Part 38 (1/2)
”_Hmmpff!_” Philander snorted defeatedly. ”What's the difference between being killed cleanly in a fight, as against a lifetime in prison, or a firing squad?”
”You'll get neither one,” Hanlon said quietly, remembering the power he, as a Secret Service operative, carried. ”There'll be a trial, of course, but I know that you, at least, are all okay.”
”He's boss, ain't he?” one of the guards growled truculently. ”Why should he get off free iffen th' rest of us don't?”
”None of you will be harmed because of your part in the plot His Highness Gorth Bohr was scheming. That is broken, and we know you were all just his tools. All any of you will be tried for are your actions as regards the Greenies. If brutality against them is proven, you'll be properly punished for that alone.”
He turned to Philander. ”Are the natives all right?”
The man looked up hopelessly, unable to believe Hanlon's statement about himself. ”How do I know?” his voice was dispirited. ”When the Corps captured us, they dragged us from wherever we were working, and as far as I know left the Greenies untended. They've probably all run back to the woods.”
Hanlon looked at his father. ”I'm going out to look. I have a feeling ...” and he walked out without saying more. Nor was he greatly surprised to see the natives all sitting or standing quietly in their compounds, some feeding from the fertilizer Hanlon was glad to see was still being fed them, others merely resting, waiting.
The gates, of course, were unlocked and wide open, so Hanlon walked quickly back to the hut his crew occupied and stepped inside the doorway. While waiting for his eyes to adjust to the dimness he saw a figure launching itself at him. But as he quickly stepped back outside, in case it was an attack, he saw that it was Geck.
”You came back, you came back!” the native was babbling telepathically in an excess of joy. ”When the new humans came and took the old humans prisoners, me said it was your work. Me knew you would come. Me tell other Guddu to wait for you here.”
”What about those near the places where the s.h.i.+ps were being built?”
Hanlon's mind asked anxiously. ”I tried to get into contact with them but couldn't.”
”Many of they were killed, yet most ran to forests when great fires that destroy were started,” was the sad response.
Hanlon was silent a moment, then telepathed again. ”There is no need for you all to stay here any longer. Tell all your people to go back to their forests, for they are all free.”
Geck turned to the other natives who were crowding close, and Hanlon could see him talking swiftly with that peculiar-looking little triangular-shaped mouth. Soon his mind was suffused with a tremendous wave of joy and ecstasy, and they began das.h.i.+ng out. Hanlon could see them talking to the natives in all the huts, and in moments all the natives except Geck were streaming happily toward the nearby forests.
Hanlon turned to Geck. ”I'd like to have you stay with me or where I can reach you for a while. As soon as we can get straightened around, we'll make arrangements to do anything we can for you.”
”Me stay with friend An-yon,” Geck said simply, and Hanlon was glad and proud of that friends.h.i.+p with this strange alien.
They walked back to the mine office, and there Hanlon told his father about what he had done with the natives.
Admiral Newton was intensely interested, and frankly studied the strange, weird Geck. It was his first sight of these ”vegetable”
creatures. ”Animated trees,” Hanlon had first called them, although now they were so familiar to him, and he knew them so well that he thought of them, naturally and without question, as ”people.”
The young Secret Serviceman explained to the elder about the frequency-transformer he had built--but dismantled before leaving Algon.
He suggested that specialists be sent here to see what could be done about teaching the natives any of the things they might want to know.
”But don't let them try to force the Guddus into a mechanical civilization,” he pleaded. ”Let 'em grow in their own way, and make what progress they can in whatever way comes natural to them.”
”Of course,” his father agreed quickly. ”That's the way we always work with such primitives. We tell them and show them what we have, but only give them what they specifically ask for, whether we think it is what they 'ought to have' or not. Don't worry, your friends will be in good hands. But,” there was a peculiar light in his eyes, ”I sure would like to watch an autopsy on one of them. A vegetable brain ...”
”Yes, it would be interesting,” Hanlon admitted, ”but I'm glad you treat them that way.” He turned back to Geck and explained, telepathically, as best he could.
”You stay here with we,” the Guddu asked hopefully.