The news as Bors got it from the men
of Deccan was remarkable for two reasons: that
so much of it was true, and that all of it was glamorized
and romanticized and garbled. It was astonishing
to find any relation at all between such fabulously
romantic tales and the facts, because there was no
way for news to travel between solar systems except
on ships, and no ships had carried stories like these!
Here on Deccan, the shining-eyed young
men knew that Bors had landed on Tralee and
on Garen. They knew that there was a fleet
in being which had fought and annihilated a Mekinese
task-force many times its size.
To the Captain, their knowledge was
undiluted catastrophe!
They admired Bors because they believed
he commanded that fleet, which he now had in hiding
while he flashed splendidly about the subjugated worlds,
performing prodigious feats of valor and destruction,
half pirate and half hero. The story had it that
he’d been driven from his native Tralee by the
invaders, and that now he fought Mekin in magnificent
knight-errantry, and that it was he who’d
set alight the flame of rebellion on so many worlds.
Bors listened, and was numbed.
He heard references to the fight off Meriden, and
the temporary escape of one of his enemies, and that
he’d pursued it to the solar system of Mekin
itself and there destroyed it while Mekin watched,
helpless to interfere.
The distortion of facts was astounding.
But the mere existence of facts at this distance was
impossible! Then Bors found himself thinking that
these tales sounded like fantasies or daydreams, and
he went white. He knew what had happened.
Just before he’d left the fleet,
he’d talked to a fat woman and a scowling man
who, together, made up the Talents, Incorporated brand
new Department for Disseminating Truthful Seditious
Rumors, so that rumors of a high degree of detail
got started, nobody knew how. If such rumors
spread, and everybody heard them, nobody would doubt
them. It was appallingly probable that the fighting
on Cassis and Avino and Deccan had no greater justification
in reason than that an enormously fat woman romantically
pictured such things as resulting from the derring-do
of one Captain Bors, of whom she thought sentimentally
and glamorously and without much discrimination.
But she’d daydreamed about the
fleet, too! And that it had destroyed a Mekinese
squadron many times its size....
He heard the leader of the young men
from Deccan speaking humorously. “Your
revolt, sir,” he told Bors, “is spreading
everywhere! On Cela, sir, there are
great space-ship yards, where they build craft for
the Mekinese navy. Not long ago they finished
one and it went out to space for a trial run.
It didn’t come back. Sabotage. Everybody
knew it. The Mekinese raged. A little while
later they finished another ship. But the Mekinese
were smart! They sent it off for its trial run
with only Celans on board. If there were sabotage
this time, it wouldn’t be Mekinese who died
in space! But that ship didn’t come back
either! It touched down here, sir, three weeks
ago, and we supplied it with food and missiles and
some of us joined it. It went off to try to find
you.”
“I’d better go
after it,” said Bors, dry-throated. “It
could blunder into trouble. At best ”
The youthful leader of Deccan’s revolt grinned
widely.
“It’s got plenty of missiles,”
he told Bors. “It can take care of itself!
And it has plenty of food. We even gave them target-balloons
to practice launching missiles on. We’ve
been storing up missiles to lay an ambush for a Mekinese
squadron if one comes by. A lot of us joined the
ship, though.”
“In any case,” said Bors,
with the feel of ashes in his throat, “I’ll
track it down so it can join the fleet.”
He could not bring himself to tell
these confident and admiring young men that there
was no hope and never had been; that the tales of his
achievements were only partly true and that they had
popped into people’s minds because a very fat
woman far away indulged in daydreams and fantasies.
They wouldn’t have understood.
If they had, they wouldn’t have believed.
He found that he savagely resisted the conviction himself.
But there was no other way for such garbled tales
with such a substratum of fact to be spread among
the stars. And whoever spread them knew of events
up to the last news sent back by Bors, but nothing
after that. Undoubtedly, Talents, Incorporated’s
Department for Disseminating Truthful Seditious Rumors
had been at work on Mekin, but the damage done elsewhere
was a thousand times greater than any benefit done
there.
It was too late to repair the damage,
here or anywhere else. This planet and all the
rest were too far committed to rebellion ever to be
forgiven by Mekin. Mekin would take revenge.
It was not pleasant to think about.
So the Horus departed, and
traveled in high-speed overdrive for ship-days seemingly
without end, toward Glamis. It knew nothing that
happened outside its own cocoon of overdrive field.
It knew nothing of any of the thousands of myriads
of stars, whose planetary systems offered unlimited
room for humanity to live in freedom and without fear.
During the journey Bors only endured
being alive. All this disaster was ultimately
his fault. The fleet’s survival was due
to his work with Talents, Incorporated. The raids
of a single ship which now would have such
disastrous results were the fruits of his
suggestion, the consequence of his actions.
Talents, Incorporated was involved,
to be sure, but only because he’d allowed it
to be. He should have realized that Madame Porvis
would work havoc if her talent was as described.
No mere romantic daydreamer would fashion fantasies
with military secrecy in mind and security as a principle.
Everything was betrayed. Everything was ruined.
