The Mekinese did not display a sporting
spirit. There were four heavy cruisers and eleven
lighter ships of the Horus’s size and
armament. According to current theories of space-battle
tactics, two of the light cruisers should have disposed
of the Horus with ease and dispatch. It
might have seemed sportsmanlike and certainly sufficient
to give the Horus only two antagonists at a
time, which would have been calculated to provide
odds of six hundred to one against it. Two light
cruisers would have fired eighteen missiles apiece
per salvo, which would have demanded thirty-six missiles
from the Horus to meet and destroy them.
She couldn’t put thirty-six missiles into space
at one firing. She would have disappeared in
atomic flame at the first exchange of fire. But
the Mekinese were not so generous. They came
up in full force loaded for bear. They obviously
intended not a fight but an execution. Mekinese
tactics depended heavily on fire-power of such superiority
that any enemy was simply overwhelmed.
Their maneuvering proved that they
intended to follow standard operation procedure.
Light ships reached space and delayed until all were
aloft. They formed themselves into a precise
half-globe and plunged at top solar-system drive toward
the Horus. This was strictly according
to the book. If the Horus chose, of course,
she could refuse battle by fleeing into overdrive which
would be expected to be the regulation many-times-faster-than-light
variety. If she dared fight, the fifteen ships
drove on. Mekinese ships never struck lightly.
The fifteen of them could launch four hundred missiles
per salvo. No single ship could counter such
an attack. But even Mekinese would not use such
stupendous numbers of missiles against one ship unless
that ship was famous; unless rumors and reports said
that it was invincible and dangerous and the hope
of oppressed peoples under Mekin.
The Horus received very special attention.
Then she vanished. At one instant
she was in full career toward the fleet of enemies.
The next instant she had wrapped an overdrive field
about herself and then no radar could detect her, nor
could any missile penetrate her protection.
When she vanished, the speck which
indicated her position disappeared from the Mekinese
radar-screens. The hundredth of a second in overdrive
as known to the Mekinese should have put her hundreds
of millions of miles away. But something new
had been added to the Horus. The hundredth
of a second did not mean millions of miles of journeying.
It meant something under three thousand, and a much
more precise interval of time could be measured and
used by her micro-timer.
Therefore, at one instant the Horus
was some two thousand miles from the lip of the half-globe
of enemy ships. Then she was not anywhere.
Then, before the mind could grasp the fact of her vanishing,
she was in the very center, the exact focus of the
formation of Mekinese battle-craft. She was at
the spot a Mekinese commander would most devoutly
wish, because it was equidistant from all his ships,
and all their missiles should arrive at the same instant
when their overwhelming number could not conceivably
be parried.
But it was more than an ideal position
from a Mekinese standpoint. It was also a point
which was ideal for the Horus, because all her
missiles would arrive at the encircling ships at the
same instant. Each Mekinese would separately
learn without information from any other that
those projectiles could not be intercepted. No
Mekinese would have the advantage of watching the
tactic practiced on a companion-ship, to guide his
own actions.
The Horus appeared at that
utterly vulnerable and wholly advantageous position.
She showed on the Mekinese screens. They launched
missiles. The Horus launched missiles.
The Horus disappeared.
She reappeared, beyond and behind
the half-globe formation. Again she showed on
the Mekinese screens. The Mekinese could not believe
their instruments. A ship which fled in overdrive
could not reappear like this! Having vanished
and reappeared once, it could not duplicate the trick.
Having duplicated it....
There was more, and worse. The
Horus missiles were not being intercepted.
Mekinese missiles were swerving crazily to try to
anticipate and destroy the curving, impossibly-moving
objects that went out from where the Horus
had ceased to be. They failed. Clouds of
new trajectiles appeared....
A flare like a temporary sun.
Another. Another. Others....
Bors turned from the viewport and
glanced at the radar-screens. There were thirteen
vaporous glowings where ships had been. There
were two distinct blips remaining. It could be
guessed that some targets had been fired on by more
than one launching-tube, leaving two ships unattacked
by the Horus’s missiles.
