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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Mercenary, by Dallas McCord Reynolds
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Mercenary
+
+Author: Dallas McCord Reynolds
+
+Illustrator: Lloyd Birmingham
+
+Release Date: January 20, 2008 [EBook #24370]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MERCENARY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Greg Weeks, Stephen Blundell and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+MERCENARY
+
+ Every status-quo-caste society in history
+ has left open two roads to rise above your
+ caste: The Priest and The Warrior. But in
+ a society of TV and tranquilizers--the
+ Warrior acquires a strange new meaning....
+
+BY MACK REYNOLDS
+
+ILLUSTRATED BY BIRMINGHAM
+
+
+Joseph Mauser spotted the recruiting line-up from two or three blocks
+down the street, shortly after driving into Kingston. The local offices
+of Vacuum Tube Transport, undoubtedly. Baron Haer would be doing his
+recruiting for the fracas with Continental Hovercraft there if for no
+other reason than to save on rents. The Baron was watching pennies on
+this one and that was bad.
+
+In fact, it was so bad that even as Joe Mauser let his sports hovercar
+sink to a parking level and vaulted over its side he was still
+questioning his decision to sign up with the Vacuum Tube outfit rather
+than with their opponents. Joe was an old pro and old pros do not get to
+be old pros in the Category Military without developing an instinct to
+stay away from losing sides.
+
+Fine enough for Low-Lowers and Mid-Lowers to sign up with this outfit,
+as opposed to that, motivated by no other reasoning than the snappiness
+of the uniform and the stock shares offered, but an old pro considered
+carefully such matters as budget. Baron Haer was watching every expense,
+was, it was rumored, figuring on commanding himself and calling upon
+relatives and friends for his staff. Continental Hovercraft, on the
+other hand, was heavy with variable capital and was in a position to
+hire Stonewall Cogswell himself for their tactician.
+
+However, the die was cast. You didn't run up a caste level, not to speak
+of two at once, by playing it careful. Joe had planned this out; for
+once, old pro or not, he was taking risks.
+
+Recruiting line-ups were not for such as he. Not for many a year, many a
+fracas. He strode rapidly along this one, heading for the offices ahead,
+noting only in passing the quality of the men who were taking service
+with Vacuum Tube Transport. These were the soldiers he'd be commanding
+in the immediate future and the prospects looked grim. There were few
+veterans among them. Their stance, their demeanor, their ... well, you
+could tell a veteran even though he be Rank Private. You could tell a
+veteran of even one fracas. It showed.
+
+He knew the situation. The word had gone out. Baron Malcolm Haer was due
+for a defeat. You weren't going to pick up any lush bonuses signing up
+with him, and you definitely weren't going to jump a caste. In short, no
+matter what Haer's past record, choose what was going to be the winning
+side--Continental Hovercraft. Continental Hovercraft and old Stonewall
+Cogswell who had lost so few fracases that many a Telly buff couldn't
+remember a single one.
+
+Individuals among these men showed promise, Joe Mauser estimated even as
+he walked, but promise means little if you don't live long enough to
+cash in on it.
+
+Take that small man up ahead. He'd obviously got himself into a hassle
+maintaining his place in line against two or three heftier would-be
+soldiers. The little fellow wasn't backing down a step in spite of the
+attempts of the other Lowers to usurp his place. Joe Mauser liked to see
+such spirit. You could use it when you were in the dill.
+
+As he drew abreast of the altercation, he snapped from the side of his
+mouth, "Easy, lads. You'll get all the scrapping you want with
+Hovercraft. Wait until then."
+
+He'd expected his tone of authority to be enough, even though he was in
+mufti. He wasn't particularly interested in the situation, beyond giving
+the little man a hand. A veteran would have recognized him as an
+old-timer and probable officer, and heeded, automatically.
+
+These evidently weren't veterans.
+
+"Says who?" one of the Lowers growled back at him. "You one of Baron
+Haer's kids, or something?"
+
+Joe Mauser came to a halt and faced the other. He was irritated, largely
+with himself. He didn't want to be bothered. Nevertheless, there was no
+alternative now.
+
+The line of men, all Lowers so far as Joe could see, had fallen silent
+in an expectant hush. They were bored with their long wait. Now
+something would break the monotony.
+
+By tomorrow, Joe Mauser would be in command of some of these men. In as
+little as a week he would go into a full-fledged fracas with them. He
+couldn't afford to lose face. Not even at this point when all, including
+himself, were still civilian garbed. When matters pickled, in a fracas,
+you wanted men with complete confidence in you.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The man who had grumbled the surly response was a near physical twin of
+Joe Mauser which put him in his early thirties, gave him five foot
+eleven of altitude and about one hundred and eighty pounds. His clothes
+casted him Low-Lower--nothing to lose. As with many who have nothing to
+lose, he was willing to risk all for principle. His face now registered
+that ideal. Joe Mauser had no authority over him, nor his friends.
+
+Joe's eyes flicked to the other two who had been pestering the little
+fellow. They weren't quite so aggressive and as yet had come to no
+conclusion about their stand. Probably the three had been unacquainted
+before their bullying alliance to deprive the smaller man of his place.
+However, a moment of hesitation and Joe would have a trio on his hands.
+
+He went through no further verbal preliminaries. Joe Mauser stepped
+closer. His right hand lanced forward, not doubled in a fist but fingers
+close together and pointed, spear-like. He sank it into the other's
+abdomen, immediately below the rib cage--the solar plexus.
+
+He had misestimated the other two. Even as his opponent crumpled, they
+were upon him, coming in from each side. And at least one of them, he
+could see now, had been in hand-to-hand combat before. In short, another
+pro, like Joe himself.
+
+He took one blow, rolling with it, and his feet automatically went into
+the shuffle of the trained fighter. He retreated slightly to erect
+defenses, plan attack. They pressed him strongly, sensing victory in his
+retreat.
+
+The one mattered little to him. Joe Mauser could have polished off the
+oaf in a matter of seconds, had he been allotted seconds to devote. But
+the second, the experienced one, was the problem. He and Joe were well
+matched and with the oaf as an ally really he had all the best of it.
+
+Support came from a forgotten source, the little chap who had been the
+reason for the whole hassle. He waded in now as big as the next man so
+far as spirit was concerned, but a sorry fate gave him to attack the
+wrong man, the veteran rather than the tyro. He took a crashing blow to
+the side of his head which sent him sailing back into the recruiting
+line, now composed of excited, shouting verbal participants of the fray.
+
+However, the extinction of Joe Mauser's small ally had taken a moment or
+two and time was what Joe needed most. For a double second he had the
+oaf alone on his hands and that was sufficient. He caught a flailing
+arm, turned his back and automatically went into the movements which
+result in that spectacular hold of the wrestler, the Flying Mare. Just
+in time he recalled that his opponent was a future comrade-in-arms and
+twisted the arm so that it bent at the elbow, rather than breaking. He
+hurled the other over his shoulder and as far as possible, to take the
+scrap out of him, and twirled quickly to meet the further attack of his
+sole remaining foe.
+
+That phase of the combat failed to materialize.
+
+A voice of command bit out, "Hold it, you lads!"
+
+The original situation which had precipitated the fight was being
+duplicated. But while the three Lowers had failed to respond to Joe
+Mauser's tone of authority, there was no similar failure now.
+
+The owner of the voice, beautifully done up in the uniform of Vacuum
+Tube Transport, complete to kilts and the swagger stick of the officer
+of Rank Colonel or above, stood glaring at them. Age, Joe estimated,
+even as he came to attention, somewhere in the late twenties--an Upper
+in caste. Born to command. His face holding that arrogant, contemptuous
+expression once common to the patricians of Rome, the Prussian Junkers,
+the British ruling class of the Nineteenth Century. Joe knew the
+expression well. How well he knew it. On more than one occasion, he had
+dreamt of it.
+
+Joe said, "Yes, sir."
+
+"What in Zen goes on here? Are you lads overtranked?"
+
+"No, sir," Joe's veteran opponent grumbled, his eyes on the ground, a
+schoolboy before the principal.
+
+Joe said, evenly, "A private disagreement, sir."
+
+"Disagreement!" the Upper snorted. His eyes went to the three fallen
+combatants, who were in various stages of reviving. "I'd hate to see you
+lads in a real scrap."
+
+That brought a response from the non-combatants in the recruiting line.
+The _bon mot_ wasn't that good but caste has its privileges and the
+laughter was just short of uproarious.
+
+Which seemed to placate the kilted officer. He tapped his swagger stick
+against the side of his leg while he ran his eyes up and down Joe Mauser
+and the others, as though memorizing them for future reference.
+
+"All right," he said. "Get back into the line, and you trouble makers
+quiet down. We're processing as quickly as we can." And at that point he
+added insult to injury with an almost word for word repetition of what
+Joe had said a few moments earlier. "You'll get all the fighting you
+want from Hovercraft, if you can wait until then."
+
+The four original participants of the rumpus resumed their places in
+various stages of sheepishness. The little fellow, nursing an obviously
+aching jaw, made a point of taking up his original position even while
+darting a look of thanks to Joe Mauser who still stood where he had when
+the fight was interrupted.
+
+The Upper looked at Joe. "Well, lad, are you interested in signing up
+with Vacuum Tube Transport or not?"
+
+"Yes, sir," Joe said evenly. Then, "Joseph Mauser, sir. Category
+Military, Rank Captain."
+
+"Indeed." The officer looked him up and down all over again, his
+nostrils high. "A Middle, I assume. And brawling with recruits." He held
+a long silence. "Very well, come with me." He turned and marched off.
+
+Joe inwardly shrugged. This was a fine start for his pitch--a fine
+start. He had half a mind to give it all up, here and now, and head on
+up to Catskill to enlist with Continental Hovercraft. His big scheme
+would wait for another day. Nevertheless, he fell in behind the
+aristocrat and followed him to the offices which had been his original
+destination.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Two Rank Privates with 45-70 Springfields and wearing the Haer kilts in
+such wise as to indicate permanent status in Vacuum Tube Transport came
+to the salute as they approached. The Upper preceding Joe Mauser flicked
+his swagger stick in an easy nonchalance. Joe felt envious amusement.
+How long did it take to learn how to answer a salute with that degree of
+arrogant ease?
+
+There were desks in here, and typers humming, as Vacuum Tube Transport
+office workers, mobilized for this special service, processed volunteers
+for the company forces. Harried noncoms and junior-grade officers buzzed
+everywhere, failing miserably to bring order to the chaos. To the right
+was a door with a medical cross newly painted on it. When it
+occasionally popped open to admit or emit a recruit, white-robed
+doctors, male nurses and half nude men could be glimpsed beyond.
+
+Joe followed the other through the press and to an inner office at which
+door he didn't bother to knock. He pushed his way through, waved in
+greeting with his swagger stick to the single occupant who looked up
+from the paper- and tape-strewn desk at which he sat.
+
+Joe Mauser had seen the face before on Telly though never so tired as
+this and never with the element of defeat to be read in the expression.
+Bullet-headed, barrel-figured Baron Malcolm Haer of Vacuum Tube
+Transport. Category Transportation, Mid-Upper, and strong candidate for
+Upper-Upper upon retirement. However, there would be few who expected
+retirement in the immediate future. Hardly. Malcolm Haer found too
+obvious a lusty enjoyment in the competition between Vacuum Tube
+Transport and its stronger rivals.
+
+ * * *
+
+Joe came to attention, bore the sharp scrutiny of his chosen
+commander-to-be. The older man's eyes went to the kilted Upper officer
+who had brought Joe along. "What is it, Balt?"
+
+The other gestured with his stick at Joe. "Claims to be Rank Captain.
+Looking for a commission with us, Dad. I wouldn't know why." The last
+sentence was added lazily.
+
+The older Haer shot an irritated glance at his son. "Possibly for the
+same reason mercenaries usually enlist for a fracas, Balt." His eyes
+came back to Joe.
+
+Joe Mauser, still at attention even though in mufti, opened his mouth to
+give his name, category and rank, but the older man waved a hand
+negatively. "Captain Mauser, isn't it? I caught the fracas between
+Carbonaceous Fuel and United Miners, down on the Panhandle Reservation.
+Seems to me I've spotted you once or twice before, too."
+
+"Yes, sir," Joe said. This was some improvement in the way things were
+going.
+
+The older Haer was scowling at him. "Confound it, what are you doing
+with no more rank than captain? On the face of it, you're an old hand, a
+highly experienced veteran."
+
+_An old pro, we call ourselves_, Joe said to himself. _Old pros, we call
+ourselves, among ourselves._
+
+Aloud, he said, "I was born a Mid-Lower, sir."
+
+There was understanding in the old man's face, but Balt Haer said
+loftily, "What's that got to do with it? Promotion is quick and based on
+merit in Category Military."
+
+At a certain point, if you are good combat officer material, you speak
+your mind no matter the rank of the man you are addressing. On this
+occasion, Joe Mauser needed few words. He let his eyes go up and down
+Balt Haer's immaculate uniform, taking in the swagger stick of the Rank
+Colonel or above. Joe said evenly, "Yes, sir."
+
+Balt Haer flushed quick temper. "What do you mean by--"
+
+But his father was chuckling. "You have spirit, captain. I need spirit
+now. You are quite correct. My son, though a capable officer, I assure
+you, has probably not participated in a fraction of the fracases you
+have to your credit. However, there is something to be said for the
+training available to we Uppers in the academies. For instance, captain,
+have you ever commanded a body of lads larger than, well, a _company_?"
+
+Joe said flatly, "In the Douglas-Boeing versus Lockheed-Cessna fracas we
+took a high loss of officers when the Douglas-Boeing outfit rang in some
+fast-firing French _mitrailleuse_ we didn't know they had. As my
+superiors took casualties I was field promoted to acting battalion
+commander, to acting regimental commander, to acting brigadier. For
+three days I held the rank of acting commander of brigade. We won."
+
+Balt Haer snapped his fingers. "I remember that. Read quite a paper on
+it." He eyed Joe Mauser, almost respectfully. "Stonewall Cogswell got
+the credit for the victory and received his marshal's baton as a
+result."
+
+"He was one of the few other officers that survived," Joe said dryly.
+
+"But, Zen! You mean you got no promotion at all?"
+
+Joe said, "I was upped to Low-Middle from High-Lower, sir. At my age, at
+the time, quite a promotion."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Baron Haer was remembering, too. "That was the fracas that brought on
+the howl from the Sovs. They claimed those _mitrailleuse_ were post-1900
+and violated the Universal Disarmament Pact. Yes, I recall that.
+Douglas-Boeing was able to prove that the weapon was used by the French
+as far back as the Franco-Prussian War." He eyed Joe with new interest
+now. "Sit down, captain. You too, Balt. Do you realize that Captain
+Mauser is the only recruit of officer rank we've had today?"
+
+"Yes," the younger Haer said dryly. "However, it's too late to call the
+fracas off now. Hovercraft wouldn't stand for it, and the Category
+Military Department would back them. Our only alternative is
+unconditional surrender, and you know what that means."
+
+"It means our family would probably be forced from control of the firm,"
+the older man growled. "But nobody has suggested surrender on any terms.
+Nobody, thus far." He glared at his officer son who took it with an easy
+shrug and swung a leg over the edge of his father's desk in the way of a
+seat.
+
+Joe Mauser found a chair and lowered himself into it. Evidently, the
+foppish Balt Haer had no illusions about the spot his father had got the
+family corporation into. And the younger man was right, of course.
+
+But the Baron wasn't blind to reality any more than he was a coward. He
+dismissed Balt Haer's defeatism from his mind and came back to Joe
+Mauser. "As I say, you're the only officer recruit today. Why?"
+
+Joe said evenly, "I wouldn't know, sir. Perhaps freelance Category
+Military men are occupied elsewhere. There's always a shortage of
+trained officers."
+
+Baron Haer was waggling a finger negatively. "That's not what I mean,
+captain. You are an old hand. This is your category and you must know it
+well. Then why are _you_ signing up with Vacuum Tube Transport rather
+than Hovercraft?"
+
+Joe Mauser looked at him for a moment without speaking.
+
+"Come, come, captain. I am an old hand too, in my category, and not a
+fool. I realize there is scarcely a soul in the West-world that expects
+anything but disaster for my colors. Pay rates have been widely posted.
+I can offer only five common shares of Vacuum Tube for a Rank Captain,
+win or lose. Hovercraft is doubling that, and can pick and choose among
+the best officers in the hemisphere."
+
+Joe said softly, "I have all the shares I need."
+
+Balt Haer had been looking back and forth between his father and the
+newcomer and becoming obviously more puzzled. He put in, "Well, what in
+Zen motivates you if it isn't the stock we offer?"
+
+Joe glanced at the younger Haer to acknowledge the question but he spoke
+to the Baron. "Sir, like you said, you're no fool. However, you've been
+sucked in, this time. When you took on Hovercraft, you were thinking in
+terms of a regional dispute. You wanted to run one of your vacuum tube
+deals up to Fairbanks from Edmonton. You were expecting a minor fracas,
+involving possibly five thousand men. You never expected Hovercraft to
+parlay it up, through their connections in the Category Military
+Department, to a divisional magnitude fracas which you simply aren't
+large enough to afford. But Hovercraft was getting sick of your
+corporation. You've been nicking away at them too long. So they decided
+to do you in. They've hired Marshal Cogswell and the best combat
+officers in North America, and they're hiring the most competent
+veterans they can find. Every fracas buff who watches Telly, figures
+you've had it. They've been watching you come up the aggressive way, the
+hard way, for a long time, but now they're all going to be sitting on
+the edges of their sofas waiting for you to get it."
+
+Baron Haer's heavy face had hardened as Joe Mauser went on relentlessly.
+He growled, "Is this what everyone thinks?"
+
+"Yes. Everyone intelligent enough to have an opinion." Joe made a motion
+of his head to the outer offices where the recruiting was proceeding.
+"Those men out there are rejects from Catskill, where old Baron
+Zwerdling is recruiting. Either that or they're inexperienced
+Low-Lowers, too stupid to realize they're sticking their necks out. Not
+one man in ten is a veteran. And when things begin to pickle, you want
+veterans."
+
+Baron Malcolm Haer sat back in his chair and stared coldly at Captain
+Joe Mauser. He said, "At first I was moderately surprised that an old
+time mercenary like yourself should choose my uniform, rather than
+Zwerdling's. Now I am increasingly mystified about motivation. So all
+over again I ask you, captain: Why are you requesting a commission in my
+forces which you seem convinced will meet disaster?"
