Irresistible Weapon
If Worlds of Science Fiction,
July 1953
There’s no such thing as a weapon too horrible to use; weapons will
continue to become bigger, and deadlier. Like other things that can’t be
stopped...
In the special observation dome
of the colossal command ship just beyond Pluto, every nervous clearing of a
throat rasped through the silence. Telescopes were available but most of the
scientists and high officials preferred the view on the huge telescreen.
This showed, from a distance of
several million miles, one of the small moons of the frigid planet, so
insignificant that it had not been discovered until man had pushed the
boundaries of space exploration past the asteroids. The satellite was about to
become spectacularly significant, however, as the first target of man’s newest,
most destructive weapon.
“I need not remind you,
gentlemen,” white-haired Co-ordinator Evora of Mars had said. “That if we have
actually succeeded in this race against our former Centaurian colonies, it may
well prevent the imminent conflict entirely. In a few moments we shall know
whether our scientists have developed a truly irresistible weapon.”
Of all the officials, soldiers,
and scientists present, Arnold Gibson was perhaps the least excited. For one
thing, he had labored hard to make the new horror succeed and felt reasonably
confident that it would. The project had been given the attention of every
first-class scientific mind in the Solar System; for the great fear was that
the new states on the Centaurian planets might win the race of discovery and…
And bring a little order into this old-fashioned, inefficient fumbling toward
progress, Gibson
thought contemptuously. Look at them—fools
for all their degrees and titles! They’ve stumbled on something with possibilities
beyond their confused powers of application.
A gasp rustled through the
chamber, followed by an even more awed silence than had preceded the
unbelievable, ultra-rapid action on the telescreen. Gibson permitted himself a
tight smile of satisfaction.
Now my work really begins, he reflected.
A few quick steps brought him to
Dr. Haas, director of the project, just before the less stunned observers
surrounded that gentleman, babbling questions.
“I’ll start collecting the Number
Three string of recorders,” he reported.
“All right, Arnold,” agreed Haas.
“Tell the others to get their ships out too. I’ll be busy here.”
Not half as busy as you will be in about a day, thought Gibson, heading for the
spaceship berths.
***
He had arranged to be assigned
the recording machines drifting in space at the greatest distance from the
command ship. The others would assume that he needed more time to locate and
retrieve the apparatus—which would give him a head start toward Alpha Centauri.
His ship was not large, but it
was powerful and versatile to cope with any emergency that may have been
encountered during the dangerous tests. Gibson watched his instruments
carefully for signs of pursuit, until he had put a few million miles between
himself and the command ship. Then he eased his craft into subspace drive and
relaxed his vigilance.
He returned to normal space many ‘days’
later in the vicinity of Alpha Centauri. They may have attempted to follow him
for all he knew, but it hardly mattered by then. He broadcast the recognition
signal he had been given to memorize long ago, when he had volunteered his
services to the new states. Then he headed for the capital planet, Nessus. Long
before reaching it, he acquired a lowering escort of warcraft, but he was permitted
to land.
“Well, well, it’s young Gibson!”
the Chairman of Nessus greeted him, after the newcomer had passed through the
exhaustive screening designed to protect the elaborate underground
headquarters. “I trust you have news for us, my boy. Watch outside the door,
Colonel!”
One of the ostentatiously armed
guards stepped outside and closed the door as Gibson greeted the obese man
sitting across the button-studded expanse of desk. The scientist was under no
illusion as to the vagueness of the title “Chairman.” He was facing the
absolute power of the Centaurian planets—which, in a few months’ time, would be
the same as saying the ruler of all the human race in both systems. Gibson’s
file must have been available on the Chairman’s desk telescreen within minutes
of the reception of his recognition signal. He felt a thrill of admiration for
the efficiency of the new states and their system of government.
He made it his business to report
briefly and accurately, trusting that the plain facts of his feat would attract
suitable recognition. They did.
Chairman Diamond’s sharp blue
eyes glinted out of the fat mask of his features.
“Well done, my boy!” he grunted,
with a joviality he did not bother trying to make sound overly sincere. “So they have it! You must see our men
immediately, and point out where they have gone wrong. You may leave it to me
to decide who has gone wrong!”
