right! Here, put it on Keltry."

Keltry accepted the helmet with a laugh, put it on her head and was
buckling it under her chin when her blood suddenly congealed in her
veins. A loud shout rang echoingly through the shaft. Dynamon whirled
around and beheld a curious figure standing in front of a rock not
sixty feet away. It stood upright on two legs, and cradled a sort of
club in its arms. Its head was covered with long, yellow hair that fell
down on to its shoulders, and the lower half of its face was covered
with coarse, yellow hair. Blue eyes glinted from under shaggy brows in
a menacing glare at the two Earth-people.

"It looks quite human, doesn't it?" whispered Keltry.

Dynamon nodded and slid his ear phone off his right ear as he saw the
stranger's hairy mouth opening and closing. Keltry followed his example
in time to hear the stranger's rumbling voice.

"Whoo-yoo?"

Dynamon touched Keltry's hand. "That sounded like 'who are you' didn't
it?" he said wonderingly.

"It certainly did," Keltry answered. "I think that's some kind of
human."

"If it's a human," Dynamon said, "then there must be some sort of
breathable atmosphere down here. You notice he's not wearing any oxygen
mask."

"Whoo-yoo?" the stranger repeated, "an whey cum fum?"

"He's speaking a kind of English!" said Keltry excitedly. "He said,
'who are you' and 'where do you come from'!"

"By Jupiter!" cried Dynamon. "I think you're right. If he can breathe
without a mask, so can we. I'll have a little talk with him."

A moment later the centurion stood bare-headed, helmet and oxygen mask
in hand.

"We're humans from Earth," he told the stranger, pronouncing each word
carefully. "Who are you?"

The stranger's eyes and mouth flew open in astonishment and the rod
sagged in his hands.

"Humes! Fum Earth!" he cried hoarsely, then turned his head, and gave
an ear-splitting yell.

       *       *       *       *       *

A moment later, a dozen or more short, hairy-faced creatures closely
resembling the first stranger came tumbling through a passageway
behind him and stood rooted with astonishment at the sight of Dynamon
and Keltry. Their bodies were completely covered, the torsoes, with
loose, gray tunics, and the legs with ugly, baggy tubes. They advanced
cautiously on the two people from Earth.

"Take off your helmet and mask," Dynamon directed Keltry, "the air is
perfectly good. We'll try and find out the mystery of how these humans
ever got here."

He turned and addressed the first stranger, again enunciating slowly
and carefully. Immediately the whole crowd burst into excited
jabbering. Here and there Dynamon thought he recognized a word.
Finally, one man taller than the rest stepped forward.

"Yoo cum thus," he declared.

"Certainly," Dynamon nodded with a smile, and reached out a hand to
Keltry. The crowd, with wondering eyes, opened up a line and the two
young people from Earth followed their self-appointed guide through it.
A short narrow passageway led off at a sharp angle through the rocky
wall of the pit, and presently Dynamon and Keltry found themselves on
what appeared to be a hill top. Both of them gave little gasps as a
vast and magnificent panorama spread out before their astonished eyes.
It was as if they had stepped into a new world.

A gently undulating plain stretched away in three directions as far
as their eyes could see. It was predominantly gray in color, but here
and there, were scattered long, narrow strips of green. These green
strips all had shimmering, silvery borders, and Dynamon couldn't
help recalling to mind some arid spots back on the Earth that were
criss-crossed with irrigation ditches. There were no trees on this
vast plain, but strewn around in a haphazard way, were a quantity of
great boulders. And these rocks, like the rocks at the base of the pit,
glowed luminously. However, the landscape was clearly illuminated by
some other source than those scattered rocks. Dynamon lifted his eyes
upward and saw that above them, and stretching as far as the eye could
reach, there was a softly luminous ceiling. There was no way of telling
how high up this ceiling was. It might be twenty feet or twenty miles.
The effect was like that of certain days on the Earth, when wide-spread
clouds blanket the sky and diffuse the sun's rays.

The plain was by no means deserted. Here and there along the green
strips four-legged creatures moved slowly, creatures that, on Earth
Dynamon would have said were cows. Nearer at hand, a flock of small
white creatures milled around aimlessly, and Dynamon could have sworn
he heard the cackle of hens. Dynamon glanced over his shoulder and saw
that the little hairy-faced men were filing out of the passageway to
the pit. The guide tugged at his sleeve.

"This oo-ay," he said and pointed to his right.

Still holding Keltry's hand, Dynamon turned and followed the man, and
the others fell in behind them. Their way eventually led toward a tall
set of cliffs at the base of which a score or so of cave-like openings
could be seen.

"These _are_ humans, aren't they, Dynamon?" Keltry whispered.

"They certainly look like it," Dynamon answered, "although obviously
they're very primitive."

"Then how and when did they come to Saturn?" Keltry persisted.

"I haven't the faintest idea," Dynamon shrugged. "Perhaps we'll find
out."

Other strange humans came running up the hill and joined the crowd
behind them. Apparently they were not all men, for some of them had no
hair on their faces and wore long robes over their bodies. The guide
led them straight to one of the openings in the cliff, then halted and
faced the two adventurers impressively.

"The koo-een!" he announced in a loud tone.

Dynamon and Keltry looked wonderingly at each other and then back to
the guide. At that moment a woman appeared at the mouth of the cave.
She was small and delicately formed and strikingly beautiful. She had
the bluest of eyes and golden hair that fell away on either side of a
marble brow. A long-sleeved white garment gathered at the waist covered
her from neck to toe, but its shapeless folds could scarcely conceal
the delicious curves of her little body.

"Humes!" the guide shouted proudly, "fum Earth!"

       *       *       *       *       *

The woman's blue eyes widened as she stared solemnly at Dynamon and
Keltry.

"Are you from Earth?" she said in slow musical tones. "So strange! So
wonderful! How did you come?"

Dynamon grinned. "We came in a Cosmos Carrier," he said easily. "And to
us, it seems even more strange and more wonderful that we find humans
already on Saturn."

A shy answering smile came over the woman's beautiful face.

"We have been here hundreds of years," she replied in the same slow
accents. "But come inside the Palace and we will talk."

She turned with an inviting look and the two adventurers from Earth
followed her through a passageway lined with the, by now, familiar
luminous rocks. They came out in a fairly large, high-ceilinged room,
in the center of which was a sort of table made out of a long, trimmed
slab of rock. At one end of this table was a high-back chair made of
woven reeds. The woman walked over to the chair and sitting down in it,
indicated stools on either side of her.

"Sit down," she said, "and tell me more about yourselves."

"Thank you," Dynamon answered, and turning to his companion said, "It's
warm in here, I think we might take off these cloaks."

Keltry nodded, and putting her hand to the throat fastening, zipped it
downward. Dynamon did likewise and the two stepped out of their cloaks.
There was a sudden scream from the beautiful little woman, and her
hands flew up in front of her eyes.

"What are you doing?" she squealed. "Why you're--you're practically
naked! You're positively immodest!"

Keltry threw a startled glance at Dynamon's long, brown legs.

"Why, not at all," she said quietly. "We are dressed like everyone else
on Earth at the present time. Modesty with us, nowadays, is something
much more important than lengths of cloth."

The little woman kept her hands before her eyes and shook her head
vigorously. "It's immodest," she insisted, "and you must put on your
clothes at once. Don't you realize that I'm the queen?"

Reluctantly, Keltry and Dynamon stepped back into their heavy cloaks
and zipped them up the front.

"Well! that's better," said the little queen primly. "My goodness," she
said with a slight glance, "is everybody on Earth as big and brown as
you two?"