+
+Joe wet his lips carefully. "I think I know a way you can win."
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+
+His permanent military rank the Haers had no way to alter, but they were
+short enough of competent officers that they gave him an acting rating
+and pay scale of major and command of a squadron of cavalry. Joe Mauser
+wasn't interested in a cavalry command this fracas, but he said nothing.
+Immediately, he had to size up the situation; it wasn't time as yet to
+reveal the big scheme. And, meanwhile, they could use him to whip the
+Rank Privates into shape.
+
+He had left the offices of Baron Haer to go through the red tape
+involved in being signed up on a temporary basis in the Vacuum Tube
+Transport forces, and reentered the confusion of the outer offices where
+the Lowers were being processed and given medicals. He reentered in time
+to run into a Telly team which was doing a live broadcast.
+
+Joe Mauser remembered the news reporter who headed the team. He'd run
+into him two or three times in fracases. As a matter of fact, although
+Joe held the standard Military Category prejudices against Telly, he had
+a basic respect for this particular newsman. On the occasions he'd seen
+him before, the fellow was hot in the midst of the action even when
+things were in the dill. He took as many chances as did the average
+combatant, and you can't ask for more than that.
+
+The other knew him, too, of course. It was part of his job to be able to
+spot the celebrities and near celebrities. He zeroed in on Joe now,
+making flicks of his hand to direct the cameras. Joe, of course, was
+fully aware of the value of Telly and was glad to co-operate.
+
+"Captain! Captain Mauser, isn't it? Joe Mauser who held out for four
+days in the swamps of Louisiana with a single company while his ranking
+officers reformed behind him."
+
+That was one way of putting it, but both Joe and the newscaster who had
+covered the debacle knew the reality of the situation. When the front
+had collapsed, his commanders--of Upper caste, of course--had hauled
+out, leaving him to fight a delaying action while they mended their
+fences with the enemy, coming to the best terms possible. Yes, that had
+been the United Oil versus Allied Petroleum fracas, and Joe had emerged
+with little either in glory or pelf.
+
+The average fracas fan wasn't on an intellectual level to appreciate
+anything other than victory. The good guys win, the bad guys
+lose--that's obvious, isn't it? Not one out of ten Telly followers of
+the fracases was interested in a well-conducted retreat or holding
+action. They wanted blood, lots of it, and they identified with the
+winning side.
+
+Joe Mauser wasn't particularly bitter about this aspect. It was part of
+his way of life. In fact, his pet peeve was the _real_ buff. The type,
+man or woman, who could remember every fracas you'd ever been in, every
+time you'd copped one, and how long you'd been in the hospital. Fans who
+could remember, even better than you could, every time the situation had
+pickled on you and you'd had to fight your way out as best you could.
+They'd tell you about it, their eyes gleaming, sometimes a slightest
+trickle of spittle at the sides of their mouths. They usually wanted an
+autograph, or a souvenir such as a uniform button.
+
+Now Joe said to the Telly reporter, "That's right, Captain Mauser.
+Acting major, in this fracas, ah--"
+
+"Freddy. Freddy Soligen. You remember me, captain--"
+
+"Of course I do, Freddy. We've been in the dill, side by side, more than
+once, and even when I was too scared to use my side arm, you'd be
+scanning away with your camera."
+
+"Ha ha, listen to the captain, folks. I hope my boss is tuned in. But
+seriously, Captain Mauser, what do you think the chances of Vacuum Tube
+Transport are in this fracas?"
+
+Joe looked into the camera lens, earnestly. "The best, of course, or I
+wouldn't have signed up with Baron Haer, Freddy. Justice triumphs, and
+anybody who is familiar with the issues in this fracas, knows that Baron
+Haer is on the side of true right."
+
+Freddy said, holding any sarcasm he must have felt, "What would you say
+the issues were, captain?"
+
+"The basic North American free enterprise right to compete. Hovercraft
+has held a near monopoly in transport to Fairbanks. Vacuum Tube
+Transport wishes to lower costs and bring the consumers of Fairbanks
+better service through running a vacuum tube to that area. What could be
+more in the traditions of the West-world? Continental Hovercraft stands
+in the way and it is they who have demanded of the Category Military
+Department a trial by arms. On the face of it, justice is on the side of
+Baron Haer."
+
+Freddy Soligen said into the camera, "Well, all you good people of the
+Telly world, that's an able summation the captain has made, but it
+certainly doesn't jibe with the words of Baron Zwerdling we heard this
+morning, does it? However, justice triumphs and we'll see what the field
+of combat will have to offer. Thank you, thank you very much, Captain
+Mauser. All of us, all of us tuned in today, hope that you personally
+will run into no dill in this fracas."
+
+"Thanks, Freddy. Thanks all," Joe said into the camera, before turning
+away. He wasn't particularly keen about this part of the job, but you
+couldn't underrate the importance of pleasing the buffs. In the long run
+it was your career, your chances for promotion both in military rank and
+ultimately in caste. It was the way the fans took you up, boosted you,
+idolized you, worshipped you if you really made it. He, Joe Mauser, was
+only a minor celebrity, he appreciated every chance he had to be
+interviewed by such a popular reporter as Freddy Soligen.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Even as he turned, he spotted the four men with whom he'd had his spat
+earlier. The little fellow was still to the fore. Evidently, the others
+had decided the one place extra that he represented wasn't worth the
+trouble he'd put in their way defending it.
+
+On an impulse he stepped up to the small man who began a grin of
+recognition, a grin that transformed his feisty face. A revelation of
+an inner warmth beyond average in a world which had lost much of its
+human warmth.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+Joe said, "Like a job, soldier?"
+
+"Name's Max. Max Mainz. Sure I want a job. That's why I'm in this
+everlasting line."
+
+Joe said, "First fracas for you, isn't it?"
+
+"Yeah, but I had basic training in school."
+
+"What do you weigh, Max?"
+
+Max's face soured. "About one twenty."
+
+"Did you check out on semaphore in school?"
+
+"Well, sure. I'm Category Food, Sub-division Cooking, Branch Chef, but,
+like I say, I took basic military training, like most everybody else."
+
+"I'm Captain Joe Mauser. How'd you like to be my batman?"
+
+Max screwed up his already not overly handsome face. "Gee, I don't know.
+I kinda joined up to see some action. Get into the dill. You know what I
+mean."
+
+Joe said dryly, "See here, Mainz, you'll probably find more pickled
+situations next to me than you'll want--and you'll come out alive."
+
+The recruiting sergeant looked up from the desk. It was Max Mainz's turn
+to be processed. The sergeant said, "Lad, take a good opportunity when
+it drops in your lap. The captain is one of the best in the field.
+You'll learn more, get better chances for promotion, if you stick with
+him."
+
+Joe couldn't remember ever having run into the sergeant before, but he
+said, "Thanks, sergeant."
+
+The other said, evidently realizing Joe didn't recognize him, "We were
+together on the Chihuahua Reservation, on the jurisdictional fracas
+between the United Miners and the Teamsters, sir."
+
+It had been almost fifteen years ago. About all that Joe Mauser
+remembered of that fracas was the abnormal number of casualties they'd
+taken. His side had lost, but from this distance in time Joe couldn't
+even remember what force he'd been with. But now he said, "That's right.
+I thought I recognized you, sergeant."
+
+"It was my first fracas, sir." The sergeant went businesslike. "If you
+want I should hustle this lad though, captain--"
+
+"Please do, sergeant." Joe added to Max, "I'm not sure where my billet
+will be. When you're through all this, locate the officer's mess and
+wait there for me."
+
+"Well, O.K.," Max said doubtfully, still scowling but evidently a
+servant of an officer, if he wanted to be or not.
+
+"Sir," the sergeant added ominously. "If you've had basic, you know
+enough how to address an officer."
+
+"Well, yessir," Max said hurriedly.
+
+Joe began to turn away, but then spotted the man immediately behind Max
+Mainz. He was one of the three with whom Joe had tangled earlier, the
+one who'd obviously had previous combat experience. He pointed the man
+out to the sergeant. "You'd better give this lad at least temporary rank
+of corporal. He's a veteran and we're short of veterans."
+
+The sergeant said, "Yes, sir. We sure are." Joe's former foe looked
+properly thankful.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Joe Mauser finished off his own red tape and headed for the street to
+locate a military tailor who could do him up a set of the Haer kilts and
+fill his other dress requirements. As he went, he wondered vaguely just
+how many different uniforms he had worn in his time.
+
+In a career as long as his own from time to time you took semi-permanent
+positions in bodyguards, company police, or possibly the permanent
+combat troops of this corporation or that. But largely, if you were
+ambitious, you signed up for the fracases and that meant into a uniform
+and out of it again in as short a period as a couple of weeks.
+
+At the door he tried to move aside but was too slow for the quick moving
+young woman who caromed off him. He caught her arm to prevent her from
+stumbling. She looked at him with less than thanks.
+
+Joe took the blame for the collision. "Sorry," he said. "I'm afraid I
+didn't see you, Miss."
+
+"Obviously," she said coldly. Her eyes went up and down him, and for a
+moment he wondered where he had seen her before. Somewhere, he was sure.
+
+She was dressed as they dress who have never considered cost and she had
+an elusive beauty which would have been even the more hadn't her face
+projected quite such a serious outlook. Her features were more delicate
+than those to which he was usually attracted. Her lips were less full,
+but still-- He was reminded of the classic ideal of the British Romantic
+Period, the women sung of by Byron and Keats, Shelly and Moore.
+
+She said, "Is there any particular reason why you should be staring at
+me, Mr.--"
+
+"Captain Mauser," Joe said hurriedly. "I'm afraid I've been rude,
+Miss--Well, I thought I recognized you."
+
+She took in his civilian dress, typed it automatically, and came to an
+erroneous conclusion. She said, "Captain? You mean that with everyone
+else I know drawing down ranks from Lieutenant Colonel to Brigadier
+General, you can't make anything better than Captain?"
+
+Joe winced. He said carefully, "I came up from the ranks, Miss. Captain
+is quite an achievement, believe me."
+
+"Up from the ranks!" She took in his clothes again. "You mean you're a
+Middle? You neither talk nor look like a Middle, captain." She used the
+caste rating as though it was not _quite_ a derogatory term.
+
+Not that she meant to be deliberately insulting, Joe knew, wearily. How
+well he knew. It was simply born in her. As once a well-educated
+aristocracy had, not necessarily unkindly, named their status inferiors
+_niggers_; or other aristocrats, in another area of the country, had
+named theirs _greasers_. Yes, how well he knew.
+
+He said very evenly, "Mid-Middle now, Miss. However, I was born in the
+Lower castes."
+
+An eyebrow went up. "Zen! You must have put in many an hour studying.
+You talk like an Upper, captain." She dropped all interest in him and
+turned to resume her journey.
+
+"Just a moment," Joe said. "You can't go in there, Miss--"
+
+Her eyebrows went up again. "The name is Haer," she said. "Why can't I
+go in here, captain?"
+
+Now it came to him why he had thought he recognized her. She had basic
+features similar to those of that overbred poppycock, Balt Haer.
+
+"Sorry," Joe said. "I suppose under the circumstances, you can. I was
+about to tell you that they're recruiting with lads running around half
+clothed. Medical inspections, that sort of thing."
+
+She made a noise through her nose and said over her shoulder, even as
+she sailed on. "Besides being a Haer, I'm an M.D., captain. At the
+ludicrous sight of a man shuffling about in his shorts, I seldom blush."
+
+She was gone.
+
+Joe Mauser looked after her. "I'll bet you don't," he muttered.
+
+Had she waited a few minutes he could have explained his Upper accent
+and his unlikely education. When you'd copped one you had plenty of
+opportunity in hospital beds to read, to study, to contemplate--and to
+fester away in your own schemes of rebellion against fate. And Joe had
+copped many in his time.
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+
+By the time Joe Mauser called it a day and retired to his quarters he
+was exhausted to the point where his basic dissatisfaction with the
+trade he followed was heavily upon him.
+
+He had met his immediate senior officers, largely dilettante Uppers with
+precious little field experience, and was unimpressed. And he'd met his
+own junior officers and was shocked. By the looks of things at this
+stage, Captain Mauser's squadron would be going into this fracas both
+undermanned with Rank Privates and with junior officers composed largely
+of temporarily promoted noncoms. If this was typical of Baron Haer's
+total force, then Balt Haer had been correct; unconditional surrender
+was to be considered, no matter how disastrous to Haer family fortunes.
+
+Joe had been able to take immediate delivery of one kilted uniform. Now,
+inside his quarters, he began stripping out of his jacket. Somewhat to
+his surprise, the small man he had selected earlier in the day to be his
+batman entered from an inner room, also resplendent in the Haer uniform
+and obviously happily so.
+
+He helped his superior out of the jacket with an ease that held no
+subservience but at the same time was correctly respectful. You'd have
+thought him a batman specially trained.
+
+Joe grunted, "Max, isn't it? I'd forgotten about you. Glad you found our
+billet all right."
+
+Max said, "Yes, sir. Would the captain like a drink? I picked up a
+bottle of applejack. Applejack's the drink around here, sir. Makes a
+topnotch highball with ginger ale and a twist of lemon."
+
+Joe Mauser looked at him. Evidently his tapping this man for orderly had
+been sheer fortune. Well, Joe Mauser could use some good luck on this
+job. He hoped it didn't end with selecting a batman.
+
+Joe said, "An applejack highball sounds wonderful, Max. Got ice?"
+
+"Of course, sir." Max left the small room.
+
+Joe Mauser and his officers were billeted in what had once been a motel
+on the old road between Kingston and Woodstock. There was a shower and a
+tiny kitchenette in each cottage. That was one advantage in a fracas
+held in an area where there were plenty of facilities. Such military
+reservations as that of the Little Big Horn in Montana and particularly
+some of those in the South West and Mexico, were another thing.
+
+Joe lowered himself into the room's easy-chair and bent down to untie
+his laces. He kicked his shoes off. He could use that drink. He began
+wondering all over again if his scheme for winning this Vacuum Tube
+Transport versus Continental Hovercraft fracas would come off. The more
+he saw of Baron Haer's inadequate forces, the more he wondered. He
+hadn't expected Vacuum Tube to be in _this_ bad a shape. Baron Haer had
+been riding high for so long that one would have thought his reputation
+for victory would have lured many a veteran to his colors. Evidently
+they hadn't bitten. The word was out all right.
+
+Max Mainz returned with the drink.
+
+Joe said, "You had one yourself?"
+
+"No, sir."
+
+Joe said, "Well, Zen, go get yourself one and come on back and sit down.
+Let's get acquainted."
+
+"Well, yessir." Max disappeared back into the kitchenette to return
+almost immediately. The little man slid into a chair, drink awkwardly in
+hand.
+
+His superior sized him up, all over again. Not much more than a kid,
+really. Surprisingly aggressive for a Lower who must have been raised
+from childhood in a trank-bemused, Telly-entertained household. The fact
+that he'd broken away from that environment at all was to his credit, it
+was considerably easier to conform. But then it is always easier to
+conform, to run with the herd, as Joe well knew. His own break hadn't
+been an easy one. "Relax," he said now.
+
+Max said, "Well, this is my first day."
+
+"I know. And you've been seeing Telly shows all your life showing how an
+orderly conducts himself in the presence of his superior." Joe took
+another pull and yawned. "Well, forget about it. With any man who goes
+into a fracas with me, I like to be on close terms. When things pickle,
+I want him to be on my side, not nursing some peeve brought on by his
+officer trying to give him an inferiority complex."
+
+The little man was eying him in surprise.
+
+Joe finished his highball and came to his feet to get another one. He
+said, "On two occasions I've had an orderly save my life. I'm not taking
+any chances but that there might be a third opportunity."
+
+"Well, yessir. Does the captain want me to get him--"
+
+"I'll get it," Joe said.
+
+When he'd returned to his chair, he said, "Why did you join up with
+Baron Haer, Max?"
+
+The other shrugged it off. "The usual. The excitement. The idea of all
+those fans watching me on Telly. The share of common stock I'll get.
+And, you never know, maybe a promotion in caste. I wouldn't mind making
+Upper-Lower."
+
+Joe said sourly, "One fracas and you'll be over that desire to have the
+buffs watching you on Telly while they sit around in their front rooms
+sucking on tranks. And you'll probably be over the desire for the
+excitement, too. Of course, the share of stock is another thing."
+
+"You aren't just countin' down, captain," Max said, an almost surly
+overtone in his voice. "You don't know what it's like being born with no
+more common stock shares than a Mid-Lower."
+
+Joe held his peace, sipping at his drink, taking this one more slowly.
+He let his eyebrows rise to encourage the other to go on.
+
+Max said doggedly, "Sure, they call it People's Capitalism and everybody
+gets issued enough shares to insure him a basic living all the way from
+the cradle to the grave, like they say. But let me tell you, you're a
+Middle and you don't realize how basic the basic living of a Lower can
+be."
+
+Joe yawned. If he hadn't been so tired, there would have been more
+amusement in the situation.
+
+Max was still dogged. "Unless you can add to those shares of stock, it's
+pretty drab, captain. You wouldn't know."
+
+Joe said, "Why don't you work? A Lower can always add to his stock by
+working."
+
+Max stirred in indignity. "Work? Listen, sir, that's just one more field
+that's been automated right out of existence. Category Food Preparation,
+Sub-division Cooking, Branch Chef. Cooking isn't left in the hands of
+slobs who might drop a cake of soap into the soup. It's done automatic.
+The only new changes made in cooking are by real top experts, almost
+scientists like. And most of them are Uppers, mind you."
+
+Joe Mauser sighed inwardly. So his find in batmen wasn't going to be as
+wonderful as all that, after all. The man might have been born into the
+food preparation category from a long line of chefs, but evidently he
+knew precious little about his field. Joe might have suspected. He
+himself had been born into Clothing Category, Sub-division Shoes, Branch
+Repair--Cobbler--a meaningless trade since shoes were no longer
+repaired but discarded upon showing signs of wear. In an economy of
+complete abundance, there is little reason for repair of basic
+commodities. It was high time the government investigated category
+assignment and reshuffled and reassigned half the nation's population.
