The Hour of Battle
Robert Sheckley
Space Science Fiction, September 1953.
As one of the Guardian ships
protecting Earth, the crew had a problem to solve. Just how do you protect a
race from an enemy who can take over a man’s mind without seeming effort or
warning?
“That hand didn’t move, did it?”
Edwardson asked, standing at the port, looking at the stars.
“No,” Morse said. He had been
staring fixedly at the Attison Detector for over an hour. Now he blinked three
times rapidly, and looked again. “Not a millimeter.”
“I don’t think it moved either,”
Cassel added, from behind the gunfire panel. And that was that. The slender
black hand of the indicator rested unwaveringly on zero. The ship’s guns were
ready, their black mouths open to the stars. A steady hum filled the room. It
came from the Attison Detector, and the sound was reassuring. It reinforced the
fact that the Detector was attached to all the other Detectors, forming a gigantic
network around Earth.
“Why in hell don’t they come?”
Edwardson asked, still looking at the stars. “Why don’t they hit?”
“Aah, shut up,” Morse said. He
had a tired, glum look. High on his right temple was an old radiation burn, a
sunburst of pink scar tissue. From a distance it looked like a decoration.
“I just wish they’d come,”
Edwardson said. He returned from the port to his chair, bending to clear the
low metal ceiling. “Don’t you wish they’d come?”
Edwardson had the narrow, timid
face of a mouse; but a highly intelligent mouse. One that cats did well to
avoid.
“Don’t you?” he repeated.
The other men didn’t answer. They
had settled back to their dreams, staring hypnotically at the Detector face.
“They’ve had enough time,”
Edwardson said, half to himself.
Cassel yawned and licked his
lips. “Anyone want to play some gin?” he asked, stroking his beard. The beard
was a memento of his undergraduate days. Cassel maintained he could store
almost fifteen minutes worth of oxygen in its follicles. He had never stepped
into space unhelmeted to prove it.
Morse looked away, and Edwardson
automatically watched the indicator. This routine had been drilled into them,
branded into their subconscious. They would as soon have cut their throats as
leave the indicator unguarded.
“Do you think they’ll come soon?”
Edwardson asked, his brown rodent’s eyes on the indicator. The men didn’t
answer him. After two months together in space their conversational powers were
exhausted. They weren’t interested in Cassel’s undergraduate days, or in Morse’s
conquests.
They were bored to death even
with their own thoughts and dreams, bored with the attack they expected
momentarily.
“Just one thing I’d like to know,”
Edwardson said, slipping with ease into an old conversational gambit. “How far
can they do it?”
They had talked for weeks about
the enemy’s telepathic range, but they always returned to it.
As professional soldiers, they
couldn’t help but speculate on the enemy and his weapons.
It was their shop talk.
“Well,” Morse said wearily, “Our
Detector network covers the system out beyond Mars’ orbit.”
“Where we sit,” Cassel said,
watching the indicators now that the others were talking.
“They might not even know we have
a detection unit working,” Morse said, as he had said a thousand times.
“Oh, stop,” Edwardson said, his
thin face twisted in scorn. “They’re telepathic. They must have read every bit
of stuff in Everset’s mind.”
“Everset didn’t know we had a
detection unit,” Morse said, his eyes returning to the dial. “He was captured
before we had it.”
“Look,” Edwardson said, “They ask
him, ‘Boy, what would you do if you knew a telepathic race was coming to take
over Earth? How would you guard the planet?’“
“Idle speculation,” Cassel said. “Maybe
Everset didn’t think of this.”
“He thinks like a man, doesn’t
he? Everyone agreed on this defense. Everset would, too.”
“Syllogistic,” Cassel murmured. “Very
shaky.”
“I sure wish he hadn’t been
captured,” Edwardson said.
“It could have been worse,” Morse
put in, his face sadder than ever. “What if they’d captured both of them?”
“I wish they’d come,” Edwardson
said.
***
Richard Everset and C. R. Jones
had gone on the first interstellar flight. They had found an inhabited planet
in the region of Vega. The rest was standard procedure.
A flip of the coin had decided
it. Everset went down in the scouter, maintaining radio contact with Jones, in
the ship.
The recording of that contact was
preserved for all Earth to hear.
“Just met the natives,” Everset
said. “Funny-looking bunch. Give you the physical description later.”
“Are they trying to talk to you?”
Jones asked, guiding the ship in a slow spiral over the planet.
“No. Hold it. Well I’m damned!
They’re telepathic! How do you like that?”
“Great,” Jones said. “Go on.”
“Hold it. Say, Jonesy, I don’t
know as I like these boys. They haven’t got nice minds. Brother!”
“What is it?” Jones asked,
lifting the ship a little higher.
“Minds! These bastards are
power-crazy. Seems they’ve hit all the systems around here, looking for someone
to—”
“Yeah?”
“I’ve got that a bit wrong,”
Everset said pleasantly. “They are not so bad.”
Jones had a quick mind, a
suspicious nature and good reflexes. He set the accelerator for all the G’s he
could take, lay down on the floor and said, “Tell me more.”
“Come on down,” Everset said, in
violation of every law of spaceflight. “These guys are all right. As a
matter of fact, they’re the most marvelous-”
That was where the recording
ended, because Jones was pinned to the floor by twenty G’s acceleration as he
boosted the ship to the level needed for the C-jump.
He broke three ribs getting home,
but he got there.
A telepathic species was on the
march. What was Earth going to do about it?
A lot of speculation necessarily
clothed the bare bones of Jones’ information. Evidently the species could take
over a mind with ease.
