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SCIENCE FICTION

JUNE 1952 VOL. XLIX NO. 4

NOVELETTES

the specter general . . . by Theodore R. Cogswell 9 blood bank by Walter M . Miller, Jr. 95

SHORT STORIES

the ghost town by Donald Kingsbury 58

ascent into chaos by M.C. Pease 139

A RTICLE

TRANSISTORS by J . J . Coupling 82

READERS’ DEPARTMENTS

THE EDITOR’S PAGE 6

IN TIMES TO COME 81

the reference library . . by P . Schuyler Miller 159 BRASSTACKS 166

Editor Assistant Editor Adv. Mgr.

JOHN yv. CAMPBELL, JR. KAY TARRANT WALTER J. MC BRIDE

COVER BY VAN DONGEN

Illustrations by Cartier, Orban and Welker

The editorial contents have not been published before, are protected by cbpyright and cannot be reprinted without publishers' permission. All stories in this magazine are fiction. No actual persons are designated by name or character. Any similarity is coincidental.

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EDITORIAL

UNCERTAINTY PRINCIPLE

Heisenberg, by considerable mathe- matical manipulation, demonstrated that a basic uncertainty existed in nature. It was shown that the position of an electron, or the velocity could be determined theoretically to any de- sired degree of accuracy but not both simultaneously.

Without mathematical analysis, I wonder if one can’t make a similar and meaningful statement about the future. Our business is studying the future; physical science is, basically, an effort to make accurate predictions of the future. Men live best if they can predict with reasonable accuracy the results of their acts. The effort to predict the future is older than man, surely, and no mere mystic-spiritual- ist-misty-eyed-dreamer business. It’s the most essential business of Man- kind.

It seems to me that there are, basically, two types of statements concerning the future, representing the two extremes between which all usual prediction statements fall. These

6

are the statement of very high truth value, and practically zero applicabil- ity value, and the statement of very low truth value, and very high ap- plicability value. I have a hunch that some sort of mathematical relation- ship could be worked out that the product of truth value times applica- bility value for any statement of the future equaled a constant. The higher the truth, the lower the applicability.

For example, the statement: “Some- thing will happen in the future,” approaches the ultimate absolute cer- tainty in truth-value. But its ap- plicability value is a very good ap- proximation of zero.

The other side of the relationship statements of high applicability value and low truth value are known as fiction stories. The stories in the current issue, for instance, contain an immense wealth of detail about the future; their truth value, sad to say, approaches zero.

Now it is highly interesting to con- sider this problem and see what escape

ASTOUNDING SCIENCE-FICTION

from this situation might be possible. How can we predict the future if all true statements have no applicability? It would then be impossible. But, while the product of truth-applicabil- ity value approaches zero, it does not equal zero it’s simply infinitesi- mally small.

Mathematics has a way of handling infinitesimals, however; the integra- tion of a near-infinite number of near- infinitely-small units can equal a large, determined value the basic principle of integral calculus. While the future can’t be predicted arith- metically, then, perhaps it can be predicted on the general approach of integral calculus the summation of an immense number of very small truth-applicability units.

Now it’s evident that summing statements like “Something will hap- pen in the future” isn’t in line with this approach. People have been try- ing to get somewhere that way, how- ever, for a long time. Make a gen- eralization sufficiently broad, and it is apt to be true but uninformative.

More recently, the other ap- proach has been studied. Take in- finitesimals consisting of highly prob- able truths, but of exceedingly narrow applicability value, and sum these to predict the future. That approach, as a matter of tested fact, permits ac- curate prediction the accuracy being

limited only by the accuracy of meas- urement of our instruments!

The approach necessary to this technique is to narrow the range of application of the statement to an extremely improbable event but im- probable by reason of the narrowness and immense specificity of the terms of the prediction.

In essence, the sum of many highly improbable events yields a certainty.

This proven method of predicting the future is known as physical science.

Physical science consists of making an immense number of extremely limited statements about extremely improbable events; each of the im- probable events is itself true, but actually contains information of prac- tically zero applicability. The product of an immense number of near-zero applicability value statements, how- ever, has high applicability.

That this is in fact the case in physical science is not immediately apparent to the modern technologist; it is still a fact. Consider this: “If metallic zinc is in 1-normal sulfuric acid, it will dissolve, releasing hydro- gen and forming zinc sulfate.” Any chemist will tell you that that, as a prediction, is a certainty.

Its truth-value may be high, but its probability of applicability in the Universe is about fifty places to the

UNCERTAINTY PRINCIPLE

7

right of the decimal point. Free metallic zinc doesn’t occur in nature. Free sulfuric acid doesn’t occur in nature. Both of these substances are extremely reactive; the probability of either occurring in a free state is in- finitesimal. The probability that these two substances should occur free in the same environment at the same time is immeasurably remote. There- fore the statement that a reaction would occur if the situation existed may have high truth value, but the probability of having such a situation actually eventuate, in a free universe, makes the statement one of nearly zero applicability value.

It’s somewhat like a gambler who has an ace of spades, and four com- pletely useless cards in his hand, say- ing “If I take four new cards, and I draw the king, queen, jack and ten of spades, I predict I’ll win the pot.” He is perfectly correct; the statement has very high truth-value, but very low applicability value.

So he bets on the pot, draws four new cards, pushes the bets to the limit, and lays down a Royal Straight Flush in spades. This man is not only a gambler; he’s a professional gambler,

and stacks the cards for a living.

The business of a professional gam- bler of that type is, like the business of the professional scientist, one of interfering with the laws of probabil- ity, so that exceedingly remote possi- bilities become certainties. The engi- neer stacks the cards against nature; he makes one extremely remote prob- ability operate against another even more remote probability, until a cer- tainty results.

There’s an atom of zinc in South Africa, and an atom of sulfur eight hundred feet down under Louisiana. Under the laws of a free universe with no stacking of the cards what is the probability that these two will combine to form zinc sulfide next year, in the area of London, England?

Life forms including Man make a business of playing nature for a sucker; they reverse the laws of prob- ability, invalidate statistics, and in- vert entropy.

And the way to predict the future with deadly accuracy is to in- tegrate an immense number of high- truth statements of near-zero ap- plicability value!

The Editor.

*

8

ASTOUNDING SCIENCE-FICTION

THE SPECTER GENERAL

BY THEODORE R. COGSWELL

formally, a colony is a fairly balanced miniature of its civilization , and acts pretty much like the civilization. But some most peculiar results can come from an isolated military base!

Illustrated

i.

“Sergeant Dixon!”

Kurt stiffened. He knew that voice. Dropping the handles of the wooden plow, he gave a quick “rest” to the private and a polite “by your leave, sir to the lieutenant who were yoked together in double harness. They both sank gratefully to the ground as Kurt advanced to meet the approaching officer.

Marcus Harris, the commander of the 427th Light Maintenance Bat- talion of the Imperial Space Marines, was an imposing figure. The three silver eagle feathers of a full colonel rose proudly from his war bonnet and the bright red of the flaming comet insignia of the Space Marines that was painted on his chest stood out

THE SPECTER GENERAL

by Welker

sharply against his sun-blackened, leathery skin. As Kurt snapped to attention before him and saluted, the colonel surveyed the fresh turned earth with an experienced eye.

“You plow a straight furrow, sol- dier!” His voice was hard and metallic but it seemed to Kurt that there was a concealed glimmer of approval in his flinty eyes. Dixon flushed with pleas- ure and drew his broad shoulders back a little farther.

The commander’s eyes flicked down to the battle-ax that rested snugly in its leather holster at Kurt’s side. “You keep a clean sidearm, too.”

Kurt uttered a silent prayer of thanksgiving that he had worked over his weapon before reveille that morn- ing until there was a satin gloss to its redwood handle and the sheen of

9

black glass to its obsidian head.

“In fact,” said Colonel Harris, “you’d be officer material if His voice trailed off.

If what? asked Kurt eagerly.

“If,” said the colonel with a note of paternal fondness in his voice that sent cold chills dancing down Kurt’s spine, “you weren’t the most com- pletely unmanageable, undisciplined, over-muscled and under-brained knuck- lehead I’ve ever had the misfortune to have in my command. This last little unauthorized jaunt of yours indicates to me that you have as much right to sergeant’s stripes as I have to have kittens. Report to me at ten tomorrow ! I personally guarantee that when I’m through with you if you live that long you’ll have a bare forehead!”

Colonel Harris spun on one heel and stalked back across the dusty plateau toward the walled garrison that stood at one end. Kurt stared after him for a moment and then turned and let his eyes slip across the wide belt of lush green jungle that surrounded the high plateau. To the north rose a great range of snow- capped mountains and his heart filled with longing as he thought of the strange and beautiful thing he had found behind them. Finally he plodded slowly back to the plow, his shoulders stooped and his head sagging. With an effort he recalled himself to the business at hand.

“Up on your dying feet, soldier!” he barked to the reclining private.

ASTOUNDING SCIENCE-FICTION

If you please, sir ! he said to the lieu- tenant. His calloused hands grasped the worn plow handles.

“Giddiup!” The two men strained against their collars and with a creak of harness the wooden plow started to move slowly across the arid plateau.

II.

Conrad Krogson, Supreme Com- mander of War Base Three of Sector Seven of the Galactic Protectorate stood at quaking attention before the visiscreen of his space communicator. It was an unusual position for the commander. He was accustomed to having people quake while he talked.

“The Lord Protector’s got another hot tip that General Carr is still alive!” said the sector commander. “He’s yelling for blood;' and if it’s a choice between yours and mine, you know who will do the donating!”

“But, sir,” quavered Krogson to the figure on the screen, “I can’t do anything more than I am doing. I’ve had double security checks running since the last time there was an alert, and they haven’t turned up a thing. And I’m so shorthanded now that if I pull another random purge, I won’t have enough techs left to work the base.”

“That’s your problem, not mine,” said the sector commander coldly. “All that I know is that rumors have got to the Protector that an organized underground is being built up and that

Carr is behind it. The Protector wants action now. If he doesn’t get it, heads are going to roll !

“I’ll do what I can, sir,” promised Krogson.

“I’m sure you will,” said the sector commander viciously, “because I’m giving you exactly ten days to produce something that is big enough to take the heat off me. If you don’t, I’ll break you, Krogson. If I’m sent to the mines, you’ll be sweating right along- side me. That’s a promise!”

Krogson’s face blanched.

“Any questions?” snapped the sec- tor commander.

“Yes,” said Krogson.

“Well don’t bother me with them. I’ve got troubles of my own!” The screen went dark.

Krogson slumped into his chair and sat staring dully at the blank screen. Finally he roused himself with an effort and let out a bellow that rattled the windows of his dusty office.

“Schninkle! Get in here!”

A gnomelike little figure scuttled in through the door and bobbed ob- sequiously before him.

“Yes, commander?”

“Switch on your thinktank,” said Krogson. “The Lord Protector has the shakes again and the heat’s on!”

“What is it this time?” asked Schninkle.

“General Carr!” said the com- mander gloomily, “the ex-Number Two.”

“I thought he’d been liquidated.”

THE SPECTER GENERAL

11

“So did I,” said Krogson, “but he must have slipped out some way. The Protector thinks he’s started up an underground.”

“He’d be a fool if he didn’t,” said the little man. “The Lord Protector isn’t as young as he once was and his grip is getting a little shaky.”

“Maybe so, but he’s still strong enough to get us before General Carr gets him. The Sector Commander just passed the buck down to me. We pro- duce or else!”

“We?” said Schninkle unhappily.

“Of course,” snapped Krogson, “we’re in this together. Now let’s get to work! If you were Carr, where would be the logical place for you to hide out?

“Well,” said Schninkle thought- fully, “if I were as smart as Carr is supposed to be, I’d find myself a hideout right on Prime Base. Every- thing’s so fouled up there that they’d never find me.”

“That’s out for us,” said Krogson. “We can’t go rooting around in the Lord Protector’s own backyard. What would Carr’s next best bet be?

Schninkle thought for a moment. “He might go out to one of the de- serted systems,” lie said slowly. “There must be half a hundred stars in our own base area that haven’t been visited since the old empire broke up. Our ships don’t get around the way they used to and the chances are mighty slim that anybody would

12

stumble on to him accidentally.”

“It’s a possibility,” said the com- mander thoughtfully, “a bare possi- bility.” His right fist slapped into his left palm in a gesture of sudden resolu- tion. “But by the Planets! at least it’s something! Alert all section heads for a staff meeting in half an hour. I want every scout out on a quick check of every system in our area!”

“Beg pardon, commander,” said Schninkle, “but half our light ships are red-lined for essential maintenance and the other half should be. Anyway it would take months to check every possible hideout in this area even if we used the whole fleet.”

“I know,” said Krogson, “but we’ll have to do what we can with what we have. At least I’ll be able to report to sector that we’re doing something! Tell Astrogation to set up a series of search patterns. We won’t have to check every planet. A single quick sweep through each system will do the trick. Even Carr can’t run a base without power. Where there’s power, there’s radiation, and radiation can be detected a long way off. Put all electronic techs on double shifts and have all detection gear double- checked.”

Can’t do that either,” said Schnin- kle. “There aren’t more than a dozen electronic techs left. Most of them were transferred to Prime Base last week.”

Commander Krogson blew up. “How in the name of the Bloody Blue Ple-

ASTOUNDING SCIENCE- F I OTI ON

iades am I supposed to keep a war base going without technicians? You tell me, Schninkle, you always seem to know all the answers.”

Schninkle coughed modestly. Well, sir,” he said, “as long as you have a situation where technicians are sent to the uranium mines for making mis- takes, it’s going to be an unpopular vocation. And, as long as the Lord Protector of the moment is afraid that Number Two, Number Three, and so on have ideas about grabbing his job which they generally do he’s going to keep his fleet as strong as possible and their fleets so weak they aren’t dangerous. The best way to do that is to grab techs. If most of a base’s ships are sitting around waiting repair, the commander won’t be able to do much about any ambitions he may happen to have. Add that to the obvious fact that our whole technology has been on a downward spiral for the last three hundred years and you have your answer.”

Krogson nodded gloomy agreement. “Sometimes I feel as if we were all on 'a dead ship falling into a dying sun,” he said with rare candor. His voice suddenly altered. “But in the mean- time we have our necks to save. Get going, Schninkle!”

Schninkle bobbed and darted out of the office.

IH.

It was exactly ten o’clock in the

morning when Sergeant Dixon of the Imperial Space Marines snapped to attention before his commanding offi- cer.

“Sergeant Dixon reporting as or- dered, sir!” His voice cracked a bit in spite of his best efforts to control it.

The colonel looked at him coldly. “Nice of you to drop in, Dixon,” he said. “Shall we go ahead with our little chat?

Kurt nodded nervously.

“I have here,” said the colonel, shuffling a sheaf of papers, “a report of an unauthorized expedition made by you into Off Limits territory.”

“Which one do you mean, sir?” asked Kurt without thinking.

“Then there has been more than one?” asked the colonel quietly.

Kurt started to stammer.

Colonel Harris silenced him with a gesture of his hand . I’m talking abou t the country to the north, the tableland back of the Twin Peaks.”

“It’s a beautiful place!” burst out Kurt enthusiastically. “It’s . . . it’s like Imperial Headquarters must be. Dozens of little streams full of fish, trees heavy with fruit, small game so slow and stupid that they can be knocked over with a club. Why, the battalion could live there without hardly lifting a finger!”

“I’ve no doubt that they could,” said the colonel.

“Think of it, sir!” continued the sergeant. “No more plowing details, no more hunting details, no more

THE SPECTER GENERAL

13

nothing but taking it easy!”

“You might add to your list of ‘no mores,’ no more tech schools,” said Colonel Harris. “I’m quite aware that the place is all you say it is, sergeant. As a result I’m placing all information that pertains to it in a ‘Top Secret’ category. That applies to what is inside your head as well ! “But, sir!” protested Kurt. “If you could only see the place

“I have,” broke in the colonel, “thirty years ago.”

Kurt looked at him in amazement. “Then why are we still on the pla- teau?”

“Because my commanding officer did just what I’ve just done, classified the information ‘Top Secret.’ Then he gave me thirty days extra detail on the plows. After he took my stripes away that is.” Colonel Harris rose slowly to his feet. “Dixon,” he said softly, “it’s not every man who can be a noncommissioned officer in the Space Marines. Sometimes we guess wrong. When we do we do some- thing about it!” There was the hissing crackle of distant summer lightning in his voice and storm clouds seemed to gather about his head. “Wipe those chevrons off!” he roared.

Kurt looked at him in mute protest. “You heard me!” the colonel thun- dered.

“Yes-s-s, sir,” stuttered Kurt, re- luctantly drawing his forearm across his forehead and wiping off the three triangles of white grease paint that

U

marked him a sergeant in the Im- perial Space Marines. Quivering with shame, he took a tight grip on his temper and choked back the angry protests that were trying to force their way past his lips.

“Maybe,” suggested the colonel, “you’d like to make a complaint to the I.G. He’s due in a few days and he might reverse my decision. It has happened before, you know.”

“No, sir,” said Kurt woodenly.

“Why not?” demanded Harris.

“When 1 was sent out as a scout for the hunting parties I was given direct orders not to range farther than twenty kilometers to the north. I went sixty.” Suddenly his forced composure broke. “I couldn’t help it, sir,” he said. “There was something behind those peaks that kept pulling me and pulling me and he threw up his hands “you know the rest.”

There was a sudden change in the colonel’s face as a warm human smile swept across it, and he broke into a peal of laughter. “It’s a hell of a feel- ing, isn’t it, son? You know you shouldn’t, but at the same time there’s something inside you that says you’ve got to know what’s behind those peaks or die. When you get a few more years under your belt you’ll find that it isn’t just mountains that make you feel like that. Here, boy, have a seat.” He gestured toward a woven wicker chair that stood by his desk.

Kurt shifted uneasily from one foot to the other, stunned by the colonel’s

ASl'OUN D I MG SCIENCE-FICTION

sudden change of attitude and em- barrassed by his request. “Excuse me, sir,” he said, “but we aren’t out on work detail, and

The colonel laughed. “And enlisted men not on work detail don’t sit in the presence of officers. Doesn’t the way we do things ever strike you as odd, Dixon? On one hand you’d see nothing strange about being yoked to a plow with a major, and on the other you’d never dream of sitting in his presence off duty.”

Kurt look puzzled. “Work details are different,” he said. “We all have to work if we’re going to eat. But in the garrison, officers are officers and enlisted men are enlisted men and that’s the way it’s ahvays been.”

Still smiling, the colonel reached into his desk drawer, fished out some- thing, and tossed it to Kurt.

“Stick this in your scalp lock,” he said.

Kurt looked at it, stunned. It was a golden feather crossed with a single black bar, the insignia of rank of a second lieutenant of the Imperial Space Marines. The room swirled before his eyes.

“Now,” said the older officer, “sit down!”

Kurt slowly lowered himself into the chair and looked at the colonel through bemused eyes.

