<h2>11</h2>
<p>“What I want to know,” said Lieutenant Keku, “is, what
kind of ship is this?”</p>
<p>Mike the Angel chuckled, and Lieutenant Mellon, the Medical Officer,
grinned rather shyly. But young Ensign Vaneski looked puzzled.</p>
<p>“What do you mean, sir?” he asked the huge Hawaiian.</p>
<p>They were sitting over coffee in the officers’ wardroom. Captain
Quill, First Officer Jeffers, and Lieutenant Commander von Liegnitz were
on the bridge, and Dr. Fitzhugh and Leda Crannon were down below, giving
Snookums lessons.</p>
<p>Mike looked at Lieutenant Keku, waiting for him to answer
Vaneski’s question.</p>
<p>“What do I mean? Just what I said, Mister Vaneski. I want to know
what kind of ship this is. It is obviously not a warship, so we can
forget that classification. It is not an expeditionary ship; we’re
not outfitted for exploratory work. Is it a passenger vessel, then? No,
because Dr. Fitzhugh and Miss Crannon are listed as ‘civilian
technical advisers’ and are therefore legally part of the crew.
I’m wondering if it might be a cargo vessel, though.”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[95]</SPAN></span>
“Sure it is,” said Ensign Vaneski. “That brain in
Cargo Hold One is cargo, isn’t it?”</p>
<p>“I’m not certain,” Keku said thoughtfully, looking up
at the overhead, as if the answer might be etched there in the metal.
“Since it is built in as an intrinsic part of the ship, I
don’t know if it can be counted as cargo or not.” He brought
his gaze down to focus on Mike. “What do you think,
Commander?”</p>
<p>Before Mike the Angel could answer, Ensign Vaneski broke in with:
“But the brain is going to be removed when we get to our
destination, isn’t it? That makes this a cargo ship!” There
was a note of triumph in his voice.</p>
<p>Lieutenant Keku’s gaze didn’t waver from Mike’s face,
nor did he say a word. For a boot ensign to interrupt like that was an
impoliteness that Keku chose to ignore. He was waiting for Mike’s
answer as though Vaneski had said nothing.</p>
<p>But Mike the Angel decided he might as well play along with Keku’s
gag and still answer Vaneski. As a full commander, he could overlook
Vaneski’s impoliteness to his superiors without ignoring it as
Keku was doing.</p>
<p>“Ah, but the brain <i>won’t</i> be unloaded, Mister
Vaneski,” he said mildly. “The ship will be
<i>dismantled</i>—which is an entirely different thing. I’m afraid you
can’t call it a cargo ship on those grounds.”</p>
<p>Vaneski didn’t say anything. His face had gone red and then white,
as though he’d suddenly realized he’d committed a <i>faux
pas</i>. He nodded his head a little, to show he understood, but he
couldn’t seem to find his voice.</p>
<p>To cover up Vaneski’s emotional dilemma, Mike addressed the
Medical Officer. “What do you think, Mister Mellon?”</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[96]</SPAN></span>
Mellon cleared his throat. “Well—it seems to me,” he said
in a dry, serious tone, “that this is really a medical
ship.”</p>
<p>Mike blinked. Keku raised his eyebrows. Vaneski swallowed and jerked his
eyes away from Mike’s face to look at Mellon—but still he
didn’t say anything.</p>
<p>“Elucidate, my dear Doctor,” said Mike with interest.</p>
<p>“I diagnose it as a physician,” Mellon said in the same dry,
earnest tone. “Snookums, we have been told, is too dangerous to be
permitted to remain on Earth. I take this to mean that he is potentially
capable of doing something that would either harm the planet itself or a
majority—if not all—of the people on it.” He picked up his cup
of coffee and took a sip. Nobody interrupted him.</p>
<p>“Snookums has, therefore,” he continued, “been removed
from Earth in order to protect the health of that planet, just as one
would remove a potentially malignant tumor from a human body.</p>
<p>“This is a medical ship. Q.E.D.” And only then did he smile.</p>
<p>“Aw, now....” Vaneski began. Then he shut his mouth again.</p>
<p>With an inward smile, Mike realized that Ensign Vaneski had been taking
seriously an argument that was strictly a joke.</p>
<p>“Mister Mellon,” Mike said, “you win.” He
hadn’t realized that Mellon’s mind could work on that level.</p>
<p>“Hold,” said Lieutenant Keku, raising a hand. “I yield
to no one in my admiration for the analysis given by our good doctor;
indeed, my admiration knows no bounds. But I insist we hear from
Commander Gabriel before we adjourn.”</p>
<p>“Not me,” Mike said, shaking his head. “I know when
I’m beaten.” He’d been going to suggest that the
<i>Brainchild</i><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[97]</SPAN></span>
was a training ship, from Snookums’ “learning”
periods, but that seemed rather obvious and puerile now.</p>
<p>He glanced at his watch, saw the time, and stood up. “Excuse me,
gentlemen; I have things to do.” He had an appointment to talk to
Leda Crannon, but he had no intention of broadcasting it.</p>
<p>As he closed the wardroom door, he heard Ensign Vaneski’s voice
saying: “I <i>still</i> say this should be classified as a cargo
ship.”</p>
<p>Mike sighed as he strode on down the companionway. The ensign was, of
course, absolutely correct—which was the sad part about it, really. Oh
well, what the hell.</p>
<p>Leda Crannon had agreed to have coffee with Mike in the office suite she
shared with Dr. Fitzhugh. Mike had had one cup in the officers’
wardroom, but even if he’d had a dozen he’d have been
willing to slosh down a dozen more to talk to Leda Crannon. It was not,
he insisted to himself, that he was in love with the girl, but she had
intelligence and personality in addition to her striking beauty.</p>
<p>Furthermore, she had given Mike the Angel a dressing-down that had been
quite impressive. She had not at all cared for the remarks he had made
when Snookums was being loaded aboard—patting him on the head and
asking him his age, for instance—and had told him so in no uncertain
terms. Mike, feeling sheepish and knowing he was guilty, had accepted
the tongue-lashing and tendered an apology.</p>
<p>And she had smiled and said: “All right. Forget it. I’m
sorry I got mad.”</p>
<p>He knew he wasn’t the only man aboard who was interested in Leda.
