Out in the asteroid belt, Thad Allen survives on grit, welding arcs, and the faint hope that one rich strike will change his life. When he intercepts a drifting Earth rocket called the Red Dragon, he expects salvage law, maybe a disabled crew, maybe a broken drive. Instead he finds dried blood, abandoned cabins, and a dog trembling at shadows no human eye can see.
The ship carries treasure beyond calculationāingots of rare metals, mountains of cut gems, and a crystal chest guarding a silent young woman who looks as if she might wake at any moment. But something else rode aboard from the outer worlds. Something invisible. Something that hunts by sound and scent, and has already reduced a full crew to stains on the deck. If Thad wants the salvage, he must search the ship, uncover what happened, and stand his ground in a locked room against a predator he cannot see.
What follows is classic deep-space suspense: magnetic boots on steel decking, the hiss of air locks, the scrape of unseen claws in the dark. The tension builds in tight corridors where escape is impossible and sleep is a luxury no one can afford. The prize is immense, but so is the risk. When Thad makes his choice, he does it alone, far from Earth, with only a welding torch in his hand.
Jack Williamson (1908ā2006) was one of science fictionās longest-working pioneers. He began publishing in the late 1920s in magazines such as Amazing Stories and Wonder Stories, later contributing regularly to Astounding Science Fiction. Over a career that spanned more than seven decades, he wrote landmark works including The Legion of Time, Darker Than You Think, and the influential āLegion of Spaceā series. āSalvage in Spaceā reflects the early pulp-era daring that helped define interplanetary adventure, combining frontier economics, cosmic mystery, and a very human gamble on love and luck.
Salvage in Space: Treasure And Terror - Jack Williamson
Out in the asteroid belt, Thad Allen survives on grit, welding arcs, and the faint hope that one rich strike will change his life. When he intercepts a drifting Earth rocket called the Red Dragon, he expects salvage law, maybe a disabled crew, maybe a broken drive. Instead he finds dried blood, abandoned cabins, and a dog trembling at shadows no human eye can see.
The ship carries treasure beyond calculationāingots of rare metals, mountains of cut gems, and a crystal chest guarding a silent young woman who looks as if she might wake at any moment. But something else rode aboard from the outer worlds. Something invisible. Something that hunts by sound and scent, and has already reduced a full crew to stains on the deck. If Thad wants the salvage, he must search the ship, uncover what happened, and stand his ground in a locked room against a predator he cannot see.
What follows is classic deep-space suspense: magnetic boots on steel decking, the hiss of air locks, the scrape of unseen claws in the dark. The tension builds in tight corridors where escape is impossible and sleep is a luxury no one can afford. The prize is immense, but so is the risk. When Thad makes his choice, he does it alone, far from Earth, with only a welding torch in his hand.
Jack Williamson (1908ā2006) was one of science fictionās longest-working pioneers. He began publishing in the late 1920s in magazines such as Amazing Stories and Wonder Stories, later contributing regularly to Astounding Science Fiction. Over a career that spanned more than seven decades, he wrote landmark works including The Legion of Time, Darker Than You Think, and the influential āLegion of Spaceā series. āSalvage in Spaceā reflects the early pulp-era daring that helped define interplanetary adventure, combining frontier economics, cosmic mystery, and a very human gamble on love and luck.