Troubled Star
Copyright© 2026 by George O. Smith
Chapter 7
The snick of a key in the lock did not break through their preoccupation with one another, but the cynical voice of Dusty Britton came as the shock of a bucket of cold water:
“Very pleasant scene,” he drawled. “I hope I’ve interrupted something.”
Scyth and Barbara parted in a whirl.
Scyth felt a sinking sensation in his middle as he realized that the facts were far too clear; that the sensible course was a hasty retreat, but the only path was barred by Dusty Britton.
Barbara took the woman’s course. “Don’t you ever use the doorbell?” she asked icily.
Dusty smiled sourly. “I always have,” he said. “Up to now. But this time I want words with the gentleman in question instead of losing him out through the back door.”
“I think I should explain,” said Scyth uncertainly.
Dusty chuckled. “What sort of explanation do you think I’ll accept?” he asked the Marandanian.
“But I—”
“Stow it, Scyth. You couldn’t explain a thing and you know it.”
Barbara snorted angrily. “See here, Dusty, you can’t come in here and start—”
“I’m not starting anything. I’m just seeking a conference with Scyth.”
“How did you know?” asked the Marandanian uncertainly.
“By being just smart enough to find a tomcat by knowing where the tomcat is likely to prowl.”
“Meaning?” demanded Barbara icily.
Dusty ignored her. To Scyth he said, “I don’t know beans about barytrine fields or generators, but I guessed that you’d set it up on earth somewhere, start it cooking, and wetnurse it until it came to a boil. That would leave you on Earth with time to kill. Since time hangs heavy, you’d probably look up one of the only two people you know. The more attractive one, Scyth. So I’ve been haunting the front door like a private eye.”
Barbara coughed. “You took that right out of The Space Patrol Fights The Overlords of Delgon.”
“So I’ve got good writers,” grinned Dusty.
“What do you intend to do?” asked Scyth nervously.
Dusty faced Scyth. Dusty topped the Marandanian by perhaps an inch or two and covered him by a good twenty pounds. He guessed that if it came to roughhouse he would probably win. He poised himself on the balls of his feet, just in case. He had no way of guessing the speed or power of the wiry-looking Scyth Radnor and so he was taking no chances.
“I became a professional bum because of you and your phanobands and your menslators and your barytrine fields,” he said bluntly. “I was laughed out of everything I had. So now you’re going to go with me and tell ‘em all that I was right. We’ll have the big domes out to take a look at your spacecraft, have ‘em inspect your barytrine doodad, take a gander at whatever it is you call phanobands, and so on.”
Scyth understood all too well. He was trapped, faced by a man who could take him apart bit by bit without much trouble, and if he came out of it alive, he would end up by being a bigger bum than Dusty Britton had become. Scyth had fumbled badly by taking time off for fun and games with Barbara and he knew it. The only thing to do was to clear out of here no matter what happened afterwards. For once the barytrine field snapped on, any evidence of Scyth Radnor’s attempt at dalliance could not come to light for a thousand years.
His hand lifted slowly to the inside pocket of his jacket as he said, “I’ll be glad to help you, Dusty. Naturally, none of us have any notion of making things tough for anybody. So—”
Scyth went into whirlwind motion. His hand came out from inside the coat carrying a fluted-barrelled weapon. As the end of the thing cleared the lapel of Scyth’s jacket he was fingering the trigger and a pale emanence seared out and cut down and over in a slashing arc.
But at the whirl of action, Dusty’s hand arrowed into the space between the lower two buttons of his dress shirt and came out with a snub-nosed automatic.
The pale slash of Scyth’s weapon was blotted out by the flash and racket of a shot.
Scyth whirled, flinging his weapon against the wall from an outstretched hand. The thing hit with a crunching sound and Scyth continued to turn on rubbery legs, sinking and sinking and turning until he sat heavily on the floor. He sat, stunned, just long enough to fold his hands over his belly. Then he folded forward over them and rolled around sidewise as if falling out of his own lap. He half-rolled and fell a-sprawl on his face. A spread of blood stained the white carpet.
Dusty looked down at Scyth. He looked from Scyth to the snub-nosed gun in his hand and swallowed heavily. The gun dropped to the floor with a muffled thud from nerveless fingers; Dusty looked at Barbara out of far-away eyes and said, “He—er—I—”
Then he slid to the floor in a dead faint.
Barbara stifled a scream. The whole thing had been lightning-fast, but she had caught most of it. Scyth had shot first but now he was bleeding on her carpet. Dusty had shot second and was lying in a dead faint. Hysteria choked up in her but she drove it back. She wanted to laugh hysterically. She wanted to let go and slide to the floor and go to sleep while someone else came in and cleaned up the mess.
Realizing that she could only hold off the rising hysteria until someone did make a rational move, Barbara reached for and drained the highball on the bar. She augmented this slug with a muscle-sized hooker from the bottle. The liquor burned down and helped to iron out her jittery nerves.
She grabbed the ice-pitcher which was filled now with melted cubes and a slosh of water. Unceremoniously she poured the cold mess over Dusty’s white face.
Dusty’s eyes fluttered and his voice made spluttering noises. “Wha—?” he fumbled.
“Come off it!” snapped Barbara.
Dusty sat up weakly. He looked around for a moment as if he weren’t quite sure of where he was. Then he caught sight of Scyth and it all came back to him. He scrambled to his feet and took the bottle from Barbara’s hand. He took a healthy slug himself and then said, “He tried to—tried to—”
Barbara laughed hysterically. Between gales of half-mad laughter, she said, “Tried to beat the fastest man—in The Space Patrol—to the draw!”
Dusty slapped her across the face with the flat of his hand. “Shut up!” he roared. “Shut up and make sense!”
She came out of the hysteria instantly, shrinking back from Dusty with a hand against the growing redness on her face. “Dusty—don’t—”
He shook his head hard. “Sorry. You needed it.”
“I know. But he—? Look, Dusty, what do we do now?”
Dusty looked down at the bleeding man. “Cops,” he said thickly. “I’ve just shot a—” He could not finish; his face was turning green again.
“Cops nothing,” snapped Barbara.
“But shooting—”
“Come off it, Dusty. The cops will only delay and investigate and generally botch things up until it will be two months and a thousand years from here.”
“Cops aren’t that stupid.”
“Cops aren’t stupid at all,” she snapped. “They’re just smart enough to insist on knowing all the answers. So tell you what. You go to the phone and call Lieutenant Yonkers and explain carefully that you’ve just shot a Marandanian Marauder in my living room. Tell him you’ve collected one of your Great Galactics, only he’s defunct. See how far you’ll get!”
Dusty looked at her blankly.
“The first stop will be the bull pen,” she went on hotly. “The second stop is the nut-locker. And the third stop is some unknown star a thousand years from now while the F.B.I. try to match the guy’s fingerprints. Then you call on me for a witness and that gets us the front page in big black letters saying: ‘Former Hero Shoots Rival In Leading Lady’s Boudoir!’ Start thinking right, Dusty Britton. Or,” she added scathingly, “call up one of your writers.”
Dusty considered. “I could slope out of here and—”
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