“Stop gawking!” said Colonel Har- ris. “You’re an officer now! When a man gets too big for his sandals, we

give him a new pair after we let him sweat a while!”

He suddenly grew serious. “Now that you’re one of the family you have a right to know why I’m hushing up the matter of the tableland to the north. What I have to say won’t make much sense at first. Later I’m hoping it will. Tell me,” he said suddenly, where did the battalion come from?

“We’ve always been here I guess,” said Kurt. “When I was a recruit, Granddad used to tell me stories about us being brought from some place else a long time ago by an iron bird, but it stands to reason that something that heavy can’t fly!”

A faraway look came into the colo- nel’s eyes. “Six generations,” he mused, “and history becomes legend. Another six and the legends themselves become tales for children. Yes, Kurt,” he said softly, “it stands to reason that something that heavy couldn’t fly so we’ll forget it for a while. We did come from some place else though. Once there was a great empire, so great that all the stars you see at night were only part of it. And then, as things do when age rests too heavily on them, it began to crumble. Com- manders fell to fighting among them- selves and the Emperor grew weak. The battalion was set down here to operate a forward maintenance sta- tion for his ships. We waited but no ships came. For five hundred years no ships have come,” said the colonel somberly. “Perhaps they tried to

THE SPECTER GENERAL

15

relieve us and couldn’t, perhaps the Empire fell with such a crash that we were lost in the wreckage. There are a thousand perhapses that a man can tick off in his mind when the nights are long and sleep comes hard! Lost . . . forgotten . . . who knows?

Kurt stared at him with a blank expression on his face. Most of what the colonel had said made no sense at all. Wherever Imperial Headquarters was, it hadn’t forgotten them. The I.G. still made his inspection every year or so.

The colonel continued as if talking to himself. “But our operational or- ders said that we would stand by to give all necessary maintenance to Imperial warcraft until properly re- lieved, and stand by we have.”

The old officer’s voice seemed to be coming from a place far distant in time and space.

“I’m sorry, sir,” said Kurt, “but I don’t follow you. If all these things did happen, it was so long ago that they mean nothing to us now.”

“But they do!” said Colonel Harris vigorously. “It’s because of them that things like your rediscovery of the tableland to the north have to be suppressed for the good of the bat- talion! Here on the plateau the living is hard. Our work in the fields and the meat brought in by our hunting par- ties give us just enough to get by on. But here we have the garrison and the Tech Schools and vague as it has

become a reason for remaining to- gether as the battalion. Out there where the living is easy we’d lose that. We almost did once. A wise com- mander stopped it before it went too far. There are still a few signs of that time left left deliberately as remind- ers of what can happen if commanding officers forget why we’re here!”

“What things?” asked Kurt curi- ously.

“Well, son,” said the colonel, pick- ing up his great war bonnet from the desk and gazing at it quizzically, “I don’t think you’re quite ready for that information yet. Now take off and strut your feather. I’ve got work to do!”

IV.

At War Base Three nobody was happy. Ships that were supposed to be light-months away carrying on the carefully planned search for General Carr’s hideout were fluttering down out of the sky like senile penguins, disabled by blown jets, jammed com- puters, and all the other natural ills that worn out and poorly serviced equipment is heir to. Technical main- tenance was quietly going mad. Com- mander Krogson was being noisy about it.

“Schninkle!” he screamed. “Isn’t anything happening any place?

“Nothing yet, sir,” said the little man.

“Well make something happen!”

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ASTOUNDING SCIENCE-FICTION

J le hoisted his battered brogans onto the scarred top of the desk and chewed savagely on a frayed cigar. How are the other sectors doing?” “No better than we are,” said Schninkle. “Commander Snork of Sector Six tried to pull a fast one but he didn’t get away with it. He sent his STAP into a plantation planet out at the edge of the Belt and had them hypno the whole population. By the time they were through there were

about fifteen. million greenies running around yelling ‘Up with General Carr!’ ‘Down with the Lord Protec- tor!’ ‘Long Live the People’s Revolu- tion ! and things like that. Snork even gave them a few medium vortex blast- ers to make it look more realistic. Then he sent in his whole fleet, tipped off the press at Prime Base, and waited. Guess what the Bureau of Essential Information finally sent him?

“I’ll bite,” said Commander Krog-

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THE SPECTER GENERAL

son.

“One lousy cub reporter. Snork couldn’t back out then so he had to go ahead and blast the planet down to bedrock. This morning he got a three- line notice in Space and a citation as Third Rate Protector of the People’s Space Ways, Eighth Grade.”

“That’s better than the nothing we’ve got so far ! said the commander gloomily.

“Not when the press notice is buried on the next to last page right below the column on ‘Our Feathered Com- rades’,” said Schninkle, “and when the citation is posthumous. They even misspelled his name; it came out Snark!”

V.

As Kurt turned to go, there was a sharp knock on Colonel Harris’ door.

“Come in!” called the colonel.

Lieutenant Colonel Blick, the bat- talion executive officer, entered with an arrogant stride and threw his com- mander a slovenly salute. For a moment he didn’t notice Kurt stand- ing at attention beside the door.

“Listen, Harris ! he snarled. What’s the idea of pulling that clean-up detail out of my quarters?”

“There are no servants in this bat- talion, Blick,” the older man said quietly. “When the men come in from work detail at night they’re tired. They’ve earned a rest and as long as I’m C.O. they’re going to get it. If

you have dirty work that has to be done, do it yourself. You’re better able to do it than some poor devil who’s been dragging a plow all day. I suggest you check pertinent regula- tions! ”

“Regulations!” growled Blick. “What do you expect me to do, scrub my own floors?

“I do,” said the colonel dryly, “when my wife is too busy to get to it. I haven’t noticed that either my dig- nity or my efficiency have suffered ap- preciably. I might add,” he continued mildly, “that staff officers are sup- posed to set a good example for their juniors. I don’t think either your tone or your manner are those that Lieu- tenant Dixon should be encouraged to emulate.” He gestured toward Kurt and Blick spun on one heel.

Lieutenant Dixon!” he roared in an incredulous voice. “By whose au- thority? ”

“Mine,” said the colonel mildly. “In case you’ve forgotten I am still commanding officer of this battalion.”

“I protest!” said Blick. “Commis- sions have always been awarded by decision of the entire staff.”

“Which you now control,” replied the colonel.

Kurt coughed nervously. “Excuse me, sir,” he said, “but I think I’d better leave.”

Colonel Harris shook his head. “You’re one of our official family now, son, and you might as well get used to our squabbles. This particular

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one has been going on between Colonel Blick and me for years. He has no patience with some of our old cus- toms.” He turned to Blick. “Have you, colonel?”

“You’re right, I haven’t!” growled Blick. “And that’s why I’m going to change some of them as soon as I get the chance. The sooner we stop this Tech School nonsense and put the recruits to work in the fields where they belong, the better off we’ll all be. Why should a plowman or a hunter have to know how to read wiring dia- grams or set tubes. It’s nonsense, superstitious nonsense. You!” he said, stabbing his finger into the chest of the startled lieutenant. “You! Dixon! You spent fourteen years in the Tech Schools just like I did when I was a recruit. What for?”

“To learn maintenance, of course,” said Kurt.

“What’s maintenance?” demanded Blick.

“Taking stuff apart and putting it back together and polishing jet bores with microplanes and putting plates in alignment and checking the meters when we’re through to see the job was done right. Then there’s class work- in Direc calculus and subelectronics and

“That’s enough!” interrupted Blick. “And now that you’ve learned all that, what can you do with it?”

Kurt looked at him in surprise. “Do with it?” he echoed. “You don’t do anything with it. You just learn it

because regulations say you should.”

“And this,” said Blick, turning to Colonel Harris, “is one of your prize products. Fourteen of his best years poured down the drain and he doesn’t even know what for ! He paused and then said in an arrogant voice, “I’m here for a showdown, Harris !

“Yes?” said the colonel mildly.

“I demand that the Tech Schools be closed at once and the recruits re- leased for work details. If you want to keep your command, you’ll issue that order. The staff is behind me on this!”

Colonel Harris rose slowly to his feet. Kurt waited for the thunder to roll, but strangely enough it didn’t. It almost seemed to him that there was an expression of concealed amuse- ment playing across the colonel’s face.

“Some day, just for once,” he said, “I wish somebody around here would do something that hasn’t been done before.”

“What do you mean by that?”de- manded Blick.

“Nothing,” said the colonel. “You know,” he continued conversationally, “a long time ago I walked into my C.O.’s and made the same demands and the same threats that you’re making now. I didn’t get very far, though just as you aren’t going to because I overlooked the little matter of the Inspector General’s annual visit. He’s due in from Imperial Head- quarters Saturday night, isn’t he Blick?”

“You know he is!” growled the

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THE SPECTER GENERAL

other.

“Aren’t worried, are you? It occurs to me that the I.G. might take a dim view of your new order.”

“I don’t think he’ll mind,” said Blick with a nasty grin. “Now will you issue the order to close the Tech Schools or won’t you?”

“Of course not!” said the colonel brusquely.

“That’s final?”

Colonel Harris just nodded.

“All right,” barked Blick, “you asked for it!”

There was an ugly look on his face as he barked, “Kane! Simmons! Arnett! The rest of you! Get in here!”

The door to Harris’ office swung slowly open and revealed a group of officers standing sheepishly in the anteroom.

“Come in, gentlemen,” said Colonel

Harris.

They came slowly forward and grouped themselves just inside the door.

“I’m taking over!” roared Blick. “This garrison has needed a house cleaning for a long time and I’m just the man to do it !

“How about the rest of you?” asked the colonel.

“Beg pardon, sir,” said one hesi- tantly, “but we think Colonel Blick’s probably right. I’m afraid we’re going to have to confine you for a few days. Just until after the I.G.’s visit,” he added apologetically.

“And what do you think the I.G. will say to all this?

“Colonel Blick says we don’t have to worry about that,” said the of- ficer. “ He’s going to take care of every- thing.”

A look of sudden anxiety played across Harris’ face and for the first time he seemed on the verge of losing his composure.

“How?” he demanded, his voice betraying his concern.

“He didn’t say, sir,” the other re- plied. Harris relaxed visibly.

“All right,” said Blick. “Let’s get moving!” He walked behind the desk and plumped into the colonel’s chair. Hoisting his feet on the desk he gave his first command.

“Take him away!”

There was a sudden roar from the far corner of the room. “No you don’t!” shouted Kurt. His battle-ax leaped into his hand as he jumped in front of Colonel Harris, his muscular body taut and his gray eyes flashing defiance.

Blick jumped to his feet. “Disarm that man! he commanded. There was a certain amount of scuffling as the officers in the front of the group by the door tried to move to the rear and those behind them resolutely defended their more protected positions.

Blick’s face grew so purple that he seemed on the verge of apoplexy. “Major Kane,” he demanded, “place that man under restraint!”

Kane advanced toward Kurt with a

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noticeable lack of enthusiasm. Keep- ing a cautious eye on the glittering ax head, he said in what he obviously hoped to be a placating voice, “Come now, old man. Can’t have this sort of thing, you know.” He stretched out his hand hesitantly toward Kurt. “Why don’t you give me your ax and we’ll forget that the incident ever occurred.”

Kurt’s ax suddenly leaped toward the major’s head. Kane stood petrified as death whizzed toward him. At the last split second Kurt gave a practiced twist to his wrist and the ax jumped up, cutting the air over the major’s head with a vicious whistle. The top half of his silver staff plume drifted slowly to the floor.

“You want it,” roared Kurt, his ax flicking back and forth like a snake’s tongue, “\rou come get it. That goes for the rest of you, too!”

The little knot of officers retreated still farther. Colonel Harris was having the time of his life.

“Give it to ’em, son!” he whooped.

Blick looked contemptuously at the staff and slowly drew his own ax. Colonel Harris suddenly stopped laughing.

“Wait a minute, Blick!” he said. “This has gone far enough.” He turned to Kurt.

“Give them your ax, son.”

Kurt looked at him with an expres- sion of hurt bewilderment in his eyes, hesitated for a moment, and then glumly surrendered his weapon to the

relieved major.

“Now,” snarled Blick, “take that insolent puppy out and feed him to the lizards!”

Kurt drew himself up in injured dignity. “That is no way to refer to a brother officer,” he said reproachfully.

The vein in Blick’s forehead started to pulse again. “Get him out of here before I tear him to shreds!” he hissed through clenched teeth. There was silence for a moment as he fought to regain control of himself. Finally he succeeded.

“Lock him up!” he said in an ap- proximation to his normal voice. “Tell the provost sergeant I’ll send down the charges as soon as I can think up enough.”

Kurt was led resentfully from the room.

“The rest of you clear out,” said Blick. “I want to talk with Colonel Harris about the I.G.”

VI.

There was a saying in the Protec- torate that when the Lord Protector was angry, stars and heads fell. Com- mander Krogson felt his wabble on his neck. His far-sweeping scouts were sending back nothing but reports of equipmen t failure, and the sector com- mander had coldly informed him that morning that his name rested securely at the bottom of the achievement list. It looked as if War Base Three would shortly have a change of command.

IHK SPECTER GENERAL

21

“Look, Schninkle,” he said des- perately, “even if we can’t give them anything, couldn’t we make a promise that would look good enough to take some of the heat off us?

Schninkle looked dubious.

“Maybe a new five-year plan?” suggested Krogson.

The little man shook his head. “That’s a subject we’d better avoid entirely,” he said. “They’re still asking nasty questions about what happened to the last one. Mainly on the matter of our transport quota. I took the liberty of passing the buck on down to Logistics. Several of them have been . . . eh . . . removed as a con- sequence.”

“Serves them right!” snorted Krog- son. “They got me into that mess with their ‘if a freighter and a half flies a light-year and a half in a month and a half, ten freighters can fly ten light- years in ten months!’ I knew there was something fishy about it at the time but I couldn’t put my finger on it.”

“It’s always darkest before the storm,” said Schninkle helpfully.

VII.

“Take off your war bonnet and make yourself comfortable,” said Colo- nel Harris hospitably.

Blick grunted assent. “This thing is sort of heavy,” he said. “I think I’ll change uniform regulations while I’m at it.”

“There was something you wanted to tell me? suggested the colonel.

“Yeah,” said Blick. “I figure that you figure the I.G.’s going to baiLyou out of this. Right?”

“I wouldn’t be surprised.”

“I would,” said Blick. “I was up snoopin’ around the armory last week. There was something there that started me doing some heavy thinking. Do you know what it was?

“I can guess,” said the colonel.

“As I looked at it it suddenly oc- curred to me what a happy coinci- dence it is that the Inspector General always arrives just when you happen to need him.”

“It is odd, come to think of it.” “Something else occurred to me, too. I got to thinking that if I were C.O. and I wanted to keep the troops whipped into line, the easiest way to do it would be to have a visible symbol of Imperial Headquarters appear in person once in a while.”

“That makes sense,” admitted Har- ris, “especially since the chaplain has started preaching that Imperial Head- quarters is where good marines go when they die if they follow regula- tions while they’re alive. But how would you manage it?”

“Just the way you did. I’d take one of the old battle suits, wait until it was good and dark, and then slip out the back way and climb up six or seven thousand feet. Then I’d switch on my landing lights and drift slowly down to the parade field to review the

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troops.” Blick grinned triumphantly.

“It might work,” admitted Colonel Harris, “but I was under the impres- sion that those rigs were so heavy that a man couldn’t even walk in one, let alone fly.”

Blick grinned triumphantly. “Not if the suit was powered. If a man were to go up into the tower of the arsenal and pick the lock of the little door labeled Danger! Absolutely .No Ad- mittance,’ he might find a whole stack of shiny little cubes that look sus- piciously like the illustrations of power packs in the tech manuals.”

“That he might,” agreed the colo- nel.

Blick shifted back in his chair. “Aren’t worried, are you?”

Colonel Harris shook his head. “I was for a moment when I thought you’d told the rest of the staff, but I’m not now.”

“You should be! When the I.G. arrives this time I’m going to be inside that suit. There’s going to be a new order around here and he’s just what I need to put the stamp of approval on it. When the Inspector General talks, nobody questions!”

He looked at Harris expectantly, waiting for a look of consternation to sweep across his face. The colonel just laughed.

“Blick,” he said, “you’re in for a big surprise!”

“What do you mean?” said the other suspiciously.

“Simply that I know you better

than you know yourself. You wouldn’t be executive officer if I didn’t. You know, Blick, I’ve got a hunch that the battalion is going to change the man more than the man is going to change the battalion. And now if you’ll ex- cuse me He started toward the door. Blick moved to intercept him.

“Don’t trouble yourself,” chuckled the colonel, “I can find my own way to the cell block.” There was a broad grin on his face. “Besides, you’ve got work to do.”

There was a look of bewilderment in Blick’s face as the erect figure went out the door. “I don’t get it,” he said to himself. “I just don’t get it!”

VIII.

Flight Officer Ozaki was unhappy. Trouble had started two hours after he lifted his battered scout off War Base Three and showed no signs of letting up. He sat glumly at his con- trols and enumerated his woes. First there was the matter of the air condi- tioner which had acquired an odd little hum and discharged into the cabin oxygen redolent with the rich ripe odor of rotting fish. Secondly, something had happened in the com- plex insides of his food synthesizer and no matter what buttons he punched, all that emerged from the ejector were quivering slabs of under- cooked protein base smeared with a raspberry flavored goo.

Not last, but worst of all, the ship’s

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TIIK SPECTER GENERAL

fuel converter was rapidly becoming more erratic. Instead of a slow, steady feeding of the plutonite ribbon into the combustion chamber, there were moments when the mechanism would falter and then leap ahead. The result- ing sudden injection of several square millimicrons of tape would send a sud- den tremendous flare of energy spout- ing out through the rear jets. The pulse only lasted for a fraction of a second but the sudden application of several G’s meant a momentary blackout and, unless he was strapped carefully into the pilot seat, several new bruises to add to the old.

What made Ozalti the unhappiest was that there was nothing he could do about it. Pilots who wanted to stay alive just didn’t tinker with the mechanism of their ships.

Glumly he pulled out another red- bordered IMMEDIATE MAINTE- NANCE card from the rack and began to fill it in.

Description of item, requiring main- tenance: “Shower thermostat, M7, Small Standard.”

Nature of malfunction: “Shower will deliver only boiling water.”

Justification for immediate mainte- nance: Slowly in large block letters Ozaki bitterly inked in “Haven’t had a bath since I left base!” and tossed the card into the already overflowing gripe box with a feeling of helpless anger.

“Kitchen mechanics,” he muttered. “Couldn’t do a decent repair job if

24

they wanted to and most of the time they don’t. I’d like to see one of them three days out on a scout sweep with a toilet that won’t flush !

IX.

It was a roomy cell as cells go but Kurt wasn’t happy there. His con- tinual striding up and down was mak- ing Colonel Harris nervous.

“Relax, son,” he said gently, “you’ll just wear yourself out.”