+But then, of course, was the question of what to do with the
+technologically unemployed.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Max was saying, "The only way I could figure on a promotion to a higher
+caste, or the only way to earn stock shares, was by crossing categories.
+And you know what that means. Either Category Military, or Category
+Religion and I sure as Zen don't know nothing about religion."
+
+Joe said mildly, "Theoretically, you can cross categories into any field
+you want, Max."
+
+Max snorted. "Theoretically is right ... sir. You ever heard about
+anybody born a Lower, or even a Middle like yourself, cross categories
+to, say, some Upper category like banking?"
+
+Joe chuckled. He liked this peppery little fellow. If Max worked out as
+well as Joe thought he might, there was a possibility of taking him
+along to the next fracas.
+
+Max was saying, "I'm not saying anything against the old time way of
+doing things or talking against the government, but I'll tell you,
+captain, every year goes by it gets harder and harder for a man to raise
+his caste or to earn some additional stock shares."
+
+The applejack had worked enough on Joe for him to rise against one of
+his pet peeves. He said, "That term, the old time way, is strictly Telly
+talk, Max. We don't do things _the old time way_. No nation in history
+ever has--with the possible exception of Egypt. Socio-economics are in a
+continual flux and here in this country we no more do things in the way
+they did fifty years ago, than fifty years ago they did them the way the
+American Revolutionists outlined back in the Eighteenth Century."
+
+Max was staring at him. "I don't get that, sir."
+
+Joe said impatiently, "Max, the politico-economic system we have today
+is an outgrowth of what went earlier. The welfare state, the freezing of
+the status quo, the Frigid Fracas between the West-world and the
+Sov-world, industrial automation until useful employment is all but
+needless--all these things were to be found in embryo more than fifty
+years ago."
+
+"Well, maybe the captain's right, but you gotta admit, sir, that mostly
+we do things the old way. We still got the Constitution and the
+two-party system and--"
+
+Joe was wearying of the conversation now. You seldom ran into anyone,
+even in Middle caste, the traditionally professional class, interested
+enough in such subjects to be worth arguing with. He said, "The
+Constitution, Max, has got to the point of the Bible. Interpret it the
+way you wish, and you can find anything. If not, you can always make a
+new amendment. So far as the two-party system is concerned, what effect
+does it have when there are no differences between the two parties? That
+phase of pseudo-democracy was beginning as far back as the 1930s when
+they began passing State laws hindering the emerging of new political
+parties. By the time they were insured against a third party working its
+way through the maze of election laws, the two parties had become so
+similar that elections became almost as big a farce as over in the
+Sov-world."
+
+"A farce?" Max ejaculated indignantly, forgetting his servant status.
+"That means not so good, doesn't it? Far as I'm concerned, election day
+is tops. The one day a Lower is just as good as an Upper. The one day
+how many shares you got makes no difference. Everybody has everything."
+
+"Sure, sure, sure," Joe sighed. "The modern equivalent of the Roman
+Bacchanalia. Election day in the West-world when no one, for just that
+one day, is freer than anyone else."
+
+"Well, what's wrong with that?" The other was all but belligerent.
+"That's the trouble with you Middles and Uppers, you don't know how it
+is to be a Lower and--"
+
+Joe snapped suddenly, "I was born a Mid-Lower myself, Max. Don't give me
+that nonsense."
+
+Max gaped at him, utterly unbelieving.
+
+Joe's irritation fell away. He held out his glass. "Get us a couple of
+more drinks, Max, and I'll tell you a story."
+
+By the time the fresh drink came, Joe Mauser was sorry he'd made the
+offer. He thought back. He hadn't told anyone the Joe Mauser story in
+many a year. And, as he recalled, the last time had been when he was
+well into his cups, on an election day at that, and his listener had
+been a Low-Upper, a hereditary aristocrat, one of the one per cent of
+the upper strata of the nation. Zen! How the man had laughed. He'd
+roared his amusement till the tears ran.
+
+However, Joe said, "Max, I was born in the same caste you were--average
+father, mother, sisters and brothers. They subsisted on the basic income
+guaranteed from birth, sat and watched Telly for an unbelievable number
+of hours each day, took trank to keep themselves happy. And thought I
+was crazy because I didn't. Dad was the sort of man who'd take his belt
+off to a child of his who questioned such school taught slogans as _What
+was good enough for Daddy is good enough for me_.
+
+"They were all fracas fans, of course. As far back as I can remember the
+picture is there of them gathered around the Telly, screaming
+excitement." Joe Mauser sneered, uncharacteristically.
+
+"You don't sound much like you're in favor of your trade, captain," Max
+said.
+
+Joe came to his feet, putting down his still half-full glass. "I'll make
+this epic story short, Max. As you said, the two actually valid methods
+of rising above the level in which you were born are in the Military and
+Religious Categories. Like you, even I couldn't stomach the latter."
+
+Joe Mauser hesitated, then finished it off. "Max, there have been few
+societies that man has evolved that didn't allow in some manner for the
+competent or sly, the intelligent or the opportunist, the brave or the
+strong, to work his way to the top. I don't know which of these I
+personally fit into, but I rebel against remaining in the lower
+categories of a stratified society. Do I make myself clear?"
+
+"Well, no sir, not exactly."
+
+Joe said flatly, "I'm going to fight my way to the top, and nothing is
+going to stand in the way. Is that clearer?"
+
+"Yessir," Max said, taken aback.
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+
+After routine morning duties, Joe Mauser returned to his billet and
+mystified Max Mainz by not only changing into mufti himself but having
+Max do the same.
+
+In fact, the new batman protested faintly. He hadn't nearly, as yet, got
+over the glory of wearing his kilts and was looking forward to parading
+around town in them. He had a point, of course. The appointed time for
+the fracas was getting closer and buffs were beginning to stream into
+town to bask in the atmosphere of threatened death. Everybody knew what
+a military center, on the outskirts of a fracas reservation such as the
+Catskills, was like immediately preceding a clash between rival
+corporations. The high-strung gaiety, the drinking, the overtranking,
+the relaxation of mores. Even a Rank Private had it made. Admiring
+civilians to buy drinks and hang on your every word, and more important
+still, sensuous-eyed women, their faces slack in thinly suppressed
+passion. It was a recognized phenomenon, even Max Mainz knew--this
+desire on the part of women Telly fans to date a man, and then watch him
+later, killing or being killed.
+
+"Time enough to wear your fancy uniform," Joe Mauser growled at him. "In
+fact, tomorrow's a local election day. Parlay that up on top of all the
+fracas fans gravitating into town and you'll have a wingding the likes
+of nothing you've seen before."
+
+"Well yessir," Max begrudged. "Where're we going now, captain?"
+
+"To the airport. Come along."
+
+Joe Mauser led the way to his sports hovercar and as soon as the two
+were settled into the bucket seats, hit the lift lever with the butt of
+his left hand. Aircushion-borne, he trod down on the accelerator.
+
+Max Mainz was impressed. "You know," he said. "I never been in one of
+these swanky sports jobs before. The kinda car you can afford on the
+income of a Mid-Lower's stock aren't--"
+
+"Knock it off," Joe said wearily. "Carping we'll always have with us
+evidently, but in spite of all the beefing in every strata from
+Low-Lower to Upper-Middle, I've yet to see any signs of organized
+protest against our present politico-economic system."
+
+[Illustration]
+
+"Hey," Max said. "Don't get me wrong. What was good enough for Dad is
+good enough for me. You won't catch me talking against the government."
+
+"Hm-m-m," Joe murmured. "And all the other cliches taught to us to
+preserve the status quo, our People's Capitalism." They were reaching
+the outskirts of town, crossing the Esopus. The airport lay only a mile
+or so beyond.
+
+It was obviously too deep for Max, and since he didn't understand, he
+assumed his superior didn't know what he was talking about. He said,
+tolerantly, "Well, what's wrong with People's Capitalism? Everybody
+owns the corporations. Damnsight better than the Sovs have."
+
+Joe said sourly. "We've got one optical illusion, they've got another,
+Max. Over there they claim the proletariat owns the means of production.
+Great. But the Party members are the ones who control it, and, as a
+result they manage to do all right for themselves. The Party hierarchy
+over there are like our Uppers over here."
+
+"Yeah." Max was being particularly dense. "I've seen a lot about it on
+Telly. You know, when there isn't a good fracas on, you tune to one of
+them educational shows, like--"
+
+Joe winced at the term _educational_, but held his peace.
+
+"It's pretty rugged over there. But in the West-world, the people own a
+corporation's stock and they run it and get the benefit."
+
+"At least it makes a beautiful story," Joe said dryly. "Look, Max.
+Suppose you have a corporation that has two hundred thousand shares out
+and they're distributed among one hundred thousand and one persons. One
+hundred thousand of these own one share apiece, but the remaining
+stockholder owns the other hundred thousand."
+
+"I don't know what you're getting at," Max said.
+
+Joe Mauser was tired of the discussion. "Briefly," he said, "we have the
+illusion that this is a People's Capitalism, with all stock in the hands
+of the People. Actually, as ever before, the stock is in the hands of
+the Uppers, all except a mere dribble. They own the country and they run
+it for their own benefit."
+
+Max shot a less than military glance at him. "Hey, you're not one of
+these Sovs yourself, are you?"
+
+They were coming into the parking area near the Administration Building
+of the airport. "No," Joe said so softly that Max could hardly hear his
+words. "Only a Mid-Middle on the make."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Followed by Max, he strode quickly to the Administration Building,
+presented his credit identification at the desk and requested a light
+aircraft for a period of three hours. The clerk, hardly looking up,
+began going through motions, speaking into telescreens.
+
+The clerk said finally, "You might have a small wait, sir. Quite a few
+of the officers involved in this fracas have been renting out
+taxi-planes almost as fast as they're available."
+
+That didn't surprise Joe Mauser. Any competent officer made a point of
+an aerial survey of the battle reservation before going into a fracas.
+Aircraft, of course, couldn't be used _during_ the fray, since they
+postdated the turn of the century, and hence were relegated to the
+cemetery of military devices along with such items as nuclear weapons,
+tanks, and even gasoline-propelled vehicles of size to be useful.
+
+Use an aircraft in a fracas, or even _build_ an aircraft for military
+usage and you'd have a howl go up from the military attaches from the
+Sov-world that would be heard all the way to Budapest. Not a fracas
+went by but there were scores, if not hundreds, of military observers,
+keen-eyed to check whether or not any really modern tools of war were
+being illegally utilized. Joe Mauser sometimes wondered if the
+West-world observers, over in the Sov-world, were as hair fine in their
+living up to the rules of the Universal Disarmament Pact. Probably. But,
+for that matter, they didn't have the same system of fighting fracases
+over there, as in the West.
+
+Joe took a chair while he waited and thumbed through a fan magazine.
+From time to time he found his own face in such publications. He was a
+third-rate celebrity, really. Luck hadn't been with him so far as the
+buffs were concerned. They wanted spectacular victories, murderous
+situations in which they could lose themselves in vicarious sadistic
+thrills. Joe had reached most of his peaks while in retreat, or
+commanding a holding action. His officers appreciated him and so did the
+ultra-knowledgeable fracas buffs--but he was all but an unknown to the
+average dim wit who spent most of his life glued to the Telly set,
+watching men butcher each other.
+
+On the various occasions when matters had pickled and Joe had to fight
+his way out against difficult odds, using spectacular tactics in
+desperation, he was almost always off camera. Purely luck. On top of
+skill, determination, experience and courage, you had to have luck in
+the Military Category to get anywhere.
+
+This time Joe was going to manufacture his own.
+
+A voice said, "Ah, Captain Mauser."
+
+Joe looked up, then came to his feet quickly. In automatic reflex, he
+began to come to the salute but then caught himself. He said stiffly,
+"My compliments, Marshal Cogswell."
+
+The other was a smallish man, but strikingly strong of face and strongly
+built. His voice was clipped, clear and had the air of command as though
+born with it. He, like Joe, wore mufti and now extended his hand to be
+shaken.
+
+"I hear you've signed up with Baron Haer, captain. I was rather
+expecting you to come in with me. Had a place for a good aide de camp.
+Liked your work in that last fracas we went through together."
+
+"Thank you, sir," Joe said. Stonewall Cogswell was as good a tactician
+as freelanced and he was more than that. He was a judge of men and a
+stickler for detail. And right now, if Joe Mauser knew Marshal Stonewall
+Cogswell as well as he thought, Cogswell was smelling a rat. There was
+no reason why old pro Joe Mauser should sign up with a sure loser like
+Vacuum Tube when he could have earned more shares taking a commission
+with Hovercraft.
+
+He was looking at Joe brightly, the question in his eyes. Three or four
+of his staff were behind a few paces, looking polite, but Cogswell
+didn't bring them into the conversation. Joe knew most by sight. Good
+men all. Old pros all. He felt another twinge of doubt.
+
+Joe had to cover. He said, "I was offered a particularly good contract,
+sir. Too good to resist."
+
+The other nodded, as though inwardly coming to a satisfactory
+conclusion. "Baron Haer's connections, eh? He's probably offered to back
+you for a bounce in caste. Is that it, Joe?"
+
+Joe Mauser flushed. Stonewall Cogswell knew what he was talking about.
+He'd been born into Middle status himself and had become an Upper the
+hard way. His path wasn't as long as Joe's was going to be, but long
+enough and he knew how rocky the climb was. How very rocky.
+
+Joe said, stiffly, "I'm afraid I'm in no position to discuss my
+commander's military contracts, marshal. We're in mufti, but after
+all--"
+
+Cogswell's lean face registered one of his infrequent grimaces of humor.
+"I understand, Joe. Well, good luck and I hope things don't pickle for
+you in the coming fracas. Possibly we'll find ourselves aligned together
+again at some future time."
+
+"Thank you, sir," Joe said, once more having to catch himself to prevent
+an automatic salute.
+
+Cogswell and his staff went off, leaving Joe looking after them. Even
+the marshal's staff members were top men, any of whom could have
+conducted a divisional magnitude fracas. Joe felt the coldness in his
+stomach again. Although it must have looked like a cinch, the enemy
+wasn't taking any chances whatsoever. Cogswell and his officers were
+undoubtedly here at the airport for the same reason as Joe. They wanted
+a thorough aerial reconnaissance of the battlefield-to-be, before the
+issue was joined.
+
+ * * *
+
+Max was standing at his elbow. "Who was that, sir? Looks like a real
+tough one."
+
+"He is a real tough one," Joe said sourly. "That's Stonewall Cogswell,
+the best field commander in North America."
+
+Max pursed his lips. "I never seen him out of uniform before. Lots of
+times on Telly, but never out of uniform. I thought he was taller than
+that."
+
+"He fights with his brains," Joe said, still looking after the craggy
+field marshal. "He doesn't have to be any taller."
+
+Max scowled. "Where'd he ever get that nickname, sir?"
+
+"Stonewall?" Joe was turning to resume his chair and magazine. "He's
+supposed to be a student of a top general back in the American Civil
+War. Uses some of the original Stonewall's tactics."
+
+Max was out of his depth. "American Civil War? Was that much of a
+fracas, captain? It musta been before my time."
+
+"It was quite a fracas," Joe said dryly. "Lot of good lads died. A
+hundred years after it was fought, the _reasons_ it was fought seemed
+about as valid as those we fight fracases for today. Personally I--"
+
+He had to cut it short. They were calling him on the address system. His
+aircraft was ready. Joe made his way to the hangars, followed by Max
+Mainz. He was going to pilot the airplane himself and old Stonewall
+Cogswell would have been surprised at what Joe Mauser was looking for.
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+
+By the time they had returned to quarters, there was a message waiting
+for Captain Mauser. He was to report to the officer commanding
+reconnaissance.
+
+Joe redressed in the Haer kilts and proceeded to headquarters.
+
+The officer commanding reconnaissance turned out to be none other than
+Balt Haer, natty as ever, and, as ever, arrogantly tapping his swagger
+stick against his leg.
+
+"Zen! Captain," he complained. "Where have you been? Off on a trank
+kick? We've got to get organized."
+
+Joe Mauser snapped him a salute. "No, sir. I rented an aircraft to scout
+out the terrain over which we'll be fighting."
+
+"Indeed. And what were your impressions, captain?" There was an overtone
+which suggested that it made little difference what impressions a
+captain of cavalry might have gained.
+
+Joe shrugged. "Largely mountains, hills, woods. Good reconnaissance is
+going to make the difference in this one. And in the fracas itself
+cavalry is going to be more important than either artillery or infantry.
+A Nathan Forrest fracas, sir. A matter of getting there fustest with the
+mostest."
+
+Balt Haer said amusedly. "Thanks for your opinion, captain. Fortunately,
+our staff has already come largely to the same conclusions. Undoubtedly,
+they'll be glad to hear your wide experience bears them out."
+
+Joe said evenly, "It's a rather obvious conclusion, of course." He took
+this as it came, having been through it before. The dilettante amateur's
+dislike of the old pro. The amateur in command who knew full well he was
+less capable than many of those below him in rank.
+
+"Of course, captain," Balt Haer flicked his swagger stick against his
+leg. "But to the point. Your squadron is to be deployed as scouts under
+my overall command. You've had cavalry experience, I assume."
+
+"Yes, sir. In various fracases over the past fifteen years."
+
+"Very well. Now then, to get to the reason I have summoned you.
+Yesterday in my father's office you intimated that you had some
+grandiose scheme which would bring victory to the Haer colors. But then,
+on some thin excuse, refused to divulge just what the scheme might be."
+
+Joe Mauser looked at him unblinkingly.
+
+Balt Haer said: "Now I'd like to have your opinion on just how Vacuum
+Tube Transport can extract itself from what would seem a poor position
+at best."
+
+In all there were four others in the office, two women clerks
+fluttering away at typers, and two of Balt Haer's junior officers. They
+seemed only mildly interested in the conversation between Balt and Joe.
+
+Joe wet his lips carefully. The Haer scion was his commanding officer.
+He said, "Sir, what I had in mind is a new gimmick. At this stage, if I
+told anybody and it leaked, it'd never be effective, not even this first
+time."
+
+Haer observed him coldly. "And you think me incapable of keeping your
+secret, ah, _gimmick_, I believe is the idiomatic term you used."
+
+Joe Mauser's eyes shifted around the room, taking in the other four, who
+were now looking at him.
+
+Bait Haer rapped, "These members of my staff are all trusted Haer
+employees, Captain Mauser. They are not fly-by-night freelancers hired
+for a week or two."
