Dusts Of Death

	                        by Earl Pearson

A star.  A star out far from the warmth of the central cluster.  A dying star
upon the Rim, "where stars grow thin and the cold of space creeps in."  A star
in the last of its life emitting only a dull red glow against the cold of the
eternal night.

A planet.  Circling the ancient sun, a cold dead planet, third of a family of
nine.  Dead planets, all but the innermost frozen to death.  The inner one is
now warm, but life was long ago burned from its face.

Dwyl turned from the telecube and faced the other three in the control room.
"There's no need to tell you that we can go no further.  Our power supply is
almost gone.  We'll have to try and make a landing on one of the planets of
this system.  Ronak, since you're our astrogator, which one do you think is our
best chance?"

The astrogator looked up, nervously aware that all eyes were on him.  "Well,
really I don't know too much about planetography," he began apologetically.  It
was the simple truth.  But then, who did?  Of the 2,000 who had fled upon the
ancient ship, four alone remained.

It was only blind luck that among them were a pilot and a navigator.  Somewhere
hidden deep in the ancient ship the knowledge lay, but they had neither time
nor did they realize all the skills that they were lacking, or more than
partially realize it.

	                            *******

Almost eight centuries ago a small group of refugees desperately conceived a
plan.  Xinod Tebor was an obscure historian on the little planet of Evorlt,
less than half a parsec from Ailairtenc, center of the galaxy, home of the
Galactic Federation.  He, along with a few others, saw what was coming, a break-
up of the Federation, decades of civil strife and revolution that would follow.
But most of all, they realized that man, a minor race whose legends said that
he rose from the dust of the Rim, would be totally annihilated.

Man, the violent barbaric race, would meet a violent end.  Out of this
desperation, Xinod gathered the remnants of the species together, and they
desperately plotted an escape.

Slowly, but surely, their plans were laid.  A great library was compiled.
Experts in all fields were found.  One by one, all the problems fell before the
determined effort.  But time was running out, and there was still one problem
that defied them.  That was the ship they would have to use.

Stellar freighters are expensive, especially if you must have one that is large
enough to establish a closed-life cycle in.  One other thing had to be taken
into consideration.  They would have to flee far from the Central Cluster; and
any of the super-C, faster than light ships would be useless.  For once the
stars began to thin, the ship's power would be lost as the ivlre radiation
concentration diminished.

So the only place they could find such a ship was in a museum.  The only way
they could get it was to steal it.  Finally they located the ship "Planet
Explorer" in the Museum of Life on Ailairtenc.  Calculations were immediately
made.

Finally, on the third of Syrius, 3160 A.C., the group moved.  A quick, well-
organized infiltration put a skeleton crew on the "Explorer."  They lifted the
ship through a hole blasted in the dome housing it.  It rose tiredly into the
center of a makeshift escort of ships they had been able to throw together.

Miraculously only one third of the escort was ionized before they landed at
their secret base on Evorlt.  In only two chronos, the tight schedule of
refitting was complete and again the ship and escort lifted.  They immediately
set a course for the spiral arms of the galaxy.  By the time they were out of
the Federation, only two of the escort were left.

After that they pushed the ship as fast as they dared.  For the ship had been
old when The Federation had been a dream in the heads of visionaries.  The
legends of pre-history said it had brought the first party of explorers to
Ailairtenc.  Through the centuries her metal had been crystalizing, and no one
could say just how much the old girl would take.

For the first six centuries they had traveled a straight line, trying to put as
much distance as possible between them and the Central Cluster.  Finally they
began to search the dusky worlds of the Rim.  The centuries slid by, and slowly
the refugees's hope turned to apathy.  They felt a growing conviction that they
never would find a world to settle on, and slower still the number of them
decreased.  Men and women decided it was better to be childless than condemn
their heirs to endless wandering in a metal prison.  And the specialized skills
of civilization and survival which didn't need to be practiced were lost.  Now
there were four.

	                            *******

"But as far as I can tell," continued Ronak, "we might as well try the third
one."

"Are there any questions?"  Dwyl searched the faces of his compatriots.  "Well,
let's strap in for the landing."

	                            *******

Dwyl was sweating.  Even under ideal conditions it would be hard to land the
ship without the aid of a proper field.  But to make matters worse, he had
never landed one, even though he was a pilot.  The ship hadn't been grounded in
over a century.  For a crew he had an inexperienced stripling, a kid who had
chanced to be an astrogator, and a young engineer.

Dwyl flipped on the rear viewers and watched the planet mushrooming on the
screen above him.  Well, it was now or never; he cut the braking rockets.  The
ship began to slow.  Then suddenly there was a muffled explosion, and the ship
began to tilt.  Dwyl, with the lightning-quick reflexes of a trained pilot,
counteracted with the steering vanes.  From deep within the ship rose the
scream of tortured metal moving to answer a call after centuries of inactivity.
Slowly the ship righted herself.

But still the ship was falling too fast.  Dwyl gently eased more power from the
ship.  Slowly he pushed the power lever over as far as he dared.  The ship
slowed more, and it was beginning to look as if things were going to turn out
all right after all.

1,000 feet, 500 feet, and then came a series of explosions.  The image on the
screen lurched sickeningly and went blank.  Dwyl didn't have a chance to get
half way thru the First Prayer before blackness engulfed him.

	                            *******

Bertor shrugged the cloak tighter over his shivering body.  He couldn't help
but see the irony of it all.  He, the only one of four who had no knowledge,
should be the one to survive the crash.  As he peered at the horizon in the
growing darkness, a blast of wind and snow slapped at him.  There was nothing
in sight anywhere but wasteland.  Maybe they had made a mistake...  Well, no
use thinking about it.  He cast one last glance at the wrecked "Explorer," tomb
of his last contacts with life.  Then he slowly drew his blaster.

	                      [pp. 23 - 27, THE NO-EYED MONSTER #1, Winter 1964]


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