Marcius Kemble once commanded armies and bent entire planets to his will. Now he stands alone on the frozen surface of Pluto, stripped of rank, allies, and authority, exiled by the very worlds he tried to conquer. The silence should have broken him. Instead, it feeds the rage still burning inside his mind.
When unseen intelligences probe his thoughts and offer him a way off the desolate plain, Kemble sees only opportunity. He accepts their help, learns the controls of an unfamiliar craft, and launches himself back toward the inner system with visions of retaliation blazing in his imagination. He believes he has outlasted defeat. He believes he has been underestimated.
But Pluto is not Earth. Its inhabitants are not human. And the laws that govern their machines are not meant for warmth, sunlight, or ambition.
What begins as exile turns into something far more unsettling. Kemble may be leaving Pluto, but he is not escaping judgment. The deeper he travels into space, the more certain it becomes that someone has calculated his future more precisely than he ever calculated conquest.
William Oberfield crafted a sharp planetary tale that blends space opera tension with a cool understanding of physics. First published during the height of interplanetary fiction's popularity, "Escape From Pluto" captures the era's fascination with distant worlds while grounding its climax in a clever, science-driven twist. Oberfield's work appeared in science fiction magazines of the 1940s and 1950s, where writers frequently explored the outer planets as strange but scientifically plausible frontiers. In this story, Oberfield uses Pluto not just as a setting, but as a decisive force—one that proves colder and more exacting than any human enemy.
If you enjoy classic solar system adventures where arrogance meets hard reality, this one delivers its reckoning in unforgettable fashion.