+
+Joe said, "Yes, sir. But it's been my experience that one person can
+hold a secret. It's twice as hard for two, and from there on it's a
+decreasing probability in a geometric ratio."
+
+The younger Haer's stick rapped the side of his leg, impatiently.
+"Suppose I inform you that this is a command, captain? I have little
+confidence in a supposed gimmick that will rescue our forces from
+disaster and I rather dislike the idea of a captain of one of my
+squadrons dashing about with such a bee in his bonnet when he should be
+obeying my commands."
+
+Joe kept his voice respectful. "Then, sir, I'd request that we take the
+matter to the Commander in Chief, your father."
+
+"Indeed!"
+
+Joe said, "Sir, I've been working on this a long time. I can't afford to
+risk throwing the idea away."
+
+Bait Haer glared at him. "Very well, captain. I'll call your bluff, come
+along." He turned on his heel and headed from the room.
+
+Joe Mauser shrugged in resignation and followed him.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The old Baron wasn't much happier about Joe Mauser's secrets than was
+his son. It had only been the day before that he had taken Joe on, but
+already he had seemed to have aged in appearance. Evidently, each hour
+that went by made it increasingly clear just how perilous a position he
+had assumed. Vacuum Tube Transport had elbowed, buffaloed, bluffed and
+edged itself up to the outskirts of the really big time. The Baron's
+ability, his aggressiveness, his flair, his political pull, had all
+helped, but now the chips were down. He was up against one of the
+biggies, and this particular biggy was tired of ambitious little Vacuum
+Tube Transport.
+
+He listened to his son's words, listened to Joe's defense.
+
+He said, looking at Joe, "If I understand this, you have some scheme
+which you think will bring victory in spite of what seems a disastrous
+situation."
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+The two Haers looked at him, one impatiently, the other in weariness.
+
+Joe said, "I'm gambling everything on this, sir. I'm no Rank Private in
+his first fracas. I deserve to be given some leeway."
+
+Balt Haer snorted. "Gambling everything! What in Zen would _you_ have to
+gamble, captain? The whole Haer family fortunes are tied up. Hovercraft
+is out for blood. They won't be satisfied with a token victory and a
+negotiated compromise. They'll devastate us. Thousands of mercenaries
+killed, with all that means in indemnities; millions upon million in
+expensive military equipment, most of which we've had to hire and will
+have to recompensate for. Can you imagine the value of our stock after
+Stonewall Cogswell has finished with us? Why, every two by four trucking
+outfit in North America will be challenging us, and we won't have the
+forces to meet a minor skirmish."
+
+Joe reached into an inner pocket and laid a sheaf of documents on the
+desk of Baron Malcolm Haer. The Baron scowled down at them.
+
+Joe said simply, "I've been accumulating stock since before I was
+eighteen and I've taken good care of my portfolio in spite of taxes and
+the various other pitfalls which make the accumulation of capital
+practically impossible. Yesterday, I sold all of my portfolio I was
+legally allowed to sell and converted to Vacuum Tube Transport." He
+added, dryly, "Getting it at an excellent rate, by the way."
+
+Balt Haer mulled through the papers, unbelievingly. "Zen!" he
+ejaculated. "The fool really did it. He's sunk a small fortune into our
+stock."
+
+Baron Haer growled at his son, "You seem considerably more convinced of
+our defeat than the captain, here. Perhaps I should reverse your
+positions of command."
+
+His son grunted, but said nothing.
+
+Old Malcolm Haer's eyes came back to Joe. "Admittedly, I thought you on
+the romantic side yesterday, with your hints of some scheme which would
+lead us out of the wilderness, so to speak. Now I wonder if you might
+not really have something. Very well, I respect your claimed need for
+secrecy. Espionage is not exactly an antiquated military field."
+
+"Thank you, sir."
+
+But the Baron was still staring at him. "However, there's more to it
+than that. Why not take this great scheme to Marshal Cogswell? And
+yesterday you mentioned that the Telly sets of the nation would be tuned
+in on this fracas, and obviously you are correct. The question becomes,
+what of it?"
+
+The fat was in the fire now. Joe Mauser avoided the haughty stare of
+young Balt Haer and addressed himself to the older man. "You have
+political pull, sir. Oh, I know you don't make and break presidents. You
+couldn't even pull enough wires to keep Hovercraft from making this a
+divisional magnitude fracas--but you have pull enough for my needs."
+
+Baron Haer leaned back in his chair, his barrel-like body causing that
+article of furniture to creak. He crossed his hands over his stomach.
+"And what are your needs, Captain Mauser?"
+
+Joe said evenly, "If I can bring this off, I'll be a fracas buff
+celebrity. I don't have any illusions about the fickleness of the Telly
+fans, but for a day or two I'll be on top. If at the same time I had
+your all out support, pulling what strings you could reach--"
+
+"Why then, you'd be promoted to Upper, wouldn't you, captain?" Balt Haer
+finished for him, amusement in his voice.
+
+"That's what I'm gambling on," Joe said evenly.
+
+The younger Haer grinned at his father superciliously. "So our captain
+says he will defeat Stonewall Cogswell in return for you sponsoring his
+becoming a member of the nation's elite."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Good Heavens, is the supposed cream of the nation now selected on no
+higher a level than this?" There was sarcasm in the words.
+
+The three men turned. It was the girl Joe had bumped into the day
+before. The Haers didn't seem surprised at her entrance.
+
+"Nadine," the older man growled. "Captain Joseph Mauser who has been
+given a commission in our forces."
+
+Joe went through the routine of a Middle of officer's rank being
+introduced to a lady of Upper caste. She smiled at him, somewhat
+mockingly, and failed to make standard response.
+
+Nadine Haer said, "I repeat, what is this service the captain can render
+the house of Haer so important that pressure should be brought to raise
+him to Upper caste? It would seem unlikely that he is a noted scientist,
+an outstanding artist, a great teacher--"
+
+Joe said, uncomfortably, "They say the military is a science, too."
+
+Her expression was almost as haughty as that of her brother. "Do they? I
+have never thought so."
+
+"Really, Nadine," her father grumbled. "This is hardly your affair."
+
+"No? In a few days I shall be repairing the damage you have allowed,
+indeed sponsored, to be committed upon the bodies of possibly thousands
+of now healthy human beings."
+
+Balt said nastily, "Nobody asked you to join the medical staff, Nadine.
+You could have stayed in your laboratory, figuring out new methods of
+preventing the human race from replenishing itself."
+
+The girl was obviously not the type to redden, but her anger was
+manifest. She spun on her brother. "If the race continues its present
+maniac course, possibly more effective methods of birth control _are_
+the most important development we could make. Even to the ultimate
+discovery of preventing all future conception."
+
+Joe caught himself in mid-chuckle.
+
+But not in time. She spun on him in his turn. "Look at yourself in that
+silly skirt. A professional soldier! A killer! In my opinion the most
+useless occupation ever devised by man. Parasite on the best and useful
+members of society. Destroyer by trade!"
+
+Joe began to open his mouth, but she overrode him. "Yes, yes. I know.
+I've read all the nonsense that has accumulated down through the ages
+about the need for, the glory of, the sacrifice of the professional
+soldier. How they defend their country. How they give all for the common
+good. Zen! What nonsense."
+
+Balt Haer was smirking sourly at her. "The theory today is, Nadine, old
+thing, that professionals such as the captain are gathering experience
+in case a serious fracas with the Sovs ever develops. Meanwhile his
+training is kept at a fine edge fighting in our inter-corporation,
+inter-union, or union-corporation fracases that develop in our private
+enterprise society."
+
+She laughed her scorn. "And what a theory! Limited to the weapons which
+prevailed before 1900. If there was ever real conflict between the
+Sov-world and our own, does anyone really believe either would stick to
+such arms? Why, aircraft, armored vehicles, yes, and nuclear weapons and
+rockets, would be in overnight use."
+
+Joe was fascinated by her furious attack. He said, "Then, what would you
+say was the purpose of the fracases, Miss--"
+
+"Circuses," she snorted. "The old Roman games, all over again, and a
+hundred times worse. Blood and guts sadism. The quest of a frustrated
+person for satisfaction in another's pain. Our Lowers of today are as
+useless and frustrated as the Roman proletariat and potentially they're
+just as dangerous as the mob that once dominated Rome. Automation, the
+second industrial revolution, has eliminated for all practical purposes
+the need for their labor. So we give them bread and circuses. And every
+year that goes by the circuses must be increasingly sadistic, death on
+an increasing scale, or they aren't satisfied. Once it was enough to
+have fictional mayhem, cowboys and Indians, gangsters, or G.I.s versus
+the Nazis, Japs or Commies, but that's passed. Now we need _real_ blood
+and guts."
+
+Baron Haer snapped finally, "All right, Nadine. We've heard this lecture
+before. I doubt if the captain is interested, particularly since you
+don't seem to be able to get beyond the protesting stage and have yet to
+come up with an answer."
+
+"I have an answer!"
+
+"Ah?" Balt Haer raised his eyebrows, mockingly.
+
+"Yes! Overthrow this silly status society. Resume the road to progress.
+Put our people to useful endeavor, instead of sitting in front of their
+Telly sets, taking trank pills to put them in a happy daze and watching
+sadistic fracases to keep them in thrills, and their minds from their
+condition."
+
+Joe had figured on keeping out of the controversy with this firebrand,
+but now, really interested, he said, "Progress to where?"
+
+She must have caught in his tone that he wasn't needling. She frowned at
+him. "I don't know man's goal, if there is one. I'm not even sure it's
+important. It's the road that counts. The endeavor. The dream. The
+effort expended to make a world a better place than it was at the time
+of your birth."
+
+[Illustration]
+
+Balt Haer said mockingly, "That's the trouble with you, Sis. Here we've
+reached Utopia and you don't admit it."
+
+"Utopia!"
+
+"Certainly. Take a poll. You'll find nineteen people out of twenty happy
+with things just the way they are. They have full tummies and security,
+lots of leisure and trank pills to make matters seem even rosier than
+they are--and they're rather rosy already."
+
+"Then what's the necessity of this endless succession of bloody
+fracases, covered to the most minute bloody detail on the Telly?"
+
+Baron Haer cut things short. "We've hashed and rehashed this before,
+Nadine and now we're too busy to debate further." He turned to Joe
+Mauser. "Very well, captain, you have my pledge. I wish I felt as
+optimistic as you seem to be about your prospects. That will be all for
+now, captain."
+
+Joe saluted and executed an about face.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the outer offices, when he had closed the door behind him, he rolled
+his eyes upward in mute thanks to whatever powers might be. He had
+somehow gained the enmity of Balt, his immediate superior, but he'd
+also gained the support of Baron Haer himself, which counted
+considerably more.
+
+He considered for a moment, Nadine Haer's words. She was obviously a
+malcontent, but, on the other hand, her opinions of his chosen
+profession weren't too different than his own. However, given this
+victory, this upgrading in caste, and Joe Mauser would be in a position
+to retire.
+
+The door opened and shut behind him and he half turned.
+
+Nadine Haer, evidently still caught up in the hot words between herself
+and her relatives, glared at him. All of which stressed the beauty he
+had noticed the day before. She was an almost unbelievably pretty girl,
+particularly when flushed with anger.
+
+It occurred to him with a blowlike suddenness that, if his caste was
+raised to Upper, he would be in a position to woo such as Nadine Haer.
+
+He looked into her furious face and said, "I was intrigued, Miss Haer,
+with what you had to say, and I'd like to discuss some of your points. I
+wonder if I could have the pleasure of your company at some nearby
+refreshment--"
+
+"My, how formal an invitation, captain. I suppose you had in mind
+sitting and flipping back a few trank pills."
+
+Joe looked at her. "I don't believe I've had a trank in the past twenty
+years, Miss Haer. Even as a boy, I didn't particularly take to having my
+senses dulled with drug-induced pleasure."
+
+Some of her fury was abating, but she was still critical of the
+professional mercenary. Her eyes went up and down his uniform in scorn.
+"You seem to make pretenses of being cultivated, captain. Then why your
+chosen profession?"
+
+He'd had the answer to that for long years. He said now, simply, "I told
+you I was born a Lower. Given that, little counts until I fight my way
+out of it. Had I been born in a feudalist society, I would have
+attempted to batter myself into the nobility. Under classical
+capitalism, I would have done my utmost to accumulate a fortune, enough
+to reach an effective position in society. Now, under People's
+Capitalism ..."
+
+She snorted, "Industrial Feudalism would be the better term."
+
+"... I realize I can't even start to fulfill myself until I am a member
+of the Upper caste."
+
+Her eyes had narrowed, and the anger was largely gone. "But you chose
+the military field in which to better yourself?"
+
+"Government propaganda to the contrary, it is practically impossible to
+raise yourself in other fields. I didn't build this world, possibly I
+don't even approve of it, but since I'm in it I have no recourse but to
+follow its rules."
+
+Her eyebrows arched. "Why not try to change the rules?"
+
+Joe blinked at her.
+
+Nadine Haer said, "Let's look up that refreshment you were talking
+about. In fact, there's a small coffee bar around the corner where it'd
+be possible for one of Baron Haer's brood to have a cup with one of her
+father's officers of Middle caste."
+
+
+
+
+VI
+
+
+The following morning, hands on the pillow beneath his head, Joe Mauser
+stared up at the ceiling of his room and rehashed his session with
+Nadine Haer. It hadn't taken him five minutes to come to the conclusion
+that he was in love with the girl, but it had taken him the rest of the
+evening to keep himself under rein and not let the fact get through to
+her.
+
+He wanted to talk about the way her mouth tucked in at the corners, but
+she was hot on the evolution of society. He would have liked to have
+kissed that impossibly perfectly shaped ear of hers, but she was all for
+exploring the reasons why man had reached his present impasse. Joe was
+for holding hands, and staring into each other's eyes, she was for
+delving into the differences between the West-world and the Sov-world
+and the possibility of resolving them.
+
+Of course, to keep her company at all it had been necessary to suppress
+his own desires and to go along. It obviously had never occurred to her
+that a Middle might have romantic ideas involving Nadine Haer. It had
+simply not occurred to her, no matter the radical teachings she
+advocated.
+
+Most of their world was predictable from what had gone before. In spite
+of popular fable to the contrary, the division between classes had
+become increasingly clear. Among other things, tax systems were such
+that it became all but impossible for a citizen born poor to accumulate
+a fortune. Through ability he might rise to the point of earning
+fabulous sums--and wind up in debt to the tax collector. A great
+inventor, a great artist, had little chance of breaking into the domain
+of what finally became the small percentage of the population now known
+as Uppers. Then, too, the rising cost of a really good education became
+such that few other than those born into the Middle or Upper castes
+could afford the best of schools. Castes tended to perpetuate
+themselves.
+
+Politically, the nation had fallen increasingly deeper into the
+two-party system, both parties of which were tightly controlled by the
+same group of Uppers. Elections had become a farce, a great national
+holiday in which stereotyped patriotic speeches, pretenses of unity
+between all castes, picnics, beer busts and trank binges predominated
+for one day.
+
+Economically, too, the augurs had been there. Production of the basics
+had become so profuse that poverty in the old sense of the word had
+become nonsensical. There was an abundance of the necessities of life
+for all. Social security, socialized medicine, unending unemployment
+insurance, old age pensions, pensions for veterans, for widows and
+children, for the unfit, pensions and doles for this, that and the
+other, had doubled, and doubled again, until everyone had security for
+life. The Uppers, true enough, had opulence far beyond that known by the
+Middles and lived like Gods compared to the Lowers. But all had
+security. They had agreed, thus far, Joe and Nadine. But then had come
+debate.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Then why," Joe had asked her, "haven't we achieved what your brother
+called it? Why isn't this Utopia? Isn't it what man has been yearning
+for, down through the ages? Where did the wheel come off? What happened
+to the dream?"
+
+Nadine had frowned at him--beautifully, he thought. "It's not the first
+time man has found abundance in a society, though never to this degree.
+The Incas had it, for instance."
+
+"I don't know much about them," Joe admitted. "An early form of
+communism with a sort of military-priesthood at the top."
+
+She had nodded, her face serious, as always. "And for themselves, the
+Romans more or less had it--at the expense of the nations they
+conquered, of course."
+
+"And--" Joe prodded.
+
+"And in these examples the same thing developed. Society ossified. Joe,"
+she said, using his first name for the first time, and in a manner that
+set off a new count down in his blood, "a ruling caste and a
+socio-economic system perpetuates itself, just so long as it ever can.
+No matter what damage it may do to society as a whole, it perpetuates
+itself even to the point of complete destruction of everything.
+
+"Remember Hitler? Adolf the Aryan and his Thousand Year Reich? When it
+became obvious he had failed, and the only thing that could result from
+continued resistance would be destruction of Germany's cities and
+millions of her people, did he and his clique resign or surrender?
+Certainly not. They attempted to bring down the whole German structure
+in a Götterdammerung."
+
+Nadine Haer was deep into her theme, her eyes flashing her conviction.
+"A socio-economic system reacts like a living organism. It attempts to
+live on, indefinitely, agonizingly, no matter how antiquated it might
+have become. The Roman politico-economic system continued for centuries
+after it should have been replaced. Such reformers as the Gracchus
+brothers were assassinated or thrust aside so that the entrenched
+elements could perpetuate themselves, and when Rome finally fell,
+darkness descended for a thousand years on Western progress."
+
+Joe had never gone this far in his thoughts. He said now, somewhat
+uncomfortably, "Well, what would replace what we have now? If you took
+power from you Uppers, who could direct the country? The Lowers? That's
+not even funny. Take away their fracases and their trank pills and
+they'd go berserk. They don't _want_ anything else."
+
+Her mouth worked. "Admittedly, we've already allowed things to
+deteriorate much too far. We should have done something long ago. I'm
+not sure I know the answer. All I know is that in order to maintain the
+status quo, we're not utilizing the efforts of more than a fraction of
+our people. Nine out of ten of us spend our lives sitting before the
+Telly, sucking tranks. Meanwhile, the motivation for continued progress
+seems to have withered away. Our Upper political circles are afraid some
+seemingly minor change might avalanche, so more and more we lean upon
+the old way of doing things."
