atomic-powered prosthetics—amazing things, virtually robot legs. All the survivors of the Sadlerville Blast were given the necessary replacement limbs free of charge. All except you. You were so sick you had to get away from the world you despised and come here.'

'You're lying,' he said. 'It's not true!'

'Oh, but it is,' Val smiled.

I saw him wilt visibly, and for a moment I almost felt sorry for him, a pathetic legless figure propped up against the wall of the Dome at blaster-point. But then I remembered he'd killed twelve Geigs—or more—and would have added Val to the number had he had the chance.

'You're a very sick man, Ledman,' I said. 'All this time you could have been happy, useful on Earth, instead of being holed up here nursing your hatred. You might have been useful, on Earth. But you decided to channel everything out as revenge.'

'I still don't believe it—those legs. I might have walked again. No—no, it's all a lie. They told me I'd never walk,' he said, weakly but stubbornly still.

I could see his whole structure of hate starting to topple, and I decided to give it the final push.

'Haven't you wondered how I managed to break the tangle-cord when I kicked you over?'

'Yes—human legs aren't strong enough to break tangle-cord that way.'

'Of course not,' I said. I gave Val the blaster and slipped out of my oxysuit. 'Look,' I said. I pointed to my smooth, gleaming metal legs. The almost soundless purr of their motors was the only noise in the room. 'I was in the Sadlerville Blast, too,' I said. 'But I didn't go crazy with hate when I lost my legs.'

Ledman was sobbing.

'Okay, Ledman,' I said. Val got him into his suit, and brought him the fishbowl helmet. 'Get your helmet on and let's go. Between the psychs and the prosthetics men, you'll be a new man inside of a year.'

'But I'm a murderer!'

'That's right. And you'll be sentenced to psych adjustment. When they're finished, Gregory Ledman the killer will be as dead as if they'd electrocuted you, but there'll be a new—and sane—Gregory Ledman.' I turned to Val.

'Got the geigers, honey?'

For the first time since Ledman had caught us, I remembered how tired Val had been out on the desert. I realized now that I had been driving her mercilessly—me, with my chromium legs and atomic-powered muscles. No wonder she was ready to fold! And I'd been too dense to see how unfair I had been.

She lifted the geiger harnesses, and I put Ledman back in his wheelchair.

Val slipped her oxymask back on and fastened it shut.

'Let's get back to the Dome in a hurry,' I said. 'We'll turn Ledman over to the authorities. Then we can catch the next ship for Earth.'

'Go back? Go back? If you think I'm backing down now and quitting you can find yourself another wife! After we dump this guy I'm sacking in for twenty hours, and then we're going back out there to finish that search-pattern. Earth needs uranium, honey, and I know you'd never be happy quitting in the middle like that.' She smiled. 'I can't wait to get out there and start listening for those tell-tale clicks.'

I gave a joyful whoop and swung her around. When I put her down, she squeezed my hand, hard.

'Let's get moving, fellow hero,' she said.

I pressed the stud for the airlock, smiling.

THE END

Вы читаете The Hunted Heroes
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