<h2>IV</h2>
<p>Three days later Joseph Dixon
slid a closed-circuit message
plate across the desk to his boss.</p>
<p>“Here. You might be interested
in this.”</p>
<p>Reinhart picked the plate up
slowly. “What is it? You came
all the way here to show me
this?”</p>
<p>“That’s right.”</p>
<p>“Why didn’t you vidscreen
it?”</p>
<p>Dixon smiled grimly. “You’ll
understand when you decode it.
It’s from Proxima Centaurus.”</p>
<p>“Centaurus!”</p>
<p>“Our counter-intelligence service.
They sent it direct to me.
Here, I’ll decode it for you. Save
you the trouble.”</p>
<p>Dixon came around behind
Reinhart’s desk. He leaned over
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page49" title="49"> </SPAN>the Commissioner’s shoulder,
taking hold of the plate and
breaking the seal with his thumb
nail.</p>
<p>“Hang on,” Dixon said. “This
is going to hit you hard. According
to our agents on Armun, the
Centauran High Council has
called an emergency session to
deal with the problem of Terra’s
impending attack. Centauran
relay couriers have reported to
the High Council that the Terran
bomb Icarus is virtually
complete. Work on the bomb has
been rushed through final stages
in the underground laboratories
under the Ural Range, directed
by the Terran physicist Peter
Sherikov.”</p>
<p>“So I understand from Sherikov
himself. Are you surprised
the Centaurans know about the
bomb? They have spies swarming
over Terra. That’s no news.”</p>
<p>“There’s more.” Dixon traced
the message plate grimly, with
an unsteady finger. “The Centauran
relay couriers reported
that Peter Sherikov brought an
expert mechanic out of a previous
time continuum to complete
the wiring of the turret!”</p>
<p>Reinhart staggered, holding
on tight to the desk. He closed
his eyes, gasping.</p>
<p>“The variable man is still
alive,” Dixon murmured. “I
don’t know how. Or why.
There’s nothing left of the Albertines.
And how the hell did
the man get half way around
the world?”</p>
<p>Reinhart opened his eyes
slowly, his face twisting. “Sherikov!
He must have removed him
before the attack. I told Sherikov
the attack was forthcoming.
I gave him the exact hour. He
had to get help—from the variable
man. He couldn’t meet his
promise otherwise.”</p>
<p>Reinhart leaped up and began
to pace back and forth. “I’ve already
informed the SRB machines
that the variable man has
been destroyed. The machines
now show the original 7-6 ratio
in our favor. But the ratio is
based on false information.”</p>
<p>“Then you’ll have to withdraw
the false data and restore the
original situation.”</p>
<p>“No.” Reinhart shook his
head. “I can’t do that. The machines
must be kept functioning.
We can’t allow them to jam
again. It’s too dangerous. If
Duffe should become aware
that—”</p>
<p>“What are you going to do,
then?” Dixon picked up the
message plate. “You can’t leave
the machines with false data.
That’s treason.”</p>
<p>“The data can’t be withdrawn!
Not unless equivalent
data exists to take its place.”
Reinhart paced angrily back and
forth. “Damn it, I was <em>certain</em>
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page50" title="50"> </SPAN>the man was dead. This is an incredible
situation. He must be
eliminated—at any cost.”</p>
<p>Suddenly Reinhart stopped
pacing. “The turret. It’s probably
finished by this time. Correct?”</p>
<p>Dixon nodded slowly in agreement.
“With the variable man
helping, Sherikov has undoubtedly
completed work well ahead
of schedule.”</p>
<p>Reinhart’s gray eyes flickered.
“Then he’s no longer of any use—even
to Sherikov. We could
take a chance…. Even if there
were active opposition….”</p>
<p>“What’s this?” Dixon demanded.
“What are you thinking
about?”</p>
<p>“How many units are ready
for immediate action? How
large a force can we raise without
notice?”</p>
<p>“Because of the war we’re
mobilized on a twenty-four hour
basis. There are seventy air
units and about two hundred
surface units. The balance of the
Security forces have been transferred
to the line, under military
control.”</p>
<p>“Men?”</p>
<p>“We have about five thousand
men ready to go, still on Terra.
Most of them in the process of
being transferred to military
transports. I can hold it up at
any time.”</p>
<p>“Missiles?”</p>
<p>“Fortunately, the launching
tubes have not yet been disassembled.
They’re still here on
Terra. In another few days
they’ll be moving out for the
Colonial fracas.”</p>
<p>“Then they’re available for
immediate use?”</p>
<p>“Yes.”</p>
<p>“Good.” Reinhart locked his
hands, knotting his fingers
harshly together in sudden decision.
“That will do exactly.
Unless I am completely wrong,
Sherikov has only a half-dozen
air units and no surface cars.
And only about two hundred
men. Some defense shields, of
course—”</p>
<p>“What are you planning?”</p>
<p>Reinhart’s face was gray and
hard, like stone. “Send out orders
for all available Security
units to be unified under your
immediate command. Have them
ready to move by four o’clock
this afternoon. We’re going to
pay a visit,” Reinhart stated
grimly. “A surprise visit. On
Peter Sherikov.”</p>
<hr class="thoughtbreak" />
<p class="post_thoughtbreak">“Stop here,” Reinhart ordered.</p>
<p>The surface car slowed to a
halt. Reinhart peered cautiously
out, studying the horizon ahead.</p>
<p>On all sides a desert of scrub
grass and sand stretched out.
Nothing moved or stirred. To
the right the grass and sand
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page51" title="51"> </SPAN>rose up to form immense peaks,
a range of mountains without
end, disappearing finally into the
distance. The Urals.</p>
<p>“Over there,” Reinhart said to
Dixon, pointing. “See?”</p>
<p>“No.”</p>
<p>“Look hard. It’s difficult to
spot unless you know what to
look for. Vertical pipes. Some
kind of vent. Or periscopes.”</p>
<p>Dixon saw them finally. “I
would have driven past without
noticing.”</p>
<p>“It’s well concealed. The
main labs are a mile down. Under
the range itself. It’s virtually
impregnable. Sherikov had it
built years ago, to withstand
any attack. From the air, by
surface cars, bombs, missiles—”</p>
<p>“He must feel safe down
there.”</p>
<p>“No doubt.” Reinhart gazed
up at the sky. A few faint black
dots could be seen, moving lazily
about, in broad circles.
“Those aren’t ours, are they? I
gave orders—”</p>
<p>“No. They’re not ours. All our
units are out of sight. Those belong
to Sherikov. His patrol.”</p>
<p>Reinhart relaxed. “Good.” He
reached over and flicked on the
vidscreen over the board of the
car. “This screen is shielded? It
can’t be traced?”</p>
<p>“There’s no way they can spot
it back to us. It’s non-directional.”</p>
<p>The screen glowed into life.
Reinhart punched the combination
keys and sat back to wait.</p>
<p>After a time an image formed
on the screen. A heavy face,
bushy black beard and large
eyes.</p>
<p>Peter Sherikov gazed at
Reinhart with surprised curiosity.
“Commissioner! Where are
you calling from? What—”</p>
<p>“How’s the work progressing?”
Reinhart broke in coldly.
“Is Icarus almost complete?”</p>
<p>Sherikov beamed with expansive
pride. “He’s done, Commissioner.
Two days ahead of time.
Icarus is ready to be launched
into space. I tried to call your
office, but they told me—”</p>
<p>“I’m not at my office.” Reinhart
leaned toward the screen.
“Open your entrance tunnel at
the surface. You’re about to receive
visitors.”</p>
<p>Sherikov blinked. “Visitors?”</p>
<p>“I’m coming down to see you.
