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PAGE 18

A Matter Of Importance
by [?]

He undogged the exit door and went out through the small vestibule which was also the ship’s air lock. Patrolman Willis joined him out-of-doors. The air was fresh. The sky was blue. Clouds floated in the sky, and growing things gave off a not-unpleasant odor, and a breeze blew uncertainly. But such things happen on appropriate planets in most sol-type solar systems.

Huks came toward them. Stiffly. Defiantly. The most conspicuous difference between Huks and humans was of degree. Huks grew hair all over their heads, instead of only parts of it. But they wore garments, and some of the garments were identical and impressive, so they could be guessed to be uniforms.

“How-do,” said the voice that had guided the ship down. “We are r-ready to listen to your message.”

Sergeant Madden said heavily:

“We humans believe you Huks have got a good fleet. We believe you’ve got a good army. We know you’ve got good rockets and a fighting force that’s worth a lot to us. We want to make a treaty for you to take over and defend as much territory as you’re able to, against some characters heading this way from the Coalsack region.”

Silence. The interpreter translated, and the Huks muttered astonishedly among themselves. The interpreter received instructions.

“Do you mean others of our r-race?” he demanded haughtily. “Members of our own r-race who r-return to r-recover their home worlds from humans?”

“Hell, no!” said Sergeant Madden dourly. “If you can get in contact with them and bring them back, they can have their former planets back and more besides–if they’ll defend ’em. We’re stretched thin. We didn’t come here to fight your fleet. We came to ask it to join us.”

More mutterings. The interpreter faced about.

“This surpr-rises us,” he said darkly. “We know of no danger in the direction you speak of. Per-rhaps we would wish to make fr-riends with that danger instead of you!”

Sergeant Madden snorted.

“You’re welcome!” Then he said sardonically: “If you’re able to reach us after you try, the offer stands. Join us, and you’ll give your own commands and make your own decisions. We’ll co-operate with you. But you won’t make friends with the characters I’m talking about! Not hardly!”

More hurried discussions still. The interpreter, defiantly: “And if we r-refuse to join you?”

Sergeant Madden shrugged.

“Nothing. You’ll fight on your own, anyhow. So will we. If we joined up we could both fight better. I came to try to arrange so we’d both be stronger. We need you. You need us.”

* * * * *

There was a pause. Patrolman Willis swallowed. At five-million-mile intervals, in a circle fifty million miles across with the Huk world as its center, objects floated in space. Patrolman Willis knew about them, because he and Sergeant Madden had put them there immediately after the missile rockets ceased to explode. He knew what they were, and his spine crawled at the thought of what would happen if the Huks found out. But the distant objects were at the limit of certain range for detection devices. The planet’s instruments could just barely pick them up. They subtended so small a fraction of a thousandth of a second of arc that no information could be had about them.

But they acted like a monstrous space fleet, ready to pour down war-headed missiles in such numbers as to smother the planet in atomic flame. Patrolman Willis could not imagine admitting that such a supposed fleet needed another fleet to help it. A military man, bluffing as Sergeant Madden bluffed, would not have dared offer any terms less onerous than abject surrender. But Sergeant Madden was a cop. It was not his purpose to make anybody surrender. His job was, ultimately, to make them behave.

The Huks conferred. The conference was lengthy. The interpreter turned to Sergeant Madden and spoke with vast dignity and caginess: