Skeel’s hand darted out to shut off the power. It was too late. The electro-gun coils burst from their housing in a shower of incandescent wire and metal, as a strong smell of ozone pervaded the ship. Skeel cursed in pain, clapping a hand to his arm where a white-hot strand of wire had struck.
“So that’s that!” he gritted fiercely. “Not close enough yet to use the Tynyte bombs.” There was nothing to do now but continue the chase, and Skeel saw that it wouldn’t last long. Indirectly ahead was a bright dot of sunlight which must have been an asteroid of considerable size. The pirate ship was veering, limping toward it on crippled rockets. Skeel followed, closing in fast. He was sure of his quarry now! When it came to close combat on these big rocks, he was a past master.
The rock loomed up. It was a big one all right, nearly twenty miles in diameter with dangerous plateaus and ugly serrated cliffs reaching up. The pirate seemed in pell-mell panic now. The black ship swung in perilously near, made one complete circuit of the rock and landed on a tiny plateau with a shallow sweep that must have sheared part of the under-hull away! Skeel brought his own cruiser down with ease, several hundred yards distant.
Even as he was adjusting his helmet and gravity plates, he glimpsed a space-suited figure leaping away from the black ship. Skeel exited quickly, snatched out his electro-pistol and took careful aim. He fired.
The distance was a little too great. The beam hacked down, cutting a shallow path in the rock immediately behind the running figure. The figure looked back but didn’t stop running. Skeel grunted and went leaping after it in long swinging strides. He was very casual and confident now. This was all so familiar….
Familiar? It was too darned familiar! Skeel stopped and shielded his eyes against the surface glare of sunlight. He stared at the low line of cliffs toward which the figure was running. A strange, insistent hammering seemed to pound away at Skeel’s brain. And then, with a little thrill he knew! This was the same asteroid where he had chased his last quarry, in circumstances very similar to this! Those might be the very cliffs where he had killed young—what was his name? Didn’t matter now.
Skeel leaped forward again. For a moment he kept the figure In sight, then it seemed to dissolve in the sunlight and disappear. That puzzled him, until he came very close and saw a little cave mouth in the bosom of the cliff. It was there his quarry had fled. Skeel chuckled deep in his throat. He loosened the gun in his belt. Swell! It was as good as over now. Whenever he got this close to the victim he stuck with it to the finish.
SKEEL stood just within the darkened cave, listening, pistol clutching in his corded hand. A narrow passage seemed to lead slightly downward. Far along it he saw a dim light glow that was not sunlight.
He made his way carefully toward that phenomenon. Soon the sides of the rocky cave were sprinkled with little flat creatures about the size of a silver dollar. They were miniature beacons, exuding light through their tenuous, transparent surfaces! Yet it wasn’t phosphorescence Skeel stopped to examine one of them. It was more like actual sunlight, but there was no heat. He touched one of them gingerly, the light immediately went out and it became the same gray color of the stone to which it clung.
Skeel plunged on. Soon the walls became thick with the blazing things. But as he ran by, the vibration of his leaden shoes seemed to frighten them. They blinked off, huge patches of them, remaining gray and quiescent ’til he had passed. Then they came on again. As a result he was running in a constant little patch of darkness, with light ahead and light behind, but always darkness where the reverberation of his pounding feet frightened the button-lichen things.
The tunnel turned and twisted, and several other large ones branched from it. There was no further sight of his quarry. Skeel moved more slowly now. He clicked on his helmet radio but heard no sound of receding feet. Nevertheless he knew his quarry had passed this way not many minutes before, because a few of the light-creatures ahead of him were blinking on again laggardly. Grim-lipped now, a weapon in hand, Skeel pressed on a little more slowly and watched and listened.
He stopped in a dim little grotto where three tunnel mouths gaped. He hesitated, then chose the tunnel to the left and proceeded along it with infinite caution. Still there was no sign his quarry had come this way. Skeel suddenly realized he had acted with foolhardy recklessness. This might be a trap! He started to turn back. “Stand right where you are!”
THE words rasped through his helmet phones and echoed in his ears. Something jabbed into his ribs with a viciousness that made him grunt.
Skeel slowly raised his arms but the voice rasped again:
“Don’t raise your hands! Drop them to your side. Slowly! That’s it. Now drop your gun.”
Skeel did so. The figure behind him swooped and picked it up.
“Now you can turn around.”
Skeel did that too, then expressed himself in three thunderous words. “Blazes! A female!”
“Sure. But don’t let it give you ideas.” She stepped back a pace keeping the two pistols carefully centered on him.
“A trick!” bellowed Skeel. “This is Anders’ work, I might have known it!”
“No. It’s my work.” Her voice was soft in the phones and her smile beneath the helmet was hardly a smile; it showed teeth, but they were no more gleaming than the ice-hard gleam in her blue eyes. “My work,” she repeated. “And now that you know I’m not the Lonely One, I shall tell you who I really am. The name’s Nadia Miller.”
She saw the dawn of realization in his eyes.
“Miller,” she said again slowly, savoring the word. “My brother was Arnold Miller—the man you killed.”
“Look here, Miss Miller, I’m afraid you’ve got this figured out wrong. I knew your brother, sure. I was after him. But I didn’t kill him, he fell off—”
“He fell off a cliff. I don’t doubt it, after you got through with him.” She gestured imperatively with the gun in her right hand. “All right, walk ahead of me. Move!”
Skeel shrugged and obeyed, watching the clusters of light-creatures blink off at the reverberation of their steps. For five minutes they continued in silence, in their continuous little patch of darkness. They made several turns as the tunnel angled sharply.
Finally Skeel said: “Where are you taking me?”
“Out to your Patrol cruiser. There you’ll sign a written confession or I’ll kill you. I almost hope you’ll refuse to sign it.”
“We won’t get out of here at this rate! I’m afraid you made a wrong turn to the left back there.”
“I don’t think so. Just keep moving, because if I bump into you one of these pistols might go off.”
SKEEL cursed but kept moving, because she sounded as though she meant it.
“That was a neat trick of yours,” he said, “coming clear through that rogue group of asteroids.”
“I thought so. Of course, I hoped you’d follow me and never come out of there.”
“Kind of a risky chance to take, wasn’t it?”
“It was worth it—even if it didn’t work out.”
“I don’t think this’ll work out either. We’re going in the wrong direction, back into the cliff instead of out.”
“Just keep moving.”
They walked on.
She called a stop at the next intersection, where a much narrower passage came into theirs at a sharp angle. She hesitated, looking around.
“I told you,” Skeel chuckled.
“You’re lost. You made two wrong turns, but luckily for us I noticed them. Want me to go back and show you?”
“No! Keep moving straight ahead.” She didn’t sound very confident.
This time Skeel didn’t move. “Listen,” he said grimly. “Do you realize it’ll soon be night out there? Maybe it’s come already!”
“Well?”
“Well!” he repeated in amazement, whirling to face her in the dim light. “Do you mean to say you aren’t familiar with a night on an asteroid? Especially a lone one this big?”
“What do you mean?”
“I mean that when night comes on these big rocks, strange things come out to greet it; creatures that stir and scramble out of the crevices, tentacular things that hate the sunlight but come out in the dark and are plenty dangerous! Usually the dark side of an asteroid is thick with ’em. This is one such asteroid. I’ve been here before.”
“You can’t frighten me.” But her little gasp belied the words. “Anyway, I’ve made up my mind. We’ll wait until morning.”
Now he laughed. “Morning? That’ll be ten hours from now. This planet has a very slow axial rotation. Know how much oxygen we have left in these tanks? About four hours’ worth. We haven’t time to stand here talking. I’m going to try to make it back out to the cruiser. You can do as you please.”
Ignoring the weapons in her hands, Skeel strode past her. She hesitated a split second, then followed. She knew he was right about the oxygen, but wondered how much of the rest he