"We're about average, I should say," Keltry answered with a smile. "And
seriously, we didn't mean to offend you in the matter of clothes."

"Well we, on Saturn," said the little queen, "don't believe in indecent
exposure. Now, you say you came in some kind of a carrier?"

"Yes," said Dynamon. "It's up on the surface. We were exploring in the
darkness and fell down the long shaft."

"Why weren't you killed?" said the queen, blue eyes wide. Dynamon
explained the counter-gravity helmets. It took considerable
explanation, because the queen was inclined to disbelieve the whole
story. She finally accepted it, however, and then launched into a long
series of questions about the Cosmos Carrier and about the state of
the Earth. Eventually Dynamon found an opening and started asking
questions on his part.

"We're anxious to know about you and your people on Saturn," he
suggested. "Have you a name or are you addressed only as Queen?"

"I am Queen Diana," the little woman stated. "The last of my line. I am
a Bolton, and the Boltons have been rulers of Saturn ever since we came
here."

"Bolton!" Dynamon shouted. "Are you a descendant of Leonard Bolton?"

"Yes!" replied the queen, with a delighted smile. "Do they still
remember Leonard Bolton on Earth?"

"We know that he designed a contrivance called a 'space ship', but
that's all. Did he actually build such a ship, and is that how you come
to be here so many thousands of miles from Earth?"

"Yes," said Queen Diana, proudly. "It's all down in some books which I
will show you. Leonard Bolton built a space ship which was big enough
to hold ten families and their belongings. There was a terrible war
going on and he thought the only place to find safety was another
planet. So the 'space ship' left the Earth by means of a thing called a
'rocket,' whatever that is. And they wandered around for years in space
till they finally came into Saturn's orbit, and the tremendous gravity
pulled the ship right through the light outer crust into this Nether
World. I don't know how many years ago that was, but we have been here
ever since."

"Well that is an amazing story," said Dynamon. "And I would like to
see those books you mentioned. How incredibly fortunate that the
'space ship' broke through into this Nether World, where there is an
atmosphere that will support life. And it is pretty miraculous too,
that the 'space ship' didn't break up from the force of hitting the
outer crust."

"Well, the books say that it was broken up somewhat," the queen
answered, "but nobody was hurt. And after they unloaded the ship, they
took it apart so that they could use the metal in it for other things."

She was eyeing him admiringly.

"And the colony has survived over a thousand years," Dynamon mused. He
could not help thinking how, in comparison with the people on Earth,
the survivors of Bolton's expedition were a rather poor lot. They had
made no progress at all in the thousand years, mentally or culturally;
from all evidences they had, on the contrary, retrogressed at least to
a degree. Then across his mind flitted a picture of the hardships these
brave souls had to endure in establishing themselves on the new planet.
At no time could they have even hoped to return to Earth.

With their limited equipment they had set out to make the most of their
new world. The great caves offered natural shelter so it was small
wonder that they made their homes in them.

Dynamon, although a soldier to his finger tips, had none of the
haughtiness and cruelty which are so often found in the warriors of
today. Quickly his pity for the colonists turned into admiration, and
he turned gently to face Queen Diana again.

"Tell me," he asked, "Are we the first strangers you have seen? You
haven't, by any chance, been visited by Martians, have you?"

"Martians," said the queen. "What are they?"

"At present, they are just about the worst enemies of human beings,"
Dynamon replied tersely.

"No," said the queen, "our only enemies here are the _land-krakens_. We
have been fighting them for hundreds of years and we have never been
able to exterminate them, because they're so hard to kill."

"Land-krakens," said Dynamon. "What sort of creature are they?"

"They are great, crawling monsters," the queen told him. "They have a
dozen long, flexible arms that curl around their victims and strangle
them. They lie in wait for our cows and kill them easily, and now and
then, they catch a human being. They're terribly hard to kill even with
bullets--they seem to be made of gristle and jelly."

Just as the queen spoke, there was a chorus of shouts outside the cave,
followed by three or four sharp reports, in rapid succession. The queen
stood up quickly, as one of her subjects rushed into the cave.

"Land-kraken!" he shouted. "Ter'ble biggun!"

       *       *       *       *       *

Without a word, the queen picked up her long skirts and ran to the
entrance of the cave, Dynamon and Keltry following close behind. An
extraordinary sight met their eyes.

At the fool of the little hill, fifty or sixty shouting men were ringed
around a horrible mass of thrashing, gray tentacles. Several of the men
were pointing their black rods at the beast.

"Oh, it _is_ a big one," the queen cried. "Our guns will be useless
against that thick hide--the bullets will just skim off."

There were several more reports and smoke curled from the ends of the
rods. Several long, grey tentacles rose up above the mass, and the
crowd surged backward in all directions. Suddenly one of the slimy
arms streaked downward and outward, and a moment later a struggling,
screaming human was lifted high in the air. A thrill of horror went
through Dynamon, and Keltry clutched his arm.

"Their ancient fire-arms are useless," she said in a tense whisper.
"Perhaps a voltage bomb--"

But Dynamon was already running down the slope, fumbling at the black
box at his hip. The concerted groan of despair from the crowd suddenly
changed to a shout as the unfortunate human somehow tore loose from the
encircling tentacle and dropped to the ground. Just as the land-kraken
was reaching for the doomed man with another long arm, Dynamon hurled
a voltage bomb over the heads of the crowd. The little glass ball
landed squarely in the middle of the writhing gray mass. There was a
blinding flash and a loud report. A convulsive shudder rippled over the
gray monster and its twelve tentacles suddenly went limp. The crowd
looked at it in stunned silence for a second, and then raised a yell of
triumph. A noisy mob of little bearded men escorted Dynamon back up the
hill to where the beautiful little queen stood, waiting, her blue eyes
shining.

"How marvelous! How heroic!" she breathed, as Dynamon came up to her.
"You killed the kraken with one blow. How did you do it?"

"Well, you see, Queen Diana," Dynamon replied, patting the black box,
"these little voltage bombs have long ago entirely replaced fire-arms
on Earth. Their range is shorter but they are far more deadly."

"Oh! So wonderful!" the queen gasped. "I am so glad you came. You shall
marry me and I'll make you King of Saturn."

"I am most honored and flattered by your proposal, Queen Diana,"
Dynamon smiled, "but I am afraid that isn't possible. Keltry and I must
go back up the shaft and rejoin our expedition."

"Oh, but you can't!" said the queen suddenly. "Send the girl away if
you want"--she waved a careless hand at Keltry-"but you must stay here
with me forever."

       *       *       *       *       *

Dynamon saw Keltry's startled eyes on him and he felt an acute
embarrassment. It was an impossible situation. He could not repress
a little glow within him from the frank approval of the beautiful,
imperious little queen. But at the same time, he knew that he must
soon devise some means of making a graceful exit from her presence.
His thoughts were interrupted by a sudden cry from the edge of the
surrounding crowd. He turned his head and looked along the base of the
cliff. A column of cloaked figures, helmeted and masked, were streaming
out of the passageway to the pit.

"It's a search party coming after us!" cried Keltry.

They were twenty or so of the soldiers from Earth, and they covered the
distance toward Dynamon and Keltry in a short time and forced their way
through the crowd of bearded Saturnians. The one in the lead unfastened
his oxygen mask and revealed the spectacled face of Thamon.

"Thank goodness, you're alive!" said the scientist fervently. "We never
expected to find you. What a fantastic place this is!"

"You are in the kingdom of the Boltons," said Dynamon, "and this is
Queen Diana."

The man behind Thamon unmasked, revealing the lean, dark features of
Mortoch.

