<h2><SPAN name="Chapter_4" id="Chapter_4"></SPAN>Chapter 4</h2>
<p><span class="smcap">The small fighting ship</span> lifted swiftly from the surface
of Kandar. As it rose, the sky turned dark and the sun's brilliant
disk, far too bright to be looked at with unshielded
eyes, became a blazing furnace that could roast unshielded
flesh. Stars appeared, shining myriads despite the sun, with
every one vivid against a background of black. The planet's
surface became a half-ball, of which a part lay in darkness.</p>
<p>"<i>Co-o-ntact!</i>" said a voice through many speakers placed
throughout the fighting ship's hull.</p>
<p>There was the rushing sound of compartment doors closing.
Then a cushioned silence everywhere, save for the faint, standby
scratching sounds that loudspeakers always emit.</p>
<p>Screens lighted. A speck moved among the stars.</p>
<p>"<i>Prepare counter-missiles</i>," said the voice. "<i>Proximity and
track. Fire only as missiles appear.</i>"</p>
<p>The moving speck flamed and was again only a moving
speck. It ejected something which hurtled toward the ship just
up from Kandar.</p>
<p>"<i>Intercept one away!</i>" said a confident voice.</p>
<p>The last-launched missile fled toward the first moving speck,
diminishing as it went. It swung suddenly, off course.</p>
<p>"<i>Fire two!</i>" snapped somebody somewhere.</p>
<p>Another object hurtled away toward the stars.</p>
<p>"<i>Fire three! Fire four!</i>"</p>
<p>Far away, something came plunging toward the ship. It
did not travel in a straight line. It curved. It was not reasonable
for a missile to travel in a curved line. The interceptor
missiles had to detect it, swing to intercept, to accelerate
furiously. The first interceptor missed. Worse, it had lost its
target. It went wandering vaguely among the stars and was
gone.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_44" id="Page_44"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>The second missed. The voice in the speaker seemed to
crack.</p>
<p>"<i>Fire all missiles! They're turning too late! Pull 'em up
ahead of the damned thing!</i>"</p>
<p>The deadly contrivances plunged away and further away into
emptiness. The third interceptor missed. The fourth. Tiny
specks moved gracefully on the radar screen. There was something
coming toward the ship that had risen from Kandar.
The tracer-trails of missiles appeared against the stars. They
made very pretty parabolas. That was all. The thing that was
coming left a tracer-trail too. It curved preposterously. The
just-risen ship furiously flung missiles at it. It did not dodge.
But none of the tracer-trails intersected its own. All of
them passed to its rear.</p>
<p>For the fraction of a second it was visible as an object
instead of a speck. That object swelled.</p>
<p>It went by. Bors's voice, relayed, said,</p>
<p>"<i>Coup! You're out of action. Right?</i>"</p>
<p>The skipper of the ship just up from Kandar said grudgingly,
"Hell, yes! We threw fifteen missiles at it, and missed
with every one! This is magic! Can we all have this before
the Mekinese get here?"</p>
<p>"<i>I hope so</i>," said Bors's voice. "<i>We're trying hard, anyhow.
Will you report to ground?</i>"</p>
<p>"<i>Right</i>," said the speakers in the ship which had just fired
fifteen missiles without a hit or interception. "<i>Off.</i>"</p>
<p>And then the compartment doors opened again and the normal
sounds of a small fighting ship in space began again.</p>
<p>An hour later, aground, Bors said impatiently, "Half a dozen
ships have checked out with me. I sent a single dummy-warhead
missile at each one. They knew I was trying something
new. They tried interceptors. Not one worked. Worse,
my missiles drew the interceptors off-course so they lost their
original aim on the <i>Isis</i>. Missiles set for variable acceleration
not only can't be intercepted but they draw interceptors
off-course and are super-interceptors themselves. I fired one
dummy warhead at each target-ship. I got six hits with six<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_45" id="Page_45"></SPAN></span>
missiles. They fired an average of twelve missiles against each
of mine. They got no intercepts or hits with seventy-two tries!
This appears to me a very gratifying development for the
situation we're in."</p>
<p>The bearded man who'd plumped for negotiation, earlier,
now spoke indignantly in the War Council.</p>
<p>"Why wasn't this revealed earlier? We could have made a
demonstration and Mekin would have been wary of issuing
an ultimatum! Why was this concealed until it was too late
to use in negotiations with them?"</p>
<p>"It wasn't available until today," Bors answered. "It was
tried, and it worked."</p>
<p>An admiral said slowly, "As I understand it, this is a proposal
of the—hm—Talents, Incorporated people."</p>
<p>"No," said Bors. "We got the idea but couldn't do the
math. Talents, Incorporated did the computations to make
the missiles hit."</p>
<p>"Why? Why let them do the math? There may be a counter
to this device. Perhaps Talents, Incorporated, was sent to us
to get us to adopt this freakish trick."</p>
<p>"Talents, Incorporated," said Bors, "enabled us to smash
a submerged Mekinese cruiser. In giving us the necessary information,
Talents, Incorporated kept the Mekinese from wiping
out our space-fleet. Talents, Incorporated— Oh, the devil!"</p>
<p>The admiral gazed about him.</p>
<p>"This—device," he said precisely, "is not a tried and standard
weapon. On the other hand, the sally of our fleet is not
war. Because of our civilian population we cannot make war
on Mekin! The defiance of our fleet will be a gesture only—a
splendid gesture, but no more. It should be a dignified gesture.
It would be most inappropriate for our fleet to take to
space, ostensibly to say that it prefers death to surrender, and
for it then to unveil a new and eccentric device which would
say that the fleet was foolish enough to hope that a gadget
would save it from dying and Kandar from conquest. The
fleet action should be fought with scorn of odds. It should
end its existence in a manner worthy of its traditions!"<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_46" id="Page_46"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>Bors exploded, "Damnit—"</p>
<p>King Humphrey held up his hand and said fretfully, "As
I remember it, Admiral, you have been assigned to hold together
the defense forces—those who either did not insist on
going with the fleet, or for whom there was no room—who have
to be surrendered. You talk of gestures. But the young men
who will go out in the fleet are not going there to make gestures!
They simply and furiously hate Mekin for what it is
about to do. They are going out to kill as many Mekinese
as they can before they, themselves, are killed. They would
call your speech nonsense. And I would agree with them."</p>
<p>Bors said respectfully, "Yes, Majesty. It may also be said
that copies of the first Talents, Incorporated launching-data
tables have already been distributed to the missile crews
throughout the fleet. More are being distributed as fast as
Logan calculates them. I don't think you can keep our
ships from trying the new missiles when the fighting starts!"</p>
<p>Indignantly, the bearded man said, "I protest! This is a
War Council! If the council is to be lectured by strangers
and if its orders won't be obeyed, why hold it?"</p>
<p>"Why, indeed?" King Humphrey looked sternly about the
council-table. Sternness did not become him, but dignity did.
He said with dignity, "You who are to stay here have to
think of dealing with a victorious Mekin. We who are to go
have to think of making our defeat count. There is no point
in further discussion. The fleet will take off immediately."</p>
<p>He rose from his seat. The bearded man protested, "But
the Mekinese aren't here yet! They won't arrive until day
after tomorrow!"</p>
<p>"You're using Talents, Incorporated information," objected
Bors. "And it is wise for the fleet to move off-planet at once!
You are reasonable men. Too reasonable! Nothing can destroy
a nation so quickly as for it to fall into the hands of practical,
hard-headed, reasonable men who act upon the best scientific
data and the opinions of the best experts! That happened on
Tralee, and my uncle and myself are exiles and Tralee is<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_47" id="Page_47"></SPAN></span>
subjugated in consequence. But I am beginning to have hope
for Kandar!"</p>
<p>He followed King Humphrey out of the council-room. Fleet
admirals brought up the rear. The stodgy, dumpy figure of
the king tramped onward. It became obvious that he was
bound for the ground-cars that waited to take him and those
who would follow him to the launching area of the fleet.</p>
<p>A lean, gray, vice-admiral fell into step beside Bors.</p>
<p>"You don't think things are hopeless, Captain?" he asked
curiously. "I don't see the shred of a chance for us. But my
whole life's been in the fleet. Under Mekin I'd be drafted to
work in a factory or serve as an under-officer on a guard-ship,
one or the other! I'd rather end in a good fight. How can
you have hope?"</p>
<p>Bors said grimly, "I'm not sure that I have. But I can't
believe that nations can be saved by reasonable, practical men.
They aren't made by them! I've no hope except that acting
foolishly may be wisdom. Sometimes it is."</p>
<p>"Ha!" The vice-admiral grinned wryly. "But fortunes are
made by businessmen, and only history by heroes. No sensible
man is ever a hero. But, like you, I don't like practical men."</p>
<p>They went out-of-doors. The king climbed sturdily into a
ground-car. It hummed away. There was a sort of ordered
confusion, and then other ground-cars began to stream away
from the palace.</p>
<p>Morgan appeared and waved to Bors. He hesitated, and
Morgan pointed to an unofficial vehicle. Inside, Gwenlyn was
smiling cheerfully at Bors. He found himself returning the
smile, and allowed himself to be guided to her. The ground-car
rolled swiftly after the others.</p>
<p>"I've a little more Talents, Incorporated information," said
Morgan. "It's written down for you to read when you get
to wherever you're going. It's rather important. Please be sure
to read it fairly soon, it may affect the fight."</p>
<p>"I'm headed for the fleet," said Bors. "Take me there, will
you? I wanted to say something before I left, anyhow."</p>
<p>Morgan waved his hand.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_48" id="Page_48"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"I can guess," he said blandly. "Deepest gratitude and all
that, but the rush of events blocked any way to arrange a
suitable recompense for what Talents, Incorporated has done."</p>
<p>Bors blinked. "That's the substance of what I meant to
say," he admitted.</p>
<p>"We'll take it up later," Morgan told him. "We'll get in
touch with you after the battle."</p>
<p>"I doubt it," said Bors. "I'm not likely to be around."</p>
<p>Gwenlyn laughed a little.</p>
<p>"What's so amusing?" asked Bors. "I don't mean to strike
an attitude, but I do hate everything Mekin stands for, and
I've a chance to throw a brick at it. The price may be high
but throwing the brick is necessary!"</p>
<p>"We," said Gwenlyn, "have Talents, Incorporated information,
some of which is in that letter Father gave you. Our
Department for Predicting Dirty Tricks has been busy. You'll
see. But we've other information, too."</p>
<p>Bors frowned at her. He put the letter away.</p>
<p>"More information—and you'll see me after the fight. You're
not telling me you know the future?"</p>
<p>Morgan waved a cigar.</p>
<p>"Of course not! That's nonsense! If one knew the future,
one could change it, and then it wouldn't be what one knew!
You haven't had any prophecies from me! Prophecy's absurd!
All we've told you is about events whose probability
approaches unity."</p>
<p>"But—"</p>
<p>"What Father means," Gwenlyn told him, "is that you
can't be told beforehand about anything you can prevent, because
if you can prevent it you can make your knowledge
false. So it isn't knowledge. What we want to say, though, is
that we aren't through."</p>
<p>"Why not?"</p>
<p>"I'm going to retire," said Morgan blandly. "But I want to
do something first that I can gloat over later."</p>
<p>"He wants," added Gwenlyn, "to repose in the satisfaction
of his vanity." She laughed again at her father's expression.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_49" id="Page_49"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Seriously, Captain, we wanted to give you the letter and
to ask you not to be surprised if we turn up somewhere.
There's a Talent," she added, "a young boy who can find people.
He doesn't know how he does it, but.... We'll find you!"</p>
<p>The ground-car turned in at the fleet's take-off ground. The
normal interstellar traffic of a planet, of course, was handled
by a spaceport, with ships brought down to ground and lifted
out to space again by the force-fields generated in a giant
landing-grid. But a war-fleet could not depend solely on
ground installations. The fighting ships of Kandar were allowed
to use the planet's spaceport only for special reasons.
