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Poised in mid-air, almost exactly in the center of the huge globular room, was a metal globe of some thirty feet in diameter. It was held, not by any solid girders, but by four narrow beams of light which mounted to it from widespread points of the convex room.
Upon the entire surface of this thirty-foot globe, a group of masters were seated, in little, cup-like seats upon resilient stems. They swayed and nodded with movement. There seemed to be glowing wires and grids and thread-like beams of light carrying current. Light-threads shot from the mechanisms to the heads of the seated brains. All the devices were evidently in operation; and upon this poised central globe the attention of the audience was directed.
Molo bent over me. "The Great Intelligence soon will see you."
Snap, from the other side of Molo, whispered: "What are they doing up there?"
The faint hiss and throb of the devices were audible. I stared, trying to understand. Images, and sounds, invisible and inaudible were being received from across the millions of miles of s.p.a.ce, and they were being trans.m.u.ted within the brains themselves. I saw that discs were fastened upon the bulging foreheads of the brains, upon which the tiny light-beams carrying the vibrations impinged.
These brains, receiving "waves" of some unknown variety were, within the mechanism of the brain-cell, trans.m.u.ting, translating the vibrations into things knowable. They were not seeing, not hearing, but _knowing_ what went on millions of miles across s.p.a.ce!
Again Molo bent over me. "They are about to show this audience what is happening on the three worlds."
Upon the thirty-foot globe I saw now a dozen or so b.a.l.l.s of about three-foot diameter. These had been dark and I had not noticed them.
Now they began glowing, not from wires carrying the current, but from the little hands of the brains touching them.
I stared at the brain nearest me. His flabby little arm was extended; his hand touched the image-ball; gave it light and color, like a fortune-teller of Earth with a crystal before her.
Even though I was some sixty feet from it, I could see the moving images clearly, and recognized the scene. The Tappan Interplanetary Stage. Ships were rising; two of our s.p.a.ceships mounting.
And all in an instant the scene blurred, took form again. The red-green spires and minarets of Ferrok-Shahn. The Central Ca.n.a.l extended like a gash across the foreground; the "Mushroom Mountains"
were in a line upon the horizon. Three Martian s.p.a.ce-flyers slid up while we watched.
And now Grebhar. The silver forest in all its shining beauty, where Venza was born. The sunlight sparkled on the river. A s.p.a.ceship was rising in the distant sky over the shining forest.
Beyond Anita, I heard Venza murmuring, "Home! If only we were there."
I could feel Anita move to silence her.
Molo was whispering: "They come. But we will be ready for them."
Another image: mid-s.p.a.ce. The allied ships gathering, waiting for others to arrive. A group here of about ten of our ships from the three worlds: poised, waiting.
I was aware that upon the mound-like protuberance of the room-floor where we were sitting, a door was opening. It slid, or melted away. At our feet was an opening downward into the small interior of the mound.
Molo whispered, "The great Master. Sit quiet! He will talk to us."
Over us now a barrage came with a hiss, a circular curtain of insulation. The huge globular room faded. We were alone on the mound, Snap, Molo, myself, Anita, Venza and Meka upon the end of our bench.
Behind us stood our single Wandlite guard, with a weapon in his shoulder hand.
At our feet an opening yawned into the mound-interior. It was a tiny, lighted room. In a cup-like seat a brain was perched, just below the level of our feet: the great Master Brain of Wandl. He was alone here.
Not attended by retinue; no pomp and ceremony to usher us into his presence; no underlings obsequiously bowing to mark him for a great ruler.
We stared down, and the great brain stared up at us, seemingly equally curious. His head was a full four feet in diameter; the little body sat in the cup, with dangling legs. The clothes were ornamented: there was a glowing device on the chest.
He spoke with a measured rumble, in Martian. "You are Molo, of Ferrok-Shahn."
"Yes," said Molo.
"You must say, 'Yes, Great Master.'"
"Yes, Great Master."
"I know about you. I know that we trust you."
The huge round eyes next fastened upon me. Then to Snap, and back to me. The words were English this time. "Men of Earth, are you decided, like the Martian, to join with us?"
I tried with sudden vehemence to still my thoughts, or to change them so that they lied. Fear surged upon me. Could this vast mechanism of human mind here at my feet interpret the vibrations of my thoughts?
Could this Great Master of Wandl see into my mind?
The brain said, "You are uncertain. You do not want to die?"
"No Great Master," we both answered.
"You shall not, unless you attempt to cause us trouble. Your thoughts are black." He addressed Molo. "Have they ever been read?"
"No, Great Master."
"When opportunity comes, have them read." He added to Snap and me: "I plan to take prisoners. My Supreme Rulers, rulers of a neighboring more powerful planet, which sent Wandl upon her mission of conquest, ordered it. When your worlds are vacant of life, those who command me will want some of you left alive to be studied. Your thoughts are very black, Earthman. I think when they are carefully read you will prove no great advantage to us."
There was irony in the voice, and upon the monstrous bulging face came the horrible travesty of a grin.
The grin on the brain's face faded. His interest went again to Molo.
"That is your sister." The eyes swung to Meka and back.
"Yes, Great Master."
"She is caring for this Earth-girl and this girl from Venus?"
"Yes, Great Master. I am fond of them. I have plans."
"They are in your charge, Martian; I will not interfere with you. But guard them well. I trust you and your sister. These others...."
"The Earth and the Venus girl can be of help to me, Great Master."
"How?"
"They knew young men who were in the s.p.a.ceship Service. They can tell me the armament of men and weapons on most of the s.p.a.ceships which Earth will send against us."
Did Molo really believe that? Probably not, but he wanted the girls with him. Again came that grotesque smile. "Let them not bother you, Martian. You have work to do. Listen carefully. There will be a battle. Earth, Mars, and Venus may perhaps have a hundred ships. I cannot bring destruction upon those three worlds in a day. We soon will make contact with the light-beam you placed on Earth. That I will show you. But the rotation cannot be stopped at once. It will take time.
"The enemy ships might dare to come to Wandl, but I shall not wait for that. All my s.p.a.ceships are very nearly ready. If there is to be a battle, it shall be far from here, in the neighborhood of the enemy worlds. We are at this time about sixty-two million of your miles from the Earth, a third less than that from Mars, and about a third more from Venus. I understand, Martian, that you are skilled in s.p.a.ce warfare."
The brain went on, "I have given you a vessel to command. You will be surprised to know its name: the _Star-Streak_."
Meka gasped, "But you destroyed it, Great Master!"
"Only wrecked it, Martian girl. It is repaired now. You, Molo--and your sister to help you--who could command it to more advantage? All your own weapons, and ours of Wandl have been added. You may select your crew. Is it to your liking?"