Otis Adelbert Kline
The Planet of Peril
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Table of contents
CHAPTER 1
CHAPTER 2
CHAPTER 3
CHAPTER 4
CHAPTER 5
CHAPTER 6
CHAPTER 7
CHAPTER 8
CHAPTER 9
CHAPTER 10
CHAPTER 11
CHAPTER 12
CHAPTER 13
CHAPTER 14
CHAPTER 15
CHAPTER 16
CHAPTER 17
CHAPTER 18
CHAPTER 19
CHAPTER 1
Robert Ellsmore Grandon
stifled a yawn with difficulty as the curtain went down on the first
act of Don Giovanni and wondered what was the matter. It wasn't that
opera bored him, or that tonight's performance was inferior; in fact,
what he had been able to give his attention to struck him as being
among the best performances he had seen. But something was
distracting him, something he could not put his finger on; and the
effort to keep his attention on the music and the performers was
tiring him. Perhaps it was just one of those days, he thought.
He was tired of life at
twenty-four, he, decided—tired and disillusioned and somehow
trapped. After his spell of military service, he'd broken away from
family obligations and expectations to join revolutionaries in Cuba.
The struggle there had seemed important, worth risking his neck for;
but he'd seen, much earlier than some others, that the new regime was
just a change of masters. He'd gotten out while getting out was easy
and returned to take up the career in, insurance administration that
his uncle wanted him to take —the uncle who had paid his college
expenses. Now, Robert and Vincent Grandon would prepare for the
position that. Uncle Arthur would be leaving in a few years. It would
be a good career for both young men; for while only one could step
into Arthur Grandon's shoes, the second spot would be no less
desirable.
Very likely, with full
effort, he could make the top—but his cousin had the extra measure
of devotion to the business that Robert Grandon simply couldn't
bring. Robert Ellsmore Grandon yearned for action, adventure,
romance—something that seemed to be gone in this world of the
Twentieth Century.
He made his way to the bar
thinking that he'd chuck it all in a moment for a chance to think and
act for himself, for a chance to accomplish something worth while
according to his own lights. Yes—insurance was worthwhile, he
thought as he sat at the bar and beckoned to Louis, but not worth his
while.
Louis looked his way,
nodded, and started to mix a Gibson for him. The bartender had a
curious grin on his face as he set the glass down. "Did you get
the message, Mr. Grandon?"
Robert Grandon blinked.
"What message?"
"Didn't you see the
papers today?"
Grandon shook his head.
"Just glanced at them. What's up?"
Louis went back and bent
down, to return with the Times, folded to a certain page, and placed
it on the bar before him. To Grandon's astonishment, he saw a sketch
of himself staring him in the face.
"Had you planned in
advance to come tonight, Mr. Grandon?"
Grandon looked up with a
puzzled expression on his face. "No—now that you mention it, I
hadn't. I was going to ask a friend to come with me next Friday
night. Came down this morning to see about tickets, and decided that
I'd come tonight alone, when I found that there was a good seat
available...Don't know why, now that I think of it."
Louis' face wore a strange
smile. "Read that ad, Mr. Grandon. Maybe you are the one."
Grandon picked up the
paper. The heading read, "I Want You!" There was no caption
under the sketch; beneath it, the text said: "I do not know your
name, or anything about you, except that you are in the city. I want
to perform an experiment, and you may be the man I need. If you are,
you will know by these tokens.
"You will feel an
urge to go to a certain place tonight which you may or may not have
been planning to go to, and you will want to get there around 8 p.m.
Starting at 8:30 p.m., every half hour, I will send you a message.
You may not hear it the first or second time, but you may feel
distracted. If you are the man I want, it will seem as if a voice is
speaking to you. It will be a voice in your mind; it will say `Doctor
Morgan' and direct you to go to a particular spot. There a man will
be waiting for you; he will ask you a question which I shall also
tell you of when I communicate with you. Please give him a hearing
before you decide."
"Looks as if you've
gotten the first part of it, Mr. Grandon. You hadn't expected to come
tonight, but here you are."
Grandon put the newspaper
down. It had been just about half an hour after the performance
started that he'd begun to feel distracted and a little irritated.
Louis said, "It's two
minutes of nine, Mr. Grandon. Maybe you'll get the message this
time."
Grandon sipped the Gibson,
with his eyes on the clock. He tried to relax, to let himself open to
whatever thoughts might come into his head. He'd heard of experiments
in telepathy, and while he didn't find parapsychology too convincing,
he had no strong bias against it. In fact, he'd thought that it might
be fascinating if this sort of thing could be so. Here would be a new
frontier if...
It wasn't exactly a
whisper, but there was a softness about a voice he now seemed to hear
yet not to hear. It said, "Doctor Morgan." Grandon sat up
straight. Again it came: "Doctor Morgan." A third time;
then the voice said, "Go to the telephone booths in the lobby. A
man wearing a tuxedo with a green lapel pin will offer you a
cigarette."
The voice ceased. Grandon
waited a moment or two, but there was nothing more.
"Did you get it, Mr.
Grandon?" asked Louis eagerly.
Grandon finished his
Gibson and put a bill down on the bar. "Could be," he said.
"I have a pretty good imagination, you know. Think I'll wait
another half hour and see."
He left the bar. Either
this was or it wasn't. If it was, then he might as well follow up now
as wait another half hour. If it wasn't, it didn't make any
difference; he couldn't possibly pay any attention to the opera now,
no matter who was singing.
He made his way to the
phone booths in the lobby and looked around, oblivious to the
feminine eyes that turned to glance at his broad shoulders and curly
black hair. No one fitting the description he'd received was in
sight. He waited a moment and began to feel foolish.
Just imagination, he
decided a little sadly. Well, there was time for a cigarette before
he had to get back to his seat. He was reaching for his case when a
pleasant voice at his right said, "Try one of mine, won't you?"
Grandon turned and looked
into the smiling eyes of a man about his own age. A man wearing a
tuxedo with a green lapel pin. He accepted with thanks.
"Excellent
performance, don't you think?" volunteered the smiling one,
lighting a cigarette himself which he had, unnoticed by Grandon in
his confusion, taken from the side of the case opposite the one which
he had extended a moment before.
"I suppose so—ah—why,
yes, of course..."
Grandon was beginning to
feel unaccountably drowsy.
Suddenly he slumped
forward, and would have fallen on his face, but for the quick
assistance of the friendly young man. A moment later he lost
consciousness.
An attendant came running
up. "What's the matter with your friend?" he asked.
"Fainted dead away.
It's his heart; he's had spells like this quite often lately. Help me
get him outdoors."
The two of them carried
Grandon outside, followed by the more curious bystanders. When he
reached the sidewalk, the young man waved to the driver of a car
parked on the other side of the street. It immediately swung across
and drew up to the curb.
"Let's put him in the
car," said the young roan. "I'm used to this —a spin on
Michigan Boulevard will revive him. Just needs fresh air. His doctor
has told me how to handle him."
They lifted Grandon into
the car and the driver put the top down. The young man handed a crisp
bill to the attendant and got into the car, which drove away.
CHAPTER 2
When Grandon regained
consciousness he was lying on a cot in a dimly lighted room. He
looked about him in bewilderment as he saw four bare concrete walls,
a heavy oak door studded with many large bolts, and a small window
fitted with powerful iron bars more than an inch in diameter.
There was a chair and a
small table with a lamp on it next to the cot. On the table, Grandon
saw a sheet of paper. He rolled over and picked it up, switching on
the lamp.
"Dear Mr. Grandon,"
he read, "I must admit and apologize for technically kidnapping
you; but I hope to be able to persuade you shortly that this was both
necessary and to your advantage. Now I must ask you to be patient for
a little while; I shall see you soon. The drug you were given should
be wearing off by evening—you were kidnapped last night—and I can
assure you that it will have no harmful after-effects, physical or
mental." The paper was signed, "Dr. Morgan."
Grandon arose and tottered
unsteadily toward the door. It was evidently locked from the outside,
for he could not rattle it. He went to the window and peered out.
