Rumi, trapped and desperate, were scattering and trying to flee down river. O’Mara stumbled over a barricade of rocks and boxes and almost got a Terran slug in him before he realized that they had cut their way through to the broken ship. He was up in a minute and urging his men on after the scattering enemy. Twenty or thirty of them tried to make a stand around a tall Rumi officer but O’Shaughnessy at the head of a wedge of Narakans swept into them at a full run.
Their bayonets flashed for a few seconds and then flashed no more, the steel was covered with blood. A few hundred Rumi made it to the river under a hail of fire from O’Shea and his squad on the hill. Hardly pausing to consider their cat-like aversion to water, most of them plunged in and struck out for the other shore. The rest were cut down on the bank by onrushing Greenbacks. Terrence grabbed hold of one of his buglers and then had to practically beat the man over the head to get him to sound Recall.
Bill Fielding picked his way among the bodies and came toward Terrence holding his left arm. O’Shaughnessy was leaping up and down and waving his fist across the river.
“Things different now! All different now! One Greenback better than four, five, eight Rumi!”
“At least that many,” Terrence said under his breath before he roared at O’Shaughnessy, “Fall the men in on the double now! We’re going to march back to the Sun Maid in proper military style.”
There was a blowing of sergeant’s whistles, the shouting of corporals, and the Narakan Rifles slowly formed ranks. Some were missing and others were limping and holding wounds but they stepped out smartly as the column headed back up the river. Every rifle was at the correct slope, every man was in step as they marched through the makeshift barricade and past where Chapelle was standing. The drum and bugle corps struck up The Wearing of the Green just as O’Mara shouted, “Eyes Right!” and every eye swung right in perfect unison. A tattered and weary Chapelle brought a surprised hand up to salute and the Narakan Rifles came to a snappy halt.
A small, black haired figure threw itself at Terrence and his arms were again holding Joan Allen. “I knew you’d come,” she said, “only a big, crazy Irishman like you could do it.”
He kissed her and then pressed his mud-caked face against hers as he said into her ear. “Only three hundred big, crazy Irishmen, baby. There’s not a drop of anything else in me boys.”
STOP LOOK AND DIG
by George O. Smith
The enlightened days of mental telepathy and ESP should have made the world a better place, But the minute the Rhine Institute opened up, all the crooks decided it was time to go collegiate!
Someone behind me in the dark was toting a needle-ray. The impression came through so strong that I could almost read the filed-off serial number of the thing, but the guy himself I couldn’t dig at all. I stopped to look back but the only sign of life I could see was the fast flick of taxicab lights as they crossed an intersection about a half mile back. I stepped into a doorway so that I could think and stay out of the line of fire at the same time.
The impression of the needle-ray did not get any stronger, and that tipped me off. The bird was following me. He was no peace-loving citizen because honest men do not cart weapons with the serial numbers filed off. Therefore the character tailing me was a hot papa with a burner charge labelled “Steve Hammond” in his needler.
I concentrated, but the only impression I could get would have specified ninety-eight men out of a hundred anywhere. He was shorter than my six-feet-two and lighter than my one-ninety. I could guess that he was better looking. I’d had my features arranged by a blocked drop kick the year before the National Football League ruled the Rhine Institute out because of our use of mentals and perceptives. I gave up trying—I wanted details and not an overall picture of a hotbird carrying a burner.
I wondered if I could make a run for it.
I let my sense of perception dig the street ahead, casing every bump and irregularity. I passed places where I could zig out to take cover in front of telephone poles, and other places where I could zag in to take cover beyond front steps and the like. I let my perception run up the block and by the time I got to the end of my range, I knew that block just as well as if I’d made a practise run in the daytime.
At this point I got a shock. The hot papa was coming up the sidewalk hell bent for destruction. He was a mental sensitive, and he had been following my thoughts while my sense of perception made its trial run up the street. He was running like the devil to catch up with my mind and burn it down per schedule. It must have come as quite a shock to him when he realized that while the mind he was reading was running like hell up the street, the hard old body was standing in the doorway waiting for him.
I dove out of my hiding place as he came close. I wanted to tackle him hard and ask some pointed questions. He saw me as I saw him skidding to an unbalanced stop, and there was the dull glint of metal in his right hand. His needle-ray came swinging up and I went for my armpit. I found time to curse my own stupidity for not having hardware in my own fist at the moment. But then I had my rod in my fist. I felt the hot scorch of the needle going off just over my shoulder, and then came the godawful racket of my ancient forty-five. The big slug caught him high in the belly and tossed him back. It folded him over and dropped him in the gutter while the echoes of my cannon were still racketing back and forth up and down the quiet street.
I had just enough time to dig his wallet, pockets, and billfold before the whole neighborhood was up and out. Sirens howled in the distance and from above I could hear the thin wail of a jetcopter. Someone opened a window and called: “What’s going on out there? Cut it out!”
“Tea party,” I called back. “Go invite the cops, Tommy.”
The window slammed down again. He didn’t have to invite the law. It arrived in three ground cruisers and two jetcopter emergency squads that came closing in like a collapsing balloon.
The leader of the squadron was a Lieutenant Williamson whom I’d never met before. But he knew all about me before the ’copter hit the ground. I could almost feel his sense of perception frisking me from the skin outward, going through my wallet and inspecting the Private Operator’s license and my Weapon-Permit. I found out later that Williamson was a Rhine Scholar with a Bachelor’s Degree in Perception, which put him head and shoulders over me. He came to the point at once.
“Any ideas about this, Hammond?”
I shook my head. “Nope,” I replied. He looked at one of his men.
The other man nodded. “He’s levelling,” he said.
“Now look, Hammond,” said the lieutenant pointedly, “You’re clean and we know it. But hot papas don’t go out for fun. Why was he trying to burn you?”
“I wouldn’t know. I’m as blank as any perceptive when it comes to reading minds. I was hoping to collect him whole enough to ask questions, but he forced my hand.” I looked to where some of the clean-up squad were tucking the corpse into a basket. “It was one of the few times I’d have happily swapped my perception for the ability to read a mind.”
The lieutenant nodded unhappily. “Mind telling me why you were wandering around in this neighborhood? You don’t belong here, you know.”
“I was doing the job that most private eyes do. I was tailing a gent who was playing games off the reservation.”
“You’ve gone into this guy’s wallet, of course?”
I nodded. “Sure. He was Peter Rambaugh, age thirty, and—”
“Don’t bother. I know the rest. I can add only one item that you may not know. Rampaugh was a paid hotboy, suspected of playing with Scarmann’s mob.”
“I’ve had no dealings with Scarmann, Lieutenant.”
The Lieutenant nodded absently. It seemed to be a habit with him, probably to cover up his thinking-time. Finally he said, “Hammond, you’re clean. As soon as I identified you I took a dig of your folder at headquarters. You’re a bit rough and fast on that prehistoric cannon of yours, but—”
“You mean you can dig a folder at central files all the way from here?”
“I did.”