"Congratulations, Dynamon," said the Chief Decurion, dryly, as he in
turn was presented to the wide-eyed little queen. "You certainly picked
a sort of paradise to fall into. A paradise, I might add, presided over
by an angel."

A coy smile crept over the queen's face, then died away at Mortoch's
next words.

"I bring you grave news, Dynamon," the Chief Decurion said. "There are
two Martian Carriers in the vicinity. We haven't seen them yet, but we
intercepted a long-wave conversation between them. What do you intend
to do about it?"

"Why, I think we should go right back to the surface," Dynamon replied.
"Could you tell from their conversation whether they knew that we were
on Saturn?"

"Apparently they knew we were somewhere around," said Mortoch, "but
hadn't located us yet."

"Well, we'd better hurry right on up then," said Dynamon, "so that we
can get back to our Carrier before they find it."

"Oh, but you can't go!" said the little queen in a shrill voice, "I
forbid it."

"I wish we could stay, Queen Diana," Dynamon answered, "but there's
dangerous work to be done up on the surface."

"But why go to the surface at all?" the queen demanded. "Why not stay
down here and keep away from the danger?"

"No, Queen Diana," Dynamon said, keenly conscious of Mortoch's lurking
smile. "Duty calls and we must go. Perhaps when we have finished our
work we will pay you another visit. All right, men, here we go."

       *       *       *       *       *

The centurion, Keltry by his side, led the way back to the entrance
to the pit, while the Saturnians, grouped around their little queen,
gaped after them. As the little force stood in the bottom of the pit
adjusting their helmets and oxygen masks preparatory to ascending to
the surface, Mortoch leaned over to Dynamon.

"That wasn't such a bad idea of the beautiful Diana's," he murmured.
"Personally, I wouldn't mind spending a few safe years down there with
her. It would be better than facing those deadly Photo-Atomic Rays of
the Martians."

"If it's safety you're interested in, Mortoch," said Dynamon, dryly,
"we'll try and get you, as soon as possible, to the safety of the
Carrier. Anyway, perhaps the Martians are just exploring and didn't
come equipped with the Ray."

But as the centurion turned the knob in his helmet and shot up through
the great shaft, he felt in his heart no great hope that such, indeed,
would be the case. If the Martian Carrier were in the vicinity of
Saturn it was altogether likely that they had come prepared to destroy
the Earth Carrier, and would be equipped with their best weapon.
Dynamon hoped against hope that he and the little force would reach
the surface in time to get to their own Carrier, whose thick walls
the Martians' Ray could not penetrate. After that, it would be a case
of maneuvering the Carrier in such a way as to try to disable the
Martians' ships.

The humans, their gravity repellors turned up full strength, whizzed
up the black shaft at a tremendous rate of speed. Even so, it seemed
hours before a small gray disc above him warned Dynamon that they were
nearing the top. He spoke some words of command into his radio phone
and cut down his upward speed. In a few moments he stepped over the rim
of the shaft into the gray light of the Saturnian midday. He glanced
down into the valley in the direction of the Carrier and felt a shock
of dismay go through him.

       *       *       *       *       *

The gray Earth Carrier was in the same place, but a half a mile on
either side of it were two flaming red Martian Carriers. And out on
the gray sand far from any of the ships a furious battle was going on.
Some twenty tall, human figures were ringed around by a swarm of tiny,
globular Martians. A continuous series of white flashes showed that the
humans were desperately hurling their voltage bombs, but the encircling
Martians were keeping well out of range and a dozen still forms on the
ground showed that the invisible Photo-Atomic Ray was doing its deadly
work.

All too clearly, Dynamon saw what had happened. In the absence of a
commanding officer, himself or Mortoch, Borion had unwarily sent a
force of soldiers out scouting. The Martians had swooped down, landed
swiftly, and cut off the force from the Carrier. The humans were
desperately trying to cut through to safety, but their situation looked
hopeless.

Quickly, Dynamon turned and faced the men behind him and held up his
hands in a gesture signifying that no one should use his radio phone.
He had determined to try and help his beleaguered soldiers down in
the valley, and the only way that could successfully be done was to
surprise-attack swiftly on the rear of the Martians. He motioned Keltry
and Thamon back into the pit and then, sweeping his arm forward in a
wide arc, he plunged down the hillside. But before he had covered half
the distance to the combat in the valley, Dynamon realized that his
attack was coming too late. The Photo-Atomic Ray was cutting down the
little force of humans like an invisible scythe. There were only nine
of them left now and one by one these were falling. A thousand thoughts
raced through Dynamon's head. Should he go ahead with the attack,
courting on getting within bombing distance of the Martians unnoticed,
before they could swing their Photo-Atomic Ray around? Or, should he
change direction, skirting the enemy, and make a run for the Carrier?
Suddenly, his blood froze in his veins as a voice sounded in his ear
phones.

"This is suicide, Dynamon!" It was Mortoch's voice.

"It's suicide now!" said Dynamon through clenched teeth. "You fool! You
have given us away!"

There was an instant reaction from the swarming Martians in the valley.
A large group of them broke away from the combat and rolled over the
gray sand toward Dynamon's detachment. The centurion halted his men
abruptly. It was sure annihilation to try and stand in the face of the
oncoming men of Mars.

"Back to the pit!" Dynamon commanded. "It's our only chance. Once we
get down there we'll decide what to do later."

The little force just barely made it to the mouth of the shaft. The
Martians were coming up rapidly behind them, and Dynamon could see the
big, black cones which produced the invisible Ray.

       *       *       *       *       *

The descent down the shaft was rapid, Dynamon being the last to land on
the shiny floor. Immediately, he marched his men through the passageway
into the Nether World and detailed two men to remain and guard the
entrance to the pit.

"I don't believe the Martians will follow us down," he said. "If they
do, we can easily defend the passageway."

Then he turned and singled out the Chief Decurion.

"Mortoch," he announced, "you are under arrest. You disobeyed my orders
in regard to using the radio phone, and by doing so you betrayed our
presence to the enemy. I will dispose of your case later."

Mortoch stepped forward, a sardonic gleam in his dark eyes.

"And suppose I refuse to be arrested?" he said. "If I had not disobeyed
the order, you would have led us into certain death." Mortoch swept the
crowd of soldiers with a burning look. "Men, I proclaim that Dynamon is
incompetent to command you. Henceforth, you will take your orders from
me--and _you_, Dynamon, are the one who is under arrest."

"Mortoch!" Dynamon cried. "You are out of your mind!"

"Not at all," Mortoch returned. "I am merely assuming the command which
should have been mine to begin with. Put your hands up in the air,
Dynamon, and backward march till I tell you to stop. And let nobody
else make a move"--Mortoch's rasping voice rose to a shout--"I have in
each hand a voltage bomb which I shall not hesitate to throw if anybody
attempts to cross my will."

"This is madness!" Dynamon cried hoarsely. "You can't hope to get away
with this!" He strode forward angrily.

"Back!" roared Mortoch, and raised his right hand threateningly.

Dynamon staggered back in bewilderment from the soldiers who stood
in silence, too shocked to make a move. Helpless against the voltage
bombs in Mortoch's hands, the centurion stepped slowly backward, arms
upraised. It was an impossible situation, and for the moment, Dynamon
felt powerless to do anything about it. He reproached himself bitterly
for not being more wary of Mortoch. Up till now he had been conscious
of the Chief Ducurion's enmity, but he had never thought that the man
would erupt into open mutiny.

Dynamon threw a swift glance over his shoulder and saw that he was
only two paces away from one of those curious, luminous rocks. It
was approximately cylindrical in shape, six feet wide and perhaps
twenty feet tall. Dynamon took another step backward and turned his
head to face Mortoch. His back was almost touching the rock now, and
a desperate plan formed in his head. That was to make a sudden leap
around the rock. Once behind it and protected by its mass, he would
have time to pull out one of his own voltage bombs and await Mortoch's
next move.

       *       *       *       *       *

But Dynamon had not truly measured the state of Mortoch's mind.
There was a sudden scream from Keltry as Mortoch, with a lightning
movement, drew back his right arm and flung the voltage bomb straight
at Dynamon's chest. The little glass ball sped unerringly across the
intervening twenty feet. There was no time to dodge. Dynamon pressed
his back against the rock and closed his eyes. It was the end.

Dynamon felt the little bomb bump his chest. But--wonder of wonders!
There was no blinding flash--no explosion. There was just a silvery
tinkle as the glass ball shattered at his feet. Dynamon opened his eyes
and found that he was still alive. An incredulous shout went up from
the horrified crowd and Thamon started running toward him.

"Tridium!" shouted the scientist. "You have discovered tridium!"

As in a dream, Dynamon saw the soldiers overpowering Mortoch and heard
himself say, "What do you mean? Where is the tridium?" He stared about
in wonder.

"The rock!" cried Thamon excitedly. "You touched the rock and were
instantly insulated against the electric charge. Great heavens! What a
discovery! Every one of these luminous rocks must be made of tridium."

Dynamon turned around and placed a hand on the glowing rock. Instantly,
he felt himself enveloped in an extraordinary transparent aura.

"You see!" cried Thamon, and struck at the rock with his metal rod.
Evidently, it was almost as soft as chalk, for several pieces as big as
a man's fist chipped off and fell to the ground. Thamon stooped down
and picked one of the pieces up and immediately he, too, stood in a
curious, gleaming aura.

"It's tridium, all right!" exclaimed the scientist. "There can be
no doubt about it. We knew it was on Saturn and we knew what its
properties were, but we didn't know what it looked like. Do you realize
what this means, Dynamon? It means that we may finally have found the
defense against the Photo-Atomic Ray!"

Dynamon felt a little dizzy. Not only had he been snatched from what
appeared to be certain death but he had inadvertently made a discovery
that might save the people of the world from conquest at the hands of
the Martians.

"Thamon, are you quite sure?" he said. "Are you quite sure that this
will work against the Ray?"

"No," replied Thamon promptly. "I won't be _quite_ sure until we've
tested it out. From a theoretical standpoint, this glowing cloud, this
aura that surrounds us as we touch a piece of tridium should insulate
us against the Ray. But to be absolutely certain, somebody will have to
expose himself to the Ray. Someone among us must go up to the surface
holding a piece of tridium in his hand and face the Martians. If he
is killed, then I'm wrong. But if he is not killed, then the Martians
are at our mercy. We can walk up to them untouched and crush their
egg-shell skulls with our bare fists."

"I see," said Dynamon gravely. "Then, one of us must be a heroic
experimental guinea pig?"

"Exactly," said Thamon.

Dynamon looked over the silent group of soldiers, at Mortoch, shoulders
hunched in the grip of two stalwarts. Then he bowed his head in thought
for a moment.

"Men," he said, finally, "this is not a case of calling for volunteers.
I think any one of us is brave enough to offer his life for the good of
the rest of the human beings, but I think we should decide who is to do
this dirty work by drawing lots."

"No!"

It was Mortoch. In his eyes was a wild, hunted look, and his voice was
hoarse, but there was deep sincerity in his tones.

"Dynamon," said the Chief Decurion, "I went off my head with jealousy
a minute ago. The madness is gone now, and I would give anything if I
could undo what I did. You must give me the chance to redeem myself. If
I am killed, so much the better for me. And if I am not, so much the
better for all the human beings in the world."

Dynamon looked long and searchingly at the Decurion. Finally he said,
"Mortoch, I cannot deny your appeal. Take this piece of tridium and go
up the shaft. We will be close behind you to observe the experiment."

Just then, there was a shout from the two soldiers who were guarding
the passageway to the pit.

"Martians!" they cried. "They are coming down on us! The shaft is full
of them!"

Dynamon walked straight toward Mortoch and placed the piece of tridium
in his hand.

"Your ordeal is at hand," he said simply, as, in a flash, the bright
aura transferred itself to the person of Mortoch.

       *       *       *       *       *

The two soldiers guarding the entrance to the pit were backing away to
either side and throwing voltage bombs into the passageway as Mortoch
ran toward them.

"Stop!" he shouted, never slackening his pace. "This is my job! Get out
of range!"

He halted six feet away from the mouth of the passage and raised
his arms up in a gesture of defiance. An admiring gasp went up from
the crowd of watching humans at the tall, lean figure bathed in its
luminous glow. Then a deathly silence shut down abruptly as four little
figures erupted through the passageway. Martians!

They were scarcely two feet tall, with spindly little bodies and legs,
but their heads were more than twice the size of human heads and looked
doubly grotesque in their combination helmet-masks. One of them was
holding a big, black cone--the Photo-Atomic generator. Quickly the
little creature leveled it at Mortoch and pulled a lever on the side.
An ominous high-pitched hum filled the air and everyone knew that the
death Ray was being poured in all its deadly violence on Mortoch.

Thamon was the first to raise his voice in a shout as Mortoch,
unharmed, strode forward and felled the Martian with one blow of
his fist. The air rang with human cheers as Mortoch seized two more
scurrying Martians by the legs and dashed their brains out on the
ground.

"It works!" Thamon yelled, hysterically. "It's tridium! We're saved!"

The scientist was hacking crazily at the rock with his metal staff and
jubilant soldiers swarmed around him, picking up pieces of tridium. In
a few moments the whole force, every man surrounded by the luminous
aura, was bolting through the passageway into the bottom of the pit.

For a short time the Martians tried to put up a battle. But with their
chief weapon nullified, they were slaughtered by the dozen, and the
survivors began flitting up the shaft. In the midst of the turmoil,
Dynamon kept his wits about him. He knew that in order to realize the
full value of the tridium discovery, the Martians on the surface must
be kept from learning about it. He raised his voice in a mighty shout
over the clamor.

"Masks on! Up the shaft at full speed! We must not allow a single
Martian to reach the surface!"

Swiftly the Earth-soldiers fastened their masks and took off straight
upward. Each one of them clung to their precious lumps of tridium, and
in a short time the dark shaft presented an extraordinary spectacle.
Each of the twenty-odd humans was bathed in his own ghostly envelope of
light, and the fleeing Martians, looking downward, must have felt as if
they were being pursued by a squadron of giant fireflies.

The survivors of the massacre below had a head start of their pursuers,
but being so much lighter in weight, their gravity-repellors could not
push them up through the atmosphere as fast as the humans could go.
Gradually they were overtaken and destroyed by Dynamon's force--the
last Martian being caught just at the upper mouth of the pit.

       *       *       *       *       *

Dynamon quickly gathered his men about him while he took stock of the
situation in the valley. The three Carriers were in the same position
as they were before, but there were no Earth-soldiers left standing. A
little circle of fallen bodies offered mute testimony to the hopeless
battle put up by the force of three decuria which had made that
ill-fated sortie from the Carrier. Now, the Martians from both of the
red ships--excluding, of course, the group that had been cut to pieces
in the pit--were gathered in a body near the Earth Carrier. Dynamon
guessed that they were waiting to see what the Earth people were going
to do next. They would soon find out, the centurion thought grimly.
Even though there were probably close to two hundred of the evil little
creatures down there, they would be no match for the brawny humans
insulated against the Photo-Atomic Ray.

