<h2><SPAN name="c11" id="c11"></SPAN><i>11</i></h2>
<p>Joe sat on the porch of Major Holt’s quarters in the area next to the
Shed. It was about eight-thirty, and dark, but there was a moon. And Joe
had come to realize that his personal disappointment was only his
personal disappointment, and that he hadn’t any right to make a nuisance
of himself about it. Therefore he didn’t talk about the thing nearest in
his mind, but something else that was next nearest or farther away
still. Yet, with the Shed filling up a full quarter of the sky, and a
gibbous moon new-risen from the horizon, it was not natural for a young
man like Joe to speak purely of earthly things.</p>
<p>“It’ll come,” he said yearningly, staring at the moon. “If the Platform
gets up day after tomorrow, it’s going to take time to ferry up the
equipment it ought to have. But still, somebody ought to land on the
moon before too long.”</p>
<p>He added absorbedly: “Once the Platform is fully equipped, it won’t take
many rocket pay loads to refill a ship’s tanks at the Platform, before
it can head on out.”</p>
<p>Mathematically, a rocket ship that could leave the Platform with full
fuel tanks should have fuel to reach the moon and land on it, and take
off again and return to the Platform. The mathematical fact had a
peculiar nagging flavor. When a dream is subjected to statistical
analysis and the report is in its favor, a dreamer’s satisfaction is
always diluted by a subconscious feeling that the report is only part of
the dream. Everybody worries a little when a cherished dream shows a
likelihood of coming true. Some people take firm steps to stop things
right there, so a romantic daydream won’t be spoiled by transmutation
into prosaic fact. But Joe said doggedly: “Twenty ferry trips to pile up
fuel, and the twenty-first <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_134" id="Page_134">[Pg 134]</SPAN></span>ship should be able to refuel and go on out.
And then somebody will step out on the moon!”</p>
<p>He was disappointed now. He wouldn’t be the one to do it. But somebody
would.</p>
<p>“You might try for the ferry service,” said Sally uneasily.</p>
<p>“I will,” said Joe grimly, “but I won’t be hoping too much. After all,
there are astronomers and physics sharks and such things, who’ll be glad
to learn to run rockets in order to practice their specialties out of
atmosphere.”</p>
<p>Sally said mournfully: “I can’t seem to say anything to make you feel
better!”</p>
<p>“But you do,” said Joe. He added grandiloquently, “But for your
unflagging faith in me, I would not have the courage to bear the burdens
of everyday life.”</p>
<p>She stamped her foot.</p>
<p>“Stop it!”</p>
<p>“All right.” But he said quietly, “You are a good kid, Sally. You know,
it’s not too bright of me to mourn.”</p>
<p>She drew a deep breath.</p>
<p>“That’s better! Now, I want——”</p>
<p>There was a gangling figure walking down the concrete path between the
trim, monotonous cottages that were officers’ quarters at the Shed.</p>
<p>Joe said sharply: “That’s Haney! What’s he doing here?” He called,
“Haney!”</p>
<p>Haney’s manner took on purpose. He came across the grass—the lawns
around the officers’ quarters contained the only grass in twenty miles.</p>
<p>“Hiya,” said Haney uncomfortably. He spoke politely to Sally. “Hiya.
Uh—you want to get in on the party, Joe?”</p>
<p>“What kind?”</p>
<p>“The party Mike was talkin’ about,” said Haney. “He’s set it up. He
wants me to get you and a kinda—uh—undercover tip-off to Major Holt.”</p>
<p>Joe stirred. Sally said hospitably: “Sit down. You’ve noticed that my
father gave you full security clearance, so you can go anywhere?”</p>
<p>Haney perched awkwardly on the edge of the porch.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_135" id="Page_135">[Pg 135]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>“Yeah. That’s helped with the party. It’s how I got here, as far as that
goes. Mike’s on top of the world.”</p>
<p>“Shoot it,” said Joe.</p>
<p>“Y’know he’s been pretty bitter about things,” said Haney carefully.
“He’s been sayin’ that little guys like him ought to be the spacemen.
There’s half a dozen other little guys been working on the Platform too.