Jakob von Liegnitz, all Teutonic masterfulness and Old World suavity,
had obviously made a favorable <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[98]</SPAN></span>
impression on her. Lew Mellon was often seen in deep philosophical
discussions with her, his eyes never leaving her face and his earnest
voice low and confidential. Both of them had known her longer than he
had, since they’d both been stationed at Chilblains Base.</p>
<p>Mike the Angel didn’t let either of them worry him. He had enough
confidence in his own personality and abilities to be able to take his
own tack no matter which way the wind blew.</p>
<p>Blithely opening the door of the office, Mike the Angel stepped inside
with a smile on his lips.</p>
<p>“Ah, good afternoon, Commander Gabriel,” said Dr. Morris
Fitzhugh.</p>
<p>Mike kept the smile on his face. “Leda here?”</p>
<p>Fitzhugh chuckled. “No. Some problems came up with Snookums.
She’ll be in session for an hour yet. She asked me to convey her
apologies.” He gestured toward the coffee urn. “But the
coffee’s all made, so you may as well have a cup.”</p>
<p>Mike was thankful he had not had a dozen cups in the wardroom. “I
don’t mind if I do, Doctor.” He sat down while Fitzhugh
poured a cup.</p>
<p>“Cream? Sugar?”</p>
<p>“Black, thanks,” Mike said.</p>
<p>There was an awkward silence for a few seconds while Mike sipped at the
hot, black liquid. Then Mike said, “Dr. Fitzhugh, you said, at the
briefing back on Earth, that Snookums knows too much about nuclear
energy. Can you be more specific than that, or is it too
hush-hush?”</p>
<p>Fitzhugh took out his briar and began filling it as he spoke. “We
don’t want this to get out to the general public, of
course,” he said thoughtfully, “but, as a ship’s
officer, you <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_99" id="Page_99">[99]</SPAN></span>
can be told. I believe some of your fellow officers know already,
although we’d rather it wasn’t discussed in general
conversation, even among the officers.”</p>
<p>Mike nodded wordlessly.</p>
<p>“Very well, then.” Fitzhugh gave the tobacco a final shove
with his thumb. “As a power engineer, you should be acquainted
with the ‘pinch effect,’ eh?”</p>
<p>It was a rhetorical question. The “pinch effect” had been
known for over a century. A jet of highly ionized gas, moving through a
magnetic field of the proper structure, will tend to pinch down, to
become narrower, rather than to spread apart, as a jet of ordinary gas
does. As the science of magnetohydrodynamics had progressed, the effect
had become more and more controllable, enabling scientists to force the
nuclei of hydrogen, for instance, closer and closer together. At the end
of the last century, the Bending Converter had almost wrecked the
economy of the entire world, since it gave to the world a source of free
energy. Sam Bending’s “little black box” converted
ordinary water into helium and oxygen and energy—plenty of energy. A
Bending Converter could be built relatively cheaply and for small-power
uses—such as powering a ship or automobile or manufacturing
plant—could literally run on air, since the moisture content of
ordinary air was enough to power the converter itself with plenty of
power left over.</p>
<p>Overnight, all previous forms of power generation had become obsolete.
