Part 26 (1/2)
”I know what Arkalion said, but we haven't learned anything yet.”
Hours before, Arkalion had landed them on the s.p.a.ce station, a gleaming, five-mile in diameter globe, and had quickly departed. Soon after that they had found themselves in a veritable labyrinth of tunnels, pa.s.sageways, vaults. Occasionally they pa.s.sed a great glowing screen, and always the view of s.p.a.ce was the same. Like a magnificent, elongated s.h.i.+eld, sparkling with a million million points of light, pale gold, burnished copper, blue of glacial ice and silver white, the Andromeda Galaxy spanned s.p.a.ce from upper right to lower left. Off at the lower right hand corner they could see their s.p.a.ce station; apparently the viewer itself stood far removed in s.p.a.ce, projecting its images here at the globe.
Awed the first time they had seen one of the screens, Temple said, ”All the poets who ever wrote a line would have given half their lives to see this as we see it now.”
”And all the writers, musicians, artists....”
”Anyone, who ever thought creatively, Sophia. How can you say it's breathtaking or anything like that when words weren't ever spoken which can....”
”Let's not go poetic just yet,” Sophia admonished him with a smile.
”We'd better get squared away here, as the expression goes, before it's too late.”
”Yes.... h.e.l.lo, what's this?” A door irised open for them in a solid wall of metal. Irised was the only word Temple could think of, for a tiny round hole appeared in the wall spreading evenly in all directions with a slow, uniform, almost liquid motion. When it was large enough to walk through, they entered a completely bare room and Temple whirled in time to see the entrance irising shut.
”Something smells,” said Sophia, sniffing at the air.
Sweet and cloying, the odor grew stronger. Temple may have heard a faint hissing sound. ”I'm getting sleepy,” he said.
Nodding, Sophia ran, banged on the wall where the door had opened so suddenly, then closed. No response. ”Is it a trap?”
”By whom? For what?” Temple found it difficult to keep his eyes from closing. ”Fight it if you want, Sophia. I'm going to sleep.” And he squatted in the center of the floor, staring vacantly at the bare wall.
Just as Temple was drifting off into a dream about complex machinery he did not yet understand but realized he soon would, Sophia joined him the hard way, collapsing alongside of him, unconscious and sprawling gracelessly on the floor.
Temple slept.
”Sleepy-head, get up.” Sophia stirred as he spoke and shook her. She yawned, stretched, smiled up at him lazily. ”How do you feel now?”
”Hungry, Kit.”
”That's a point. It's all right now, though. I know exactly where the food concentrates are kept. Three levels below us, second segment of the wall. You can make those queer doors iris by pressing the wall twice, with about a one second interval.”
They found the food compartment, discovered row on row of cans, boxes, jars. Temple opened one of the cans, gazed in disappointment on a sorry looking thing the size of his thumb. Brown, shriveled, dry and almost flaky, it might have been a bird.
Sophia turned up her nose. ”If that's the best this place has to offer, I'm not so hungry anymore.”
Suddenly, she gaped. So did Temple. A savory odor attracted their attention, steam rising from the small can added to their interest.
Amazing things happened to the withered sc.r.a.p of food on exposure to the air. Temple barely had time to extract it from the can, burning his fingers in the process, when it became twice the can's size. It grew and by the time it finished, it was as savory looking a five pound fowl as Temple had ever seen. Roasted, steaming hot, ready to eat.
They tore into it with savage gusto.
”Stephanie should see me now,” Temple found himself saying and regretted it.
”Stephanie? Who's that?”
”A girl.”
”Your girl?”