Part 6 (1/2)

As he came back he looked up at them. Stinging drops of sweat blurred his vision but he managed to smile. ”Now try your psychograph. Just try it. Here's what you'll read: _conditioned against physical torture. Brain waves lack stable pattern. History inconsistent.

Standard drug susceptibility predicted negative._ Then decide, friends, if I'm bluffing.”

Candar growled, ”Do as he says.”

The test was run. They looked at the results. All three of them walked over to the corner of the room behind him. With his head strapped he could not see them. He heard their conversation in undertones. He broke in. ”There's your choice, Candar. Kill me or turn me over to the church. And if you're afraid to know what's coming, if you're afraid to know how you're going to die, you'd better kill me now.”

There was a long silence. Then Candar: ”Unstrap him.” Candar walked up and stood before him as the straps were taken off. ”You'll curse yourself for postponing the end, if this is a trick. The transfer papers will be prepared now.” He gestured to the commander. ”Bring him back to my chambers, and call the emissary of the church.” The door slammed jarringly behind him as he strode out.

When the conditions were made out, signed and countersigned and sealed, and a copy transmitted to the Cathedral of Keltar, and when the young emissary in cloth-of-gold had signed the receipt for him, Thane began. ”At this moment,” he started, ”the Darzent Empire is preparing an attack. They have a s.p.a.ce-drive, stolen from the Allied Systems, which allows almost instantaneous travel through the Galaxy.

You will learn of this drive, and you will learn something that Darzent does not know. You will learn how to locate any s.h.i.+p using this drive at any time the drive is in operation.”

That was enough to stimulate Candar's driving, paranoid megalomania to the full. Thane had already threatened him with destruction. Now he held out to him the opportunity to be master of the Galaxy. Thane felt it would be simple now to obtain the transfer of Astrid to the custody of the church. He thought so, but there was another hour of argument before he had overcome Candar's suspicions and convinced him of the absolute necessity of having Astrid to supervise the building of the Tracer and the Drive.

At last it was settled. Then Thane committed his treason. He told all he knew, about the second-stage drive and the tracer, and when Astrid came in, she finished the job. Between them they gave away the most important secrets of the Galaxy to an enemy, a man of endless, pathologic ambition.

Candar, of course, wanted confirmation. It was fast in coming. With all the technical resources of Onzar at her disposal, Astrid had a prototype of the tracer in operation the following day. An hour later the existence of a s.h.i.+p using the catalyst drive was reported by the tracer. Its position could not be determined until a base line had been established. The following day, three more tracers were set up at widely separated points across the planet. More movement of s.h.i.+ps was reported--and they were definitely placed within the Darzent Empire.

One more day pa.s.sed, and more tracers had been set up on Onzar III, across the sun from the capitol planet.

At the same time, Candar pushed work on the second-stage drive with all possible speed. As Thane had guessed, the use of gold in the catalyst principle gave Candar pause, but only momentarily. It was true that such a use of gold violated one of the oldest and strongest taboos in the religion but Candar's hunger for power was stronger than his fear of revolt. As Thane had supposed, Candar went ahead with the development of the drive, thinking that when he had it his power would enable him to ignore the church. The church was powerful on just this system. With the drive, Candar would rule the Galaxy.

Candar had taken certain precautions. Almost complete radio silence had been clamped down, partially to prevent any information getting out, and partially to provide enough power for the tracer. No s.h.i.+ps of any registry could enter or leave the system. Only his personal adherents of unquestioned loyalty were allowed to work on the a.s.sembly of the drive. But there were leaks. And there was Thane....

With one legal pretext after another, Candar had succeeded in keeping Thane in isolation within the palace for three days. Finally, he gave in to the demand of the church that Thane be turned over to the Cathedral. He did not want Thane loose but still he could not afford a break with the church just a few days before his great victory.

So Thane at last managed to see Selan in her personal chambers in the Keltar Cathedral. It was a small, comfortable room that did not seem to share the bleakness of most of Onzar. Perhaps, as much as anything, that was due to the personality of the Priestess Selan. She was very old. She had remained slim, and her lined face retained much of its original golden color. Her yellow eyes were alert. The only term Thane could think of for their expression was cynical compa.s.sion. She sat by a small writing table in one of the traditional, intricately carved chairs of Onzar.

”The developments of the past few days, Priestess Selan, are of extreme importance to Onzar and the church. The tracer device has already confirmed our belief that Darzent is preparing to attack.

Already their trial maneuvers with the second-stage drive have ceased, and they have begun the marshalling of their fleet. When they come, they must come through the Onzar Confluence, not more than a pa.r.s.ec from this system. This attack must be stopped, and we hope that time enough is left.”

”I am aware of these developments, Roger Thane,” she said with a slight smile. ”We still have our sources of information.”

”Perhaps,” Thane said, ”you are also aware of the industrial use of gold in the second-stage drive?”

”We have heard rumors,” she said wearily, ”but perhaps my position on such matters is not clear to you. I have never been a religious doctrinaire. I have lived through tremendous changes on this planet, and I know that the church must conform to survive. You certainly must know that from the history of religions in your own system. The church is conservative, yes. It can never move with the skeptical flexibility of the politician or the scientist. But it must change with them, sometimes leading, sometimes following. Otherwise it becomes a thing of quaintness, a building without an inst.i.tution, a place for tourists.”

Thane regarded her thoughtfully for a moment. Even this brilliant, experienced woman would be ensnared by her own long-range theories into a disastrous inaction in the short-run crisis. And there would be no long-range for her or her church unless there were victory in the present crisis. He said, ”I agree with you completely. Like any organism, social or biological, the church must adapt to continue. It must survive. And the present situation is not merely one in which an ancient taboo is violated. It is a crisis of survival for you.”

”I know,” she said thoughtfully, ”that Candar has never been friendly to the church. But I do not believe that he has the power to destroy it.”

”Up to now,” Thane answered, ”Candar has been limited. Now, with the drive, he feels that unlimited power is his. His dream is to crush the power of Darzent in this attack, and then to turn upon the Allied Systems. I do not know if his dream of complete domination of the Galaxy can be realized. I do not think so. But it is something he will not put away. And when he makes the attempt, it will mean the destruction of millions, the killing of whole planets, the ending of all life of whole systems.

”There is no need to keep the useless old taboos that no longer fit into the present world. But they should be ended by the church itself, in its own time and its own way, not abrogated by a contemptuous politician.”

She looked half-convinced, and he pressed his point at once. ”The power of the whole planetary communications system is now being used by Astrid Reine for the tracer system now being built. With a word from you the whole radio system will be at your disposal for as long as we can keep it open. You can at last tell the people of Onzar the truth, which they have not heard for so long.”

Selan stared at the floor for a long time. Finally she looked up. ”I don't know. I just don't know.” She paused again, and it was a long, agonizing pause for Thane. ”The decision is too large for me now. It is a seizure of authority that goes against my whole nature.” She looked directly at Thane. ”But, be a.s.sured, you will have my word in time. You and I will witness this battle of the confluence, and then you will know my decision.”

Thane's mind was full of reasons why the old priestess should not travel out into s.p.a.ce, with all the stresses of that travel, to a position of great danger. But he met her determined eyes and saw at once that all arguments would be futile.