Swiftly, Dynamon formulated a plan of action. His first consideration
was to try and seize both Martian Carriers. If possible, they must
be prevented from leaving the ground and carrying back to Mars the
warning that, at last, the humans had found a defense against the Ray.
With that in mind, the centurion divided his little force in two.
One decuria with its decurion he put under Mortoch, and the other,
he commanded himself. Each group was to strike boldly at one of the
Martian ships, Mortoch, the nearer one; himself, the farther one.

Dynamon issued his commands by signs, hoping to remain unnoticed by
the enemy if he refrained from using the radio-phone. But as he led
his group off along the hillside, a sudden activity among the Martians
in the valley told him that he had been sighted. They came streaming
across the valley floor toward the heights on a shallow crescent, each
wing spreading to perform an enveloping movement.

What an unpleasant surprise the nasty little devils are going to get,
thought Dynamon, and he switched on his radio-phone. "Follow me, now,
on the dead run!"

He dug his toes into the yielding gray sand and ran along the hillside,
bending low into the wind. It was heavy going, but the humans were able
to make faster progress than their enemies because of their greater
weight. Dynamon saw that he and his group were outrunning the Martians
and would probably reach their objective sooner. Two thoughts arose
in his mind to worry him. One was, that the Martians inside the red
ships might lock their doors and take off before he and Mortoch,
respectively, could reach them. The other was the fear that Borion,
inside the Earth-Carrier, not knowing of the new defense against the
Ray, would sally out in a desperate attempt to save--as he might
think--the two isolated detachments of humans.

However, Dynamon reflected, those were eventualities over which he had
no control. All he could do under the circumstances was pray for good
luck.

       *       *       *       *       *

A glance down into the valley told him that he and his little force
were abreast of the Earth-Carrier by now, with a half a mile still to
go to reach the Martian ship. The Martians, running parallel, were
falling behind a little. Rapping out a command into his transmitter,
Dynamon changed his direction slightly, and swung downhill on a direct
line with the red ship. At the same time, he and his men readjusted
their gravity-control so that their speed was almost doubled. Away to
their left, the Martian horde was dropping behind. Dynamon gave an
involuntary shout of triumph. He and his party was going to win the
race.

As the little knot of speeding humans approached within a hundred
yards of the Martian Carrier, another cheer broke from Dynamon's lips.
The door at the side of the Carrier swung open and a score of little
creatures carrying the once-dreaded black cones tumbled out. The
Martians inside the ship, far from running away, were coming out to
fight--mistakingly confident that the twelve humans were at their mercy!

Quickly, Dynamon issued orders that two of his men should immediately
penetrate the inside of the Carrier and seize the control-room, while
the rest stayed outside and engaged the Martian warriors. Then, panting
for breath, but none the less confident, the decuria closed in on the
Martians.

They were within twenty-five yards of the dwarf-like little creatures
before the Martians discovered that something was amiss with the
Photo-Atomic Ray. The ugly little men hesitated in momentary dismay,
and then started to make a dash for the inside of the Carrier. But by
that time, it was too late.

The twelve humans, clothed in their life-preserving auras, swept down
on the Martians like avenging angels. All the pent-up hatred against
this diabolically cruel enemy now found release. At last, the Martian
superiority in weapons was broken. Dynamon and his men waded implacably
into the terrified little ogres and slew them without mercy. The whole
business was over in less than two minutes.

Without the loss of a man, Dynamon had annihilated the defenders of
the Carrier, and two of his soldiers were inside in possession of the
control-room. There remained now the job of handling the hundred or
so Martians who were moving over the gray sand toward his victorious
decuria.

But this force of the enemy had realized that something was radically
wrong. They were no longer running, but, in fact, were slowing up to
a halt about fifty yards away. Dynamon swung an arm and began to walk
toward them. The black cones came up, pointing, all along the long line
of Martians. Dynamon's men fanned out on either side of him, walking
forward slowly, inexorably.

The line of Martians wavered uncertainly, and then began to fall back
in terrified confusion, as the humans remained unharmed by the Ray.
Dynamon's voice crackled in nine sets of ear-phones, and the decuria
lunged forward. In a moment, they were in the midst of a panic-stricken
mass of scurrying Martians. Again, the soldiers from Earth slew
pitilessly, until in a short while, fifty-odd of the harried little
creatures lay dead. The rest were scattered in headlong flight over the
valley.

       *       *       *       *       *

The business was accomplished none too soon. The thing which Dynamon
had feared might happen earlier, happened now. A force of humans,
unprotected by tridium, emerged from the big gray Carrier and hastened
toward Dynamon. A few minutes earlier and these men would have been
mowed down by the Ray. The centurion sighed with relief and ordered
the newcomers back to the Cosmos Carrier.

The danger was over.

Twenty minutes later, Dynamon had joined forces again with Mortoch's
detachment and was marching back to the mouth of the pit, where Keltry
and Thamon were waiting. The past hour had seen a complete and sweeping
triumph for the humans. Mortoch's attack on the other Martian ship had
been as successful as Dynamon's. Now, both of the Martian Carriers were
captured, and their crews and warriors cut to pieces. And, all this
had been accomplished with the loss of but one man. One of Mortoch's
soldiers had fallen and dropped his lump of tridium. The man had
instantly died under the Photo-Atomic Ray.

There remained only one more piece of business to conclude successfully
the expedition to Saturn, and Dynamon set about it promptly. Once again
he led the way down the pit to the Nether World.

There was great excitement at the bottom of the shaft. The Saturnians
were disposing of the bodies of the Martians who had fallen in the
first onslaught when Mortoch had proven the efficacy of tridium. And,
as Dynamon landed among them, closely followed by Thamon, Keltry and
the soldiers, the Saturnians crowded around in a condition bordering
on hysteria. They had never before seen Martians, or even dreamed of
their existence, so it was not to be wondered at that the primitive
humans of the Nether World were excited when the sudden, fierce combat
broke out almost in their midst. With the greatest difficulty, Dynamon
quieted them down enough so that they heard and complied with his
request to be taken to their Queen.

"Queen Diana," he said directly, "in your kingdom, you have any
quantity--thousands of tons--of this luminous rock which we have
identified as tridium. This substance is the one thing which can save
the people of the Earth from the death-ray of the Martians. Will you
give me your permission to carry away some of these rocks back to
Earth, so that our armies can defend themselves against our enemies?"

The little Queen gave Dynamon a long languorous look.

"If you stay here and be my King," she answered, at length, "I will
permit your people to carry away as many of the rocks as they want."

Dynamon's heart sank. He had hoped that Queen Diana had got over that
idea. What was he going to do?

"Well, Queen Diana," he said, slowly, trying frantically to think of
some way out, "I can't tell you how flattered I am at your proposal,
but I don't see how I can accept it."

"Why not?" the queen demanded, imperiously.

       *       *       *       *       *

Dynamon shook his head helplessly. He was trying to think of some
tactful way of telling this spoiled little woman that his heart already
belonged to Keltry.

"Well, perhaps you have noticed," he began, "that someone else on this
expedition has a--a claim--er--"

"Who do you mean?" the Queen interrupted, "The tall, dark man? The one
called Mortoch?"

"Mortoch?" said Dynamon wonderingly.

"Yes, isn't that what you're trying to tell me? Mortoch! That's very
interesting," said the Queen dreamily, "Come to think of it, I _had_
noticed that he looked at me very intensely."

A great light dawned on Dynamon. The Queen was jumping to a quite
different set of conclusions. He had tried to tell her that he was in
love with Keltry, and she thought he was telling her that Mortoch was
in love with her, the Queen!