Both of those ships one
a heavy cruiser now desperately flung the
contents of their magazines at the Horus.
Bors heard his voice snapping coordinates.
“Launch all missiles at those
two targets,” he commanded. “Fire!
Overdrive coming! Five, four, three, two....”
The intolerable discomfort of entry
and immediate breakout from overdrive was ever present.
But the Horus had shifted position five thousand
miles. Bors saw one of his just-launched missiles now
a continent away as it went off. It
accounted for one of the two Mekinese survivors.
The radar-blip which told of that ship’s existence
changed to the vaguely vaporous glow of incandescent
gas. The other blip went out. No flare of
a bomb. Nothing. It went out.
So the last Mekinese ship was gone
in overdrive. It was safe! It could not
possibly be overtaken or attacked. It had seen
the Horus’s missiles following an unpredictable
course, which was duly recorded. It had seen
the Horus go into overdrive and move only hundreds
of miles instead of hundreds of millions. It
had seen the Horus vanish from one place and
appear at another in the same combat area, launch missiles
and vanish again before it could even be ranged.
The last Mekinese ship certainly carried
with it the Horus’s tactics and actions
recorded on tape. The technicians of Mekin would
set to work instantly to duplicate them. Once
they were considered possible once they
were recognized they could be achieved.
The combat efficiency of the Mekinese fleet would
be increased as greatly as that of the fleet of Kandar
had been, and the overwhelming superiority
of numbers would again become decisive. The hopeless
situation of the Kandarian fleet would become a hundred
times worse. And Mekinese counter-intelligence
would make a search for the origin of such improvements.
Since Kandar was to have been attacked and occupied,
it would be a place of special search.
The only unsuspected source, of course,
would be Talents, Incorporated.
For a full minute after the enemy
ship’s disappearance, Bors sat rigid, his hands
clenched, facing the disaster the escape of the Mekinese
constituted. Sweat appeared on his forehead.
Then he pressed the engine-room button
and said evenly, “Prepare for standard overdrive,
top speed possible.”
He swung the ship. He lined it
up with Mekin itself, which, of course, was the one
place where it would be most fatal for a ship from
Kandar to be discovered.
Very shortly thereafter, the Horus was in overdrive.
Traveling in such unthinkable haste,
it is paradoxic that there is much time to spare.
Bors had to occupy it. He prepared a careful and
detailed account of exactly how the low-speed overdrive
had worked, and its effectiveness as a combat tactic.
He’d distributed instructions and Logan’s
tables on the subject before leaving Glamis. He
would be, of course, most bitterly blamed for having
taken on a whole squadron of enemy ships, with the
result that one had gotten away. It could be the
most decisive of catastrophes. But he made his
report with precision.
For seven successive ship-days there
was no event whatever on the Horus, as she
drove toward Mekin. Undoubtedly the one survivor
of the enemy squadron was fleeing for Mekin, too,
to report to the highest possible authority what it
had seen and experienced. It would not be much,
if at all, slower than the Horus. It might
be faster, and might reach the solar system of Mekin
before the Horus broke out there. It had
every advantage but one. It had solar-system drive,
for use within a planetary group, and it had overdrive
for use between the stars. But the Horus
had an intermediate drive as well, which was faster
than the enemy’s slow speed and slower than
the fast.
Bors depended on it for the continued
existence of Kandar and the fleet. As the desperately
tedious ship-days went by he began to have ideas at
which he consciously scoffed concerning
Tralee. But if anything as absurd as those ideas
came to be, there were a score of other planets which
would have to be considered too.
He sketched out in his own mind a
course of action that would be possible to follow
after breakout off Mekin. It did not follow the
rules for sound planning, which always assume that
if things can go wrong they will. Bors could
only plan for what might be done if things went right.
But he could not hope. Not really. Still,
he considered every possibility, however far-fetched.
