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The God In The Box
by
The battle was at a momentary standstill. The Neens and the Libars seemed, for the moment, to forget the issue; every face was turned upward. Even the faces of the runners who fled from a disaster they did not understand.
“I think one more will be enough, sir,” chuckled Correy. “The beggars are ready to run for it right now.” He gave a command, and as though the microphone itself released the bomb, it dropped from the bottom of the Ertak and diminished swiftly as it hurtled earthward.
Again the swift spread of white that turned to gray; again the vast red crater. Again, too, a flank crumpled.
As though I could see the faces of the brown men, I saw terror strike to the heart of the Neens. The flanks were melting away, and the panic of fear spread as flame spreads on a surface of oil. Correy has a good eye for such things, and he said there were fifty thousand of the enemy massed there. If there were, in the space that it takes the heart to tick ten times, fifty thousand Neens turned their back to the enemy and fled to the safety of their own jungles.
* * * * *
The Libars made no effort to pursue. They stood there, in their military formations, watching with wonderment. Then, with crisp military dispatch, they maneuvered into great long ranks, awaiting the arrival of transportation.
“And so it is finished, John Hanson,” said Artur slowly, his eyes shining with a light that might almost be called holy. “My people are saved! He spoke well, as always, when He said that those who would come after Him would be our friends if we were their friends.”
“We are your friends,” I replied, “but tell me, who is this one of whom you speak always, but do not name? From what I have seen, I guess a great deal, but there has been no time to learn all the story. Will you tell me, now?”
“I will, if that is your wish,” said Artur, “but I should prefer to tell you in the Place. It is a long story, the story of toma annerson, the story of He Who Speaks, and there are things you should see, so that you may understand that story.”
“As you wish, Artur.” I glanced at Correy and nodded. “Back to the city, Mr. Correy. I think we’re through here.”
“I believe we are, sir.” He gave the orders to the operating room, and the Ertak swung in a great circle toward the gleaming city of the Libars. “It looked like a real row when we got here; I wouldn’t have minded being down there for a few minutes myself.”
“With the Ertak poised over your head, dropping atomic bombs?”
Correy shook his head and grinned.
“No, sir!” he admitted. “Just hand to hand, with clubs.”
* * * * *
Artur and I were together in the great domed building he called “the Place.” There were no others in that vast auditorium, although outside a multitude waited. Artur had expressed a wish that no one accompany me, and I could see no valid reason for refusing the request.
“First,” he said, pausing beside the great shining body of the space ship upon the central dais, “let me take you back many generations, to the time when only this northern continent was inhabited, and the Libars and the Neens were one people.
“In those days, we were of less understanding than the Neens of today. There were no cities; each family lived to itself, in crude huts, tilling the ground and hunting its own food. Then, out of the sky came this.” He touched, reverently, the smooth side of the space ship. “It came to earth at this very spot, and from it, presently, emerged He Who Speaks. Would you inspect the ship that brought Him here?”