They can get in cracks an’ buck rivets an’ so on. Useful. He’s had ’em
all hopped up on the fact that the Platform coulda been finished months
ago if it’d been built for them, an’ they could get to the moon an’ back
while full-sized guys couldn’t an’ so on. Remember?”</p>
<p>“I remember,” said Sally.</p>
<p>“They’ve all been beefin’ about it,” explained Haney. “People know how
they feel. So today Mike went and talked to one or two of ’em. An’ they
started actin’ mysterious, passin’ messages back an’ forth an’ so on.
Little guys, actin’ important. Security guys wouldn’t notice ’em much.
Y’don’t take a guy Mike’s size serious, unless you know him. Then he’s
the same as anybody else. So the security guys didn’t pay any attention
to him. But some other guys did. Some special other guys. They saw those
little fellas actin’ like they were cookin’ up somethin’ fancy. An’ they
bit.”</p>
<p>“Bit?” asked Sally.</p>
<p>“They got curious. So Mike an’ his gang got confidential. An’ they’re
going to have help sabotagin’ the Platform when the next shift changes.
The midgets gettin’ even for bein’ laughed at, see? They’re pretending
their plan is that when the Platform’s sabotaged—not smashed, but just
messed up so it can’t take off—the big brass will let ’em take a ferry
rocket up in a hurry, an’ get it in orbit, an’ use it for a Platform
until the big Platform can be mended an’ sent up. Once they’re up there,
there’s no use tryin’ to stop the big Platform. So it can go ahead.”</p>
<p>Joe said dubiously: “I think I see....”</p>
<p>“Mike and his gang of little guys are bein’ saps—on purpose. If
anybody’s goin’ to pull some fast stuff, next shift change—that’s the
time everybody’s got to! Last chance! Mike and his gang don’t know
what’s gonna happen, but <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_136" id="Page_136">[Pg 136]</SPAN></span>they sure know when! They’re invitin’ the real
saboteurs to make fools of ’em. And what’ll happen?”</p>
<p>Joe said drily: “The logical thing would be to feel sorry for the big
guys who think they’re smarter than Mike.”</p>
<p>“Uh-huh,” said Haney, deadly serious. “Mike’s story is there’s half a
dozen rocket tubes already loaded. They’re goin’ to fire those rockets
between shifts. The Platform gets shoved off its base an’ maybe dented,
and so on. Mike’s gang say they got the figures to prove they can go up
in a ferry rocket an’ be a Platform, and the big brass won’t have any
choice but to let ’em.”</p>
<p>Sally said: “I don’t think they know how the big brass thinks.”</p>
<p>Haney and Joe said together, “No!” and Joe added: “Mike’s not crazy! He
knows better! But it’s a good story for somebody who doesn’t know Mike.”</p>
<p>Haney said in indignation: “I came out here to ask the Major to help us.
The Chief’s gettin’ a gang together, too. There’s some Indians of his
tribe that work here. We can count on them for plenty of rough stuff.
And there’s Joe and me. The point is that Mike’s stunt makes it certain
that everything busts loose at a time we can know in advance. If the
Major gives us a free hand, and then in the last five minutes takes his
own measures—so they can’t leak out ahead of time and tip off the gangs
we want to get—we oughta knock off all the expert saboteurs who know
the weak spots in the Platform. For instance those who know that
thermite in the gyros would mess everything up all over again.”</p>
<p>Joe said quietly: “But Major Holt has to be told well in advance about
all this! That’s absolute!”</p>
<p>“Yeah,” agreed Haney. “But also he has got to keep quiet—not tell
anybody else! There’ve been too many leaks already about too many
things. You know that!”</p>
<p>Joe said: “Sally, see if you can get your father to come here and talk.
Haney’s right. Not in his office. Right here.”</p>
<p>Sally got up and went inside the house. She came back with an uneasy
expression on her face.</p>
<p>“He’s coming. But I couldn’t very well tell him what was <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_137" id="Page_137">[Pg 137]</SPAN></span>wanted,
and—I’m not sure he’s going to be in a mood to listen.”</p>
<p>When the Major arrived he was definitely not in a mood to listen. He was
a harried man, and he was keyed up to the limit by the multiplied strain
due to the imminence of the Platform’s take-off. He came back to his
house from a grim conference on exactly the subject of how to make
preparations against any possible sabotage incidents—and ran into a
proposal to stimulate them! He practically exploded. Even if provocation
should be given to saboteurs to lure them into showing their hands, this
was no time for it! And if it were, it would be security business. It
should not be meddled in by amateurs!</p>
<p>Joe said grimly: “I don’t mean to be disrespectful, sir, but there’s a
point you’ve missed. It isn’t thinkable that you’ll be able to prevent
something from being tried at a time the saboteurs pick. They’ve got
just so much time left, and they’ll use it! But Mike’s plan would offer
them a diversion under cover of which they could pull their own stuff!
