Rodrone stared sullenly at him for a long moment. He slumped. Then he grunted again, this time with a hint of grudging humor. "Tell me," he said, "why do you seem a bit more human than the rest—and yet you still stick with them?"
For answer, Shone flicked a switch. On a small vision plate something appeared.
This time it was not the artificially condensed image that glowed behind him. It was a vaster view, more like what the naked eye would see.
"Just look at that."
Rodrone saw—suns. Billions of suns, congregated in piling clouds and clusters, space edging black between them.
"That's excuse enough for anything," Shone said.
"Then we're brothers under the skin," Rodrone told him, laughing shortly.
Shone flicked off the vision plate. "Business acquaintances, anyway. The Streall are on to us. I've detected them coming up fast—three or four ships. I think we'd better slip out of the way."
He climbed down from the throne and walked unsteadily to one end of the desk, where he made an adjustment. Then he came back and began to work with the controls.
After a minute or two concern showed on his face. "Something's wrong."
He continued working for about another minute, and spoke into a communicator.
"Feeldonet!" he bellowed.
A voice answered. "Yep?"
"The drive's acting up. It doesn't work! Fix it will you?"
"Right."
Shone glanced at Rodrone. "It'll mean a pitched battle if they catch up with us, but we mount some pretty powerful weapons."
Half an hour later Feeldonet came up to the control gallery. He was embarrassed. Somewhat diffidently, he explained how fluctuations in the power supply—caused by tampering with the reactor—had disturbed the drive and thrown it out of action. Then he described his efforts to put it right, ending apologetically with a story of failure.
Then he admitted that he knew nothing about the drive in question.
Rodrone was amazed. "Is this your ship's engineer?" he said to the captain.
Shone sighed. "I took him on a couple of stops back. He seemed good enough, and he certainly put up a good case for himself. You gulled me!" he said accusingly to Feeldonet.
Feeldonet shifted his feet. "All right, it's true I'd never heard of this system before, but I'm a good technician and I thought there wasn't anything I couldn't get the hang of. I won't be so cocksure again."
Rodrone questioned him, intrigued. He had traveled under dozens of different space propulsion systems: numberous sophistications of the reaction-mass principle, "space-compression," and even on the new
It was as close to a practical application of sheer metaphysics as Rodrone was ever likely to see.
"Now you know why the ship was cheap," the engineer told Shone. "Only three of these units were ever built. Just after you gave me the job, a fellow told me that was because there were only ever three technicians who understood it."
Shone looked at a suddenly winking screen before him.
"And you thought you could make it four, eh? Well, keep trying. We've got trouble on our hands."
Rodrone peered over his shoulder. On the screen, three long, angular Streall ships flashed into existence.
From the deadliners' point of view, the Streall had not necessarily come with hostile intentions. But Rodrone urged that they be fought off and the deadliners were quick and eager.
Rodrone retired to one end of the gallery during the battle. An unspeakable weariness had come over him, more profound than anything he had felt before. The death of Clave had shaken him. His failure to act in his defense also bothered him, and he realized that having fallen in with the deadliners, he had taken up their ways with frightening readiness, as if hypnotized.
Men became deadliners because they had been "squeezed out" of normal life because of personality defects or an irremediable need to fail. The long-haul ships swept up a human detritus of psychotics, would-be suicides, and people who were unable for one reason or another to form proper relationships with healthy human beings. They were the desperadoes of the psyche, inviting death, defying life to have any meaning. What stroke of fate was it that had thrown Rodrone in their midst?
Captain Shone stooped intently over the desk console. The sounds of searing shots from the heavy weapons came from the distant parts of the ship. Then there was a shuddering crash as the Streall returned the fire.