Emergency rocket take-offs and landings were necessary training
for war conditions anyhow. So the take-off ground was
pitted and scarred with burnt-over circles, where no living
thing grew and where very often the clay beneath the humus
top-layer was vitrified by rocket-flames.</p>
<p>A guard at the gate brought the ground-car to a halt.</p>
<p>"War alert," said Bors. "Only known officers and men admitted
here. It's not worth arguing about."</p>
<p>He got out of the car and shook hands.</p>
<p>"I still regret," he told Morgan, "that we've had no chance
to do something in return for the information you've given
us." To Gwenlyn he said obscurely, "I'm glad I didn't know
you sooner."</p>
<p>He turned and walked briskly into the fenced-off area. Behind
him, Morgan looked inquisitively at his daughter.</p>
<p>"What was that he just said?"</p>
<p>"He's glad he didn't know me sooner," said Gwenlyn. She
looked smugly pleased. "Considering everything, it was a very
nice thing to say. I like him even if he doesn't smile."</p>
<p>Morgan did not seem enlightened. "It doesn't make sense
to me."</p>
<p>"That's because you are my father," said Gwenlyn. She
stirred restlessly. She was no longer smiling. "I hope Talents,
Incorporated information isn't wrong this time! Remember,
we heard on Norden that the dictator of Mekin consults fortune-tellers!"<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_50" id="Page_50"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Ah!" said her father. "But they're only fortune-tellers!"</p>
<p>"One could be a Talent," said Gwenlyn worriedly, "maybe
without even knowing it."</p>
<p>There came a far-distant, roaring sound. Something silvery
and glistening rose swiftly toward the sky. It dwindled to a
speck. There were more roarings. Three more silvery, glistening
objects flung themselves heavenward, leaving massive
trails of seemingly solid smoke behind them. Then there were
bellowings. Larger ships rose up. As the din of their rising began
to diminish, there were louder, booming uproars and other
silvery objects seemed to fling themselves toward the sky.</p>
<p>Then thunder rolled, and huge shapes plunged in their turn
toward the heavens. The space-fleet of Kandar left its native
world. It departed in the formation used for space maneuvering,
much like the tactical disposition of a column of marching
soldiers in doubtful territory. There was a "point" in advance
of all the rest, to be the first to detect or be fired on by an
enemy. Then flankers reached straight out, and to the right
and left, and then an advance-guard, and then the main force
with a rear-guard behind it.</p>
<p>The take-off area became invisible under a monstrous, roiling
mountain of smoke, from which threads of vapor reached
to emptiness. It became impossible to hear oneself talk; it
was unlikely that one could have heard a shot, as the heavy
ships took off. But presently there were only lesser clamors
and then mere roarings after them, and the last of the rocket-boomings
died away. The smoke remained, rolling very slowly
aside. Then there were unexpected detonations. As the rocket-fume
mist dissolved, the detonations were explained. Every
building in the fleet's home area, the sunken fuel-tanks, the
giant rolling gantries—every bit of ground equipment for the
servicing of the fleet was methodically and carefully being
blown to bits. The fleet was not expected back.</p>
<p>The ships rose above the atmosphere, and rose still higher,
and the planet Kandar became a gigantic ball which filled an
enormous part of the firmament. Then there were cracklings
of communicators, and orders flittered through emptiness in<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_51" id="Page_51"></SPAN></span>
scrambled and re-scrambled broadcasts of gibberish which
came out as lucid commands in the control-rooms of the ships.
Then, first, the point, then the advanced flankers, and then
the main fleet, line by line and rank by rank—every ship
drove on outward under top-speed solar-system drive.</p>
<p>The last of the four chartered space-liners, come to take
refugees away before the Mekinese arrived, saw the disappearance
of the ships in the rear of the fleet's formation. The
liner was lowered to the ground by the landing-grid. It reported
what it had seen. Those who were entitled to depart
on it crowded aboard. With the fleet gone, panic began.</p>
<p>Morgan had to spend lavishly to get copies of the news
reports that the liner had brought along as a matter of course.
