A gong sounded. A moment later a man ran up. "Captain, sir. A report! Burton's ship is coming down. Also the Ashley ship, sir!"
"See!" Captain Hart beat the table. "Here come the jackals to the harvest! They can't wait to feed. Wait till I confront them. I'll make them cut me in on this feast--I will!"
Martin looked sick. He stared at the captain.
"Business, my dear boy, business," said the captain.
Everybody looked up. Two rockets swung down out of the sky.
When the rockets landed they almost crashed.
"What's wrong with those fools?" cried the captain, jumping up. The men ran across the meadowlands to the steaming ships.
The captain arrived. The airlock door popped open on Burton's ship.
A man fell out into their arms.
"What's wrong?" cried Captain Hart.
The man lay on the ground. They bent over him and he was burned, badly burned. His body was covered with wounds and scars and tissue that was inflamed and smoking. He looked up out of puffed eyes and his thick tongue moved in his split lips.
"What happened?" demanded the captain, kneeling down, shaking the man's arm.
"Sir, sir," whispered the dying man. "Forty-eight hours ago, back in Space Sector Seventy-nine DFS, off Planet One in this system, our ship, and Ashley's ship, ran into a cosmic storm, sir." Liquid ran gray from the man's nostrils. Blood trickled from his mouth. "Wiped out. All crew. Burton dead. Ashley died an hour ago. Only three survivals."
"Listen to me!" shouted Hart bending over the bleeding man. "You didn't come to this planet before this very hour?"
Silence.
"Answer me!" cried Hart.
The dying man said, "No. Storm. Burton dead two days ago. This first landing on any world in six months."
"Are you sure?" shouted Hart, shaking violently, gripping the man in his hands. "Are you sure?"
"Sure, sure," mouthed the dying man.
"Burton died two days ago? You're positive?"
"Yes, yes," whispered the man. His head fell forward. The man was dead.
The captain knelt beside the silent body. The captain's face twitched, the muscles jerking involuntarily. The other members of the crew stood back of him looking down. Martin waited. The captain asked to be helped to his feet, finally, and this was done. They stood looking at the city. "That means----"
"That means?" said Martin.
"We're the only ones who've been here," whispered Captain Hart. "And that man----"
"What about that man, Captain?" asked Martin.
The captain's face twitched senselessly. He looked very old indeed, and gray. His eyes were glazed. He moved forward in the dry grass.
"Come along, Martin. Come along. Hold me up; for my sake, hold me. I'm afraid I'll fall. And hurry. We can't waste time----"
They moved, stumbling, toward the city, in the long dry grass, in the blowing wind.
Several hours later they were sitting in the mayor's auditorium. A thousand people had come and talked and gone. The captain had remained seated, his face haggard, listening, listening. There was so much light in the faces of those who came and testified and talked he could not bear to see them. And all the while his hands traveled, on his knees, together; on his belt, jerking and quivering.
When it was over, Captain Hart turned to the mayor and with strange eyes said: