Read locked the door and drew his
pistol. Sergeant Rashid handed Premier Umluana
the warrant.
“We’re from the Un
Inspector Corps,” Sergeant Rashid said.
“I’m very sorry, but we have to arrest
you and bring you in for trial by the World Court.”
If Umluana noticed Read’s gun,
he didn’t show it. He read the warrant
carefully. When he finished, he said something
in Dutch.
“I don’t know your language,” Rashid
said.
“Then I’ll speak English.”
Umluana was a small man with wrinkled brow, glasses
and a mustache. His skin was a shade lighter than
Read’s. “The Inspector General doesn’t
have the power to arrest a head of state especially
the Premier of Belderkan. Now, if you’ll
excuse me, I must return to my party.”
In the other room people laughed and
talked. Glasses clinked in the late afternoon.
Read knew two armed men stood just outside the door.
“If you leave, Premier, I’ll have to shoot
you.”
“I don’t think so,”
Umluana said. “No, if you kill me, all Africa
will rise against the world. You don’t want
me dead. You want me in court.”
Read clicked off the safety.
“Corporal Read is very young,”
Rashid said, “but he’s a crack shot.
That’s why I brought him with me. I think
he likes to shoot, too.”
Umluana turned back to Rashid a second
too soon. He saw the sergeant’s upraised
hand before it collided with his neck.
“Help! Kidnap.”
Rashid judo chopped him and swung
the inert body over his shoulders. Read pulled
a flat grenade from his vest pocket. He dropped
it and yellow psycho gas hissed from the valve.
“Let’s be off,” Rashid said.
The door lock snapped as they went
out the window. Two men with rifles plunged into
the gas; sighing, they fell to the floor in a catatonic
trance.
A little car skimmed across the lawn.
Bearing the Scourge of Africa, Rashid struggled toward
it. Read walked backward, covering their retreat.
The car stopped, whirling blades holding
it a few inches off the lawn. They climbed in.
“How did it go?” The driver
and another inspector occupied the front seat.
“They’ll be after us in half a minute.”
The other inspector carried a light
machine gun and a box of grenades. “I better
cover,” he said.
“Thanks,” Rashid said.
The inspector slid out of the car
and ran to a clump of bushes. The driver pushed
in the accelerator. As they swerved toward the
south, Read saw a dozen armed men run out of the house.
A grenade arced from the bushes and the pursuers recoiled
from the cloud that rose before them.
“Is he all right?” the driver asked.
“I don’t think I hurt
him.” Rashid took a syrette from his vest
pocket. “Well, Read, it looks like we’re
in for a fight. In a few minutes Miaka Station
will know we’re coming. And God knows what
will happen at the Game Preserve.”
Read wanted to jump out of the car.
He could die any minute. But he had set his life
on a well-oiled track and he couldn’t get off
until they reached Geneva.
“They don’t know who’s
coming,” he said. “They don’t
make them tough enough to stop this boy.”
Staring straight ahead, he didn’t
see the sergeant smile.
Two types of recruits are accepted
by the Un Inspector Corps: those with a
fanatic loyalty to the ideals of peace and world order,
and those who are loyal to nothing but themselves.
Read was the second type.
A tall, lanky Negro he had spent his
school days in one of the drab suburbs that ring every
prosperous American city. It was the home of
factory workers, clerks, semiskilled technicians, all
who do the drudge work of civilization and know they
will never do more. The adults spent their days
with television, alcohol and drugs; the young spent
their days with gangs, sex, television and alcohol.
What else was there? Those who could have told
him neither studied nor taught at his schools.
What he saw on the concrete fields between the tall
apartment houses marked the limits of life’s
possibilities.
He had belonged to a gang called The
Golden Spacemen. “Nobody fools with me,”
he bragged. “When Harry Read’s out,
there’s a tiger running loose.” No
one knew how many times he nearly ran from other clubs,
how carefully he picked the safest spot on the battle
line.