And if he, Bors, had only been properly skeptical,
the fleet would have been destroyed and Kandar now
occupied by the Mekinese doomed to servitude
but not necessarily to annihilation and
other worlds would also be safely servile. They’d
still be resentful and they’d bitterly hate
Mekin, but they would not have before them the monstrous
vengeance now in store.
Bors, in fact, felt guilty because he was still alive.
There was only one small thing he
could still try to set aright. He could insist
that Morgan take Gwenlyn far away from the dangerous
possibility that Mekin might somehow find her.
He had to make Morgan see the need for it.
If necessary, he would convince King Humphrey that
a royal order must be issued to send the Sylva
light-centuries away, before the Mekinese empire began
to restore itself to devastated calm if
that process hadn’t already begun.
Mekin had its grand fleet assembled
and ready. If convincing and, unfortunately,
truthful rumors ran about Mekin, as elsewhere, concerning
the fleet and Bors’s attempts to hide it, then
their dictator need only give a single order and the
grand fleet would lift off. When it found Kandar
unoccupied it would leave Kandar dead. Then it
would seek out the fleet, and destroy it, and then
it would move from one to another of its rebellious
tributaries and take revenge upon them....
And Bors could only hope to salvage
the life of one girl from the wreckage of everything
that human beings prefer to believe in. He could
only hope to send Gwenlyn away if he was
not already too late.
The Horus broke out into normal
space twelve days after leaving Deccan. The untrustworthy
sun of Glamis still shone brightly. The inner
planet revolved about it with one side glowing low
red heat and the other side piled high with frozen
atmosphere. The useless outer planet remained
a lush green, save for its seas. And the fleet
still circled it from pole to pole.
Bors had himself ferried to the flagship
by space-boat, because what he had to report was too
disheartening to be spoken where all the fleet might
hear. Gwenlyn met him at the flagship’s
airlock. She looked very glad, as if she’d
been uneasy about him.
“Call for a boat,” Bors
commanded her curtly, “to take you to the Sylva.
Go on board with anybody else who belongs on it, your
father, anybody. I’m going to ask the king
to insist that the Sylva get away from here fast!
Before the Mekinese turn up.”
Gwenlyn shook her head, her eyes searching his face.
“The Sylva’s not
here. It’s gone to Kandar as a sort of
dispatch-boat.”
Bors groaned.
“Then I’ll try to get
another ship assigned to take you away,” he said
formidably. “Maybe one of the captured cargo-ships
I sent back.”
“No,” said Gwenlyn.
“They’re going to be released. They’ll
go to Mekin, and we couldn’t go there!”
Bors groaned again. Then he said
savagely, “Wait here for me. I’ll
arrange something as soon as I’ve seen the king.”
He strode down the corridor to King
Humphrey’s cabin. A sentry came to attention.
Bors passed through a door. The king and half
a dozen of the top-ranking officers of the fleet were
listening apathetically to Morgan, at once vexed and
positive and uncertain.
“But you can’t ignore
it!” protested Morgan. “I don’t
understand it either, but you’ll agree that
since my precognizer said no ship but Bors’s
is coming here and he precognized every
one of the prizes before they arrived you’ll
concede that the Mekinese aren’t coming here.
So you’re going out to meet them.”
He saw Bors, and breathed an audible sigh of relief.
“Bors!” he said in a changed tone.
“I’m glad you’re back!”
Bors said grimly, “Majesty, I’ve very
bad news.”
King Humphrey shrugged. He spoke in a listless
voice.
“I doubt it differs from ours.
You captured a passenger-liner off Mekin, you will
remember. You sent it here. When it arrived
we found that all its passengers knew that Kandar
was not occupied and that the fleet sent to capture
it had not reported back.”
“My news is worse,” said
Bors. “The continued existence of our fleet,
and the fact that it defeated a Mekinese force, is
common knowledge on at least five planets all
of them now in revolt against Mekin.”
The king’s expression had reached
the limit of reaction to disaster. It did not
change. He looked almost apathetic.
“Mekin,” he said dully,
“sent a second squadron to Kandar to investigate
the rumors of defeat. We have a very tiny force
there three ships. Of course our ships
won’t attack the Mekinese, but they might as
well. Knowing that we destroyed their first fleet
and that we still live, Mekin will assuredly retaliate.”
“And not only on Kandar,”
said Bors. “On Tralee and Garen and Cassis
and Meriden ”
Morgan interrupted.
“Majesty! All this is more
reason to listen to me! I’ve been telling
you that all my Talents agree ”
King Humphrey interrupted tonelessly,
“We’ve made our final arrangements, Bors.
We are going to release the cargo-ships and the passenger-ship
you sent us. We will use them as messengers.
We are going to send a message of surrender, to Mekin.”
Bors swallowed. His most dismal
forebodings had produced nothing more hopeless than
this moment.
“Majesty ”
“We have to sacrifice,”
said the king in a leaden voice, “not only our
lives but our self-respect, to try to gain something
less than the total annihilation of Kandar. We
shall tell the Mekinese that we will return to Kandar
and form up in space. If they send a small force
to accept our surrender, they shall have it.
If they prefer to destroy us, they can do that also.
But we submit ourselves to punishment for having resisted
the original fleet. We admit our guilt.
And we beg Mekin not to avenge that resistance upon
our people, who are not guilty.”
Bors tried to speak, and could not.
There was a sodden, utterly unresilient stillness
in the room, as if all the high officers of the fleet
were corpses and the king himself, though he spoke,
was not less dead.
Then Morgan moved decisively.
He moved away from the spot where he had been engaged
in impassioned argument. He took Bors by the arm,
and hustled him through the door.
“Come along!” he said
urgently. “Something’s got to be done!
You have the knack of thinking of things to do!
The king’s intentions ”
The door closed behind him and he
broke off. He wiped sweat from his forehead with
one hand while he thrust Bors on with the other.
They came to a cabin evidently assigned to him.
Gwenlyn waited there.
“Craziness!” said Morgan
bitterly. “Craziness! I get the finest
group of Talents that ever existed! I teach them
to think! I instruct them! And they can’t
think of what is going to happen. And everything
depends on it! Everything!”
“When will the Sylva be back?”
demanded Bors.
Morgan automatically looked at his
watch. Gwenlyn opened her mouth to speak.
Morgan shook his head impatiently. Gwenlyn was
silent.
“My ship-arrival Talent’s
with the Sylva,” said Morgan harassedly.
“We sent him to Kandar to find out if the Mekinese
fleet’s coming there, and when. It isn’t
coming here. He said so.”
“It’ll go to Kandar,”
said Bors bitterly, “to destroy it. I imagine
we’ll go there too, to be destroyed.”
“But it’s insane!”
protested Morgan. “Look! You captured
a passenger-ship off Mekin. Right?”
“Yes.”
“You sent it here with all its passengers.
Right?”
“Yes.”
“One of the passengers said
he was a clairvoyant. Hah!” Morgan expressed
the ultimate of disgust. “He was a fortune-teller!
He didn’t know there was anything better than
that! A fortune-teller! But he’s a
Talent! He’s a born charlatan, but he’s
an authentic Talent, and he doesn’t know what
that is! He thinks predictions as Madame Porvis
thinks scandals! And they’re just as crazy!
But he is a Talent and they have to be right!”
Bors said, “You’re going to take Gwenlyn
away from here, and fast!”
Morgan paid no attention. He
was embittered, and agitated, and in particular, he
was frustrated.
“It’s all madness!”
he protested almost hysterically. “Here
we’ve got a firm precognition that King Humphrey’s
going to open parliament on Kandar next year, and
there’s another one ”
Gwenlyn said quickly, “Which you won’t
tell!”
“Which I won’t tell.
But something’s got to happen! Something’s
got to be done! And this crazy Talent gives me
a crazy precognition and looks proud because I can’t
make sense of it! What the hell can you make out
of a precognition that Mekin will be defeated when
an enemy fleet submits to destruction, lying still
in space? There’s no sense to it! My
Talents wouldn’t think of anything idiotic like
that! They’ve got better sense! But
when this lunatic said it, they could precognize it
too! It’s so! They couldn’t think
of it themselves, but when this Mekinese Talent does,
they know it’s true. But it can’t
be!”
Bors said coldly, “The fleet’s
going to be destroyed, certainly. If that will
defeat Mekin. But Gwenlyn is not to stay aboard
to be destroyed with it! How are you going to
get her away?”
“The king’s waiting for
the Sylva to come back,” Morgan said
indignantly, “so he’ll know my
ship-arrival Talent went to find out if
the Mekin fleet’s going to Kandar, and when.
He insists that if they know the fleet exists, they
know where it is and will come here looking for it.
But Madame Porvis couldn’t have told that in
her daydreaming. She didn’t know
what planet we’re circling! She couldn’t
have spread that fact by contagion!”
“She spread plenty more!”
said Bors. “Her daydreams were too damned
true!”
Gwenlyn said, “It’s a
contradiction in terms for a fleet to win a battle
by letting itself be destroyed. Perhaps the Captain ”
“It’s also a contradiction
in terms,” said Bors bitterly, “for all
our troubles to come because we won a victory.
Now we regret that we weren’t all killed.
But it’s madness for the king to propose to get
us all slaughtered in hope of rousing the Mekinese
better nature!”
“Maybe you can resolve it, Captain,”
said Gwenlyn thoughtfully. “Could it be
that it isn’t a contradiction but only a paradox?”
Bors spread his hands helplessly.
Of all times and circumstances, this particular moment
and situation seemed the least occasion for quibbling
over words.
Then he said, “Yes....
It could be a paradox. If this prediction by that
wild Talent is true, there is a way it could win a
fight. I don’t believe it, but I’m
going to put something in motion. Nothing can
make matters worse!”
He turned and strode back to the council
room where King Humphrey and the high commanders of
his fleet sat like dead men, waiting for the moment
to be killed, to no purpose.