"I think that is very generous of you, Dynamon," said the Queen with a
brilliant smile. "You are standing aside in favor of Mortoch because in
your eyes, his bravery in facing the Martians gives him a greater claim
on my hand."

Dynamon nodded wisely.

"He is a very handsome man," the Queen went on, looking off into space,
"perhaps you're right."

"He is just outside," said Dynamon rising. "Let me bring him in to you."

Before the little Queen could say anything more, Dynamon walked briskly
out to the mouth of the cave and hailed Mortoch.

"I remember hearing you say," he said, as the Chief Decurion came up to
him, "that you wouldn't mind staying here with Queen Diana. Well, it
seems that you are to have your wish. The Queen is determined to marry
one of us, and right at this moment, she is inclining toward you as a
husband. I think it's a fine idea."

Mortoch turned startled eyes on the centurion. Then he began to grin.

"Is that a command?" he asked.

"It is," Dynamon replied.

"I could do lots worse," said Mortoch, "although I'm liable to get
homesick now and then."

"Don't forget," said Dynamon, "you'll be King of Saturn, or at least,
of this part of Saturn. Go on inside, now, she's waiting for you."

Not long afterwards, Queen Diana, her eyes shining, appeared at the
entrance to her cave. Her hand rested lightly on Mortoch's arm, and
she announced to her people that at last she was taking a husband and
giving the Nether World of Saturn, a King. As cheer after cheer went
up from the bearded Saturnians, Dynamon bent over the Queen's hand and
kissed it. He, then, received gracious permission to take away as much
tridium as he needed.

       *       *       *       *       *

Keltry stood between Dynamon and Thamon and the three of them stared
into the bow periscope screens in the control-room of the Carrier.
Borion came over and joined them.

"Well, there she is," said the navigator, fondly. "There was a time
back there on Saturn when I kind of doubted that any of us would ever
see her again."

The chief image in the screens was a glowing sphere about the size of
a man's head. It was Earth. Already, the watchers in the control-room
could make out the outlines of the continents.

"But at that, I guess we got off lightly," continued Borion, "We lost
thirty-nine men--including Mortoch--but just think what we're bringing
back! We've got enough tridium in these three Carriers to divide up
among ten thousand men. I was afraid we might have trouble with so much
of the stuff--afraid it might affect the magnets."

"No, it's a curiously inert substance," said Thamon, "I suppose that's
why it can absorb the terrific shock of the Photo-Atomic Ray so easily.
What's the news from Headquarters, Dynamon?"

"It's pretty sketchy," said the centurion, "Argallum was afraid to say
too much for fear the Martians might be able to decode the message.
But it looks as if we are going to be just about in the nick of time.
The Martian invasion began ten months ago, just about the time we were
leaving Saturn. Even though they came without warning in thousands of
ships, our people managed to beat them off for quite a while. Some
cities were destroyed, but Copia wasn't touched--too well guarded.
But then, even though our people maintained, and still do maintain,
superiority in the air, those Martian devils found some remote desert
spot unguarded and landed thousands of their men. They were all
equipped with the Ray, of course, and our land forces simply couldn't
stand up against them. They've been driving steadily ever since, and
right now, they're within seventy miles of Copia."

"Whew!" gasped Borion.

"I should say we _are_ in the nick of time," said Keltry.

"Heavens!" exclaimed Thamon, "I shudder to think what would happen to
the World right now, Keltry, if you hadn't fallen down that pit!"

"That's right," laughed Dynamon.

Just then, a communications man walked into the control-room and handed
Dynamon a message.

He read it avidly.

"That's good news," the centurion remarked, looking up from the piece
of paper, "Argallum is sending a heavy convoy to meet us. How soon will
we be landing, Borion?"

"Well, we should hit the top of the stratosphere in less than an hour,"
the navigator replied. "From there on down--at reduced speed--will
probably take another two hours."

"In that case," said Dynamon, "I think we'd better shut down on all
conversation. Even Argallum doesn't know what we're bringing back--I'm
taking no chances on having our secret get out to the enemy. He only
knows that we are returning with two captured Martian Carriers. So,
make your dispositions, Borion, because in five minutes I'm going to
order everyone on all three ships to landing stations."

       *       *       *       *       *

The next three hours were tense ones for the returning expedition.
Even though a convoy had been promised, Dynamon was apprehensive about
possible attacks by the Martians, who, he was sure, must know something
of what was going on. But as it worked out, a perfect cloud of gray
Cosmos Carriers came out to meet the voyagers from Saturn, and Dynamon
was able to set his ships down at Vanadium Field without mishap.

A heavy guard was thrown around the precious cargoes, and the young
centurion was whisked away to Government City.

"What did you find?" The Commander-in-Chief's face was haggard.

"We found tridium," said Dynamon, "tons of it. We had an opportunity to
test it, and it proved to be a complete defense against the Ray."

"How difficult is it to get at?"

"Not difficult at all," said Dynamon, "we brought back enough to equip
nearly ten thousand men."

"Heaven be praised!" said Argallum fervently, "We might pull out of
this situation yet. Those devils have been sweeping everything before
them. We cut off their communications with our air power but that
didn't stop them. They've been living off the land, and they're so
powerful that they've been able to overrun territory at will."

Dynamon glanced at his watch. "It is almost noon," he said, "It will
take just one counter-attack to break through their line and roll it
up in both directions. If you throw attack-units forward as fast as
they can be equipped with tridium, you will have the Martians in a rout
before sundown."

And it was so.

Dynamon stood beside Argallum two hours later, on a little knoll sixty
miles out of Copia. A wide plain stretched before their eyes and across
its width, a beaten, discouraged army of humans gave ground slowly
before hordes of tiny, malevolent creatures from another planet. As
the two men watched, a fresh column of Earth-soldiers issued forth
from a woods in the center of the plain. There was a curious greenish
shimmer surrounding this new column--a will-o'-the-wisp, mirage-like
quality--and it advanced without hesitation straight into the serried
ranks of the terrible Martians.

"Great Heavens!" cried Argallum, "They're walking right up to them! And
not a man is down! Look! The Martians are reeling back! Our voltage
bombs are killing them like flies!"

Dynamon turned away from the scene of carnage with a curious smile. He
knew that Argallum in his gratitude would probably want to throw every
conceivable honor and promotion at him. For bringing three Carrier
loads of tridium back from Saturn, he, Dynamon, would very likely
become a World-wide hero. And yet, he reflected, it was a feat which
could never have been accomplished if it hadn't been for a series of
unrelated incidents. If Keltry hadn't stowed away, she couldn't have
fallen down the pit, thus leading to the discovery of Queen Diana's
Nether World. If Mortoch had not rebelled and tried to kill him with a
voltage bomb--. If he hadn't happened to touch the rock with his back--.

Dynamon turned and looked out on to the battle field where the
victorious Earth-soldiers in their tridium-auras were vengefully
slaughtering the hideous Martians. And he thought of the incident which
had to precede all the other incidents so that he could bring back the
tridium. That was the incident which had occurred hundreds of years
before, when a man named Leonard Bolton had built a "space ship" and
had traveled to Saturn in it, breaking through the burnt-out crust
into the Nether World, boring the long hole with his clumsy medieval
Carrier. That was the hole that Keltry had fallen into.

Dynamon shook his head. Leonard Bolton had built his "space ship" in
the year 1956, the last year but one of the long series of frightful
wars, in which the divided peoples of the World tried to destroy one
another--and very nearly succeeded.