***
Arnold Gibson shivered
involuntarily before reminding himself that he
had seen the correct answer proved before his eyes. He had stood there and
watched—more, he had worked with them all his adult life—and he was the last
whom the muddled fools would have suspected.
The officer outside the door,
Colonel Korman, was recalled and given orders to escort Gibson to the secret
state laboratories. He glanced briefly at the scientist when they had been let
out through the complicated system of safeguards.
“We have to go to the second
moon,” he said expressionlessly. “Better sleep all you can on the way. Once you’re
there, the Chairman will be impatient for results!”
Gibson was glad, after they had
landed on the satellite, that he had taken the advice. He was led from one
underground lab to another, to compare Centaurian developments with Solarian.
Finally, Colonel Korman appeared to extricate him, giving curt answers to such
researchers as still had questions.
“Whew! Glad you got me out!”
Gibson thanked him. “They’ve been picking my brain for two days straight!”
“I hope you can stay awake,”
retorted Korman with no outward sign of sympathy. “If you think you can’t, say
so now. I’ll have them give you another shot. The Chairman is calling on the
telescreen.”
Gibson straightened.
Jealous snob! Typical military fathead, and he knows I amount
to more than any little colonel now. I was smart enough to fool all the
so-called brains of the Solar System.
“I’ll stay awake,” he said
shortly.
Chairman Diamond’s shiny features
appeared on the screen soon after
Korman reported his charge ready.
“Speak freely,” he ordered
Gibson. “This beam is so tight and scrambled that no prying jackass could even
tell that it is communication. Have you set us straight?”
“Yes. Your Excellency,” replied
Gibson. “I merely pointed out which of several methods the Solarians got to
yield results. Your—our scientists were working on all possibilities, so it
would have been only a matter of time.”
“Which you have saved us,” said
Chairman Diamond. His ice-blue eyes glinted again. “I wish I could have seen
the faces of Haas and Co-ordinator Evora, and the rest. You fooled them
completely!”
Gibson glowed at the rare praise.
“I dislike bragging, Your
Excellency,” he said, “but they are
fools. I might very well have found the answer without them, once they had collected
the data. My success shows what intelligence, well-directed after the manner of
the new states of Centauri, can accomplish against inefficiency.”
The Chairman’s expression, masked
by the fat of his face, nevertheless approached a smile.
“So you would say that you—one of
our sympathizers—were actually the most
intelligent worker they had?”
He’ll have his little joke, thought Gibson, and I’ll let him put it over. Then, even that sour colonel will laugh
with us, and the Chairman will hint about what post I’ll get as a reward. I
wouldn’t mind being in charge—old Haas’ opposite number at this end.
“I think I might indeed be
permitted to boast of that much ability, Your Excellency,” he answered, putting
on what he hoped was an expectant smile. “Although, considering the Solarians,
that is not saying much.”
The little joke did not develop
precisely as anticipated.
“Unfortunately,” Chairman Diamond
said, maintaining his smile throughout. “Wisdom should never be confused with
intelligence.”
***
Gibson waited, feeling his own
smile stiffen as he wondered what could be going wrong. Surely, they could not
doubt his loyalty! A hasty glance at
Colonel Korman revealed no expression on the military façade affected by that
gentleman.
“For if wisdom were completely synonymous with
intelligence,” the obese Chairman continued, relishing his exposition. “You
would be a rival to myself, and consequently would be—disposed of—anyway!”
Such a tingle shot up Gibson’s
spine that he was sure he must have jumped.
“Anyway?” he
repeated huskily. His mouth suddenly seemed dry.
Chairman Diamond smiled out of
the telescreen, so broadly that Gibson was unpleasantly affected by the sight
of his small, gleaming, white teeth.
“Put it this way,” he suggested
suavely. “Your highly trained mind observed, correlated, and memorized the most
intricate data and mathematics, meanwhile guiding your social relations with
your former colleagues so as to remain unsuspected while stealing their most cherished
secret. Such a feat demonstrates ability and intelligence.”
Gibson tried to lick his lips,
and could not, despite the seeming fairness of the words. He sensed a pulsing
undercurrent of cruelty and cynicism.