Kurt turned to face the colonel who was stretched out comfortably on his cot. “Sir,” he said in a conspira- torial whisper, “we’ve got to break out of here.”

“What for?” asked Harris. “This is the first decent rest I’ve had in years.”

“You aren’t going to let Blick get away with this?” demanded Kurt in a shocked voice.

Why not? said the colonel. “He’s the exec, isn’t he? If something hap- pened to me, he’d have to take over command anyway. He’s just going through the impatient stage, that’s all. A few days behind my desk will settle him down. In two weeks he’ll be so sick of the job he’ll be down on his knees begging me to take over again.”

Kurt decided to try a new tack. “But, sir, he’s going to shut down the Tech Schools!”

“A little vacation won’t hurt the kids,” said the colonel indulgently.

ASTOUNDING SCIENCE-FICTION

“After a week or so the wives will get so sick of having them underfoot all day that they’ll turn the heat on him. Blick has six kids himself and I’ve a hunch his wife won’t be any happier than the rest. She’s a very determined woman, Kurt; a very de- termined woman!”

Kurt had a feeling he was getting no place rapidly. “Please, sir,” he said earnestly, “I’ve got a plan.” “Yes?”

“Just before the guard makes his evening check-in, stretch out on the bed and start moaning. I’ll yell that you’re dying and when he comes in to check I’ll jump him!”

“You’ll do no such thing!” said the colonel sternly. “Sergeant Wetzel is an old friend of mine. Can’t you get it through your thick head that I don’t want to escape. When you’ve held command as long as I have you’ll wel- come a chance for a little peace and quiet. I know Blick inside out and I’m not worried about him. But, if you’ve got your heart set on escaping, I sup- pose there’s no particular reason why you shouldn’t. Do it the easy way though. Like this.” He walked to the bars that fronted the cell and bel- lowed, “Sergeant Wetzel! Sergeant Wetzel!”

“Coming, sir!” called a voice from down the corridor. There was a shuffle of running feet and a gray scalp-locked and extremely portly sergeant puffed into view.

“What will it be, sir?” he asked.

“Colonel Blick or any of the staff around?” questioned the colonel.

“No, sir,” said the sergeant. “They’re all upstairs celebrating.

“Good!” said Harris. “Unlock the door, will you?”

“Anything you say, colonel,” said the old man agreeably and produced a large key from his pouch and fitted it into the lock. There was a slight creak- ing and the door swung open.

“Young Dixon here wants to es- cape,” said the colonel.

“It’s all right by me,” replied the sergeant, “though it’s going to be awkward when Colonel Blick asks what happened to him.”

“The lieutenant has a plan,” con- fided the colonel. “He’s going to over- power you and escape.”

“There’s more to it than just that!” said Kurt. “I’m figuring on swapping uniforms with you. That way I can walk right out through the front gate without anybody being the wiser.” “That,” said the sergeant, slowly looking down at his sixty-three inch waist, “will take a heap of doing. You’re welcome to try though.” “Let’s get on with it then,” said Kurt, winding up a round-house swing.

“If it’s all the same with you, lieu- tenant,” said the old sergeant, eying Kurt’s rocklike fist nervously, “I’d rather have the colonel do any over- powering that’s got to be done.” Colonel Harris grinned and walked over to Wetzel.

“Ready?”

TIIE SPECTER GENERAL

25

“Ready!”

Harris’ fist traveled a bare five inches and tapped Wetzel lightly on the chin.

“Oof!” grunted the sergeant co- operatively and staggered back to a point where he could collapse on the softest of the two cots.

The exchange of clothes was quickly effected. Except for the pants which persisted in dropping down to Kurt’s , ankles and the war bonnet which with equal persistence kept sliding down over his ears— he was ready to go. The pants problem was solved easily by stuffing a pillow inside them. This Kurt fondly believed made him look more like the rotund sergeant than ever. The garrison bonnet pre- sented a more difficult problem but he finally achieved a partial solution. By holding it up with his left hand and keeping the palm tightly pressed against his forehead, it should appear to the casual observer that he was walking engrossed in deep thought.

The first two hundred yards were easy. The corridor was deserted and he plodded confidently along, the great war bonnet wabbling sedately on his head in spite of his best efforts to keep it steady. When he finally reached the exit gate, he knocked on it firmly and called to the duty sergeant.

“Open up! It’s Wetzel.”

Unfortunately, just then he grew careless and let go of his headgear.

26

As the door swung open; the great war bonnet swooped down over his ears and came to rest on his shoulders. The result was that where his head normally was there could be seen only a nest of weaving feathers. The duty sergeant’s jaw suddenly dropped as he got a good look at the strange figure that stood in the darkened corridor. And then with remarkable presence of mind he slammed the door shut in Kurt’s face and clicked the bolt.

Sergeant of the guard ! he bawled. “Sergeant of the guard! There’s a thing in the corridor !

“What kind of a thing?” inquired a sleepy voice from the guard room.

“A horrible kind of a thing with wiggling feathers where its head ought to be,” replied the sergeant.

“Get it’s name, rank, and serial number,” said the sleepy voice.

Kurt didn’t wait to hear any more. Disentangling himself from the head- dress with some difficulty, he hurled it aside and pelted back down the corridor.

Lieutenant Dixon wandered back into the cell with a crestfallen look on his face. Colonel Harris and the old sergeant were so deeply engrossed in a game of “rockets high” that they didn’t even see him at first. Kurt coughed and the colonel looked up.

“Change your mind?”

“No, sir,” said Kurt. “Something slipped.”

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“What?” asked the colonel.

“Sergeatit Wetzel’s war bonnet. I’d rather not talk about it.” He sank down on his bunk and buried his head in his hands.

“Excuse me,” said the sergeant apologetically, “but if the lieutenant’s through with my pants I’d like to have them back. There’s a draft in here!”

Kurt silently exchanged clothes and then moodily walked over to the grille that barred the window and stood looking out.

“Why not go upstairs to officers’ country and out that way? sug- gested the sergeant, who hated the idea of being overpowered for nothing. “If you can get to the front gate with- out one of the staff spotting you, you can walk right out. The sentry never notices faces, he just checks for in- signia.”

Kurt grabbed Sergeant Wetzel’s plump hand and wrung it warmly. “I don’t know how to thank you,” he stammered.

“Then it’s about time you learned,” said the colonel. “The usual practice in civilized battalions is to say Thank you

“Thank you!” said Kurt.

“Quite all right,” said the sergeant. “Take the first stairway to your left. When you get to the top, turn left again and the corridor will take you straight to the exit.”

Kurt got safely to the top of the

stairs and turned right. Three hundred feet later the corridor ended in a blank wall. A small passageway angled off to the left and he set off do.wn it. It also came to a dead end in a small anteroom whose farther wall was occupied by a set of great bronze doors. He turned and started to retrace his steps. He had almost reached the main corridor when he heard angry voices sounding from it. He peeked cautiously around the corridor. His escape route was blocked by two offi- cers engaged in acrimonious argu- ment. Neither was too sober and the captain obviously wasn’t giving the major the respect that a field officer usually commanded.

“I don’t care what she said!” the captain shouted. “I saw her first.” The major grabbed him by the shoulder and pushed him back against the wall. “It doesn’t matter who saw her first. You keep away from her or there’s going to be trouble !

The captain’s face flushed with rage. With a snarl he tore off the major’s breechcloth and struck him in the face with it.

The major’s face grew hard and cold. He stepped back, clicked his calloused heels together, and bowed slightly.

“Axes or fists?”

“Axes,” snapped the captain.

“May I suggest the armory ante- room?” said the major formally. “We won’t be disturbed there.”

“As you wish, sir,” said the captain

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with equal formality. “Your breech- cloth, sir.” The major donned it with dignity and they started down the hall toward Kurt. He turned and fled back down the corridor.

In a second he was back in the ante- room. Unless he did something quickly he was trapped. Two flaming torches were set in brackets on each side of the great bronze door. As flickering pools of shadow chased each other across the worn stone floor, Kurt searched desperately for some other way out. There was none. The only possible exit was through the bronze portals. The voices behind him grew louder. He ran forward, grabbed a projecting handle, and pulled. One door creaked open slightly and with a sigh of relief Kurt slipped inside.

There were no torches here. The great hall stood in half darkness, its only illumination the pale moonlight that streamed down through the arch- ing skylight that formed the central ceiling. He stood for a moment in awe, impressed in spite of himself by the strange unfamiliar shapes that loomed before him in the half-darkness. He was suddenly brought back to reality by the sound of voices in the ante- room.

“Hey! The armory door’s open!” “So what? That place is off limits to everybody but the C.O.”

“Blick won’t care. Let’s fight in there. There should be more room.” Kurt quickly scanned the hall for

a safe hiding place. At the far end stood what looked like a great bronze statue, its burnished surface gleaming dimly in the moonlight. As the door swung open behind him, he slipped cautiously through the shadows until he reached it. It looked like a coffin with feet, but to one side of it there was a dark pool of shadow. He slipped into it and pressed himself close against the cold metal. As he did so his hipbone pressed against a slight protrusion and with a slight clicking sound, a hinged middle section of the metallic figure swung open, exposing a dark cavity. The thing was hollow!

Kurt had a sudden idea. “Even if they do come down here,” he thought, “they’d never think of looking inside this thing!” With some difficulty he wiggled inside and pulled the hatch shut after him. There were legs to the thing his own fit snugly into them but no arms.

The two officers strode out of the shadows at the other end of the hall. Thej? stopped in the center of the armory and faced each other like fighting cocks. Kurt gave a sigh of relief. It looked as if he were safe for the moment.

There was a sudden wicked glitter of moonlight on axheads as their weapons leaped into their hands. They stood frozen for a moment in a mur- derous tableau and then the captain’s ax hummed toward his opponent’s head in a vicious slash. There was a shower of sparks as the major parried

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and then with a quick wrist twist sent his own weapon looping down toward the captain’s midriff. The other pulled his ax down to ward the blow but he was only partially successful. The keen obsidian edge raked his ribs and blood dripped darkly in the moon- light.

As Kurt watched intently he began to feel the first faint stirrings of claustrophobia. The Imperial design- ers had planned their battle armor for efficiency rather than comfort and Kurt felt as if he were locked away in a cramped dark closet. His malaise wasn’t helped by a sudden realization that when the men left they might very well lock the door behind them. His decision to change his hiding place was hastened when a bank of dark clouds swept across the face of the moon. The flood of light that poured down through the skylight suddenly dimmed until Kurt could barely make out the pirouetting forms of the two officers who were fighting in the center of the hall.

This was his chance. K he could slip down the darkened side of the hall before the moon lighted up the hall again, he might be able to slip out of the hall unobserved. He pushed against the closed hatch through which he entered. It refused to open. A feeling of trapped panic started to roll over him but he fought it back. “There must be some way to open this thing from the inside,” he thought.

As his fingers wandered over the

30

dark interior of the suit looking for a release lever, they encountered a bank of keys set just below his midriff. He pressed one experimentally. A quiet hum filled the armor and suddenly a feeling of weightlessness came over him. He stiffened in fright. As he did so one of his steel shod feet pushed lightly backwards against the floor. That was enough. Slowly, like a child’s balloon caught in a light draft, he drifted toward the center of the hall. He struggled violently but since lie was now several inches above the floor and rising slowly it did him no good.

The fight was progressing splen- didly. Both men were master axmen and in spite of being slightly drunk were putting on a brilliant exhibition. Each was bleeding from a dozen minor slashes but neither had been seriously axed as yet. Their flashing strokes and counters were masterful, so masterful that Kurt slowly forgot his increas- ingly awkward situation as he became more and more absorbed in the fight before him. The blond captain was slightly the better axman but the major compensated for it by occa- sionally whistling in cuts that to Kurt’s experienced eye seemed peril- ously close to fouls. He grew steadily more partisan in his feelings until one particularly unscrupulous attempt broke down his restraint altogether.

“Pull down your guard!” he screamed to the captain. “He’s

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trying to cut you below the belt!” His voice reverberated within the battle suit and boomed out with strange metallic overtones.

Both men whirled in the direction of the sound. They could see nothing for a moment and then the major caught sight of the strange menacing figure looming above him in the murky darkness.

Dropping his ax he dashed fran- tically toward the exit shrieking: “It’s the Inspector General!”

The captain’s reflexes were a second slower. Before he could take off Kurt poked his head out of the open face- port and shouted down, “It’s only me, Dixon! Get me out of here, will you?” The captain stared up at him goggle-eyed. “What kind of a contrap- tion is that?” he demanded. “And what are you doing in it?”

Kurt by now was floating a good ten feet off the floor. He had visions of spending the night on the ceiling and he wasn’t happy about it. “Get me down now,” he pleaded. “We can talk after I get out of this thing.”

The captain gave a leap upwards and tried to grab Kurt’s ankles. His jump was short and his outstretched fingers gave the weightless armor a slight shove that sent it bobbing up another three feet.

He cocked his head back and called up to Kurt. “Can’t reach you now. We’ll have to try something else. How did you get into that thing in the first place?

“The middle section is hinged,” said Kurt. “When I pulled it shut it clicked.”

“Well, unclick it!”

“I tried that. That’s why I’m up here now.”

“Try again,” said the man on the floor. “If you can open the hatch, you can drop down and I’ll catch you.”

“Here I come!” said Kurt, his fingers selecting a stud at random. He pushed. There was a terrible blast of flame from the shoulder jets and he screamed skywards on a pillar of fire. A microsecond later he reached the skylight. Something had to give. It did !

At fifteen thousand feet the air pressure dropped to the point where the automatics took over and the face plate clicked shut. Kurt didn’t notice that. He was out like a light. At thirty thousand feet .the heaters cut in. Forty seconds later he was in free space. Things could have been worse though, he still had air for two hours

X.

Flight Officer Ozaki was taking a cat nap when the alarm on the radia- tion detector went off. Dashing the sleep out of his eyes, he slipped rapidly into the control seat and cut off the gong. His fingers danced over the controls in a blur of movement. Swiftly the vision screen shifted until the little green dot that indicated a

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source of radiant energy was firmly centered. Next he switched on the pulse analyzer and watched carefully as it broke down the incoming signal into components and sent them surg- ing across the scope in the form of sharp-toothed sine waves. There was an odd peak to them, a strength and sharpness that he hadn’t seen before.

“Doesn’t look familiar,” he mut- tered to himself, “but I’d better check to make sure.”

He punched the comparison button and while the analyzer methodically began to check the incoming trace against the known patterns stored up in its compact little memory bank, he turned back to the vision screen. He switched on high magnification and the system rushed toward him. It expanded from a single pin point of light into a distinct planetary system. At its center a giant dying sun ex- panded on the plate like a malignant red eye. As he watched, the green dot moved appreciably, a thin red line stretching out behind it to indicate its course from point of first detection. Ozaki’s fingers moved over the con- trols and a broken line of white light came into being on the screen. With careful adjustments he moved it up toward the green track left by the crawling red dot. When he had an exact overlay, he carefully moved the line back along the course that the energy emitter had followed prior to detection.

Ozaki was tense. It looked as if he

migh t have something. He gave a sudden whoop of excitement as the broken white line intersected the orange dot of a planetary mass. A vision of the promised thirty-day leave and six months’ extra pay danced before his eyes as he waited for the pulse analyzer to clear.

“Home!” he thought ecstatically. ' “Home and unplugged plumbing!”

With a final whir of relays the analyzer clucked like a contented chicken and dropped an identity card out of its emission slot. Ozaki grabbed it and scanned it eagerly. At the top was printed in red, “Identity Un- known,” and below in smaller letters, “Suggest check of trace pattern on base analyzer. He gave a sudden whistle as his eyes caught the energy utilization index. 927! That was fifty points higher than it had any right to be. The best tech in the Protectorate considered himself lucky if he could tune a propulsion unit so that it delivered a thrust of forty-five per cent of rated maximum. Whatever was out there was hot! Too hot for one man to handle alone. With quick decision he punched the transmission key of his space communicator and sent a call winging back to War Base Three.

XI.

Commander Krogson stormed up and down his office in a frenzy of impatience.

“It shouldn’t be more than another

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fifteen minutes, sir,” said Schninkle.

Krogson snorted. “That’s what you said an hour ago! What’s the matter with those people down there? I want the identity of that- ship and I want it now.”

“It’s not Identification’s fault,” ex- plained the other. “The big analyzer is in pretty bad shape and it keeps jamming. They’re afraid that if they take it apart they won’t be able to get it back together again.”

The next two hours saw Krogson’s blood pressure steadily rising toward the explosion point. Twice he ordered the whole identification section trans- ferred to a labor battalion and twice he had to rescind the command when Schninkle pointed out that scrapings from the bottom of the barrel were better than nothing at all. His finger- nails were chewed down to the quick when word finally came through.

“Identification, sir,” said a hesitant voice on the intercom.

“Well? demanded the commander.

“The analyzer says The voice hesitated again.

“The analyzer says what?” shouted Krogson in a fury of impatience.

“The analyzer says that the trace pattern is that of one of the old Imperial drive units.”

“That’s impossible!” sputtered the commander. “The last Imperial base was smashed five hundred years ago. What of their equipment was salvaged has long since been worn out and tossed on the scrap heap. The machine

must be wrong!”

“Not this time,” said the voice. We checked the memory bank man- ually and there’s no mistake. It’s an Imperial all right. Nobody can pro- duce a drive unit like that these days.”

Commander Krogson leaned back in his chair, his eyes veiled in deep thought. “Schninkle,” he said finally, thinking out loud, “I’ve got a hunch that maybe we’ve stumbled on some- thing big. Maybe the Lord Protector is right about there being a plot to knock him over, but maybe he’s wrong about who’s trying to do it. What if all these centuries since the Empire collapsed a group of Imperials have been hiding out waiting for their chance?”

Schninkle digested the idea for a moment. “It could be,” he said slowly. If there is such a group, they couldn’t pick a better time than now to strike; the Protectorate is so wobbly that it wouldn’t take much of a shove to topple it over.”

The more he thought about it, the more sense the idea made to Krogson. Once he felt a fleeting temptation to hush up the whole thing. If there were Imperials and they did take over, maybe they would put an end to the frenzied rat race that was slowly ruining the galaxy a race that sooner or later entangled every competent man in the great web of intrigue and power politics that stretched through the Protectorate and forced him in

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self-defense to keep clawing his way toward the top of the heap.

Regretfully he dismissed the idea. This was a matter of his own neck, here and now!

“It’s a big IF, Schninkle,” he said, “but if I’ve guessed right we’ve bailed ourselves out. Get hold of that scout and find out his position.”

Schninkle scooted out of the door. A few minutes later he dashed back in. “I’ve just contacted the scout!” he said excitedly. “He’s closed in on the power source and it isn’t a ship after all. It’s a man in space armor! The drive unit is cut off and it’s head- ing out of the system at fifteen hun- dred per. The pilot is standing by for instructions.”

“Tell him to intercept and cap- ture!” Schninkle started out of the office. “Wait a second; what’s the scout’s position?”