About Icarus. Have the tunnel
opened for me at once.”</p>
<p>“Exactly where are you, Commissioner?”</p>
<p>“On the surface.”</p>
<p>Sherikov’s eyes flickered.
“Oh? But—”</p>
<p>“Open up!” Reinhart snapped.
He glanced at his wristwatch.
“I’ll be at the entrance in five
minutes. I expect to find it ready
for me.”</p>
<p>“Of course.” Sherikov nodded
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page52" title="52"> </SPAN>in bewilderment. “I’m always
glad to see you, Commissioner.
But I—”</p>
<p>“Five minutes, then.” Reinhart
cut the circuit. The screen
died. He turned quickly to
Dixon. “You stay up here, as we
arranged. I’ll go down with one
company of police. You understand
the necessity of exact timing
on this?”</p>
<p>“We won’t slip up. Everything’s
ready. All units are in
their places.”</p>
<p>“Good.” Reinhart pushed the
door open for him. “You join
your directional staff. I’ll proceed
toward the tunnel entrance.”</p>
<p>“Good luck.” Dixon leaped out
of the car, onto the sandy
ground. A gust of dry air swirled
into the car around Reinhart.
“I’ll see you later.”</p>
<p>Reinhart slammed the door.
He turned to the group of police
crouched in the rear of the
car, their guns held tightly.
“Here we go,” Reinhart murmured.
“Hold on.”</p>
<p>The car raced across the
sandy ground, toward the tunnel
entrance to Sherikov’s underground
fortress.</p>
<p>Sherikov met Reinhart at the
bottom end of the tunnel,
where the tunnel opened up onto
the main floor of the lab.</p>
<p>The big Pole approached, his
hand out, beaming with pride
and satisfaction. “It’s a pleasure
to see you, Commissioner.
This is an historic moment.”</p>
<p>Reinhart got out of the car,
with his group of armed Security
police. “Calls for a celebration,
doesn’t it?” he said.</p>
<p>“That’s a good idea! We’re
two days ahead, Commissioner.
The SRB machines will be interested.
The odds should change
abruptly at the news.”</p>
<p>“Let’s go down to the lab. I
want to see the control turret
myself.”</p>
<p>A shadow crossed Sherikov’s
face. “I’d rather not bother the
workmen right now, Commissioner.
They’ve been under a
great load, trying to complete
the turret in time. I believe
they’re putting a few last finishes
on it at this moment.”</p>
<p>“We can view them by vidscreen.
I’m curious to see them
at work. It must be difficult to
wire such minute relays.”</p>
<p>Sherikov shook his head.
“Sorry, Commissioner. No vidscreen
on them. I won’t allow
it. This is too important. Our
whole future depends on it.”</p>
<p>Reinhart snapped a signal to
his company of police. “Put this
man under arrest.”</p>
<p>Sherikov blanched. His mouth
fell open. The police moved
quickly around him, their gun tubes
up, jabbing into him. He
was searched rapidly, efficiently.
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page53" title="53"> </SPAN>His gun belt and concealed
energy screen were yanked off.</p>
<p>“What’s going on?” Sherikov
demanded, some color returning
to his face. “What are you doing?”</p>
<p>“You’re under arrest for the
duration of the war. You’re relieved
of all authority. From
now on one of my men will operate
Designs. When the war is
over you’ll be tried before the
Council and President Duffe.”</p>
<p>Sherikov shook his head,
dazed. “I don’t understand.
What’s this all about? Explain
it to me, Commissioner. What’s
happened?”</p>
<p>Reinhart signalled to his police.
“Get ready. We’re going
into the lab. We may have to
shoot our way in. The variable
man should be in the area of the
bomb, working on the control
turret.”</p>
<p>Instantly Sherikov’s face
hardened. His black eyes glittered,
alert and hostile.</p>
<p>Reinhart laughed harshly.
“We received a counter-intelligence
report from Centaurus.
I’m surprised at you, Sherikov.
You know the Centaurans are
everywhere with their relay
couriers. You should have
known—”</p>
<p>Sherikov moved. Fast. All at
once he broke away from the
police, throwing his massive
body against them. They fell,
scattering. Sherikov ran—directly
at the wall. The police
fired wildly. Reinhart fumbled
frantically for his gun tube,
pulling it up.</p>
<p>Sherikov reached the wall,
running head down, energy
beams flashing around him. He
struck against the wall—and
vanished.</p>
<p>“Down!” Reinhart shouted.
He dropped to his hands and
knees. All around him his police
dived for the floor. Reinhart
cursed wildly, dragging himself
quickly toward the door. They
had to get out, and right away.
Sherikov had escaped. A false
wall, an energy barrier set to
respond to his pressure. He had
dashed through it to safety.
He—</p>
<p>From all sides an inferno
burst, a flaming roar of death
surging over them, around them,
on every side. The room was
alive with blazing masses of destruction,
bouncing from wall
to wall. They were caught between
four banks of power, all
of them open to full discharge.
A trap—a death trap.</p>
<hr class="thoughtbreak" />
<p class="post_thoughtbreak">Reinhart reached the hall
gasping for breath. He leaped
to his feet. A few Security police
followed him. Behind them,
in the flaming room, the rest of
the company screamed and
struggled, blasted out of existence
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page54" title="54"> </SPAN>by the leaping bursts of
power.</p>
<p>Reinhart assembled his remaining
men. Already, Sherikov’s
guards were forming. At
one end of the corridor a snub-barreled
robot gun was maneuvering
into position. A siren
wailed. Guards were running on
all sides, hurrying to battle stations.</p>
<p>The robot gun opened fire.
Part of the corridor exploded,
bursting into fragments. Clouds
of choking debris and particles
swept around them. Reinhart
and his police retreated, moving
back along the corridor.</p>
<p>They reached a junction. A
second robot gun was rumbling
toward them, hurrying to get
within range. Reinhart fired
carefully, aiming at its delicate
control. Abruptly the gun spun
convulsively. It lashed against
the wall, smashing itself into
the unyielding metal. Then it
collapsed in a heap, gears still
whining and spinning.</p>
<p>“Come on.” Reinhart moved
away, crouching and running.
He glanced at his watch. <em>Almost
time.</em> A few more minutes. A
group of lab guards appeared
ahead of them. Reinhart fired.
Behind him his police fired past
him, violet shafts of energy
catching the group of guards as
they entered the corridor. The
guards spilled apart, falling and
twisting. Part of them settled
into dust, drifting down the corridor.
Reinhart made his way
toward the lab, crouching and
leaping, pushing past heaps of
debris and remains, followed by
his men. “Come on! Don’t
stop!”</p>
<hr class="thoughtbreak" />
<p class="post_thoughtbreak">Suddenly from around them
the booming, enlarged voice of
Sherikov thundered, magnified
by rows of wall speakers along
the corridor. Reinhart halted,
glancing around.</p>
<p>“Reinhart! You haven’t got a
chance. You’ll never get back to
the surface. Throw down your
guns and give up. You’re surrounded
on all sides. You’re a
mile, under the surface.”</p>
<p>Reinhart threw himself into
motion, pushing into billowing
clouds of particles drifting
along the corridor. “Are you
sure, Sherikov?” he grunted.</p>
<p>Sherikov laughed, his harsh,
metallic peals rolling in waves
against Reinhart’s eardrums. “I
don’t want to have to kill you,
Commissioner. You’re vital to
the war: I’m sorry you found
out about the variable man. I admit
we overlooked the Centauran
espionage as a factor in this.
But now that you know about
him—”</p>
<p>Suddenly Sherikov’s voice
broke off. A deep rumble had
shaken the floor, a lapping vibration
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page55" title="55"> </SPAN>that shuddered through
the corridor.</p>
<p>Reinhart sagged with relief.
He peered through the clouds
of debris, making out the figures
on his watch. Right on
time. Not a second late.</p>
<p>The first of the hydrogen
missiles, launched from the
Council buildings on the other
side of the world, were beginning
to arrive. The attack had
begun.</p>
<p>At exactly six o’clock Joseph
Dixon, standing on the surface
four miles from the entrance
tunnel, gave the sign to the waiting
units.</p>
<p>The first job was to break
down Sherikov’s defense
screens. The missiles had to
penetrate without interference.
At Dixon’s signal a fleet of
thirty Security ships dived from
a height of ten miles, swooping
above the mountains, directly
over the underground laboratories.
Within five minutes the
defense screens had been
smashed, and all the tower projectors
leveled flat. Now the
mountains were virtually unprotected.</p>
<p>“So far so good,” Dixon murmured,
as he watched from his
secure position. The fleet of Security
ships roared back, their
work done. Across the face of
the desert the police surface
cars were crawling rapidly toward
the entrance tunnel, snaking
from side to side.</p>
<p>Meanwhile, Sherikov’s counter-attack
had begun to go into
operation.</p>
<p>Guns mounted among the
hills opened fire. Vast columns
of flame burst up in the path of
the advancing cars. The cars
hesitated and retreated, as the
plain was churned up by a
howling vortex, a thundering
chaos of explosions. Here and
there a car vanished in a cloud
of particles. A group of cars
moving away suddenly scattered,
caught up by a giant wind that
lashed across them and swept
them up into the air.</p>
<p>Dixon gave orders to have the
cannon silenced. The police air
arm again swept overhead, a
sullen roar of jets that shook
the ground below. The police
ships divided expertly and
hurtled down on the cannon protecting
the hills.</p>
<p>The cannon forgot the surface
cars and lifted their snouts to
meet the attack. Again and
again the airships came, rocking
the mountains with titanic
blasts.</p>
<p>The guns became silent. Their
echoing boom diminished, died
away reluctantly, as bombs took
critical toll of them.</p>
<p>Dixon watched with satisfaction
as the bombing came to an
end. The airships rose in a thick
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page56" title="56"> </SPAN>swarm, black gnats shooting up
in triumph from a dead carcass.
They hurried back as emergency
anti-aircraft robot guns swung
into position and saturated the
sky with blazing puffs of energy.</p>
<p>Dixon checked his wristwatch.
The missiles were already
on the way from North America.
Only a few minutes remained.</p>
<p>The surface cars, freed by the
successful bombing, began to regroup
for a new frontal attack.
Again they crawled forward,
across the burning plain, bearing
down cautiously on the battered
wall of mountains, heading
toward the twisted wrecks
that had been the ring of defense
guns. Toward the entrance
tunnel.</p>
<p>An occasional cannon fired
feebly at them. The cars came
grimly on. Now, in the hollows
of the hills, Sherikov’s troops
were hurrying to the surface to
meet the attack. The first car
reached the shadow of the
mountains….</p>
<p>A deafening hail of fire burst
loose. Small robot guns appeared
everywhere, needle barrels
emerging from behind hidden
screens, trees and shrubs, rocks,
stones. The police cars were
caught in a withering cross-fire,
trapped at the base of the hills.</p>
<p>Down the slopes Sherikov’s
guards raced, toward the stalled
cars. Clouds of heat rose up and
boiled across the plain as the
cars fired up at the running
men. A robot gun dropped like
a slug onto the plain and
screamed toward the cars, firing
as it came.</p>
<p>Dixon twisted nervously. Only
a few minutes. Any time, now.
He shaded his eyes and peered
up at the sky. No sign of them
yet. He wondered about Reinhart.
No signal had come up
from below. Clearly, Reinhart
had run into trouble. No doubt
there was desperate fighting going
on in the maze of underground
tunnels, the intricate
web of passages that honeycombed
the earth below the
mountains.</p>
<p>In the air, Sherikov’s few defense
ships were taking on the
police raiders. Outnumbered, the
defense ships darted rapidly,
wildly, putting up a futile fight.</p>
<p>Sherikov’s guards streamed
out onto the plain. Crouching
and running, they advanced toward
the stalled cars. The police
airships screeched down at
them, guns thundering.</p>
<p>Dixon held his breath. When
the missiles arrived—</p>
<p>The first missile struck. A section
of the mountain vanished,
turned to smoke and foaming
gasses. The wave of heat slapped
Dixon across the face, spinning
him around. Quickly he re-entered
his ship and took off,
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page57" title="57"> </SPAN>shooting rapidly away from the
scene. He glanced back. A second
and third missile had arrived.
Great gaping pits yawned
among the mountains, vast sections
missing like broken teeth.
Now the missiles could penetrate
to the underground laboratories
below.</p>
<p>On the ground, the surface
cars halted beyond the danger
area, waiting for the missile attack
to finish. When the eighth
missile had struck, the cars
again moved forward. No more
missiles fell.</p>
<p>Dixon swung his ship around,
heading back toward the scene.
The laboratory was exposed. The
top sections of it had been ripped
open. The laboratory lay like
a tin can, torn apart by mighty
explosions, its first floors visible
from the air. Men and cars were
pouring down into it, fighting
with the guards swarming to the
surface.</p>
<hr class="thoughtbreak" />
<p class="post_thoughtbreak">Dixon watched intently. Sherikov’s
men were bringing up
heavy guns, big robot artillery.
But the police ships were diving
again. Sherikov’s defensive patrols
had been cleaned from the
sky. The police ships whined
down, arcing over the exposed
laboratory. Small bombs fell,
whistling down, pin-pointing the
artillery rising to the surface on
the remaining lift stages.</p>
<p>Abruptly Dixon’s vidscreen
clicked. Dixon turned toward it.</p>
<p>Reinhart’s features formed.
“Call off the attack.” His uniform
was torn. A deep bloody
gash crossed his cheek. He
grinned sourly at Dixon, pushing
his tangled hair back out of
his face. “Quite a fight.”</p>
<p>“Sherikov—”</p>
<p>“He’s called off his guards.
We’ve agreed to a truce. It’s all
over. No more needed.” Reinhart
gasped for breath, wiping
grime and sweat from his neck.
“Land your ship and come down
here at once.”</p>
<p>“The variable man?”</p>
<p>“That comes next,” Reinhart
said grimly. He adjusted his
gun tube. “I want you down
here, for that part. I want you
to be in on the kill.”</p>
<p>Reinhart turned away from
the vidscreen. In the corner of
the room Sherikov stood silently,
saying nothing. “Well?”
Reinhart barked. “Where is he?
Where will I find him?”</p>
<p>Sherikov licked his lips nervously,
glancing up at Reinhart.
“Commissioner, are you sure—”</p>
<p>“The attack has been called
off. Your labs are safe. So is
your life. Now it’s your turn to
come through.” Reinhart gripped
his gun, moving toward
Sherikov. “<em>Where is he?</em>”</p>
<p>For a moment Sherikov hesitated.
Then slowly his huge body
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page58" title="58"> </SPAN>sagged, defeated. He shook his
head wearily. “All right. I’ll
show you where he is.” His voice
was hardly audible, a dry whisper.
“Down this way. Come on.”</p>
<p>Reinhart followed Sherikov
out of the room, into the corridor.
Police and guards were
working rapidly, clearing the
debris and ruins away, putting
out the hydrogen fires that
burned everywhere. “No tricks,
Sherikov.”</p>
<p>“No tricks.” Sherikov nodded
resignedly. “Thomas Cole is by
himself. In a wing lab off the
main rooms.”</p>
<p>“Cole?”</p>
<p>“The variable man. That’s
his name.” The Pole turned his
massive head a little. “He has
a name.”</p>
<p>Reinhart waved his gun.
“Hurry up. I don’t want anything
to go wrong. This is the
part I came for.”</p>
<p>“You must remember something,
Commissioner.”</p>
<p>“What is it?”</p>
<p>Sherikov stopped walking.
“Commissioner, nothing must
happen to the globe. The control
turret. Everything depends on
it, the war, our whole—”</p>
<p>“I know. Nothing will happen
to the damn thing. Let’s go.”</p>
<p>“If it should get damaged—”</p>
<p>“I’m not after the globe. I’m
interested only in—in Thomas
Cole.”</p>
<p>They came to the end of the
corridor and stopped before a
metal door. Sherikov nodded at
the door. “In there.”</p>
<p>Reinhart moved back. “Open
the door.”</p>
<p>“Open it yourself. I don’t
want to have anything to do
with it.”</p>
<p>Reinhart shrugged. He stepped
up to the door. Holding his
gun level he raised his hand,
passing it in front of the eye
circuit. Nothing happened.</p>
<p>Reinhart frowned. He pushed
the door with his hand. The
door slid open. Reinhart was
looking into a small laboratory.
He glimpsed a workbench, tools,
heaps of equipment, measuring
devices, and in the center of the
bench the transparent globe, the
control turret.</p>
<p>“Cole?” Reinhart advanced
quickly into the room. He
glanced around him, suddenly
alarmed. “Where—”</p>
<p>The room was empty. Thomas
Cole was gone.</p>
<p>When the first missile struck,
Cole stopped work and sat listening.</p>
<p>Far off, a distant rumble
rolled through the earth, shaking
the floor under him. On the
bench, tools and equipment
danced up and down. A pair of
pliers fell crashing to the floor.
A box of screws tipped over,
spilling its minute contents out.</p>
<p><SPAN class="pagenum" id="page59" title="59"> </SPAN>Cole listened for a time. Presently
he lifted the transparent
globe from the bench. With carefully
controlled hands he held
the globe up, running his fingers
gently over the surface, his
faded blue eyes thoughtful.
Then, after a time, he placed
the globe back on the bench, in
its mount.</p>
<p>The globe was finished. A
faint glow of pride moved
through the variable man. The
globe was the finest job he had
ever done.</p>
<p>The deep rumblings ceased.
Cole became instantly alert. He
jumped down from his stool,
hurrying across the room to the
door. For a moment he stood by
the door listening intently. He
could hear noise on the other
side, shouts, guards rushing
past, dragging heavy equipment,
working frantically.</p>
<p>A rolling crash echoed down
the corridor and lapped against
his door. The concussion spun
him around. Again a tide of
energy shook the walls and floor
and sent him down on his knees.</p>
<p>The lights flickered and
winked out.</p>
<p>Cole fumbled in the dark until
he found a flashlight. Power
failure. He could hear crackling
flames. Abruptly the lights
came on again, an ugly yellow,
then faded back out. Cole bent
down and examined the door
with his flashlight. A magnetic
lock. Dependent on an externally
induced electric flux. He
grabbed a screwdriver and pried
at the door. For a moment it
held. Then it fell open.</p>
<p>Cole stepped warily out into
the corridor. Everything was in
shambles. Guards wandered
everywhere, burned and half-blinded.
Two lay groaning under
a pile of wrecked equipment.
Fused guns, reeking
metal. The air was heavy with
the smell of burning wiring and
plastic. A thick cloud that
choked him and made him bend
double as he advanced.</p>
<p>“Halt,” a guard gasped feebly,
struggling to rise. Cole pushed
past him and down the corridor.
Two small robot guns,
still functioning, glided past
him hurriedly toward the drumming
chaos of battle. He followed.</p>
<p>At a major intersection the
fight was in full swing. Sherikov’s
guards fought Security
police, crouched behind pillars
and barricades, firing wildly,
desperately. Again the whole
structure shuddered as a great
booming blast ignited some
place above. Bombs? Shells?</p>
<p>Cole threw himself down as a
violet beam cut past his ear and
disintegrated the wall behind
him. A Security policeman, wild-eyed,
firing erratically. One of
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page60" title="60"> </SPAN>Sherikov’s guards winged him
and his gun skidded to the
floor.</p>
<p>A robot cannon turned toward
him as he made his way
past the intersection. He began
to run. The cannon rolled along
behind him, aiming itself uncertainly.
Cole hunched over as
he shambled rapidly along,
gasping for breath. In the flickering
yellow light he saw a
handful of Security police advancing,
firing expertly, intent
on a line of defense Sherikov’s
guards had hastily set up.</p>
<p>The robot cannon altered its
course to take them on, and
Cole escaped around a corner.</p>
<p>He was in the main lab, the
big chamber where Icarus himself
rose, the vast squat column.</p>
<p>Icarus! A solid wall of
guards surrounded him, grim-faced,
hugging guns and protection
shields. But the Security
police were leaving Icarus
alone. Nobody wanted to damage
him. Cole evaded a lone
guard tracking him and reached
the far side of the lab.</p>
<p>It took him only a few seconds
to find the force field generator.
There was no switch. For
a moment that puzzled him—and
then he remembered. The
guard had controlled it from his
wrist.</p>
<p>Too late to worry about that.
With his screwdriver he unfastened
the plate over the generator
and ripped out the wiring
in handfuls. The generator
came loose and he dragged
it away from the wall. The
screen was off, thank God. He
managed to carry the generator
into a side corridor.</p>
<p>Crouched in a heap, Cole bent
over the generator, deft fingers
flying. He pulled the wiring to
him and laid it out on the floor,
tracing the circuits with feverish
haste.</p>
<p>The adaptation was easier
than he had expected. The screen
flowed at right angles to the wiring,
for a distance of six feet.
Each lead was shielded on one
side; the field radiated outward,
leaving a hollow cone in the center.
He ran the wiring through
his belt, down his trouser legs,
under his shirt, all the way to
his wrists and ankles.</p>
<p>He was just snatching up the
heavy generator when two Security
police appeared. They
raised their blasters and fired
point-blank.</p>
<p>Cole clicked on the screen. A
vibration leaped through him
that snapped his jaw and danced
up his body. He staggered away,
half-stupefied by the surging
force that radiated out from
him. The violet rays struck the
field and deflected harmlessly.</p>
<p>He was safe.</p>
<p>He hurried on down the corridor,
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page61" title="61"> </SPAN>past a ruined gun and
sprawled bodies still clutching
blasters. Great drifting clouds of
radioactive particles billowed
around him. He edged by one
cloud nervously. Guards lay
everywhere, dying and dead,
partly destroyed, eaten and corroded
by the hot metallic salts in
the air. He had to get out—and
fast.</p>
<p>At the end of the corridor a
whole section of the fortress was
in ruins. Towering flames leaped
on all sides. One of the
missiles had penetrated below
ground level.</p>
<p>Cole found a lift that still
functioned. A load of wounded
guards was being raised to the
surface. None of them paid any
attention to him. Flames surged
around the lift, licking at the
wounded. Workmen were desperately
trying to get the lift into
action. Cole leaped onto the lift.
A moment later it began to rise,
leaving the shouts and the flames
behind.</p>
<p>The lift emerged on the surface
and Cole jumped off. A
guard spotted him and gave
chase. Crouching, Cole dodged
into a tangled mass of twisted
metal, still white-hot and smoking.
He ran for a distance, leaping
from the side of a ruined
defense-screen tower, onto the
fused ground and down the side
of a hill. The ground was hot
underfoot. He hurried as fast as
he could, gasping for breath. He
came to a long slope and scrambled
up the side.</p>
<p>The guard who had followed
was gone, lost behind in the
rolling clouds of ash that drifted
from the ruins of Sherikov’s
underground fortress.</p>
<p>Cole reached the top of the
hill. For a brief moment he halted
to get his breath and figure
where he was. It was almost
evening. The sun was beginning
to set. In the darkening sky a
few dots still twisted and rolled,
black specks that abruptly burst
into flame and fused out again.</p>
<p>Cole stood up cautiously, peering
around him. Ruins stretched
out below, on all sides, the furnace
from which he had escaped.
A chaos of incandescent metal
and debris, gutted and wrecked
beyond repair. Miles of tangled
rubbish and half-vaporized
equipment.</p>
<p>He considered. Everyone was
busy putting out the fires and
pulling the wounded to safety.
It would be awhile before he
was missed. But as soon as they
realized he was gone they’d be
after him. Most of the laboratory
had been destroyed. Nothing
lay back that way.</p>
<p>Beyond the ruins lay the great
Ural peaks, the endless mountains,
stretching out as far as
the eye could see.</p>
<p><SPAN class="pagenum" id="page62" title="62"></SPAN>Mountains and green forests.
A wilderness. They’d never find
him there.</p>
<p>Cole started along the side of
the hill, walking slowly and
carefully, his screen generator
under his arm. Probably in the
confusion he could find enough
food and equipment to last him
indefinitely. He could wait until
early morning, then circle back
toward the ruins and load up.
With a few tools and his own
innate skill he would get along
fine. A screwdriver, hammer,
nails, odds and ends—</p>
<p>A great hum sounded in his
ears. It swelled to a deafening
roar. Startled, Cole whirled
around. A vast shape filled the
sky behind him, growing each
moment. Cole stood frozen, utterly
transfixed. The shape thundered
over him, above his head,
as he stood stupidly, rooted to
the spot.</p>
<p>Then, awkwardly, uncertainly,
he began to run. He stumbled
and fell and rolled a short distance
down the side of the hill.
Desperately, he struggled to hold
onto the ground. His hands dug
wildly, futilely, into the soft
soil, trying to keep the generator
under his arm at the same
time.</p>
<p>A flash, and a blinding spark
of light around him.</p>
<p>The spark picked him up and
tossed him like a dry leaf. He
grunted in agony as searing fire
crackled about him, a blazing inferno
that gnawed and ate hungrily
through his screen. He
spun dizzily and fell through the
cloud of fire, down into a pit of
darkness, a vast gulf between
two hills. His wiring ripped off.
The generator tore out of his
grip and was lost behind.
Abruptly, his force field ceased.</p>
<p>Cole lay in the darkness at the
bottom of the hill. His whole
body shrieked in agony as the
unholy fire played over him. He
was a blazing cinder, a half-consumed
ash flaming in a universe
of darkness. The pain made him
twist and crawl like an insect,
trying to burrow into the
ground. He screamed and
shrieked and struggled to
escape, to get away from the
hideous fire. To reach the curtain
of darkness beyond, where
it was cool and silent, where the
flames couldn’t crackle and eat
at him.</p>
<p>He reached imploringly out,
into the darkness, groping feebly
toward it, trying to pull himself
into it. Gradually, the glowing
orb that was his own body
faded. The impenetrable chaos
of night descended. He allowed
the tide to sweep over him, to
extinguish the searing fire.</p>
<p>Dixon landed his ship expertly,
bringing it to a halt in front
of an overturned defense tower.
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page63" title="63"> </SPAN>He leaped out and hurried across
the smoking ground.</p>
<p>From a lift Reinhart appeared,
surrounded by his Security
police. “He got away from us!
He escaped!”</p>
<p>“He didn’t escape,” Dixon answered.
“I got him myself.”</p>
<p>Reinhart quivered violently.
“What do you mean?”</p>
<p>“Come along with me. Over in
this direction.” He and Reinhart
climbed the side of a demolished
hill, both of them panting
for breath. “I was landing.
I saw a figure emerge from a
lift and run toward the mountains,
like some sort of animal.
When he came out in the open
I dived on him and released a
phosphorus bomb.”</p>
<p>“Then he’s—<em>dead?</em>”</p>
<p>“I don’t see how anyone could
have lived through a phosphorus
bomb.” They reached the top of
the hill. Dixon halted, then
pointed excitedly down into the
pit beyond the hill. “There!”</p>
<p>They descended cautiously.
The ground was singed and
burned clean. Clouds of smoke
hung heavily in the air. Occasional
fires still flickered here
and there. Reinhart coughed and
bent over to see. Dixon flashed
on a pocket flare and set it beside
the body.</p>
<p>The body was charred, half
destroyed by the burning phosphorus.
It lay motionless, one
arm over its face, mouth open,
legs sprawled grotesquely. Like
some abandoned rag doll, tossed
in an incinerator and consumed
almost beyond recognition.</p>
<p>“He’s alive!” Dixon muttered.
He felt around curiously. “Must
have had some kind of protection
screen. Amazing that a man
could—”</p>
<p>“It’s him? It’s really him?”</p>
<p>“Fits the description.” Dixon
tore away a handful of burned
clothing. “This is the variable
man. What’s left of him, at
least.”</p>
<p>Reinhart sagged with relief.
“Then we’ve finally got him. The
data is accurate. He’s no longer
a factor.”</p>
<p>Dixon got out his blaster and
released the safety catch
thoughtfully. “If you want, I
can finish the job right now.”</p>
<p>At that moment Sherikov appeared,
accompanied by two
armed Security police. He strode
grimly down the hillside, black
eyes snapping. “Did Cole—” He
broke off. “Good God.”</p>
<p>“Dixon got him with a
phosphorus bomb,” Reinhart
said noncommittally. “He had
reached the surface and was
trying to get into the mountains.”</p>
<p>Sherikov turned wearily away.
“He was an amazing person.
During the attack he managed
to force the lock on his door
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page64" title="64"> </SPAN>and escape. The guards fired at
him, but nothing happened. He
had rigged up some kind of
force field around him. Something
he adapted.”</p>
<p>“Anyhow, it’s over with,”
Reinhart answered. “Did you
have SRB plates made up on
him?”</p>
<p>Sherikov reached slowly into
his coat. He drew out a manila
envelope. “Here’s all the information
I collected about him, while
he was with me.”</p>
<p>“Is it complete? Everything
previous has been merely fragmentary.”</p>
<p>“As near complete as I could
make it. It includes photographs
and diagrams of the interior
of the globe. The turret
wiring he did for me. I haven’t
had a chance even to look at
them.” Sherikov fingered the
envelope. “What are you going
to do with Cole?”</p>
<p>“Have him loaded up, taken
back to the city—and officially
put to sleep by the Euthanasia
Ministry.”</p>
<p>“Legal murder?” Sherikov’s
lips twisted. “Why don’t you
simply do it right here and get
it over with?”</p>
<p>Reinhart grabbed the envelope
and stuck it in his pocket.
“I’ll turn this right over to the
machines.” He motioned to
Dixon. “Let’s go. Now we can
notify the fleet to prepare for
the attack on Centaurus.” He
turned briefly back to Sherikov.
“When can Icarus be launched?”</p>
<p>“In an hour or so, I suppose.
They’re locking the control turret
in place. Assuming it functions
correctly, that’s all that’s
needed.”</p>
<p>“Good. I’ll notify Duffe to send
out the signal to the warfleet.”
Reinhart nodded to the police to
take Sherikov to the waiting
Security ship. Sherikov moved
off dully, his face gray and
haggard. Cole’s inert body was
picked up and tossed onto a
freight cart. The cart rumbled
into the hold of the Security
ship and the lock slid shut after
it.</p>
<p>“It’ll be interesting to see how
the machines respond to the
additional data,” Dixon said.</p>
<p>“It should make quite an improvement
in the odds,” Reinhart
agreed. He patted the envelope,
bulging in his inside
pocket. “We’re two days ahead
of time.”</p>
<hr class="thoughtbreak" />
<p class="post_thoughtbreak">Margaret Duffe got up slowly
from her desk. She pushed her
chair automatically back. “Let
me get all this straight. You
mean the bomb is finished?
Ready to go?”</p>
<p>Reinhart nodded impatiently.
“That’s what I said. The Technicians
are checking the turret
locks to make sure it’s properly
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page65" title="65"> </SPAN>attached. The launching will
take place in half an hour.”</p>
<p>“Thirty minutes! Then—”</p>
<p>“Then the attack can begin
at once. I assume the fleet is
ready for action.”</p>
<p>“Of course. It’s been ready
for several days. But I can’t
believe the bomb is ready so
soon.” Margaret Duffe moved
numbly toward the door of her
office. “This is a great day, Commissioner.
An old era lies behind
us. This time tomorrow
Centaurus will be gone. And
eventually the colonies will be
ours.”</p>
<p>“It’s been a long climb,” Reinhart
murmured.</p>
<p>“One thing. Your charge
against Sherikov. It seems incredible
that a person of his
caliber could ever—”</p>
<p>“We’ll discuss that later,”
Reinhart interrupted coldly. He
pulled the manila envelope from
his coat. “I haven’t had an opportunity
to feed the additional
data to the SRB machines. If
you’ll excuse me, I’ll do that
now.”</p>
<hr class="thoughtbreak" />
<p class="post_thoughtbreak">For a moment Margaret Duffe
stood at the door. The two of
them faced each other silently,
neither speaking, a faint smile
on Reinhart’s thin lips, hostility
in the woman’s blue eyes.</p>
<p>“Reinhart, sometimes I think
perhaps you’ll go too far. And
sometimes I think you’ve <em>already</em>
gone too far….”</p>
<p>“I’ll inform you of any change
in the odds showing.” Reinhart
strode past her, out of the office
and down the hall. He headed
toward the SRB room, an intense
thalamic excitement rising
up inside him.</p>
<p>A few moments later he entered
the SRB room. He made
his way to the machines. The
odds 7-6 showed in the view
windows. Reinhart smiled a
little. 7-6. False odds, based on
incorrect information. Now they
could be removed.</p>
<p>Kaplan hurried over. Reinhart
handed him the envelope, and
moved over to the window, gazing
down at the scene below.
Men and cars scurried frantically
everywhere. Officials coming
and going like ants, hurrying
in all directions.</p>
<p>The war was on. The signal
had been sent out to the warfleet
that had waited so long near
Proxima Centaurus. A feeling
of triumph raced through Reinhart.
He had won. He had destroyed
the man from the past
and broken Peter Sherikov. The
war had begun as planned. Terra
was breaking out. Reinhart
smiled thinly. He had been completely
successful.</p>
<p>“Commissioner.”</p>
<p>Reinhart turned slowly. “All
right.”</p>
<p><SPAN class="pagenum" id="page66" title="66"> </SPAN>Kaplan was standing in front
of the machines, gazing down at
the reading. “Commissioner—”</p>
<p>Sudden alarm plucked at Reinhart.
There was something in
Kaplan’s voice. He hurried
quickly over. “What is it?”</p>
<p>Kaplan looked up at him, his
face white, his eyes wide with
terror. His mouth opened and
closed, but no sound came.</p>
<p>“<em>What is it?</em>” Reinhart demanded,
chilled. He bent toward
the machines, studying the reading.</p>
<p>And sickened with horror.</p>
<p>100-1. <em>Against</em> Terra!</p>
<p>He could not tear his gaze
away from the figures. He was
numb, shocked with disbelief.
100-1. <em>What had happened?</em>
What had gone wrong? The turret
was finished, Icarus was
ready, the fleet had been
notified—</p>
<p>There was a sudden deep buzz
from outside the building.
Shouts drifted up from below.
Reinhart turned his head slowly
toward the window, his heart
frozen with fear.</p>
<p>Across the evening sky a trail
moved, rising each moment. A
thin line of white. Something
climbed, gaining speed each
moment. On the ground, all eyes
were turned toward it, awed
faces peering up.</p>
<p>The object gained speed.
Faster and faster. Then it
vanished. Icarus was on his way.
The attack had begun; it was
too late to stop, now.</p>
<p>And on the machines the odds
read a hundred to one—for
failure.</p>
<p>At eight o’clock in the evening
of May 15, 2136, Icarus was
launched toward the star Centaurus.
A day later, while all
Terra waited, Icarus entered the
star, traveling at thousands of
times the speed of light.</p>
<p>Nothing happened. Icarus disappeared
into the star. There
was no explosion. The bomb
failed to go off.</p>
<p>At the same time the Terran
warfleet engaged the Centauran
outer fleet, sweeping down in a
concentrated attack. Twenty
major ships were seized. A good
part of the Centauran fleet was
destroyed. Many of the captive
systems began to revolt, in the
hope of throwing off the Imperial
bonds.</p>
<p>Two hours later the massed
Centauran warfleet from Armun
abruptly appeared and joined
battle. The great struggle illuminated
half the Centauran
system. Ship after ship flashed
briefly and then faded to ash.
For a whole day the two fleets
fought, strung out over millions
of miles of space. Innumerable
fighting men died—on both sides.</p>
<p>At last the remains of the
battered Terran fleet turned and
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page67" title="67"> </SPAN>limped toward Armun—defeated.
Little of the once impressive
armada remained. A
few blackened hulks, making
their way uncertainly toward
captivity.</p>
<p>Icarus had not functioned.
Centaurus had not exploded. The
attack was a failure.</p>
<p>The war was over.</p>
<p>“We’ve lost the war,” Margaret
Duffe said in a small
voice, wondering and awed. “It’s
over. Finished.”</p>
<p>The Council members sat in
their places around the conference
table, gray-haired elderly
men, none of them speaking or
moving. All gazed up mutely at
the great stellar maps that
covered two walls of the
chamber.</p>
<p>“I have already empowered
negotiators to arrange a truce,”
Margaret Duffe murmured.
“Orders have been sent out to
Vice-Commander Jessup to give
up the battle. There’s no hope.
Fleet Commander Carleton destroyed
himself and his flagship
a few minutes ago. The Centauran
High Council has agreed to
end the fighting. Their whole
Empire is rotten to the core.
Ready to topple of its own
weight.”</p>
<p>Reinhart was slumped over at
the table, his head in his hands.
“I don’t understand…. <em>Why?</em>
Why didn’t the bomb explode?”
He mopped his forehead shakily.
All his poise was gone. He was
trembling and broken. “<em>What
went wrong?</em>”</p>
<p>Gray-faced, Dixon mumbled
an answer. “The variable man
must have sabotaged the turret.
The SRB machines knew….
They analyzed the data. <em>They
knew!</em> But it was too late.”</p>
<p>Reinhart’s eyes were bleak
with despair as he raised his
head a little. “I knew he’d destroy
us. We’re finished. A century
of work and planning.” His
body knotted in a spasm of
furious agony. “All because of
Sherikov!”</p>
<hr class="thoughtbreak" />
<p class="post_thoughtbreak">Margaret Duffe eyed Reinhart
coldly. “Why because of Sherikov?”</p>
<p>“He kept Cole alive! I wanted
him killed from the start.” Suddenly
Reinhart jumped from his
chair. His hand clutched convulsively
at his gun. “And he’s
<em>still</em> alive! Even if we’ve lost
I’m going to have the pleasure of
putting a blast beam through
Cole’s chest!”</p>
<p>“Sit down!” Margaret Duffe
ordered.</p>
<p>Reinhart was half way to the
door. “He’s still at the Euthanasia
Ministry, waiting for the
official—”</p>
<p>“No, he’s not,” Margaret Duffe
said.</p>
<p>Reinhart froze. He turned
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page68" title="68"> </SPAN>slowly, as if unable to believe
his senses. “<em>What?</em>”</p>
<p>“Cole isn’t at the Ministry. I
ordered him transferred and
your instructions cancelled.”</p>
<p>“Where—where is he?”</p>
<p>There was unusual hardness
in Margaret Duffe’s voice as she
answered. “With Peter Sherikov.
In the Urals. I had Sherikov’s
full authority restored. I then
had Cole transferred there, put
in Sherikov’s safe keeping. I
want to make sure Cole recovers,
so we can keep our
promise to him—our promise to
return him to his own time.”</p>
<p>Reinhart’s mouth opened and
closed. All the color had drained
from his face. His cheek muscles
twitched spasmodically. At last
he managed to speak. “You’ve
gone insane! The traitor responsible
for Earth’s greatest
defeat—”</p>
<p>“We have lost the war,”
Margaret Duffe stated quietly.
“But this is not a day of defeat.
It is a day of victory. The most
incredible victory Terra has
ever had.”</p>
<p>Reinhart and Dixon were
dumbfounded. “What—” Reinhart
gasped. “What do you—”
The whole room was in an uproar.
All the Council members
were on their feet. Reinhart’s
words were drowned out.</p>
<p>“Sherikov will explain when
he gets here,” Margaret Duffe’s
calm voice came. “He’s the one
who discovered it.” She looked
around the chamber at the incredulous
Council members.
“Everyone stay in his seat. You
are all to remain here until
Sherikov arrives. It’s vital you
hear what he has to say. His
news transforms this whole
situation.”</p>
<hr class="thoughtbreak" />
<p class="post_thoughtbreak">Peter Sherikov accepted the
briefcase of papers from his
armed technician. “Thanks.” He
pushed his chair back and
glanced thoughtfully around the
Council chamber. “Is everybody
ready to hear what I have to
say?”</p>
<p>“We’re ready,” Margaret
Duffe answered. The Council
members sat alertly around
the table. At the far end, Reinhart
and Dixon watched uneasily
as the big Pole removed papers
from his briefcase and carefully
examined them.</p>
<p>“To begin, I recall to you the
original work behind the ftl
bomb. Jamison Hedge was the
first human to propel an object
at a speed greater than light. As
you know, that object diminished
in length and gained in mass as
it moved toward light speed.
When it reached that speed it
vanished. It ceased to exist in
our terms. Having no length it
could not occupy space. It rose
to a different order of existence.</p>
<p><SPAN class="pagenum" id="page69" title="69"> </SPAN>“When Hedge tried to bring
the object back, an explosion occurred.
Hedge was killed, and
all his equipment was destroyed.
The force of the blast was beyond
calculation. Hedge had
placed his observation ship many
millions of miles away. It was
not far enough, however.
Originally, he had hoped his
drive might be used for space
travel. But after his death the
principle was abandoned.</p>
<p>“That is—until Icarus. I saw
the possibilities of a bomb, an
incredibly powerful bomb to destroy
Centaurus and all the
Empire’s forces. The reappearance
of Icarus would mean the
annihilation of their System. As
Hedge had shown, the object
would re-enter space already occupied
by matter, and the cataclysm
would be beyond belief.”</p>
<p>“But Icarus never came back,”
Reinhart cried. “Cole altered the
wiring so the bomb kept on
going. It’s probably still going.”</p>
<p>“Wrong,” Sherikov boomed.
“The bomb <em>did</em> reappear. But it
didn’t explode.”</p>
<p>Reinhart reacted violently.
“You mean—”</p>
<p>“The bomb came back, dropping
below the ftl speed as soon
as it entered the star Proxima.
But it did not explode. There
was no cataclysm. It reappeared
and was absorbed by the sun,
turned into gas at once.”</p>
<p>“Why didn’t it explode?”
Dixon demanded.</p>
<p>“Because Thomas Cole solved
Hedge’s problem. He found a
way to bring the ftl object back
into this universe without collision.
Without an explosion. The
variable man found what Hedge
was after….”</p>
<p>The whole Council was on its
feet. A growing murmur filled
the chamber, a rising pandemonium
breaking out on all
sides.</p>
<p>“I don’t believe it!” Reinhart
gasped. “It isn’t possible. If Cole
solved Hedge’s problem that
would mean—” He broke off,
staggered.</p>
<p>“Faster than light drive can
now be used for space travel,”
Sherikov continued, waving the
noise down. “As Hedge intended.
My men have studied the photographs
of the control turret.
They don’t know <em>how</em> or <em>why</em>,
yet. But we have complete records
of the turret. We can duplicate
the wiring, as soon as
the laboratories have been repaired.”</p>
<p>Comprehension was gradually
beginning to settle over the
room. “Then it’ll be possible to
build ftl ships,” Margaret Duffe
murmured, dazed. “And if we
can do that—”</p>
<p>“When I showed him the control
turret, Cole understood its
purpose. Not <em>my</em> purpose, but
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page70" title="70"> </SPAN>the original purpose Hedge had
been working toward. Cole realized
Icarus was actually an incomplete
spaceship, not a bomb
at all. He saw what Hedge had
seen, an ftl space drive. He set
out to make Icarus work.”</p>
<p>“We can go <em>beyond</em> Centaurus,”
Dixon muttered. His lips
twisted. “Then the war was
trivial. We can leave the Empire
completely behind. We can go
beyond the galaxy.”</p>
<p>“The whole universe is open
to us,” Sherikov agreed. “Instead
of taking over an
antiquated Empire, we have the
entire cosmos to map and explore,
God’s total creation.”</p>
<p>Margaret Duffe got to her
feet and moved slowly toward
the great stellar maps that
towered above them at the far
end of the chamber. She stood
for a long time, gazing up at the
myriad suns, the legions of
systems, awed by what she saw.</p>
<p>“Do you suppose he realized
all this?” she asked suddenly.
“What we can see, here on these
maps?”</p>
<p>“Thomas Cole is a strange
person,” Sherikov said, half to
himself. “Apparently he has a
kind of intuition about machines,
the way things are supposed to
work. An intuition more in his
hands than in his head. A kind
of genius, such as a painter or
a pianist has. Not a scientist.
He has no verbal knowledge
about things, no semantic references.
He deals with the things
themselves. Directly.</p>
<p>“I doubt very much if Thomas
Cole understood what would
come about. He looked into the
globe, the control turret. He saw
unfinished wiring and relays. He
saw a job half done. An incomplete
machine.”</p>
<p>“Something to be fixed,” Margaret
Duffe put in.</p>
<p>“Something to be fixed. Like
an artist, he saw his work ahead
of him. He was interested in
only one thing: turning out the
best job he could, with the skill
he possessed. For us, that skill
has opened up a whole universe,
endless galaxies and systems to
explore. Worlds without end.
Unlimited, <em>untouched</em> worlds.”</p>
<p>Reinhart got unsteadily to his
feet. “We better get to work.
