k-factor?'

'Simple,' Neel told him. 'Once you've gotten rid of the 3L's and their false conclusions. Remember that politics in the old days was all We are angels and They are devils. This was literally believed. In the history of mankind there has yet to be a war that wasn't backed by the official clergy on each side. And each declared that God was on their side. Which leaves You Know Who as prime supporter of the enemy. This theory is no more valid than the one that a single man can lead a country into war, followed by the inference that a well-timed assassination can save the peace.'

'That doesn't sound too unreasonable,' Costa said.

'Of course not. All of the old ideas sound good. They have a simple-minded simplicity that anyone can understand. That doesn't make them true. Kill a war-minded dictator and nothing changes. The violence-orientated society, the factors that produced it, the military party that represents it—none of these are changed. The k-factor remains the same.'

'There's that word again. Do I get a definition yet?'

Neel smiled. 'Of course. The k-factor is one of the many factors that interrelate in a society. Abstractly it is no more important than the other odd thousand we work with. But in practice it is the only one we try to alter.'

'The k-factor is the war factor,' Adao Costa said. All the humor was gone now.

'That's a good enough name for it,' Neel said, grinding out his half-smoked cigarette. 'If a society has a positive k-factor, even a slight one that stays positive, then you are going to have a war. Our planetary operators have two jobs. First to gather and interpret data. Secondly to keep the k-factor negative.'

They were both on their feet now, moved by the same emotion.

'And Himmel has a positive one that stays positive,' Costa said. Neel Sidorak nodded agreement. 'Then let's get into the ship and get going,' he said.

It was a fast trip and a faster landing. The UN cruiser cut its engines and dropped like a rock in free fall. Night rain washed the ports and the computer cut in the maximum permissible blast for the minimum time that would reduce their speed to zero at zero altitude. Deceleration sat on their chests and squeezed their bones to rubber. Something crunched heavily under their stern at the exact instant the drive cut out. Costa was unbelted and out the door while Neel was still feeling his insides shiver back into shape.

The unloading had an organized rhythm that rejected Neel. He finally realized he could help best by standing back out of the way while the crewmen grav-lifted the heavy cases out through the cargo port, into the blackness of the rain-lashed woods. Adao Costa supervised this and seemed to know what he was doing. A signal rating wearing earphones stood to one side of the lock chanting numbers that sounded like detector fixes. There was apparently enough time to unload everything—but none to spare. Things got close towards the end.

Neel was suddenly bustled out into the rain and the last two crates were literally thrown out after him. He plowed through the mud to the edge of the clearing and had just enough time to cover his face before the take-off blast burst out like a new sun.

'Sit down and relax,' Costa told him. 'Everything is in the green so far. The ship wasn't spotted on the way down. Now all we have to do is wait for transportation.'

In theory at least, Adao Costa was Neel's assistant. In practice he took complete charge of moving their equipment and getting it under cover in the capital city of Kitezh. Men and trucks appeared to help them, and vanished as soon as their work was done. Within twenty hours they were installed in a large loft, all of the machines uncrated and plugged in. Neel took a no-sleep and began tuning checks on all the circuits, glad of something to do. Costa locked the heavy door behind their last silent helper, then dropped gratefully onto one of the bedding rolls.

'How did the gadgets hold up?' he asked.

'I'm finding out now. They're built to take punishment—but being dropped twelve feet into mud soup, then getting baked by rockets isn't in the original specs.'

'They crate things well these days,' Costa said unworriedly, sucking on a bottle of the famous Himmelian beer. 'When do you go to work?'

'We're working right now,' Neel told him, pulling a folder of papers out of the file. 'Before we left I drew up a list of current magazines and newspapers I would need. You can start on these. I'll have a sampling program planned by the time you get back.'

Costa groaned hollowly and reached for the papers.

Once the survey was in operation it went ahead of its own momentum. Both men grabbed what food and sleep they could. The computers gulped down Neel's figures and spat out tape-reels of answers that demanded even more facts. Costa and his unseen helpers were kept busy supplying the material.

Only one thing broke the ordered labors of the week. Neel blinked twice at Costa before his equation-fogged brain assimilated an immediate and personal factor.

'You've a bandage on your head,' he said. 'A blood-stained bandage!'

'A little trouble in the streets. Mobs. And that's an incredible feat of observation,' Costa marveled. 'I had the feeling that if I came in here stark naked, you wouldn't notice it.'

'I ... I get involved,' Neel said. Dropping the papers on a table and kneading the tired furrow between his eyes. 'Get wrapped up in the computation. Sorry. I tend to forget about people.'

'Don't feel sorry to me,' Costa said. 'You're right. Doing the job. I'm supposed to help you, not pose for the before picture in Home Hospital ads. Anyway—how are we doing? Is there going to be a war? Certainly seems like one brewing outside. I've seen two people lynched who were only suspected of being Earthies.'

'Looks don't mean a thing,' Neel said, opening two beers. 'Remember the analogy of the pile. It boils liquid metal and cooks out energy from the infrared right through to hard radiation. Yet it keeps on generating power at a nice, steady rate. But your A-bomb at zero minus one second looks as harmless as a fallen log. It's the k-factor that counts, not surface appearance. This planet may look like a dictator's dream of glory, but as long as we're reading in the negative things are fine.'

'And how are things? How's our little k-factor?'

'Coming out soon,' Neel said, pointing at the humming computer. 'Can't tell about it yet. You never can until the computation is complete. There's a temptation to try and guess from the first figures, but they're meaningless. Like trying to predict the winner of a horse race by looking at the starters lined up at the gate.'

'Lots of people think they can.'

'Let them. There are few enough pleasures in this life without taking away all delusions.'

Behind them the computer thunked and was suddenly still.

'This is it,' Neel said, and pulled out the tape. He ran it quickly through his fingers, mumbling under his breath. Just once he stopped and set some figures into his hand computer. The result flashed in the window and he stared at it, unmoving.

'Good? Bad? What is it?'

Neel raised his head and his eyes were ten years older.

'Positive. Bad. Much worse than it was when we left Earth.'

'How much time do we have?'

'Don't know for certain,' Neel shrugged. 'I can set it up and get an approximation. But there is no definite point on the scale where war has to break out. Just a going and going until, somewhere along the line—'

'I know. Gone.' Costa said, reaching for his gun. He slid it into his side pocket. 'Now it's time to stop looking and start doing. What do I do?'

'Going to kill War Marshal Lommeord?' Neel asked distastefully. 'I thought we had settled that you can't stop a war by assassinating the top man.'

'We also settled that something can be done to change the k-factor. The gun is for my own protection. While you're radioing results back to Earth and they're feeling bad about it, I'm going to be doing something. Now you tell me what that something is.'

This was a different man from the relaxed and quietly efficient Adao Costa of the past week. All of his

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