“A man ought to be a man,”
he once told a girl. “He ought to do a
man’s work. Did you ever notice how our
fathers look, how they sleep so much? I don’t
want to be like that. I want to be something
proud.”
He joined the Un Inspector Corps
at eighteen, in 1978. The international cops
wore green berets, high buttonless boots, bush jackets.
They were very special men.
For the first time in his life, his
father said something about his ambitions.
“Don’t you like America,
Harry? Do you want to be without a country?
This is the best country in the world. All my
life I’ve made a good living. Haven’t
you had everything you ever wanted? I’ve
been a king compared to people overseas. Why,
you stay here and go to trade school and in two years
you’ll be living just like me.”
“I don’t want that,” Read said.
“What do you mean, you don’t want that?”
“You could join the American
Army,” his mother said. “That’s
as good as a trade school. If you have to be
a soldier.”
“I want to be a Un man.
I’ve already enlisted. I’m in!
What do you care what I do?”
The Un Inspector Corps had been
founded to enforce the Nuclear Disarmament Treaty
of 1966. Through the years it had acquired other
jobs. Un men no longer went unarmed.
Trained to use small arms and gas weapons, they guarded
certain borders, bodyguarded diplomats and Un
officials, even put down riots that threatened international
peace. As the Un evolved into a strong world
government, the Un Inspector Corps steadily acquired
new powers.
Read went through six months training on Madagascar.
Twice he nearly got expelled for picking
fights with smaller men. Rather than resign,
he accepted punishment which assigned him to weeks
of dull, filthy extra labor. He hated the restrictions
and the iron fence of regulations. He hated boredom,
loneliness and isolation.
And yet he responded with enthusiasm.
They had given him a job. A job many people considered
important.
He took his turn guarding the still
disputed borders of Korea. He served on the rescue
teams that patrol the busy Polar routes. He mounted
guard at the 1980 World’s Fair in Rangoon.
“I liked Rangoon,” he
even told a friend. “I even liked Korea.
But I think I liked the Pole job best. You sit
around playing cards and shooting the bull and then
there’s a plane crash or something and you go
out and win a medal. That’s great for me.
I’m lazy and I like excitement.”
One power implied in the Un Charter
no Secretary General or Inspector General had ever
tried to use. The power to arrest any head of
state whose country violated international law.
Could the World Court try and imprison a politician
who had conspired to attack another nation?
For years Africa had been called “The
South America of the Old World.” Revolution
followed revolution. Colonies became democracies.
Democracies became dictatorships or dissolved in civil
war. Men planted bases on the moon and in four
years, 1978-82, ringed the world with matter transmitters;
but the black population of Africa still struggled
toward political equality.
Umluana took control of Belderkan
in 1979. The tiny, former Dutch colony, had been
a tottering democracy for ten years. The very
day he took control the new dictator and his African
party began to build up the Belderkan Army. For
years he had preached a new Africa, united, free of
white masters, the home of a vigorous and perfect
Negro society. His critics called him a hypocritical
racist, an opportunist using the desires of the African
people to build himself an empire.
He began a propaganda war against
neighboring South Africa, promising the liberation
of that strife-torn land. Most Negro leaders,
having just won representation in the South African
Parliament, told him to liberate his own country.
They believed they could use their first small voice
in the government to win true freedom for their people.
But the radio assault and the arms
buildup continued. Early in 1982, South Africa
claimed the Belderkan Army exceeded the size agreed
to in the Disarmament Treaty. The European countries
and some African nations joined in the accusation.
China called the uproar a vicious slur on a new African
nation. The United States and Russia, trying
not to get entangled, asked for more investigation
by the Un.
But the evidence was clear. Umluana
was defying world law. If he got away with it,
some larger and more dangerous nation might follow
his precedent. And the arms race would begin again.
The Inspector General decided.