End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Cave-Dwellers of Saturn, by John Wiggin

*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK CAVE-DWELLERS OF SATURN ***

***** This file should be named 61759.txt or 61759.zip *****
This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
        http://www.gutenberg.org/6/1/7/5/61759/

Produced by Greg Weeks, Mary Meehan and the Online
Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net


Updated editions will replace the previous one--the old editions
will be renamed.

Creating the works from public domain print editions means that no
one owns a United States copyright in these works, so the Foundation
(and you!) can copy and distribute it in the United States without
permission and without paying copyright royalties.  Special rules,
set forth in the General Terms of Use part of this license, apply to
copying and distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works to
protect the PROJECT GUTENBERG-tm concept and trademark.  Project
Gutenberg is a registered trademark, and may not be used if you
charge for the eBooks, unless you receive specific permission.  If you
do not charge anything for copies of this eBook, complying with the
rules is very easy.  You may use this eBook for nearly any purpose
such as creation of derivative works, reports, performances and
research.  They may be modified and printed and given away--you may do
practically ANYTHING with public domain eBooks.  Redistribution is
subject to the trademark license, especially commercial
redistribution.



*** START: FULL LICENSE ***

THE FULL PROJECT GUTENBERG LICENSE
PLEASE READ THIS BEFORE YOU DISTRIBUTE OR USE THIS WORK

To protect the Project Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting the free
distribution of electronic works, by using or distributing this work
(or any other work associated in any way with the phrase "Project
Gutenberg"), you agree to comply with all the terms of the Full Project
Gutenberg-tm License (available with this file or online at
http://gutenberg.org/license).


Section 1.  General Terms of Use and Redistributing Project Gutenberg-tm
electronic works

1.A.  By reading or using any part of this Project Gutenberg-tm
electronic work, you indicate that you have read, understand, agree to
and accept all the terms of this license and intellectual property
(trademark/copyright) agreement.  If you do not agree to abide by all
the terms of this agreement, you must cease using and return or destroy
all copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in your possession.
If you paid a fee for obtaining a copy of or access to a Project
Gutenberg-tm electronic work and you do not agree to be bound by the
terms of this agreement, you may obtain a refund from the person or
entity to whom you paid the fee as set forth in paragraph 1.E.8.

1.B.  "Project Gutenberg" is a registered trademark.  It may only be
used on or associated in any way with an electronic work by people who
agree to be bound by the terms of this agreement.  There are a few
things that you can do with most Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works
even without complying with the full terms of this agreement.  See
paragraph 1.C below.  There are a lot of things you can do with Project
Gutenberg-tm electronic works if you follow the terms of this agreement
and help preserve free future access to Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
works.  See paragraph 1.E below.

1.C.  The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation ("the Foundation"
or PGLAF), owns a compilation copyright in the collection of Project
Gutenberg-tm electronic works.  Nearly all the individual works in the
collection are in the public domain in the United States.  If an
individual work is in the public domain in the United States and you are
located in the United States, we do not claim a right to prevent you from
copying, distributing, performing, displaying or creating derivative
works based on the work as long as all references to Project Gutenberg
are removed.  Of course, we hope that you will support the Project
Gutenberg-tm mission of promoting free access to electronic works by
freely sharing Project Gutenberg-tm works in compliance with the terms of
this agreement for keeping the Project Gutenberg-tm name associated with
the work.  You can easily comply with the terms of this agreement by
keeping this work in the same format with its attached full Project
Gutenberg-tm License when you share it without charge with others.

1.D.  The copyright laws of the place where you are located also govern
what you can do with this work.  Copyright laws in most countries are in
a constant state of change.  If you are outside the United States, check
the laws of your country in addition to the terms of this agreement
before downloading, copying, displaying, performing, distributing or
creating derivative works based on this work or any other Project
Gutenberg-tm work.  The Foundation makes no representations concerning
the copyright status of any work in any country outside the United
States.

1.E.  Unless you have removed all references to Project Gutenberg:

1.E.1.  The following sentence, with active links to, or other immediate
access to, the full Project Gutenberg-tm License must appear prominently
whenever any copy of a Project Gutenberg-tm work (any work on which the
phrase "Project Gutenberg" appears, or with which the phrase "Project
Gutenberg" is associated) is accessed, displayed, performed, viewed,
copied or distributed:

This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
almost no restrictions whatsoever.  You may copy it, give it away or
re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license

1.E.2.  If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is derived
from the public domain (does not contain a notice indicating that it is
posted with permission of the copyright holder), the work can be copied
and distributed to anyone in the United States without paying any fees
or charges.  If you are redistributing or providing access to a work
with the phrase "Project Gutenberg" associated with or appearing on the
work, you must comply either with the requirements of paragraphs 1.E.1
through 1.E.7 or obtain permission for the use of the work and the
Project Gutenberg-tm trademark as set forth in paragraphs 1.E.8 or
1.E.9.

1.E.3.  If an individual Project Gutenberg-tm electronic work is posted
with the permission of the copyright holder, your use and distribution
must comply with both paragraphs 1.E.1 through 1.E.7 and any additional
terms imposed by the copyright holder.  Additional terms will be linked
to the Project Gutenberg-tm License for all works posted with the
permission of the copyright holder found at the beginning of this work.

1.E.4.  Do not unlink or detach or remove the full Project Gutenberg-tm
License terms from this work, or any files containing a part of this
work or any other work associated with Project Gutenberg-tm.

1.E.5.  Do not copy, display, perform, distribute or redistribute this
electronic work, or any part of this electronic work, without
prominently displaying the sentence set forth in paragraph 1.E.1 with
active links or immediate access to the full terms of the Project
Gutenberg-tm License.

1.E.6.  You may convert to and distribute this work in any binary,
compressed, marked up, nonproprietary or proprietary form, including any
word processing or hypertext form.  However, if you provide access to or
distribute copies of a Project Gutenberg-tm work in a format other than
"Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other format used in the official version
posted on the official Project Gutenberg-tm web site (www.gutenberg.org),
you must, at no additional cost, fee or expense to the user, provide a
copy, a means of exporting a copy, or a means of obtaining a copy upon
request, of the work in its original "Plain Vanilla ASCII" or other
form.  Any alternate format must include the full Project Gutenberg-tm
License as specified in paragraph 1.E.1.

1.E.7.  Do not charge a fee for access to, viewing, displaying,
performing, copying or distributing any Project Gutenberg-tm works
unless you comply with paragraph 1.E.8 or 1.E.9.

1.E.8.  You may charge a reasonable fee for copies of or providing
access to or distributing Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works provided
that

- You pay a royalty fee of 20% of the gross profits you derive from
     the use of Project Gutenberg-tm works calculated using the method
     you already use to calculate your applicable taxes.  The fee is
     owed to the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark, but he
     has agreed to donate royalties under this paragraph to the
     Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation.  Royalty payments
     must be paid within 60 days following each date on which you
     prepare (or are legally required to prepare) your periodic tax
     returns.  Royalty payments should be clearly marked as such and
     sent to the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation at the
     address specified in Section 4, "Information about donations to
     the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation."

- You provide a full refund of any money paid by a user who notifies
     you in writing (or by e-mail) within 30 days of receipt that s/he
     does not agree to the terms of the full Project Gutenberg-tm
     License.  You must require such a user to return or
     destroy all copies of the works possessed in a physical medium
     and discontinue all use of and all access to other copies of
     Project Gutenberg-tm works.

- You provide, in accordance with paragraph 1.F.3, a full refund of any
     money paid for a work or a replacement copy, if a defect in the
     electronic work is discovered and reported to you within 90 days
     of receipt of the work.

- You comply with all other terms of this agreement for free
     distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm works.

