Part Seven:
Aboard
the Gemini 12, the alien Kresh has taken advantage of Professor Robinson’s
collapse and has pulled a laser rifle on Don, Judy and Dr. Smith. Suddenly, in a
burst of light, a familiar mechanical voice was heard . . . .
“Danger! Extreme danger!
Cross-dimensional protective forcefield in place!”
Judy cried out. “It’s the robot! They
must have sent him after us!”
Kresh spun around and saw the mechanical
man, still ablaze with blue sparks of the ion forcefield. “What is that?”
Kresh screamed, instinctively shooting at the robot. The laser blast bounced off
the forcefield and hit the astrogator.
There was a boom and a shower of sparks as
the navigation island burst into flames. An alarm went off and once again, the
Gemini began rocking. The engines started to rev, sending the ship into an
unknown flight path. The force of the acceleration caught everyone by surprise,
tossing them off their balance. Don, Judy, Smith and even Kresh careened across
the deck, grasping for something to support themselves. The robot switched off
the forcefield and began flailing its retractable arms. “Danger,” it said.
“Extreme danger!”
“Robot!” Don shouted. “Disarm that
alien!”
Dr. Smith piped up. “Yes you ninny! Save
us!”
Struggling to maintain its balance, the
robot reached out for Kresh, but the alien quickly dodged its claws and fired
another shot. This time the blast hit home, striking the robot directly in its
breastplate and disabling it. The robot made a groaning sound and leaned
forward, its arms dangling lifeless.
Kresh steadied himself against the frame of
the co-pilot’s chair and tried to take aim at Don. Just as he did so, Judy
lost her grip and slid halfway across the deck. Kresh reached down and grabbed
her around the neck. “All right!” he said. “Everyone settle down or she
dies!”
Don had gotten to his feet and held tight
to the rim of the burning astrogator. He crouched forward, ready to leap at
Kresh. Dr. Smith was cringing on the floor, practically hugging the base of the
pilot’s seat.
The rocking of the Gemini decreased
somewhat, but the ship’s lurching motion was still strong enough to make
normal standing or walking impossible. Don figured the back-up controls had
stabilized the ship. “Let her go, Kresh,” he ordered.
“I’m afraid I just can’t do that
Major West,” Kresh said. “Despite this minor setback, I fully intend to
press on with my plan. However, in light of the changed circumstances, I must
insist that you and Dr. Smith suit up and leave the ship at once. I will keep
the girl to ensure your compliance.”
“What?” Smith said. “You’re simply
abandoning us to the dark reaches of space?” He looked through the main
viewpoint at the blackness outside the ship. “Oh dear! We’re doomed!”
“You’ve got to be kidding Kresh,” Don said.
“There’s no way I’m leaving her here with you.”
“Surely you don’t expect us to just
step out into space,” Dr. Smith pleaded. “There must be some way we can come
to an understanding.”
John Robinson opened his eyes a sliver. He
was laying on his side in front of the freezing tubes and from his position, he
could see Kresh holding Judy at gunpoint. He couldn’t hear the conversation
very well, but he knew he had to act fast. But what could he possibly do in his
condition?
“Oh don’t worry about the girl,”
Kresh said. “I’ll place her in that empty freezing tube after you’ve gone.
I’ll need some time to formulate my next step. As for you two, I’d highly
advise you to follow my instructions. My patience is beginning to wear thin.”
Judy struggled in Kresh’s grip. The
alien’s arm was wrapped tightly around her throat, making it hard for her to
breathe and nearly impossible to speak.
John needed a weapon. He slowly reached out
with his right arm and quietly patted the floor beyond his head. He remembered
the pistol Don had earlier. Where had it ended up? Just at the limit of his
reach, his fingertips landed on the edge of the gun’s barrel. He tried pulling
it toward him, but the pistol merely rocked in place. I’ve got to get a grip
on it, he thought. He kept his eyes on Kresh. Beyond the alien, John could see
some kind of inactive robot standing uselessly. He briefly wondered where such a
monstrous looking device had come from.
“Look Kresh,” Don said. “We can talk
this over. Nobody has to get hurt. Just let her go.”
“Didn’t I tell the two of you to get
your spacesuits on?” Kresh asked menacingly. “I suppose you don’t think I
would really harm the girl.” He tightened his hold on Judy. “It looks like
I’m going to have to show you how serious I am.”
Judy tried to wrest herself free of the
alien’s grip, but she couldn’t. It surprised her how strong Kresh was for
such a small being. “Please!” she cried. “You’re hurting me!”
This is it, John thought. He realized there
was only one way he could make it. He had to move fast to grab the pistol and
take out the alien. They all still thought he was passed out, so he would have
the element of surprise on his side. He prayed it would be enough. His head was
throbbing worse than ever and his body felt very weak, but as he had trained
himself to do, John set his feelings and physical condition aside and focused
mentally on the task before him. He flexed his legs slightly against a support
beam and pushed forward. His hand closed around the pistol and he sat up fast.
John summoned all his remaining strength and quickly took aim.
“Get your hands off my daughter!” he
yelled, firing the laser.
Kresh was caught completely by surprise.
The laser beam that struck him was narrow, but contained an enormous amount of
energy. Kresh lost all muscle control as the laser seared into his body. The
power of the beam instantly broke down his nervous system. Judy felt the
alien’s arms go limp and she quickly pushed herself away from him. The beam
had passed close enough to her face to singe her eyelashes, but otherwise, she
hadn’t been harmed. Scrambling backwards across the floor in a frantic
crablike motion, Judy watched as the laser beam devoured Kresh’s small frame.
The alien suddenly vibrated in a grotesque dance of death and then vanished
altogether in a burst of energy. Suddenly, the Gemini was very quiet.
Once Kresh was gone, John dropped the laser
and collapsed again.
Don was at Judy’s side, helping her to
her feet. “Are you all right?”
“I’m fine,” she said. “Dad!” She
left Don and ran to John’s side. “Dad!” she cried again. “We thought you
were gone!”
Don grabbed a fire extinguisher and started
dousing the burning astrogator. “Smith!” he yelled. “Get that robot
working!”
Professor Robinson held Judy’s hand and
smiled up at her. “I couldn’t let him hurt you. You may be from another
universe, but you’re still my daughter,” he said. He reached for her hand.
“I’m sorry I was so harsh with you earlier.”
“I understand,” she said. “You were
protecting your family. My dad would’ve done the same thing. That’s one of
the things I love about you. Or him. Or both of you.” She laughed. “This
situation is so confusing.”
“I know,” John said. He squeezed her
hand and suddenly grimaced in pain. “Th- thank God you - you’re my -” John
closed his eyes and whispered. “My daughter.” Then he was still.
Judy shook him lightly, but there was no
response. “Dad? Dad! Wake up! Please! Wake up! No, daddy you can’t die!
Please wake up!”
Don stopped his work on the damaged
astrogator and grabbed Smith’s arm. “We need that robot now!” he barked.
Then, he knelt at Judy’s side. Tears were streaming down her cheeks and she
turned to Don and wept openly. He wrapped his arm around her and held her.
“It’s going to be all right,” he said. He felt John’s wrist, but
couldn’t find a pulse.
Smith furiously snapped relays into place
on the robot, trying to circumvent the burned out circuits. “Just a moment,”
he nervously called. “I’ve almost got it. There!” He turned a switch on
the robot’s front panel and the mechanical man sprang into life.
“Danger, danger!” it said.
“Never mind that,” Smith cried.
“Evaluate Professor Robinson’s condition at once!”
The robot’s sensors hummed and clicked
for a few seconds. “Professor Robinson is near death,” it said. “He must
be returned to a state of cryogenic stasis immediately.”
Judy looked up. “He’s still alive?”
She choked back a sob. “Then we can still save him!”
“Can you set the freezing tube
controls?” Don asked the robot. “We don’t understand his physiology.”
“Affirmative!” the robot stated.
“Place him in his cryogenic suspension tube, I shall operate the controls.”
“Smith!” Don yelled. “Give me a
hand!” Together, the two men pulled John to his feet and gently positioned him
inside the freezing tube. “Okay,” Don said.
