<h2>CHAPTER XI</h2>
<h3>The New Boss</h3>
<p class="cap"><span class="dcap">We</span> had ultrophoned our arrival and the Big
Boss himself, surrounded by the Council, was
on hand to welcome us and learn our news.
In turn we were informed that during the night a band
of raiding Bad Bloods, disguised under the insignia of
the Altoonas, a gang some distance to the west of us,
had destroyed several of our camps before our people
had rallied and driven them off. Their purpose, evidently,
had been to embroil us with the Altoonas, but
fortunately, one of our exchanges recognized the Bad
Blood leader, who had been slain.</p>
<p>The Big Boss had mobilized the full raiding force
of the Gang, and was on the point of heading an expedition
for the extermination of the Bad Bloods.</p>
<p>I looked around the grim circle of the sub-bosses,
and realized the fate of America, at this moment, lay
in their hands. Their temper demanded the immediate
expenditure of our full effort in revenging ourselves
for this raid. But the strategic exigencies, to my mind,
quite clearly demanded the instant and absolute extermination
of the Sinsings. It might be only a matter
of hours, for all we knew, before these degraded people
would barter clues to the American ultronic secrets
to the Hans.</p>
<p>"How large a force have we?" I asked Hart.</p>
<p>"Every man and maid who can be spared," he replied.
"That gives us seven hundred married and
unmarried men, and three hundred girls, more than
the entire Bad Blood Gang. Every one is equipped with
belts, ultrophones, rocket guns and swords, and all
fighting mad."</p>
<p>I meditated how I might put the matter to these
determined men, and was vaguely conscious that they
were awaiting my words.</p>
<p>Finally I began to speak. I do not remember to this
day just what I said. I talked calmly, with due regard
for their passion, but with deep conviction. I went
over the information we had collected, point by point,
building my case logically, and painting a lurid picture
of the danger impending in that half-alliance between
the Sinsings and the Hans of Nu-yok. I became impassioned,
culminating, I believe, with a vow to proceed
single-handed against the hereditary enemies of our
race, "if the Wyomings were blindly set on placing a
gang feud ahead of honor and duty and the hopes of
all America."</p>
<p>As I concluded, a great calm came over me, as of
one detached. I had felt much the same way during
several crises in the First World War. I gazed from
face to face, striving to read their expressions, and in
a mood to make good my threat without any further
heroics, if the decision was against me.</p>
<p>But it was Hart who sensed the temper of the Council
more quickly than I did, and looked beyond it into
the future.</p>
<p>He arose from the tree trunk on which he had been
sitting.</p>
<p>"That settles it," he said, looking around the ring.
"I have felt this thing coming on for some time now.
I'm sure the Council agrees with me that there is among
us a man more capable than I, to boss the Wyoming
Gang, despite his handicap of having had all too short
a time in which to familiarize himself with our modern
ways and facilities. Whatever I can do to support
his effective leadership, at any cost, I pledge myself
to do."</p>
<p>As he concluded, he advanced to where I stood, and
taking from his head the green-crested helmet that
constituted his badge of office, to my surprise he placed
it in my mechanically extended hand.</p>
<p>The roar of approval that went up from the Council
members left me dazed. Somebody ultrophoned the
news to the rest of the Gang, and even though the
earflaps of my helmet were turned up, I could hear the
cheers with which my invisible followers greeted me,
from near and distant hillsides, camps and plants.</p>
<p>My first move was to make sure that the Phone
Boss, in communicating this news to the members of the
Gang, had not re-broadcast my talk nor mentioned my
plan of shifting the attack from the Bad Bloods to
the Sinsings. I was relieved by his assurance that he
had not, for it would have wrecked the whole plan.
Everything depended upon our ability to surprise the
Sinsings.</p>
<p>So I pledged the Council and my companions to
secrecy, and allowed it to be believed that we were
about to take to the air and the trees against the Bad
Bloods.</p>
<p>That outfit must have been badly scared, the way
they were "burning" the ether with ultrophone alibis
and propaganda for the benefit of the more distant
gangs. It was their old game, and the only method
by which they had avoided extermination long ago
from their immediate neighbors—these appeals to the
spirit of American brotherhood, addressed to gangs
too far away to have had the sort of experience with
them that had fallen to our lot.</p>
<p>I chuckled. Here was another good reason for the
shift in my plans. Were we actually to undertake the
exterminations of the Bad Bloods at once, it would
have been a hard job to convince some of the gangs
that we had not been precipitate and unjustified. Jealousies
and prejudices existed. There were gangs which
would give the benefit of the doubt to the Bad Bloods,
rather than to ourselves, and the issue was now hopelessly
beclouded with the clever lies that were being
broadcast in an unceasing stream.</p>
<p>But the extermination of the Sinsings would be
another thing. In the first place, there would be no
warning of our action until it was all over, I hoped.