Night had fallen, and a myriad of twinkling stars looked down at him
from a clear sky. Not a tree, house, or earthly object of any kind
was visible. There was only the starry sky above and the black void
below.
He heard the sound of
talking, and wheeled about as a bolt slid back and the door opened.
Two men entered. The foremost was tall and of large structure; his
forehead was high and bulged outward, so that his shaggy eyebrows,
which grew together above the bridge of his aquiline nose,
half-concealed his eyes. He wore a painted, closely-cropped beard, in
which a few gray hairs proclaimed him as middle-aged. Behind him was
the young man who had given him the drugged cigarette in the lobby of
the opera house.
The young man advanced and
extended his hand. "How are you feeling now, Mr. Grandon?"
he asked. "Ah, you seem surprised that we know your name. That
will be explained to you. I should have introduced myself sooner. My
name is Harry Thorne. Allow me to present Doctor Morgan."
The big man held out his
hand and said in a booming bass voice, "This is a pleasure I
have long anticipated, Mr. Grandon."
It was nothing like the
voice he had heard in his mind, and yet it was the same voice.
Grandon realized that at once; and his curiosity, added to the
feeling of confidence in these men's intentions toward him that the
note had imparted, washed away any resentment he might feel at their
methods. He clasped the doctor's muscular hand and muttered an
acknowledgment.
"And now," said
Morgan, "if you will accompany us to dinner, we shall start the
explanation due you. Afterwards, I shall ask you to read two
interesting manuscripts before we talk further; they will tell you
far more, and prepare you far better, for the experiment I have in
mind than a lecture from me."
In Dr. Morgan's drawing
room, where night had given way to day while Robert Ellsmore Grandon
read two novel-length manuscripts, Dr. Morgan— who had entered just
as Grandon was finishing the last chapter of the second box of
neatly-typed pages—smiled at his guest quizzically. "What do
you think of them?" he asked.
Grandon shook his head.
"If I hadn't had the experience of the past day or so, I'd think
they were just good stories and nothing more. Even so, they sound
fantastic:
"They are,"
Morgan agreed. "But nonetheless true. To summarize briefly, I
started experimenting with telepathy ten years ago, and finally
succeeded in building a device which would pick up and amplify
thought waves."
"And thought waves,
you found," said Grandon, "are not limited by space or
time. So you picked up the waves projected by another man who had
built a similar device to project them—only this man was on Mars."
"But not the
present-day Mars—the Mars of some millions of years ago, when a
high human civilization did exist there."
"And you and this
Martian scientist, Lal Vak, found that persons who are nearly doubles
in physical appearance may have similar brain-patterns— enough
alike so that consciousness may be exchanged between them. Your first
experiment involved such an exchange between an Earthman named Harry
Thorne and a Martian named Borgen Takkor. The man you now call Harry
Thorne was born on Mars as Borgen Takkor, while the true Harry Thorne
is now living on Mars —and leading a most adventurous and
satisfying career from the account I just read."
Dr. Morgan nodded. "He
and his princess have had many adventures together beyond those
related in the first manuscript. To us, of course, both have been
dead millions of years. But it is possible for me to tune in on their
lives at any point where Harry was transmitting to me. He has never
regretted his choice."
"Then", went on
Grandon, "you got in touch with a Venusian named Vorn Vangal,
who is a contemporary of Lal Vak and Borgen Takkor. With his help you
constructed a space-time vehicle through which your nephew, Jerry
Morgan, was able to go to Mars in the flesh. And he, too, made out
pretty well."
Morgan nodded. "Yes.
I sent Jerry to Mars that way, and hoped that I'd be able to send
someone to Venus the same way. But my telekinetic control failed in
some way on the return trip, and I never recovered the ship I built
for Jerry. Vorn Vangal said he would build one on Venus and send it
to Earth for me, so that I could visit him, but I do not know when
this will be possible. It may be soon; it may not be for some years."