The robot rolled to the leftmost section of
the main control panel. As there was no time for mechanical button pushing, the
robot sounded a string of beeps and tones, instructing the main computer what
settings to use to stabilize John’s condition. The computer quickly processed
the orders and lights suddenly flashed on and off above John’s freezing tube.
Within seconds, the front half of the tube quietly slid into place. As they
watched, a light within the tube grew in intensity, enveloping John in it’s
glow.
Practically biting her nails, Judy watched
as the process completed. The glow faded, revealing John standing within the
tube, in perfect hibernation. She turned to the robot. “Is he all right?”
she asked. “Did it work?”
“Professor Robinson’s respiratory,
circulatory and metabolic systems have been restored,” the robot said.
“However, he must remain in cryogenic suspension for at least 72 hours for a
full recovery.”
“Oh thank you!” Judy said, ecstatic.
She wrapped her arms around the robot. “You always come through for us, robot.
What would we do without you?”
Dr. Smith cleared his throat. “Don’t
forget, dear girl, that it was I who repaired our mechanical friend so
quickly.”
She smiled. “Of course I couldn’t
forget that, Dr. Smith! And after everything Dad said about you, you still
jumped to his aid. Thank you so much!” She gave Smith a warm hug.
“That’s just great,” Don said.
“Once again, Smith almost gets us all killed and here you are hugging him!”
“Because of Dr. Smith, my father is
alive!” Judy said.
Don had just about reached his boiling
point. “He’s not even your real -,” he stopped himself. Don’t get into
this, he thought. It’s not worth it. “Never mind that,” he said.
“We’ve got to find a way to get back to the Jupiter.” He looked at the
robot. “I hope you’ve got some information for us, mister.”
“Affirmative,” the robot said. “I
have been programmed with instructions from Professor Robinson on returning all
of us to our own universe.”
“Oh, what wondrous news!” Smith cried
out. “I simply cannot wait to leave this ghastly dimension. To be reunited
with the rest of the family will be sheer bliss after this dreadful
experience!” He clasped his hands together over his breastbone in an
expression of joy.
Don gave Smith a harsh look. It nagged him
to the core that Smith had backstabbed them and was getting away with it once
again. Talking to Judy was useless. She was so happy that the Gemini’s John
Robinson would be all right, nothing else mattered. Judy could forgive Smith for
anything, it seemed. Don, on the other hand apparently had done nothing right
the entire time they’d been aboard the Gemini 12. The cold looks Judy had
given him made Don feel broken inside.
“Robot,”
Don said in a flat voice. “Let’s get going on those instructions you’ve
got.”
“Affirmative!” The robot rolled over to
the control panel and began reciting Professor Robinson’s instructions for
setting up an anti-matter field generator.
Judy straightened up around the deck as best she could, glancing at the
freezing tubes from time to time.
“This will sure make an interesting story
once they’ve landed,” Judy remarked to Smith.
“Indeed it would, if the good Professor
remembers any of it at all,” Smith said. “I can’t help but wonder what
effect his condition will have on his memory. For all we know, he might not
remember any part of our little adventure. Or he might simply think it was a bad
dream.”
She shrugged her shoulders. “I guess
we’ll never know.”
“Perhaps that’s as it should be,”
Smith said, nodding.
Don snapped a couple switches and stepped
away from the control panel. The instruments were humming with power, surging as
if trying to break free. “Okay,” he said. “We’re just about ready here.
I’ve set the navigation controls to automatic. The Gemini will seek out the
nearest habitable planet and set down, releasing the Robinsons from their
freezing tubes. That’ll probably take a couple weeks.”
“It’s a shame we can’t help them get
back on course,” Judy said.
“Yeah, I’d like to, but being lost in
our own universe is bad enough. There’s no way I could navigate here. Despite
the damage to the astrogator, the navigation controls are still working good.
They’ll be okay.” Don looked at the robot. “Before John sent the robot
over, he put a small forcefield around him. We can extend the range of that
field to protect all of us when we cross over.”
Smith was anxious. “Well Major,” he
said. “Everything sounds in order. When can we go?”
“Right now,” Don said. “We’ll need
to kind of huddle around the robot. The anti-matter system’s programmed to
shut itself off once we’ve gone.”
Dr. Smith and Judy stepped up close to the robot
and grabbed onto the machine’s hoisting loops. “This had better work, you
thundering dunderhead!” Smith snapped.
“Stay close and be still, Dr. Smith!”
the robot said.
Don pressed a final button and quickly stepped
over to the front of the robot. As he did so, he felt Judy move away from him.
It’s as if the distance between us keeps growing. I’ll have to talk with her
later, he thought. There’s no time now. The humming sound rose in volume and
green sparks of energy started to pop up from the control panel.
“Robot, activate force field!” Don
shouted above the noise. At once, a sheet of blue sparkles enveloped them. Smith
shut his eyes and clenched onto the robot in fear. The roar of the anti-matter
field grew louder and the green sparks that were jumping along the control panel
fused into a thick green arc of energy. The arc began to bend and fold until it
finally jumped up at them. The anti-matter energy surrounded them in a brilliant
green light and all at once, they felt themselves being literally pushed out of
the universe of the Gemini 12 . . .
*
* *
. . . and back onto
the deck of the Jupiter 2.
They appeared amidst an all too familiar
flare of green light nearly exactly where they had first vanished. John,
standing near the turbo lift, shielded himself from the light and the heat. When
he looked back, he saw Judy, Don and Smith, gathered around the robot as if in a
group hug, surrounded by the blue sparks of the force field. John couldn’t
contain his joy. “They’re back! Maureen! They made it!”
As the robot switched off the force field,
everyone staggered away. Dr. Smith clutched his back with one hand and held his
forehead with the other. “Good heavens!” he cried. “I feel as if I’ve
been run over by a steam roller!”
Don held a pilot’s chair for support and
shook his head, trying to get his strength back. “Whew!” he said. “That
was something else!” He looked over to Judy, leaning against the radio control
panel. Her eyes were closed and she looked quite weak. He wanted to go to her,
but there was no time.
The rest of the family had arrived and were
embracing the three of them. “Dr. Smith!” Penny screamed in happiness,
running across the deck into his arms. “We were so worried!”
“There, there my dear child,” Smith
said. “Nothing to worry about. It appears we all made it back in one piece. No
harm done.”
John took Judy into his arms. “Are you
all right darling?” he gently asked.
“Yes,” she said. “I’m fine. I just
need to lie down.”
“Of course,” John said. He helped Judy
across the deck to the elevator. She looked back at Don, started to say
something, but then just turned away.
Maureen and Will helped Don steady himself.
“What was it like?” Will asked. “In the alternate universe, I mean.”
Don smiled weakly. “Just like here, only
a little different,” he said. “Except for Smith that is. Wherever we go,
it’s always the same old Dr. Smith.” He laughed and shook his head.
“Everyone was there Penny,” Smith told
her. “The entire family, still in their freezing tubes. It was like some sort
of horrible nightmare.”
“Oh, it sounds weird,” Penny said.
“Well thank goodness you’re all back
safe and sound,” Maureen said. “That’s what really matters.”
Don thought about Judy. He thought it might
be a good idea to give her some space for a while. They both had some things to
sort out on their own.
“Mrs. Robinson,” Smith said. “I’m
sure you would agree that after such a trying ordeal, it would seem only fitting
that we replenish ourselves with a hot hearty meal!” His back pain seemed to
have mysteriously vanished. “While we dine, I can regale you all with the
story of how I single handedly saved everyone from a gigantic, ferocious alien,
bent on our destruction!” He began to lead everyone to the elevator, which had
returned to the main deck.
“What?” Don asked. “Oh brother! You saved us?”
While Don and Smith bickered, Penny glanced
out the main windows. She wondered if she would ever see that strange river in
space again. It was so beautiful, she couldn’t help but marvel at it. She
looked out at the sprinkling of stars, but there was no sign of the river now. A
little disappointed, she turned to go down below when she heard someone behind
her.
“What?” she said, turning back around.
“What did you say?” She was startled to see no one there. The voice hadn’t
been clear, but she could have sworn there had been someone standing right
behind her. She looked around, but all she saw was Will and the robot over by
the elevator.
“Penny,” Will called. “Aren’t you
coming?”
She shook her head, puzzled. It must have
been her imagination. There was nobody there. “Yeah, I’m coming,” she
said.
The End
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