+
+Joe had put up mild argument. "I've heard the case made that the Lowers
+are fools and the reason our present socio-economic system makes it so
+difficult to rise from Lower to Upper is that you cannot make a fool
+understand he is one. You can only make him angry. If some, who are not
+fools, are allowed to advance from Lower to Upper, the vast mass who are
+fools will be angry because they are not allowed to. That's why the
+Military Category is made a channel of advance. To take that road, a man
+gives up his security and he'll die if he's a fool."
+
+Nadine had been scornful. "That reminds me of the old contention by
+racial segregationalists that the Negroes _smelled_ bad. First they put
+them in a position where they had insufficient bathing facilities, their
+diet inadequate, and their teeth uncared for, and then protested that
+they couldn't be associated with because of their odor. Today, we are
+born within our castes. If an Upper is inadequate, he nevertheless
+remains an Upper. An accident of birth makes him an aristocrat;
+environment, family, training, education, friends, traditions and laws
+maintain him in that position. But a Lower who potentially has the
+greatest of value to society, is born handicapped and he's hard put not
+to wind up before a Telly, in a mental daze from trank. Sure he's a
+fool, he's never been _allowed_ to develop himself."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Yes, Joe reflected now, it had been quite an evening. In a life of more
+than thirty years devoted to rebellion, he had never met anyone so
+outspoken as Nadine Haer, nor one who had thought it through as far as
+she had.
+
+He grunted. His own revolt was against the level at which he had found
+himself in society, not the structure of society itself. His whole
+_raison d'être_ was to lift himself to Upper status. It came as a shock
+to him to find a person he admired who had been born into Upper caste,
+desirous of tearing the whole system down.
+
+His thoughts were interrupted by the door opening and the face of Max
+Mainz grinning in at him. Joe was mildly surprised at his orderly not
+knocking before opening the door. Max evidently had a lot to learn.
+
+The little man blurted, "Come on, Joe. Let's go out on the town!"
+
+"_Joe?_" Joe Mauser raised himself to one elbow and stared at the other.
+"Leaving aside the merits of your suggestion for the moment, do you
+think you should address an officer by his first name?"
+
+Max Mainz came fully into the bedroom, his grin still wider. "You
+forgot! It's election day!"
+
+"Oh." Joe Mauser relaxed into his pillow. "So it is. No duty for today,
+eh?"
+
+"No duty for anybody," Max crowed. "What'd you say we go into town and
+have a few drinks in one of the Upper bars?"
+
+Joe grunted, but began to arise. "What'll that accomplish? On election
+day, most of the Uppers get done up in their oldest clothes and go
+slumming down in the Lower quarters."
+
+Max wasn't to be put off so easily. "Well, wherever we go, let's get
+going. Zen! I'll bet this town is full of fracas buffs from as far as
+Philly. And on election day, to boot. Wouldn't it be something if I
+found me a real fracas fan, some Upper-Upper dame?"
+
+Joe laughed at him, even as he headed for the bathroom. As a matter of
+fact, he rather liked the idea of going into town for the show. "Max,"
+he said over his shoulder, "you're in for a big disappointment. They're
+all the same. Upper, Lower, or Middle."
+
+"Yeah?" Max grinned back at him. "Well, I'd like the pleasure of finding
+out if that's true by personal experience."
+
+
+
+
+VII
+
+
+In a far away past, Kingston had once been the capital of the United
+States. For a short time, when Washington's men were in flight after the
+debacle of their defeat in New York City, the government of the United
+Colonies had held session in this Hudson River town. It had been its one
+moment of historic glory, and afterward Kingston had slipped back into
+being a minor city on the edge of the Catskills, approximately halfway
+between New York and Albany.
+
+Of most recent years, it had become one of the two recruiting centers
+which bordered the Catskill Military Reservation, which in turn was one
+of the score or so population cleared areas throughout the continent
+where rival corporations or unions could meet and settle their
+differences in combat--given permission of the Military Category
+Department of the government. And permission was becoming ever easier to
+acquire.
+
+It had slowly evolved, the resorting to trial by combat to settle
+disputes between competing corporations, disputes between corporations
+and unions, disputes between unions over jurisdiction. Slowly, but
+predictably. Since the earliest days of the first industrial revolution,
+conflict between these elements had often broken into violence,
+sometimes on a scale comparable to minor warfare. An early example was
+the union organizing in Colorado when armed elements of the Western
+Federation of Miners shot it out with similarly armed "detectives" hired
+by the mine owners, and later with the troops of an unsympathetic State
+government.
+
+By the middle of the Twentieth-Century, unions had become one of the
+biggest businesses in the country, and by this time a considerable
+amount of the industrial conflict had shifted to fights between them for
+jurisdiction over dues-paying members. Battles on the waterfront,
+assassination and counter-assassination by gun-toting goon squads
+dominated by gangsters, industrial sabotage, frays between pickets and
+scabs--all were common occurrences.
+
+But it was the coming of Telly which increasingly brought such conflicts
+literally before the public eye. Zealous reporters made ever greater
+effort to bring the actual mayhem before the eyes of their viewers, and
+never were their efforts more highly rewarded.
+
+A society based upon private endeavor is as jealous of a vacuum as is
+Mother Nature. Give a desire that can be filled profitably, and the
+means can somehow be found to realize it.
+
+ * * *
+
+At one point in the nation's history, the railroad lords had dominated
+the economy, later it became the petroleum princes of Texas and
+elsewhere, but toward the end of the Twentieth Century the
+communications industries slowly gained prominence. Nothing was more
+greatly in demand than feeding the insatiable maw of the Telly fan,
+nothing, ultimately, became more profitable.
+
+And increasingly, the Telly buff endorsed the more sadistic of the
+fictional and nonfictional programs presented him. Even in the earliest
+years of the industry, producers had found that murder and mayhem, war
+and frontier gunfights, took precedence over less gruesome subjects.
+Music was drowned out by gunfire, the dance replaced by the shuffle of
+cowboy and rustler advancing down a dusty street toward each other,
+their fingertips brushing the grips of their six-shooters, the
+comedian's banter fell away before the chatter of the gangster's tommy
+gun.
+
+And increasing realism was demanded. The Telly reporter on the scene of
+a police arrest, preferably a murder, a rumble between rival gangs of
+juvenile delinquents, a longshoreman's fray in which scores of workers
+were hospitalized. When attempts were made to suppress such broadcasts,
+the howl of freedom of speech and the press went up, financed by tycoons
+clever enough to realize the value of the subjects they covered so
+adequately.
+
+The vacuum was there, the desire, the _need_. Bread the populace had.
+Trank was available to all. But the need was for the circus, the
+vicious, sadistic circus, and bit by bit, over the years and decades,
+the way was found to circumvent the country's laws and traditions to
+supply the need.
+
+Aye, a way is always found. The final Universal Disarmament Pact which
+had totally banned all weapons invented since the year 1900 and provided
+for complete inspection, had not ended the fear of war. And thus there
+was excuse to give the would-be soldier, the potential defender of the
+country in some future inter-nation conflict, practical experience.
+
+Slowly tolerance grew to allow union and corporation to fight it out,
+hiring the services of mercenaries. Slowly rules grew up to govern such
+fracases. Slowly a department of government evolved. The Military
+Category became as acceptable as the next, and the mercenary a valued,
+even idolized, member of society. And the field became practically the
+only one in which a status quo orientated socio-economic system allowed
+for advancement in caste.
+
+Joe Mauser and Max Mainz strolled the streets of Kingston in an extreme
+of atmosphere seldom to be enjoyed. Not only was the advent of a
+divisional magnitude fracas only a short period away, but the freedom of
+an election day as well. The carnival, the Mardi Gras, the fete, the
+fiesta, of an election. Election Day, when each aristocrat became only a
+man, and each man an aristocrat, free of all society's artificially
+conceived, caste-perpetuating rituals and taboos.
+
+Carnival! The day was young, but already the streets were thick with
+revelers, with dancers, with drunks. A score of bands played, youngsters
+in particular ran about attired in costume, there were barbeques and
+flowing beer kegs. On the outskirts of town were roller coasters and
+ferris wheels, fun houses and drive-it-yourself miniature cars.
+Carnival!
+
+Max said happily, "You drink, Joe? Or maybe you like trank, better."
+Obviously, he loved to roll the other's first name over his tongue.
+
+Joe wondered in amusement how often the little man had found occasion to
+call a Mid-Middle by his first name. "No trank," he said. "Alcohol for
+me. Mankind's old faithful."
+
+"Well," Max debated, "get high on alcohol and bingo, a hangover in the
+morning. But trank? You wake up with a smile."
+
+"And a desire for more trank to keep the mood going," Joe said wryly.
+"Get smashed on alcohol and you suffer for it eventually."
+
+"Well, that's one way of looking at it," Max argued happily. "So let's
+start off with a couple of quick ones in this here Upper joint."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Joe looked the place over. He didn't know Kingston overly well, but by
+the appearance of the building and by the entry, it was probably the
+swankiest hotel in town. He shrugged. So far as he was concerned, he
+appreciated the greater comfort and the better service of his Middle
+caste bars, restaurants and hotels over the ones he had patronized when
+a Lower. However, his wasn't an immediate desire to push into the
+preserves of the Uppers; not until he had won rightfully to their
+status.
+
+But on this occasion the little fellow wanted to drink at an Upper bar.
+Very well, it was election day. "Let's go," he said to Max.
+
+In the uniform of a Rank Captain of the Military Category, there was
+little to indicate caste level, and ordinarily given the correct air of
+nonchalance, Joe Mauser, in uniform, would have been able to go
+anywhere, without so much as a raised eyebrow--until he had presented
+his credit card, which indicated his caste. But Max was another thing.
+He was obviously a Lower, and probably a Low-Lower at that.
+
+But space was made for them at a bar packed with election day
+celebrants, politicians involved in the day's speeches and voting,
+higher ranking officers of the Haer forces, having a day off, and
+various Uppers of both sexes in town for the excitement of the fracas to
+come.
+
+"Beer," Joe said to the bartender.
+
+"Not me," Max crowed. "Champagne. Only the best for Max Mainz. Give me
+some of that champagne liquor I always been hearing about."
+
+Joe had the bill credited to his card, and they took their bottles and
+glasses to a newly abandoned table. The place was too packed to have
+awaited the services of a waiter, although poor Max probably would have
+loved such attention. Lower, and even Middle bars and restaurants were
+universally automated, and the waiter or waitress a thing of yesteryear.
+
+Max looked about the room in awe. "This is living," he announced. "I
+wonder what they'd say if I went to the desk and ordered a room."
+
+Joe Mauser wasn't as highly impressed as his batman. In fact, he'd often
+stayed in the larger cities, in hostelries as sumptuous as this, though
+only of Middle status. Kingston's best was on the mediocre side. He
+said, "They'd probably tell you they were filled up."
+
+Max was indignant. "Because I'm a Lower? It's _election_ day."
+
+Joe said mildly, "Because they probably are filled up. But for that
+matter, they might brush you off. It's not as though an Upper went to a
+Middle or Lower hotel and asked for accommodations. But what do you
+want, justice?"
+
+Max dropped it. He looked down into his glass. "Hey," he complained,
+"what'd they give me? This stuff tastes like weak hard cider."
+
+Joe laughed. "What did you think it was going to taste like?"
+
+Max took another unhappy sip. "I thought it was supposed to be the best
+drink you could buy. You know, really strong. It's just bubbly wine."
+
+A voice said, dryly, "Your companion doesn't seem to be a connoisseur of
+the French vintages, captain."
+
+Joe turned. Balt Haer and two others occupied the table next to them.
+
+Joe chuckled amiably and said, "Truthfully, it was my own reaction, the
+first time I drank sparkling wine, sir."
+
+"Indeed," Haer said. "I can imagine." He fluttered a hand. "Lieutenant
+Colonel Paul Warren of Marshal Cogswell's staff, and Colonel Lajos
+Arpàd, of Budapest--Captain Joseph Mauser."
+
+Joe Mauser came to his feet and clicked his heels, bowing from the waist
+in approved military protocol. The other two didn't bother to come to
+their feet, but did condescend to shake hands.
+
+The Sov officer said, disinterestedly, "Ah yes, this is one of your
+fabulous customs, isn't it? On an election day, everyone is quite
+entitled to go anywhere. Anywhere at all. And, ah"--he made a sound
+somewhat like a giggle--"associate with anyone at all."
+
+Joe Mauser resumed his seat then looked at him. "That is correct. A
+custom going back to the early history of the country when all men were
+considered equal in such matters as law and civil rights. Gentlemen, may
+I present Rank Private Max Mainz, my orderly."
+
+Balt Haer, who had obviously already had a few, looked at him dourly.
+"You can carry these things to the point of the ludicrous, captain. For
+a man with your ambitions, I'm surprised."
+
+The infantry officer the younger Haer had introduced as Lieutenant
+Colonel Warren, of Stonewall Cogswell's staff, said idly, "Ambitions?
+Does the captain have ambitions? How in Zen can a Middle have ambitions,
+Balt?" He stared at Joe Mauser superciliously, but then scowled.
+"Haven't I seen you somewhere before?"
+
+Joe said evenly, "Yes, sir. Five years ago we were both with the marshal
+in a fracas on the Little Big Horn reservation. Your company was pinned
+down on a knoll by a battery of field artillery. The Marshal sent me to
+your relief. We sneaked in, up an arroyo, and were able to get most of
+you out."
+
+"I was wounded," the colonel said, the superciliousness gone and a
+strange element in his voice above the alcohol there earlier.
+
+Joe Mauser said nothing to that. Max Mainz was stirring unhappily now.
+These officers were talking above his head, even as they ignored him. He
+had a vague feeling that he was being defended by Captain Mauser, but he
+didn't know how, or why.
+
+Balt Haer had been occupied in shouting fresh drinks. Now he turned back
+to the table. "Well, colonel, it's all very secret, these ambitions of
+Captain Mauser. I understand he's been an aide de camp to Marshal
+Cogswell in the past, but the marshal will be distressed to learn that
+on this occasion Captain Mauser has a secret by which he expects to rout
+your forces. Indeed, yes, the captain is quite the strategist." Balt
+Haer laughed abruptly. "And what good will this do the captain? Why on
+my father's word, if he succeeds, all efforts will be made to make the
+captain a caste equal of ours. Not just on election day, mind you, but
+all three hundred sixty-five days of the year."
+
+Joe Mauser was on his feet, his face expressionless. He said, "Shall we
+go, Max? Gentlemen, it's been a pleasure. Colonel Arpàd, a privilege to
+meet you. Colonel Warren, a pleasure to renew acquaintance." Joe Mauser
+turned and, trailed by his orderly, left.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Lieutenant Colonel Warren, pale, was on his feet too.
+
+Balt Haer was chuckling. "Sit down, Paul. Sit down. Not important enough
+to be angry about. The man's a clod."
+
+Warren looked at him bleakly. "I wasn't angry, Balt. The last time I saw
+Captain Mauser I was slung over his shoulder. He carried, tugged and
+dragged me some two miles through enemy fire."
+
+Balt Haer carried it off with a shrug. "Well, that's his profession.
+Category Military. A mercenary for hire. I assume he received his pay."
+
+"He could have left me. Common sense dictated that he leave me."
+
+Balt Haer was annoyed. "Well, then we see what I've contended all along.
+The ambitious captain doesn't have common sense."
+
+Colonel Paul Warren shook his head. "You're wrong there. Common sense
+Joseph Mauser has. Considerable ability, he has. He's one of the best
+combat men in the field. But I'd hate to serve under him."
+
+The Hungarian was interested. "But why?"
+
+"Because he doesn't have luck, and in the dill you need luck." Warren
+grunted in sour memory. "Had the Telly cameras been focused on Joe
+Mauser, there at the Little Big Horn, he would have been a month long
+sensation to the Telly buffs, with all that means." He grunted again.
+"There wasn't a Telly team within a mile."
+
+"The captain probably didn't realize that," Balt Haer snorted.
+"Otherwise his heroics would have been modified."
+
+Warren flushed his displeasure and sat down. He said, "Possibly we
+should discuss the business before us. If your father is in agreement,
+the fracas can begin in three days." He turned to the representative of
+the Sov-world. "You have satisfied yourselves that neither force is
+violating the Disarmament Pact?"
+
+Lajos Arpàd nodded. "We will wish to have observers on the field,
+itself, of course. But preliminary observation has been satisfactory."
+He had been interested in the play between these two and the lower caste
+officer. He said now, "Pardon me. As you know, this is my first visit to
+the, uh _West_. I am fascinated. If I understand what just transpired,
+our Captain Mauser is a capable junior officer ambitious to rise in rank
+and status in your society." He looked at Balt Haer. "Why are you
+opposed to his so rising?"
+
+Young Haer was testy about the whole matter. "Of what purpose is an
+Upper caste if every Tom, Dick and Harry enters it at will?"
+
+Warren looked at the door through which Joe and Max had exited from the
+cocktail lounge. He opened his mouth to say something, closed it again,
+and held his peace.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+The Hungarian said, looking from one of them to the other, "In the
+Sov-world we seek out such ambitious persons and utilize their
+abilities."
+
+Lieutenant Colonel Warren laughed abruptly. "So do we here
+_theoretically_. We are _free_, whatever that means. However," he added
+sarcastically, "it does help to have good schooling, good connections,
+relatives in positions of prominence, abundant shares of good stocks,
+that sort of thing. And these one is born with, in this free world of
+ours, Colonel Arpàd."
+
+The Sov military observer clucked his tongue. "An indication of a
+declining society."
+
+Balt Haer turned on him. "And is it any different in your world?" he
+said sneeringly. "Is it merely coincidence that the best positions in
+the Sov-world are held by Party members, and that it is all but
+impossible for anyone not born of Party member parents to become one?
+Are not the best schools filled with the children of Party members? Are
+not only Party members allowed to keep servants? And isn't it so that--"
+
+Lieutenant Colonel Warren said, "Gentlemen, let us not start World War
+Three at this spot, at this late occasion."
+
+
+
+
+VIII
+
+
+Baron Malcolm Haer's field headquarters were in the ruins of a farm
+house in a town once known as Bearsville. His forces, and those of
+Marshal Stonewall Cogswell, were on the march but as yet their main
+bodies had not come in contact. Save for skirmishes between cavalry
+units, there had been no action. The ruined farm house had been a victim
+of an earlier fracas in this reservation which had seen in its
+comparatively brief time more combat than Belgium, that cockpit of
+Europe.