Schninkle’s face fell. “He doesn’t quite know, sir.”

“He what ?” demanded the com- mander.

“Fie doesn’t quite know,” repeated the little man. “His astrocomputer went haywire six hours out of base.”

“Just our luck!” swore Krogson. “Well tell him to leave his transmitter on. We’ll ride in on his beam. Better call the sector commander while you’re at it and tell him what’s happened.”

“Beg pardon, commander,” said Schninkle, “but I wouldn’t advise it.”

Why not? asked Krogson.

“You’re next in line to be sector commander, aren’t you, sir?”

“I guess so,” said the commander.

If this pans out you’ll be in a posi- tion to knock him over and grab his job, won’t you?” asked Schninkle slyly.

“Could be,” admitted Krogson in a tired voice. “Not because I want to, though but because I have to. I’m not as young as I once was and the boys below are pushing pretty hard.

It’s either up or out -and out is

always feet first.”

“Put yourself in the sector com- mander’s shoes for a minute,” sug- gested the little man. “What would you do if a war base commander came through with news of a possible Im- perial base?”

A look of grim comprehension came over Krogson ’s face. “Of course! I’d ground the commander’s ships and send out my own fleet. I must be slipping; I should have thought of that at once!”

“On the other hand,” said Schninkle “you might call him and request per- mission to conduct routine maneu- vers. He’ll approve as a matter of course and you’ll have an excuse for taking out the full fleet. Once in deep space you can slap on radio silence and set course for the scout. If there is an Imperial base out there, nobody will know anything about it until il’s blasted. I’ll stay back here and keep my eyes on things for you.”

Commander Krogson grinned.

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“Schninkle, it’s a pleasure to have you in my command: How would you like me to make you Devoted Servant of the Lord Protector, Eighth Class? It carries an extra shoe ration coupon!”

“If it’s all the same with you,” said Schninkle, “I’d just as soon have Saturday afternoons off.”

XII.

As Kurt struggled up out of the darkness, he could hear a gong sound- ing in the faint distance. Bong! Bong! BONG! It grew nearer and louder. He shook his head painfully and groaned. There was light from some place beating against his eyelids. Opening them, was too much effort. He was in some sort of a bunk. He could feel that. But the gong. He lay there concentrating on it. Slowly he began to realize that the beat didn’t come from outside. It was his head. It felt swollen and sore and each pulse of his heart sent a hammer thud through it.

One by one his senses began to re- turn to normal. As his nose reassumed its normal acuteness it began to quiver. There was a strange scent in the air, an unpleasant sickening scent as of he chased the scent down his aching memory channels until he fi- nally had it cornered— rotting fish. With that to anchor on he slowly be- gan to reconstruct reality. He had been floating high above the floor in the armory and the captain had been

trying to get him down. Then he had pushed a button. There had been a microsecond of tremendous accelera- tion and then a horrendous crash. That must have been the skylight. After the crash was 'darkness, then the gongs, and now fish dead and rotting fish.

“I must be alive,” he decided. “Imperial Headquarters would never smell like this!”

He groaned and slowly opened one eye. Wherever he was he hadn’t been there before. He opened the other eye. He was in a room. A room with a curved ceiling and curving walls. Slowly, with infinite care, he hung his head over the side of the bunk. Below him in a form-fitting chair before a bank of instruments sat a small man with yellow skin and blue- black hair. Kurt coughed. The man looked up. Kurt asked the obvious question.

“Where am I?”

“I’m not permitted to give you any information,” said the small man. His speech had an odd slurred quality to Kurt’s ear.

“Something stinks!” said Kurt.

“It sure does,” said the small man gloomily. “It must be worse for you. I’m used to it.”

Kurt surveyed the cabin with in- terest. There were a lot of gadgets tucked away here and there that looked familiar. They were like the things he had worked on in Tech School except that they were cruder

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and simpler. They looked as if they had been put together by an eight- year-old recruit who was doing his first trial assembly. He decided to make another stab at establishing some sort of communication with the little man.

“How come you have everything in one room? We always used to keep different things in different shops.”

“No comment,” said Ozaki.

Kurt had a feeling he was butting his head against a stone wall. He decided to make one more try.

“I give up,” he said, wrinkling his nose, “where’d you hide it?”

“Hide what?” asked the little man.

“The fish,” said Kurt.

“No comment.”

“Why not?” asked Kurt.

“Because there isn’t anything that can be done about it,” said Ozaki. “It’s the air conditioner. Something’s haywire inside.”

“What’s an air conditioner?” asked Kurt.

“That square box over your head.”

Kurt looked at it, closed his eyes, and thought for a moment. The thing did look familiar. Suddenly a picture of it popped into his mind. Page 318 in the “Manual of Auxiliary Mechan- isms.”

“It’s fantastic!” he said.

“What is?” said the little man.

“This.” Kurt pointed to the condi- tioner. “I didn’t know they existed in real life. I thought they were just in

36

books. You got a first echelon kit?”

“Sure,” said Ozaki. “It’s in that recess by the head of the bunk. Why?

Kurt pulled the kit out of its re- taining clips and opened its cover, fishing around until he found a small screwdriver and a pair of needle-nose pliers.

“I think I’ll fix it,” he said con- versationally.

“Oh no you won’t!” howled Ozaki. “Air with fish is better than no air at all.” But before he could do anything, Kurt had pulled the cover off the air conditioner and was probing into the intricate mechanism with his screwdriver. A slight thumping noise came from inside. Kurt cocked his ear and thought. Suddenly his screwdriver speared down through the maze of whirring parts. He gave a slow quarter turn and the internal thumping dis- appeared.

“See,” he said triumphantly, “no more fish !

Ozaki stopped shaking long enough to give the air a tentative sniff. He had got out of the habit of smelling in self-defense and it took him a minute or two to detect the difference. Suddenly a broad grin swept across Iris face.

“It’s going away! I do believe it’s going away!”

Kurt gave the screwdriver another quarter of a turn and suddenly the sharp spicy scent of pines swept through the scout. Ozaki took a deep ecstatic breath and relaxed in his

ASTOUNDING SCIENCE-FICTION

chair. His face lost it’s pallor.

“How did you do it?” he said finally.

“No comment,” said Kurt pleas- antly.

There was silence from below. Ozaki was in the throes of a brain storm. He was more impressed by Kurt’s casual repair of the air conditioner than he liked to admit.

“Tell me,” he said cautiously, “can you fix other things beside air con- ditioners?”

“I guess so,” said Kurt, “if it’s just simple stuff like this.” He gestured around the cabin. “Most of the stuff here needs fixing. They’ve got it to- gether wrong.”

"Maybe we could make a dicker,” said Ozaki. “You fix things, I answer questions Some questions that is,” he added hastily.

“It’s a deal,” said Kurt who was filled with a burning curiosity as to his whereabouts. Certain things were al- ready dear in his mind. He knew that wherever he was he’d never been there before. That meant evidently that there was a garrison on the other side of the mountains whose existence had never been suspected. What bothered him was how he had got there.

Check,” said Ozaki. First, do you know anything about plumbing?

“What’s plumbing?” asked Kurt curiously.

“Pipes,” said Ozaki. “They’re plugged. They’ve been plugged for more time than I like to think about.”

“I can try,” said Kurt.

“Good!” said the pilot and ushered him into the small cubicle that opened off the rear bulkhead. “You might tackle the shower while you’re at it.”

“What’s a shower?”

“That curved dingbat up there,” said Ozaki pointing. “The thermostat’s out of whack.”

“Thermostats are kid stuff,” said Kurt, shutting the door.

Ten minutes later Kurt came out.

“It’s all fixed.”

“I don’t believe it,” said Ozaki, shouldering his way past Kurt. He reached down and pushed a small curved handle. There was the satisfy- ing sound of rushing water. He next reached into the little shower com- partment and turned the knob to the left. With a hiss a needle spray of cold water burst forth. The pilot looked at Kurt with awe in his eyes.

“If I hadn’t seen it, I wouldn’t have believed it ! That’s two answers you’ve earned.”

Kurt peered back into the cubicle curiously. “Well, first,” he said, “now that I’ve fixed them, what are they for?”

Ozaki explained briefly and a look of amazement came over Kurt’s face. Machinery he knew, but the idea that it could be used for something was hard to grasp.

“If I hadn’t seen it, I wouldn’t have believed it!” he said slowly. This would be something to tell when

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he got home. Home! The pressing question of location popped back into his mind.

“How far are we from the gar- rison?” he asked.

Ozaki made a quick mental cal- culation.

“Roughly two light-seconds,” he said.

How far’s that in kilometers?

Ozaki thought again. “Around six hundred thousand. I’ll run off the exact figures if you want them.”

Kurt gulped. No place could be that far away. Not even Imperial Head- quarters! He tried to measure out the distance in his mind in terms of days’ marches but he soon found himself lost. Thinking wouldn’t do it. He had to see with his own eyes where he was.

“How do you get outside?” he asked.

•• Ozaki gestured toward the air lock that opened at the par of the com- partment. “Why?”

“I want to go out for a few minutes to sort of get my bearings.”

Ozaki looked at him in disbelief. “What’s your game, anyhow?” he demanded.

It was Kurt’s turn to look be- wildered. “I haven't any game. I’m just trying to find out where I am so I’ll know which way to head to get back to the garrison.”

“It’ll be a long cold walk.” Ozaki laughed and hit the stud that slid back the ray screens on the vision ports.

38

“Take a look.”

Kurt looked out into nothingness, a blue-black void marked only by distant pin points of light. He sud- denly felt terribly alone, lost in a blank immensity that had no bound- aries. Down was gone and so was up. There was only this tiny lighted room with nothing underneath it. The port began to swim in front of his eyes as a sudden strange vertigo swept over him. He felt that if he looked out into that terrible space for another mo- ment he would lose his sanity. He covered his eyes with his hands and staggered back to the center of the cabin.

Ozaki slid the ray screens back in place. “Kind of gets you first time, doesn’t it?

Kurt had always carried a little automatic compass within his head. Wherever he had gone, no matter how far afield he had wandered, it had always pointed steadily toward home. Now for the first time in his life the needle was spinning helplessly. It was an uneasy feeling. He had to get oriented.

“Which way is the garrison?” he pleaded.

Ozaki shrugged. “Over there some place. I don’t know whereabouts on the planet you come from. I didn’t pick up your track until you were in free space.”

“Over where?” asked Kurt.

“Think you can stand another look?”

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Kurt braced himself and nodded. The pilot opened a side port to vision and pointed. There, s&emingly mo- tionless in the black emptiness of space, floated a great greenish gray globe. It didn’t make sense to Kurt. The satellite that hung somewhat to the left did. It’s face was different, the details were sharper than he’d ever seen them before, but the features he knew as well as his own. Night after night on scouting detail for the hunt- ing parties while waiting for sleep he had watched the silver sphere ride through the clouds above him.

He didn’t want to believe but he had to!

His face was white and tense as he turned back to Ozaki. A thousand sharp and burning questions milled chaotically through his mind.

“Where am I?” he demanded. “How did I get out here? Who are you? Where did you come from?”

“You’re in a spaceship,” said Ozaki, “a two-man scout. And that’s all you’re going to get out of me until you get some more work done. You might as well start on this microscopic pro- jector. The thing burned out just as the special investigator was about to reveal who had blown off the com- missioner’s head by wiring a bit of plutonite into his autoshave. I’ve been going nuts ever since trying to figure out who did it!”

Kurt took some tools out of the first echelon kit and knelt obediently down beside the small projector.

Three hours later they sat down to dinner. Kurt had repaired the food machine and Ozaki was slowly masti- cating synthasteak that for the first time in days tasted like synthasteak. As he ecstatically lifted the last savory morsel to his mouth, the ship gave a sudden leap that plastered him and what remained of his supper against the rear bulkhead. There was darkness for a second and then the ceiling lights flickered on, then off, and then on again. Ozaki picked himself up and gingerly ran his fingers over the throbbing lump that was beginning to grow out of the top of his head. His temper wasn’t improved when he looked up and saw Kurt still seated at the table calmly cutting himself an- other piece of pie.

“You should have braced your- self,” said Kurt conversationally, “The converter’s out of phase. You can hear her build up for a jump if you listen. When she does you ought to brace yourself. Maybe you don’t hear so good?” he asked helpfully.

“Don’t talk with your mouth full, it isn’t polite,” snarled Ozaki.

Late that night the converter cut out altogether. Ozaki was sleeping the sleep of the innocent and didn’t find out about it for several hours. When he did awake it was to Kurt’s gentle shaking.

“Hey!” Ozaki groaned and buried his face in the pillow.

“Hey!” This time the voice was

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louder. The pilot yawned and tried to open his eyes.

“Is it important if all the lights go out?” the voice queried. The import of the words suddenly struck home and Ozaki sat bolt upright in his bunk. He opened his eyes, blinked, and opened them again. The lights were out. There was a strange unnatural silence about the ship.

“Good Lord!” he shouted and jumped for the controls, “The power’s off.”

He hit the starter switch but noth- ing happened. The converter was jammed solid. Ozaki began to sweat. He fumbled over the control board until he found the switch that cut the emergency batteries into the lighting

40

circuit. Again nothing happened.

“If you’re trying to run the lights on the batteries, they won’t work,” said Kurt in a conversational tone.

“Why not?” snapped Ozaki as he punched savagely and futilely at the starter button.

“They’re dead,” said Kurt. “I used them all up.”

“You what?” yelled the pilot in anguish.

“I used them all up. You see, when the converter went out I woke up. After a while the sun started to come up and it began to get awfully hot so I hooked the batteries into the re- frigeration coils. Kept the place nice and cool while they lasted.”

Ozaki howled. When he swung the

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shutter of the forward port to let in some light he howled again. This time in dead earnest. The giant red sun of the system was no longer perched off to the left at a comfortable distance. Instead before Ozaki’s horrified eyes was a great red mass that stretched from horizon to horizon.

“We’re falling into the sun!” he screamed.

It’s getting sort of hot,” said Kurt. “Hot” was an understatement. The thermometer needle pointed at a hun- dred and ten and was climbing steadily.

Ozaki jerked open the stores com- partment door and grabbed a couple of spare batteries. As quickly as his trembling fingers would work, he con- nected them to the emergency power line. A second later the cabin lights flickered on and Ozaki was warming up the space communicator. He punched the transmitter key and a call went arcing out through hyper- space. The vision screen flickered and the bored face of a communication tech, third class, appeared.

“Give me Commander Krogson at once!” demanded Ozaki.

“Sorry, old man,” yawned the other, “but the commander’s having breakfast. Call back in half an hour, will you?”

“This is an emergency! Put me through at once!”

“Can’t help it,” said the other, “nobody can disturb the Old Man while he’s having breakfast.”

“Listen, you knucklehead,” screamed Ozaki, “if you don’t get me through to the commander as of right now, I’ll have you in the uranium mines so fast that you won’t know what hit you!”

“You and who else?” drawled the tech.

“Me and my cousin Takahashi!” snarled the pilot. “He’s Reclassifica- tion Officer for the Base STAP.”

The tech’s face went white. “Yes, sir!” he stuttered. “Right away, sir! No offense meant, sir!” He disap- peared from the screen. There was a moment of darkness and then the interior of Commander Krogson’s ca- bin flashed on.

The commander was having break- fast. His teeth rested on the white tablecloth and his mouth was full of mush.

Commander Krogson ! said Ozaki desperately.

The commander looked up with a startled expression. When he noticed his screen was on he swallowed his mush convulsively and popped his teeth back into place.

“Who’s there?” he demanded in a neutral voice in case it might be some- body important.

“Flight Officer Ozaki,” said Flight Officer Ozaki.

A thundercloud rolled across the commander’s face. “What do you mean by disturbing me at breakfast? he demanded.

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“Beg pardon, sir,” said the pilot, “but my ship’s falling into a red sun.” “Too bad,” grunted Commander Krogson and turned back to his mush and milk.

“But, sir,” persisted the other, “you’ve got to send somebody to pull me off. My converter’s dead !

“Why tell me about it?” said Krog- son in annoyance. Call Space Rescue, they’re supposed to handle things like this.”

“Listen, commander,” wailed the pilot, “by the time they’ve assigned me a priority and routed the paper through proper channels, I’ll have gone up in smoke. The last time I got in a jam it took them two weeks to get to me. I’ve only got hours left ! “Can’t make exceptions,” snapped Krogson testily. “If I let you skip the chain of command, everybody and his brother will think he has a right to.”

“Commander,” howled Ozaki, “we’re frying in here!”

“All right. All right!” said the commander sourly. “I’ll send some- body after you. What’s your name?” “Ozaki, sir. Flight Officer Ozaki.” The commander was in the process of scooping up another spoonful of mush when suddenly a thought struck him squarely between the eyes.

“Wait a second,” he said hastily, “you aren’t the scout who located the Imperial base, are you?”

“Yes, sir,” said the pilot in a cracked voice.

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“Why didn’t you say so?” roared Krogson. Flipping on his intercom he growled, “Give me the Exec.” There was a moment’s silence.

“Yes, sir?”

“How long before we get to that scout?

“About six hours, sir.”

“Make it three!”

“Can’t be done, sir.”

“It will be done!” snarled Krogson and broke the connection.

The temperature needle in the little scout was now pointing to a hundred and fifteen.

“I don’t think we can hold out that long,” said Ozaki.

“Nonsense!” said the commander and the screen went blank.

Ozaki slumped into the pilot chair and buried his face in his hands. Sud- denly he felt a blast of cold air on his neck. “There’s no use in prolonging our misery,” he said without looking up. “Those spare batteries won’t last five minutes under this load.”

“I knew that,” said Kurt cheer- fully, “so while you were doing all the talking I went ahead and fixed the converter. You sure have mighty hot summers out here!” he continued, mopping his brow.

“You what? yelled the pilot, jump- ing half out of his seat. “You couldn’t even if you did have the know-how. It takes half a day to get the shielding off so you can get at the thing!”

“Didn’t need to take the shielding

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off for a simple job like that,” said Kurt. He pointed to a tiny inspection port about four inches in diameter. “I worked through there.”

That’s impossible ! interjected the pilot. “You can’t even see the injector through that, let alone get to it to work on !

“Shucks,” said Kurt, “a man doesn’t have to see a little gadget like that to fix it. If your hands are trained right, you can feel what’s wrong and set it to rights right away. She won’t jump on you any more either. The syncromesh thrust baffle was a little out of phase so I fixed that, too, while I was at it.”

Ozaki still didn’t believe it but he hit the controls on faith. The scout bucked under the sudden strong surge of power and then, it’s converter humming sweetly, arced away from the giant sun in a long sweeping curve.

There was silence in the scout. The two men sat quietly, each immersed in an uneasy welter of troubled specu- lation.

“That was close!” said Ozaki fi- nally. “Too close for comfort. Another hour or so and !” He snapped his fingers.

Kurt looked puzzled. “Were we in trouble?”

