Three
days
later
Joseph
Dixon slid a closed-circuit
message
plate
across
the
desk
to
his
boss. “Here.
You
might
be
interested
in
this.” Reinhart picked
the
plate
up
slowly. “What
is
it?
You
came
all
the
way
here
to
show
me
this?” “That’s right.” “Why didn’t
you
vidscreen it?” Dixon
smiled
grimly. “You’ll
understand
when
you
decode it. It’s
from
Proxima Centaurus.” “Centaurus!” “Our counter-intelligence service.
They
sent
it
direct
to
me. Here, I’ll decode
it
for
you. Save
you
the
trouble.” “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.” “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.” “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!” Reinhart staggered, holding
on
tight
to
the
desk.
He
closed
his
eyes, gasping. “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?” 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.” 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.” “Then you’ll
have
to
withdraw
the
false
data
and
restore
the
original
situation.” “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—” “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.” Suddenly Reinhart stopped pacing. “The turret. It’s probably finished
by
this
time. Correct?” Dixon
nodded
slowly
in
agreement. “With
the
variable
man
helping, Sherikov has undoubtedly completed
work
well
ahead
of
schedule.” 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….” “What’s this?” Dixon demanded. “What
are
you
thinking
about?” “How
many
units
are
ready
for
immediate
action?
How
large
a
force
can
we
raise
without
notice?” “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.” “Men?” “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.” “Missiles?” “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.” “Then they’re available
for
immediate
use?” “Yes.” “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—” “What
are
you
planning?” 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.” “Stop here,” Reinhart ordered.
The
surface
car
slowed
to
a halt. Reinhart
peered
cautiously
out, studying
the
horizon
ahead. “Over there,” Reinhart said
to
Dixon, pointing. “See?” “No.” “Look hard. It’s
difficult
to
spot
unless
you
know
what
to
look
for.
Vertical
pipes.
Some
kind
of
vent.
Or
periscopes.” Dixon
saw
them
finally. “I
would
have
driven past
without
noticing.” “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—” “He
must
feel
safe
down
there.” “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—” “No. They’re
not
ours.
All
our
units
are
out
of
sight.
Those
belong
to
Sherikov.
His
patrol.” 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?” “There’s
no
way
they
can
spot
it
back
to
us. It’s non-directional.”
The
screen
glowed
into
life. Reinhart punched
the
combination
keys
and
sat
back
to
wait.
After
a time
an
image
formed
on
the
screen. A heavy face, bushy
black
beard
and
large
eyes. Peter Sherikov gazed
at
Reinhart
with
surprised curiosity. “Commissioner!
Where
are
you
calling from? What—” “How’s
the
work
progressing?” Reinhart
broke
in
coldly. “Is
Icarus
almost
complete?” 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—” “I’m
not
at
my office.” Reinhart
leaned
toward
the
screen. “Open
your
entrance
tunnel
at
the
surface. You’re
about
to
receive
visitors.” Sherikov blinked. “Visitors?” “I’m coming
down
to
see
you.
About
Icarus.
Have
the
tunnel
opened
for
me
at
once.” “Exactly
where
are
you, Commissioner?” “On
the
surface.” Sherikov’s
eyes
flickered. “Oh? But—” “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.” “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?” “We won’t slip up. Everything’s ready.
All
units
are
in
their
places.” “Good.” Reinhart
pushed
the
door
open
for
him. “You
join
your
directional staff. I’ll
proceed
toward
the
tunnel entrance.” “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.” 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.”
The
car
raced
across
the
sandy ground,
toward
the
tunnel
entrance
to
Sherikov’s
underground
fortress. Sherikov met Reinhart
at
the
bottom
end
of
the
tunnel,
where
the
tunnel
opened
up
onto
the
main
floor
of
the
lab.
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.” Reinhart got
out
of
the
car,
with
his
group
of
armed
Security
police. “Calls
for
a celebration, doesn’t it?”
he
said. “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.” “Let’s
go
down
to
the
lab. I
want
to
see
the
control
turret
myself.” 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.” “We
can
view
them
by
vidscreen. I’m
curious
to
see
them
at
work.
It
must
be
difficult
to
wire
such
minute
relays.” 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.” Reinhart snapped a
signal
to
his
company
of
police. “Put
this
man
under
arrest.” “What’s going on?” Sherikov demanded,
some
color
returning
to
his
face. “What
are
you
doing?” “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.” Sherikov shook
his
head, dazed. “I don’t understand. What’s
this
all
about?
Explain
it
to
me, Commissioner. What’s happened?” 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.” Instantly Sherikov’s face hardened.
His
black
eyes
glittered,
alert
and
hostile. 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—” 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. Sherikov reached
the
wall, running
head
down,
energy
beams
flashing
around
him.
He
struck against
the
wall—and vanished. “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—
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. 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.
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.
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. Suddenly
from
around
them
the
booming,
enlarged
voice
of
Sherikov thundered, magnified
by
rows
of
wall
speakers
along
the
corridor. Reinhart halted, glancing around. “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.” Reinhart threw
himself
into
motion,
pushing
into
billowing
clouds
of
particles
drifting
along
the
corridor. “Are
you
sure, Sherikov?”
he
grunted. 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—” 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.
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.
At
exactly
six
o’clock
Joseph
Dixon, standing
on
the
surface
four
miles
from
the
entrance
tunnel, gave
the
sign
to
the
waiting
units.
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. “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. Meanwhile, Sherikov’s counter-attack had begun
to
go
into
operation.
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. 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.
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.
The
guns
became silent.
Their
echoing
boom diminished,
died
away
reluctantly,
as
bombs
took
critical
toll
of
them. Dixon checked
his
wristwatch.
The
missiles
were
already
on
the
way
from
North
America.
Only
a
few
minutes
remained.
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.
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…. 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.
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. 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.
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. 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. Dixon
held
his
breath.
When
the
missiles
arrived—
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. 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. 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.
Abruptly
Dixon’s vidscreen clicked. Dixon
turned
toward
it. 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.” “Sherikov—” “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.” “The variable man?” “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.” 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?” Sherikov licked
his
lips
nervously, glancing
up
at
Reinhart. “Commissioner,
are
you
sure—” 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.” “No tricks.” Sherikov
nodded
resignedly. “Thomas
Cole
is
by
himself.
In
a
wing
lab
off
the
main
rooms.” “Cole?” “The variable man. That’s
his
name.”
The
Pole
turned
his
massive
head
a little. “He has a name.” Reinhart
waved
his
gun. “Hurry up. I don’t
want
anything
to
go
wrong.
This
is
the
part
I came for.” “You
must
remember
something, Commissioner.” “What
is
it?” Sherikov stopped walking. “Commissioner,
nothing
must
happen
to
the
globe.
The
control turret. Everything
depends
on
it,
the
war,
our
whole—” “I know.
Nothing
will
happen
to
the
damn
thing. Let’s go.” “If
it
should
get
damaged—” “I’m
not
after
the
globe. I’m interested
only
in—in
Thomas
Cole.”
They
came
to
the
end
of
the
corridor
and
stopped
before
a
metal
door. Sherikov
nodded
at
the
door. “In there.” Reinhart
moved
back. “Open
the
door.” “Open
it
yourself. I don’t
want
to
have
anything
to
do
with
it.” 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. 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. “Cole?” Reinhart advanced
quickly
into
the
room.
He
glanced
around
him, suddenly alarmed. “Where—”
The
room
was
empty.
Thomas
Cole
was
gone.
When
the
first
missile
struck,
Cole
stopped
work
and
sat listening.
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.
The
globe
was
finished. A faint
glow
of
pride
moved
through
the
variable man.
The
globe
was
the
finest
job
he
had
ever
done.
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. 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.
The
lights flickered
and
winked out.
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.
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. “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.
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? 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.
The
robot
cannon
altered
its
course
to
take
them
on,
and
Cole
escaped
around
a corner.
He
was
in
the
main
lab,
the
big
chamber
where
Icarus
himself
rose,
the
vast
squat column. 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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
He
was
just
snatching
up
the
heavy
generator
when
two
Security
police
appeared.
They
raised
their
blasters
and
fired
point-blank.
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.
He
was
safe.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
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.
Beyond
the
ruins
lay
the
great
Ural peaks,
the
endless
mountains, stretching
out
as
far
as
the
eye
could
see.
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— 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. 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. A flash,
and
a blinding spark
of
light
around
him.
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.
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.
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.
From
a lift Reinhart appeared,
surrounded
by
his
Security
police. “He got
away
from
us!
He
escaped!” “He didn’t escape,” Dixon answered. “I got
him
myself.” Reinhart
quivered
violently. “What
do
you
mean?” “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.” “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!”
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.
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. “He’s alive!” Dixon muttered.
He
felt
around
curiously. “Must
have
had
some
kind
of
protection
screen. Amazing
that
a
man
could—” “It’s him? It’s really him?” “Fits
the
description.” Dixon tore
away
a
handful
of
burned
clothing. “This
is
the
variable man. What’s left
of
him,
at
least.” Reinhart
sagged
with
relief. “Then we’ve finally got him.
The
data
is
accurate. He’s
no
longer
a factor.” Dixon got
out
his
blaster
and
released
the
safety
catch
thoughtfully. “If
you
want, I
can
finish
the
job
right
now.”
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.” “Dixon got
him
with
a
phosphorus
bomb,” Reinhart said noncommittally. “He had reached
the
surface
and
was
trying
to
get
into
the
mountains.” “Anyhow, it’s
over
with,” Reinhart answered. “Did
you
have
SRB
plates
made
up
on
him?” 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.” “Is
it
complete? Everything
previous
has been merely fragmentary.” “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?” “Have
him
loaded up, taken
back
to
the
city—and
officially
put
to
sleep
by
the
Euthanasia
Ministry.” “Legal murder?” Sherikov’s
lips
twisted. “Why don’t
you
simply
do
it
right
here
and
get
it
over
with?” 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?” “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.” “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. “It’ll
be
interesting
to
see
how
the
machines
respond
to
the
additional data,” Dixon said. “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.”
