Miners in the Sky

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Authors: Murray Leinster
Tags: Science-Fiction
definite reluctance to do what he now must do. He hadn’t wanted Nike to think of any possible linkage between the blowing up of his donkeyship and what happened to Keyes, guarding the rock-fragment that was too valuable to be left unwatched. He’d thrust the suspicion away from his own mind as well as he could, but it was back.
    The drive of the lifeboat began its moaning, humming sound. The boat surged ahead. He set the controls. He watched the radar screen, again working. He listened to the speaker over his head. Nike stood just behind him. He stood still, watching and listening, his hands unconsciously clenching and unclenching because he was very much afraid of what he was going to find out. He was fairly confident of his astrogation, but he didn’t like to think of what it might lead him to.
    Presently, at the very utmost limit of the radar’s range, there was the beginning of an indication of something solid. Dunne swung the lifeboat in that exaggerated fashion needed for a change of course in space.
    “Is that it?” asked Nike anxiously.
    “Perhaps,” said Dunne.
    His tone was unconsciously cold. The birdlike twittering he’d heard was unnatural. It was wrong. Somebody knew where Keyes was. That last, alone, could add up to disaster. Dunne smelled disaster. Something was wrong. Very wrong!
    The lifeboat moved on, pointing on a course that seemed to have no connection with the direction of its motion. But the radar image began to take recognizable shape. There was still nothing to be seen out the viewports. That was merely pure golden haze. But the radar said that the lifeboat was moving toward something solid. Then it said toward something large. Then it said something near.
    “It’s our rock, I think,” said Dunne quietly. He spoke into the communicator’s transmitter. “Keyes?”
    There was no answer. He spoke again. Then he fell silent until the featureless haze ahead began to show a formless darkening at one particular spot. Then he said, very carefully, “I don’t like this, Nike. Watch, will you? I’m going to get into my space-suit.”
    He went back. Nike, her heart in her throat, watched ahead while she heard Dunne getting into the suit which allowed him to work and move outside of the ship in emptiness. The last time, he’d stood in an airlock door and fired bazooka shells at donkeyships that trailed him. Now—
    The dimness took shape. Nike said tensely, “We’re very close!”
    Dunne came waddling into the control room, working himself swiftly into his space-suit, He reversed the lifeboat’s drive. The small space-vessel came to an almost complete stop only fifty yards or so from a mass of stony stuff many times the volume of the lifeboat. It was seventy feet high—“high” being the longest dimension of any object in space where there was no up or down. It was totally irregular in form. There were painted letters and numbers on it. Its mineral nature was obvious. The lifeboat drifted very, very slowly toward it.
    “Aren’t you going to call again?” asked Nike anxiously.
    “There are detectors,” said Dunne. “They should tell him we’re here.”
    His voice was unnatural. This was wrong. It was very wrong. It was appalling.
    The big, irregularly shaped lump of stone turned slowly in emptiness. There was a slash of gray along one side. It was that friable matrix material in which abyssal crystals were always found. The stony mass turned further. There was a bubble—a fifteen-foot dome of plastic, welded by its own nature to a hollow part of the stony surface. Inside it there were objects. A small-capacity air-freshener. Oxygen tanks. Mining equipment. A sleeping bag with its light-hood that allowed a man to provide himself with darkness to sleep in, even in a bubble in the Rings. There was something inside the sleeping bag, but the hood was pulled up.
    “There he is!” said Nike, her voice trembling. “In the sleeping bag! See? He’s asleep!”
    Dunne didn’t recognize

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