He came to first-breakout, a light-week
short of Mekin. The yellow sun flamed dead ahead.
He determined his distance from it with very great
care. The Horus went back into overdrive
and out again, and it was well within the system,
though carefully not on the plane of its ecliptic.
Then the Horus waited.
She was twenty millions of miles from the planet Mekin.
Bors ordered that for intervals of up to five minutes
no electronic apparatus on the ship should be in operation.
In those periods of electronic silence, his radars
swept all of space except Mekin. He had no desire
to have Mekin pick up radar-pulses and wonder what
they came from. The rest of the system, though,
he mapped. He found two meteor-streams, and a
clump of three planetoids in a nearly circular orbit,
and he spotted a ship just lifted from Mekin by its
landing-grid. It went out to five planetary diameters
and flicked out of existence so far as radar was concerned.
It had gone into overdrive and away.
Another ship came around Mekin, in orbit. It
reached the spot from which the first ship had vanished.
It began to descend; the landing-grid had locked onto
it with projected force-fields and was drawing it
down to ground.
Bors growled to himself. It was
not likely that this ship was the one he’d pursued,
sight unseen, since the end of the fight off Meriden.
But it was a possibility. If it were true, then
everything that mattered to Bors was lost forever.
Then a blip appeared. It was
at the most extreme limit of the radar’s range.
A ship had come out of overdrive near the fourth planetary
orbit of this solar system.
Bors and the yeoman computer-operator
figured its distance to six places of decimals.
Bors set the microsecond timer. The Horus
went into low-speed overdrive and out again.
Then the electron telescope revealed a stubby, rotund
cargo-ship, about to land on Mekin.
Bors swore. It would be days
before this tub reached Mekin on solar-system drive.
But it must not report that an armed vessel had inspected
it in remoteness.
“We haul alongside,” said
Bors angrily. “Boarding-parties ready in
the space-boats.”
Another wrenching flicker into overdrive
and through breakout without pause. The cargo-boat
was within ten miles.
“Calling cargo-boat!”
rasped Bors, in what would be the arrogant tones of
a Mekinese naval officer hailing a mere civilian ship.
“Identify yourself!”
A voice answered apologetically, “Cargo-ship
Empress, sir, bound from Loral to Mekin with frozen
foods.”
“Cut your drive,” snapped
Bors. “Stand by for inspection! Muster
your crews. There’s a criminal trying to
get ashore on Mekin. We’ll check your hands.
Acknowledge!”
“Yes, sir,” said
the apologetic voice. “Obeying, sir.”
Bors fretted. The space-boats
left the Horus’s side. One clamped
onto the airlock of the rounded, bulging tramp-ship.
The second lifeboat hovered nearby. The first
boat broke contact and the second hooked on.
The second boat broke contact. Both came back
to the Horus.
The screen before Bors lighted up.
One of his own crewmen nodded out of it.
“All clear, sir,”
said his voice briskly. “They behaved like
lambs, sir. No arms. We’ve locked
them in a cargo hold.”
“You know what to do now,” said Bors.
“Yes, sir. Off.”
Ten miles away the cargo-boat swung
itself about. Suddenly it was gone. It was
on the way to Glamis and the fleet.
Another hour of watching. Another
blip. It was another cargo-carrier like the first.
As the other had done, it meekly permitted itself to
be boarded by what it believed were mere naval ratings
of the Mekinese space-fleet, searching for a criminal
who might be on board. Like the first ship, it
was soon undeceived. Again like the first, it
vanished from emptiness, and it would be heading for
the fleet in its monotonous circling of Glamis.
The third blip, though, was a light
cruiser. The Horus appeared from nowhere
close beside it and its communicator began to scream
in gibberish. It would be an official report,
scrambled and taped, to be transmitted to ground on
the first instant there was hope of its reception.
“Fire one,” said Bors.
“The skipper there is on his toes.”
He watched bleakly as the Horus’s
missile arched in its impossible trajectory, as the
light cruiser flung everything that could be gotten
out to try to stop it, while its transmitter shrieked
gibberish to the stars.
There was a blinding flash of light. Then nothing.
“He got out maybe fifteen seconds
of transmission,” said Bors somberly, “which
may or may not be picked up from this distance, and
may or may not tell anything. He got a tape ready
while he was in overdrive, with plenty of time for
the job. My guess is that he’d take at least
fifteen seconds to identify his ship, give her code
number, her skipper, and such things. I hope
so....”
But for minutes he was irresolute.
He’d send his own minutely detailed report back
to Glamis on the second captured ship. He did
not need to return to report in person. He hadn’t
yet sent back provisions enough for the intended voyage
of the fleet. The solar system of Mekin was an
especially well-stocked hunting-ground for such marauders
as Bors and his crew declared themselves to be so
long as word did not get to ground on Mekin.
But it did not get down. From
time to time at intervals of a few hours specks
appeared in emptiness. Mekin monopolized the off-planet
trade of its satellite world. There would be many
times the space-traffic here that would be found off
any other planet in the Mekinese empire.
One ship got to ground unchallenged.
By pure accident it came out of overdrive within half
a million miles of Mekin. To have attacked it
would have been noted. But he got two more cargo-ships.
Then he found the Horus alongside a passenger-ship.
But it couldn’t be allowed to ground, to report
that it had been stopped by an armed ship. A
prize-crew took it off to Glamis.
Bors made a formal announcement to
his crew. “I think,” he told them
over the all-speaker circuit, “that we got the
ship which could have reported our action off Meriden.
I’m sure we’ve sent four shiploads of
food back to the fleet, besides the passenger-ship
we’d rather have missed. But there’s
still something to be done. To confuse Mekin and
keep it busy, and therefore off Kandar’s neck,
we have to start trouble elsewhere. From now
on we are pirates pure and simple.”
And he headed the Horus for
the planet Cassis, which was another victim of the
Mekinese. It was a rocky, mountainous world with
many mines. Mekin depended on it for metal in
vast quantities. The Horus hovered over
it and sent down a sardonic challenge. One missile
came up in defiance. But it was badly aimed and
Bors ignored it. Then voices called to him, sharp
with excitement. He heard shots and shouting and
a voice said feverishly that rebels on Cassis, who
had been fighting in the streets, had rushed a transmitter
to welcome the enemies of Mekin.
Bors had one light cruiser and merely
a minimum crew for it. He couldn’t be of
much help to insurrectionists. Then he heard artillery-fire
over the communicator, and voices gasped that the
Mekinese garrison was charging out of its highly-fortified
encampment. Bors sent down a missile to break
the back of the counter-attack. Then the communicator
gave off the sound of gunfire and men in battle, and
presently yells of triumph.
He took the Horus away.
Its arrival and involvement in the revolt was pure
accident. It was no part of any thought-out plan.
But he was wryly relieved when he had convinced himself
that Mekin needed the products of this world too much
to exterminate its population with fusion-bombs.
More days of travel in overdrive tedium.
Bors was astounded and appalled. Interference
here would only make matters worse. The Horus
went on.
There was a cargo-ship aground on
Dover, and the Horus threatened bombs and a
space-boat went down and brought it up. That ship
also went away to Glamis where the fleet was accumulating
an inconvenient number of prisoners. The fact
that the capture of this ship only added to that number
made Bors realize that King Humphrey would be especially
disturbed about the passengers on the liner sent back
from Mekin. Unless they were murdered, sooner
or later they would reveal the facts about the Fleet.
And King Humphrey was a highly conscientious man.
There was dissention even on Dover.
The landing-party was cheered from the edge of the
spaceport. Bors could not understand. He
tried to guess what was going on in the Mekinese empire.