Start organizing construction
teams. Exploration crews. We’ll
have to reconvert from war
production to ship designing.
Begin the manufacture of mining
and scientific instruments
for survey work.”</p>
<p>“That’s right,” Margaret
Duffe said. She looked reflectively
up at him. “But you’re not
going to have anything to do
with it.”</p>
<p>Reinhart saw the expression
on her face. His hand flew to
his gun and he backed quickly
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page71" title="71"> </SPAN>toward the door. Dixon leaped
up and joined him. “Get back!”
Reinhart shouted.</p>
<p>Margaret Duffe signalled and
a phalanx of Government troops
closed in around the two men.
Grim-faced, efficient soldiers
with magnetic grapples ready.</p>
<p>Reinhart’s blaster wavered—toward
the Council members sitting
shocked in their seats, and
toward Margaret Duffe, straight
at her blue eyes. Reinhart’s features
were distorted with insane
fear. “Get back! Don’t anybody
come near me or she’ll be the
first to get it!”</p>
<p>Peter Sherikov slid from the
table and with one great stride
swept his immense bulk in front
of Reinhart. His huge black-furred
fist rose in a smashing
arc. Reinhart sailed against the
wall, struck with ringing force
and then slid slowly to the floor.</p>
<p>The Government troops threw
their grapples quickly around
him and jerked him to his feet.
His body was frozen rigid.
Blood dripped from his mouth.
He spat bits of tooth, his eyes
glazed over. Dixon stood dazed,
mouth open, uncomprehending,
as the grapples closed around his
arms and legs.</p>
<p>Reinhart’s gun skidded to the
floor as he was yanked toward
the door. One of the elderly
Council members picked the gun
up and examined it curiously. He
laid it carefully on the table.
“Fully loaded,” he murmured.
“Ready to fire.”</p>
<p>Reinhart’s battered face was
dark with hate. “I should have
killed all of you. <em>All</em> of you!”
An ugly sneer twisted across
his shredded lips. “If I could
get my hands loose—”</p>
<p>“You won’t,” Margaret Duffe
said. “You might as well not
even bother to think about it.”
She signalled to the troops and
they pulled Reinhart and Dixon
roughly out of the room, two
dazed figures, snarling and resentful.</p>
<p>For a moment the room was
silent. Then the Council members
shuffled nervously in their
seats, beginning to breathe
again.</p>
<p>Sherikov came over and
put his big paw on Margaret
Duffe’s shoulder. “Are you all
right, Margaret?”</p>
<p>She smiled faintly. “I’m fine.
Thanks….”</p>
<p>Sherikov touched her soft hair
briefly. Then he broke away and
began to pack up his briefcase
busily. “I have to go. I’ll get in
touch with you later.”</p>
<p>“Where are you going?” she
asked hesitantly. “Can’t you stay
and—”</p>
<p>“I have to get back to the
Urals.” Sherikov grinned at her
over his bushy black beard as
he headed out of the room.
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page72" title="72"> </SPAN>“Some very important business
to attend to.”</p>
<hr class="thoughtbreak" />
<p class="post_thoughtbreak">Thomas Cole was sitting up
in bed when Sherikov came to
the door. Most of his awkward,
hunched-over body was sealed in
a thin envelope of transparent
airproof plastic. Two robot
attendants whirred ceaselessly
at his side, their leads contacting
his pulse, blood-pressure, respiration,
body temperature.</p>
<p>Cole turned a little as the
huge Pole tossed down his briefcase
and seated himself on the
window ledge.</p>
<p>“How are you feeling?”
Sherikov asked him.</p>
<p>“Better.”</p>
<p>“You see we’ve quite advanced
therapy. Your burns should be
healed in a few months.”</p>
<p>“How is the war coming?”</p>
<p>“The war is over.”</p>
<p>Cole’s lips moved. “Icarus—”</p>
<p>“Icarus went as expected. As
<em>you</em> expected.” Sherikov leaned
toward the bed. “Cole, I promised
you something. I mean to
keep my promise—as soon as
you’re well enough.”</p>
<p>“To return me to my own
time?”</p>
<p>“That’s right. It’s a relatively
simple matter, now that Reinhart
has been removed from
power. You’ll be back home
again, back in your own time,
your own world. We can supply
you with some discs of platinum
or something of the kind to
finance your business. You’ll need
a new Fixit truck. Tools. And
clothes. A few thousand dollars
ought to do it.”</p>
<p>Cole was silent.</p>
<p>“I’ve already contacted histo-research,”
Sherikov continued.
“The time bubble is ready as
soon as you are. We’re somewhat
beholden to you, as you
probably realize. You’ve made it
possible for us to actualize our
greatest dream. The whole planet
is seething with excitement.
We’re changing our economy
over from war to—”</p>
<p>“They don’t resent what happened?
The dud must have made
an awful lot of people feel downright
bad.”</p>
<p>“At first. But they got over
it—as soon as they understood
what was ahead. Too bad you
won’t be here to see it, Cole.
A whole world breaking loose.
Bursting out into the universe.
They want me to have an ftl
ship ready by the end of the
week! Thousands of applications
are already on file, men and
women wanting to get in on the
initial flight.”</p>
<p>Cole smiled a little, “There
won’t be any band, there. No
parade or welcoming committee
waiting for them.”</p>
<p>“Maybe not. Maybe the first
ship will wind up on some dead
<SPAN class="pagenum" id="page73" title="73"> </SPAN>world, nothing but sand and
dried salt. But everybody wants
to go. It’s almost like a holiday.
People running around and
shouting and throwing things in
the streets.</p>
<p>“Afraid I must get back to
the labs. Lots of reconstruction
work being started.” Sherikov
dug into his bulging briefcase.
“By the way…. One little thing.
While you’re recovering here,
you might like to look at these.”
He tossed a handful of schematics
on the bed.</p>
<p>Cole picked them up slowly.
“What’s this?”</p>
<p>“Just a little thing I designed.”
Sherikov arose and
lumbered toward the door.
“We’re realigning our political
structure to eliminate any recurrence
of the Reinhart affair.
This will block any more one-man
power grabs.” He jabbed
a thick finger at the schematics.
“It’ll turn power over to all of
us, not to just a limited number
one person could dominate—the
way Reinhart dominated the
Council.</p>
<p>“This gimmick makes it possible
for citizens to raise and
decide issues directly. They
won’t have to wait for the
Council to verbalize a measure.
Any citizen can transmit his
will with one of these, make his
needs register on a central control
that automatically responds.
When a large enough segment of
the population wants a certain
thing done, these little gadgets
set up an active field that touches
all the others. An issue won’t
have to go through a formal
Council. The citizens can express
their will long before any bunch
of gray-haired old men could
get around to it.”</p>
<hr class="thoughtbreak" />
<p class="post_thoughtbreak">Sherikov broke off, frowning.</p>
<p>“Of course,” he continued
slowly, “there’s one little detail….”</p>
<p>“What’s that?”</p>
<p>“I haven’t been able to get
a model to function. A few bugs….
Such intricate work never
was in my line.” He paused at
the door. “Well, I hope I’ll see
you again before you go. Maybe
if you feel well enough later on
we could get together for one
last talk. Maybe have dinner together
sometime. Eh?”</p>
<p>But Thomas Cole wasn’t
listening. He was bent over the
schematics, an intense frown on
his weathered face. His long
fingers moved restlessly over the
schematics, tracing wiring and
terminals. His lips moved as he
calculated.</p>
<p>Sherikov waited a moment.
Then he stepped out into the
hall and softly closed the door
after him.</p>
<p>He whistled merrily as he
strode off down the corridor.</p>
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