He took them back to the <i>Sylva</i>, where a frowning man with
rings on his fingers read them with dark suspicion. Presently,
triumphantly, he dictated predictions of dirty tricks from indications
in the news.</p>
<p>Morgan returned to what he'd called the family room of
the yacht. He relaxed. Gwenlyn tried to read. She did not
succeed. She was excessively nervous.</p>
<p>Bors was not. The fleet re-formed itself well out from Kandar.
It made for a rendezvous over a pole of the gas-giant planet
which was the fourth planet from Kandar's sun. It was
almost, but not quite in line with that yellow star toward the
base, from which the Mekinese flotilla would come. The fleet
went into a polar orbit around that gigantic planet, which was
useless to mankind because its atmosphere was partly gaseous
ammonia and partly methane.</p>
<p>The cosmos paid no attention. An unstable sol-type star
in Cygnus collapsed abruptly and a number of otherwise
promising planets became unfit for human exploitation. In
Andromeda, a super-nova flared. The light of its explosion
would not reach Kandar for very many thousands of years.
The largest comet in the galaxy reached perihelion, and practically
outshone the sun it circled. Nobody saw it, because nobody
lived there. On a dreary, red-sky planet in Mousset, a
thing squirmed heavily out of a stagnant sea and blinked stupidly<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_52" id="Page_52"></SPAN></span>
at the remarkable above-water cosmos it had discovered.
Suns flamed and spouted flares. Small dark stars became an
infinitesimal fraction of a degree colder. There was a magnetic
storm in the photosphere of a sun which was not supposed
to have such things.</p>
<p>The war-fleet of Kandar, in very fine formation, flowed in
its polar orbit around the fourth planet out from Kandar's sun.
In carefully scrambled and re-scrambled communications, certain
ships were authorized to modify the settings of Mark 13
missiles in this exact fashion, to remove their warheads, and
to diverge in pairs from the fleet proper. They were to familiarize
themselves with the results of making the acceleration
of such missiles variable during flight. They would use
the supplied data-tables to compute firing constants for given
ranges and relative speeds. They would, of course, return to
formation to permit other ships the same practice with the
new method of missile handling.</p>
<p>Bors read the letter from Talents, Incorporated. It gave an
exact time for the breakout of the Mekinese fleet. The rest
consisted mostly of specific warnings from the Talents, Incorporated
Department for Predicting Dirty Tricks. It listed
certain things to be looked for among the ships of the fleet.
The information was like the news of an enemy ship aground
on Kandar; it was self-evidently plausible once one thought
of it. Mekin was ruled and its military practices governed by
men with the instincts of conspirators, using other men with
the psychopathological impulses which make for spies. They
thought of devices neither statesmen nor fighting men would
have invented. But a paranoid Talent could think of them,
and know that they were true.</p>
<p>As a result of the warnings, the flagship was found to have
been somehow equipped, by Mekin, with a tiny, special microwave
transmitter which used a frequency not usual on Kandar.
It was, in effect, a radio beacon on which enemy missiles could
home. Also, the lead ship of a cruiser-squadron had been mysteriously
geared to reveal its exact position, course and speed
while in space. There were other concealed devices. Some<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_53" id="Page_53"></SPAN></span>
would make the controls of predetermined ships useless when
beams of specific frequency and form were trained upon them.</p>
<p>Once the basic idea was discovered, it was possible to
make sure that all such enemy-supplied equipment was out of
operation. The fleet was still in no promising situation, with
a ten-to-one disadvantage. But it could not have put up even
the beginning of a fight, had these spy-installed devices remained
undiscovered.</p>
<p>Bors said carefully, by scrambled and re-scrambled communicator,
"Majesty, I'm beginning to be less than despairing.
If they expect our ships either to have been destroyed
aground, or to be made helpless the instant combat begins,
we may give them a shock. We hoped to smash them ship
for ship. Finding out their tricks in advance may give us that!
And if our missiles work as they've promised, we may get
two for one!"</p>
<p>King Humphrey's voice was dogged. "<i>I will settle for anything
but surrender! From an honorable enemy I would take
severe terms rather than see my spacemen die. But I would
do nobody any good by yielding to Mekin!</i>"</p>
<p>Bors clicked off. He looked at a clock. The prediction from
Talents, Incorporated was that the Mekinese fleet would break
out of overdrive at 11.19 hours astronomical time.</p>
<p>He went over his ship. His crew was by no means depressed.