He could not know whether or not disaster had yet
struck Kandar. He could only hope that there were
ships lurking near it, ready to use the recent technical
combat improvements against any single Mekinese ship
that might appear, so no report would be carried back.
But it seemed to him that utter and complete catastrophe
was inevitable.
He reflected unhappily about Tralee,
and wondered what the Pretender, his uncle, really
thought about his loosing of chemical-explosive missiles
against puppet government buildings there. He
found himself worrying again about the truck drivers
who’d warned his men of booby-traps in the supplies
they delivered. He hoped they hadn’t been
caught.
The Horus arrived at Deccan,
and called down the savage message of challenge.
There came a tumultuous, roaring reply.
“Captain Bors!”
cried a voice from the ground exultantly. “Land
and welcome! We didn’t hope you’d
come here, but you’re a thousand times welcome!
We’ve smashed the garrison here, Captain!
We rose days ago and we hold the planet! We’ll
join you! Come to ground, sir! We can supply
you!”
Bors went tense all over. He’d
been called by name! If he was known by name
on this world twenty light-years
from Mekin and thirty-five from Kandar then
everything was lost.
“Can you send up a space-boat?”
he asked in a voice he did not recognize. “I’d
like to have your news.”
It must be a trap. It was possible
that there’d been revolt on Deccan; he’d
found proof of rebellion elsewhere. There’d
been claims of revolt on Cassis, but he hadn’t
been suspicious then. He’d sent down a missile
to help the self-proclaimed rebels there. Now
he wondered desperately if he’d been tricked
there as, it was all too likely, he would be here.
There’d been reported fighting on Avino.
There was cheering for his men on Dover, and he might
have landed there. But there were too many coincidences,
far too many.
He waited, fifty thousand miles high,
with the ship at combat-alert. He felt cold all
over. Somehow, news had preceded him. It
was garbled truth, but there was enough to make his
spine feel like ice.
He spoke over the all-speaker hook-up,
in a voice he could not keep steady by any effort
of will.
“All hands attention,”
he said heavily. “I just called ground.
We have had a reply calling me by name. You will
see the implication. It looks like somehow the
Mekinese have managed to send word ahead of us.
They’ve found out that no one can stand against
us. They know we have new and deadly weapons.
Probably there have been orders given to lure us to
ground by the pretense of a successful revolt.
It would be hoped that we can be fooled to the point
where we will land and our ship can be captured undestroyed. That’s
the way it looks.”
He swallowed, with difficulty.
“If that’s so,”
he said after an instant, “you can guess what’s
been done about Kandar. The grand fleet was assembled
on Mekin. It could have gone to Kandar....”
He swallowed again. Then he said
savagely, “Well make sure first. If the
worst has happened we’ll take our fleet and head
for Mekin and pour down every ounce of atomic explosive
we’ve got. We may not be able to turn its
air to poison, but if there are survivors, they won’t
celebrate what they did to Kandar!”
He clicked off. His fists clenched.
He paced back and forth in the control room.
He almost did not wait to make sure. Almost.
But he had never seen a Mekinese fighting man face
to face. He’d gone into exile with his
uncle when that unhappily reasonable man let Tralee
surrender rather than be bombed to depopulation.
He’d served in the Kandarian navy without ever
managing to be in any port when a Mekinese ship was
in. He’d fought in the battle off Kandar,
he’d destroyed a Mekinese cruiser off Tralee,
another in the Mekinese system itself and a squadron
off Meriden. But he had never seen a Mekinese
fighting-man face to face. Filled with such hatred
as he felt, he meant to do so now.
A space-boat came up from the ground.
The Horus trained weapons on it. Bors
painstakingly arranged for its occupants to board the
Horus in space-suits, which could not conceal
bombs.
There were six men in the space-boat.
They came into the Horus’s control room
and he saw that they were young, almost boys.
When they learned that he was Captain Bors, they looked
at him with shining, admiring, worshipping eyes.
It could not be a trick. It could not be a trap.
He was incredulous.
The message from the ground was true.