“Trouble!” snorted Ozaki. “If you hadn’t fixed the converter when you did, we’d be cinders by now!”

Kurt digested the news in silence. There was something about this super- being who actually made machines

work that bothered him. There was a note of bewilderment in his voice when he asked : If we were really in danger, why didn’t you fix the converter in- stead of wasting time talking on that thing?” He gestured toward the space communicator.

It was Ozaki’s turn to be bewildered. “Fix it?” he said with surprise in his voice. “There aren’t a half a dozen techs on the whole base who know enough about atomics to work on a propulsion unit. When something like that goes out you call Space Rescue and chew your nails until a wrecker can get to you.”

Kurt crawled into his bunk and lay back staring at the curved ceiling. He had thinking -to do, a lot of thinking!

Three hours later the scout flashed up alongside the great flagship and darted into a landing port. Flight Officer Ozaki was stricken by a horrible thought as he gazed affectionately around his smoothly running ship.

“Say,” he said to Kurt hesitantly, “would you mind not mentioning that you fixed this crate up for me? If you do, they’ll take it away from me sure. Some captain will get a new gig and I’ll be issued another clunk from Base junkpile.”

“Sure thing,” said Kurt.

A moment later the flashing of a green light on the control panel sig- naled that the pressure in the lock had reached normal.

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“Back in a minute,” said Ozaki. “You wait here.”

There was a muted hum as the exit hatch swung slowly open. Two guards entered and stood silently beside Kurt as Ozaki left to report to Commander Krogson.

XIII.

The battle fleet of War Base Three of Sector Seven of the Galactic Protec- torate hung motionless in space twenty thousand kilometers out from Kurt’s home planet. A hundred tired detec- tion techs sat tensely before their screens, sweeping the globe for some sign of energy radiation. Aside from the occasional light spatters caused by space static, their scopes remained dark. As their reports filtered in to Commander Krogson he became more and more exasperated.

“Are you positive this is the right planet?” he demanded of Ozaki.

“No question about it, sir.”

“Seems funny there’s nothing run- ning down there at all,” said Krogson. “Maybe they spotted us on the way in and cut off power. I’ve got a hunch that He broke off in mid sentence as the red top-priority light on the communication panel began to flash. “Get that,”, he said. “Maybe they’ve spotted something at last.”

The executive officer flipped on the vision screen and the interior of the flagship’s communication room was revealed.

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“Sorry to bother you, sir,” said the tech whose image appeared on the screen, “but a message just came through on the emergency band.”

“What does it say?”

The tech looked unhappy. “It’s coded, sir.”

“Well, decode it!” barked the executive.

“We can’t,” said the technician dif- fidently. “Something’s gone wrong with the decoder. The printer is pound- ing out random groups that don’t make any sense at all.”

The executive grunted his disgust. “Any idea where the call’s coming from?”

“Yes, sir; it’s coming in on a tight beam from the direction of Base. Must be from a ship emergency rig, though. Regular hyperspace transmission isn’t directional. Either the ship’s regular rig broke down or the operator is using the beam to keep anybody else from picking up his signal.”

“Get to work on that decoder. Call back as. soon as you get any results.” The tech saluted and the screen went black.

“Whatever it is, it’s probably trou- ble,” said Krogson morosely. “Well, we’d better get on with this job. Take the fleet into atmosphere. It looks as if we are going to have to make a visual check.”

“Maybe the prisoner can give us a lead,” suggested the executive of- ficer.

“Good idea. Have him brought in.”

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A moment later Kurt was ushered into the master control room. Krog- son’s eyes widened at the sight of his scalp lock and paint.

“Where in the name of the Galactic Spirit,” he demanded, “did you get that rig?

“Don’t you recognize an Imperial Space Marine when you see one?” Kurt answered coldly.

The guard that had escorted Kurt in made a little twirling motion at his temple with one finger. Krogson took another look and nodded agreement.

“Sit down, son,” he said in a fatherly tone. “We're trying to get you home, but you’re going to have to give us a little help before we can do it. You see, we’re not quite sure just where your base is.”

“I’ll help all I can,” said Kurt.

“Fine!” said the commander, rub- bing his palms together. “Now just where down there do you come from? He pointed out the vision port to the curving globe that stretched out below.

Kurt looked down helplessly. Noth- ing makes sense, seeing it from up here,” he said apologetically.

Krogson thought for a moment. “What’s the country like arotlnd your base?” he asked.

“Mostly jungle,” said Kurt. “The garrison is on a plateau though and there are mountains to the north.”

Krogson turned quickly to his exec. “Did you get that description?”

“Yes, sir!”

Get all scouts out for a close sweep.

As soon as the base is spotted, move the fleet in and hover at forty thousand!”

Forty minutes later a scout came streaking back.

“Found it, sir!” said the exec. “Plateau with jungle all around and mountains to the north. There’s a settlement at one end. The pilot saw movement down there but they must have spotted us on our way in. There’s still no evidence of energy radiation. They must have everything shut down.”

“That’s not good!” said Krogson. “They’ve probably got all their heavy stuff set up waiting for us to sweep over. We’ll have to hit them hard and fast. Did they spot the scout?”

“Can’t tell, sir.”

“We’d better assume that they did. Notify all gunnery officers to switch their batteries over to central control. If we come in fast and high and hit them with simultaneous fleet concen- tration, we can vaporize the whole base before they can take a crack at us.”

“I’ll send the order out at once, sir,” said the executive officer.

The fleet pulled into tight formation and headed toward the Imperial base. They were halfway there when the fleet gunnery officer entered the con- trol room and said apologetically to Commander Krogson, “Excuse me, sir, but I’d like to suggest a trial run. Fleet concentration is a tricky thing

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and if something went haywire we’d be sitting ducks for the ground bat- teries.”

Good idea,” said Krogson thought- fully. “There’s too much at stake to have anything go wrong. Select an equivalent target and we’ll make a pass.”

The fleet was now passing over a towering mountain chain.

“How about that bald spot down there?” said the Exec, pointing to a rocky expanse that jutted out from the side of one of the towering peaks.

“Good enough,” said Krogson.

“All ships on central control!” re- ported the gunnery officer.

“On target!” reported the tech on the tracking screen. “One. Two. Three. Four

Kurt stood by the front observation port watching the ground far below sweep by. He had been listening in- tently but what had been said didn’t make sense. There had been some- thing about batteries the term was alien to him and somethin % about the garrison. He decided to ask the commander what it was all about but the intentness with which Krogson was watching the tracking screen de- terred him. Instead he gazed moodily down at the mountains below him.

“Five. Six. Seven. Ready. FIRE!”

A savage shudder ran through the great ship as her ground-pointed bat- teries blasted in unison. Seconds went by and then suddenly the rocky expanse on the shoulder of the moun-

46

tain directly below twinkled as blind- ing flashes of actinic light danced across it. Then as Kurt watched, great masses of rock and earth moved slowly skyward from the center of the spurting nests of tangled flame. Still slowly, as if buoyed up by the thin mountain air, the debris began to fall back again until it was lost from sight in quick rising mushrooms of jet-black smoke. Kurt turned and looked back toward Commander Krog- son. Batteries must be the things that had torn the mountains below apart. And garrison there was only one garrison !

“I ordered fleet fire,” barked Krog- son. “This ship was the only one that cut loose. What happened?”

“Just a second, sir,” said the execu- tive officer, “I’ll try and find out.” He was busy for a minute on the intercom system. “The other ships were ready, sir,” he reported finally. “Their guns were all switched over to our control but no impulse came through. Central fire control must be on the blink!” He gestured toward a complex bank of equipment that oc- cupied one entire corner of the control room.

Commander Krogson said a few appropriate words. When he reached the point where he was beginning to repeat himself, he paused and stood in frozen silence for a good thirty seconds.

“Would you mind getting a fire control tech in here to fix that ob-

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scenity bank?” he asked in a voice that put everyone’s teeth on edge.

The other seemed to have something to say but he was having trouble getting it out.

“Well?” said Krogson.

“Prime Base grabbed our last one two weeks ago. There isn’t another left with the fleet.”

“Doesn’t look like much to me,” said Kurt as he strolled over to ex* amine the bank of equipment.

“Get away from there!” roared the commander. “We’ve got enough trou- ble without you making things worse.” Kurt ignored him and began to open inspection ports.

“Guard!” yelled Krogson. “Throw that man out of here!”

Ozaki interrupted timidly. “Beg pardon, commander, but he can ,fix it if anybody can.”

Krogson whirled on the flight offi- cer. “How do you know?

Ozaki caught himself just in time. If he talked too much he was likely to lose the scout that Kurt had fixed up for him.

“Because he . . .eh . . . talks like a tech,” he concluded lamely.

Krogson looked at Kurt dubiously. “I guess there’s no harm in giving it a trial,” he said finally. “Give him a set of tools and turn him loose. Maybe for once a miracle will happen.” “First,” said Kurt, “I’ll need the wiring diagrams for this thing.”

“Get them!” barked the com- mander and an orderly scuttled out of

the control, headed aft.

“Next you’ll have to give me a general idea of what it’s supposed to do,” continued Kurt.

Krogson turned to the gunnery offi- cer. “You’d better handle this.”

When the orderly returned with the circuit diagrams, they were spread out on the plotting table and the two men bent over them.

“Got it!” said Kurt at last and sauntered over to the control bank. Twenty minutes later he sauntered back again.

“She’s all right now,” he said pleasantly.

The gunnery officer quickly scanned his testing board. Not a single red trouble light was on. He turned to Commander Krogson in amazement.

“I don’t know how he did it, sir, but the circuits are all clear now.”

Krogson stared at Kurt with a look of new respect in his eyes. “What were you down there, chief maintenance tech?”

Kurt laughed. “Me? I was never chief anything. I spent most of my time on hunting detail.”

The commander digested that in silence for a moment. “Then how did you become so familiar with fire- control gear?”

“Studied it in school like everyone else does. There wasn’t anything much wrong with that thing anyway except a couple of sticking relays.”

“Excuse me, sir,” interrupted the executive officer, “but should we make

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another trial run?”

“Are you sure the bank is in work- ing order?

“Positive, sir!”

“Then we’d better make straight for that base. If this boy here is a fair example of what they have down there, their defenses may be too tough for us to crack if we give them a chance to get set up !

Kurt gave a slight start which he quickly controlled. Then he had guessed right! Slowly and casually he began to sidle toward the semicircular bank of controls that stood before the great tracking screen.

Where do you think you’re going ! barked Krogson.

Kurt froze. His pulses were pound- ing within him but he kept his voice light and casual.

“No place,” he said innocently.

Get over against the bulkhead and keep out of the way!” snapped the commander. “We’ve got a job of work coming up.”

Kurt injected a note of bewilder- ment into his voice.

“What kind of work?”

Ivrogson’s voice softened and a look approaching pity came into his eyes. “It’s just as well you don’t know about it until it’s over,” he said gruffly.

There she is ! sang out the naviga- tor, pointing to a tiny brown projection that jutted up out of the green jungle in the far distance. “We’re about three minutes out, sir. You can take

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over at any time now.”

The fleet gunnery officer’s fingers moved quickly over the keys that welded the fleet into a single instru- ment of destruction, keyed and ready to blast a barrage of ravening thunder- bolts of molecular disruption down at the defenseless garrison at a single touch on the master fire-control but- ton.

“Whenever you’re ready, sir,” he said deferentially to Krogson as he vacated the controls. A hush fell over the control room as the great tracking screen brightened and showed the compact bundle of white dots that marked the fleet crawling slowly to- ward the green triangle of the target area.

“Get the prisoner out of here,” said Krogson. “There’s no reason why he should have to watch what’s about to happen.”

The guard that stood beside Kurt grabbed his arm and shoved him toward the door.

There was a sudden explosion of fists' as Kurt erupted into action. In a blur of continuous movement he streaked toward the gunnery control panel. He was halfway across the control room before the pole axed guard hit the floor. There was a second of stunned amazement, and then be- fore anyone could move to stop him, he stood beside the controls, one hand poised tensely above the master stud that controlled the combined fire of the fleet.

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“Hold it!” he shouted as the mo- ment of paralysis broke and several of the officers started toward him menacingly. “One move and I’ll blast the whole fleet into scrap!”

They stopped in shocked silence, looking to Commander Krogson for guidance.

“Almost on target, sir,” called the tech on the tracking screen.

Krogson stalked menacingly to- ward Kurt. “Get away from those controls!” he snarled. “You aren’t going to blow anything to anything. All that you can do is let off a pre- mature blast. If you are trying to alert your base, it’s no use. We can be on a return sweep before they have time to get ready for us.”

Kurt shook his head calmly. “Wouldn’t do you any good,” he said. “Take a look at the gun ports on the other ships. I made a couple of minor changes while I was working on the control bank.”

“Quit bluffing,” said Krogson.

“I’m not bluffing,” said Kurt quietly. “Take a look. It won’t cost you anything.”

“On target!” called the tracking tech.

“Order the fleet to circle for another sweep,” snapped Krogson over his shoulder as he stalked toward the for- ward observation port. There was something in Kurt’s tone that had impressed him more than he liked to admit. He squinted out toward the nearest ship. Suddenly his face

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blanched !

"The gun ports! They’re still closed !

Kurt gave a- whistle of relief. “I had my fingers crossed,” he said pleas- antly. “You didn’t give me enough time with the wiring diagrams for me to be sure that cutting out that circuit would do the trick. Now . . . guess what the results would be if I should happen to push down on this stud.”

Krogson had a momentary vision of several hundred shells ramming their sensitive noses against the thick chrome steel of the closed gun ports.

“Don’t bother trying to talk,” said Kurt, noticing the violent contractions of the commander’s Adam’s apple. “You’d better save your breath for my colonel.”

“Who?” demanded Krogson.

My colonel,” repeated Kurt. “We’d better head back and pick him up. Can you make these ships hang in one place or do they have to keep moving fast to stay up?”

The commander clamped his jaws together sullenly and said nothing.

Kurt made a tentative move toward the firing stud.

“Easy!” yelled the gunnery officer in alarm. “That thing has hair-trigger action!”

“Well?” said Kurt to Krogson.

“We can hover,” grunted the other.

“Then take up a position a little to one side of the plateau.” Kurt brushed the surface of the firing stud with a casual finger. “If you make me push

49

this, I don’t want a lot of scrap iron falling down on the battalion. Some- body might get hurt.”

As the fleet came to rest above the plateau, the call light on the communi- cation panel began to flash again.

“Answer it,” ordered Kurt, “but watch what you say.”

Krogson walked over and snapped on the screen.

“Communications, sir.”

“Well?”

“It’s that message we called you about earlier. We’ve finally got the decoder working sort of, that is.” His voice faltered and then stopped.

“What does it say?” demanded Krogson impatiently.

“We still don’t know,” admitted the tech miserably. “It’s being de- coded all right but it’s coming out in a North Vegan dialect that nobody down here can understand. I guess there’s still something wrong with the selector. All that we can figure out is that the message has something to do with General Carr and the Lord Protector.”

“Want me to go down and fix it?” interrupted Kurt in an innocent voice.

Krogson whirled toward him, his hamlike hands clinching and unclinch- ing in impotent rage.

“Anything wrong, sir?” asked the technician on the screen.

Kurt raised a significant eyebrow to the commander.

“Of course not,” growled Krogson.

“Go find somebody to translate that message and don’t bother me until it’s done.”

A new face appeared on the screen.

“Excuse me for interrupting, sir,, but translation won’t be necessary. We just got a flash from Detection that they’ve spotted the ship that sent it. It’s a small scout heading in on emer- gency drive. She should be here in a matter of minutes.”

Krogson flipped off the screen im- patiently. “Whatever it is, it’s sure to be more trouble,” he said to nobody in particular. Suddenly he became aware that the fleet was no longer in motion. “Well,” he said sourly to Kurt, “we’re here. What now?”

“Send a ship down to the garrison and bring Colonel Harris back up here so that you and he can work this thing out between you. Tell him that Dixon is up here and has everything under control.”

Krogson turned to the executive officer. “All right,” he said, “do what he says.” The other saluted and started toward the door.

“Just a second,” said Kurt, “if you have any idea of telling the boys out- side to cut the transmission leads from fire control, I wouldn’t advise it. It’s a rather lengthy process and the minute a trouble light blinks on that board, up we go! Now on your way!”

XIV.

Lieutenant Colonel Blick, acting

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commander of the 427th Light Main- tenance Battalion of the Imperial Space Marines stood at his office win- dow and scowled down upon the whole civilized world, all twenty-six square kilometers of it. It had been a hard day. Three separate delegations of mothers had descended upon him

demanding that he reopen the Tech Schools for the sake of their sanity. The recruits had been roaming the company streets in bands composed of equal numbers of small boys and large dogs creating havoc wherever they went. He tried to cheer himself up by thinking of his forthcoming tri-

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umph when he in the guise of the Inspector General would float magnifi- cently down from the skies and once and for all put the seal of final author- ity upon the new order. The only trouble was that he was beginning to have a sneaking suspicion that maybe that new order wasn’t all that he had planned it to be. As he thought of his own six banshees screaming through quarters, his suspicion deepened al- most to certainty.

He wandered back to his desk and slumped behind it gloomily. He couldn’t backwater now, his pride was at stake. He glanced at the water clock on his desk, and then rose reluctantly and started toward the door. It was time to get into battle armor and get ready for the inspection.

As he reached the door, there was a sudden slap of running sandals down the hall. A second later Major Kane burst into the office, his face white and terrified.

“Colonel,” he gasped, “the I.G.’s here !

“Nonsense,” said Blick. “I’m the I.G. now!”

“Oh yeah? whimpered Kane. Go look out the window. He’s here and he’s brought the whole Imperial fleet with him!”

Blick dashed to the window and looked up. High above, so high that he could see them only as silver specks, hung hundreds of ships.

“Headquarters clones exist!” he gasped.

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He stood stunned. What to do . . . what to do . . . what to do The question swirled around in his brain until he was dizzy. He looked to Kane for advice but the other was as bewildered as he was.

“Don’t stand there, man,” he stormed. “Do something!”

“Yes, sir,” said Kane. “What?”

Blick thought for a long silent mo- ment. The answer was obvious but there was a short, fierce inner struggle before he could bring himself to accept it.

Get Colonel Harris up here at once. He’ll know what we should do.”

A stubborn look came across Kane’s face. “We’re running things now,” he said angrily.

Blick’s face hardened and he let out a roar that shook the walls. “Listen, you pup, when you get an order you follow it. Now get!”

Forty seconds later Colonel Harris stormed into the office. “What kind of a mess have you got us into this time? he demanded.

“Look up there, sir,” said Blick, leading him to the window.

Colonel Harris snapped back into command as if he’d never left it.

“Major Kane!” he shouted.

Kane popped into the office like a frightened rabbit.

“Evacuate the garrison at once! I want everyone off the plateau and into the jungle immediately. Get litters for the sick and the veterans who can’t

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walk and take them to the hunting camps. Start the rest moving north as soon as you can.”

