code on the
communicator-no general announcement. Keep watch especially for any
spacecraft-especially any spacecraft!"
"Yes sir!" Gene took his place and the others returned to their duties.
Once he saw that the crew members were well settled, he picked up the intercom and
ordered his leaders to assemble in a meeting room in five minutes. From the few dozen
pirates left, he had hand-selected five competent leaders to be his lieutenants: Gebbeth,
Crass, Lather, Bolcher, and Slant.
In less than that time, Lurton Zimbardo was sitting at a table with the five other men. All
but Zimbardo looked haggard. The pirates were demoralized and upset. Victory on Mars
and beyond had been within their grasp, but it had all been blundered away. A band of
several hundred men who had planned and worked for several years had been reduced to
a few dozen. Their dreams of power and prominence, shaped and fueled by their captain
Troy Putnam, had been utterly destroyed. Now Putnam was in custody on Mars, along
with the rest of the pirates who had been captured by Earth's forces.
"Troy Putnam was a fool," Zimbardo announced in a quiet voice edged with steel. "His
plan might have worked-might have worked, if I had had more part in planning-but he
was no more than a conceited ignoramus! The Starmen walked in on him and took him
completely by surprise! I can just imagine how his face must have looked as he realized
his plan was over and he was led off to jail. A fool! We are better off without him!"
"Better off without him?" asked one man in a dull voice. "What do you mean, Lurton?
Better off for what?"
"Don't be a fool yourself, Crass!" Zimbardo sneered. "You think we're finished here? We
will still get what we want and it won't be very difficult! We don't need Putnam and we
don't need a few hundred men, either! You can be thankful you're here instead of locked
in a stone room in Eagle City eating square, plain, healthy meals off of a metal tray! The
collapse of Putnam's big dream is the best thing that could have happened for us!"
A muscular, unsmiling man on Zimbardo's right swung his gaze to the speaker. "It sounds
as if you have a plan, Mr. Zimbardo." The man was in his early thirties and resembled a
street fighter. His carefully combed dark hair made him look almost strikingly handsome,
but his eyes were black and humorless.
Zimbardo turned toward the man. "Yes, I have a plan. You, Gebbeth, will be my chief
assistant and the pilot of the Tartarus, my personal ship. I can depend on you. Space
Command's celebration on Mars will be extremely short-lived."
"You were always the strong one, Lurton," said another. "I kind of always figured you for
the real leader, and I always wished it was you instead of Putnam."
"Now you got your wish, Bolcher. I've taken charge. I'm moving this asteroid out of its
orbit into a place outside the Belt. Here's my plan."
Almost an hour later, the men left the meeting room, smiling, joking, and stepping lightly.
Their fatigue was gone, their discouragement forgotten.
Lurton Zimbardo was the last to leave. Now that things were moving in the direction he
wanted, he allowed his fatigue to take over. Encouraged by the support of his assistants,
he felt he could rest at last. He walked down the halls, past various doors and entered an
elevator. The display screen offered only the few floors in use by the pirates but
Zimbardo had another destination in mind. Alone in the elevator, he punched in a special
code which only he knew. When the proper sequence was displayed, he pressed "Enter."
As the elevator began to move, the new leader of the pirates relaxed even further. The
others would not know where he was, and he would be undisturbed.
He could barely sense the elevator's motion. He didn't know how far into the asteroid's
interior he was moving, but he knew what he would find when he reached his destination.
The door opened and Zimbardo stepped out. A quick walk down a short corridor brought
him to a double door. Embossed on the doors was a huge, rich, golden symbol-a lush
planet with about 80% blue oceans, a few continents, and thick cloud cover. Three small
moons were arranged at the upper left, set at the points of an equilateral triangle.
Zimbardo had been intrigued by the design when he'd first found it, but now he hastened
through the doors without noticing it. He was eager to get into the Chamber beyond.
As Lurton stepped into the room, he gasped. His dozen prior visits still had not taken the
surprise out of the room. Each time
Continue reading on your phone by scaning this QR Code
Tip: The current page has been bookmarked automatically. If you wish to continue reading later, just open the
Dertz Homepage, and click on the 'continue reading' link at the bottom of the page.