Robert Silverberg - Starman's Quest
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- Название:Starman's Quest
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- Издательство:Gnome Press
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- Год:1958
- ISBN:нет данных
- Рейтинг книги:3 / 5. Голосов: 1
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Alan looked at Hawkes in alarm. “What happened to him? Why’d he pass out?”
Hawkes smiled knowingly. “An ancient Earth beverage known as the Mickey Finn. Two drops of a synthetic enzyme in his drink; tasteless, but extremely effective. He’ll be asleep for ten hours or more.”
“How’d you arrange it?”
“I told the bartender it was in a good cause, and he believed me. You wait here, now. I want to talk to that Bryson man about your brother’s debts, and then we’ll spirit him out to the spaceport and dump him aboard the Valhalla before he wakes up.”
Alan grinned. He was going to have to do some explaining to Steve later, but by that time it would be too late; the starship would be well on its way to Procyon. It was a dirty trick to play, he thought, but it was justifiable. In Hawkes’ words, it was in a good cause.
Alan put his arms around his brother’s shoulders and gently lifted him out of the chair; Steve was surprisingly light, for all his lack of condition. Evidently muscle weighed more than fat, and Steve had gone to fat. Supporting his brother’s bulk without much trouble, Alan made his way toward the entrance to the bar. As he went past the bartender, the old man smiled at him. Alan wondered what Hawkes had said to him.
Right now Hawkes was three booths up, leaning over and taking part in an urgent whispered conference with a thin dark-faced man in a sharply tailored suit. They reached some sort of agreement; there was a handshake. Then Hawkes left the booth and slung one of Steve’s dangling arms around his own shoulder, easing the weight.
“There’s an Undertube that takes us as far as Carhill Boulevard and the bridge,” Hawkes said. “We can get a ground vehicle there that’ll go on through the Enclave and out to the spacefield.”
The trip took nearly an hour. Steve sat propped up between Alan and Hawkes, and every now and then his head would loll to one side or another, and he would seem to be stirring; but he never woke. The sight of two men dragging a third along between them attracted not the slightest attention as they left the Undertube and climbed aboard the spacefield bus. Apparently in York City no one cared much about what went on; it made no difference to the busy Earthers whether Steve were unconscious or dead.
The ground bus took them over the majestic arch of the bridge, rapidly through the sleepy Enclave—Alan saw nobody he recognized in the streets—and through the restricted area that led to the spacefield.
The spaceport was a jungle of ships, each standing on its tail waiting to blast off. Most of them were small two-man cargo vessels, used in travel between Earth and the colonies on the Moon, Mars, and Pluto, but here and there a giant starship loomed high above the others. Alan stood on tiptoes to search for the golden hull of the Valhalla , but he was unable to see it. Since the starship would be blasting off at the end of the week, he knew the crew was probably already at work on it, shaping it up for the trip. He belonged on it too.
He saw a dark green starship standing nearby; the Encounter , Kevin Quantrell’s ship. Men were moving about busily near the big ship, and Alan remembered that it had become obsolete during its last long voyage, and was being rebuilt.
A robot came sliding up to the three of them as they stood there at the edge of the landing field.
“Can I help you, please?”
“I’m from the starship Valhalla ,” Alan said. “I’m returning to the ship. Would you take me to the ship, please?”
“Of course.”
Alan turned to Hawkes. The moment had come, much too suddenly. Alan felt Rat twitching at his cuff, as if reminding him of something.
Grinning awkwardly, Alan said, “I guess this is the end of the line, Max. You’d better not go out on the spacefield with us. I—I sort of want to thank you for all the help you’ve given me. I never would have found Steve without you. And about the bet we made—well, it looks like I’m going back on my ship after all, so I’ve won a thousand credits from you. But I can’t ask for it, of course. Not after what you did for Steve.”
He extended his hand. Hawkes took it, but he was smiling strangely.
“If I owed you the money, I’d pay it to you,” the gambler said. “That’s the way I work. The seven thousand I paid for Steve is extra and above everything else. But you haven’t won that bet yet. You haven’t won it until the Valhalla’s in space with you aboard it.”
The robot made signs of impatience. Hawkes said, “You’d better convoy your brother across the field and dump him on his ship. Save the goodbyes for later. I’ll wait right here for you. Right here.”
Alan shook his head. “Sorry, Max, but you’re wasting your time by waiting. The Valhalla has to be readied for blastoff, and once I check in aboard ship I can’t come back to visit. So this is goodbye, right here.”
“We’ll see about that,” Hawkes said. “Ten to one odds.”
“Ten to one,” Alan said. “And you’ve lost your bet.” But his voice did not sound very convincing, and as he started off across the field with Steve dragging along beside him he frowned, and did some very intense thinking indeed in the few minutes’ time it took him to arrive at the shining Valhalla . He was beginning to suspect that Hawkes might be going to win the bet after all.
Chapter Twelve
He felt a little emotional pang, something like nostalgia, as the Valhalla came into sight, standing by itself tall and proud at the far end of the field. A cluster of trucks buzzed around it, transferring fuel, bringing cargo. He spotted the wiry figure of Dan Kelleher, the cargo chief, supervising and shouting salty instructions to the perspiring men.
Alan tightened his grip on Steve’s arm and moved forward. Kelleher shouted, “You men back there, tighten up on that winch and give ’er a hoist! Tighten up, I say! Put some muscle into—” He broke off. “Alan,” he said, in a quiet voice.
“Hello, Dan. Is my father around?”
Kelleher was staring with frank curiosity at the slumped figure of Steve Donnell. “The Captain’s off watch now. Art Kandin’s in charge.”
“Thanks,” Alan said. “I’d better go see him.”
“Sure. And—”
Alan nodded. “Yes. That’s Steve.”
He passed between the cargo hoists and clambered onto the escalator rampway that led to the main body of the ship. It rose, conveying him seventy feet upward and through the open passenger hatch to the inner section of the towering starship.
He was weary from having carried Steve so long. He put the sleeping form down against a window-seat facing one of the viewscreens, and said to Rat, “You stay here and keep watch. If anyone wants to know who he is, tell them the truth.”
“Right enough.”
Alan found Art Kandin where he expected to find him—in the Central Control Room, posting work assignments for the blastoff tomorrow. The lanky, pudgy-faced First Officer hardly noticed as Alan stepped up beside him.
“Art?”
Kandin turned—and went pale. “Oh—Alan. Where in blazes have you been the last two days?”
“Out in the Earther city. Did my father make much of a fuss?”
The First Officer shook his head. “He kept saying you just went out to see the sights, that you hadn’t really jumped ship. But he kept saying it over and over again, as if he didn’t really believe it, as if he wanted to convince himself you were coming back.”
“Where is he now?”
“In his cabin. He’s off-watch for the next hour or two. I’ll ring him up and have him come down here, I guess.”
Alan shook his head. “No—don’t do that. Tell him to meet me on B Deck.” He gave the location of the picture-viewscreen where he had parked Steve, and Kandin shrugged and agreed.
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