"Hmm. Wonder if there"s any historical parallel? Don"t suppose so." He raised his head. "Although this isn"t conclusive, it seems logical enough. Any other defense would involve recognition of the weapon first, then an appraisal, then a countermove predicated on the potentialities of the weapon. The Amba.s.sador"s defense would be a lot faster and safer. He wouldn"t have to recognize the weapon. I suppose his body simply _identifies_, in some way, with the menace at hand."

"Did the a.n.a.lyzer say there was any way of breaking this defense?"

Cercy asked.

"The a.n.a.lyzer stated definitely that there was no way, if the premise were true," Malley answered gloomily.

"We can discard that judgment," Darrig said. "The machine is limited."

"But we still haven"t got any way of stopping him," Malley pointed out. "And he"s still broadcasting that beam."

Cercy thought for a moment. "Call in every expert you can find. We"re going to throw the book at the Amba.s.sador. I know," he said, looking at Darrig"s dubious expression, "but we have to try."

During the next few days, every combination and permutation of death was thrown at the Amba.s.sador. He was showered with weapons, ranging from Stone-Age axes to modern high-powered rifles, peppered with hand grenades, drowned in acid, suffocated in poison gas.

He kept shrugging his shoulders philosophically, and continued to work on the new typewriter they had given him.

Bacteria was piped in, first the known germ diseases, then mutated species.

The diplomat didn"t even sneeze.

He was showered with electricity, radiation, wooden weapons, iron weapons, copper weapons, bra.s.s weapons, uranium weapons--anything and everything, just to cover all possibilities.

He didn"t suffer a scratch, but his room looked as though a bar-room brawl had been going on in it continually for fifty years.

Malley was working on an idea of his own, as was Darrig. The physicist interrupted himself long enough to remind Cercy of the Baldur myth.

Baldur had been showered with every kind of weapon and remained unscathed, because everything on Earth had promised to love him.

Everything, except the mistletoe. When a little twig of it was shot at him, he died.

Cercy turned away impatiently, but had an order of mistletoe sent up, just in case.

It was, at least, no less effective than the explosive sh.e.l.ls or the bow and arrow. It did nothing except lend an oddly festive air to the battered room.

After a week of this, they moved the unprotesting Amba.s.sador into a newer, bigger, stronger death cell. They were unable to venture into his old one because of the radioactivity and micro-organisms.

The Amba.s.sador went back to work at his typewriter. All his previous attempts had been burned, torn or eaten away.

"Let"s go talk to him," Darrig suggested, after another day had pa.s.sed. Cercy agreed. For the moment, they were out of ideas.

"Come right in, gentlemen," the Amba.s.sador said, so cheerfully that Cercy felt sick. "I"m sorry I can"t offer you anything. Through an oversight, I haven"t been given any food or water for about ten days.

Not that it matters, of course."

"Glad to hear it," Cercy said. The Amba.s.sador hardly looked as if he had been facing all the violence Earth had to offer. On the contrary, Cercy and his men looked as though they had been under bombardment.

"You"ve got quite a defense there," Malley said conversationally.

"Glad you like it."

"Would you mind telling us how it works?" Darrig asked innocently.

"Don"t you know?"

"We think so. You become what is attacking you. Is that right?"

"Certainly," the Amba.s.sador said. "You see, I have no secrets from you."

"Is there anything we can give you," Cercy asked, "to get you to turn off that signal?"

"A bribe?"

"Sure," Cercy said. "Anything you--?"

"Nothing," the Amba.s.sador replied.

"Look, be reasonable," Harrison said. "You don"t want to cause a war, do you? Earth is united now. We"re arming--"

"With what?"

"Atom bombs," Malley answered him. "Hydrogen bombs. We"re--"

"Drop one on me," the Amba.s.sador said. "It wouldn"t kill me. What makes you think it will have any effect on my people?"

The four men were silent. Somehow, they hadn"t thought of that.

"A people"s ability to make war," the Amba.s.sador stated, "is a measure of the status of their civilization. Stage one is the use of simple physical extensions. Stage two is control at the molecular level. You are on the threshold of stage three, although still far from mastery of atomic and subatomic forces." He smiled ingratiatingly. "My people are reaching the limits of stage five."

"What would that be?" Darrig asked.

"You"ll find out," the Amba.s.sador said. "But perhaps you"ve wondered if my powers are typical? I don"t mind telling you that they"re not.

In order for me to do my job and nothing more, I have certain built-in restrictions, making me capable only of pa.s.sive action."

"Why?" Darrig asked.

"For obvious reasons. If I were to take positive action in a moment of anger, I might destroy your entire planet."

"Do you expect us to believe that?" Cercy asked.

"Why not? Is it so hard to understand? Can"t you believe that there are forces you know nothing about? And there is another reason for my pa.s.siveness. Certainly by this time you"ve deduced it?"

"To break our spirit, I suppose," Cercy said.

"Exactly. My telling you won"t make any difference, either. The pattern is always the same. An Amba.s.sador lands and delivers his message to a high-spirited, wild young race like yours. There is frenzied resistance against him, spasmodic attempts to kill him. After all these fail, the people are usually quite crestfallen. When the colonization team arrives, their indoctrination goes along just that much faster." He paused, then said, "Most planets are more interested in the philosophy I have to offer. I a.s.sure you, it will make the transition far easier."

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