“Really, sir,” protested Kane, look- ing to Blick for a cue.

“You heard the colonel,” barked Blick. “On your way!” Kane bolted.

Colonel Harris turned to Blick and said in a frosty voice: “I appreciate your help, colonel, but I feel perfectly competent to enforce my own orders.”

“Sorry, sir,” said the other meekly. “It won’t happen again.”

Harris smiled. “O.K., Jimmie,” he said, “let’s forget it. We’ve got work to do!”

XV.

It seemed to Kurt as if time was standing still. His nerves were screwed up to the breaking point and although he maintained an air of outward com- posure for the benefit of those in the control room of the flagship, it took all his will power to keep the hand that was resting over the firing stud from quivering. One slip and they’d be on him. Actually it was only a matter of minutes between the time the scout was dispatched to the garrison below and the time it returned, but to him it seemed as if hours had passed before the familiar form of his commanding officer strode briskly into the control room.

Colonel Harris came to a halt just inside the door and swept the room with a keen penetrating gaze.

“What’s up, son?” he asked Kurt.

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“I’m not quite sure. All that I know is that they’re here to blast the garri- son. As long as I’ve got control of this,” he indicated the firing stud, “I’m top dog, but you’d better work something out in a hurry.”

The look of strain on Kurt’s face was enough for the colonel.

“Who’s in command here?” he demanded.

Krogson stepped forward and bowed stiffly. “Commander Conrad Krogson of War Base Three of the Galactic Protectorate.”

“Colonel Marcus Harris, 427th Light Maintenance Battalion of the Imperial Space Marines,” replied the other briskly. “Now that the formali- ties are out of the way, let’s get to work. Is there some place here where we can talk?

Krogson gestured toward a small cubicle that opened off the control room. The two men entered and shut the door behind them.

A half hour went by without agree- ment. “There may be an answer some- where,” Colonel Harris said finally, “but I can’t find it. We can’t surren- der to you, and we can’t afford to have you surrender to us. We haven’t the food, facilities, or anything else to keep fifty thousand men under guard. If we turn you loose, there’s nothing to keep you from coming back to blast us except your word, that is, and since it wopld obviously be given under duress, I’m afraid that we couldn’t attach

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much weight to it. It's a nice problem. I wish we had more time to spend on it but unless you can come up with something workable during the next few minutes, I’m going to have to give Kurt orders to blow the fleet.”

Krogson’s mind was operating at a furious pace. One by one he snatched at possible solutions, and one by one he gave them up as he realized that they would never stand up under the scrutiny of the razor-sharp mind that sat opposite him.

“Look,” he burst out finally, “your empire is dead and our protectorate is about to fall apart. Give us a chance to come down and join you and we’ll chuck the past. We need each other and you know it!”

.“I know we do,” said the colonel soberly, “and 1 rather think you are being honest with me. But we just can’t take the chance. There are too many of you for us to digest and if you should change your mind He threw up his hands in a helpless gesture.

“But I wouldn’t,” protested Krog- son. “You’ve told me what your life is like down there and you know what kind of a rat race I’ve been caught up in. I’d welcome the chance to get out of it. All of us would!”

“You might to begin with,” said Harris, “but then you might start thinking what your Lord Protector would give to get his hands on several hundred trained technicians. No, com- mander,” he said, “we just couldn’t

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chance it.” He stretched his hand out to Krogson and the other after a sec- ond’s hesitation took it.

Commander Krogson had reached the end of the road and he knew it. The odd thing about it was that now he found himself there, he didn’t par- ticularly mind. He sat and watched his own reactions with a sense of vague bewilderment. The strong drive for self-preservation that had kept him struggling ahead for so long was petering out and there was nothing to take its place. He was immersed in a strange feeling of emptiness and though a faint something within him said that he should go out fighting, it seemed pointless and without reason.

Suddenly the moment of quiet was broken. From the control room came a muffled sound of angry voices and scuffling feet. With one quick stride Colonel Harris reached the door and swung it open. He was almost bowled over by a small disheveled figure who darted past him into the cubicle. Close behind came several of the ship’s officers. As the figure came to a stop before Commander Krogson, he grabbed him and started to drag him back into the control room.

“Sorry, sir,” one of them said to Krogson, “but he came busting in demanding to see you at once. He wouldn’t tell us why and when we tried to stop him, he broke away.”

“Release him!” ordered the com- mander. He looked sternly at the little

ASTOUNDING SCIENCE- FICTION

figure. “Well, Schninkle,” he said sternly, “what is it this time?” “Didn’t you get my message?” quavered the little man.

Krogson snorted. “So it was you in that scout! I might have known it. We got it all right but Communica- tion still hasn’t got it figured out. What are you doing out here? You’re supposed to be back at base keeping knives out of my back !

“It’s private, sir,” said Schninkle. “The rest of you clear out!” or- dered Krogson. A second later, with the exception of Colonel Harris, the cubicle stood empty. Schninkle looked questioningly at the oddly uniformed officer.

“Couldn’t put him out if I wanted to,” said Krogson, “Now go ahead.” Schninkle closed the door carefully and then turned to the commander and said in a hushed voice, “There’s been a blowup at Prime Base. General Carr was hiding out there after all. He hit at noon yesterday. He had two- thirds of the Elite Guard secretly on his side and the Lord Protector didn’t have a chance. He tried to run but they chopped him clown before he got out of atmosphere.”

Krogson digested the news in si- lence for a moment. “So the Lord Protector is dead.” He laughed bit- terly. “Well, long live the Lord Pro- tector!” He turned slowly to Colonel Harris. “I guess this lets us both off. Now that the heat’s off me, you’re safe. Call off your boy out there and

we’ll make ourselves scarce. I’ve got to get back to the new Lord Protector to pay my respects. If some of my boys get to Carr first, I’m apt to be out of a job.”

Harris shook his head. “It isn’t as simple as that. Your new leader needs technicians as much as your old one did. I’m afraid we are still back where we started.”

As Krogson broke into an impatient denial, Schninkle interrupted him. “You can’t go back, commander. None of us can. Carr has the whole staff down on his out list. He’s mak- ing a clean sweep of all possible com- petition. We’d all be under arrest now if he knew where we were !

Krogson gave a slow whistle. “Doesn’t leave me much choice, does it? he said to Colonel Harris. If you don’t turn me loose I get blown up, if you do I get shot down.”

Schninkle looked puzzled. “What’s up, sir? he asked.

Krogson gave a bitter laugh. “In case you didn’t notice on your way in, there is a young man sitting at the fire controls out there who can blow up the whole fleet at the touch of a button. Down below is an ideal base with hundreds of techs, but the colonel here won’t take us in and he’s afraid to let us go.”

“I wouldn’t,” admitted Harris, “but the last few minutes have rather changed the picture. My empire has been dead for five hundred years and your protectorate doesn’t seem to

THE SPECTER GENERAL

55

want you around any more. It looks like we’re both out of a job. Maybe we both ought to try to find a new one. What do you think?”

“I don’t know what to think,” said Krogson. “I can’t go back and I can’t stay here, and there isn’t any place else. The fleet can’t keep going without a base.”

A broad grin came over the face of Colonel Harris. “You know,” he said, I’ve got a hunch that maybe we can do business after all. Come on!” He threw open the cubicle door and strode briskly into the control room, Krogson and Schninkle following close at his heels. He walked over to Kurt who was still poised stiffly at the fire- control board.

“You can relax now, lad. Every- thing is under control.”

Kurt gave a sigh of relief and pull- ing himself to his feet, stretched lux- uriantly. As the other officers saw the firing stud deserted, they tensed and looked to Commander Krogson ques- tioningly. He frowned for a second and then slowly shook his head.

“Well?” he said to Colonel Harris.

“It’s obvious,” said the other, “you’ve a fleet, a darn good fleet, but it’s falling apart for lack of decent maintenance. I’ve got a base down there with five thousand lads who can think with their fingers. This knuckle- head of mine is a good example.” He walked over to Kurt and slapped him affectionately on the shoulder.

56

“There’s nothing on this ship that he couldn’t tear down and put back to- gether blindfolded if he was. given a little time to think about it. I think he’ll enjoy having some real work to do for a change.”

“I may seem dense,” said Krogson with a bewildered expression on his face, “but wasn’t that the idea that I was trying to sell you?”

“The idea is the same,” said Harris, “but the context isn’t. You’re in a position now where you have to co- operate. That makes a difference. A big difference!”

“It sounds good,” said Krogson, “but now you’re overlooking some- thing. Carr will be looking for me. We can’t stand off the whole galaxy!

Schninkle interrupted. “You’re overlooking something too, sir. He hasn’t the slightest idea where we are. It will be months before he has things well enough under control to start an organized search for us. When he does his chances of ever spotting the fleet are mighty slim if we take reasonable precautions. Remember that it was only by a fluke that we ever happened to spot this place to begin with.”

As he talked a calculating look came into his eyes. “A year of train- ing and refitting here and there wouldn’t be a fleet in the galaxy that could stand against us.” He casually edged over until he occupied a posi- tion between Kurt and the fire-control board. “If things went right, there’s

ASTOUNDING SCIENCE-FICTION

no reason why you couldn’t become Lord Protector, commander.”

A flash of the old fire stirred within Krogson and then quickly flickered out. “No, Schninkle,” he said heavily. “That’s all past now. I’ve had enough. It’s time to try something new.”

“In that case,” said Colonel Harris, “let’s begin! Out there a whole galaxy is breaking up. Soon the time will come when a strong hand is going to be needed to piece it back together and put it in running order again. You know,” he continued reflectively, “the name of the old empire still has a certain magic to it. It might not be a bad idea to use it until we are ready to move on to something better.”

He walked silently to the vision port and looked down on the lush greenness spreading far below. “But whatever we call ourselves,” he con- tinued slowly, half talking to himself, “we have something to work for now.” A quizzical smile played over his lips and his wise old eyes seemed to be scanning the years ahead. “You know, Kurt; there’s nothing like a visit from the Inspector General

once in a while to keep things in line. The galaxy is a big place but when the time comes, we’ll make our rounds!”

XVI.

On the parade ground behind the low buildings of the garrison, the 427th Light Maintenance Battalion of the Imperial Space Marines stood in rigid formation, the feathers of their war bonnets moving slightly in the little breeze that blew in from the west and their war paint glowing redly in the slanting rays of the set- ting sun.

A quiver ran through the hard sur- face soil of the plateau as the great mass of the fleet flagship settled down ponderously to rest. There was a mo- ment of expectant silence as a great port clanged open and a gangplank extended to the ground. From some- where within the ship a fanfare of trumpets sounded. Slowly and with solemn dignity, surrounded by his staff, Conrad Krogson, Inspector Gen- eral of the Imperial Space Marines, advanced to review the troops.

THE END

THE SPECTER GENERAL

57

THE GHOST TOWN

BY DONALD KINGSBURY

Sometimes a cat gets into trouble ; it's got claws that make climbing up a tree easy , but getting down again is tougher. And under certain conditions , getting to the Moon would be like the problem of the tree-climbing cat!

58

ASTOUNDING SCIENCE -PICT ION

She could feel the body of the City of Citadel rotting in its underground grave. The air fans had an odd whine and they exhaled the smell of a newly dying garden, the city lights were gone, the walls were cold. Years ago space had invaded most of the shafts and corridors and rooms of the old Citadel; now space had under siege the small remnant of this once great outpost. It was a firmly opinionated woman who carried her oil lantern through the upper level hallway. She was quite determined to leave the Moon.

The lantern made weird shadows: a monstrous electric bulb, a warped hand truck, a ladder. She climbed the ladder and a bloated ladder-shadow was cast around her. Then presently she was above the surface level, in the tower of the Seven MPS Transport Corporation. The bare office was as black as the rest of Citadel. She threw the lantern light about the room but found nobody, only the counter and the tables of freight rates and the sign:

“Live Human Freight $40 to $50 per pound. Passage price determined solely by dickering. No round-trip tickets.”

She glided behind the counter into the next room but no one was there either. Well, if Abe Srenco was not here in the office he would be “up- stairs.” She looked at the ladder for a moment, then began to climb it.

Srenco was leaning silently against the mass of his Focomcon the Flight

Orbital Computer and Controller which calculated the orbits of space- ships entering the Northern Mare Imbrium gravitic field and which piloted those ships in for a landing. He stared into her lantern light curi- ously. The bright glow from the room’s lamp touched the side of his harsh face and an emergency lox-oil electric generator hummed above the whine of the air fan. She started to speak but he cut her short with a ges- ture, gliding over to the ladderway.

I don’t want to disturb my pilot,” he said softly, motioning as he did so toward the earphoned man at the Focomcon’s controls. “He’s just bring- ing in a ship now. Anything I can do for you?”

“I’m Mrs. Smith. I have to speak with you.”

“Certainly.”

“I want to leave the Moon,” she said firmly.

“Oh?”

“Right now. This week.”

Srenco smiled. “That is too bad. I wish I could offer you passage, Mrs. Smith.”'

“You won’t?” Fright gripped her face. “I have some money,” she said stumbling quickly over the words.

“I’m sorry. Even money won’t help you. I sincerely wish I could take your life savings. I can’t. I can offer trans- portation to no one. My only passen- ger ship was grounded at Inyokern Thursday as untrustworthy. The au- thorities there tell me that they will

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59

never let her blast-off again.” He added thoughtfully, “She was a bit leaky. She’s just an old war can I bought dirt cheap. I couldn’t expect her to hang together forever.”

“Won’t you get another ship?” “Maybe. But it is not a prosperous business this catering to a cityful of poverty stricken rabble.” He looked at tiny Mrs. Smith who was bare- footed and wore an old army uniform several sizes too large. “I cannot afford new ships.”

Her panic was growing. “How much would passage for me cost?” “You’re about one ten.” He paused to make a mental calculation. “If I had a ship, I’d sell you a place for say five thousand dollars.”

“That’s too much!” she said in- dignantly. “I’m skinny.”

Srenco laughed. “Prices like that don’t attract business, I’ll grant you,” he said, then added harshly, “but I charge them and I’m in debt.”

“We have no money. My husband is a gardener and since the power went off his crops are dead. We haven’t any- thing any more.” Then she spoke with a hint of hopeful appeal. “On Earth I could earn enough to buy his passage home, apd enough to pay for my passage, too.”

“Except,” Srenco replied sourly, “I have no ship.” *

“I could go freight. I’m tough. Freight is cheaper, isn’t it?”

“Considerably cheaper. But you aren’t tough enough to go freight.

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One: You’d suffocate. Two: You’d be squashed to death. Three: You’d die of radiation sickness.”

Mrs. Smith stared pathetically at Srenco. “Oh Mr. Srenco, I can’t stay on the Moon!”

“A lot of people are. I can’t even afford my own passage home.”

“But I’m pregnant,” she said quickly. “Dr. Robin told me this morning. I can’t raise a child here.”

The spaceline owner sighed and spoke more gently to her than he would have spoken to a man. He was partial to women because there were so few of them in Citadel. “Perhaps I can extend to you one hope. See Major Kavam over at garrison head- quarters. He might be able to arrange passage for you on the Caspian Sea. My pildt is bringing her in now. But I wouldn’t ' count on a bunk. The Caspian Sea is the only live can in space since my ship was grounded. Plenty of soldiers want to go home. A lot of enlistments are running out now.”

“Thank you,” she said. She was crying.

Srenco took her softly by the arm. Come over to the window. We’ll watch the Sea blast-in.” He won- dered how such a frail girl had ever come to be in Citadel. She could have stayed at home. She could have left when Citadel had been abandoned by the United States Army.

Drop. Drop Faster.

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Luna grappled feebly with the needlelike ship from Earth, ever so slowly cultivating the strength in her fingers until, of a sudden, the feeble fingers were strong and the wee ship was dropping silently, rapidly toward the Moon’s bright gray skin. The ship fought back. Angry white fire burst from her jets and lashed with solar ferocity down upon the lunar globe at better than eight thousand meters per second. The spaceship won the battle. She broke fall above the dark sands of the Northern Imbrium Plain, hovered momentarily as if undecided, and then began to sink to the ground, fins first, jets blazing. The fins touched rock and the stabbing flame died.

Colonel “Handy” Tool stirred in his bunk, stared at the four other empty bunks, loosened his safety belt, and sat up shaky from the land- ing. He was a veteran of space— this was his third trip and yet the thun- der of rockets beneath him was still scaring. He smiled at himself for being afraid. On Earth people had asked him about space and he had told them. And the tales had become sweeter to his tongue and richer with the retell- ing. Hut now he had just suffered an- other blast-in and he was weak from suspense. So he sat on the bunk’s edge, gathering himself.

Outside the Moonscape was dark. Along the eastern horizon of the Imbrium flatlands mountain-teeth grinned blackly, holding, the colonel knew, a ghost town in their jaws, the

city called Citadel. Pale Earth light revealed a glint of metal, a glint of tower below Gaunt Mountain, near the Valley of the Alps. A few huts and a tower, that was Citadel. She had not changed outwardly in these six years since Tool had last glanced at her from the bridge of a ship here on the Imbrium plain. But in 1958 she had been alive. Now she was only a dying ghost town.

War usually destroys cities. The colonel saw in his mind’s eye the pathetic flash of a little Ukranian vil- lage. Somebody had the town under mortar fire. A Patton tank was burn- ing, its American crew freshly dead, and the buildings beside the tank were on fire. In the street a wounded Russian woman lay moaning Russian prayers to God, while three American equipped “revoltist” infantrymen moved up the street too cold to care for the dead tankmen or the old Rus- sian woman. There were no houses whole. And white snow fell.

War usually destroys cities, but it had built Citadel. Citadel was a fortress. Citadel was a base for liquid fuel Moon-to-Earth rocket bombs. The Pax Americana was the culprit here. Peace was killing Citadel. Her maximum war population of eighteen thousand thriving human beings had dropped by 1964 to less than one thousand nine hundred starvelings. And now Colonel Tool was to evacu- ate even those few who remained. Indeed, peace had been a disaster for

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61

the Moon’s lone town.

For the next thirty-two hours the colonel slept in his tiny bunk or played crap with the Caspian Sea’s jovial officer-and-crew, Captain Sil- berman, while the two of them waited out the “decay lay -in.” Humans had to stay cooped high inside a spaceship until the radioactive jet-splash from the landing degenerated below the specified level of safety. Eventually the Geiger needles entered the green.

“Caspian Sea to Citadel. Geigers in green. Come and get us.” That is what Captain Silberman broadcast to the radio tower of Seven MPS Trans- port at the end of the “lay-in.” What did come and get him Colonel Tool did not in the least expect.

It was a battered truck that ground its way across the pumice sand of Imbrium and balked to a stop at the base of the slim .spacetransport. The spacesuited colonel was standing near a fin. He did not believe in the truck at first, but it moved and five spacesuited soldiers climbed out. The truck’s cycloptic headlamp was mashed at a skewed angle, the tread guards were gone, the outer motor casing was exposed to space, and the monster had lost its air-lock doors.

The colonel cursed with venom. He hated poor equipment in a death trap like space. The best that science could provide was not good enough. So he was angry when he stepped through the hole that had once been a door. There was not even any flooring over

62

the liquid oxygen tanks. The colonel was mad but he could say nothing. The truck was of war vintage six or more years old. Citadelians had to use what they had. No replacements were available.

Evacuate the people of the Moon before they kill themselves. Those were Tool’s orders. He cringed throughout the whole journey to Citadel, vowing with every rough bounce that he would execute those orders rapidly. No one had the right to use a battered truck in space. It was a killer in an environment that offered no mercy. Better to leave space alone than to die wholesale.

Abe Srenco knocked on the lab door of the Richardson Observatory, then walked in and set his lantern on the table.

“Hello, Olga.”

“Hello, Abe.”

“Hello, Mr. Srenco,” said Olga’s little daughter from her perch high atop a cabinet.

Black haired Olga Pyzel was trying to do what her dead husband had wanted to do. She owned a fifty cen- timeter Schmidt telescope and a ninety-two centimeter reflector and a fine spectroscope, little more. Pier working day was fifteen hours long yet she barely earned enough money to keep herself and small Diana alive. The astronomers of Earth paid well for her photographs, but what was good pay on Earth was poor pay on

ASTOUNDING SCIENCE-FICTION

the Moon.

Srenco turned to Olga. “What is all this I hear from the Pirate?”

“Has the Pirate been talking to you?”

“Yeah,” said Srenco. “Yeah, he’s been talking to me all right. He wants me to do a special favor for Citadel. From the Pirate that’s a laugh. He wants a favor done for Citadel like he wants a hole in the head.- As a small token of my esteem for you rabble, I’m supposed to buy Citadel a new power plant. He thinks I love you all a lot, Olga.”

The Pirate was a disreputable con- man who owned a mine in the Im- brium Alps. It was a rich mine for sure rich in ferrous oxide but that did not bother the stock hungry suckers of Earth. The Pirate was the only man on the Moon who was mak- ing any money, a sly operator you never trusted when you could get by with trusting someone else.

“You know we have to have a new power plant,” said Olga. “And we aren’t asking you to get it either. The Pirate will tend to that.”

“Yeah. That’s the way he talks, too. He’s going to gel the plant, sure, but it looks like I’m the sucker" who will pay for it.” Srenco spoke bitterly, “Am I the big brass god who doles out grace to every forsaken villager? Am I supposed to offer salvation every time this rat hole gets into trouble? Sure the Pirate will pay for the plant. All I’ve got to do is ship it here free.

The freight being only seventy per cent of the cost. I can’t do it, Olga. I’ve got too many creditors already, and too many broke people who owe me money.”

“We’ll die then,” said Olga sharply.

“Look. If I bring in that power plant free, I go bankrupt. If I go bank- rupt, Citadel loses contact with Earth : in which case Citadel also dies.”

“But can we stand the dark much longer?” asked Olga.

“The sun rises tomorrow.”

“And sets in fourteen days. What will we do then?”

During the daylight hours giant sun engines out on Mare Imbrium gener- ated current for Citadel. Some of the current was used in the city’s machines and lights and gardens. The rest of it was used to create fuel for the long night to purify contaminated uran- ium slugs, to manufacture plant oil and liquid oxygen. Since Citadel was dependent upon atomic energy at night, the loss of her reactor broke the steady flow of power into the city. W'ith the sun gone there was oil for lanterns and trucks, and oxygen, but little electricity. Without electricity the red-orange lamps in the gardens ceased to function and without pho- tonic nourishment the crops died. And dead crops over any period of time meant starvation because nobody on the Moon earned enough dollars to eat food shipped in from Earth.

“Mr. Srenco, please don’t be mad at Olga.” Little Diana slid from her

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63

perch and looked up at the space- transport man. “She’s just scared of the dark. She can’t help it.”

“And aren’t you scared of the dark, baby?”

“No,” retorted a solemn Diana. “I’m not afraid of the dark. I think lanterns and wicks are fun and when I sneak down an inky corridor I pre- tend there’s a big wolf chasing me and that’s exciting.”

Srenco smiled. “And what happens when the wolves catch you?”

“Oh, they don’t. They’re scared of me.” Then she added irrelevantly, “Are you scared of the dark, Mr. Srenco?”

“I probably am, baby.”

Diana turned to her mother. “The plants are scared, too, aren’t they, Olga?” And then she smiled shyly at the two adults. “Look. I got it this morning.” She climbed up on the star-map desk and took down an ugly little vegetable from beside the room’s lamp. “Look. It’s all white. It got gray hair it was so scared of the dark.” To Diana this was a tragedy. She held the sorry plant up for inspec- tion. “It’s going to die of fright, isn’t it, Mr. Srenco?”

“Yes, poor thing.”

“Then what will we eat?” she demanded suddenly.

Srenco sighed and spoke to Olga. “A poor sweet gardener’s wife was begging me for passage home yester- day morning. Her whole life is tied up in a couple of rooms filled with with-

64

ered sprouts like that.” The thought made him curse. “If I owned a fleet, I’d herd you rabble off to Earth!”

“You’d never get me to leave, Abe.”

Srenco shrugged. “What can a man do with a village full of stubborn peasants? Nothing. I suppose I’ll have to get that power plant up here before you kill yourselves.”

“Thank you,” said Olga.

“Oh, shut up!” said Srenco.

The thin corona, then the ptomi- nences, then the hot sun itself crept above the Lunar Alps and the first feeble current from the Imbrium solar engines began to trickle into the city. Day had come to Citadel. Here and there a fluorescent light flickered on, motors began to turn over, employ- ment notices were hung out, and a crew of gardeners went to work in the big salt tanks seeding a new ten-day crop of algae.* People were happier than they had been since the power failure. They were glad to put away the lanterns and the groping.

Colonel “Handy” Tool stepped through the mess-hall door, braked his glide, and looked about the room. Vision was not good because most of the lights were still off and so it was a while before he saw Abe Srenco.

Abe Srenco.

The face and the name together closed a switch in his mind. They had met before. Srenco was a boy during

* The algae, treated to grow as eighty per cent fatty plants, were used in making oil for oleomar- garine, truck fuel, et cetera.

ASTOUNDING SCIENCE-FICTION

Citadel’s heyday, a pipsqueak mid- shipman of the Rocket Maintenance Yard who liked to talk, liked coffee, and liked to rib the Army. He had been an ordinary Midwesterner in- clined toward gaiety, but now sitting over his dinner he looked harsh, in his thirties, and a bit sick.

‘'Hello swabby, remember me?” Srenco glanced up, smiled, and then returned to his plate. ‘‘Sure I do. I saw your name on the Caspian Sea’s passenger list and figured our bad luck was still holding out. You’re that stupid Army colonel who picked tar- gets. 1 remember you went back to Earth to look over bomb damage. Did we ever hit anything?

“Sometimes,” said the colonel. “And now you’re on the Moon to see what hit us, eh? Major Kavam has reported what a sorry state we’re in and you are the brass god that is going to tidy things up.”

“Of course, of course.”

“All 1 hope is you have some money,” said Srenco sourly. “What we try to do with our wooden nickles never works. Have a seat. Have some cake, Handy.” He looked at the colo- nel squarely. “If you really want to help us, I know what you can do. You could pay the freight on a new ex- change unit for our reactor.”

“No,” said Tool. “You won’t need it.”

“We’ll hire glowworms^ eh?” snapped Srenco.

“With a few new parts and a little THE GHOST TOWN

tinkering on the old exchange, the reactor will keep producing a couple of months longer. I don’t imagine you’ll get much wattage, though.”

“Another baling wire job,” said Srenco bitterly. “And what do we do after a couple of months?”

“I intend to evacuate Citadel.”

Srenco was shocked.

What? Evacuate Citadel.

He could make no ready adjust* ment to that compact statement.

“Look,” he babbled. “Wait a min* ute.” Then he stopped, collected his slowly sinking heart, and managed an answer. “Some of us won’t leave,” he. said.

“Oh, but you will,” insisted the colonel. “I can kick the props out of this colony one by one. First the Army personnel go.” He grinned ma- liciously.

Soldiers had the habit of selling gov- ernment goods at reasonably cheap prices. This black market was an al- most essential facet of the Lunar economy. Without such under-the- counter business Citadel would be at a bad loss. Srenco knew it. He said nothing.

“And then,” went on the colonel, “when we offer free transportation back to Earth how many Citadelians will choose to stay? A few perhaps, but not enough to keep the body of Citadel alive. Suppose there aren’t any garden- ers left? Or suppose all the electricians leave? You are finished then. You will have to leave.”

65

The inevitable had happened. A waning, war-induced space travel had suffered its final blow. Srenco had been expecting some such catastrophe. His reaction was to curse the colonel. Tool was a progress destroyer, a defiler of hope, a meddling son sprung from use- less ancestors. Such exclamations re- lieved the pain within him but did not in the least alter any facts. He stopped cursing.

The colonel only grinned. “I’m just one of these queer men who believe in the sanctity of human life. I don’t want to see you killed, that’s all. If I have to force you to safety, I’ll force you.”

“Then why don’t you build Earth a big incubator and we’ll all crawl in- side! Would that make you happy?”

“Abe, I don’t know if you ever thought about it but I’ve killed enough people to make me burn for the rest of my life after I’m dead. I’ve been tour- ing Russia, the places where our bombs hit. In some cities there are still thousands of people buried in the rub- ble. Remember, I was the fellow who picked the targets. I’m responsible for killing a million people and maiming a million others. I saw some of those peo- ple with big radiation scars, and I fig- ure I put those burns there. My orders fixed the orders in the rockets’ brains. As long as I live I never want to see another human killed. There are al- most two thousand of you here in Citadel living in extreme danger. If I can keep you from getting killed, I

66

will. Do you believe me?”

Srenco was turning his vegetable stew bowl slowly in a circle. He growled his reply. “Two million Rus- kies, so what? There are more of them now than there were at the beginning of the war. Two thousand Americans, so what? Leave us alone. We’re ex- pendable. Can’t fools get themselves killed any more?”

“I can prove to you,” the colonel continued, “that what is left of this

«r

rotten city is ready to collapse, or blow up, or get holed. The entire colony in a reasonably short time will be destroyed without mercy by a re- lentless space. The poor tenacious people of Citadel do not deserve that, Abe.”

“Oh shut up. You’re making me sick.”firenco knew the desperate con- dition of the city.

“Abe. You know that Citadel is fin- ished. You are afraid to face it because you don't know what to do about it and you don’t want to leave.”

“I’ll never leave space,” said Srenco stubbornly. 41 If I have to blast-off from Inyokern instead of the Moon, O.K., but I’ll never leave space alone. I’ll never abandon space flight.”

“You don’t have to, but this colony has to be abandoned. If you want, I’ll give you the contract to build up the modest -space fleet necessary for the evacuation. It will put your company back in. the black and you can start fresh again on Earth. How’s that?” Srenco grumbled. He got up, picked

ASTOUNDING SCIENCE-FICTION

up his tray, muttered. His voice was a nothingness. Then he glided away all chewed up inside, leaving the colonel at the bench.

The dead crop lay uprooted on the floor around the hydroponic tanks, but such things did not perturb gardener Smith overmuch. Farmers for aeons had been losing their crops. Smith was busy setting out the sprouts from a pile of germinating mats with rapid little motions of his right hand. He had half the new crop planted already and the red-orange lights were ad- justed for maximum stimulation.

“Al! All” It was gardener Smith’s young wife who came rushing through the garden door trampling the dead leaves with bare feet. “Al, I’ve just been speaking to Major Kavam like Mr. Srenco told me to do. We’re going back to Earth! Both of us!”

Smith was a big, simple fellow. He smiled at his wife without interrupting the planting. “How did you work that, child?” He was obviously pleased.

“The whole base is to be evacuated before the year is out.”

Smith just shook his head happily and she kissed the back of his head and wrapped her arms around his neck.

Little Diana Pyzel was only mildly drunk —a few sips of home brew at the local Rum House but what she lacked in alcohol she made up by pre- tending. She had seen drunken men.

Diana was rebounding off a corridor

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wall with a glassy smile on her face when she met Colonel Tool. He was rather startled but she knew exactly what to do. She grabbed his hand and pumped it.

“Hello, Mr. Soldier.” Her words were appropriately slurred. “I’m a soldier, too. See,” she said pointing to the patch on her sleeve. I belong to the Ninety-second Division.”

Whereupon she continued to reel down the hallway in a vaguely spiral glide singing a song favored by drunken spacemen.

Colonel Tool loved children. He was left openmouthed for as long as it took him to gather his. rage potential. Then he filled himself with indignant fury. Diana was bare footed and wore an old, somewhat cut-down Army shirt with a drawstring at the waist. To boot she was drunk. It made him rage to see this child impoverished and de- graded because her parents would not leave the Moon for a decent home. Well, fumed the colonel, this little girl and her mother would be among the very first to be evacuated. That was for sure.

That was for sure.

Abe Srenco’s helmet lamp reluc- tantly touched the battered bulk- heads, the slanting floors, the gutted rooms of old Citadel. It was sickening for him to look this part of the city over, ravaged as -it was by the penni- less scavengers who lived in one small corner of its vast expanse.

68

Srenco stopped his upward glide be- side a light titanium girder to stare down moodily into the old Snack Bar. The fixtures and the air fan were stripped away. The kitchen was gone. The floor was gone and the counter hung precariously over nothingness. Only the paintings on the walls were left, though they had been blistered by the heat and cracked by the cold of space.

Too many memories were here in the Snack Bar for Srenco to take the scene impassionately. The wild days of the war peak were here, and faces were here,’ and crazy talk-talk about a will-o’-the-wisp future, and the smell of English muffins. The Snack Bar had once been the off-work center of a boom town. Now it was a kilometer beyond the periphery of a shivering, clawing ghost town.

Homesickness became overwhelm- ing; desire for that brief bright “golden age” of yesteryear, unendurable.

Srenco moved on, but everywhere lay the evidence that Citadel was a peace- torn carcass buried in a lonely lunar mare, a weakling thing that space would not tolerate for long. He passed through empty corridors, through the naked rocket assembly plant, and up onto the surface via the elevator shaft that had once raised the Moon-to-Earth rockets up into the firing stage but was now only a lava shaft for the stars to glare down.

This was not the usual route to reach the surface, however, Srenco

ASTOUNDING. SCIENCE-FICTION

had wanted to look at the old city once again to confirm irrevocably in his own mind the validity of what the colonel had been saying.

She’ s finished. That was what Srenco now thought of Citadel.

And so there wa.s a fleet to assess. He adjusted his sunshield to the harsh blow of Sol’s heat and moved in slow leaps out across the mare toward the abandoned naval yard.

Four hundred ships were there, rot- ting wdth the sun on their sides the elegant spacetransports, the stubby freighters, all in neat rows. Such had been the fate of space travel.

The first ship that Srenco tackled was the old Lake Ontario. Like all freighters she was built squat in order to combine high structural strength and maximum cargo space with mini- mum mass. She carried no lead shield- ing whatever because she had no use for a crew, and because she was with- out crew neither weight nor space was wasted on crew comforts such as food, ventilators, oxygen tanks, bunks, et cetera. Being without crew also had other economic advantages. The freighters were not chained to the ballistically inefficient four-gravity ac- celeration. They could stand as many G’s as could their light framework.

The Lake Ontario had everything a good commercial spaceship should have,. She certainly could carry goods at “reasonably” cheap rates from the Earth to the Moon. But she could not carry humans, animals, gamma sensi-

tive chemicals, et cetera.

Space rot is a diabolical thing. That is why the builders of Citadel put the bulk of the city underground. Space rot is a dry rot caused exclusively by extreme temperatures, sudden changes in temperature, and to a certain small extent by ultraviolet radiation. The Lake Ontario, exposed to such condi- tions for five years, was space rotten.

Srenco could feel sharp crackings in the “can” through the glove of his spacesuit. That was due to the falling shadows and uneven co-efficients of expansion wdiich unfortunately caused leaky seams. The Lake Ontario was no longer air-tight. And not only was she leaky the insulation in delicate elec- tronical equipment was carbonized, air lock doors were jammed, “fuel” pump turbines were sprung, “fuel” tank walls were warped, and glass was fused to instrument, et cetera.

And on top of that the Lake Ontario happened to be obsolete. Modern pumps could handle ten tunes the liquid capacity per kilogram of pump. Modern rocket motors, such as those of the Caspian Sea, could deliver a thrust two thousand meters per second greater at half the plutonium con- sumption than could the crude motors built during the late ’50s.

All day as Srenco worked he was lost in memory, lost to the recollection of days long gone when these very ships had been blasting in, one every forty minutes around the clock, the days when Citadel had been so hungry

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69

for supplies to build up her bombing potential that Maintenance had even repaired hot freighters to keep them from the idleness of the “decay lay- in,” the days when space cans had bad habits like wobbling, and digest- ing motors, and forgetting to land, and “molting” fins.

But today that grand Lunar fleet was a ghost, fair companion to a ghost town. The eastward pointing shadows shrouded the deserted naval yard while Srenco surveyed the ruin from the broken bridge of a slim transport. It was not a hopeless junk dump. The core of that fleet could be rebuilt. It could evacuate Citadel. It could crush the hopes of those who pined for even the smallest handful of stars.

Olga Pyzel looked down on Srenco’s sober face. “Where are you, Abe?” she asked gently. “You’re not with me tonight.”

“I’m back on Earth,” said Srenco.

“Are you thinking about Earth?”

“Yes.”

“Does it make }'ou homesick?”

“No.”

Olga pouted. “Why don’t you talk to me instead of saying ‘yes’ and ‘no’?”

“I’m just thinking that I better get a job lined up for myself on Earth.”

Olga stared at Srenco wide-eyed. “You’re not leaving us?” She shook him by the shoulder. “What’s hap- pened?”

He turned his head. “No. I’m not

leaving you. But I’m going back with you to Earth.”

“Make sense,” demanded Olga. “Who’s going back?”

“Colonel Tool has ordered Citadel evacuated, that’s all.”

“He can’t do that!”

“He is.”

“Don’t let him, Abe!”

Srenco smiled weakly. “I have the contract to do the evacuation. Tool pays for it. I supply the service.”

Olga was bewildered. “Oh no, Abe! “I’m a traitor, eh?”

“Yes, you’re a traitor,” she screamed at him. “You’re a turncoat and a louse! Why, Abe?”

It was Srenco’s turn to shout. Be- cause Citadel is finished!"

“It isn’t,” she yelled.

“Says a fool like you !

Olga slapped him for that. It isn’t. It isn’t.” She slapped him again. “It isn’t.”

He had to grab her wrists then, for she had become an avenging fury.

The fat Pirate was wearing a blue robe and slippers when Olga Pyzel called on him. His rooms were perhaps the only decent accommodations in Citadel outside of Major Kavam’s “house.” He ushered her inside.