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?” “Thirty minutes! Then—” “Then
the
attack
can
begin
at
once. I
assume
the
fleet
is
ready
for
action.” “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.” “It’s been a
long
climb,” Reinhart murmured. “One thing.
Your
charge
against Sherikov.
It
seems
incredible
that
a
person
of
his
caliber
could
ever—” “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.”
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. “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. 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. 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.
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. “Commissioner.” Reinhart
turned
slowly. “All right.”
Sudden
alarm plucked
at
Reinhart.
There
was
something
in
Kaplan’s voice.
He
hurried
quickly
over. “What
is
it?” Kaplan
looked
up
at
him,
his
face white,
his
eyes
wide
with
terror.
His
mouth
opened
and
closed,
but
no
sound
came.
And
sickened
with
horror.
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.
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.
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.
And
on
the
machines
the
odds read a
hundred
to
one—for failure.
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.
Nothing
happened.
Icarus
disappeared
into
the
star.
There
was
no
explosion.
The
bomb
failed
to
go
off.
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.
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.
Icarus
had
not
functioned. Centaurus had
not
exploded.
The
attack
was
a failure.
The
war
was
over. “We’ve lost
the
war,”
Margaret
Duffe said
in
a small voice,
wondering
and
awed. “It’s over. Finished.”
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. “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.” 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!”
Margaret
Duffe
eyed
Reinhart coldly. “Why
because
of
Sherikov?” “Sit down!”
Margaret
Duffe ordered. Reinhart
was
half
way
to
the
door. “He’s
still
at
the
Euthanasia
Ministry,
waiting
for
the
official—” “No, he’s not,”
Margaret
Duffe said. “Cole isn’t
at
the
Ministry. I ordered
him
transferred
and
your
instructions
cancelled.” “Where—where
is
he?”
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.” 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—” “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.” 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. “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.” 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?” “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. “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. “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.” “But
Icarus
never
came back,” Reinhart cried. “Cole
altered
the
wiring
so
the
bomb
kept
on
going. It’s probably
still
going.” Reinhart reacted violently. “You mean—” “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.” “Why didn’t
it
explode?” Dixon demanded. “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….”
The
whole
Council
was
on
its
feet. A
growing
murmur
filled
the
chamber, a rising
pandemonium
breaking
out
on
all
sides. “I don’t
believe
it!” Reinhart gasped. “It isn’t possible.
If
Cole
solved
Hedge’s
problem
that
would
mean—”
He
broke
off, staggered.
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—” “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.”
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. “Do
you
suppose
he
realized
all
this?”
she
asked
suddenly. “What
we
can
see,
here
on
these
maps?” “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. “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.” “Something
to
be
fixed,”
Margaret
Duffe
put
in. 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.” “That’s right,”
Margaret
Duffe said.
She
looked
reflectively
up
at
him. “But you’re
not
going
to
have
anything
to
do
with
it.”
Margaret
Duffe
signalled
and
a
phalanx
of
Government
troops closed
in
around
the
two
men. Grim-faced,
efficient
soldiers
with
magnetic
grapples
ready. 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!” 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.
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. 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.” “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.
For
a
moment
the
room
was
silent.
Then
the
Council
members
shuffled
nervously
in
their
seats,
beginning
to
breathe
again. Sherikov came
over
and
put
his
big
paw
on
Margaret
Duffe’s shoulder. “Are
you
all
right, Margaret?”
She
smiled
faintly. “I’m fine. Thanks….” 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.” “Where
are
you
going?”
she
asked
hesitantly. “Can’t
you
stay and—”
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.
Cole
turned
a
little
as
the
huge
Pole tossed
down
his
briefcase
and
seated
himself
on
the
window
ledge. “How
are
you
feeling?” Sherikov
asked
him. “Better.” “You
see
we’ve
quite
advanced therapy.
Your
burns
should
be
healed
in
a
few
months.” “How
is
the
war
coming?” “The
war
is
over.” Cole’s
lips
moved. “Icarus—” “To
return
me
to
my
own
time?” “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.”
Cole
was
silent. “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—” “They don’t
resent
what
happened?
The
dud
must
have
made
an
awful
lot
of
people
feel
downright
bad.” “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.”
Cole
smiled
a little, “There won’t
be
any
band, there.
No
parade
or
welcoming
committee
waiting
for
them.” “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.
Cole
picked
them
up
slowly. “What’s this?” “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. “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.” Sherikov
broke
off, frowning. “Of course,”
he
continued
slowly, “there’s
one
little
detail….” “What’s that?” “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?”
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. Sherikov
waited
a moment.
Then
he
stepped
out
into
the
hall
and
softly closed
the
door
after
him.
He
whistled
merrily
as
he
strode
off
down
the
corridor.