There had been a terrific lift in spirits when dummy-warheaded
missiles made theoretic hits, though fifteen interceptors tried
to stop them. The crewmen now tended elaborately to explain
the process. A part of the trick was the curved path along
which the re-set missiles flashed. Such courses alone could
never be computed by an unwarned enemy under battle conditions.
But the all-important thing was that the missiles changed
their acceleration as they drove. That couldn't be solved and
the solution put into practice during one fleet-action. Once
the enemy had experienced it, they could later duplicate it
without doubt, but it would still be impossible to counter.</p>
<p>So Bors's men were cheerful to the point of gaiety. They
would fight magnificently because they were thinking of what<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_54" id="Page_54"></SPAN></span>
they would do to the enemy instead of what the enemy might
do to them. If enemy crews had been assured that the fleet
was half defeated before the fight began, to find the fleet not
crippled by spy-set devices would be startling. To find them
fighting like fiends would be alarming. And if—Bors grimly
repeated to himself, <i>if</i>—the modified missiles worked as well
in battle as in target practice....</p>
<p>He turned in and, despite his tensions, fell asleep immediately
and slept soundly. When he awoke he felt curiously
relaxed. It took him a moment to realize he had dreamed
about Gwenlyn. He couldn't remember what he had dreamed,
but he knew it was comfortable and good. He wouldn't let
himself dwell on it, however. There was work to be done.</p>
<p>It was singularly like morning on a planet. The ship was
spotless, immaculate. There was the fresh smell of growing
things in the air. To save tanked oxygen the air-room used
vegetation to absorb CO<sub>2</sub> and excess moisture from the breathing
of the crew. There was room to spare everywhere, because
unlike aircraft and surface ships, the size of a space-ship made
no difference in its speed. There was no resistance due to size.
Only the mass counted. So there was spaciousness and freshness
and something close to elation on Bors's ship on the day
it was to fight for the high satisfaction of getting killed.</p>
<p>Bors saw to it that his men breakfasted heartily.</p>
<p>"We've got a party ahead," he told the watch at mess.
"Eat plenty but give the other watch a chance to fill up, too."</p>
<p>Somebody said cheerfully, "The condemned men ate a hearty
breakfast, sir?"</p>
<p>Bors grinned.</p>
<p>"The breakfast we can be sure of. The condemned part—we'll
have something to say about that. Some Mekinese
wouldn't have good appetites if they knew what's ahead of
them. One word! Don't waste missiles! There are a lot of
Mekin ships. We've got to make each missile count!"</p>
<p>There was laughter. He went to the control room. He
checked with the clock. Shortly after the other watch was back
at its stations he calculated carefully. The enemy fleet would<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_55" id="Page_55"></SPAN></span>
break out of overdrive short of Kandar, of course. It would
have broken out once before, to correct its line and estimate
the distance to its destination. It would have assembled itself
at that breakout point, but it would still arrive in a disorderly
mob. One's point of arrival could not be too closely
figured at the high speeds of overdrive. So when the Mekinese
came, they would not be in formation.</p>
<p>Bors called the flagship, when the gas-giant planet was in
line and a barrier against the radio waves. King Humphrey's
voice came from the speaker by Bors's side.</p>
<p>"<i>Bors? What?</i>"</p>
<p>"Majesty," said Bors. "Talents, Incorporated says the enemy
fleet will break out of overdrive in just about ten minutes.
We're out here waiting for it, instead of aground as they'll
expect. They'll break out in complete confusion. Even with
great luck, they'll lose time assembling into combat formation.
Being out here, we may be able to hit them before they're
organized."</p>
<p>A pause.</p>
<p>"<i>I've been discussing tactics with the high command</i>," said
the king's voice. "<i>There's some dispute. The classic tactic is
to try for englobement.</i>"</p>
<p>"I want to point out, Majesty," Bors interrupted urgently,
"that when we cross the north pole again, we're apt to detect
the fleet signalling frantically to itself, sorting itself out, trying
to get into some sort of order. It'll be stirred up as if with
a spoon. But if we come around the planet's pole—and they
don't expect us to be out here waiting for them—we'll be in
combat-ready formation. We may be able to tear into them
as an organized unit before they can begin to co-operate with
each other."</p>
<p>A longer pause. Then King Humphrey said grimly;</p>
<p>"<i>There is one weak point in your proposal, Bors. Only one.
