Part 3 (2/2)

”It's death to remain,” I a.s.sured him earnestly.

”But not definitely certain,” he maintained. ”For some reason or other they're holding off from us. We have an advantage of some kind, but d.a.m.ned if I know what it is.”

”Look!” cried Quentin.

He pointed to three of the four projectiles which were visible from where we lay. They were glowing strangely with intense light. A jagged beam of electricity leaped out from the airs.h.i.+p. Instantly iridescent shafts of light spread from the nearest projectile to the ones on either side of it. The shafts made a flas.h.i.+ng display, crooked, forked and darting.

”Lightning bolts!” exclaimed Cragley. ”We're surrounded by a fence of them!”

”Penned in--like rats in a trap!”

”What will they do now?”

”Hard to tell. Probably pick us off one by one at their leisure. They seem to be going to a lot of unnecessary trouble for no reason at all.”

Three sharp blasts of sound issued from the outlaw s.h.i.+p. A pause, and then followed three more. I watched Cragley to see what action, if any, he would take. He seemed undecided. I began to grow uneasy.

”Not a chance of breaking through that screen of electricity,” said Quentin. ”They got us right where they want to keep us.”

”But why?”

Quentin shook his head. ”If it was just the platinum, they could destroy every one of us, then come in here and take it.”

CHAPTER III

Weird figures suddenly burst the walls of flaming death. They were outlaws attired in strange accoutrements. A series of metal rings surrounded them, connected to their bodies with spokes. The electrical discharges darted all over the rings. As they came closer, we discovered that they were not surrounded by separate rings but with a continuous spiral which narrowed together at the top of the head. The other end dragged on the ground.

”Electric resistors of some kind!” muttered Cragley whose face wore a hopeless expression. ”They walked right through those lightning bolts!”

Quentin aimed his pistol and fired at one of the slowly advancing figures. The spiral glowed faintly. The outlaw continued his approach.

”There goes our last chance!” I cried. ”We might just as well toss up the sponge!”

Cragley was thinking fast. It was unlike him to give up without a fight.

But what was he to do when his weapons had been shorn of their force, leaving him utterly helpless before the superior strength of the brigands.

Several figures rushed from the bushes. They were panic-stricken pa.s.sengers. In alarm, despite the warning cry the captain hurled at them, they rushed straight past the advancing figures with their enc.u.mbering spirals. Frightened, bewildered, and hemmed in by the play of lightning, they ran directly in the path of the electric fence. The crackling bolts enfolded three of them before the fourth became startled out of his madness, retreating from the flas.h.i.+ng death.

One of the spiral clad figures turned and regarded the frightened man for a moment. Raising his electric pistol, he fired, and the pa.s.senger from the ill-fated _C-49_ joined his companions who had futilely rushed the electric barrier.

A voice from the s.p.a.ce s.h.i.+p of the brigands suddenly gave out an order.

The voice came from a speaker and was many times amplified.

”Crew and pa.s.sengers of the _C-49_--come out in the open. Bring the platinum with you. Keep away from the electric fence unless you wish to die. Come out--or we shall come in and hunt you down.”

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