“Do be less nervous, Olga. Sit down. Have some alcohol.” He half filled her space flask with strong beer.

“I’m not nervous,” said Olga tak- ing the beer nervously. “I’m just dis- tressed. I want to talk to you about

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the evacuation.”

“A distressing subject to be sure.” “I Want to ask you one question,” said Olga. “Are you going to fight it?” “Probably not.” The ex-supply ser- geant smiled lazily.

“Why?” she demanded.

The Pirate shrugged. “And what is the use?”

“Do you want to see an Empire of the Inner Solar System?”

“Not especially,” said the Pirate, amused.

“Then why are you here?”

For the fun of it. Maybe the police want me on Earth. Maybe I have a battle-ax for a wife back home. Maybe I like to tinker in mines. That answer your question?”

“No!” she said emphatically. “You don’t want Citadel evacuated any more than I do.”

“Perhaps not.”

“Then why don’t you help us fight?”

“Why waste the energy when the evacuation plans are only talk?”

“In a month they won’t be talk!” Olga flared.

“Lady, I disagree.” The ' Pirate shook his fat head. Citadel will never be evacuated. For once the grand Pax Americana is doing you a favor. Peace is a sadist, Olga. It is going to starve Citadel to skin and bones but it is never going to let Citadel die.” “Why?” demanded Olga.

The Pirate smiled but would com- mit himself no further. I might be

wrong, of course,” he said finally.

Within the week Srenco sat down bitterly to draft his report. He fiddled and dawdled, reluctant to write. The report would be nothing less than executioner’s instructions.

History, thought Srenco, will have things to say about us and the war and mankind. Eurasia degenerated, we dis- solved, the whole periphery gone to pot. He meditated aimlessly upon such things rather than type the report.

There had been no sharp ending to the Third World WTar, no VJ-like day, no sudden termination of war con- tracts, no surrender, not even a peace treaty. The main war petered out when carefully cultivated internecine con- flict, and carefully placed Allied forces, and careful aerial attack began to paralyze the Asian hemisphere. In the autumn of 1958 the tired Western armies began a slow demobilization. By the summer of 1 960 intelligence re- ports indicated that, except for a fringe of shaky nations along the North At- lantic coast, the degenerating trans- portation and communication network of Eurasia had utterly collapsed. Eurasia was infested by more than three thousand autonomous warlords, presidents, “regional councils,” polit- buros, et cetera, and innumerable small armies. It was not the first time in human history that interregnum had cloaked a civilization.

In such a mental environment Abe Srenco acquired a charter for his

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Seven Miles Per Second Transport Corporation. He bought a few multi- million dollar ships off the War Sur- plus Board for twenty thousand dol- lars— seven Lake Class freighters and one Ocean Class transport and opened up his service when the United States Navy had all but quit the Moon.

Something like the relief that fills a driver who finds himself missing the car he was skidding into entered the North American mentality in the late ’50s. By the beginning of the new decade that relief had blown up into a full emotional jag. The American peo- ple felt that the endless World War Playoff Series was over, not because they were naive enough to assume that humans had learned a lesson but because they saw not even the remot- est potential enemy in the farthest cranny of Earth. Such a political situ- ation had not existed since the days of the Pax Romana. It made the average United States citizen feel big and good. Still a bit wobbly at the knees they stood around in circles patting each other on the back. The feeling was good. We can do anything, they said.

Srenco, being an American, agreed.

He was the genius who was going to open up the Inner Solar System. He had plans. He had ambition. He had drive. He was going to have a space- ship research division, and a spaceship factory. The United States owned heaven as well as Earth but it didn’t work out that way. Srenco and a lot of other fools who stayed in Citadel did

72

not know the financial facts of life. A military budget can supply a base on the Moon just as simply as it can ship coal in airplanes. No trouble at all. But Srenco was a civilian. He ran out of money.

He had to cut his rates, tie had to learn ruthless efficiency. His rocket motors were pressed into delivering maximum exhaust velocity in spite of the danger. His Focomcon pilots had to land his ships fast and with no fuss -or else. He had to starve his em- ployees. He had to strip the idle mon- sters in the naval yard when repairs were needed. He had to squeeze his fellow Citadelians and rob dead men. Just to stay in business. Still he never made any money, nor was he able to lay away cash for the inevitable time when he would have to replace the ships in his small fleet.

An omen of disaster.

Seven MPS became destitute, yet Srenco kept it running for it was the only real link between Citadel and Earth. But the link had been breaking down. Less people came to the Moon, and less people left it. Less equipment was imported ; even the flow of necessi- ties had dwindled by more than fifty per cent since ’62.

Space had a death hug on Citadel. The energy gap between Earth and Moon was just too great for economic and social intercourse. Energy hap- pened to have a frightful price tag. And so the war-won American Empire was going to retract in upon itself

ASTOUNDING SCIENCE-FICTION

again. It had been retracting steadily for five years, unable to digest its conquests.

There was nothing for Srenco to do but gather the facts, make the esti- mates, assemble the figures, compute the ways and means. He began to type.

Little Diana was afraid of some- thing. She huddled atop a pile of empty oxygen cylinders deep inside the dim catacombs of Citadel, afraid of what was going to happen. She was afraid of Earth.

Mr. Srenco had said: We'll all be liv- ing on Earth in a little while, baby. It’s too bad , but those are the breaks you get. I don’t want you to die.

Then Olga had said the same day, I’ll die if I ever go back to Earth. I’ll never lei them take you there, Diana dear.

Big fat Earth lived in a dark sky. It was a bad place, so Diana thought. It was bad because it made grown-ups unhappy. But why did it make grown- ups so sad? Diana didn’t know. Earth was far away in the sky ; that was the only reason she could think of .- It was so far away from home that if they ever went to live there they might never see Citadel again. And maybe Olga would die, and Mr. Srenco might die, and everybody might die. Like Papa.

Diana fidgeted on the cylinders, fig- uring out all the angles on Earth. Earth was a big bad place. It had wild- gardens as big as Mare Imbrium full of monster plants that grew higher

THE GHOST TOWN

than twenty tall men standing on each other’s shoulders. And crazy animals with four legs and no hands lived in the branches. And there weren’t any electric lamps around to show you where the ground was, just the sun that couldn’t get through the leaves. And people were so heavy that if an animal jumped them they couldn’t run away.

Then there were the seas, too.

Diana shivered. Why couldn’t ev- erybody stay in Citadel? Space was crisp and clean. It wasn’t full of scar}^ things like animals and trees and waves and swordfish. She began to cry. She was afraid of Earth.

Inside Seven MPS Transport’s inner office Colonel Tool listened to sounds the faint humming from a cranky fluorescent, the rustling of paper, breathing, foot taps on the hard floor, a cough from Srenco, the squeak of Srenco’s chair. Tool was examining the typewritten pages of Srenco’s report with distaste. He had been stopped by one item for a long time, long enough so that all the irritating sounds in the room caught his attention. Eventually he scowled, slapped the page on the desk, stared at it furiously.

'‘Ridiculous!” he snorted.

“Yes?” asked Srenco.

“I’m at the costs,” roared Tool. “I’ve never seen such padding in my life! Ridiculous!”

“Yeah?” said Srenco. He ambled in a short arc to the desk. Where did I

7*3

make a mistake?”

Tool motioned Abe back to his seat. “I’m not sure you made a mistake.” He grumbled, read on.

Srenco had developed essentially seven points:

(1) Approximately three hundred thousand pounds of live human flesh have to be moved to Earth on a very short-term .basis which naturally will involve an abnormal capital invest- ment per delivered pound.

(2) Any transport vessels consid- ered will have to have a needle body— to keep the passengers as far as possi- ble from the deadly motors will have to be heavily leaded, have a maximum acceleration of four G, carry heavy cabin equipment, and meet new Inyo- kern safety requirements a kind of ship which inevitably has a high ship- fuel-mass to freight-mass ratio and consequently cannot compete in cost with the relatively efficient space freighter.

(3) The small fleet of late-war Ocean Class transports are not avail- able for any evacuation of Citadel since they have all been stripped down to uselessness by the Seven MPS Maintenance Division. This leaves the old standby, the double-S-five, as the only ship represented in enough quantity to carry out the evacuation, however, the double-S-fives were thrown together in the early days of space travel. They are space-going coffins, having a strong tendency to cough up their insides or cease to

function while in mid-flight. Their motor’s exhaust velocity is less than five thousand meters per second. Their landing equipment is worth Moon-air. Their safety equipment is nonexistent. Their shielding worthless. Shipmasters of the double-S-fives during the late war had the unhappy habit of dying from radiation sickness. Consequently a radically revised edition would have to be built around the frame of the old double-S-five, incorporating modern spaceship technology.

(4) Such radical remodeling re- quires a probable reduction of the pas- senger capacity to two-three people not including the shipmaster. It re- quires skilled labor and much equip- ment not available in Citadel. Freight- ers to carry equipment to the Moon and “fuel” for the transports would have to be reconditioned, and trans- portation facilities would have to be supplied to import the needed workers.

(5) At least thirty-five transports and forty-five freighters will have to be put into operation to carry out the evacuation in less than two years. The double-S-five cannot under any cir- cumstances be relied upon to make more than one round trip a fortnight. Overhaul on a new model is a large factor expensive in both time aijd money.

(6) Operating expenses will be roughly doubled since the ships will be carrying a payload only one way.

(7) The evacuation bill: high.

It was the bill which had stopped

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ASTOUNDING SCIENCE-FICTION

the colonel. His eyes kept wandering back to it. He would read, then open up the section on costs again, stare, slap it shut and continue reading. Suddenly he blurted out:

“But according to your figures it would cost more to recondition a double-S-five than it did to build one 1”

“Exactly. This isn’t 1957, Handy.” “Then build some new ones!”

The Navy paid thirty million dol- lars for the Caspian Sea. Want to buy a dozen of them?”

“No.” The colonel scratched his nose.

“Seriously Handy, how much did you expect to spend on the evacua- tion?” Srenco was amused.

“Not three hundred million dol- lars.”

“And here I thought you were stuffed with United States funds.” “Three hundred million dollars is money! This is peace, Abe. Ever heard of a colonel spending three hundred million in peace time? The grand Pax Americana! Phut!” He growled bit- terly.

“But can you raise that money?” asked Srenco urgently.

Tool shrugged, embarrassed. “No.” Srenco said nothing. He just looked at the colonel. Then he chuckled. He was not happy, though.

His favorite delusion had just vapor- ized. Like in the story about the space- man who thought he would never die. The spaceman was riding a double-S-

four into Mare Imbrium. He was eighty miles from the Lunar surface and his motors had not yet kicked in. He felt uneasy. So did Srenco.

Srenco had always supposed that if and when space’s siege of . Citadel be- came too menacing the four hundred ships in the naval yard offered an escape. In the past week and a half he had become convinced that such a menace existed, that space was about to win her battle, and so he had sided reluctantly with the colonel. Now the colonel turned out to be a poor man in philanthropist clothing.

There was to be no retreat.

Retreat was impossible. Four hun- dred ships had become worthless be- cause a colonel had no money.

Which did not at all alter the fact that weak Citadel was at the mercy of the merciless.

Olga Pyzel was crouched at a table in the far corner of the Rum House. Drinking made her sleepy. She was sad, too.

Cowards that can’t stick it out and fight. Cowards without any nerve. Dirty cowards. How I hate a coward. She conjured up a mental image of Abe Srenco. Coward! Coward!

“And what might Olga be mutter- ing about?” The Pirate sat down beside her.

“Cowards,” she said without en- thusiasm.

Other people glided into the Rum House, bearded men mostly. They

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75

looked at Olga and she looked away. Some nippled bottles clinked together in the “sink.” Three men burst into a laugh and Olga mumbled inaudibly about gaiety.

“Lady,” said the Pirate, “I got news for you. The big boys just figured out that we’re stuck on the Moon. How does that make you feel? Seen Srenco lately?”

“I’m not on speaking terms with him any more.”

"He looks kind of bewildered. I guess anyone would be stunned after losing the kind of contract he just lost.”

Olga uncurled a bit. She stared into her nippled glass unemotionally. “So we’re staying? Is that what you’re telling me?”

“Yeah.”

What is the use of staying with a bunch of cowards like Citadel is full of, eh Pirate? They’ll just sit down and get their heads kicked in. You have to fight to stay alive on the Moon. You

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got to be a good fighter. You can’t moan about hardship. You can’t pine away for a safe salt box in New Eng- land. You have to fight.”

The Pirate grinned across his fat face. Then he moved her glass where she could not reach it. “And Olga is in real good condition to fight now, I’ll bet. You’re lucky this is the Moon or you’d be flat on your face. Get up. I’m taking you home.”

“I’m sleepy,” she said.

“Come on, come on.” He took her by the arm and propelled her through the Rum House toward the door. “Why aren’t they evacuating us?” That was a thought. There was nothing stopping the evacuation, really. “We’re just an obstinate puddle of ancient flood water stuck on high ground. The levees have been rebuilt. The flood is forgotten and so are we. It is too much trouble to pump us back into the main river channel. That’s all. You see? It was inevitable.” Goody,” said Olga sleepily.

“I wouldn’t be so happy,” said the Pirate. “We’re in for bad times. We’d better start milking the suckers on Earth in earnest. You charge the big- heads triple for your unduplicatable photographs and I’ll sell the small- heads an aluminum mine in Theophi- lus. How’s that?”

The room had once been a giant communications center. Now it was hardly anything but a ham radio sta- tion, though its array of equipment

was quite impressive.

Colonel Tool settled himself at one of the long unused collation desks. He felt irritable. He grumbled when he could not find his pen in the right pocket, grumbled when his pockets produced nothing but an old ball point Skribler which barely Managed to write General Schmidt’s address on the standard radio facsimile form be- fore it gave out and had to be replaced by a Number Two pencil borrowed from the radio operator.

Tool wrote, “Dear Smitty,” then stared at the radio operator. The operator stared back.

Look some place else, you prize jack- ass. Look at your pretty dials. Mind your own business.

Tool’s thoughts were not inclined to favor Citadelians at the present mo- ment. Many had been bitter about his retraction of the evacuation order; some were cracking sharp jokes about it ; a big gardener had even threatened to punch his nose if he did not at least get power for the crops that night. The colonel was sour. He wrote:

Dear Smitty:

This is to be considered as a report, if an unofficial one. As far as I am concerned our evacuation plan is totally unfeasible, the cost* being in the neighborhood of three hundred million dollars. Nevertheless, Citadel is in bad shape and desperately needs some one’s help. I would like you to consider an alterna- tive two-point plan which can probably be carried out for a tenth of the cost of an evacuation.

First: There must be a general recondi- tioning of the inhabited section of Citadel. A new exchange unit for the reactor being a

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77

priority necessity.

Second: An attempt must be made to put the entire economy of Citadel on a more realistic basis. The Moon has certain unique (if limited) advantages astronomy, for in- stance, can virtually become a lunar monop- oly. Citadel will cease to be a burden to us only when these intrinsic advantages have been rigorously exploited. She can rise above her present substandard living conditions in no other way.

I am not sure such a program will work, but to my mind it is the only answer that fits the economic facts of 1964.

H. D. Tool

P.S. Ain’t human critters miserable!

The colonel put the letter aside, then began to write on another “fax” form.

United States Army Hq.

Citadel, Moon

Via Inyokern, California.

June 1964

Naad’s Kiddy Shop Los Angeles, California.

Dear Sirs:

I would appreciate your selecting an outfit for a five year old girl, medium size. It should be of good quality, be BRIGHTLY COL- ORED, and of simple cut. The design should not be of such a nature as to cause embar- rassment to the wearer under conditions of light gravity. Above all it should not in any respect resemble an army shirt.

Yours sincerely,

Colonel Hans D. Tool

Mrs. Smith knocked hesitantly on the door of Room Twelve, upper level, with one hand firmly around the wallet in her pocket. She wiggled her big toes nervously.

It was Srenco who opened the door. He had little Diana on his shoulders clinging to his ears. Both of them smiled. They had been having fun

78

together.

“Well, hello,” said Srenco. “Come on in. Looks like my afternoon is turn- ing into a fair sized party.”

“Hello, Mrs. Smith,” said Diana from her perch.

Mrs. Smith replied, “Hello, little girl.” Then she looked at Abe fur- tively. “Hello.”

Srenco dumped Diana off his shoul- ders, grabbed her, and threw her screaming over onto the bed.

“I saw Major Kavam,” said Mrs. Smith. “He told me about the evacua- tion and now my husband tells me there isn’t going to be one.”

“Yes?”

“What do I do now?”

Srenco shrugged helplessly.

“Is the passenger service really so bad?” she asked plaintively.

“It is.”

“That makes me worry more than ever. If nobody can ship a few humans between here and Earth, then what about supplies? Suppose we need something bad? Will the colonel tell us, ‘Sorry, it costs too much to get it to you!”’ She was trying to be calm and reasonable.

Srenco shook his head. "Colonel Tool is leaving us here because we are cheaper to feed than to evacuate. Live human flesh is a grotesquely uneco- nomical thing to move between plan- ets, ordinary freight isn’t. The trans- ports may stop running. Freighters won’t.”

“Oh,” she said faintly.

ASTOUNDING SCIENCE-FICTION

At that moment Srenco had to ward off one of Diana’s gliding dives at his feet. He flattened her small squealing body against the floor and then pitched her back onto the bed.

Mrs. Smith watched sadly. “What a sad place to bring up a sweet little child,” she said.

“You still want to go back to Earth, eh?”

“Oh yes!”

“I’ll tell you frankly, Mrs. Smithy you won’t make it. Does that strike you hard? I suppose it does. You’ll just have to get used to the idea of liv- ing here. The people you’re with count more than the place, remember that. You have your husband.”

Confronted by that stand Mrs. Smith made her last desperate move. If Srenco was not going to offer aid voluntarily, she had the chance of making him offer it. So she pushed her wallet quickly into his hand. I have to get to Earth,” she said stubbornly.

A cynical Srenco counted the bills. Six hundred and seventeen United States dollars. He tossed the full wal- let gently back to her. “Buy yourself a coffin,” he said. If that’s all you’ve got, you’re really buried on the Moon.” Tears welled. “My baby,” she sobbed. “I can’t have it here, Mr. Srenco. Please, Mr. Srenco!”

Little Diana heard that about the baby. Her ears suddenly became very alert and she stared at Mrs. Smith in awed fascination. Diana had been born among adults. She had never

seen another child in her life. The bed, the room, and Srenco vanished. Tear- ful Mrs. Smith who was going to have a baby became the only important thing within a thousand kilometers.

“Will ipbe a boy or a girl?” asked Diana timidly.

Mrs. Smith shook her head.

Then Diana glided over, very wor- ried, and put her arms around the woman’s legs in an attempt to comfort a sorrow she could not understand. “Don’t worry. I’ll take care of your baby. I’ll be very good to it. Don’t worry about anything.”

Mrs. Smith could only twist Di- ana’s hair nervously around