Astounding Stories of Super-Science, October, 1930 - LightNovelsOnl.com
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But it would not yield. A gas torch would melt this outer seal. Was there a torch here at Sp.a.w.n's? But I had no time to search for a torch! Or a bar with which to ram this door--
A panic seized me, with the fresh realization that any instant De Boer and his men would arrive. I beat with futile fists on the door, and Jetta from within, calling to me to get away before I was caught.
This accursed door between us!
And then--after no more than half a minute, doubtless--I thought of the window. My momentary panic left me. I dashed to the window oval.
Sealed. But the shutter curtain, and the gla.s.site pane behind it, were fragile.
"Jetta, are you near the window?"
"No. On the bed. They have tied me."
"Look out; I'm breaking through!"
There were loose rocks, as large as my head, set to mark the garden path. I seized one and hurled it. With a crash it went through the window and fell to the floor of the room. A jagged hole showed.
"All right, Jetta?"
"Yes! Yes, Philip."
I squirmed through the oval and dropped to the floor. My arms were cut from the jagged gla.s.site, though I did not know it then. It was dim inside the room, but I could see the outline of the bed with her lying on it.
Her ankles and wrists were tied. I cut the cords with my knife.
She was gasping. "They're planning to capture you. Philip! You should not be here! Get away!"
"Yes. But I'm going to take you with me. Can you stand up?"
I set her on her feet in the center of the room. A shaft of moonlight was coming through the hole in the window.
"Philip! You're bleeding!"
"It is nothing. Cut myself on the gla.s.site. Can you stand alone?"
"Yes."
But her legs, stiffened and numb from having been bound so many hours, bent under her. I caught her as she was falling.
"I'll be--all right in a minute. But Philip, if you stay here--"
"You're going with me!"
"Oh!"
I could carry her, if she could not run. But it would be slow; and it would be difficult to get her through the window. And on the street we would attract too much attention.
"Jetta, try to stand. Stamp your feet. I'll hold you."
I steadied her. Then I bent down, chafing her legs with my hands. Her arms had been limp, but the blood was in them now. She murmured with the tingling pain, and then bent over, frantically helping me rub the circulation back into her legs.
"Better?"
"Yes." She took a weak and trembling step.
"Wait. Let me rub them more, Jetta."
Precious minutes!
"I'll knock out the rest of the window with that rock! We'll run; we'll be out of here in a moment."
"Run where?"
"Away. Into hiding--out of all this. The United States patrol-s.h.i.+p is coming from Porto Rico. It will take us from here."
"Where?"
"Away. To Great New York, maybe. Away from all this; from that old fossil, Perona."
I was stooping beside her.
"I'm all right now, Philip."
I rose up, and suddenly found myself clasping her in my arms; her slight body in the boy's ragged garb pressed against me.
"Jetta, dear, do you trust me? Will you come?"
"Yes. Oh, yes--anywhere, Philip, with you."
For only a breathless instant I lingered, holding her. Then I cast her off and seized the rock from the floor. The jagged gla.s.site fell away under my blows.
"Now, Jetta. I'll go first--"
But it was too late! I stopped, stricken by the sound of a voice outside!
"He's there! In the girl's room! That's her window!"
Cautious voices in the garden! The thud of approaching footsteps.
I shoved Jetta back and rushed to the broken window oval. The figures of De Boer and his men showed in the moonlight across the patio. They had heard me breaking the gla.s.site. And they saw me, now.
"There he is, De Boer!"