Space Gypsies

Space Gypsies by Murray Leinster Page A

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Authors: Murray Leinster
Tags: Science-Fiction
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how it could convey information or ask for it. The mooing was not a single note. It was a chord. It was a dissonant mingling of frequencies. Instead of a tone modulated and changed to vowels and consonants in succession, it was a noise like a dozen instruments sounded together, with some ceasing and others entering the cacophony. The result was an outcry a human ear might eventually learn to analyze and understand. But men would never be able to duplicate it.
    “I came inside,” said Howell, “to find out what you just heard. I think that’s the other slug-ship, gone to bring friends to murder us—but thoroughly this time.”
    Ketch said briskly, “I’ll go hunt the remaining beasts, if there are any.” As Howell opened his mouth to speak, Ketch added, “I’ve done plenty of big game hunting, but never before of anything that could shoot back at me. I’m the best one for the job, though!”
    He swung out the port and dropped to the ground. Howell said quickly, “Stay here with Karen, Breen. And keep listening. If the things wore space-suits today, as they did, there must be a limit to how long they can go on what to them is air. But one of them might try to get into the Marintha and smash things before it dies. They don’t know how badly we’re smashed already. Watch!”
    He swung down to the ground behind Ketch. There was a faint sting of chlorine in the air. There was the smell of ozone. There was smoke and the reek of smouldering green stuff. The composite stench was not pleasant. Also there was the smell of scorched flesh,which was revolting.
    Ketch was moving toward the blasted-clear space beyond the six craters first-formed about the yacht. He carried his rifle ready for instant use. But in the hunting of dangerous game there is a necessary precaution at least as important as alertness and a ready weapon. Anyone of the remaining slug-ship creatures would be a castaway now, on a planet whose air it could not breathe. It would be, the most dangerous of all possible hunted things, because it could not possibly hope to live longer than its air supply allowed. If one of those creatures survived, it would not flee. It could gain nothing by flight. So it would try to kill members of the monstrous oxygen-breathing animals who had destroyed its ship. It could have no other purpose.
    So Howell followed Ketch, making of himself the needed extra precaution no hunter of dangerous game should go without. That precaution was another man with a rifle, ready to use it if the first man needed help.
    Ketch needed it. There was nearly no wind, and coiling masses of steam and smoke and smells rose twistily toward the sky. Ketch advanced carefully toward the burned area. The slug-creatures had scattered to be outside it, and from the unscorched outer edge had directed the aim of the ball-lightning weapons by their fire. Ketch went on. His eyes swept back and forth, keenly. There could be no question of his alertness or his caution.
    Then there was a stirring among tree branches twenty feet above the ground. Ketch turned his eyes upward. He searched for something that seemed to be shaking a foliage-masked-tree limb overhead. It was in all respects what a hunter should do.
    But Howell shot as fast as his rifle would fire. A stream of blaster-bolts—glowing as brightly as ancient tracer-bullets—poured into the jungle at the base of the tree whose upper parts Ketch stared at so alertly.
    On the ground a hand-weapon exploded and something jerked violently.
    There’d been a slug-creature aground and it had found one of the surprisingly few vines that grew in this jungle. It had tugged on that to call Ketch’s attention aloft. He’d raised his eyes for long seconds, certainly, he’d have stared at that one spot. Which would have made him a perfect target for the slug-creature.
    But Howell had seen the lesser stirring at ground-level. He’d flung bolts at it, and he’d killed one of the two slug-creatures possibly still

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