1.E.9.  If you wish to charge a fee or distribute a Project Gutenberg-tm
electronic work or group of works on different terms than are set
forth in this agreement, you must obtain permission in writing from
both the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation and Michael
Hart, the owner of the Project Gutenberg-tm trademark.  Contact the
Foundation as set forth in Section 3 below.

1.F.

1.F.1.  Project Gutenberg volunteers and employees expend considerable
effort to identify, do copyright research on, transcribe and proofread
public domain works in creating the Project Gutenberg-tm
collection.  Despite these efforts, Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
works, and the medium on which they may be stored, may contain
"Defects," such as, but not limited to, incomplete, inaccurate or
corrupt data, transcription errors, a copyright or other intellectual
property infringement, a defective or damaged disk or other medium, a
computer virus, or computer codes that damage or cannot be read by
your equipment.

1.F.2.  LIMITED WARRANTY, DISCLAIMER OF DAMAGES - Except for the "Right
of Replacement or Refund" described in paragraph 1.F.3, the Project
Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation, the owner of the Project
Gutenberg-tm trademark, and any other party distributing a Project
Gutenberg-tm electronic work under this agreement, disclaim all
liability to you for damages, costs and expenses, including legal
fees.  YOU AGREE THAT YOU HAVE NO REMEDIES FOR NEGLIGENCE, STRICT
LIABILITY, BREACH OF WARRANTY OR BREACH OF CONTRACT EXCEPT THOSE
PROVIDED IN PARAGRAPH 1.F.3.  YOU AGREE THAT THE FOUNDATION, THE
TRADEMARK OWNER, AND ANY DISTRIBUTOR UNDER THIS AGREEMENT WILL NOT BE
LIABLE TO YOU FOR ACTUAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, CONSEQUENTIAL, PUNITIVE OR
INCIDENTAL DAMAGES EVEN IF YOU GIVE NOTICE OF THE POSSIBILITY OF SUCH
DAMAGE.

1.F.3.  LIMITED RIGHT OF REPLACEMENT OR REFUND - If you discover a
defect in this electronic work within 90 days of receiving it, you can
receive a refund of the money (if any) you paid for it by sending a
written explanation to the person you received the work from.  If you
received the work on a physical medium, you must return the medium with
your written explanation.  The person or entity that provided you with
the defective work may elect to provide a replacement copy in lieu of a
refund.  If you received the work electronically, the person or entity
providing it to you may choose to give you a second opportunity to
receive the work electronically in lieu of a refund.  If the second copy
is also defective, you may demand a refund in writing without further
opportunities to fix the problem.

1.F.4.  Except for the limited right of replacement or refund set forth
in paragraph 1.F.3, this work is provided to you 'AS-IS' WITH NO OTHER
WARRANTIES OF ANY KIND, EXPRESS OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED TO
WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY OR FITNESS FOR ANY PURPOSE.

1.F.5.  Some states do not allow disclaimers of certain implied
warranties or the exclusion or limitation of certain types of damages.
If any disclaimer or limitation set forth in this agreement violates the
law of the state applicable to this agreement, the agreement shall be
interpreted to make the maximum disclaimer or limitation permitted by
the applicable state law.  The invalidity or unenforceability of any
provision of this agreement shall not void the remaining provisions.

1.F.6.  INDEMNITY - You agree to indemnify and hold the Foundation, the
trademark owner, any agent or employee of the Foundation, anyone
providing copies of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works in accordance
with this agreement, and any volunteers associated with the production,
promotion and distribution of Project Gutenberg-tm electronic works,
harmless from all liability, costs and expenses, including legal fees,
that arise directly or indirectly from any of the following which you do
or cause to occur: (a) distribution of this or any Project Gutenberg-tm
work, (b) alteration, modification, or additions or deletions to any
Project Gutenberg-tm work, and (c) any Defect you cause.


Section  2.  Information about the Mission of Project Gutenberg-tm

Project Gutenberg-tm is synonymous with the free distribution of
electronic works in formats readable by the widest variety of computers
including obsolete, old, middle-aged and new computers.  It exists
because of the efforts of hundreds of volunteers and donations from
people in all walks of life.

Volunteers and financial support to provide volunteers with the
assistance they need, are critical to reaching Project Gutenberg-tm's
goals and ensuring that the Project Gutenberg-tm collection will
remain freely available for generations to come.  In 2001, the Project
Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation was created to provide a secure
and permanent future for Project Gutenberg-tm and future generations.
To learn more about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation
and how your efforts and donations can help, see Sections 3 and 4
and the Foundation web page at http://www.pglaf.org.


Section 3.  Information about the Project Gutenberg Literary Archive
Foundation

The Project Gutenberg Literary Archive Foundation is a non profit
501(c)(3) educational corporation organized under the laws of the
state of Mississippi and granted tax exempt status by the Internal
Revenue Service.  The Foundation's EIN or federal tax identification
number is 64-6221541.  Its 501(c)(3) letter is posted at
http://pglaf.org/fundraising.  Contributions to the Project Gutenberg
Literary Archive Foundation are tax deductible to the full extent
permitted by U.S. federal laws and your state's laws.

The Foundation's principal office is located at 4557 Melan Dr. S.
Fairbanks, AK, 99712., but its volunteers and employees are scattered
throughout numerous locations.  Its business office is located at
809 North 1500 West, Salt Lake City, UT 84116, (801) 596-1887, email
[email protected].  Email contact links and up to date contact
information can be found at the Foundation's web site and official
page at http://pglaf.org

For additional contact information:
     Dr. Gregory B. Newby
     Chief Executive and Director
     [email protected]


Section 4.  Information about Donations to the Project Gutenberg
Literary Archive Foundation

Project Gutenberg-tm depends upon and cannot survive without wide
spread public support and donations to carry out its mission of
increasing the number of public domain and licensed works that can be
freely distributed in machine readable form accessible by the widest
array of equipment including outdated equipment.  Many small donations
($1 to $5,000) are particularly important to maintaining tax exempt
status with the IRS.

The Foundation is committed to complying with the laws regulating
charities and charitable donations in all 50 states of the United
States.  Compliance requirements are not uniform and it takes a
considerable effort, much paperwork and many fees to meet and keep up
with these requirements.  We do not solicit donations in locations
where we have not received written confirmation of compliance.  To
SEND DONATIONS or determine the status of compliance for any
particular state visit http://pglaf.org

While we cannot and do not solicit contributions from states where we
have not met the solicitation requirements, we know of no prohibition
against accepting unsolicited donations from donors in such states who
approach us with offers to donate.

International donations are gratefully accepted, but we cannot make
any statements concerning tax treatment of donations received from
outside the United States.  U.S. laws alone swamp our small staff.

Please check the Project Gutenberg Web pages for current donation
methods and addresses.  Donations are accepted in a number of other
ways including checks, online payments and credit card donations.
To donate, please visit: http://pglaf.org/donate


Section 5.  General Information About Project Gutenberg-tm electronic
works.

Professor Michael S. Hart is the originator of the Project Gutenberg-tm
concept of a library of electronic works that could be freely shared
with anyone.  For thirty years, he produced and distributed Project
Gutenberg-tm eBooks with only a loose network of volunteer support.


Project Gutenberg-tm eBooks are often created from several printed
editions, all of which are confirmed as Public Domain in the U.S.
unless a copyright notice is included.  Thus, we do not necessarily
keep eBooks in compliance with any particular paper edition.


Most people start at our Web site which has the main PG search facility:

     http://www.gutenberg.org

This Web site includes information about Project Gutenberg-tm,
including how to make donations to the Project Gutenberg Literary
Archive Foundation, how to help produce our new eBooks, and how to
subscribe to our email newsletter to hear about new eBooks.