In the second place, we would have indisputable proof,
in the form of their rep-ray ships and other paraphernalia,
of their traffic with the Hans; and the state of
American prejudice, at the time of which I write held
trafficking with the Hans a far more heinous thing than
even a vicious gang feud.</p>
<p>I called an executive session of the Council at once.
I wanted to inventory our military resources.</p>
<p>I created a new office on the spot, that of "Control
Boss," and appointed Ned Garlin to the post, turning
over his former responsibility as Plants Boss to his
assistant. I needed someone, I felt, to tie in the records
of the various functional activities of the campaign,
and take over from me the task of keeping the
records of them up to the minute.</p>
<p>I received reports from the bosses of the ultrophone
unit, and those of food, transportation, fighting gear,
chemistry, electronic activity and electrophone intelligence,
ultroscopes, air patrol and contact guard.</p>
<p>My ideas for the campaign, of course, were somewhat
tinged with my 20th Century experience, and I
found myself faced with the task of working out a
staff organization that was a composite of the best and
most easily applied principles of business and military
efficiency, as I knew them from the viewpoint of immediate
practicality.</p>
<p>What I wanted was an organization that would be
specialized, functionally, not as that indicated above,
but from the angles of: intelligence as to the Sinsings'
activities; intelligence as to Han activities; perfection
of communication with my own units; co-operation of
field command; and perfect mobilization of emergency
supplies and resources.</p>
<p>It took several hours of hard work with the Council
to map out the plan. First we assigned functional
experts and equipment to each "Division" in accordance
with its needs. Then these in turn were reassigned
by the new Division Bosses to the Field Commands as
needed, or as Independent or Headquarters Units. The
two intelligence divisions were named the White and
the Yellow, indicating that one specialized on the
American enemy and the other on the Mongolians.</p>
<p>The division in charge of our own communications,
the assignment of ultrophone frequencies and strengths,
and the maintenance of operators and equipment, I
called "Communications."</p>
<p>I named Bill Hearn to the post of Field Boss, in
charge of the main or undetached fighting units, and
to the Resources Division, I assigned all responsibility
for what few aircraft we had; and all transportation
and supply problems, I assigned to "Resources."
The functional bosses stayed with this division.</p>
<p>We finally completed our organization with the assignment
of liaison representatives among the various
divisions as needed.</p>
<p>Thus I had a "Headquarters Staff" composed of the
Division Bosses who reported directly to Ned Garlin
as Control Boss, or to Wilma as my personal assistant.
And each of the Division Bosses had a small staff of
his own.</p>
<p>In the final summing up of our personnel and resources,
I found we had roughly a thousand "troops,"
of whom some three hundred and fifty were, in what
I called the Service Divisions, the rest being in Bill
Hearn's Field Division. This latter number, however,
was cut down somewhat by the assignment of numerous
small units to detached service. Altogether, the
actual available fighting force, I figured, would number
about five hundred, by the time we actually went into
action.</p>
<p>We had only six small swoopers, but I had an
ingenious plan in my mind, as the result of our little
raid on Nu-yok, that would make this sufficient, since
the reserves of inertron blocks were larger than I expected
to find them. The Resources Division, by
packing its supply cases a bit tight, or by slipping in
extra blocks of inertron, was able to reduce each to a
weight of a few ounces. These easily could be floated
and towed by the swoopers in any quantity. Hitched
to ultron lines, it would be a virtual impossibility for
them to break loose.</p>
<p>The entire personnel, of course, was supplied with
jumpers, and if each man and girl was careful to adjust
balances properly, the entire number could also
be towed along through the air, grasping wires of
ultron, swinging below the swoopers, or stringing out
behind them.</p>
<p>There would be nothing tiring about this, because
the strain would be no greater than that of carrying a
one or two pound weight in the hand, except for air
friction at high speeds. But to make doubly sure that
we should lose none of our personnel, I gave strict
orders that the belts and tow lines should be equipped
with rings and hooks.</p>
<p>So great was the efficiency of the fundamental organization
and discipline of the Gang, that we got
under way at nightfall.</p>
<p>One by one the swoopers eased into the air, each
followed by its long train or "kite-tail" of humanity
and supply cases hanging lightly from its tow line.
For convenience, the tow lines were made of an alloy
of ultron which, unlike the metal itself, is visible.</p>
<p>At first these "tails" hung downward, but as the
ships swung into formation and headed eastward toward
the Bad Blood territory, gathering speed, they
began to string out behind. And swinging low from
each ship on heavily weighted lines, ultroscope, ultrophone,
and straight-vision observers keenly scanned the
countryside, while intelligence men in the swoopers
above bent over their instrument boards and viewplates.</p>
<p>Leaving Control Boss Ned Garlin temporarily in
charge of affairs, Wilma and I dropped a weighted line
from our ship, and slid down about half way to the
under lookouts, that is to say, about a thousand feet.
The sensation of floating swiftly through the air like
this, in the absolute security of one's confidence in the
inertron belt, was one of never-ending delight to me.</p>
<p>We reascended into the swooper as the expedition
approached the territory of the Bad Bloods, and directed
the preparations for the bombardment. It was
part of my plan to appear to carry out the attack as
originally planned.</p>
<p>About fifteen miles from their camps our ships came
to a halt and maintained their positions for a while
with the idling blasts of their rocket motors, to give
the ultroscope operators a chance to make a thorough
examination of the territory below us, for it was very
important that this next step in our program should
be carried out with all secrecy.</p>
<p>At length they reported the ground below us entirely
clear of any appearance of human occupation, and a
gun unit of long-range specialists was lowered with
a dozen rocket guns, equipped with special automatic
devices that the Resources Division had developed at
my request, a few hours before our departure. These
were aiming and timing devices. After calculating the
range, elevation and rocket charges carefully, the guns
were left, concealed in a ravine, and the men were
hauled up into the ship again. At the predetermined
hour, those unmanned rocket guns would begin automatically
to bombard the Bad Bloods' hillsides, shifting
their aim and elevation slightly with each shot, as did
many of our artillery pieces in the First World War.</p>
<p>In the meantime, we turned south about twenty miles,
and grounded, waiting for the bombardment to begin
before we attempted to sneak across the Han ship lane.
I was relying for security on the distraction that the
bombardment might furnish the Han observers.</p>
<p>It was tense work waiting, but the affair went
through as planned, our squadron drifting across the
route high enough to enable the ships' tails of troops
and supply cases to clear the ground.</p>
<p>In crossing the second ship route, out along the
Beaches of Jersey, we were not so successful in escaping
observation. A Han ship came speeding along
at a very low elevation. We caught it on our electronic
location and direction finders, and also located it with
our ultroscopes, but it came so fast and so low that I
thought it best to remain where we had grounded the
second time, and lie quiet, rather than get under way
and cross in front of it.</p>
<p>The point was this. While the Hans had no such
devices as our ultroscopes, with which we could see
in the dark (within certain limitations of course), and
their electronic instruments would be virtually useless
in uncovering our presence, since all but natural electronic
activities were carefully eliminated from our
apparatus, except electrophone receivers (which are
not easily spotted), the Hans did have some very
highly sensitive sound devices which operated with
great efficiency in calm weather, so far as sounds
emanating from the air were concerned. But the
"ground roar" greatly confused their use of these
instruments in the location of specific sounds floating
up from the surface of the earth.</p>
<p>This ship must have caught some slight noise of ours,
however, in its sensitive instruments, for we heard
its electronic devices go into play, and picked up the
routine report of the noise to its Base Ship Commander.
But from the nature of the conversation, I judged they
had not identified it, and were, in fact, more curious
about the detonations they were picking up now from
the Bad Blood lands some sixty miles or so to the
west.</p>
<p>Immediately after this ship had shot by, we took the
air again, and following much the same route that I
had taken the previous night, climbed in a long semi-circle
out over the ocean, swung toward the north and
finally the west. We set our course, however, for the
Sinsings' land north of Nu-yok, instead of for the city
itself.</p>
<hr />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />