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Morale: A Story Of The War Of 1941-43
by
“The monster tank has been held in check,” said a smug voice encouragingly. “Encountered by home-defense troops and artillery, it proved unable to face shell-fire….”
“Liars!” said the ‘copter man calmly. He picked up the nearest loose object and flung it into the bland face of the official news-announcer. The television set went dead, but there were hissings and sputterings in its interior. He had flung a Bissel battery at it, one of a display-group, and its high-tension terminals hissed and sparked among the stray wires in the cabinet.
“That makes me mad,” said the ‘copter man grimly. “Lying for morale! The other side murders our civilians to break down morale, and our side lies about it to build morale back up again. To hell with morale!”
Sergeant Walpole reached in and pulled out the battery. Bissel batteries turn out six hundred volts these days, and they make a fat spark when short-circuited.
“For Gawd’s sake!” said Sergeant Walpole. “If they can pick up sparks from a motor, can’t they pick ’em up from this? What the hell y’doin’? Y’want ’em droppin’ eggs on us? Say!”
* * * * *
He stopped short, his eyes burning. He began to talk, suddenly groping for words while he waved the high-powered small battery in his hand. The helicopter man listened, at first skeptically and then with an equally hungry enthusiasm.
“Sergeant,” he said evenly, “that’s an idea! A whale of an idea! A hell of a fine idea! Let’s get some rockets!”
“Why rockets?” demanded Sergeant Walpole in his turn. “Whatcha want to do? Celebrate the Fourth o’ July?”
The ‘copter man explained, this time, and Sergeant Walpole seized upon the addition. Then they began a hunt. They roved the town over, and it was not pleasant. When the Wabbly had gone into that town there had still been very many living human beings in it. Some of them had believed in the ability of the artillery to defend the town against a single monster. Some had had no means of getting away. But all of them had tried to get away when the Wabbly went lurching in among the houses.
For them, the Wabbly had spewed out deadly gases. Also it had simply forged ahead. And the two living men in their gas-masks paid as little attention as possible to the bodies in the streets, most of them in flimsy night-clothing, struck down in frenzied flight, but they could not help seeing too much….
In the end they went back to the artillery-positions and found signal-rockets there. Two full cases of them, marvelously unexploded. A little later two monocycles purred madly in the beaten-down paths of the monstrous treads. Sergeant Walpole bore very many Bissel batteries, which will deliver six hundred volts even on short-circuit for half an hour at a time. The ‘copter man carried some of them, too, and both men were loaded down.
* * * * *
When dawn came they were hollow-eyed and gaunt and weary. It had started to rain, too, and both of them were drenched. They could see no more than a couple of hundred yards in every direction, and they were hungry, and they had seen things no man should have to look upon, in the way of destruction. They came upon a wrecked artillery-train just as the world lightened to a pallid gray. Guns twisted and burst. Caissons, no more than shattered scraps of metal, because of the explosion of the shells within them. And the tread-tracks of the Wabbly led across the mess. Steam still rose, hissing softly, from the bent and twisted guns which had burst when they were heated to redness by the power-beam. And there was a staff gyrocar crumpled against a tree where it had been flung by some explosion or other. There were neither sound nor wounded men about; only dead ones. The Wabbly had been here.