countries, after the statesmen got killed. It makes a war very difficult to stop.'
'It certainly made this one. It just didn't stop, till all the bombs were gone and all the aircraft were unservicable. And by that time, of course, they'd gone too far.'
'Christ,' said the American softly, 'I don't know what I'd have done in their shoes. I'm glad I wasn't.'
The scientist said, 'I should think you'd have tried to negotiate.'
'With an enemy knocking hell out of the United States and killing all our people? When I still had weapons in my hands? Just stop fighting and give in? I'd like to think that I was so high-minded but- well, I don't know.' He raised his head. 'I was never trained for diplomacy,' he said. 'If that situation had devolved on me, I wouldn't have known how to handle it.'
'They didn't, either,' said the scientist. He stretched himself, and yawned. 'Just too bad. But don't go blaming the Russians. It wasn't the big countries that set off this thing. It was the little ones, the Irresponsibles.'
Peter Holmes grinned, and said, 'It's a bit hard on all the rest of us.'
'You've got six months more,' remarked John Os-borne. 'Plus or minus something. Be satisfied with that. You've always known that you were going to die sometime. Well, now you know when. That's all.' He laughed. 'Just make the most of what you've got left.'
'I know that,' said Peter. 'The trouble is I can't think of anything that I want to do more than what I'm doing now.'
'Cooped up in bloody Scorpion?'
'Well-yes. It's our job. I really meant, at home.'
'No imagination. You want to turn Mohammedan and start a harem.'
The submarine commander laughed. 'Maybe he's got something there.'
The liaison officer shook his head. 'It's a nice idea, but it wouldn't be practical. Mary wouldn't like it.' He stopped smiling. 'The trouble is, I can't really believe it's going to happen. Can you?'
'Not after what you've seen?'
'Peter shook his head. 'No. If we'd seen any damage…'
'No imagination whatsoever,' remarked the scientist. 'It's the same with all you service people. That can't happen to me.' He paused. 'But it can. And it certainly will.'
'I suppose I haven't got any imagination,' said Peter thoughtfully. 'It's-it's the end of the world. I've never had to imagine anything like that before.'
John Osborne laughed. 'It's not the end of the world at all,' he said. 'It's only the end of us. The world will go on just the same, only we shan't be in it. I dare say it will get along all right without us.'
Dwight Towers raised his head. 'I suppose that's right. There didn't seem to be much wrong with Cairns, or Port Moresby either.' He paused, thinking of the flowering trees that he had seen on shore through the periscope, cascaras and flame trees, the palms standing in the sunlight. 'Maybe we've been too silly to deserve a world like this,' he said.
The scientist said, 'That's absolutely and precisely right.'
There didn't seem to be much more to say upon that subject, so they went up on to the bridge for a smoke, in the sunlight and fresh air.
They passed the Heads at the entrance to Sydney Harbour soon after dawn next day and went on southwards into the Bass Strait. Next morning they were in Port Phillip Bay, and they berthed alongside the aircraft carrier at Williamstown at about noon. The First Naval Member was there to meet them and he was piped aboard Scorpion as soon as the gangway was run out.
Dwight Towers met him on the narrow deck. The admiral returned his salute. 'Well, Captain, what sort of a cruise did you have?'
'We had no troubles, sir. The operation went through in accordance with the orders. But I'm afraid you may find the results are disappointing.'
'You didn't get very much information?'
'We got plenty of radiation data, sir. North of twenty latitude we couldn't go on deck.'
The admiral nodded. 'Have you had any sickness?'
'One case that the surgeon says is measles. Nothing of a radioactive nature.'
They went below into the tiny captain's cabin. Dwight displayed the draft of his report, written in pencil upon sheets of foolscap with an appendix of the radiation levels at each watch of the cruise, long columns of small figures in John Osborne's neat handwriting. 'I'll get this typed in Sydney right away,' he said. 'But what it comes to is just this-we found out very little.'
'No signs of lif e in any of those places?'
'Nothing at all. Of course, you can't see very much, at periscope height from the waterfront. I never realized before we went how little we'd be able to see. I should have, perhaps. You're quite a ways from Cairns out in the main channel, and the same at Moresby. We never saw the town of Darwin at all, up on the cliff. Just the waterfront.' He paused. 'There didn't seem to be much wrong with that.'
The admiral turned over the pencilled pages, stopping now and then to read a paragraph. 'You stayed some time at each place?'
'About five hours. We were calling all the time through the loud hailer.'
'Getting no answer?'
'No, sir. We thought we did at Darwin just at first, but it was only a crane shackle squeaking on the wharf. We moved right up to it and tracked it down.'
'Sea birds?'
'None at all. We never saw a bird north of latitude twenty. We saw a dog at Cairns.'
The admiral stayed twenty minutes. Finally he said, 'Well, get in this report as soon as you can, marking one copy by messenger direct to me. It's a bit disappointing, but you probably did all that anybody could have done.'
The American said, 'I was reading that report of Swordfish, sir. There's very little information about things on shore in that, either in the States or in Europe. I guess they didn't see much more than we did, from the waterfront.' He hesitated for a moment 'There's one suggestion that I'd like to put forward.'
'What's that, captain?'
'The radiation levels aren't very high, anywhere along the line. The scientific officer tells me that a man could work safely in an insulating suit-helmet, gloves, and all, of course. We could put an officer on shore in any of those places, rowing in a dinghy, working with an oxygen pack on his back.'
'Decontamination when he comes on board again,' said the admiral. 'That makes a problem. Probably not insuperable. I'll suggest it to the Prime Minister and see if he wants information upon any specific point. He may not think it worth while. But it's an idea.'
He turned to the control room to go up the ladder to the bridge.
'Will we be able to give shore leave, sir?'
'Any defects?'
'Nothing of importance.'
'Ten days,' said the admiral. 'I'll make a signal about that this afternoon.'
Peter Holmes rang up Mary after lunch. 'Home again, all in one piece,' he said. 'Look, darling, I'll be home sometime tonight-I don't know when. I've got a report to get off first, and I'll drop it in myself at the Navy Department on my way through-I've got to go there, anyway. I don't know when I'll be back. Don't bother about meeting me-I'll walk up from the station.'
'It's lovely to hear you again,' she said. 'You won't have had supper, will you?'
'I shouldn't think so. I'll do myself some eggs or something when I get in.'
She thought rapidly. 'I'll make a casserole, and we can have that any time.'
'Fine. Look, there's just one thing. We had a case of measles on board, so I'm in a kind of quarantine.'
'Oh, Peter! You've had it before, though, haven't you?'
'Not since I was about four years old. The surgeon says I can get it again. The incubation time is three weeks. Have you had it-recently?'
'I had it when I was about thirteen.'
'I think that makes you pretty safe.'