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“No communications with Nathaniel Greene,” Je

The office door opened. Jack Clybourne ushered the President in. General bland stood. Je

“Good afternoon,” President Coffey said. “Continue with your duties.” He sat at the large desk in the middle of the room.

“Actually, we have very little to do,” Admiral Carrell said. “The tough work was pla

Reassuring bullshit, Je

Seventeen digit ships destroyed in the war. We can’t find three. Assume one destroyed, unreported, and two on the ground in Africa, where they can’t rise in time. Can we get that lucky? Another of the battle screens flashed to show Georgia and South Carolina. A network of red lines leaped upward toward the digit ships patrolling in low orbit.

Ten minutes went past. The red lines began rapidly to wink out. Red blotches appeared south of Atlanta.

“They’re damned fast,” Toland muttered.

“Yes. Too fast,” Admiral Carrell agreed. He turned to the President. “We’d hoped to keep them distracted for half an hour or more.”

“When does Michael go up?” the President asked.

“In eighty minutes,” Admiral Carrell said.

“God help the people in Bellingham,” President Coffey muttered.

God help us all.

“God, Miranda, we can’t keep this up. I’m supposed to be on duty!”

“So you are.” She made a point of buttoning her blouse as she moved away from him to the passenger door of the squad car, and pretended to be interested in the sparse scenery of the Lummi Indian Reservation. “All right, you’ll just have to take me — home—”

“Well, but not just—” He rolled over in the seat, prepared to follow.

“All units, all units, proceed with Big Tango, proceed with Big Tango,” the radio blared.

Leigh sagged back, stu

“What is it?” Miranda demanded. His look frightened her.

“I don’t even know where to start!”

“Start what, damn you?”

He was buttoning buttons, fumbling it. “It’s — we’re supposed to evacuate the city. Everybody within five miles of the harbor.”

“Five miles?”

“Your place isn’t in the zone,” Deputy Young said. “You’re almost six miles out. But the Rez is.” He leaned forward and started the cruiser. “And I guess you’re riding with me. Miranda, how the hell do I get a bunch of Indians to leave their homes?”

“Tell them why. Tell me why, Leigh!”

“I don’t know! They told me that when Big Tango started we have one hour, one frigging hour to get everybody out of their houses and away.” He put the car in gear. “So here we go, not that it will do any good.”

It didn’t look like an Indian reservation. It looked more like a rural slum punctuated by occasional suburban houses. There was only one paved road. Leigh drove along it and spoke at intervals through the loud speaker mounted on top of the police car.

“Hi! This is Leigh Young. I have bad news. The aliens going to bomb Bellingham. You have about half an hour to the hell out of here. Drive, ride bikes, run, walk, do anything you can, but get the hell away from Bellingham Harbor.” He drove around the paved loop.

There was a numbness in Miranda’s brain. John Fox expected something, something he wouldn’t talk about. What can I do? Give Leigh half an hour to get the Indians moving, but then he damned well better take me home so I can tell Dad!

They were at the end of the loop. There were speedboats in the harbor, all racing southwest and away. Headed for Port Angles? Escaping. Escaping what?

Leigh was driving back into the loop. “Run for the hills,” his amplified voice blared. “Get out any way you can: foot, horse, car; don’t take anything you don’t value more than life. Don’t look back because the glare will burn your eyes out.”

Already there were cars moving the other way. “Some of them listened,” Miranda said. “Leigh, we have to go warn Dad if the snouts are going to bomb us!”

“They’re not going to bomb us.”

“Huh?”

“I made that up,” Leigh said.

“Then why are we doing this?”

“Damfino.”

“Ask the Sheriff.”

“Miranda, I already asked him, and he wouldn’t tell us.”

“Ask now! He has to tell us now!”

“Well …”

Miranda took the microphone from its hook and handed it to him. “Go on, ask. What harm can it do?”

“Well, all right.” Leigh keyed the microphone.

“Dispatcher.”

“Is the Sheriff there?”

“He’s busy.”

“I have to talk with him.”





“One moment.”

“Sheriff Lafferty here. That you, Young?”

“Yes, sir. Sheriff, I’m on the Rez. Most of the Indians are moving on, but some aren’t. Isn’t there anything I can tell them that’ll make them move out?”

“Tell them they’ll get killed if they stay.”

“I did. I said the snouts are going to bomb Bellingham.”

“Snouts bomb us! That’s a good one. Leigh, we’re going to bomb ourselves, there’s going to be atom bombs…”

The radio dissolved in static.

“What the hell?” Leigh tuned up and down. “Buzz saws. Like we were being jammed.”

“Maybe we are,” Miranda said.

“What?”

“Leigh, what did he mean, bomb ourselves?”

“I don’t know.”

“I don’t know either, but why would the Army jam your radio? Leigh, I’m scared.”

So far, so good. Je

“Melon daiquiri,” President Coffey muttered.

“Sir?” Carrell asked.

“Nothing. Admiral, I have a good feeling about this.”

“Yes, sir.”

“You don’t.”

“Mr. President, they say that Admiral Jellicoe at Jutland was the only man in the world who could have lost World War One in a single afternoon.”

“Oh. And we …?”

“Can lose something more than that,” Carrell said.

“Of course you’re right.” The door opened to admit a mess corporal with a tray of coffee. Outside the door were half a dozen military perso

“Sir.”

“Let Sergeant Maihey’s people act like doorkeepers. Come in and watch the action.”

“Sir?”

“Come in. You’ve earned a ringside seat.”

“But … well, thank you, sir.” Clybourne stood against one wall.

He blends into it. Like wallpaper, Je

“Control. Gimlet.”

“Gimlet, this is Harpoon. We have a security breach. We have a security breach. This went out on police radio air four minutes ago. I play the tapes now…”

“Launch now,” General Toland said.

“There are people in Bellingham,” the President said. “A lot of them.”

“All right, so it’s hard on Bellingham! Launch! Colonel, tell them to prepare.”

“Yes, sir.” Je

More sirens blared on the floor below.

“Admiral?” the President asked.

Admiral Carrell put his fingertips together and looked acros their tops at the situation maps. “Give me a minute.”

“Not much more than that,” said the General.

“All right. First, the timing is terrible. We’d be launching straight up at Bogie Two, and we didn’t hurt those digit ships enough.”

“If they drop rocks on Michael, we’ve had it!” Bland shouted.

“Yes.” Carrell glanced at his watch. “What are we afraid of? A laser can’t hurt Michael. A meteor takes time …”

“It could be on its way now!”

“And ready to hit atmosphere. All right. I say we … wait. Get ready to launch on ten seconds notice. Wait the full hour if we can, but if Gillespie sees a light in the sky he’ll launch. A meteor would flare at fifty miles up, and come in at a slant at five to six miles per second. We’d be twenty seconds in the air when it hit. Michael would survive.”