It is that Talents, Incorporated may be wrong about the time
of breakout. The more I think, the less I believe in what
they have done, or even what I saw! But we'll be prepared,
however unlikely your idea. We'll be ready.</i>"<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_56" id="Page_56"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>He clicked off. Only minutes later, the combat-alert order
came through. In the next ten minutes, Bors's ship hummed
for five, was quiet for three, and then, two minutes early, all
inner compartment doors closed quietly and there was that
muffled stillness which meant that everybody was ready for
anything that might happen.</p>
<p>In the control room, Bors watched out of a direct-vision
port, giving occasional glances to the screens. There were
flecks of light from innumerable stars. Then the shining cloud-bank
of the gas-giant planet went black. Screens showed all
of the fleet—each blip with a nimbus about it which identified
it as a friend, not a foe. There was the blip of the leading
ship, the "point" of the formation. There were the flanking
ships and all the martial array of the fleet.</p>
<p>Then the screens sparkled with seemingly hundreds of blips
which seemed to swirl and spin and whirl again in total and
disordered confusion.</p>
<p>Gongs clanged. A voice said, "<i>Co-o-ntact! Enemy fleet
ahead. Wide dispersion. They're milling about like gnats on
a sunny day!</i>"</p>
<p>A curt and authoritative and well-recognized voice snapped,
"<i>All ships keep formation on flagship. Course coordinates....</i>"
The voice gave them. "<i>There's a clump of enemy
ships beginning to organize! We hit them!</i>"</p>
<p>The fleet of Kandar came around the gas-giant world and
flung itself at the fleet of Mekin. It seemed that everything
was subject to intolerable delay. For long, sweating, unbearable
minutes nothing happened except that the fleet of Kandar
went hurtling through space with no sensation or direct evidence
of motion. The gas-giant planet dwindled, but not very
fast. The bright specks on the screens which were enemy ships
seemed to separate as they drew nearer. But all happened
with infinite and infuriating deliberation.</p>
<p>It was worth waiting for. There was truly a clumping of
enemy ships ahead. Some of them were less than ten miles
apart. In a two-hundred-mile sphere there were forty ships.
They'd been moving to consolidate themselves into a mutually<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_57" id="Page_57"></SPAN></span>
assisting group. What they accomplished was the provision
of a fine accumulation of targets. Before they could organize
themselves, the Kandarian fleet swept through them. It vastly
outnumbered them in this area.</p>
<p>It smashed them. Bombs flashed in emptiness. There were
gas-clouds and smoke-clouds which stayed behind in space as
the fleet went on.</p>
<p>"<i>New coordinates</i>," said the familiar authoritative voice. It
gave them. "<i>There's another enemy condensation. We hit it!</i>"</p>
<p>The fleet swung in space. It drove on and on and on. Interminable
time passed. Then there were flashes brighter than
the stars. A Kandar cruiser blew up soundlessly. But far, far
away other things detonated, and what had been proud structures
of steel and beryllium, armed and manned, became mere
incandescent vapor.</p>
<p>A third clumping of Mekinese ships. The Kandarian fleet
overwhelmed it; overrode it; used exactly the tactics the
Mekinese might have used. It ruthlessly made use of its local,
concentrated strength. It was outnumbered in the whole
battle area by not less than ten to one. But the Mekinese
fleet was scattered. Where it struck, the Kandarian fleet was
four and five, and sometimes twenty, ships to one.</p>
<p>It was a smaller fleet in every class of ships, but it was
compact and controlled and it made slashing plunges through
the dispersed and confused enemy. With ordinary missiles three
ships could always destroy two, and four could destroy three.
But in the battle of the gas-giant planet, where there was
fighting the Kandarians were never less than two to one. They
were surrounded by enemies, but when those enemies tried to
gather together for strength, the mass of murderously-fighting
ships of Kandar swung upon the incipient group and blasted
it.</p>
<p>Nearly half the Mekinese fleet was out of action before
Bors's ship fired a single missile. He'd sat in the skipper's
chair, and from time to time, the course of all the fleet was
changed, and he saw that his ship kept its place rigidly in
formation. But he had given not one order out of routine<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_58" id="Page_58"></SPAN></span>
before the enemy strength was half gone. Then the communicator
said coldly:</p>
<p>"<i>All ships attention! With old-style missiles we could do
everything we've accomplished so far. But the Mekinese are
refusing battle now. They'll begin to slip away in overdrive
if we keep chopping them down in groups. We have to give
them a chance or they'll run away. The new missile system
works perfectly. All ships break formation. Find your own
Mekinese. Blast them!</i>"</p>
<p>Bors said in a conversational voice, "There are three Mekin
ships yonder. They look like they're willing to start something.
We'll take them on."</p>
<p>He pointed carefully to a spot on the screen. His small
ship swung away from the rest of the fleet. It plunged toward
a battleship and two heavy cruisers who had joined forces
and appeared to attempt to rally the still-stronger-than-Kandar
invaders.</p>
<p>They became objects rather than specks upon the screens.
They were visible things on the direct-vision ports. Something
flashed, and rushed toward the little Kandarian space-can.</p>
<p>"Fire one, two, three," Bors ordered.</p>
<p>Things hurtled on before him. A screen showed that the
missiles first fired by the enemy went off-course, chasing the
later-fired missiles from the <i>Isis</i>. The Mekinese shots had automatically
become interceptors when Kandarian missiles attacked
their parent ships. But they couldn't anticipate a
curved course and their built-in computers weren't designed
to handle a rate of change of acceleration. The three Mekinese
ships ceased to exist.</p>
<p>"Let's head yonder," said Bors.</p>
<p>He pointed again, on the screen. Within the radar's range
there were hundreds of tiny blips. Some were marked with a
nimbus apiece. They were friends. Many, many more were
not.</p>
<p>The Mekinese fleet, too, could determine its own numbers
in comparison to the defending fleet. Pride and rage swept
through Mekinese commanders, as they saw the Kandarians<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_59" id="Page_59"></SPAN></span>
deliberately break up their formation to get their ships down
to the level of the enemy. It was unthinkable for a Mekinese
ship to refuse single combat! And when two and three could
combine against a single ship of Kandar....</p>
<p>The invaders had reason to fight, rather than slip into
overdrive. They still outnumbered the ships from Kandar. And
for a Mekinese commander to flee the battle area without having
engaged or fired on an antagonist would be treason. No
man who fled without fighting would stay alive. There had
to be a recording of battle offered or accepted, or the especially
merciless court-martial system of Mekin would take over.</p>
<p>There was one problem, however, for the Mekinese skippers.
When they engaged a ship from Kandar, they died. Still, no
ship left the scene of the battle to report defeat.</p>
<p>It was absolute and complete. It was not only a defeat.
It was annihilation. The Mekinese fleet was destroyed to the
last ship, even to the armed transports carrying bureaucrats
and police to set up a new government on Kandar. Those
ships which dared not run away without a token fight, discovered
the fleet of Kandar wasn't fighting a token battle. It
had started out to be just that, but somehow the plans had
changed when the fighting started. For the aggressors, it was
disaster.</p>
<p>When his fleet reassembled, King Humphrey issued a general
order to all ships. He read it in person, his voice strained
and dead and hopeless.</p>
<p>"<i>I have to express my admiration for the men of my fleet</i>,"
he said drearily. "<i>An unexampled victory over unexampled odds
is not only in keeping with the best traditions of the armed
forces of Kandar, but raises those traditions to the highest
possible level of valor and devotion. If it were not that in
winning this victory we have doomed our home world to destruction,
I would be as happy as I am, reluctantly,
proud....</i>"</p>
<hr /><p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_60" id="Page_60"></SPAN></span></p>
<p class="parts"><SPAN name="Part_Two" id="Part_Two"></SPAN>Part Two</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />