<h2>CHAPTER III</h2>
<h3>Fleet Against Planetoid</h3>
<p>One of the newest and fleetest of the Law Enforcement Vessels of the
Triplanetary League, the heavy cruiser <i>Chicago</i>, of the North
American Division of the Tellurian Contingent, plunged stolidly through
interplanetary vacuum. For five long weeks she had patrolled her
allotted volume of space. In another week she would report back to the
city whose name she bore, where her space-weary crew, worn by their long
"trick" in the awesomely oppressive depths of the limitless void, would
enjoy to the full their fortnight of refreshing planetary leave.</p>
<p>She was performing certain routine tasks--charting meteorites,
watching for derelicts and other obstructions to navigation, checking in
constantly with all scheduled space-ships in case of need, and so
on--but primarily she was a warship. She was a mighty engine of
destruction, hunting for the unauthorized vessels of whatever power or
planet it was, that had not only defied the Triplanetary League, but
were evidently attempting to overthrow it; attempting to plunge the
Three Planets back into the ghastly sink of bloodshed and destruction
from which they had so recently emerged. Every space-ship within range
of her powerful detectors was represented by two brilliant, slowly
moving points of light; one upon a great micrometer screen, the other in
the "tank"--the immense, three-dimensional, minutely cubed model of the
entire Solar System.</p>
<p>A brilliantly intense red light flared upon a panel and a bell
clanged brazenly the furious signals of the sector alarm. Simultaneously
a speaker roared forth its message of a ship in dire peril.</p>
<p>"Sector alarm! N. A. T. <i>Hyperion</i> gassed with Vee-Two. Nothing
detectable in space, but...."</p>
<p>The half-uttered message was drowned out in a crackling roar of
meaningless noise, the orderly signals of the bell became a hideous
clamor, and the two points of light which had marked the location of the
liner disappeared in widely spreading flashes of the same high-powered
interference. Observers, navigators, and control officers were alike
dumfounded. Even the captain, in the shell-proof, shock-proof, and
doubly ray-proof retreat of his conning compartment, was equally at a
loss. No ship or thing could <i>possibly</i> be close enough to be
sending out interfering waves of such tremendous power--yet there they
were!</p>
<p>"Maximum acceleration, straight for the point where
the <i>Hyperion</i> was when her tracers went out," the captain ordered,
and through the fringe of that widespread interference he drove a solid
beam, reporting concisely to G. H. Q. Almost instantly the emergency
call-out came roaring in--every vessel of the Sector, of whatever class
or tonnage, was to concentrate upon the point in space where the
ill-fated liner had last been known to be.</p>
<p>Hour after hour the great globe drove on at maximum acceleration,
captain and every control officer alert and at high tension. But in the
Quartermaster's Department, deep down below the generator rooms, no
thought was given to such minor matters as the disappearance of
a <i>Hyperion</i>. The inventory did not balance, and two Q. M. privates
were trying, profanely, and without much success, to find the
discrepancy.</p>
<p>"Charged cells for model DF Lewistons, none requisitioned, on hand
eighteen thous...." The droning voice broke off short in the middle of a
word and the private stood rigid, in the act of reaching for another
slip, every faculty concentrated upon something, imperceptible to his
companion.</p>
<p>"Come on, Cleve--snap it up!" the second commanded, but was silenced
by a vicious wave of the listener's hand.</p>
<p>"What!" the rigid one exclaimed. "Reveal ourselves! Why, it's ... Oh,
all right.... Oh, that's it.... Uh-huh.... I see.... Yes, I've got it
solid. Maybe I'll see you again some time. If not, so long!"</p>
<p>The inventory sheets fell unheeded from his hand, and his fellow
private stared after him in amazement as he strode over to the desk of
the officer in charge. That officer also stared as the hitherto
easy-going and gold-bricking Cleve saluted briskly, showed him something
flat in the palm of his left hand, and spoke.</p>
<p>"I've just got some of the funniest orders ever put out,
Lieutenant"--his voice was low and intense--"but they came from 'way,
'way up. I'm to join the brass hats in the Center. You'll know about it
directly, I imagine. Cover me up as much as you can, will you?" And he
was gone.</p>
<p>Unchallenged he made his way to the control room, and his curt
"urgent report for the Captain" admitted him there without question. But
when he approached the sacred precincts of the Captain's own and
inviolate room, he was stopped in no uncertain fashion by no less a
personage than the Officer of the Day.</p>
<p>" ... and report yourself under arrest immediately!" the O. D.
concluded his brief but pointed speech.</p>
<p>"You were right in stopping me, of course," the intruder conceded,
unmoved. "I wanted to get in there without giving everything away, if
possible, but it seems that I can't. Well, I've been ordered by Virgil
Samms to report to the Captain, at once. See this? Touch it!" He held
out a flat, insulated disk, cover thrown back to reveal a tiny golden
meteor, at the sight of which the officer's truculent manner altered
markedly.</p>
<p>"I've heard of them, of course, but I never saw one before," and the
officer touched the shining symbol lightly with his finger, jerking
backward involuntarily as there shot through his whole body a thrilling
surge of power, shouting into his very bones an unpronounceable
syllable--the password of the Secret Service. "Genuine or not, it gets
you to the Captain. He'll know, and if it's a fake you'll be breathing
space in five minutes."</p>
<p>Projector at the ready, the Officer of the Day followed Cleve into
the Holy of Holies. There the grizzled four-striper touched the golden
meteor lightly, then drove his piercing gaze deep into the unflinching
eyes of the younger man. But that captain had won his high rank neither
by accident nor by "pull"--he understood at once.</p>
<p>"It <i>must</i> be an emergency," he growled, half-audibly, still
staring at his lowly Q. M. clerk, "to make Samms uncover his whole
organization." He turned and curtly dismissed the wondering O. D. Then:
"All right! Out with it!"</p>
<p>"Serious enough so that every one of us afloat has just received
orders to reveal himself to his commanding officer and to anyone else,
if necessary to reach that officer at once--orders never before issued.
The enemy have been located. They have built a base, and have ships
better than our best. Base and ships cannot be seen nor detected by any
ether wave. However, the Service has been experimenting for years with a
new type of communicator beam; and, while pretty crude yet, it was given
to us when the <i>Dione</i> went out without leaving a trace. One of our
men was in the <i>Hyperion</i>, managed to stay alive, and has been
sending data. I am instructed to attach my new phone set to one of the
universal plates in your conning room, and to see what I can find."</p>
<p>"Go to it!" The captain waved his hand and the operative bent to his
task.</p>
<p>"Commanders of all vessels of the Fleet!" The Headquarters speaker,
receiver sealed upon the wave-length of the Admiral of the Fleet, broke
the long silence. "All vessels, in sectors L to R, inclusive, will
interlock location signals. Some of you have received, or will receive
shortly, certain communications from sources which need not be
mentioned. Those commanders will at once send out red K4 screens.
Vessels so marked will act as temporary flagships. Unmarked vessels will
proceed at maximum to the nearest flagship, grouping about it in
regulation squadron cone in order of arrival. Squadrons most distant
from objective point designated by flagship observers will proceed
toward it at maximum; squadrons nearest it will decelerate or reverse
velocity--that point must not be approached until full Fleet formation
has been accomplished. Heavy and Light Cruisers of all other sectors
inside the orbit of Mars ..." the orders went on, directing the
mobilization of the stupendous forces of the League, so that they would
be in readiness in the highly improbable event of the failure of the
massed power of seven sectors to reduce the pirate base.</p>
<p>In those seven sectors perhaps a dozen vessels threw out enormous
spherical screens of intense red light, and as they did so their tracer
points upon all the interlocked lookout plates also became ringed about
with red. Toward those crimson markers the pilots of the unmarked
vessels directed their courses at their utmost power; and while the
white lights upon the lookout plates moved slowly toward and clustered
about the red ones--the ultra-instruments of the Secret Service
operatives were probing into space, sweeping the neighborhood of the
computed position of the pirate's stronghold.</p>
<p>But the object sought was so far away that the small spy-ray sets of
the Secret Service men, intended as they were for close-range work, were
unable to make contact with the invisible planetoid for which they were
seeking. In the captain's sanctum of the <i>Chicago</i>, the operative
studied his plate for only a minute or two, then shut off his power and
fell into a brown study, from which he was rudely aroused.</p>
<p>"Aren't you even going to <i>try</i> to find them?" demanded the
captain.</p>
<p>"No," Cleve returned shortly. "No use--not half enough power or
control. I'm trying to think ... maybe ... say, Captain, will you please
have the Chief Electrician and a couple of radio men come in here?"</p>
<p>They came, and for hours, while the other ultra-wave men searched the
apparently empty ether with their ineffective beams, the three technical
experts and the erstwhile Quartermaster's clerk labored upon a huge and
complex ultra-wave projector--the three blindly and with doubtful
questions; the one with sure knowledge at least of what he was trying to
do. Finally the thing was done, the crude but efficient graduated
circles were set, and the tubes glowed redly as their solidly massed
output was driving into a tight beam of ultra-vibration. "There it is,
sir," Cleve reported, after some ten minutes of delicate manipulation,
and the vast structure of the miniature world flashed into being upon
his plate. "You may notify the fleet--co-ordinates H 11.62, RA
124-31-16, and Dx about 173.2."</p>
<p>The report made and the assistants out of the room, the captain
turned to the observer and saluted gravely.</p>
<p>"We have always known, sir, that the Service had <i>men</i>; but I
had no idea that any one man could possibly do, on the spur of the
moment, what you have just done--unless that man happened to be Lyman
Cleveland."</p>
<p>"Oh, it doesn't ..." the observer began, but broke off, muttering
unintelligibly at intervals; then swung the visiray beam toward the
earth. Soon a face appeared upon the plate, the keen but careworn face
of Virgil Samms!</p>
<p>"Hello, Lyman." His voice came clearly from the speaker, and the
Captain gasped--his ultra-wave observer and sometime clerk was Lyman
Cleveland himself, probably the greatest living expert in beam
transmission! "I knew that you'd do something, if it could be done. How
about it--can the others install similar sets on their ships? I'm
betting that they can't."</p>
<p>"Probably not," Cleveland frowned in thought. "This is a patchwork
affair, made of gunny-sacks and hay-wire. I'm holding it together by
main strength and awkwardness, and even at that it's apt to go to pieces
any minute."</p>
<p>"Can you rig it up for photography?"</p>
<p>"I think so. Just a minute--yes, I can. Why?"</p>
<p>"Because there's something going on out there that neither we nor the
so-called pirates know anything about. The Admiralty seems to think that
it's the Jovians again, but we don't see how it can be--if it is, they
have developed a lot of stuff that none of our agents has even
suspected," and he recounted briefly what Costigan had reported to him,
concluding: "Then there was a burst of interference--on
the <i>ultra-band</i>, mind you--and I've heard nothing from him since.
Therefore I want you to stay out of the battle entirely. Stay as far
away from it as you can and still get good pictures of everything that
happens. I will see that orders are issued to the <i>Chicago</i> to that
effect."</p>
<p>"But listen...."</p>
<p>"Those are orders!" snapped Samms. "It is of the utmost importance
that we know every detail of what is going to happen. The answer is
pictures. The only possibility of obtaining pictures is that machine you
have just developed. If the fleet wins, nothing will be lost. If the
fleet loses--and I am not half as confident of success as the Admiral
is--the <i>Chicago</i> doesn't carry enough power to decide the issue,
and we will have the pictures to study, which is all-important. Besides,
we've probably lost Conway Costigan to-day, and we don't want to
lose <i>you</i>, too."</p>
<p>Cleveland remained silent, pondering this startling news, but the
grizzled Captain, veteran of the Fourth Jovian War that he was, was not
convinced.</p>
<p>"We'll blow them out of space, Mr. Samms!" he declared.</p>
<p>"You just think you will, Captain. I have suggested, as forcibly as
possible, that the general attack be withheld until after a thorough
investigation is made, but the Admiralty will not listen. They see the
advisability of withdrawing a camera ship, but that is as far as they
will go."</p>
<p>"And that's plenty far enough!" growled the <i>Chicago's</i>
commander, as the beam snapped off. "Mr. Cleveland, I don't like the
idea of running away under fire, and I won't do it without direct orders
from the Admiral."</p>
<p>"Of course you won't--that's why you are going...."</p>
<p>He was interrupted by a voice from the Headquarters speaker. The
captain stepped up to the plate and, upon being recognized, he received
the exact orders which had been requested by the Chief of the Secret
Service--now not as secret as it had been heretofore.</p>
<p>Thus it was that the <i>Chicago</i> reversed her acceleration, cut
off her red screen, and fell rapidly behind, while the vessels following
her in their loose cone formation shot away toward another
crimson-flaring leader. Farther and farther back she dropped, back to
the limiting range of the ultra-cameras upon which Cleveland and his
highly trained assistants were furiously and unremittingly at work. And
during all this time the forces of the seven sectors had been
concentrating. The pilot vessels, with their flaming red screens, each
followed by a cone of space-ships, drew closer and closer together,
approaching the <i>Fearless</i>--the British super-dreadnaught which was
to be the flagship of the Fleet--the mightiest and heaviest space-ship
which had yet lifted her stupendous mass into the ether.</p>
<p>Now, systematically and precisely, the great Cone of Battle was
coming into being; a formation developed during the Jovian Wars while
the forces of the Three Planets were fighting in space for their very
civilizations' existence, and one never used since the last space-fleets
of Jupiter's murderous hordes had been wiped out.</p>
<p>The mouth of that enormous hollow cone was a ring of scout patrols,
the smallest and most agile vessels of the fleet. Behind them came a
somewhat smaller ring of light cruisers, then rings of heavy cruisers
and of light battleships, and finally of heavy battleships. At the apex
of the cone, protected by all the other vessels of the formation and in
best position to direct the battle, was the flagship. In this formation
every vessel was free to use her every weapon, with a minimum of danger
to her sister ships; and yet, when the gigantic main projectors were
operated along the axis of the formation, from the entire vast circle of
the cone's mouth there flamed a cylindrical field of force of such
intolerable intensity that in it no conceivable substance could endure
for a moment!</p>
<p>The artificial planet of metal was now close enough so that it was
visible to the ultra-vision of the Secret Service men, so plainly
visible that the warships of the pirates were seen issuing from the
enormous air-locks. As each vessel shot out into space it sped straight
for the approaching fleet without waiting to go into any formation--gray
Roger believed his structures invisible to Triplanetary eyes, thought
that the presence of the fleet was the result of mathematical
calculations, and was convinced that his mighty vessels of the void
would destroy even that vast fleet without themselves becoming known. He
was wrong. The foremost globes were allowed actually to enter the mouth
of that conical trap before an offensive move was made. Then the
vice-admiral in command of the fleet touched a button, and
simultaneously every generator in every Triplanetary vessel burst into
furious activity. Instantly the hollow volume of the immense cone became
a coruscating hell of resistless energy, an inferno which, with the
velocity of light, extended itself into a far-reaching cylinder of
rapacious destruction. Ether-waves they were, it is true, but vibrations
driven with such fierce intensity that the screens of deflection
surrounding the pirate vessels could not handle even a fraction of their
awful power. Invisibility lost, their defensive screens flared briefly;
but even the enormous force backing Roger's inventions, greater far than
that of any single Triplanetary vessel, could not hold off the
incredible violence of the massed attack of the hundreds of mighty
vessels composing the Fleet. Their defensive screens flared briefly,
then went down; their great spherical hulls first glowing red, then
shining white, then in a brief moment exploding into flying masses of
red hot, molten, and gaseous metal.</p>
<p>A full two-thirds of Roger's force was caught in that raging,
incandescent beam; caught and obliterated: but the remainder did not
retreat to the planetoid. Darting out around the edge of the cone at a
stupendous acceleration, they attacked its flanks and the engagement
became general. But now, since enough beams were kept upon each ship of
the enemy so that invisibility could not be restored, each Triplanetary
war vessel could attack with full efficiency. Magnesium flares and
star-shells illuminated space for a thousand miles, and from every unit
of both fleets was being hurled every item of solid, explosive, and
vibratory destruction known to the highly scientific warfare of that
age. Offensive beams, rods and daggers of frightful power struck and
were neutralized by defensive screens equally capable; the long range
and furious dodging made ordinary solid or high-explosive projectiles
useless; and both sides were filling all space with such a volume of
blanketing frequencies that such radio-dirigible torpedoes as were
launched could not be controlled, but darted madly and erratically
hither and thither, finally to be exploded harmlessly in mid-space by
the touch of some fiercely insistent, probing beam of force.</p>
<p>Individually, however, the pirate vessels were far more powerful than
those of the fleet, and that superiority soon began to make itself felt.
The power of the smaller ships began to fail as their accumulators
became discharged under the awful drain of the battle, and vessel after
vessel of the Triplanetary fleet was hurled into nothingness by the
concentrated blasts of the pirates' rays. But the Triplanetary forces
had one great advantage. In furious haste the Secret Service men had
been altering the controls of the radio-dirigible torpedoes, so that
they would respond to ultra-wave control; and, few in number though they
were, each was highly effective.</p>
<p>A hard-eyed observer, face almost against his plate and both hands
and both feet manipulating controls, hurled the first torpedo.
Propelling rockets viciously aflame, it twisted and looped around the
incandescent rods of destruction so thickly and starkly outlined, under
perfect control; unaffected by the hideous distortion of all ether-borne
signals. Through a pirate screen it went, and under the terrific blast
of its detonation one entire panel of the stricken battleship vanished,
crumpled and broken. It should have been out, cold--but, to the
amazement of the observers, it kept on fighting with scarcely lessened
power! Three more of the frightful space-bombs had to be exploded in
it--it had to be reduced to junk--before its terrible rays went out; Not
a man in that great fleet had even an inkling of the truth; that those
great vessels, those terrible engines of destruction, did not contain a
single living creature: that they were manned and fought by automatons;
robots controlled by keen-eyed, space-hardened veterans inside the
planetoid so distant by means of tight, interference-proof communicator
beams!</p>
<p>But they were to receive an inkling of it. As ship after ship of the
pirate fleet was blown to pieces, Roger realized that his navy was
beaten, and forthwith all his surviving vessels darted toward the apex
of the cone, where the heaviest battleships were stationed. There each
hurled itself upon a Triplanetary warship, crashing to its own
destruction, but in that destruction insuring the loss of one of the
heaviest vessels of the enemy. Thus passed the <i>Fearless</i>, and
twenty of the finest space-ships of the fleet as well. But the ranking
officer assumed command, the war-cone was re-formed, and, yawning maw to
the fore, the great formation shot toward the pirate stronghold, now
near at hand. It again launched its stupendous cylinder of annihilation,
but even as the mighty defensive screens of the planetoid flared into
incandescently furious defense, the battle was interrupted and pirates
and Triplanetarians learned alike that they were not alone in the
ether.</p>
<p>Space became suffused with a redly impenetrable opacity, and through
that indescribable pall there came reaching huge arms of force
incredible; writhing, coruscating beams of power which glowed a baleful,
although almost imperceptible, red. A vessel of unheard-of armament and
power, hailing from a distant solar system of the Galaxy, had come to
rest in that space. For months her commander had been investigating sun
after sun in quest of one precious substance. Now his detectors had
found it; and, feeling neither fear of Triplanetarian weapons nor
reluctance to sacrifice those thousands of Triplanetarian lives, he was
about to take it!</p>
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