When the screen came on again, it was just the first voice talking once more, but it had something to say that was probably the result of a rapid conference and compromise.

"Attention, everyone! I wish to inform you that the plane in which you are traveling can be exploded--melted in the air, rather--if we activate a certain control at this end. We will _not_ do so, now or subsequently, if you make the drop when we give the signal and if you remain on your present course until then. Afterwards you will be at liberty to reverse your course and escape as best you may. Let me re-emphasize that when you told me you had taken over for Grayl I accepted that a.s.sertion in full faith and still so accept it. Is that all fully understood?"

We all told him "Yes," though I don"t imagine we sounded very happy about it, even Pop. However I did get that funny feeling again that the voice was being really sincere--an illusion, I supposed, but still a comforting one.

Now while all these things were going on, believe it or not, and while the plane continued to bullet through the orange haze--which hadn"t shown any foreign objects in it so far, thank G.o.d, even vultures, let alone "straight strings of pink stars"--I was receiving a cram course in gunnery! (Do you wonder I don"t try to tell this part of my story consecutively?)

It turned out that Alice had been brilliantly right about one thing: if you pushed some of the b.u.t.tons simultaneously in patterns of five they unlocked and you could play on them like organ keys. Two sets of five keys, played properly, would rig out a sight just in front of the viewport and let you aim and fire the plane"s main gun in any forward direction. There was a rearward firing gun too, that you aimed by changing over the World Screen to a rear-view TV window, but we didn"t get around to mastering that one. In fact, in spite of my special talents it was all I could do to achieve a beginner"s control over the main gun, and I wouldn"t have managed even that except that Alice, from the thinking she"d been doing about patterns of five, was quick at understanding from the voice"s descriptions which b.u.t.tons were meant.

She couldn"t work them herself of course, what with her stump and burnt hand, but she could point them out for me.

After twenty minutes of drill I was a gunner of sorts, sprawled in the right-hand kneeling seat and intently scanning the onrushing orange haze which at last was beginning to change toward the bronze of evening. If something showed up in it I"d be able to make a stab at getting a shot in. Not that I knew what my gun fired--the voice wasn"t giving away any unnecessary data.

Naturally I had asked why didn"t the voice teach me to fly the plane so that I could maneuver in case of attack, and naturally the voice had told me it was out of the question--much too difficult and besides they wanted us on a known course so they could plan better for the drop and recovery. (I think maybe the voice would have given me some hints--and maybe even told me more about the steel cubes too and how much danger we were in from them--if it hadn"t been for the second voice, which presumably had issued from a being who was keeping watch to make sure among other things that the first voice didn"t get soft-hearted.)

So there I was being a front gunner. Actually a part of me was getting a big bang out of it--from antique Banker"s Special to needle cannon (or whatever it was)--but at the same time another part of me was disgusted with the idea of acting like I belonged to a live culture (even a smart, unqueer one) and working in a war (even just so as to get out of it fast), while a third part of me--one that I normally keep down--was very simply horrified.

Pop was back by the door with the box and "chute, ready to make the drop.

Alice had no duties for the moment, but she"d suddenly started gathering up food cans and packing them in one bag--I couldn"t figure out at first what she had in mind. Orderly housewife wouldn"t be exactly my description of her occupational personality.

Then of course everything had to happen at once.

The voice said, "Make the drop!"

Alice crossed to Pop and thrust out the bag of cans toward him, writhing her lips in silent "talk" to tell him something. She had a knife in her burnt hand too.

But I didn"t have time to do any lip-reading, because just then a glittering pink asterisk showed up in the darkening haze ahead--a whole half dozen straight lines spreading out from a blank central spot, as if a super-fast gigantic spider had laid in the first strands of its web.

Wind whistled as the door of the plane started to open.

I fought to center my sight on the blank central spot, which drifted toward the left.

One of the straight lines grew dazzlingly bright.

I heard Alice whisper fiercely, "Drop _these_!" and the part of my mind that couldn"t be applied to gunnery instantly deduced that she"d had some last-minute inspiration about dropping a bunch of cans instead of the steel cubes.

I got the sight centered and held down the firing combo. The thought flashed to me: _it"s a city you"re firing at, not a plane_, and I flinched.

The dazzlingly pink line dipped down toward me.

Behind me, the sound of a struggle. Alice snarling and Pop giving a grunt.

Then all at once a scream from Alice, a big whoosh of wind, a flash way ahead (where I"d aimed), a spatter of hot metal inside the cabin, a blinding spot in the middle of the World Screen, a searing beam inches from my neck, an electric shock that lifted me from my seat and ripped at my consciousness!

When I came to (if I really ever was out--seconds later, at most) there were no more pink lines. The haze was just its disgustingly tawny evening self with black spots that were only after-images. The cabin stunk of ozone, but wind funneling through a hole in the one-time World Screen was blowing it out fast enough--Savannah had gotten in one lick, all right. And we were falling, the plane was swinging down like a crippled bird--I could feel it and there was no use kidding myself.

But staring at the control panel wouldn"t keep us from crashing if that was in the cards. I looked around and there were Pop and Alice glaring at each other across the closing door. He looked mean. She looked agonized and was pressing her burnt hand into her side with her elbow as if he"d stamped on the hand, maybe. I didn"t see any blood though. I didn"t see the box and "chute either, though I did see Alice"s bag of groceries. I guessed Pop had made the drop.

Now, it occurred to me, was a bully time for Voice Two to melt the plane--if he hadn"t already tried. My first thought had been that the spatter of hot metal had come from the Savannah craft spitting us, but there was no way to be sure.

I looked around at the viewport in time to see rocks and stunted trees jump out of the haze. _Good old Ray_, I thought, _always in at the death_. But just then the plane took a sickening bounce, as if its antigravity had only started to operate within yards of the ground.

Another lurching fall and another bounce, less violent. A couple of repet.i.tions of that, each one a little gentler, and then we were sort of b.u.mping along on an even keel with the rocks and such sliding past fast about a hundred feet below, I judged. We"d been spoiled for alt.i.tude work, it seemed, but we could still cripple along in some sort of low-power repulsion field.

I looked at the North America screen and the b.u.t.tons, wondering if I should start us back west again or leave us set on Atla-Hi and see what the h.e.l.l happened--at the moment I hardly cared what else Savannah did to us. I needn"t have wasted the mental energy. The decision was made for me. As I watched, the Atla-Hi b.u.t.ton jumped up by itself and the b.u.t.ton for the cracking plant went down and there was some extra b.u.mping as we swung around.

Also, the violet patch of Atla-Hi went real dim and the b.u.t.ton for it no longer had a violet nimbus. The Los Alamos blue went dull too. The cracking-plant dot glowed a brighter green--that was all.

All except for one thing. As the violet dimmed I thought I heard Voice One very faintly (not as if speaking directly but as if the screen had heard and remembered--not a voice but the fluorescent ghost of one): "Thank you and good luck!"

CHAPTER 6

_Many a man has dated his ruin from some murder or other that perhaps he thought little of at the time._

--Thomas de Quincey

"And a long merry siege to you, sir, and roast rat for Christmas!" I responded, very out loud and rather to my surprise.

"War! How I hate war!"--that was what Pop exploded with. He didn"t exactly dance in senile rage--he was still keeping too sharp a watch on Alice--but his voice sounded that way.

"d.a.m.n you, Pop!" Alice contributed. "And you too, Ray! We might have pulled something, but you had to go obedience-happy." Then her anger got the better of her grammar, or maybe Pop and me was corrupting it. "d.a.m.n the both of you!" she finished.

It didn"t make much sense, any of it. We were just cutting loose, I guess, after being scared to say anything for the last half hour.

I said to Alice, "I don"t know what you could have pulled, except the chain on us." To Pop I remarked, "You may hate war, but you sure helped that one along. Those grenades you dropped will probably take care of a few hundred Savannans."

"That"s what you always say about me, isn"t it?" he snapped back. "But I don"t suppose I should expect any kinder interpretation of my motives."

To Alice he said, "I"m sorry I had to slap your burnt fingers, sister, but you can"t say I didn"t warn you about my low-down tactics." Then to me again: "I _do_ hate war, Ray. It"s just murder on a bigger scale, though some of the boys give me an argument there."

"Then why don"t you go preach against war in Atla-Hi and Savannah?"

Alice demanded, still very hot but not quite so bitter.

"Yeah, Pop, how about it?" I seconded.

"Maybe I should," he said, thoughtful all at once. "They sure need it."

Then he grinned. "Hey, how"d this sound: HEAR THE WORLD-FAMOUS MURDERER POP TRUMBULL TALK AGAINST WAR. WEAR YOUR STEEL THROAT PROTECTORS. Pretty good, hey?"

We all laughed at that, grudgingly at first, then with a touch of wholeheartedness. I think we all recognized that things weren"t going to be very cheerful from here on in and we"d better not turn up our noses at the feeblest fun.

© 2024 www.topnovel.cc