They would enter Belderkan, arrest Umluana and try
him by due process before the World Court. If
the plan succeeded, mankind would be a long step farther
from nuclear war.
Read didn’t know much about
the complicated political reasons for the arrest.
He liked the Corp and he liked being in the Corp.
He went where they sent him and did what they told
him to do.
The car skimmed above the tree-tops.
The driver and his two passengers scanned the sky.
A plane would have been a faster way
to get out of the country. But then they would
have spent hours flying over Africa, with Belderkan
fighters in hot pursuit, other nations joining the
chase and the world uproar gaining volume. By
transmitter, if all went well, they could have Umluana
in Geneva in an hour.
They were racing toward Miaka, a branch
transmitter station. From Miaka they would transmit
to the Belderkan Preserve, a famous tourist attraction
whose station could transmit to any point on the globe.
Even now a dozen inspectors were taking over the Game
Preserve station and manning its controls.
They had made no plans to take over
Miaka. They planned to get there before it could
be defended.
“There’s no military base
near Miaka,” Rashid said. “We might
get there before the Belderkans.”
“Here comes our escort,” Read said.
A big car rose from the jungle.
This one had a recoilless rifle mounted on the roof.
The driver and the gunner waved and fell in behind
them.
“One thing,” Read said,
“I don’t think they’ll shoot at us
while he’s in the car.”
“Don’t be certain, corporal.
All these strong-arm movements are alike. I’ll
bet Umluana’s lieutenants are hoping he’ll
become a dead legend. Then they can become live
conquerors.”
Sergeant Rashid came from Cairo.
He had degrees in science and history from Cambridge
but only the Corp gave him work that satisfied his
conscience. He hated war. It was that simple.
Read looked back. He saw three
spots of sunlight about two hundred feet up and a
good mile behind.
“Here they come, Sarge.”
Rashid turned his head. He waved
frantically. The two men in the other car waved
back.
“Shall I duck under the trees?” the driver
asked.
“Not yet. Not until we have to.”
Read fingered the machine gun he had
picked up when he got in the car. He had never
been shot at. Twice he had faced an unarmed mob,
but a few shots had sent them running.
Birds flew screaming from their nests.
Monkeys screeched and threw things at the noisy, speeding
cars. A little cloud of birds surrounded each
vehicle.
The escort car made a sharp turn and
charged their pursuers. The big rifle fired twice.
Read saw the Belderkan cars scatter. Suddenly
machine-gun bullets cracked and whined beside him.
“Evade,” Rashid said. “Don’t
go down.”
Without losing any forward speed,
the driver took them straight up. Read’s
stomach bounced.
A shell exploded above them.
The car rocked. He raised his eyes and saw a
long crack in the roof.
“Hit the floor,” Rashid said.
They knelt on the cramped floor.
Rashid put on his gas mask and Read copied him.
Umluana breathed like a furnace, still unconscious
from the injection Rashid had given him.
I can’t do anything,
Read thought. They’re too far away to shoot
back. All we can do is run.
The sky was clear and blue. The
jungle was a noisy bazaar of color. In the distance
guns crashed. He listened to shells whistle by
and the whipcrack of machine-gun bullets. The
car roller-coastered up and down. Every time
a shell passed, he crawled in waves down his own back.
Another explosion, this time very loud.
Rashid raised his eyes above the seat
and looked out the rear window. “Two left.
Keep down, Read.”
“Can’t we go down?” Read said.
“They’ll get to Miaka before us.”
He shut his eyes when he heard another loud explosion.
Sergeant Rashid looked out the window
again. He swore bitterly in English and Egyptian.
Read raised his head. The two cars behind them
weren’t fighting each other. A long way
back the tree-tops burned.
“How much farther?” Rashid said.
The masks muffled their voices.
“There it is now. Shall I take us right
in?”
“I think you’d better.”
The station was a glass diamond in
a small clearing. The driver slowed down, then
crashed through the glass walls and hovered by the
transmitter booth.