+
+There was a sheen of oily moisture on the Baron's bulletlike head and
+his officers weren't particularly happy about it. Malcolm Haer
+characteristically went into a fracas with confidence, an aggressive
+confidence so strong that it often carried the day. In battles past, it
+had become a tradition that Haer's morale was worth a thousand men; the
+energy he expended was the despair of his doctors who had been warning
+him for a decade. But now, something was missing.
+
+A forefinger traced over the military chart before them. "So far as we
+know, Marshal Cogswell has established his command here in Saugerties.
+Anybody have any suggestions as to why?"
+
+A major grumbled, "It doesn't make much sense, sir. You know the
+marshal. It's probably a fake. If we have any superiority at all, it's
+our artillery."
+
+"And the old fox wouldn't want to join the issue on the plains, down
+near the river," a colonel added. "It's his game to keep up into the
+mountains with his cavalry and light infantry. He's got Jack Alshuler's
+cavalry. Most experienced veterans in the field."
+
+"I know who he's got," Haer growled in irritation. "Stop reminding me.
+Where in the devil is Balt?"
+
+"Coming up, sir," Balt Haer said. He had entered only moments ago, a
+sheaf of signals in his hand. "Why didn't they make that date 1910,
+instead of 1900? With radio, we could speed up communications--"
+
+His father interrupted testily. "Better still, why not make it 1945?
+Then we could speed up to the point where we could polish ourselves off.
+What have you got?"
+
+Balt Haer said, his face in sulk, "Some of my lads based in West Hurley
+report concentrations of Cogswell's infantry and artillery near Ashokan
+reservoir."
+
+"Nonsense," somebody snapped. "We'd have him."
+
+The younger Haer slapped his swagger stick against his bare leg and
+kilt. "Possibly it's a feint," he admitted.
+
+"How much were they able to observe?" his father demanded.
+
+"Not much. They were driven off by a superior squadron. The Hovercraft
+forces are screening everything they do with heavy cavalry units. I told
+you we needed more--"
+
+"I don't need your advice at this point," his father snapped. The older
+Haer went back to the map, scowling still. "I don't see what he expects
+to do, working out of Saugerties."
+
+A voice behind them said, "Sir, may I have your permission--"
+
+Half of the assembled officers turned to look at the newcomer.
+
+Balt Haer snapped, "Captain Mauser. Why aren't you with your lads?"
+
+"Turned them over to my second in command, sir," Joe Mauser said. He was
+standing to attention, looking at Baron Haer.
+
+The Baron glowered at him. "What is the meaning of this cavalier
+intrusion, captain? Certainly, you must have your orders. Are you under
+the illusion that you are part of my staff?"
+
+"No, sir," Joe Mauser clipped. "I came to report that I am ready to put
+into execution--"
+
+"The great plan!" Balt Haer ejaculated. He laughed brittlely. "The
+second day of the fracas, and nobody really knows where old Cogswell is,
+or what he plans to do. And here comes the captain with his secret
+plan."
+
+Joe looked at him. He said, evenly, "Yes, sir."
+
+The Baron's face had gone dark, as much in anger at his son, as with the
+upstart cavalry captain. He began to growl ominously, "Captain Mauser,
+rejoin your command and obey your orders."
+
+Joe Mauser's facial expression indicated that he had expected this. He
+kept his voice level however, even under the chuckling scorn of his
+immediate superior, Balt Haer.
+
+He said, "Sir, I will be able to tell you where Marshal Cogswell is, and
+every troop at his command."
+
+For a moment there was silence, all but a stunned silence. Then the
+major who had suggested the Saugerties field command headquarters were a
+fake, blurted a curt laugh.
+
+"This is no time for levity, captain," Balt Haer clipped. "Get to your
+command."
+
+A colonel said, "Just a moment, sir. I've fought with Joe Mauser before.
+He's a good man."
+
+"Not that good," someone else huffed. "Does he claim to be clairvoyant?"
+
+Joe Mauser said flatly. "Have a semaphore man posted here this
+afternoon. I'll be back at that time." He spun on his heel and left
+them.
+
+Balt Haer rushed to the door after him, shouting, "Captain! That's an
+order! Return--"
+
+But the other was obviously gone. Enraged, the younger Haer began to
+shrill commands to a noncom in the way of organizing a pursuit.
+
+His father called wearily, "That's enough, Balt. Mauser has evidently
+taken leave of his senses. We made the initial mistake of encouraging
+this idea he had, or thought he had."
+
+"_We?_" his son snapped in return. "I had nothing to do with it."
+
+"All right, all right. Let's tighten up, here. Now, what other
+information have your scouts come up with?"
+
+
+
+
+IX
+
+
+At the Kingston airport, Joe Mauser rejoined Max Mainz, his face drawn
+now.
+
+"Everything go all right?" the little man said anxiously.
+
+"I don't know," Joe said. "I still couldn't tell them the story. Old
+Cogswell is as quick as a coyote. We pull this little caper today, and
+he'll be ready to meet it tomorrow."
+
+He looked at the two-place sailplane which sat on the tarmac.
+"Everything all set?"
+
+"Far as I know," Max said. He looked at the motorless aircraft. "You
+sure you been checked out on these things, captain?"
+
+"Yes," Joe said. "I bought this particular soaring glider more than a
+year ago, and I've put almost a thousand hours in it. Now, where's the
+pilot of that light plane?"
+
+A single-engined sports plane was attached to the glider by a fifty-foot
+nylon rope. Even as Joe spoke, a youngster poked his head from the
+plane's window and grinned back at them. "Ready?" he yelled.
+
+"Come on, Max," Joe said. "Let's pull the canopy off this thing. We
+don't want it in the way while you're semaphoring."
+
+A figure was approaching them from the Administration Building. A
+uniformed man, and somehow familiar.
+
+"A moment, Captain Mauser!"
+
+Joe placed him now. The Sov-world representative he'd met at Balt Haer's
+table in the Upper bar a couple of days ago. What was his name? Colonel
+Arpàd. Lajos Arpàd.
+
+The Hungarian approached and looked at the sailplane in interest. "As a
+representative of my government, a military attache checking upon
+possible violations of the Universal Disarmament Pact, may I request
+what you are about to do, captain?"
+
+Joe Mauser looked at him emptily. "How did you know I was here and what
+I was doing?"
+
+The Sov colonel smiled gently. "It was by suggestion of Marshal
+Cogswell. He is a great man for detail. It disturbed him that an ...
+what did he call it? ... an _old pro_ like yourself should join with
+Vacuum Tube Transport, rather than Continental Hovercraft. He didn't
+think it made sense and suggested that possibly you had in mind some
+scheme that would utilize weapons of a post 1900 period in your efforts
+to bring success to Baron Haer's forces. So I have investigated, Captain
+Mauser."
+
+"And the marshal knows about this sail plane?" Joe Mauser's face was
+blank.
+
+"I didn't say that. So far as I know, he doesn't."
+
+"Then, Colonel Arpàd, with your permission, I'll be taking off."
+
+The Hungarian said, "With what end in mind, captain?"
+
+"Using this glider as a reconnaissance aircraft."
+
+"Captain, I warn you! Aircraft were not in use in warfare until--"
+
+But Joe Mauser cut him off, equally briskly. "Aircraft were first used
+in combat by Pancho Villa's forces a few years previous to World War I.
+They were also used in the Balkan Wars of about the same period. But
+those were powered craft. This is a glider, invented and in use before
+the year 1900 and hence open to utilization."
+
+The Hungarian clipped, "But the Wright Brothers didn't fly even gliders
+until--"
+
+Joe looked him full in the face. "But you of the Sov-world do not admit
+that the Wrights were the first to fly, do you?"
+
+The Hungarian closed his mouth, abruptly.
+
+Joe said evenly, "But even if Ivan Ivanovitch, or whatever you claim his
+name was, didn't invent flight of heavier than air craft, the glider was
+flown variously before 1900, including Otto Lilienthal in the 1890s, and
+was designed as far back as Leonardo da Vinci."
+
+The Sov-world colonel stared at him for a long moment, then gave an
+inane giggle. He stepped back and flicked Joe Mauser a salute. "Very
+well, captain. As a matter of routine, I shall report this use of an
+aircraft for reconnaissance purposes, and undoubtedly a commission will
+meet to investigate the propriety of the departure. Meanwhile, good
+luck!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Joe returned the salute and swung a leg over the cockpit's side. Max was
+already in the front seat, his semaphore flags, maps and binoculars on
+his lap. He had been staring in dismay at the Sov officer, now was
+relieved that Joe had evidently pulled it off.
+
+Joe waved to the plane ahead. Two mechanics had come up to steady the
+wings for the initial ten or fifteen feet of the motorless craft's
+passage over the ground behind the towing craft.
+
+Joe said to Max, "did you explain to the pilot that under no
+circumstances was he to pass over the line of the military reservation,
+that we'd cut before we reached that point?"
+
+"Yes, sir," Max said nervously. He'd flown before, on the commercial
+lines, but he'd never been in a glider.
+
+They began lurching across the field, slowly, then gathering speed. And
+as the sailplane took speed, it took grace. After it had been pulled a
+hundred feet or so, Joe eased back the stick and it slipped gently into
+the air, four or five feet off the ground. The towing airplane was
+still taxiing, but with its tow airborne it picked up speed quickly.
+Another two hundred feet and it, too, was in the air and beginning to
+climb. The glider behind held it to a speed of sixty miles or so.
+
+At ten thousand feet, the plane leveled off and the pilot's head
+swiveled to look back at them. Joe Mauser waved to him and dropped the
+release lever which ejected the nylon rope from the glider's nose. The
+plane dove away, trailing the rope behind it. Joe knew that the plane
+pilot would later drop it over the airport where it could easily be
+retrieved.
+
+In the direction of Mount Overlook he could see cumulus clouds and the
+dark turbulence which meant strong updraft. He headed in that direction.
+
+Except for the whistling of wind, there is complete silence in a soaring
+glider. Max Mainz began to call back to his superior, was taken back by
+the volume, and dropped his voice. He said, "Look, captain. What keeps
+it up?"
+
+Joe grinned. He liked the buoyance of glider flying, the nearest
+approach of man to the bird, and thus far everything was going well. He
+told Max, "An airplane plows through the air currents, a glider rides on
+top of them."
+
+"Yeah, but suppose the current is going down?"
+
+"Then we avoid it. This sailplane only has a gliding angle ratio of one
+to twenty-five, but it's a workhorse with a payload of some four hundred
+pounds. A really high performance glider can have a ratio of as much as
+one to forty."
+
+Joe had found a strong updraft where a wind ran up the side of a
+mountain. He banked, went into a circling turn. The gauge indicated they
+were climbing at the rate of eight meters per second, nearly fifteen
+hundred feet a minute.
+
+Max hadn't got the rundown on the theory of the glider. That was obvious
+in his expression.
+
+Joe Mauser, even while searching the ground below keenly, went into it
+further. "A wind up against a mountain will give an updraft, storm
+clouds will, even a newly plowed field in a bright sun. So you go from
+one of these to the next."
+
+"Yeah, great, but when you're between," Max protested.
+
+"Then, when you have a one to twenty-five ratio, you go twenty-five feet
+forward for each one you drop. If you started a mile high, you could go
+twenty-five miles before you touched ground." He cut himself off
+quickly. "Look, what's that, down there? Get your glasses on it."
+
+Max caught his excitement. His binoculars were tight to his eyes.
+"Sojers. Cavalry. They sure ain't ours. They must be Hovercraft lads.
+And look, field artillery."
+
+Joe Mauser was piloting with his left hand, his right smoothing out a
+chart on his lap. He growled, "What are they doing there? That's at
+least a full brigade of cavalry. Here, let me have those glasses."
+
+With his knees gripping the stick, he went into a slow circle, as he
+stared down at the column of men. "Jack Alshuler," he whistled in
+surprise. "The marshal's crack heavy cavalry. And several batteries of
+artillery." He swung the glasses in a wider scope and the whistle turned
+into a hiss of comprehension. "They're doing a complete circle of the
+reservation. They're going to hit the Baron from the direction of
+Phoenicia."
+
+
+
+
+X
+
+
+Marshal Stonewall Cogswell directed his old fashioned telescope in the
+direction his chief of staff indicated.
+
+"What is it?" he grunted.
+
+"It's an airplane, sir."
+
+"Over a military reservation with a fracas in progress?"
+
+"Yes, sir." The other put his glasses back on the circling object. "Then
+what is it, sir? Certainly not a free balloon."
+
+"Balloons," the marshal snorted, as though to himself. "Legal to use.
+The Union forces had them toward the end of the Civil War. But
+practically useless in a fracas of movement."
+
+They were standing before the former resort hotel which housed the
+marshal's headquarters. Other staff members were streaming from the
+building, and one of the ever-present Telly reporting crews were
+hurriedly setting up cameras.
+
+The marshal turned and barked, "Does anybody know what in Zen that
+confounded thing, circling up there, is?"
+
+Baron Zwerdling, the aging Category Transport magnate, head of
+Continental Hovercraft, hobbled onto the wooden veranda and stared with
+the others. "An airplane," he croaked. "Haer's gone too far this time.
+Too far, too far. This will strip him. Strip him, understand." Then he
+added, "Why doesn't it make any noise?"
+
+Lieutenant Colonel Paul Warren stood next to his commanding officer. "It
+looks like a glider, sir."
+
+Cogswell glowered at him. "A what?"
+
+"A glider, sir. It's a sport not particularly popular these days."
+
+"What keeps it up, confound it?"
+
+Paul Warren looked at him. "The same thing that keeps a hawk up, an
+albatross, a gull--"
+
+"A vulture, you mean," Cogswell snarled. He watched it for another long
+moment, his face working. He whirled on his chief of artillery. "Jed,
+can you bring that thing down?"
+
+The other had been viewing the craft through field binoculars, his face
+as shocked as the rest of them. Now he faced his chief, and lowered the
+glasses, shaking his head. "Not with the artillery of pre-1900. No,
+sir."
+
+"What can you do?" Cogswell barked.
+
+The artillery man was shaking his head. "We could mount some Maxim guns
+on wagon wheels, or something. Keep him from coming low."
+
+"He doesn't have to come low," Cogswell growled unhappily. He spun on
+Lieutenant Colonel Warren again. "When were they invented?" He jerked
+his thumb upward. "Those things."
+
+Warren was twisting his face in memory. "Some time about the turn of the
+century."
+
+"How long can the things stay up?"
+
+Warren took in the surrounding mountainous countryside. "Indefinitely,
+sir. A single pilot, as long as he is physically able to operate. If
+there are two pilots up there to relieve each other, they could stay
+until food and water ran out."
+
+"How much weight do they carry?"
+
+"I'm not sure. One that size, certainly enough for two men and any
+equipment they'd need. Say, five hundred pounds."
+
+Cogswell had his telescope glued to his eyes again, he muttered under
+his breath, "Five hundred pounds! They could even unload dynamite over
+our horses. Stampede them all over the reservation."
+
+"What's going on?" Baron Zwerdling shrilled. "What's going on Marshal
+Cogswell?"
+
+Cogswell ignored him. He watched the circling, circling craft for a full
+five minutes, breathing deeply. Then he lowered his glass and swept the
+assembled officers of his staff with an indignant glare. "Ten Eyck!" he
+grunted.
+
+An infantry colonel came to attention. "Yes, sir."
+
+Cogswell said heavily, deliberately. "Under a white flag. A dispatch to
+Baron Haer. My compliments and request for his terms. While you're at
+it, my compliments also to Captain Joseph Mauser."
+
+Zwerdling was bug-eyeing him. "Terms!" he rasped.
+
+The marshal turned to him. "Yes, sir. Face reality. We're in the dill. I
+suggest you sue for terms as short of complete capitulation as you can
+make them."
+
+"You call yourself a soldier--!" the transport tycoon began to shrill.
+
+"Yes, sir," Cogswell snapped. "A soldier, not a butcher of the lads
+under me." He called to the Telly reporter who was getting as much of
+this as he could. "Mr. Soligen, isn't it?"
+
+ * * *
+
+The reporter scurried forward, flicking signals to his cameramen for
+proper coverage. "Yes, sir. Freddy Soligen, marshal. Could you tell the
+Telly fans what this is all about, Marshal Cogswell? Folks, you all know
+the famous marshal. Marshal Stonewall Cogswell, who hasn't lost a fracas
+in nearly ten years, now commanding the forces of Continental
+Hovercraft."
+
+"I'm losing one now," Cogswell said grimly. "Vacuum Tube Transport has
+pulled a gimmick out of the hat and things have pickled for us. It will
+be debated before the Military Category Department, of course, and
+undoubtedly the Sov-world military attaches will have things to say. But
+as it appears now, the fracas as we have known it, has been
+revolutionized."
+
+"Revolutionized?" Even the Telly reporter was flabbergasted. "You mean
+by that thing?" He pointed upward, and the lenses of the cameras
+followed his finger.
+
+"Yes," Cogswell growled unhappily. "Do all of you need a blueprint? Do
+you think I can fight a fracas with that thing dangling above me,
+throughout the day hours? Do you understand the importance of
+reconnaissance in warfare?" His eyes glowered. "Do you think Napoleon
+would have lost Waterloo if he'd had the advantage of perfect
+reconnaissance such as that thing can deliver? Do you think Lee would
+have lost Gettysburg? Don't be ridiculous." He spun on Baron Zwerdling,
+who was stuttering his complete confusion.
+
+"As it stands, Baron Haer knows every troop dispensation I make. All I
+know of his movements are from my cavalry scouts. I repeat, I am no
+butcher, sir. I will gladly cross swords with Baron Haer another day,
+when I, too, have ... what did you call the confounded things, Paul?"
+
+"Gliders," Lieutenant Colonel Warren said.
+
+
+
+
+XI
+
+
+Major Joseph Mauser, now attired in his best off-duty Category Military
+uniform, spoke his credentials to the receptionist. "I have no definite
+appointment, but I am sure the Baron will see me," he said.
+
+"Yes, sir." The receptionist did the things that receptionists do, then
+looked up at him again. "Right through that door, major."
+
+Joe Mauser gave the door a quick double rap and then entered before
+waiting an answer.
+
+Balt Haer, in mufti, was standing at a far window, a drink in his hand,
+rather than his customary swagger stick. Nadine Haer sat in an
+easy-chair. The girl Joe Mauser loved had been crying.
+
+Joe Mauser, suppressing his frown, made with the usual amenities.
+
+Balt Haer without answering them, finished his drink in a gulp and
+stared at the newcomer. The old stare, the aloof stare, an aristocrat
+looking at an underling as though wondering what made the fellow tick.
+He said, finally, "I see you have been raised to Rank Major."
+
+"Yes, sir," Joe said.
+
+"We are obviously occupied, major. What can either my sister or I
+possibly do for you?"
+
+Joe kept his voice even. He said, "I wanted to see the Baron."
+
+Nadine Haer looked up, a twinge of pain crossing her face.
+
+"Indeed," Balt Haer said flatly. "You are talking to the Baron, Major
+Mauser."
+
+Joe Mauser looked at him, then at his sister, who had taken to her
+handkerchief again. Consternation ebbed up and over him in a flood. He
+wanted to say something such as, "Oh _no_," but not even that could he
+utter.
+
+Haer was bitter. "I assume I know why you are here, major. You have come
+for your pound of flesh, undoubtedly. Even in these hours of our
+grief--"
+
+"I ... I didn't know. Please believe ..."
+
+"... You are so constituted that your ambition has no decency. Well,
+Major Mauser, I can only say that your arrangement was with my father.
+Even if I thought it a reasonable one, I doubt if I would sponsor your
+ambitions myself."
+
+Nadine Haer looked up wearily. "Oh, Balt, come off it," she said. "The
+fact is, the Haer fortunes contracted a debt to you, major.
+Unfortunately, it is a debt we cannot pay." She looked into his face.
+"First, my father's governmental connections do not apply to us. Second,
+six months ago, my father, worried about his health and attempting to
+avoid certain death taxes, transferred the family stocks into Balt's
+name. And Balt saw fit, immediately before the fracas, to sell all
+Vacuum Tube Transport stocks, and invest in Hovercraft."
+
+"That's enough, Nadine," her brother snapped nastily.
+
+"I see," Joe said. He came to attention. "Dr. Haer, my apologies for
+intruding upon you in your time of bereavement." He turned to the new
+Baron. "Baron Haer, my apologies for _your_ bereavement."
+
+Balt Haer glowered at him.
+
+Joe Mauser turned and marched for the door which he opened then closed
+behind him.
+
+On the street, before the New York offices of Vacuum Tube Transport, he
+turned and for a moment looked up at the splendor of the building.
+
+Well, at least the common shares of the concern had skyrocketed
+following the victory. His rank had been upped to Major, and old
+Stonewall Cogswell had offered him a permanent position on his staff in
+command of aerial operations, no small matter of prestige. The
+difficulty was, he wasn't interested in the added money that would
+accrue to him, nor the higher rank--nor the prestige, for that matter.
+
+He turned to go to his hotel.
+
+An unbelievably beautiful girl came down the steps of the building. She
+said, "Joe."
+
+He looked at her. "Yes?"
+
+She put a hand on his sleeve. "Let's go somewhere and talk, Joe."
+
+"About what?" He was infinitely weary now.
+
+"About goals," she said. "As long as they exist, whether for
+individuals, or nations, or a whole species, life is still worth the
+living. Things are a bit bogged down right now, but at the risk of
+sounding very trite, there's tomorrow."
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Note:
+
+ This etext was produced from _Analog_ April 1962. Extensive research
+ did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright on this
+ publication was renewed. Minor spelling and typographical errors
+ have been corrected without note.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Mercenary, by Dallas McCord Reynolds
+
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Mercenary, by Dallas McCord Reynolds
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Mercenary
+
+Author: Dallas McCord Reynolds
+
+Illustrator: Lloyd Birmingham
+
+Release Date: January 20, 2008 [EBook #24370]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
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+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MERCENARY ***
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+</pre>
+
+
+<div class="titl">
+<div class="figtitl" style="width: 219px;">
+<img src="images/001-1.png" width="219" height="304" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="figtitl">
+<img src="images/001-2.png" width="600" height="119" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<h1>MERCENARY</h1>
+
+<b>Every status-quo-caste society in history
+has left open two roads to rise above your
+caste: The Priest and The Warrior. But in
+a society of TV and tranquilizers&mdash;the
+Warrior acquires a strange new meaning....</b>
+
+<h2>BY MACK REYNOLDS</h2></div>
+
+<p class="illo"><b>ILLUSTRATED BY BIRMINGHAM</b></p>
+
+<p class="cap">Joseph Mauser spotted the recruiting
+line-up from two or three blocks
+down the street, shortly after driving
+into Kingston. The local offices of
+Vacuum Tube Transport, undoubtedly.
+Baron Haer would be doing his
+recruiting for the fracas with Continental
+Hovercraft there if for no other
+reason than to save on rents. The
+Baron was watching pennies on
+this one and that was bad.</p>
+
+<p>In fact, it was so bad that even as
+Joe Mauser let his sports hovercar
+sink to a parking level and vaulted
+over its side he was still questioning
+his decision to sign up with the Vacuum
+Tube outfit rather than with
+their opponents. Joe was an old pro
+and old pros do not get to be old
+pros in the Category Military without
+developing an instinct to stay
+away from losing sides.</p>
+
+<p>Fine enough for Low-Lowers and
+Mid-Lowers to sign up with this outfit,
+as opposed to that, motivated by
+no other reasoning than the snappiness
+of the uniform and the stock
+shares offered, but an old pro considered
+carefully such matters as
+budget. Baron Haer was watching
+every expense, was, it was rumored,
+figuring on commanding himself and
+calling upon relatives and friends for
+his staff. Continental Hovercraft, on
+the other hand, was heavy with variable
+capital and was in a position to
+hire Stonewall Cogswell himself for
+their tactician.</p>
+
+<p>However, the die was cast. You
+didn't run up a caste level, not to
+speak of two at once, by playing it
+careful. Joe had planned this out; for
+once, old pro or not, he was taking
+risks.</p>
+
+<p>Recruiting line-ups were not for
+such as he. Not for many a year,
+many a fracas. He strode rapidly
+along this one, heading for the offices
+ahead, noting only in passing
+the quality of the men who were taking
+service with Vacuum Tube Transport.
+These were the soldiers he'd be
+commanding in the immediate future
+and the prospects looked grim. There
+were few veterans among them. Their
+stance, their demeanor, their ...
+well, you could tell a veteran even
+though he be Rank Private. You
+could tell a veteran of even one fracas.
+It showed.</p>
+
+<p>He knew the situation. The word
+had gone out. Baron Malcolm Haer
+was due for a defeat. You weren't
+going to pick up any lush bonuses
+signing up with him, and you definitely
+weren't going to jump a caste.
+In short, no matter what Haer's past
+record, choose what was going to be
+the winning side&mdash;Continental Hovercraft.
+Continental Hovercraft and
+old Stonewall Cogswell who had lost
+so few fracases that many a Telly
+buff couldn't remember a single one.</p>
+
+<p>Individuals among these men
+showed promise, Joe Mauser estimated
+even as he walked, but promise
+means little if you don't live long
+enough to cash in on it.</p>
+
+<p>Take that small man up ahead.
+He'd obviously got himself into a
+hassle maintaining his place in line
+against two or three heftier would-be
+soldiers. The little fellow wasn't
+backing down a step in spite of the
+attempts of the other Lowers to
+usurp his place. Joe Mauser liked to
+see such spirit. You could use it when
+you were in the dill.</p>
+
+<p>As he drew abreast of the altercation,
+he snapped from the side of his
+mouth, "Easy, lads. You'll get all the
+scrapping you want with Hovercraft.
+Wait until then."</p>
+
+<p>He'd expected his tone of authority
+to be enough, even though he was
+in mufti. He wasn't particularly interested
+in the situation, beyond giving
+the little man a hand. A veteran
+would have recognized him as an old-timer
+and probable officer, and heeded,
+automatically.</p>
+
+<p>These evidently weren't veterans.</p>
+
+<p>"Says who?" one of the Lowers
+growled back at him. "You one of
+Baron Haer's kids, or something?"</p>
+
+<p>Joe Mauser came to a halt and
+faced the other. He was irritated,
+largely with himself. He didn't want
+to be bothered. Nevertheless, there
+was no alternative now.</p>
+
+<p>The line of men, all Lowers so far
+as Joe could see, had fallen silent
+in an expectant hush. They were
+bored with their long wait. Now
+something would break the monotony.</p>
+
+<p>By tomorrow, Joe Mauser would
+be in command of some of these
+men. In as little as a week he would
+go into a full-fledged fracas with
+them. He couldn't afford to lose face.
+Not even at this point when all, including
+himself, were still civilian
+garbed. When matters pickled, in a
+fracas, you wanted men with complete
+confidence in you.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="cap">The man who had grumbled the
+surly response was a near physical
+twin of Joe Mauser which put him in
+his early thirties, gave him five foot
+eleven of altitude and about one hundred
+and eighty pounds. His clothes
+casted him Low-Lower&mdash;nothing to
+lose. As with many who have nothing
+to lose, he was willing to risk all
+for principle. His face now registered
+that ideal. Joe Mauser had no authority
+over him, nor his friends.</p>
+
+<p>Joe's eyes flicked to the other two
+who had been pestering the little
+fellow. They weren't quite so aggressive
+and as yet had come to no conclusion
+about their stand. Probably
+the three had been unacquainted before
+their bullying alliance to deprive
+the smaller man of his place.
+However, a moment of hesitation
+and Joe would have a trio on his
+hands.</p>
+
+<p>He went through no further verbal
+preliminaries. Joe Mauser stepped
+closer. His right hand lanced forward,
+not doubled in a fist but fingers
+close together and pointed, spear-like.
+He sank it into the other's abdomen,
+immediately below the rib cage&mdash;the
+solar plexus.</p>
+
+<p>He had misestimated the other
+two. Even as his opponent crumpled,
+they were upon him, coming in from
+each side. And at least one of them,
+he could see now, had been in hand-to-hand
+combat before. In short, another
+pro, like Joe himself.</p>
+
+<p>He took one blow, rolling with it,
+and his feet automatically went into
+the shuffle of the trained fighter. He
+retreated slightly to erect defenses,
+plan attack. They pressed him strongly,
+sensing victory in his retreat.</p>
+
+<p>The one mattered little to him.
+Joe Mauser could have polished off
+the oaf in a matter of seconds, had
+he been allotted seconds to devote.
+But the second, the experienced one,
+was the problem. He and Joe were
+well matched and with the oaf as an
+ally really he had all the best of it.</p>
+
+<p>Support came from a forgotten
+source, the little chap who had been
+the reason for the whole hassle. He
+waded in now as big as the next man
+so far as spirit was concerned, but a
+sorry fate gave him to attack the
+wrong man, the veteran rather than
+the tyro. He took a crashing blow to
+the side of his head which sent him
+sailing back into the recruiting line,
+now composed of excited, shouting
+verbal participants of the fray.</p>
+
+<p>However, the extinction of Joe
+Mauser's small ally had taken a moment
+or two and time was what Joe
+needed most. For a double second he
+had the oaf alone on his hands and
+that was sufficient. He caught a flailing
+arm, turned his back and automatically
+went into the movements
+which result in that spectacular hold
+of the wrestler, the Flying Mare.
+Just in time he recalled that his opponent
+was a future comrade-in-arms
+and twisted the arm so that it bent
+at the elbow, rather than breaking.
+He hurled the other over his shoulder
+and as far as possible, to take the
+scrap out of him, and twirled quickly
+to meet the further attack of his sole
+remaining foe.</p>
+
+<p>That phase of the combat failed to
+materialize.</p>
+
+<p>A voice of command bit out, "Hold
+it, you lads!"</p>
+
+<p>The original situation which had
+precipitated the fight was being duplicated.
+But while the three Lowers
+had failed to respond to Joe Mauser's
+tone of authority, there was no similar
+failure now.</p>
+
+<p>The owner of the voice, beautifully
+done up in the uniform of Vacuum
+Tube Transport, complete to
+kilts and the swagger stick of the officer
+of Rank Colonel or above, stood
+glaring at them. Age, Joe estimated,
+even as he came to attention, somewhere
+in the late twenties&mdash;an Upper
+in caste. Born to command. His face
+holding that arrogant, contemptuous
+expression once common to the patricians
+of Rome, the Prussian Junkers,
+the British ruling class of the
+Nineteenth Century. Joe knew the
+expression well. How well he knew
+it. On more than one occasion, he had
+dreamt of it.</p>
+
+<p>Joe said, "Yes, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"What in Zen goes on here? Are
+you lads overtranked?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir," Joe's veteran opponent
+grumbled, his eyes on the ground, a
+schoolboy before the principal.</p>
+
+<p>Joe said, evenly, "A private disagreement,
+sir."</p>
+
+<p>"Disagreement!" the Upper snorted.
+His eyes went to the three fallen
+combatants, who were in various
+stages of reviving. "I'd hate to see
+you lads in a real scrap."</p>
+
+<p>That brought a response from the
+non-combatants in the recruiting
+line. The <i>bon mot</i> wasn't that good
+but caste has its privileges and the
+laughter was just short of uproarious.</p>
+
+<p>Which seemed to placate the kilted
+officer. He tapped his swagger stick
+against the side of his leg while he
+ran his eyes up and down Joe Mauser
+and the others, as though memorizing
+them for future reference.</p>
+
+<p>"All right," he said. "Get back into
+the line, and you trouble makers
+quiet down. We're processing as
+quickly as we can." And at that point
+he added insult to injury with an almost
+word for word repetition of
+what Joe had said a few moments
+earlier. "You'll get all the fighting
+you want from Hovercraft, if you
+can wait until then."</p>
+
+<p>The four original participants of
+the rumpus resumed their places in
+various stages of sheepishness. The
+little fellow, nursing an obviously
+aching jaw, made a point of taking
+up his original position even while
+darting a look of thanks to Joe Mauser
+who still stood where he had
+when the fight was interrupted.</p>
+
+<p>The Upper looked at Joe. "Well,
+lad, are you interested in signing up
+with Vacuum Tube Transport or
+not?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir," Joe said evenly. Then,
+"Joseph Mauser, sir. Category Military,
+Rank Captain."</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed." The officer looked him
+up and down all over again, his nostrils
+high. "A Middle, I assume. And
+brawling with recruits." He held a
+long silence. "Very well, come with
+me." He turned and marched off.</p>
+
+<p>Joe inwardly shrugged. This was a
+fine start for his pitch&mdash;a fine start.
+He had half a mind to give it all up,
+here and now, and head on up to
+Catskill to enlist with Continental
+Hovercraft. His big scheme would
+wait for another day. Nevertheless,
+he fell in behind the aristocrat and
+followed him to the offices which
+had been his original destination.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="cap">Two Rank Privates with 45-70
+Springfields and wearing the Haer
+kilts in such wise as to indicate
+permanent status in Vacuum Tube
+Transport came to the salute as they
+approached. The Upper preceding
+Joe Mauser flicked his swagger stick
+in an easy nonchalance. Joe felt envious
+amusement. How long did it
+take to learn how to answer a salute
+with that degree of arrogant ease?</p>
+
+<p>There were desks in here, and typers
+humming, as Vacuum Tube
+Transport office workers, mobilized
+for this special service, processed volunteers
+for the company forces. Harried
+noncoms and junior-grade officers
+buzzed everywhere, failing miserably
+to bring order to the chaos. To
+the right was a door with a medical
+cross newly painted on it. When it
+occasionally popped open to admit
+or emit a recruit, white-robed doctors,
+male nurses and half nude men
+could be glimpsed beyond.</p>
+
+<p>Joe followed the other through
+the press and to an inner office at
+which door he didn't bother to knock.
+He pushed his way through, waved
+in greeting with his swagger stick to
+the single occupant who looked up
+from the paper- and tape-strewn
+desk at which he sat.</p>
+
+<p>Joe Mauser had seen the face before
+on Telly though never so tired
+as this and never with the element of
+defeat to be read in the expression.
+Bullet-headed, barrel-figured Baron
+Malcolm Haer of Vacuum Tube
+Transport. Category Transportation,
+Mid-Upper, and strong candidate for
+Upper-Upper upon retirement. However,
+there would be few who expected
+retirement in the immediate
+future. Hardly. Malcolm Haer found
+too obvious a lusty enjoyment in the
+competition between Vacuum Tube
+Transport and its stronger rivals.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>Joe came to attention, bore the
+sharp scrutiny of his chosen commander-to-be.
+The older man's eyes
+went to the kilted Upper officer who
+had brought Joe along. "What is it,
+Balt?"</p>
+
+<p>The other gestured with his stick
+at Joe. "Claims to be Rank Captain.
+Looking for a commission with us,
+Dad. I wouldn't know why." The
+last sentence was added lazily.</p>
+
+<p>The older Haer shot an irritated
+glance at his son. "Possibly for the
+same reason mercenaries usually enlist
+for a fracas, Balt." His eyes came
+back to Joe.</p>
+
+<p>Joe Mauser, still at attention even
+though in mufti, opened his mouth
+to give his name, category and rank,
+but the older man waved a hand
+negatively. "Captain Mauser, isn't
+it? I caught the fracas between Carbonaceous
+Fuel and United Miners,
+down on the Panhandle Reservation.
+Seems to me I've spotted you once or
+twice before, too."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir," Joe said. This was some
+improvement in the way things were
+going.</p>
+
+<p>The older Haer was scowling at
+him. "Confound it, what are you doing
+with no more rank than captain?
+On the face of it, you're an old hand,
+a highly experienced veteran."</p>
+
+<p><i>An old pro, we call ourselves</i>, Joe
+said to himself. <i>Old pros, we call ourselves,
+among ourselves.</i></p>
+
+<p>Aloud, he said, "I was born a Mid-Lower,
+sir."</p>
+
+<p>There was understanding in the
+old man's face, but Balt Haer said
+loftily, "What's that got to do with
+it? Promotion is quick and based on
+merit in Category Military."</p>
+
+<p>At a certain point, if you are good
+combat officer material, you speak
+your mind no matter the rank of the
+man you are addressing. On this occasion,
+Joe Mauser needed few
+words. He let his eyes go up and
+down Balt Haer's immaculate uniform,
+taking in the swagger stick of
+the Rank Colonel or above. Joe said
+evenly, "Yes, sir."</p>
+
+<p>Balt Haer flushed quick temper.