Morgan smiled. "And I'm not too patient a man. I know that it is
possible for me to get an account of Venus as seen by Earthmen's
eyes—the Venus that was, in relation to the Mars that was—just as
I learned about Mars in those two manuscripts you've read. So I asked
Vorn Vangal if he could send me the brain waves of two Venusians, to
see if I could find their counterparts here on Earth. Then Harry
urged me to try to see if there was a Venusian with whom he could
change personalities—so I sent his picture and brain-wave pattern
to Vorn Vangal."
"I see. And Vorn
Vangal sent you the picture and brainwave pattern of a Venusian who
was—me."
"Yes. You'll recall
that Lal Vak had shown one how to construct a mind- compass, which
would indicate whether there were any living persons here on Earth
whose brainwaves corresponded with those of the Martians whose
pictures he sent me. This would not only aid in my finding such
people here on Earth, it would also protect me from disappointment on
coming across someone who looked right, but whose brain-pattern did
not match closely enough for an exchange of personalities, after
all."
"Has that happened?"
Grandon asked.
"Only once. But now
it's all arranged for Harry; and I hope you'll be interested in going
to Venus, too."
Grandon smiled. "After
reading those two accounts of conditions on Mars, I certainly am. Of
course, I suppose it's nothing like Venus."
"There are
differences, of course, but the civilizations are on a somewhat
similar level. The planet is known as Zarovia, and your physical
counterpart is a gentleman who has been enslaved by an Amazon ruler—a
princess with no thought save of her own pleasure. He finds it
impossible to escape from bondage, and is therefore willing to make
the exchange. Mr. Thorne's bodily duplicate is a prince of a realm on
the opposite side of the planet from that occupied by the slave. The
prince has been petted and pampered and shielded from all danger, and
longs for adventure; he is willing to exchange bodies for a time with
Mr. Thorne. Well, what do you say? Are you willing to make the trip?"
Grandon smiled.
"You know, Doctor,
I'm a little surprised. You investigated the Earth- born Harry Thorne
very carefully, because you'd made a bad choice and sent a criminal
to Mars ahead of him. You knew your nephew thoroughly because you
were in telepathic communication with him for years though he didn't
know it then. But what do you know about me?"
"Touché!"
chuckled Morgan. "I forgot to tell you. I've gone a good ways
beyond telepathic projection in the last few years. When I contacted
your mind, I also got a very full picture of your character and
personality— no intimate details, but sufficient to assure me that
you were the sort of man I wanted. And that you were very likely to
go along with me if the way could be cleared for you...But suppose
you tell me of any inhibiting factors; I think they can be cleared
up."
Robert Ellsmore Grandon
recounted his personal situation briefly, and Morgan nodded. "Yes,"
he said. "This checks with the information I've gathered on Mr.
Arthur Grandon since you arrived here. He's sincerely devoted to you,
you know. I don't believe he'll stand in the way if he knows you want
to go on some caper of your own and by your own choice. Suppose you
phone him long distance now. Here's what I suggest you tell him..."
"You were right,
Doctor," Grandon said after bidding his uncle farewell. "Uncle
Arthur agrees that Vincent is better suited to handle the firm than
I. He just wanted me to try for awhile and see—says he half
expected something like this when I disappeared and was concerned
lest I forget to let him know."
"Then we need waste
no more time, Mr. Grandon."
"But—my body will
remain here while my personality goes to Venus. What happens to it?"
"You need have no
fear about that. The man who comes to inhabit it —forgotten about
him, haven't you?—will naturally be careful of it; for if he loses
it there will be no return for him, either to this world or his own."
"What do we have to
do in order to exchange bodies? And how will you keep in touch with
me?"
"I will, at regular
intervals, establish telepathic rapport with you and Thorne while you
are asleep. You will know nothing of these telepathic
communications—which will be as detailed as those you read last
night —unless I see fit to convey a message to you which will
probably come in the form of a dream, so vivid that you will remember
every detail. If you wish to communicate with me for any reason
whatever, I will learn of it when I establish rapport with you."
Grandon sighed. "I'm
ready. Want me to lie down and look into a mirror the way Harry
Thorne did when you sent him to Mars?"
"Right. And the
present Harry Thorne will follow you in a few hours —you may meet
on Venus, though it isn't too likely." He set up the mirror,
painted with alternate circles of red and black, as Grandon reposed
on the sofa. "Now think of Venus, far off in time and
space—millions of miles, millions of years away..."
CHAPTER 3
Robert Ellsmore Grandon, was awakened
from a sound sleep by a shaft of brilliant sunlight which shone
through the mica-paneled window of the quarry- slaves' sleeping
quarters. He blinked, turned uneasily, then sat up. His muscles
appeared stiff and bruised and his back smarted and burned. He
noticed that his sole articles of apparel consisted of a scarlet
breech-cloth and a pair of sandals of strange design. His skin was
browned; his hands were rough and callused. His face was covered
with a thick, black beard, and his hair was matted and unkempt.
He rose stiffly and walked to the window, hoping for a clear view
of a Zarovian landscape, but he was disappointed, for in front of
his window there stretched a solid wall of black marble cliffs. The
only visible vegetation consisted of a few pink toadstool-like
growths which grew from niches in the rock, some over twelve feet
in height.
He turned and glanced at his room-mates. Fifty men were quartered
in the sleeping shed. The bedding consisted of a coarse, dried
moss, which made an exceptionally resilient couch. The men were
attired like Grandon, except that their breech-clouts were gray
instead of scarlet. Their skins were sun-burned like his own, and
marked with scars and open wounds.
Grandon was startled by a hollow booming sound, and someone on the
outside opened a large door at the center of the shed. Instantly
every man sprang to his feet, and he saw that they were forming in
single file to march through the door. He joined the procession,
which was heading for a large building in the midst of a group of
sheds similar to the one he had occupied, and saw that the sound
emanated from a large cylinder of iron suspended from a steel beam
in front of the building, and beaten by a man who wielded a large
club wrapped with thongs.
Heavily-armed guards stood at intervals of about fifty feet on
either side of their pathway. Each guard carried a tall spear with
a broad blade about four feet long; a sword with a basket hilt, its
blade rather like that of a scimitar, hung from the left side of
the belt.
From the right depended a weapon which was utterly strange to
Grandon. It was about two feet long, oblong like a carpenter's
level, and apparently composed of blued steel. A rivet passed
completely through it about four inches from the end, holding it
firmly to the belt, although it could be tilted at any angle, and
its wearer could point it in any direction by turning his body.
Grandon had yet to learn the efficiency of this weapon, the tork,
which fired needlelike glass projectiles filled with a potent
poison that paralyzed man and beast alike almost as soon as it
penetrated, and had a range as great as the most powerful of
rifles. These tiny bullets were propelled by a highly explosive
gas, ignited by an electric spark at the touch of a button.
The gas was compressed in a chamber at the rear of the tork, while
the glass missiles were held in a magazine near the muzzle. After a
shot was fired, the weapon would automatically reload, a bullet
sliding into place in front while just the right charge of gas was
released in the chamber behind it. Each tork, held a thousand
rounds of ammunition.
The slaves passed through the building where each man had his
ration doled out to him: a bowl of stewed mushrooms and a steaming
cup of a beverage which Grandon found to be very much like a strong
wine.
As he followed his companions, Grandon noticed that each man
stopped before a small shrine and stood for a moment with head
bowed low and hand extended toward it, palm downward. When he
reached the shrine, he stopped as the others had done, then gave a
gasp of amazement at a life-size painting of the most beautiful
woman he had ever seen.
She wore a robe of scarlet, ornamented with gold and precious
stones, and a jeweled band of platinum imprisoned a mass of golden
curls which were piled on top of her head after a style different
from anything he had ever seen. She was seated on a massive golden
throne with cushions of scarlet, across the arms of which rested a
scarbo—a sword like those carried by the guards, but with a hilt of
gold studded with rubies.
Could this be the Amazon ruler of whom Dr. Morgan had spoken?
A sharp exclamation brought him to his senses; he turned and saw an
overseer advancing with whip upraised. Quickly bowing as the others
had done, he ran forward to join his fellow slaves.
Once outside the building, the men seated themselves on the ground
in little scattered groups for their morning meal. Grandon joined a
company of those who had occupied the same dormitory with him.
He could not take part in the general conversation because the
language was unintelligible to him—yet the words sounded strangely
familiar. A recollection of their meaning was stored in the brain
cells of the body which had become his, but the ego, which was
Grandon could not interpret them. He kept silent and listened.
The meal finished, the slaves were herded to the quarries by their
drivers. Each driver, who had charge of ten slaves, wore both tork
and scarbo in his belt and carried a whip, the five lashes of which
were woven from some coarse fiber and interwoven with short pieces
of a brittle, nettle-like moss, which broke off in the skin of the
victim, inflicting pain like that of a thousand bee stings.
Grandon managed to keep pace with his fellow slaves. The intense
heat of the sun would have made labor in the open impossible, had
it not been constantly tempered by the floating clouds of vapor,
ever present in the dense, moist Zarovian atmosphere.
The marble was being removed from the hillside in large rectangular
blocks, by thousands of slaves working on a series of terraces,
each of which was the height of one of the blocks. The crews were
so distributed that the terraced hillside constantly retained the
same general contour.
Grandon's crew worked on the bottom terrace all morning, but were
ordered to the top in the afternoon to reinforce the laborers in
that section who, for some reason, had not kept up their quota. He
and a fellow slave were removing one of the heavy blocks by means
of levers when his end slipped and fell on another block, breaking
off a large fragment. The driver raised his whip and struck Grandon
a stinging blow across the shoulders.
Quickly wheeling, Grandon landed a tremendous right hook on the
point of the man's jaw. It was a clean knock-out. Another driver
came running with whip upraised, but Grandon bowled him over with a
marble fragment and ran through the group of startled slaves toward
the brow of the hill. Some one raised the alarm and a half dozen
torks were immediately pointed toward the fugitive. Several slaves
fell, struck by the missiles intended for him, as he disappeared
over the hilltop.
Before him stretched a dense, waving forest of tree ferns into
which he plunged without slackening his speed, his pursuers close
behind. As he dodged in and out among the tree trunks he could hear
their halloos growing fainter and fainter; finally no sound was
audible except the rustling of the countless, wind-shaken fern
leaves.
He slackened his pace and, after proceeding about a mile, farther,
stopped and looked about him.
Huge tree ferns with rough trunks and foliage growing out of the
tops like that of palm trees, some of them over seventy feet in
height, towered above the shorter, more bushy varieties which were
themselves giants. Then there were climbing ferns hanging in
tangled masses, creeping ferns and dwarf, low-growing kinds, barely
raising their fronds above the thick carpet of moss which
everywhere covered the forest floor.
Grandon noticed that the ground slanted slightly toward his right,
and intuition told him that this might lead to a valley and water.
He changed his course accordingly. He hoped also to find some
fruits, berries or nuts with which to satisfy his hunger.
As he trudged wearily forward, sunset was succeeded by twilight,
and before he realized it, the black, moonless Zarovian night had
spread its impenetrable mantle about him.
Suddenly, from out the darkness behind him, came a peal of
horrible, demoniac laughter.
As he wheeled, two glowing phosphorescent orbs were slowly
advancing as if something were creeping or slinking toward him.
Then, without warning, the hideous noise was repeated at his
left.
He turned to face another pair of menacing eyes, then leaped for
the trunk of the nearest tree-fern and climbed it barely in time to
escape the snapping jaws that yawned beneath him.
Not until he had reached the leaf-crown, fifty feet above the
ground, did he pause or look downward. Then he saw, not two, but a
dozen pairs of eyes glancing toward him, while peal after peal of
the nerve-racking laughter smote his ears.
Time dragged along. What manner of things were these? Evidently
they were unable to climb, or they would have followed him ere
this. The fact that they did not leave, even after several more
hours had elapsed, made it evident that they expected to get
him.
He had been hearing a peculiar crunching sound some time before he
located it and guessed the terrible truth.
They were gna [...]