Part 3
He flipped the drive control, sent the green space-ship whipping past a darting meteor. He spun the ship again, in a tight circle, thrilling to the surge of power released by the light touch of his hand on the controls, then laughed aloud at Myra's instant cry of ecstatic alarm.
"Hush, Infant," he said, "I'm just practicing up for the time when I sell the rights to the constructing of ships identical to this. Boy, will the shekels ever roll in!"
Myra tucked in a loose strand of hair, bent over and kissed Steve on the lobe of his right ear. He squirmed, wriggled, jerked the ship off-course by an inadvertent twitch of his hand, growled playfully, then let the ship travel uncontrolled while he kissed the ear of his wife in return.
"Steve, pulleeze!" Myra said faintly.
"What were you saying about the Indians, dear?" she asked finally.
"'Lo, the poor Indian,'" Steve misquoted, "he has gone the way of all--_Damn!_" His words were bitten off by the sudden jerking of the ship.
Myra frowned. "Maybe those Indians didn't build this thing so well," she said worriedly. "Remember Peachy said the first few ships built by his people wouldn't fly. It would be just our luck to try and ride an experimental job back to Jupiter."
Steve jiggled the controls.
"Something grabbed us," he said. "Something just reached out and jerked us off-course--tried to hold us back."
"I don't believe it," Myra said. "You're just--"
The ship whipped to one side, then bucked playfully like a trout riding a fisherman's line.
"Ugh!" said Steve faintly, struggled to pull his body back into his seat.
"Steve, I'm frightened!" Myra wailed.
"Nonsense!" Steve said stoutly. "There isn't a blamed thing to be afra--"
* * * * *
Suddenly the ship began to toss crazily, like a rat shaken in a terrier's teeth. Steve and Myra were thrown to the floor. Unsteadily making their way to a window, they saw a little golden meteor-ship, such as had been the beginning of all their trouble. Evidently they were caught in its magnetic field. Steve tried accelerating, but they were powerless to escape.
Myra burst into helpless tears. "Oh, Steve, this is too much. We _can't_ go back there again."
"Damn those peach-creatures!" said Steve. "Just when I thought we'd never see them again."
Again letters of fire appeared above the little golden ship. "RETURN," they said, simply.
"You're not going to do it?" asked Myra.
"There's no use getting killed." Steve shrugged disgustedly.
He was about to reverse the ship's course when a long snake-like flame streaked up from the planet below with a menacing rumble that could be felt through the hull of the ship.
The golden craft saw it coming and tried to escape, but the lash of flame followed its frantic dodgings inexorably. Suddenly, like a striking snake, it straightened. Its tip touched the meteor-ship. There was an eye-blinding flash.
When they could see again, nothing was visible but the planet below, looking serene and peaceful on the wooded half of its surface turned to them. Of the attacking ship or the instrument of its doom there was no sign.
Steve Horn looked for the last time at the planet before climbing back into the control seat. He wiped his eyes with a self-conscious gesture.
"Thanks," he said.
And flicked the drive-beam that was to send them home.
* * * * *
[Transcriber's Note: Section headings for section I to III missing.]