With Everset, it seemed that they
had insinuated their thoughts into his, delicately altering his previous
convictions. They had possessed him with remarkable ease.
How about Jones? Why hadn’t they taken
him? Was distance a factor? Or hadn’t they been prepared for the suddenness of
his departure?
One thing was certain. Everything
Everset knew, the enemy knew. That meant they knew where Earth was, and how
defenseless the planet was to their form of attack.
It could be expected that they
were on their way.
Something was needed to nullify
their tremendous advantage. But what sort of something? What armor is there
against thought? How do you dodge a wavelength?
Pouch-eyed scientists gravely
consulted their periodic tables.
And how do you know when a man
has been possessed? Although the enemy was clumsy with Everset, would they
continue to be clumsy? Wouldn’t they learn?
Psychologists tore their hair and
bewailed the absence of an absolute scale for humanity.
Of course, something had to be
done at once. The answer, from a technological planet, was a technological one.
Build a space fleet and equip it with some sort of a detection-fire network.
This was done in record time. The
Attison Detector was developed, a cross between radar and the
electroencephalograph. Any alteration from the typical human brain wave pattern
of the occupants of a Detector-equipped ship would boost the indicator around
the dial. Even a bad dream or a case of indigestion would jar it.
It seemed probable that any
attempt to take over a human mind would disturb something. There had to be a
point of interaction, somewhere.
That was what the Attison
Detector was supposed to detect. Maybe it would.
The spaceships, three men to a ship,
dotted space between Earth and Mars, forming a gigantic sphere with Earth in
the center. Tens of thousands of men crouched behind gunfire panels, watching
the dials on the Attison Detector.
The unmoving dials.
***
“Do you think I could fire a
couple of bursts?” Edwardson asked, his fingers on the gunfire button. “Just to
limber the guns?”
“Those guns don’t need limbering,”
Cassel said, stroking his beard. “Besides, you’d throw the whole fleet into a
panic.”
“Cassel,” Morse said, very
quietly. “Get your hand off your beard.”
“Why should I?” Cassel asked.
“Because,” Morse answered, almost
in a whisper, “I am about to ram it right down your fat throat.”
Cassel grinned and tightened his
fists. “Pleasure,” he said. “I’m tired of looking at that scar of yours.” He
stood up.
“Cut it,” Edwardson said wearily.
“Watch the birdie.”
“No reason to, really,” Morse
said, leaning back. “There’s an alarm bell attached.” But he looked at the
dial.
“What if the bell doesn’t work?”
Edwardson asked. “What if the dial is jammed? How would you like something cold
slithering into your mind?”
“The dial’ll work,” Cassel said.
His eyes shifted from Edwardson’s face to the motionless indicator.
“I think I’ll sack in,” Edwardson
said.
“Stick around,” Cassel said. “Play
you some gin.”
“All right.” Edwardson found and
shuffled the greasy cards, while Morse took a turn glaring at the dial.
“I sure wish they’d come,” he
said.
“Cut,” Edwardson said, handing
the pack to Cassel.
“I wonder what our friends look
like,” Morse said, watching the dial.
“Probably remarkably like us,”
Edwardson said, dealing the cards. Cassel picked them up one by one, slowly, as
if he hoped something interesting would be under them.
“They should have given us
another man,” Cassel said. “We could play bridge.”
“I don’t play bridge,” Edwardson
said.
“You could learn.”
“Why didn’t we send a task force?”
Morse asked. “Why didn’t we bomb their planet?”
“Don’t be dumb,” Edwardson said. “We’d
lose any ship we sent. Probably get them back at us, possessed and firing.”
“Knock with nine,” Cassel said.
“I don’t give a good damn if you
knock with a thousand,” Edwardson said gaily. “How much do I owe you now?”
“Three million five hundred and
eight thousand and ten. Dollars.”
“I sure wish they’d come,” Morse
said.
“Want me to write a check?”
“Take your time. Take until next
week.”
“Someone should reason with the
bastards,” Morse said, looking out the port.
Cassel immediately looked at the
dial.
“I just thought of something,”
Edwardson said.
“Yeh?”
“I bet it feels horrible to have
your mind grabbed,” Edwardson said. “I bet it’s awful.”
“You’ll know when it happens,”
Cassel said.
“Did Everset?”
“Probably. He just couldn’t do
anything about it.”
“My mind feels fine,” Cassel
said. “But the first one of you guys starts acting queer—watch out.”
They all laughed.
“Well,” Edwardson said. “I’d sure
like a chance to reason with them. This is stupid.”
“Why not?” Cassel asked.
“You mean go out and meet them?”
“Sure,” Cassel said. “We’re doing
no good sitting here.”
“I should think we could do
something,” Edwardson said slowly. “After all, they’re not invincible. They’re
reasoning beings.”
Morse punched a course on the
ship’s tape, then looked up.
“You think we should contact the
command? Tell them what we’re doing?”
“No!” Cassel said, and Edwardson
nodded in agreement. “Red tape. We’ll just go out and see what we can do. If
they won’t talk, we’ll blast ‘em out of space.”
“Look!”
Out of the port they could see the
red flare of a reaction engine; the next ship in their sector, speeding
forward.
“They must have got the same
idea,” Edwardson said.
“Let’s get there first,” Cassel
said. Morse shoved the accelerator in and they were thrown back in their seats.
“That dial hasn’t moved yet, has
it?” Edwardson asked, over the clamor of the Detector alarm bell.
“Not a move out of it,” Cassel
said, looking at the dial with its indicator slammed all the way over to the
highest notch.
End
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