Rashid opened the door and threw out
two grenades. Read jumped out and the two of
them struggled toward the booth with Umluana.
The driver, pistol in hand, ran for the control panel.
There were three technicians in the
station and no passengers. All three panicked
when the psycho gas enveloped them. They ran
howling for the jungle.
Through the window of his mask, Read
saw their pursuers land in the clearing. Machine-gun
bullets raked the building. They got Umluana
in the booth and hit the floor. Read took aim
and opened fire on the largest car.
“Now, I can shoot back,”
he said. “Now we’ll see what they
do.”
“Are you ready, Rashid?” yelled the driver.
“Man, get us out of here!”
The booth door shut. When it
opened, they were at the Game Preserve.
The station jutted from the side of
a hill. A glass-walled waiting room surrounded
the bank of transmitter booths. Read looked out
the door and saw his first battlefield.
Directly in front of him, his head
shattered by a bullet, a dead inspector lay behind
an overturned couch.
Read had seen dozens of training films
taken during actual battles or after atomic attacks.
He had laughed when other recruits complained.
“That’s the way this world is. You
people with the weak stomachs better get used to it.”
Now he slid against the rear wall
of the transmitter booth.
A wounded inspector crawled across
the floor to the booth. Read couldn’t see
his wound, only the pain scratched on his face and
the blood he deposited on the floor.
“Did you get Umluana?” he asked Sergeant
Rashid.
“He’s in the booth.
What’s going on?” Rashid’s Middle
East Oxford seemed more clipped than ever.
“They hit us with two companies
of troops a few minutes ago. I think half our
men are wounded.”
“Can we get out of here?”
“They machine-gunned the controls.”
Rashid swore. “You heard
him, Read! Get out there and help those men.”
He heard the screams of the wounded,
the crack of rifles and machine guns, all the terrifying
noise of war. But since his eighteenth year he
had done everything his superiors told him to do.
He started crawling toward an easy-chair
that looked like good cover. A bullet cracked
above his head, so close he felt the shock wave.
He got up, ran panicky, crouched, and dove behind the
chair.
An inspector cracked the valve on
a smoke grenade. A white fog spread through the
building. They could see anyone who tried to
rush them but the besiegers couldn’t pick out
targets.
Above the noise, he heard Rashid.
“I’m calling South Africa
Station for a copter. It’s the only way
out of here. Until it comes, we’ve got to
hold them back.”
Read thought of the green beret he
had stuffed in his pocket that morning. He stuck
it on his head and cocked it. He didn’t
need plain clothes anymore and he wanted to wear at
least a part of his uniform.
Bullets had completely shattered the
wall in front of him. He stared through the murk,
across the broken glass. He was Corporal Harry
Read, Un Inspector Corps a very special
man. If he didn’t do a good job here, he
wasn’t the man he claimed to be. This might
be the only real test he would ever face.
He heard a shout in rapid French.
He turned to his right. Men in red loincloths
ran zigzagging toward the station. They carried
light automatic rifles. Half of them wore gas
masks.
“Shoot the masks,” he yelled. “Aim
for the masks.”
The machine gun kicked and chattered
on his shoulder. He picked a target and squeezed
off a burst. Tensely, he hunted for another mask.
Three grenades arced through the air and yellow gas
spread across the battlefield. The attackers
ran through it. A few yards beyond the gas, some
of them turned and ran for their own lines. In
a moment only half a dozen masked men still advanced.
The inspectors fired a long, noisy volley. When
they stopped only four attackers remained on their
feet. And they were running for cover.
The attackers had come straight up
a road that led from the Game Preserve to the station.
They had not expected any resistance. The Un
men had already taken over the station, chased out
the passengers and technicians and taken up defense
positions; they had met the Belderkans with a dozen
grenades and sent them scurrying for cover. The
fight so far had been vicious but disorganized.
But the Belderkans had a few hundred men and knew
they had wrecked the transmitter controls.