And besides that, you know your office leaks! You couldn’t set up a
trick like this through security methods. And for a third fact, this is
the one sort of thing no saboteur would expect from your security
organization! We caught the saboteurs at the pushpot field by guessing
at a new sort of thinking for sabotage. Here’s a chance to catch the
saboteurs who’ll work their heads off in the next twenty-four hours or
so, by using a new sort of thinking for security!”</p>
<p>Major Holt was not an easy man to get along with at any time, and this
was the worst of all times to differ with him. But he did think
straight. He stared furiously at Joe, growing crimson with anger at
being argued with. But after he had stared a full minute, the angry
flush went slowly away. Then he nodded abruptly.</p>
<p>“There you have a point,” he said curtly. “I don’t like it. But it is a
point. It would be completely the reverse of anything my antagonists
could possibly expect. So I accept the suggestion. Now—let us make the
arrangements.”</p>
<p>He settled down for a quick, comprehensive, detailed plan. <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_138" id="Page_138">[Pg 138]</SPAN></span>In careful
consultation with Haney, Joe worked it out. The all-important point was
that the Major’s part was to be done in completely unorthodox fashion.
He would take measures to mesh his actions with those of Mike, the
Chief, Haney, and Joe. Each action the Major took and each order he gave
he would attend to personally. His actions would be restricted to the
last five minutes or less before shift-change time. His orders would be
given individually to individuals, and under no circumstances would he
transmit any order through anybody else. In every instance, his order
would be devised to mean nothing intelligible to its recipient until the
time came for obedience.</p>
<p>It was not an easy scheme for the Major to bind himself to. It ran
counter to every principle of military thinking save one, which was that
it was a good idea to outguess the enemy. At the end he said detachedly:
“This is distinctly irregular. It is as irregular as anything could
possibly be! But that is why I have agreed to it. It will be at
least—unexpected—coming from me!”</p>
<p>Then he smiled without mirth and nodded to Joe and to Haney, and went
striding away down the concrete walk to where his car waited.</p>
<p>Haney left a moment later to carry the list of arrangements to the Chief
and to Mike. And Joe went into the Shed to do his part.</p>
<p>There was little difference in the appearance of the Shed by night. In
the daytime there were long rows of windows in the roof, which let in a
vague, dusky, inadequate twilight. At night those windows were
shuttered. This meant that the shadows were a little sharper and the
contrasts of light and shade a trifle more abrupt. All other changes
that Joe could see were the normal ones due to the taking down of
scaffolding and the fastening up of rocket tubes. It was clear that the
shape of the Platform proper would be obscure when all its rocket tubes
were fast in place.</p>
<p>Joe went to look at the last pushpots, and they were ready to be taken
over to their own field for their flight test before use. There were
extras, anyhow, beyond the number needed <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_139" id="Page_139">[Pg 139]</SPAN></span>to lift the Platform. He found
himself considering the obvious fact that after the Platform was aloft,
they would be used to launch the ferry rockets, too.</p>
<p>Then he moved toward the center of the Shed. A whole level of
scaffolding came apart and its separate elements were bundled together
as he watched. Slings lowered the bundles down to waiting trucks which
would carry them elsewhere. There were mixing trucks still pouring out
their white paste for the lining of the rocket tubes, and their product
went up and vanished into the gaping mouths of the giant wire-wound
pipes.</p>
<p>Presently Joe went into the maze of piers under the Space Platform
itself. He came to the temporary stairs he had reason to remember. He
nodded to the two guards there.</p>
<p>“I want to take another look at that gadget we installed,” he said.</p>
<p>One of the guards said good-naturedly: “Major Holt said to pass you any
time.”</p>
<p>He ascended and went along the curious corridor—it had handgrips on the
walls so a man could pull himself along it when there was no weight—and
went to the engine room. He heard voices. They were speaking a
completely unintelligible language. He tensed.</p>
<p>Then the Chief grinned at him amiably. He was in the engine room and
with him were no fewer than eight men of his own coppery complexion.</p>
<p>“Here’s some friends of mine,” he explained, and Joe shook hands with
black-haired, dark-skinned men who were named Charley Spotted Dog and
Sam Fatbelly and Luther Red Cow and other exotic things. The Chief said
exuberantly, “Major Holt told the guards to let me pass in some Indian