Who would buy electric power when he could generate his own for next to
nothing? Billions upon billions of dollars worth of generating equipment
were rendered valueless. The great hydroelectric dams, the hundreds of
steam turbines, the heavy-metal atomic reactors—all useless for power
purposes. The value of the stock in those <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_100" id="Page_100">[100]</SPAN></span>
companies dropped to zero and stayed there. The value of copper metal
fell like a bomb, with almost equally devastating results—for
there was no longer any need for the millions of miles of copper cable
that linked the power plants with the consumer.</p>
<p>The Depression of 1929-42 couldn’t even begin to compare with The
Great Depression of 1986-2000. Every civilized nation on Earth had been
hit and hit hard. The resulting governmental collapses would have made
the disaster even more complete had not the then Secretary General of
the UN, Perrot of Monaco, grabbed the reins of government. Like the
Americans Franklin Roosevelt and Abraham Lincoln, he had forced through
unconstitutional bills and taken extra-constitutional powers. And, like
those Americans, he had not done it for personal gain, but to preserve
the society. He had not succeeded in preserving the old society, of
course, but he had built, almost single-handedly, a world government—a
new society on the foundations of the old.</p>
<p>All these thoughts ran through Mike the Angel’s mind. He wondered
if Snookums had discovered something that would be as much a disaster to
the world economy as the Bending Converter had been.</p>
<p>Fitzhugh got out his miniature flame thrower and puffed his pipe alight.
“Snookums,” he said, “has discovered a method of
applying the pinch effect to lithium hydride. It’s a batch
reaction rather than a flow reaction such as the Bending Converter uses.
But it’s as simple to build as a Bending Converter.”</p>
<p>“Jesus,” said Mike the Angel softly.</p>
<p>Lithium hydride. LiH. An atom of hydrogen to every atom of lithium. If a
hydrogen nucleus is driven into the <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_101" id="Page_101">[101]</SPAN></span>
lithium nucleus with sufficient force, the results are simple:</p>
<p class='noin c'>Li<sup>7</sup> + H<sup>1</sup> → 2He<sup>4</sup> + energy</p>
<p>An atom of lithium-7 plus an atom of hydrogen-1 yields two atoms of
helium-4 and plenty of energy. One gram of lithium hydride would give
nearly fifty-eight kilowatt-hours of energy in one blast. A pound of the
stuff would be the equivalent of nearly seven <i>tons</i> of TNT.</p>
<p>In addition, it was a nice, clean bomb. Nothing but helium, radiation,
and heat. In the early nineteen fifties, such a bomb had been
constructed by surrounding the LiH with a fission bomb—the so-called
“implosion” technique. But all that heavy metal around the
central reaction created all kinds of radioactive residues which had a
tendency to scatter death for hundreds of miles around.</p>
<p>Now, suppose a man had a pair of tweezers small enough to pick up a
single molecule of lithium hydride and pinch the two nuclei together. Of
course, the idea is ridiculous—that is, the tweezer part is. But if the
pinch could be done in some other way....</p>
<p>Snookums had done it.</p>
<p>“Homemade atomic bombs in your back yard or basement lab,”
said Mike the Angel.</p>
<p>Fitzhugh nodded emphatically. “Exactly. We can’t let that
technique out until we’ve found a way to keep people from doing
just that. The UN Government has inspection techniques that prevent
anyone from building the conventional types of thermonuclear bombs, but
not the pinch bomb.”</p>
<p>Mike the Angel thought over what Dr. Fitzhugh had said. Then he said:
“That’s not all of it. Antarctica is isolated enough to keep
that knowledge secret for a long time—at <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_102" id="Page_102">[102]</SPAN></span>
least until safeguards could be set up. Why take Snookums off
Earth?”</p>
<p>“Snookums himself is dangerous,” Fitzhugh said. “He
has a built-in ‘urge’ to experiment—to get data. We can
keep him from making experiments that we know will be dangerous by
giving him the data, so that the urge doesn’t operate. But if
he’s on the track of something totally new....</p>
<p>“Well, you can see what we’re up against.” He
thoughtfully blew a cloud of smoke. “We think he may be on the
track of the total annihilation of matter.”</p>
<p>A dead silence hung in the air. The ultimate, the super-atomic bomb.
Theoretically, the idea had been approached only in the assumption of
contact between ordinary matter and anti-matter, with the two canceling
each other completely to give nothing but energy. Such a bomb would be
nearly fifty thousand times as powerful as the lithium-hydride pinch
bomb. That much energy, released in a few millimicroseconds, would make
the standard H-bomb look like a candle flame on a foggy night.</p>
<p>The LiH pinch bomb could be controlled. By using just a little of the
stuff, it would be possible to limit the destruction to a neighborhood,
or even a single block. A total-annihilation bomb would be much harder
to control. The total annihilation of a single atom of hydrogen would
yield over a thousandth of an erg, and matter just doesn’t come in
much smaller packages than that.</p>
<p>“You see,” said Fitzhugh, “we <i>had</i> to get him off
Earth.”</p>
<p>“Either that or stop him from experimenting,” Mike said.
“And I assume that wouldn’t be good for Snookums.”</p>
<p>“To frustrate Snookums would be to destroy all the work we have
put into him. His circuits would tend to exceed optimum randomity, and
that would mean, in human <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_103" id="Page_103">[103]</SPAN></span>
terms, that he would be insane—and therefore worthless. As a
machine, Snookums is worth eighteen billion dollars. The information we
have given him, plus the deductions and computations he has made from
that information, is worth....” He shrugged his shoulders.
“Who knows? How can a price be put on knowledge?”</p>
<hr /><p class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_104" id="Page_104">[104]</SPAN></p>
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