Alice always carried the invisibility hat with her in her shoulder bag, and when the lights had come on in the cavern and the Fat Man and his cronies appeared Alice quietly slipped the invisible cap on her head and vanished. But she did not leave the cavern. She expected that they would confine us somewhere and she would be able to steal the key and set us free.
She moved to one side and listened to everything the Fat Man said. She would have made no move except that the pirate had come back with the Blabberyap bird dangling from his legs and the Fat Man gave the order to kill the Blabberyap bird, because the pirates no longer needed it, and then Alice knew she would have to act.
Alice crept over to the pirate on tiptoes and tripped him. The pirate fell, the Blabberyap bird got free, the shooting started, and the Blabberyap bird flew off.
What should she do now? Alice then thought: “The Blabberyap bird will fly away. It did fly out of here before. The Second Captain released it from his ship and the Blabberyap found its way out of the cavern. That means, the Blabberyap already knows how to get outside.” So Alice hurried after the Blabberyap. She was thinking that as soon as she saw where the exit was she would immediately come back to us, free us from this prison and lead us to freedom.
At first she was running in the dark. The light from the main hall penetrated into the long corridor only weakly. The Blabberyap bird flew ahead, and Alice could see him no longer she was following him by hearing, by the flapping of his wings. As soon as they had gotten well away from the pirates Alice called out to the bird in a low voice:
“Blabberyap, wait up!”
The Blabberyap bird heard her voice. At that very moment they came to the next hall in the underground maze; it was lit up, smaller than the first and filled with a small black space ship. But Alice forgot she was invisible and did not remove the cap. The Blabberyap bird made a circle over Alice, shaking its uncertain crown, and flew further, into a low tunnel which was hidden behind some protruding rocks. Alice forced her way into the tunnel as well. It rose sharply toward the surface, and far, far away she could make out a white circle daylight.
Alice was getting ready to clamber up the tunnel when she suddenly heard a weak groan.
The groan came from another tunnel, a tunnel as black as a moonless night. Alice approached the tunnel carefully. The groan was clearly audible, but Alisa had no flash light on her person, that had been left behind in the big cavern, and she had to go in blind. So she counted her steps. On the thirteenth step her hand knocked against a a metal grating.
Again she heard the groan.
“Is there anyone in here?” Alice asked in a whisper.
Evidently, the source of the groaning did not hear her.
“Wait.” Alice said. “I have to get my friends free first, then we’ll come back for you. You and any of Doctor Verkhovtseff’s prisoners.”
There was no answer.
Alice turned back. There was no time to waste with the unknown when there was no way of knowing what the fat man might do.
Returning to the first tunnel, Alice looked inside once again. The bright point the exit from this underground cavern had vanished. Alice did not realize that the short night had come and was frightened that she had mistaken some sort of tunnel for the exit. Or perhaps she was lost. Perhaps the Blabberyap bird had flown out another tunnel. And Alice, although she was very worried about me, and Poloskov and Zeleny, decided to expend another minute and make certain whether this was an exit for not. If this was a dead end, then she would lead us here and keep the pirates from capturing us again.
The path was difficult. The tunnel turned out to be slippery water dripped from the ceiling and did not evaporate. To Alice it seemed that she had spent an whole hour in there but the tunnel never came to an end. She had decided to turn back when suddenly the darkness began to lighten up, and it turned out that Alice had almost made it to the exit, she just had not seen the exit in the darkness.
The last meters of crawling were more difficult than anything else; dirt kept falling down from the roof of the tunnel and she had to force her way through the large masses of roots. Alice almost started to cry, deciding that she would never be able to make her way to the surface, to the sun and the clean air. For a moment she almost forgot about us, about the pirates, about everything in the world; all she dreamed of was getting free of the surrounding dirt.
But there was one last jerk and Alice realized she had succeeded the tunnel was behind her. She had left the gloomy cavern with the pirates and their prisoners.
Overhead was the blue sky with its quickly moving yellow star; a second star had already reached its zenith and begun to turn the world hot. Two insects similar to terrestrial beetles had gotten into an argument of some kind right in front of Alice’s face and they were dive bombing each other, beating each other with flashing wings, completely ignoring Alice, who looked at the bugs and thought sadly that it was time to go back down into the cavern. And so she lost far too much time. At the very least she now knew which way to run to get out of the caverns.
Alice looked around for the last time, ran her hand through the thick grass, but then saw, quite close by on the top of a hill, the very same space ship which Doctor Verkhovtseff had flown to the Pegasus before the Zoo ship had lifted off for the pirate’s boobytrapped field.
“Glad I saw where they landed that thing.” Alice thought. “Or we could get out of the cave and end up back in their arms. They’re certain to have left guards at their ship”
Alice was almost ready to go back to the tunnel when she saw the Blabberyap bird sitting on the steps that had descended from the ship and pecking at the closed lock with its beak.
Alice almost shouted: “Blabberyap, come back here!” but did not have time, nor would the Blabberyap bird have heard her.
The airlock rolled open and Alice could see a tall young man, someone Alice had definitely seen before, but where? The Blabberyap Bird flew up and landed on the man’s shoulder.
“Old friend!” The man exclaimed. “How did you find us?”
The moment Alice saw the man with the Blabberyap bird on his shoulder, she understood who he was. This was the First Captain. The Captain had come to their rescue! But how had he learned where to search? Alice jumped down from the end of the tunnel and rushed toward the ship. What mattered was that the Captain was here. Everything was all right now.
Alice was still a few steps from the ship and was trying to shout, but couldn’t because she was out of breath, when the second person emerged from the airlock and stood next to the Captain,
It was Doctor Verkhovtseff. But he was not dressed like the Doctor Verkhovtseff down in the cavern beneath then; this Doctor Verkhovtseff was in a space suit with a pistol in his belt.
Alice stopped, as though she had run into a wall. She did not understand it at all. The traitor had been somehow able to be simultaneously at two places at once. One thing she did understand: the First Captain was also in great danger, yet he knew nothing about it, not even that Doctor Verkhovtseff was really a pirate.
“Captain, be careful! Danger! Verkhovtseff is a traitor!” Alice shouted.
The Captain and Verkhovtseff looked around for her voice, but they could not see her. She was still invisible.
“Who said that?” The Captain asked.
“Verkhovtseff was just in the underground cavern!” Alice shouted. “He’s a pirate. They’ve captured the Second Captain and our crew.”