friends, so I took my gang on a guided tour of the Platform. None of ’em
had ever been inside before. And——”</p>
<p>“I heard you talking Indian,” said Joe.</p>
<p>“You’re gonna hear some more,” said the Chief. “We’re the first war
party of my tribe in longer’n my grandpa woulda thought respectable!”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_140" id="Page_140">[Pg 140]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Joe found it difficult to restrain a smile. The Chief took him off to
one side.</p>
<p>“Fella,” he said kindly, “it bothers you, this business, because it
ain’t organized. That’s what this world needs, Joe. Everything figured
out by slide rules an’ such—it’s civilized, but it ain’t human! What
everybody oughta be is a connoisseur of chaos, like me. Quit worryin’
an’ get outside and pick up that security guy the Major was gonna send
to meet you!”</p>
<p>He gave Joe an amiable shove and rejoined his fellow Mohawks, each of
whom, Joe noticed suddenly, had somewhere on his person a twelve-inch
Stillson wrench or a reasonable facsimile to serve as a substitute
tomahawk. They grinned at him as he departed.</p>
<p>At the bottom of the flight of narrow wooden steps there was a third
security man. He greeted Joe.</p>
<p>“Major Holt told me to pick you up,” he observed.</p>
<p>Joe walked to one side with him. Major Holt had promised to send a
first-class man to meet Joe at this place, with orders to take
instructions from Joe. Joe said curtly: “You’re to snag as many Security
men as you can, place them more or less out of sight under the Platform
here, and tell them to turn off their walkie-talkies and wait. No matter
what happens, they’re to wait right here until they’re needed, right
here!”</p>
<p>He looked harassedly around him. The Security man nodded and moved
casually away. This was close timing. Something made Joe look up. He saw
the catwalk gallery nearly overhead. The expected guard was there.
Haney, though, was with him. There was nothing else in sight. Not yet.
But Haney was on the job. Joe saw a Security man step out of sight in
the scaffolding. He saw his own assigned security man speak to another,
who wandered casually toward the Platform’s base.</p>
<p>Minutes passed. Only Joe could have noticed, because he was watching for
it. There were eight or nine Security men posted within call. They had
their walkie-talkies turned off and would be subject only to his orders
if an emergency arose.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_141" id="Page_141">[Pg 141]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Gongs began to ring all around the edge of the Shed. They set up a
horrendous clanging. This was not an alarm, but simply the notice of
change-of-shift time.</p>
<p>There was a marked change in the noises overhead. A crane pulled back.
Hammerings dwindled and stopped. There were the sounds of pipes,
combined to form the scaffolds, being taken apart for removal. A
sling-load of pipe touched the floor and stayed there. The crane’s
internal-combustion motor stopped. Its operator stepped down to the
floor and headed for the exit. Hoists descended and men moved across the
floor. Other men scrambled down ladders. The floor became dotted with
figures moving toward the doors through which men went out to get on the
busses for Bootstrap.</p>
<p>Nothing happened. More long minutes passed. The shift brought out by the
busses was going through the check-over process in the incoming screen
room. Joe knew that Major Holt had, within the past five minutes,
gathered together a tight-knit bunch of armed security men to be
available for anything that might turn up. The men doing the normal
shift-change screening were shorthanded in consequence.</p>
<p>The floor next to the exits became crowded, but the central area of the
floor was cleared. One truck was stalled at the swing-up truck doors.
Its driver ground the starter insistently.</p>
<p>Suddenly there was a high-pitched yell away up on the Platform. Then
there was a shot. Its echoes rang horribly in the resonant interior of
the Shed. Joe’s own special security man hurried to him, his face tense.</p>
<p>“What about that?”</p>
<p>“Hold everything,” said Joe grimly. “That’s taken care of.”</p>
<p>It was. That was Mike’s gang—miniature humans popping out of hiding to
offer battle with missiles carefully prepared beforehand against their
alleged associates in sabotage. One of the associates had drawn a gun
and fired. But Mike’s gang had help. Out of small air locks devised to
make the Platform’s skin accessible to its crew on every side—provided
they wore space suits—dark-skinned men appeared.</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_142" id="Page_142">[Pg 142]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>The security man’s walkie-talkie under his shoulder made a buzzing
sound. He reached for it.</p>
<p>“Forget it!” snapped Joe. “That’s not for you! You’ve got your orders!
Stay here!”</p>
<p>There was a sudden growling uproar where men were crowding to get out of
the Shed. Thick, billowing smoke appeared. There was a crashing
explosion. The men eddied and milled crazily.</p>
<p>The motor of the stalled truck caught. It moved toward the door, which
opened, swinging up and high. Two trucks came roaring in. They raced for
the Platform. And as they raced inside, their camouflaged loads
clattered off and men showed instead. The guards by the doorway began to
shoot.</p>
<p>“That’s what we’ve got to stop!” snapped Joe.</p>
<p>He began to run, his pistol out. There was suddenly a small
army—gathered by his orders—which materialized in the dim space under
the Platform. It raced to guard against this evidently well-planned
invasion.</p>
<p>The harsh, tearing rattle of a machine gun sounded from somewhere high
up. Joe knew what it was. Mike’s whole scheme had been intended to force
all sabotage efforts to take place at a single instant. Part of the
preparation was authority for Haney to drag in two machine guns from an
outer watching-post and mount them to cover the interior of the Shed
when the general attack began.</p>
<p>Those machine guns were shooting at the trucks. Splinters sprang up from
the wood-block floor. Then, abruptly, one of the trucks vanished in a
monstrous, actinic flash of blue-white flame and a roar so horrible that
it was not sound but pure concussion. The other truck keeled over and
crashed from the blast, but did not explode. Men jumped from it. There
must have been screamed orders, but Joe could hear nothing at all. He
only saw men waving their arms, and others seized things from the
toppled load and rushed toward him, and he began to shoot as he ran to
meet them.</p>
<p>Now, belatedly, the sirens of the Shed screamed their alarm, and choppy
yappings set up as the siren wails rose in pitch. Over by the exit
pistols cracked. Something fell <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_143" id="Page_143">[Pg 143]</SPAN></span>with a ghastly crash not ten feet from
where Joe ran. It was a man’s body, toppled from somewhere high up on
the structure that was the most important man-made thing in all the
world. A barbaric war whoop sounded among the echoes of other tumult.</p>
<p>A Security man shot, and one of the running figures toppled and slid,
his burden—which must certainly be a bomb—rolling ridiculously. There
had been two trucks that plunged through the swing-up door. They had
raced for the spaces under the Platform at the exact time when the floor
would be clear, because all work had stopped. Under the Platform, the
trucks were to have been detonated. At the very least, they would have
rent and torn it horribly. They might have broken its back. And surely
one truck should have made it. But there should not have been machine
guns ready trained to shoot. Now the load of desperate men from the
overturned survivor scurried for the Platform with parts of its cargo.
If they could fight their way inside the Platform, they could blast its
hull open, or demolish its controls or shatter its air pumps and its
gyros and turn its air tanks into sieves. Anything that could be damaged
would delay the take-off and so expose the Platform to further and
perhaps more successful attack.</p>
<p>There were more pistol shots. A group of men fought their way out of the
incoming screening rooms and raced for the center of the Shed. (Later,
it would be found they had slabs of explosive inside their garments, and
detonation caps to set them off.) Somewhere another door opened, and
Security men came out with flickering pistols, Major Holt leading them.
He had started out to fight off the truck-borne attack, but he was bound
to be too late. Joe’s followers were trying to take care of that. The
scuttling men from the incoming rooms were Major Holt’s first prey. They
were shot as they ran.</p>
<p>Joe stumbled and fell and he heard guns crackling. As he scrambled up he
pitched into a running figure that snarled as Joe hit him. And then he
was fighting for his life.</p>
<p>This was under the Platform and in the middle of confusion <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_144" id="Page_144">[Pg 144]</SPAN></span>many times
confounded. Joe caught a wrist that held a gun. He knew his assailant
had a bomb slung over one shoulder and right now had one hand free for
combat. Joe instinctively tried to batter his enemy with his own pistol,
instead of pushing the muzzle against the man’s body and pulling the
trigger. He struck a flailing blow, and his hand and the weapon struck a
metal brace. The blow cut his knuckles and paralyzed his fingers.
Despairingly he felt the pistol slipping from his grasp. Then his
assailant brought up his knee viciously, but it hit Joe’s thigh instead
of his groin, and Joe flung his weight furiously forward and they
toppled to the ground together.</p>
<p>There was fighting all around him. The machine guns rasped again—there
was a burst of tracer-bullet fire. The panicked men by the exit tried to
surge out through the swinging doors. But the tracers marked a line they
must not cross. They checked. Once a gun flashed so close by Joe’s eyes
that it blinded him. And once somebody fell over both himself and his
antagonist, who writhed like an eel possessed of desperate strength past
belief.</p>
<p>Joe could really know only his private part in the struggle down in the
murky tangle of the scaffold base. But there was fighting up on the
Platform itself. A savagely grinning Mohawk wrestled furiously with a
man on one of the rocket tubes. An incendiary device in the saboteur’s
pocket ignited, and it flamed red-hot and he screamed as it burned its
way out of his garments. The Mohawk flung the man fiercely clear, to
crash horribly on the far-distant floor, and then kicked the incendiary
off. It fell after the man and hit and burst, and it was thermite which
surrounded itself with a column of acrid smoke from seared wood blocks.</p>
<p>There was fighting by the exit doors. There was an ululating uproar in
the incoming screening room, and a war whoop from the top of the
Platform. A saboteur tried to crawl into an air-lock entrance, and he
got his head and shoulders in, but a copper-skinned Indian held his
forehead still and chopped down with the side of his hand on that man’s
neck. Underneath the Platform was panting chaos, with pistol <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_145" id="Page_145">[Pg 145]</SPAN></span>shots and
hand-to-hand struggles everywhere. The force Joe had gathered fought
valiantly, but four invaders got to the foot of the wooden steps, where
there were two guards. Then there were only two saboteurs left to
scramble desperately up the steps over the dead guards’ bodies and head
toward the Platform door, but the Chief appeared swinging a twelve-inch
Stillson. He let it go, precisely like a skillfully flung tomahawk, and
leaped down sixteen steps squarely onto the body of the other man. A gun
flashed, but then there was only squirming struggle on the floor.</p>
<p>Mike the midget, inside the Platform, found one bloodied, panting,
sobbing man who somehow had gotten inside. And Mike brought down a
spanner from a ladder step, and swarmed upon his half-conscious victim,
and hit him again, and then stayed on guard until somebody arrived who
was big enough to carry the saboteur away.</p>
<p>And all this while, Joe struggled with only one man. It was a horrible
struggle, because the man had a bomb and he might manage to set it off
or it might go off of itself. It was a ghastly struggle, because the man
had the strength and desperation of a maniac—and practiced the tactics.
Joe pounded the hand that held the gun upon the floor, and it hit
something and exploded smokily and fell clear. But that made things
worse. While struggling to kill Joe with the revolver, his antagonist
had had only five fingers with which to gouge out Joe’s eyes or tear
away his ears or rend his flesh. But with no pistol he had ten, and he
fought like a wild beast. He even breathed like an animal. He began to
pant—thick, guttural pantings that had the quality of hellish hate. And
then there was a surging of bodies—Major Holt’s reserve was arriving
very late in the center of the Shed—and then a struggling group
trampled all over the pair who squirmed and fought on the ground, and a
heavy boot jammed down Joe’s head and he felt teeth sink in his throat.
They dug into his flesh, worrying and tearing....</p>
<p>Joe used his knee in a frenzy of revulsion—used his knee as the other
man had tried to use his in the first instant of battle. The man beneath
him screamed as an animal would <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_146" id="Page_146">[Pg 146]</SPAN></span>scream, and Joe jerked his bleeding
throat free. In hysterical horror he pounded his antagonist’s head on
the floor until the man went limp....</p>
<p>And then he heard a grim voice saying: “Quit it or you get your head
blown off! Quit it——” And Joe panted: “It’s about time you guys got
here! This man came in on that truck. Watch out for that bomb he’s got
slung on him....”</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" /><p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_147" id="Page_147">[Pg 147]</SPAN></span></p>
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