“On the other hand,” the mellow
voice flowed on. “Having received the information, being able to use it
effectively now without you, and knowing that you betrayed once—I shall simply discard you like an old message blank. That is an act of wisdom. Had you chosen
your course more wisely,” he added. “Your position might be stronger.”
By the time Arnold Gibson
regained his voice, the Centaurian autocrat was already giving instructions to
Colonel Korman. The scientist strove to interrupt, to attract the ruler’s
attention even momentarily.
Neither paid him any heed, until
he shouted and tried frenziedly to shove the soldier from in front of the
telescreen. Korman backhanded him across the throat without looking around,
with such force that Gibson staggered back and fell.
He lay, half-choking, grasping
his throat with both hands until he could breathe. The colonel continued
discussing his extinction without emotion.
“...so if Your Excellency agrees,
I would prefer taking him back to Nessus first, for the sake of the morale
factor here. Some of them are so addled now at having been caught chasing up
wrong alleys that they can hardly work.”
Apparently the Chairman agreed,
for the screen was blank when the colonel reached down and hauled Gibson to his
feet.
“Now, listen to me carefully!” he
said, emphasizing his order with a ringing slap across Gibson’s face. “I shall
walk behind you with my blaster drawn. If you make a false move, I shall not
kill you.”
Gibson stared at him, holding his
bleeding mouth.
“It will be much worse,” Korman
went on woodenly. “Imagine what it will be like to have both feet charred to
the bone. You would have to crawl the rest of the way to the ship; I certainly would not consider carrying
you!”
In a nightmarish daze, Gibson
obeyed the cold directions, and walked slowly along the underground corridors
of the Centaurian research laboratories. He prayed desperately that someone—anyone—might
come along. Anybody who could
possibly be used to create a diversion, or to be pushed into Korman and his
deadly blaster.
The halls remained deserted,
possibly by arrangement.
Maybe I’d better wait till we reach his ship, Gibson thought. I ought to be able to figure a way before we
reach Nessus. I had the brains to fool Haas and...
He winced, recalling Chairman
Diamond’s theory of the difference between intelligence and wisdom.
The obscene swine! he screamed silently.
Colonel Korman grunted warningly,
and Gibson took the indicated turn.
They entered the spaceship from
an underground chamber, and Gibson learned the reason for his executioner’s
assurance when the latter chained him to one of the pneumatic acceleration
seats. The chain was fragile in appearance, but he knew he would not be free to
move until Korman so desired.
More of their insane brand of cleverness! he reflected. That’s the sort of thing they do succeed in
thinking of. They’re all crazy! Why did I ever...
But he shrank from the question
he feared to answer. To drag out into the open his petty, selfish reasons,
shorn of the tinsel glamor of so-called “service” and “progress,” would be too
painful.
***
After the first series of
accelerations, he roused himself from his beaten stupor enough to note that
Korman was taking a strange course for reaching Nessus. Then, entirely too
close to the planet and its satellites to ensure accuracy, the colonel put the
ship into subspace drive.
Korman leaned back at the
conclusion of the brief activity on his control board, and met Gibson’s
pop-eyed stare.
“Interesting, the things worth
knowing,” he commented. “How to make a weapon, for instance, or whether your
enemy has it yet.”
He almost smiled at his prisoner’s
expression.
“Or even better: knowing exactly
how far your enemy has progressed and how fast he can continue, whether to stop
him immediately or whether you can remain a step ahead.”
“B-but—if both sides are irresistible...”
Gibson stammered.
Korman examined him
contemptuously.
“No irresistible weapon exists,
or ever will!” he declared. “Only an irresistible process—the transmission of secrets! You are living proof that no
safeguards can defend against that.”
He savored Gibson’s silent
discomfort.
“I am sure you know how far and
how fast the Centaurian scientists will go, Gibson, since I guided you to every
laboratory in that plant. Your memory may require some painful jogging when we
reach the Solar System; but remember you
shall!”
“But you—you were ordered to...”
“You didn’t think I was a
Centaurian, did you?” sneered Korman. “After I just explained to you what is really irresistible?”
End
It’s okay, ladies and gentlemen. I never like that guy
anyways. Minor liberties have been taken with the text in order to bring it
more into line with our more modern house style.
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