"I thought quickly. Perhaps I might frustrate Hin Abtol's plans if I could have a few minutes with the controls and the instruments, which I knew as well as we know the face of a loved one; so I followed the warrior above.

"Hin Abtol was in the control room with three of his officers. His face was a black scowl as I entered. "We are off our course," he snapped, "and during the night we have lost touch with our own ship. You will instruct my officers as to these silly instruments that have confused them." With that, he left the control room.

"I looked around the horizon in every direction. The other ship was nowhere in sight. My plan was instantly formed. Had the other ship been able to see us, it could not have succeeded. I knew that if this ship on which I was prisoner ever reached Panar I would have to take my own life to escape a fate worse than death. On the ground I might also meet death, but I would have a better chance to escape.

"What is wrong?" I asked one of the officers.

"Everything," he replied. "What is this?"

"A directional compass," I explained; "but what have you done to it? It is a wreck."

"Hin Abtol could not understand what it was for, which made him very angry; so he started taking it apart to see what was inside."

"He did a good job," I said, '-of taking it apart. Now he, or another of you, should put it together again."

"We don't know how," said the fellow. "Do you?"

"Of course not."

"Then what are we to do?"

"Here is an ordinary compass," I told him. "Fly north by this, but first let me see what other harm has been done."

"I pretended to examine all the other instruments and controls, and while I was doing so, I opened the buoyancy tank valves; and then jammed them so that they couldn't be closed.

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