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Instant Of Decision
by
“Sure. Jim Avery. Worked in Assembly. What happened to him?”
“He got in the way of the bullet. Resisting arrest. He’s the jasper that set off the little incendiaries that started that mess out there. We’ve been watching him for months, now, but we didn’t get word of this cute stroke until too late.”
The guard looked puzzled. “Jim Avery. But why’d he want to do that?”
Karnes looked straight at him. “Leaguer!”
The guard nodded. You never could tell when the League would pop up like that.
Even after the collapse of Communism after the war, the world hadn’t learned anything, it seemed. The Eurasian League had seemed, at first, to be patterned after the Western world’s United Nations, but it hadn’t worked out that way.
The League was jealous of the UN lead in space travel, for one thing, and they had neither the money nor the know-how to catch up. The UN might have given them help, but, as the French delegate had remarked: “For what reason should we arm a potential enemy?”
After all, they argued, with the threat of the UN’s Moonbase hanging over the League to keep them peaceful, why should we give them spaceships so they can destroy Moonbase?
The Eurasian League had been quiet for a good many years, brooding, but behaving. Then, three years ago, Moonbase had vanished in a flash of actinic light, leaving only a new minor crater in the crust of Luna.
There was no proof of anything, of course. It had to be written off as an accident. But from that day on, the League had become increasingly bolder; their policy was: “Smash the UN and take the planets for ourselves!”
And now, with Carlson Spacecraft going up in flames, they seemed to be getting closer to their goal.
* * * * *
Karnes accepted his weapon and billfold from the guard and led them back down the stairway. “Would one of you guys phone the State Police? They’ll want to know what happened.”
The State Police copters came and went, taking Karnes and the late Mr. Avery with them, and leaving behind the now dying glow of Carlson Spacecraft.
There were innumerable forms to fill out and affidavits to make; there was a long-distance call to UN headquarters in New York to verify Karnes’ identity. And Karnes asked to borrow the police lab for an hour or so.
That evening, he caught the rocket for Long Island.
As the SR-37 floated through the hard vacuum five hundred miles above central Nebraska, Karnes leaned back in his seat, turning the odd cigarette case over and over in his hands.
Except for the neat, even checking that covered it, the little three-by-four inch object was entirely featureless. There were no catches or hinges, or even any line of cleavage around the edge. He had already found that it wouldn’t open.
Whatever it was, it was most definitely not a cigarette case.
The X-ray plates had shown it to be perfectly homogeneous throughout.
As far as I can see, thought Karnes, it’s nothing but a piece of acid-proof plastic, except that the specific gravity is way the hell too high. Maybe if I had cut it open, I could have–
Karnes didn’t push anything on the case, of that he was sure. Nor did he squeeze, shake, or rub it in any unusual way. But something happened; something which he was convinced came from the case in his hands.
He had the definite impression of something akin to a high-pressure firehose squirting from the interior of the case, through his skull, and into and over his brain, washing it and filling it. Little rivers of knowledge trickled down through the convolutions of his brain, collected in pools, and soaked in.
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