The first direct attack had been repulsed.
They could attack many more times and continue to
spray the building with bullets. They could also
try to go around the hill and attack the station from
above; if they did, the inspectors had a good view
of the hill and should see them going up.
The inspectors had taken up good defensive
positions. In spite of their losses, they still
had enough firepower to cover the area surrounding
the station.
Read surveyed his sector of fire.
About two hundred yards to his left, he saw the top
of a small ditch. Using the ditch for cover,
the Belderkans could sneak to the top of the hill.
Gas grenades are only three inches
long. They hold cubic yards of gas under high
pressure. Read unclipped a telescoping rod from
his vest pocket. He opened it and a pair of sights
flipped up. A thin track ran down one side.
He had about a dozen grenades left,
three self-propelling. He slid an Sp grenade
into the rod’s track and estimated windage and
range. Sighting carefully, not breathing, muscles
relaxed, the rod rock steady, he fired and lobbed
the little grenade into the ditch. He dropped
another grenade beside it.
The heavy gas would lie there for hours.
Sergeant Rashid ran crouched from
man to man. He did what he could to shield the
wounded.
“Well, corporal, how are you?”
“Not too bad, sergeant.
See that ditch out there? I put a little gas
in it.”
“Good work. How’s your ammunition?”
“A dozen grenades. Half a barrel of shells.”
“The copter will be here in
half an hour. We’ll put Umluana on, then
try to save ourselves. Once he’s gone, I
think we ought to surrender.”
“How do you think they’ll treat us?”
“That we’ll have to see.”
An occasional bullet cracked and whined
through the misty room. Near him a man gasped
frantically for air. On the sunny field a wounded
man screamed for help.
“There’s a garage downstairs,”
Rashid said. “In case the copter doesn’t
get here on time, I’ve got a man filling wine
bottles with gasoline.”
“We’ll stop them, Sarge. Don’t
worry.”
Rashid ran off. Read stared across
the green land and listened to the pound of his heart.
What were the Belderkans planning? A mass frontal
attack? To sneak in over the top of the hill?
He didn’t think, anymore than
a rabbit thinks when it lies hiding from the fox or
a panther thinks when it crouches on a branch above
the trail. His skin tightened and relaxed on his
body.
“Listen,” said a German.
Far down the hill he heard the deep-throated
rumble of a big motor.
“Armor,” the German said.
The earth shook. The tank rounded
the bend. Read watched the squat, angular monster
until its stubby gun pointed at the station.
It stopped less than two hundred yards away.
A loud-speaker blared.
Attention Un soldiers.
Attention Un soldiers.
You May think us savages
but we have modern weapons.
We have atomic warheads,
all gases, rockets
and flame THROWERS. If
you do not surrender
our Premier, we will destroy
you.
“They know we don’t have
any big weapons,” Read said. “They
know we have only gas grenades and small arms.”
He looked nervously from side to side.
They couldn’t bring the copter in with that
thing squatting out there.
A few feet away, sprawled behind a
barricade of tables, lay a man in advanced shock.
His deadly white skin shone like ivory. They
wouldn’t even look like that. One nuclear
shell from that gun and they’d be vaporized.
Or perhaps the tank had sonic projectors; then the
skin would peel off their bones. Or they might
be burned, or cut up by shrapnel, or gassed with some
new mist their masks couldn’t filter.
Read shut his eyes. All around
him he heard heavy breathing, mumbled comments, curses.
Clothes rustled as men moved restlessly.
But already the voice of Sergeant
Rashid resounded in the murky room.
“We’ve got to knock that
thing out before the copter comes. Otherwise,
he can’t land. I have six Molotov cocktails
here. Who wants to go hunting with me?”
For two years Read had served under
Sergeant Rashid. To him, the sergeant was everything
a Un inspector should be. Rashid’s
devotion to peace had no limits.
