Bigman said, "I'll face any trouble. Don't worry."
Cook licked his lips and looked away. "I'll call Gardoma."
Gardoma arrived five minutes later, and the shortness of his examination was proof enough that Cook had been correct.
The physician rose to his feet, wiping his hands on a pocket handkerchief. He said gravely, "Dead. Fractured skull. How did it happen?"
Several spoke at once, but Cook waved them down.
He said, "A grudge fight between Bigman and Urteil… "
"Between Bigman and Urteil!" exploded Dr. Gardoma. "Who allowed that? Are you crazy, expecting Bigman to stand up… "
"Easy there," said Bigman. "I'm in one piece."
Cook said in angry self-defense, "That's right, Gar-doma, it's Urteil that's dead. And it was Bigman who insisted on the fight. You admit that, don't you?"
"I admit it all right," said Bigman. "I also said it was to be under Mercurian gravity."
Dr. Gardoma's eyes opened wide. "Mercurian gravity? Here?" He looked down at his feet as though wondering if his senses were playing
"It isn't Mercurian gravity any more," said Bigman, "because the pseudo-grav field snapped to full Earth gravity at a crucial time. Bam! Like that! That's what killed Urteil, not yours truly."
"What made the pseudo-grav snap to Earth levels?" asked Gardoma.
There was silence.
Cook said feebly, "It might have been a short… "
"Nuts," said Bigman, "the level is pulled up. It didn't do that by itself."
There was a new silence and an uneasy one.
One of the technicians cleared his throat and said, "Maybe in the excitement of the fight someone was moving around and shoved it up with his shoulder without even realizing it."
The others agreed eagerly. One of them said, "Space! It just happened!"
Cook said, "I'll have to report the entire incident. Bigman… "
"Well," said the small Martian calmly, "am I under arrest for manslaughter?"
"N-no," said Cook uncertainly. "I won't arrest you, but I have to report, and you may be arrested in the end."
"Uh huh. Well, thanks for the warning." For the first time since returning from the mines, Bigman found himself thinking of Lucky. This, he thought, is a fine peck of trouble for Lucky to find waiting for him when he comes back.
And yet there was an odd stir of excitement in the little Martian, too, for he was sure he could get out of the trouble… and show Lucky a thing or two in the process.
A new voice broke in. "Bigman!"
Everyone looked up. It was Peverale, stepping down the ramp that led from the upper levels. "Great Space, Bigman, are you down there? And Cook?" Then almost pettishly, "What's going on?"
No one seemed to be able to say anything at all. The old astronomer's eyes fell on the prone body of Urteil, and he said with mild surprise, "Is he dead?"
To Bigman's astonishment, Peverale seemed to lose interest in that. He didn't even wait for his question to be answered before turning to Bigman once more.
He said, "Where's Lucky Starr?"
Bigman opened his mouth but nothing came out. Finally, he managed to say weakly, "Why do you ask?"
"Is he still in the mines?"
"Well… "
"Or is he on Sun-side?"
"Well… "
"Great Space, man, is he on Sun-side?"
Bigman said, "I want to know why you're asking."
"Mindes," said Peverale impatiently, "is out in his flitter, patrolling the area covered by Ms cables. He does that sometimes."
"So?"
"So he's either mad or he's correct in saying he's seen Lucky Starr out there."
"Where?" cried Bigman at once.
Dr. Peverale's mouth compressed in disapproval.
"Then he is out there. That's plain enough. Well, your friend Lucky Starr was apparently in some trouble with a mechanical man, a robot-- "
"A robot!"
"And according to Mindes, who has not landed but who is waiting for a party to be sent out, Lucky Starr is dead!"
14. Prelude to a Trial
Could it be that the robot, having the impossibility of killing a human being ingrained in its tortured mind, found itself incapable of the actual act now that it was face to face with it?
And then he thought that couldn't be, for it seemed to him the pressure of the robot's grip was increasing in smooth stages.
He cried with what force he could muster, "Release me!" and brought up his one free hand from where it had dragged, trailing in the black grime. There was one last chance, one last, miserably weak chance.
He lifted his hand to the robot's head. He could not turn his head to see, crushed as that was against the robot's chest. His hand slipped along the smooth metal surface of the robot's skull two times, three times, four times. He took Ms hand away.
There was nothing more he could do.
Then- Was it his imagination, or did the robot's grip seem to loosen? Was Mercury's big Sun on his side at last?
"Robot!" he cried.
The robot made a sound, but it was only like gears scraping rustily together.
Its grip was loosening. Now was the time to reinforce events by calling what might be left of the Laws of Robotics into play.
Lucky panted, "You may not hurt a human being."
The robot said, "I may not… " haltingly, and without warning fell to the ground.
Its grip was constant, as though rigid in death.
Lucky said, "Robot! Let go!"
Jerkily, the robot loosened his hold. Not entirely, but Lucky's legs came free and his head could move.
He said, "Who ordered you to destroy equipment?"
He no longer feared the robot's wild reaction to that question. He knew that he himself had brought that positronic mind to full disintegration. But in the last stages before final dissolution, perhaps some ragged remnant of the Second Law might hold. He repeated, "Who ordered you to destroy equipment?"
The robot made a blurred sound. "Er-Er… "
Then, maddeningly, radio contact broke off, and the robot's mouth opened and closed twice as though, in the ultimate extremity, it were trying to talk by ordinary sound.
After that, nothing.
The robot was dead.
Lucky's own mind, now that the immediate emergency of near-death was over, was wavering and blurred. He lacked the strength to unwind the robot's limbs entirely from his body. His radio controls had been smashed in the robot's hug.
He knew that he must first regain his strength. To do that meant he must get out of the direct radiation of Mercury's big Sun and quickly. That meant reaching the shadow of the near-by ridge, the shadow he had failed to reach during the duel with the robot.
Painfully he doubled his feet beneath him. Painfully he inched his body toward the shadow of the ridge, dragging the robot's weight with him. Again. Again. The process seemed to last forever and the universe shimmered about him.
Again. Again.
There seemed to be no strength or feeling in his legs, and the robot seemed to weigh a thousand pounds.
Even with Mercury's low gravity, the task seemed beyond his weakening strength, and it was sheer will that drove him on.
His head entered the shadow first. Light blanked out. He waited, panting, and then, with an effort that seemed to crack his thigh muscles, he pushed himself along the ground once more and even once more.
He was in the shadow. One of the robot's legs was still in the sun, blazing reflections in all directions. Lucky looked over his shoulder and noted that dizzily. Then, almost gratefully, he let go of consciousness.
There were intervals later when sense perception crawled back.
Then, much later, he lay quietly, conscious of a soft bed under him, trying to bring those intervals back to mind. There were fragmentary pictures in his memory of people aproaching, a vague impression of motion in a jet vehicle, of Bigman's voice, shrill and anxious. Then, a trifle more clearly, a physician's ministrations.
After that, a blank again, followed by a sharp memory of Dr. Peverale's courtly voice asking him gentle questions. Lucky remembered answering in connected fashion, so the worst of his ordeal must have been over by then. He opened his eyes.