Part 6 (1/2)
”Simply because I must insure my living. Nothing my friends could do would prevent your having plenty of time to kill me before you yourselves were destroyed. I think, under the circ.u.mstances, you _would_ kill me. And I must go free. I have made a promise. A very important promise. I must be free to carry it out.”
”Just what are you aiming at?”
”I'm offering,” said the Hawk, ”to show you where your fort is vulnerable--in time for you to protect it. I'll do this if you'll let me go free. _You need not release me till afterwards._”
Lar Tantril's mouth fell half open at this surprising turn. He was unquestionably taken aback. But he snapped his lips shut and considered the offer. A trick? Ca.r.s.e was famed for them. A trap? But how? He scanned his men. Fifty to one; fifty ray-guns on an unarmed man helpless in a hampering prison of metal and fabric. If a trap, Ca.r.s.e could not possibly escape death. But yet....
Tantril walked over to his man Esret, and, stepping apart, they conferred in whispers.
”Is he trying to trick us?” the chief asked.
”I don't see how he can hope to. He can hardly move in that suit. It ties him down. We could keep tight guard upon him. He couldn't possibly get away. And at the slightest sign of something shady--”
”Yes; but you know him.”
”What he says is sensible. Naturally he wants to live. He knows we'll shoot him if he tries to trick us, and he knows we'll do it if we're attacked! We'll of course leave men at all defensive stations. If there _is_ a weakness here, if the ranch _is_ vulnerable--we should learn what it is. It'll cost us nothing. We can't lose, and we might be saving everything. Of course we won't let him go afterwards.”
Tantril considered a moment longer, then said:
”Yes, I think you are right.”
He turned back to the waiting Ca.r.s.e.
”Agreed,” he said. ”Show this vulnerable point to us and you'll be released. But no false moves! One sign of treachery and you're dead!”
The Hawk's strong-cut face showed no change. It was only inwardly that he smiled.
Their very manner of accompanying him showed their respect for the slender adventurer.
He had no gun; he was stooped by the unrelieved weight of the ma.s.sive helmet, the suit itself and the chunky blocks of metal which were the boots; his every dragging step was that of a man shackled by chains--but he was Hawk Ca.r.s.e! And so, as he shuffled out through the front door of the house and lumbered with painful effort across the clearing, he was surrounded by a glitter of ray-guns held by the close-pressing circle of men. Tantril's own gun kept steady on his broad fabric-clad back, and of its proximity he kept reminding Ca.r.s.e.
New guards were already on watch on each of the three watch-platforms, their eyes sweeping around the clearing and the jungle and the dark stretch of the lake, and often returning to the crowd which marked the stumbling giant's progress below. Each point of defense was manned. In the ranch's central control room, a steel-sheathed cubby in the bas.e.m.e.nt of Tantril's house, men stood watchful, their hands ready at the wheels and levers which commanded the ranch's ray-batteries, their eyes on the vision-screen which gave to this unseen heart of the place a panoramic view of what was transpiring above. And all waited on what the grotesque, bloated figure they watched might reveal.
Watch--watch--watch. A hundred eyes, below, above, beside the Hawk, were centered and alert on each move of his clumsy progress. The barrels of two-score ray-guns transfixed him. Under such guard he arrived at the ranch's fence where it approached the Great Briney.
”Open the gate,” said the Hawk curtly. ”It's down there.”
He pointed to where the lake's pebbled beach shelved downward to the tiny murmurous waves, a ten-foot stretch of ghostly white between the guarding fence and the water.
”Down there?” repeated Tantril slowly. ”Down to the lake?”
”Yes!” Ca.r.s.e snapped irritably. ”Well, will you open the gate? I'm very tired: I can't bear this suit much longer.”
Lar Tantril conferred uneasily with Esret, while his men cast s.h.i.+vering glances out over the dark wind-rippled plain of the lake.
But no enemy showed there. The beach was clear for fifty yards on each side.