This World Must Die! | Page 2

Horace Brown Fyfe
met Phillips'. "Louis Phillips, age twenty-six, five-ten,
one-eighty. Hair brown, eyes brown, complexion darkly tanned--that
was before Luna, wasn't it, Phillips? Convicted of unjustified homicide,
having assaulted a jet mechanic so as to cause death. Detention record
satisfactory."
The blonde girl was last in Varret's review. "Donna Bailey, age
twenty-three, five-five, one-fifteen. Hair blonde, eyes blue, complexion
fair. Convicted of manslaughter by negligence, while piloting an
atmosphere sport rocket in an intoxicated condition. Detention record
satisfactory."
Varret fell silent, regarding them with cynical disgust. His lips twisted
slightly with distaste. "There we have it," he said. "A violent-tempered
thief from the business world; an over-expensive purchase by a rich
playboy who became his widow by her own negligence; a
mentally-unstable fool who thought he was artistically gifted, and a
rocket engineer who was too brutally careless with his own strength
when irritated by a space-fatigued helper. I wonder if you'll do...?"
Phillips felt impelled at last to speak. "Just what plans do you have for
us?" he demanded harshly.
"Nothing complicated," replied Varret, matching the tone. "We need
you to perform a mass murder!"
Phillips blinked, despite his prison-learned reserve. He heard the girl
suck in her breath sharply, and felt the youth beside him begin to

tremble.
"I have shocked you, I see," sneered Varret. "Well, I assure you, it
shocks me also, probably a good deal more since I have lived a normal
life. However--this is the background:
"About three months ago, we had reports of the outbreak of a deadly
plague in one of the asteroid groups. As near as can be determined, it
was spread by the crew of an exploratory rocket after the discovery of a
new asteroid. It began to sweep through the mining colonies out there
with the velocity of an expanding nova!"
"Where was your Health Department?" asked the man named Brecken
in a sneering tone.
Varret frowned at him. "Several members gave their lives trying to
learn the nature of the disease. We have no information to date, except
a theory that it attacks the nervous and circulatory systems, because the
reports indicate that the reason of the victim is markedly affected as the
disease progresses. Not a single survivor is known--they all die in
raving insanity. We do not even know with certainty how it is
communicated."
"What are you doing?" asked Phillips.
"Isolation. It is all we can do, until our medical men can make some
progress. We evacuated an asteroid colony and began to ship into it any
person showing any of the symptoms, using a cruiser piloted by remote
control. That was where we slipped."
"How?"
"On the last trip--unless we have not really collected all the
sufferers--we lost control. Someone being transported knew his
spaceships. Shortly thereafter, a gibbering lunatic got on the screen and
threatened the escorting rocket. He announced the cruiser would head
for Mars, where the passengers would demand their freedom. They are
past reasoning with."

"Can't say I really blame them," Phillips remarked.
"Blame them? Of course not! Neither do I. What has that to do with it?
What has the Council so worried is that this thing will get loose on
Mars, that it may even be carried to Earth and Venus. There are over a
hundred persons in that ship, no longer responsible for their actions but
capable of causing deaths by the billions. We want to help them, but we
simply must hold the line on this quarantine until we solve the medical
problem."
* * * * *
They stared at him in silence, and Phillips noticed that the old man's
forehead was moist with tiny beads of perspiration.
"Don't you see? They are as good as dead. No knowledge or help of
man can save them--as of this moment. If we are ever to be of any help,
we must prevent a worse catastrophe.
"Yes, the survival ship is a world in itself, but this world must die!"
For a minute or two, it seemed to Phillips that he could hear each
person in the control room breathing. Finally, there was a small sound
of cloth rubbing on metal as Brecken stirred. "Why pick on us?" he
rasped from his seat on the deck. "I'm no volunteer!"
"I know what you are," replied Varret sharply. "I know what you all are.
You have been chosen for this mission of murder, because you are the
only people in our culture who are capable of this kind of violence.
You have broken our laws, and this is your punishment.
"It would take us too long to find others like you who had merely never
faced the same circumstances that sent you four to Luna. We have
made attempts to attack this vessel. Manned by normal men, our ships
could accomplish nothing."
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