Read’s psych tests said pride
alone drove him on. That was good enough for
the Un; they only rejected men whose loyalties
might conflict with their duties. But an assault
on the tank required something more than a hunger
for self-respect.
Read had seen the inspector who covered
their getaway. He had watched their escort charge
three-to-one odds. He had seen another inspector
stay behind at Miaka Station. And here, in this
building, lay battered men and dead men.
All Un inspectors. All part of his life.
And he was part of their life.
Their blood, their sacrifice, and pain, had become
a part of him.
“I’ll take a cocktail, Sarge.”
“Is that Read?”
“Who else did you expect?”
“Nobody. Anybody else?”
“I’ll go,” the Frenchman
said. “Three should be enough. Give
us a good smoke screen.”
Rashid snapped orders. He put
the German inspector in charge of Umluana. Read,
the Frenchman and himself, he stationed at thirty-foot
intervals along the floor.
“Remember,” Rashid said.
“We have to knock out that gun.”
Read had given away his machine gun.
He held a gas-filled bottle in each hand. His
automatic nestled in its shoulder holster.
Rashid whistled.
Dozens of smoke grenades tumbled through
the air. Thick mist engulfed the tank. Read
stood up and ran forward. He crouched but didn’t
zigzag. Speed counted most here.
Gunfire shook the hill. The Belderkans
couldn’t see them but they knew what was going
on and they fired systematically into the smoke.
Bullets ploughed the ground beside
him. He raised his head and found the dim silhouette
of the tank. He tried not to think about bullets
ploughing through his flesh.
A bullet slammed into his hip.
He fell on his back, screaming. “Sarge.
Sarge.”
“I’m hit, too,”
Rashid said. “Don’t stop if you can
move.”
Listen to him. What’s he got, a sprained
ankle?
But he didn’t feel any pain.
He closed his eyes and threw himself onto his stomach.
And nearly fainted from pain. He screamed and
quivered. The pain stopped. He stretched
out his hands, gripping the wine bottles, and inched
forward. Pain stabbed him from stomach to knee.
“I can’t move, Sarge.”
“Read, you’ve got to. I think you’re
the only ”
“What?”
Guns clattered. Bullets cracked.
“Sergeant Rashid! Answer me.”
He heard nothing but the lonely passage
of the bullets in the mist.
“I’m a Un man,”
he mumbled. “You people up there know what
a Un man is? You know what happens when
you meet one?”
When he reached the tank, he had another
bullet in his right arm. But they didn’t
know he was coming and when you get within ten feet
of a tank, the men inside can’t see you.
He just had to stand up and drop the
bottle down the gun barrel. That was all with
a broken hip and a wounded right arm.
He knew they would see him when he
stood up but he didn’t think about that.
He didn’t think about Sergeant Rashid, about
the complicated politics of Africa, about crowded
market streets. He had to kill the tank.
That was all he thought about. He had decided
something in the world was more important than himself,
but he didn’t know it or realize the psychologists
would be surprised to see him do this. He had
made many decisions in the last few minutes.
He had ceased to think about them or anything else.
With his cigarette lighter, he lit
the rag stuffed in the end of the bottle.
Biting his tongue, he pulled himself
up the front of the tank. His long arm stretched
for the muzzle of the gun. He tossed the bottle
down the dark throat.
As he fell, the machine-gun bullets
hit him in the chest, then in the neck. He didn’t
feel them. He had fainted the moment he felt
the bottle leave his hand.
The copter landed ten minutes later.
Umluana left in a shower of bullets. A Russian
private, the ranking man alive in the station, surrendered
the survivors to the Belderkans.
His mother hung the Global Medal above
the television set.
“He must have been brave,”
she said. “We had a fine son.”
“He was our only son,”
her husband said. “What did he volunteer
for? Couldn’t somebody else have done it?”
His wife started to cry. Awkwardly,
he embraced her. He wondered what his son had
wanted that he couldn’t get at home.