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"I know that, Glaudot. I'm only trying to point out that each world must be considered as unique. Each world presents its own problems, which--"
"I say this is like Harfonte all over again. I say if you'd had the guts to land right smack in the middle of that Indian village, you'd have seen for yourself. I say to play it close to the vest is ridiculous,"
Glaudot said, and then smiled deprecatingly. "Begging your pardon, of course, Captain. But don't you see, man, you've got to show the extraterrestrials, whatever form they take, that Earthmen aren't afraid of them."
"Caution and fear aren't the same thing," Purcell insisted. He didn't know why he bothered to explain this to Glaudot. Perhaps it was because Ensign Chandler, youngest man in the exploration party, was in the lounge listening to them. Chandler was a nice kid, clean-cut and right out of the finest tradition of Earth, but Chandler was, like all boys barely out of their teens, impressionable. He was particularly impressionable in these, his first months in s.p.a.ce.
"When you're cautious it's as much to protect the natives as yourself,"
Purcell went on, and then put into simple words what Glaudot and Chandler should have learned at the Academy for Exploration, anyway.
When he finished, Glaudot shrugged and asked: "What do you think, Ensign Chandler?"
Chandler blushed slowly. "I--I'd rather not say," he told them. "Captain Purcell is--the captain."
Glaudot smiled his triumph at Purcell. It was then, for the first time, that Purcell's dislike for the man became intense. Purcell wondered how long he'd been poisoning the youth's mind against the doctrines of the Academy.
Just then a light glowed in the bulkhead and a metallic voice intoned: "Prepare for landing. Prepare for landing at once."
Purcell, striding to his blast-hammock, told Glaudot, who was the expedition's exec, "I'll want the landing party ready to move half an hour after planetfall."
"Yes, sir," said Glaudot eagerly. At least there was something they agreed on.
"Men," Purcell told the small landing party as they a.s.sembled near the main airlock thirty-five minutes later, "we have an obligation to our civilization which I hope all of you understand. While here on this unknown world we must do nothing to bring discredit to the name of Earth and the galactic culture which Earth represents."
They had all seen the bleak moon-like landscape through the viewports.
They were eager to get out there and plant the flag of Earth and determine what the new world was like. There were only eight of them in the first landing party: others would follow once the eight established a preliminary base of operations. The eight were wearing the new-style, light-weight s.p.a.cesuits which all exploration parties used even though the temperature and atmosphere of the new world seemed close enough to Earth-norm. It had long ago been decided at the Academy that chances couldn't be taken with some unknown factor, possibly toxic, fatal and irreversible, in an unknown atmosphere. After a day or two of thorough laboratory a.n.a.lysis of the air they'd be able to chuck their s.p.a.cesuits if all went well.
They filed through the airlock silently, Purcell first with the flag of Earth, then Glaudot, then the others. White faces watched from the viewport as they clomped across the convoluted terrain.
"n.o.body here but us chickens!" Glaudot said, and he laughed, after they had walked some way across the desolate landscape. "But then, what did you expect? Captain took us clear of all the more promising places."
The man's only motive, Purcell decided, was his colossal ego. He made no reply: that would be descending to Glaudot's level.
After they walked almost entirely across the low-walled crater in which the exploration s.h.i.+p had come down, and after Purcell had planted the flag on the highest pinnacle within the low crater walls, Glaudot said:
"How's about taking a look-see over the top, Captain? At least that much."
Purcell wasn't in favor of the idea. It would mean leaving sight of the s.h.i.+p too soon. But the radio voices of most of the men indicated that they agreed with Glaudot, so Purcell shrugged and said a pair of volunteers could go, if they promised to rejoin the main party within two hours.
Glaudot immediately volunteered. That at least made sense. Glaudot had the courage of his convictions. Several others volunteered, but the first hand up had been Ensign Chandler's.
"I don't want to sound like a martinet," Purcell told them. "But you understand that by two hours I mean two hours. Not a minute more."
"Yes, sir," Chandler said.
"Glaudot?"
"Yes, sir," the Executive Officer replied.
"All right," Purcell said. He walked over to the first of the big magna-sleds piled high with equipment. "We'll be setting up the base camp over here. I know the men still in the s.h.i.+p will want to stretch their legs soon as possible. We don't want to have to go looking for you, Glaudot."
"Not me, Captain," Glaudot a.s.sured him, and walked off toward the crater rim with young Ensign Chandler.
"What the devil was that?" Chandler said forty-five minutes later.
"Stop jumping at every shadow you see. Relax."
"I thought I saw something moving behind that rock."
"So, go take a look."
"But--"
"h.e.l.l, boy, don't let that Purcell put the fear of the unknown into you on your very first trip out. Huh, what do you say?"
"Yes, sir, Mr. Glaudot," Ensign Chandler replied.
"After all," Glaudot went on, "we have nothing to be afraid of. We're still within sight of the s.h.i.+p."
Chandler turned around. "I don't see it," he said.
"From the top of that rock you could."
"Think so?"
"Sure I do. Why don't you take a look if it will make you feel better?"
"All right," Chandler said, and smiled at his own temerity. But he knew vaguely that he'd been caught in a crossfire between the cautious Purcell and the bold, arrogant Glaudot. Sometimes he really thought that the Captain's caution made sense: on Wulcreston, he'd learned at the Academy, a whole Earth expedition had been slaughtered before contact because the natives mistook hand telescopes for weapons. And surely on any world a s.p.a.cesuited man looked more like a monster than a man although he was vulnerable in a s.p.a.cesuit, even more vulnerable than a naked man because he could only run awkwardly.
All this Chandler thought as he climbed the high rock rampart. He'd send a subs.p.a.ce letter back to the folks tonight, sure enough, he told himself. Not only had he been chosen for the preliminary exploration party, he'd made the first trip out of sight of the s.p.a.ces.h.i.+p. It certainly was something to write home about, and Mom would be very proud ...
He was on top of the rock now. The vast tortuous landscape spread out below him like a relief map in a mapmaker's nightmare. Far to his left, beyond Glaudot's s.p.a.cesuited figure, he could see the projectile-shaped s.p.a.ces.h.i.+p resting on its tail fins. And to his right--
He stared. He gawked.
At the last moment he tried to get down from the rock, but his s.p.a.ceboot caught on an outcropping and his fatal mistake was standing upright in an attempt to free it.
Then all at once in a blinding burst of pain he was clutching at something in his chest but knew as his life ebbed rapidly from his young body that it would not matter if he was able to pull the cruel shaft out....
Glaudot went rus.h.i.+ng up the side of the rock. He still couldn't believe his eyes. Ensign Chandler had been impaled by two long feathered shafts, two arrows. The force of the first one had spun Chandler around and he lay now with his back arched across the topmost ramparts of the rock, two arrows protruding from his chest and his life blood, starkly crimson against the white of the s.p.a.cesuit, pouring out.
Reaching the top of the rock in an attempt to drag the dying boy down, Glaudot saw the Indians rus.h.i.+ng up the other side of the crater wall.
Indians, he thought incredulously. Indians, as in the American West hundreds of years ago. Indians ... But just what the h.e.l.l were they doing here?