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Tarrano the Conqueror

Chapter 9 No.9

Word Count: 799    |    Released on: 01/12/2017

aly

, breaking down the barrage, struggling to get at us. We stood huddled together; Elza clinging to me, Geo

g sparks of the barrage blurred his w

of all of us-you Geor

h. He was thrusting a weapon into Georg's han

..." Phrases I heard; but only phrases, for in those few seconds I stood dumbly confused, fascinated

ams; the growing glare of a wall-light in a tube over there. And thr

ake a show of fight! Hold him

lash; the pungent smell of burning c

cylinder to the floor. The blackness at once sprang into light; the sparks died. Tarrano wa

f the figure of Georg. Tarrano saw him also; and with a swift gesture snapped back to his belt the interfere

ard Tarrano, with Wolfgar rushing beside me. Elza screamed. Tarrano's h

es made my arm and fist go wide. My blow missed him; he stepped aside; and like a man dr

d; but there were weapons hanging from Wolfgar's belt. His numbed fingers were groping for them. But the eff

move. I felt myself growing numb, weighted to the floor as though my feet had taken root. My arms were hanging like wood; fingers tingling, then growing cold, dea

onslaught. As I stood there now with my face like fire and my bra

is Jac Hallen-as I promised

rations he was flinging at us. And I saw his other hand lift a tiny mouthpiec

Dimly to my fading senses came the triumphant thought, the realization

the room was whirling and roaring. I felt Tarrano bending swiftly over me; felt the forcible insertion of a branched metal tube in my nostrils; a hand over my mouth. I struggled to hold my breath-failed. Then inhaled

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Tarrano the Conqueror
Tarrano the Conqueror
“Raymond King Cummings was born on August 30th, 1887 in New York. He is considered one of the "founding fathers" of science fiction. Cummings was nothing if not prolific, penning more than 750 works for pulp magazines such as Weird Tales and literary publications such as Argosy. Cummings generally wrote under his own name but also as Ray King, Gabrielle Cummings and Gabriel Wilson (a joint pseudonym with his second wife, writer Gabrielle Wilson). Cummings is credited with being the first to write of such notions as artificial gravity, invisibility cloaks and paralyzer rays—many of these concepts appeared in novel-length "space operas" and serializations.”