Soon he was dreaming of the ridged hills of Mabog and the great port of Canthanope, where the interstellar traders swung down with their strange cargoes. He was there in twilight, looking over the flat roofs at the two great setting suns. But why were they setting together in the south, the blue sun and the yellow? How could they set together in the south? A physical impossibility. Perhaps his father could explain it, for it was rapidly growing dark.
He shook himself out of the fantasy and stared at the grim light of morning. This was not the way for a Mabogian spaceman to die. He would try again.
After half an hour of slow, painful searching, he found a sealed metal box in the rear of the ship. The aliens had evidently overlooked it. He wrenched off the top. Inside were several bottles, carefully fastened and padded against shock. Kalen lifted one and examined it.
It was marked with a large white symbol. There was no reason why he should know the symbol, but it seemed faintly familiar. He searched his memory, trying to recall where he had seen it.
Then, hazily, he remembered. It was a representation of a humanoid skull. There was one humanoid race in the Mabogian Union and he had seen replicas of their skulls in a museum.
But why would anyone put such a thing on a bottle?
To Kalen, a skull conveyed an emotion of reverence. This must be what the manufacturers had intended. He opened the bottle and sniffed.
The odor was interesting. It reminded him of — Skin-cleansing solution!
Without further delay, he poured the entire bottle over himself. Hardly daring to hope, he waited. If he could put his skin back into working order.
Yes, the liquid in the skull-marked bottle was a mild cleanser! It was pleasantly scented, too.
He poured another bottle over bis armored hide and felt the nutritious fluid seep in. His body, starved for nourishment, called eagerly for more. He drained another bottle.
For a long time, Kalen just lay back and let the life-giving fluid soak in. His skin loosened and became pliable. He could feel a new surge of energy within him, a new will to live.
He would live!
After the bath, Kalen examined the spaceship's controls, hoping to pilot the old crate back to Mabog. There were immediate difficulties. For some reason, the piloting controls weren't sealed into a separate room. He wondered why not? Those strange creatures couldn't have turned their whole ship into a deceleration chamber. They couldn't! There wasn't enough tank space to hold the fluid.
It was perplexing, but everything about the aliens was perplexing. He could overcome that difficulty. But when Kalen inspected the engines, he saw that a vital link had been removed from the piles. They were useless.
That left only one alternative. He had to win back his own ship.
But how?
He paced the deck restlessly. The Mabogian ethic forbade killing intelligent life, and there were no ifs or buts about it. Under no circumstances — not even to save your own life — were you allowed to kill. It was a wise rule and had served Mabog well. By strict adherence to it, the Mabogians had avoided war for three thousand years and had trained their people to a high degree of civilization. Which would have been impossible had they allowed exceptions to creep in. Ifs and buts could erode the soundest of principles.
He could not be a backslider.
But was he going to die here passively?
Looking down, Kalen was surprised to see that a puddle of cleaning solution had eaten a hole in the deck. How flimsily these ships were made — even a mild cleaning solution could damage one! The aliens themselves must be very weak.
One thetnite bomb could do it.
He walked to the port. No one seemed to be on guard. He supposed they were too busy preparing for takeoff. It would be easy to slide through the grass, up to his ship.
And no one on Mabog would ever have to know about it.
Kalen found, to his surprise, that he had covered almost half the distance between ships without realizing it. Strange, how his body could do things without his mind being aware of it.
He took out the bomb and crawled another twenty feet.
Because after all — taking the long view — what difference would this killing make?
"Aren't you ready yet?" Barnett asked, at noon.
"I guess so," Agee said. He looked over the marked panel. "As ready as I'll ever be."
Barnett nodded. "Victor and I will strap down in the crew room. Take off under minimum acceleration."
Barnett returned to the crew room. Agee fastened the straps he had rigged and rubbed his hands together nervously. As far as he knew, all the essential controls were marked. Everything should go all right. He hoped.
For there were that closet and the knife. It was anyone's guess what this insane ship would do next.
"Ready out here," Barnett called from the crew room.
"All right. About ten seconds." He closed and sealed the airlocks. His door closed automatically, cutting him off from the crew room. Feeling a slight touch of claustrophobia, Agee activated the piles. Everything was fine so far.
There was a thin slick of oil on the deck. Agee decided it was from a loose joint and ignored it. The control surfaces worked beautifully. He punched a course into the ship's tape and activated the flight controls.
Then he felt something lapping against his foot. Looking down, he was amazed to see that thick, evil-smelling oil was almost three inches deep on the deck. It was quite a leak. He couldn't understand how a ship as well built as this could have such a flaw. Unstrapping himself, he groped for the source.
He found it. There were four small vents in the deck and each of them was feeding a smooth, even flow of oil.
Agee punched the stud that opened his door and found that it remained sealed. Refusing to grow panicky, he examined the door with care.
It should open.
It didn't.
The oil was almost up to his knees.
He grinned foolishly. Stupid of him! The pilot room was sealed from the control board. He pressed the release and went back to the door.
It still refused to open.
Agee tugged at it with all his strength, but it wouldn't budge. He waded back to the control panel. There had been no oil when they found the ship. That meant there had to be a drain somewhere.
The oil was waist-deep before he found it. Quickly the oil disappeared. Once it was gone, the door opened easily.
"What's the matter?" Barnett asked.
Agee told him.
"So that's how he does it," Barnett said quietly. "Glad I found out."
"Does what?" Agee asked, feeling that Barnett was taking the whole thing too lightly.
"How he stands the acceleration of takeoff. It bothered me. He hadn't anything on board that resembled a bed or cot. No chairs, nothing to strap into. So he floats in the oil bath, which turns on automatically when the ship is prepared for flight."
"But why wouldn't the door open?" Agee asked.
"Isn't it obvious?" Barnett said, smiling patiently. "He wouldn't want oil all over the ship. And he wouldn't want it to drain out accidentally."
"We can't take off," Agee insisted.
"Why not?"
"Because I can't breathe very well under oil. It turns on automatically with the power and there's no way of turning it off."
"Use your head," Barnett told him. "Just tie down the drain switch. The oil will be carried away as fast as it comes in."
"Yeah, I hadn't thought of that," Agee admitted unhappily.
"Go ahead, then."
"I want to change my clothes first."
"No. Get this damned ship off the ground."
"But, Captain —"
"Get her moving," Barnett ordered. "For all we know, that alien is planning something."
Agee shrugged his shoulders, returned to the pilot room and strapped in.
"Ready?"
"Yes, get her moving."
He tied down the drain circuit and the oil flowed safely in and out, not rising higher than the tops of his shoes. He activated all the controls without further incident.
"Here goes." He set minimum acceleration and blew on his fingertips for luck.