+"What do you mean by&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>But his father was chuckling. "You
+have spirit, captain. I need spirit now.
+You are quite correct. My son,
+though a capable officer, I assure
+you, has probably not participated in
+a fraction of the fracases you have
+to your credit. However, there is
+something to be said for the training
+available to we Uppers in the academies.
+For instance, captain, have you
+ever commanded a body of lads larger
+than, well, a <i>company</i>?"</p>
+
+<p>Joe said flatly, "In the Douglas-Boeing
+versus Lockheed-Cessna fracas
+we took a high loss of officers
+when the Douglas-Boeing outfit rang
+in some fast-firing French <i>mitrailleuse</i>
+we didn't know they had. As
+my superiors took casualties I was
+field promoted to acting battalion
+commander, to acting regimental
+commander, to acting brigadier. For
+three days I held the rank of acting
+commander of brigade. We won."</p>
+
+<p>Balt Haer snapped his fingers. "I
+remember that. Read quite a paper
+on it." He eyed Joe Mauser, almost
+respectfully. "Stonewall Cogswell got
+the credit for the victory and received
+his marshal's baton as a result."</p>
+
+<p>"He was one of the few other officers
+that survived," Joe said dryly.</p>
+
+<p>"But, Zen! You mean you got no
+promotion at all?"</p>
+
+<p>Joe said, "I was upped to Low-Middle
+from High-Lower, sir. At my
+age, at the time, quite a promotion."</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="cap">Baron Haer was remembering, too.
+"That was the fracas that brought on
+the howl from the Sovs. They claimed
+those <i>mitrailleuse</i> were post-1900
+and violated the Universal Disarmament
+Pact. Yes, I recall that. Douglas-Boeing
+was able to prove that the
+weapon was used by the French as
+far back as the Franco-Prussian
+War." He eyed Joe with new interest
+now. "Sit down, captain. You too,
+Balt. Do you realize that Captain
+Mauser is the only recruit of officer
+rank we've had today?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," the younger Haer said dryly.
+"However, it's too late to call the
+fracas off now. Hovercraft wouldn't
+stand for it, and the Category Military
+Department would back them.
+Our only alternative is unconditional
+surrender, and you know what that
+means."</p>
+
+<p>"It means our family would probably
+be forced from control of the
+firm," the older man growled. "But
+nobody has suggested surrender on
+any terms. Nobody, thus far." He
+glared at his officer son who took it
+with an easy shrug and swung a leg
+over the edge of his father's desk in
+the way of a seat.</p>
+
+<p>Joe Mauser found a chair and
+lowered himself into it. Evidently,
+the foppish Balt Haer had no illusions
+about the spot his father had
+got the family corporation into. And
+the younger man was right, of course.</p>
+
+<p>But the Baron wasn't blind to reality
+any more than he was a coward.
+He dismissed Balt Haer's defeatism
+from his mind and came back to Joe
+Mauser. "As I say, you're the only
+officer recruit today. Why?"</p>
+
+<p>Joe said evenly, "I wouldn't know,
+sir. Perhaps freelance Category
+Military men are occupied elsewhere.
+There's always a shortage of trained
+officers."</p>
+
+<p>Baron Haer was waggling a finger
+negatively. "That's not what I mean,
+captain. You are an old hand. This
+is your category and you must know
+it well. Then why are <i>you</i> signing up
+with Vacuum Tube Transport rather
+than Hovercraft?"</p>
+
+<p>Joe Mauser looked at him for a
+moment without speaking.</p>
+
+<p>"Come, come, captain. I am an old
+hand too, in my category, and not a
+fool. I realize there is scarcely a soul
+in the West-world that expects anything
+but disaster for my colors. Pay
+rates have been widely posted. I can
+offer only five common shares of
+Vacuum Tube for a Rank Captain,
+win or lose. Hovercraft is doubling
+that, and can pick and choose among
+the best officers in the hemisphere."</p>
+
+<p>Joe said softly, "I have all the
+shares I need."</p>
+
+<p>Balt Haer had been looking back
+and forth between his father and the
+newcomer and becoming obviously
+more puzzled. He put in, "Well, what
+in Zen motivates you if it isn't the
+stock we offer?"</p>
+
+<p>Joe glanced at the younger Haer
+to acknowledge the question but he
+spoke to the Baron. "Sir, like you
+said, you're no fool. However, you've
+been sucked in, this time. When you
+took on Hovercraft, you were thinking
+in terms of a regional dispute.
+You wanted to run one of your vacuum
+tube deals up to Fairbanks from
+Edmonton. You were expecting a
+minor fracas, involving possibly five
+thousand men. You never expected
+Hovercraft to parlay it up, through
+their connections in the Category
+Military Department, to a divisional
+magnitude fracas which you simply
+aren't large enough to afford. But
+Hovercraft was getting sick of your
+corporation. You've been nicking
+away at them too long. So they decided
+to do you in. They've hired
+Marshal Cogswell and the best combat
+officers in North America, and
+they're hiring the most competent
+veterans they can find. Every fracas
+buff who watches Telly, figures you've
+had it. They've been watching you
+come up the aggressive way, the
+hard way, for a long time, but now
+they're all going to be sitting on the
+edges of their sofas waiting for you
+to get it."</p>
+
+<p>Baron Haer's heavy face had hardened
+as Joe Mauser went on relentlessly.
+He growled, "Is this what everyone
+thinks?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes. Everyone intelligent enough
+to have an opinion." Joe made a motion
+of his head to the outer offices
+where the recruiting was proceeding.
+"Those men out there are rejects
+from Catskill, where old Baron
+Zwerdling is recruiting. Either that
+or they're inexperienced Low-Lowers,
+too stupid to realize they're
+sticking their necks out. Not one
+man in ten is a veteran. And when
+things begin to pickle, you want
+veterans."</p>
+
+<p>Baron Malcolm Haer sat back in
+his chair and stared coldly at Captain
+Joe Mauser. He said, "At first I
+was moderately surprised that an old
+time mercenary like yourself should
+choose my uniform, rather than
+Zwerdling's. Now I am increasingly
+mystified about motivation. So all
+over again I ask you, captain: Why
+are you requesting a commission in
+my forces which you seem convinced
+will meet disaster?"</p>
+
+<p>Joe wet his lips carefully. "I think
+I know a way you can win."</p>
+
+<hr class="maj" />
+<h2>II</h2>
+
+<p class="cap">His permanent military rank the
+Haers had no way to alter, but they
+were short enough of competent officers
+that they gave him an acting
+rating and pay scale of major and
+command of a squadron of cavalry.
+Joe Mauser wasn't interested in a cavalry
+command this fracas, but he said
+nothing. Immediately, he had to size
+up the situation; it wasn't time as yet
+to reveal the big scheme. And, meanwhile,
+they could use him to whip the
+Rank Privates into shape.</p>
+
+<p>He had left the offices of Baron
+Haer to go through the red tape involved
+in being signed up on a temporary
+basis in the Vacuum Tube
+Transport forces, and reentered the
+confusion of the outer offices where
+the Lowers were being processed and
+given medicals. He reentered in time
+to run into a Telly team which was
+doing a live broadcast.</p>
+
+<p>Joe Mauser remembered the news
+reporter who headed the team. He'd
+run into him two or three times in
+fracases. As a matter of fact, although
+Joe held the standard Military
+Category prejudices against Telly, he
+had a basic respect for this particular
+newsman. On the occasions he'd seen
+him before, the fellow was hot in the
+midst of the action even when things
+were in the dill. He took as many
+chances as did the average combatant,
+and you can't ask for more than
+that.</p>
+
+<p>The other knew him, too, of
+course. It was part of his job to be
+able to spot the celebrities and near
+celebrities. He zeroed in on Joe now,
+making flicks of his hand to direct
+the cameras. Joe, of course, was fully
+aware of the value of Telly and was
+glad to co-operate.</p>
+
+<p>"Captain! Captain Mauser, isn't
+it? Joe Mauser who held out for four
+days in the swamps of Louisiana with
+a single company while his ranking
+officers reformed behind him."</p>
+
+<p>That was one way of putting it,
+but both Joe and the newscaster who
+had covered the debacle knew the
+reality of the situation. When the
+front had collapsed, his commanders&mdash;of
+Upper caste, of course&mdash;had
+hauled out, leaving him to fight a
+delaying action while they mended
+their fences with the enemy, coming
+to the best terms possible. Yes, that
+had been the United Oil versus Allied
+Petroleum fracas, and Joe had
+emerged with little either in glory or
+pelf.</p>
+
+<p>The average fracas fan wasn't on
+an intellectual level to appreciate
+anything other than victory. The
+good guys win, the bad guys lose&mdash;that's
+obvious, isn't it? Not one out
+of ten Telly followers of the fracases
+was interested in a well-conducted
+retreat or holding action. They wanted
+blood, lots of it, and they identified
+with the winning side.</p>
+
+<p>Joe Mauser wasn't particularly bitter
+about this aspect. It was part of
+his way of life. In fact, his pet peeve
+was the <i>real</i> buff. The type, man or
+woman, who could remember every
+fracas you'd ever been in, every time
+you'd copped one, and how long
+you'd been in the hospital. Fans who
+could remember, even better than
+you could, every time the situation
+had pickled on you and you'd had to
+fight your way out as best you could.
+They'd tell you about it, their eyes
+gleaming, sometimes a slightest
+trickle of spittle at the sides of their
+mouths. They usually wanted an autograph,
+or a souvenir such as a
+uniform button.</p>
+
+<p>Now Joe said to the Telly reporter,
+"That's right, Captain Mauser. Acting
+major, in this fracas, ah&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Freddy. Freddy Soligen. You remember
+me, captain&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Of course I do, Freddy. We've
+been in the dill, side by side, more
+than once, and even when I was too
+scared to use my side arm, you'd be
+scanning away with your camera."</p>
+
+<p>"Ha ha, listen to the captain,
+folks. I hope my boss is tuned in.
+But seriously, Captain Mauser, what
+do you think the chances of Vacuum
+Tube Transport are in this fracas?"</p>
+
+<p>Joe looked into the camera lens,
+earnestly. "The best, of course, or I
+wouldn't have signed up with Baron
+Haer, Freddy. Justice triumphs, and
+anybody who is familiar with the issues
+in this fracas, knows that Baron
+Haer is on the side of true right."</p>
+
+<p>Freddy said, holding any sarcasm
+he must have felt, "What would you
+say the issues were, captain?"</p>
+
+<p>"The basic North American free
+enterprise right to compete. Hovercraft
+has held a near monopoly in
+transport to Fairbanks. Vacuum
+Tube Transport wishes to lower costs
+and bring the consumers of Fairbanks
+better service through running a vacuum
+tube to that area. What could be
+more in the traditions of the West-world?
+Continental Hovercraft stands
+in the way and it is they who have
+demanded of the Category Military
+Department a trial by arms. On the
+face of it, justice is on the side of
+Baron Haer."</p>
+
+<p>Freddy Soligen said into the camera,
+"Well, all you good people of
+the Telly world, that's an able summation
+the captain has made, but it
+certainly doesn't jibe with the words
+of Baron Zwerdling we heard this
+morning, does it? However, justice
+triumphs and we'll see what the field
+of combat will have to offer. Thank
+you, thank you very much, Captain
+Mauser. All of us, all of us tuned in
+today, hope that you personally will
+run into no dill in this fracas."</p>
+
+<p>"Thanks, Freddy. Thanks all," Joe
+said into the camera, before turning
+away. He wasn't particularly keen
+about this part of the job, but you
+couldn't underrate the importance of
+pleasing the buffs. In the long run it
+was your career, your chances for
+promotion both in military rank and
+ultimately in caste. It was the way
+the fans took you up, boosted you,
+idolized you, worshipped you if you
+really made it. He, Joe Mauser, was
+only a minor celebrity, he appreciated
+every chance he had to be interviewed
+by such a popular reporter as
+Freddy Soligen.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="cap">Even as he turned, he spotted the
+four men with whom he'd had his
+spat earlier. The little fellow was still
+to the fore. Evidently, the others had
+decided the one place extra that he
+represented wasn't worth the trouble
+he'd put in their way defending it.</p>
+
+<p>On an impulse he stepped up to
+the small man who began a grin of
+recognition, a grin that transformed
+his feisty face. A revelation of an
+inner warmth beyond average in a
+world which had lost much of its human
+warmth.</p>
+
+<div class="figright" style="width: 404px;">
+<img src="images/002.png" width="404" height="500" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p>Joe said, "Like a job, soldier?"</p>
+
+<p>"Name's Max. Max Mainz. Sure I
+want a job. That's why I'm in this
+everlasting line."</p>
+
+<p>Joe said, "First fracas for you,
+isn't it?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yeah, but I had basic training in
+school."</p>
+
+<p>"What do you weigh, Max?"</p>
+
+<p>Max's face soured. "About one
+twenty."</p>
+
+<p>"Did you check out on semaphore
+in school?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, sure. I'm Category Food,
+Sub-division Cooking, Branch Chef,
+but, like I say, I took basic military
+training, like most everybody else."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm Captain Joe Mauser. How'd
+you like to be my batman?"</p>
+
+<p>Max screwed up his already not
+overly handsome face. "Gee, I don't
+know. I kinda joined up to see some
+action. Get into the dill. You know
+what I mean."</p>
+
+<p>Joe said dryly, "See here, Mainz,
+you'll probably find more pickled situations
+next to me than you'll want&mdash;and
+you'll come out alive."</p>
+
+<p>The recruiting sergeant looked up
+from the desk. It was Max Mainz's
+turn to be processed. The sergeant
+said, "Lad, take a good opportunity
+when it drops in your lap. The captain
+is one of the best in the field.
+You'll learn more, get better chances
+for promotion, if you stick with him."</p>
+
+<p>Joe couldn't remember ever having
+run into the sergeant before, but
+he said, "Thanks, sergeant."</p>
+
+<p>The other said, evidently realizing
+Joe didn't recognize him, "We were
+together on the Chihuahua Reservation,
+on the jurisdictional fracas between
+the United Miners and the
+Teamsters, sir."</p>
+
+<p>It had been almost fifteen years
+ago. About all that Joe Mauser remembered
+of that fracas was the abnormal
+number of casualties they'd
+taken. His side had lost, but from
+this distance in time Joe couldn't even
+remember what force he'd been with.
+But now he said, "That's right. I
+thought I recognized you, sergeant."</p>
+
+<p>"It was my first fracas, sir." The
+sergeant went businesslike. "If you
+want I should hustle this lad though,
+captain&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Please do, sergeant." Joe added to
+Max, "I'm not sure where my billet
+will be. When you're through all this,
+locate the officer's mess and wait
+there for me."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, O.K.," Max said doubtfully,
+still scowling but evidently a servant
+of an officer, if he wanted to be or
+not.</p>
+
+<p>"Sir," the sergeant added ominously.
+"If you've had basic, you know
+enough how to address an officer."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, yessir," Max said hurriedly.</p>
+
+<p>Joe began to turn away, but then
+spotted the man immediately behind
+Max Mainz. He was one of the three
+with whom Joe had tangled earlier,
+the one who'd obviously had previous
+combat experience. He pointed
+the man out to the sergeant. "You'd
+better give this lad at least temporary
+rank of corporal. He's a veteran and
+we're short of veterans."</p>
+
+<p>The sergeant said, "Yes, sir. We
+sure are." Joe's former foe looked
+properly thankful.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="cap">Joe Mauser finished off his own red
+tape and headed for the street to locate
+a military tailor who could do
+him up a set of the Haer kilts and fill
+his other dress requirements. As he
+went, he wondered vaguely just how
+many different uniforms he had worn
+in his time.</p>
+
+<p>In a career as long as his own from
+time to time you took semi-permanent
+positions in bodyguards, company
+police, or possibly the permanent
+combat troops of this corporation
+or that. But largely, if you were
+ambitious, you signed up for the fracases
+and that meant into a uniform
+and out of it again in as short a period
+as a couple of weeks.</p>
+
+<p>At the door he tried to move aside
+but was too slow for the quick moving
+young woman who caromed off
+him. He caught her arm to prevent
+her from stumbling. She looked at
+him with less than thanks.</p>
+
+<p>Joe took the blame for the collision.
+"Sorry," he said. "I'm afraid
+I didn't see you, Miss."</p>
+
+<p>"Obviously," she said coldly. Her
+eyes went up and down him, and for
+a moment he wondered where he
+had seen her before. Somewhere, he
+was sure.</p>
+
+<p>She was dressed as they dress who
+have never considered cost and she
+had an elusive beauty which would
+have been even the more hadn't her
+face projected quite such a serious
+outlook. Her features were more delicate
+than those to which he was usually
+attracted. Her lips were less full,
+but still&mdash; He was reminded of the
+classic ideal of the British Romantic
+Period, the women sung of by Byron
+and Keats, Shelly and Moore.</p>
+
+<p>She said, "Is there any particular
+reason why you should be staring at
+me, Mr.&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Captain Mauser," Joe said hurriedly.
+"I'm afraid I've been rude,
+Miss&mdash;Well, I thought I recognized
+you."</p>
+
+<p>She took in his civilian dress, typed
+it automatically, and came to an erroneous
+conclusion. She said, "Captain?
+You mean that with everyone
+else I know drawing down ranks from
+Lieutenant Colonel to Brigadier General,
+you can't make anything better
+than Captain?"</p>
+
+<p>Joe winced. He said carefully, "I
+came up from the ranks, Miss. Captain
+is quite an achievement, believe
+me."</p>
+
+<p>"Up from the ranks!" She took in
+his clothes again. "You mean you're
+a Middle? You neither talk nor look
+like a Middle, captain." She used the
+caste rating as though it was not
+<i>quite</i> a derogatory term.</p>
+
+<p>Not that she meant to be deliberately
+insulting, Joe knew, wearily.
+How well he knew. It was simply
+born in her. As once a well-educated
+aristocracy had, not necessarily unkindly,
+named their status inferiors
+<i>niggers</i>; or other aristocrats, in another
+area of the country, had named
+theirs <i>greasers</i>. Yes, how well he
+knew.</p>
+
+<p>He said very evenly, "Mid-Middle
+now, Miss. However, I was born in
+the Lower castes."</p>
+
+<p>An eyebrow went up. "Zen! You
+must have put in many an hour
+studying. You talk like an Upper,
+captain." She dropped all interest in
+him and turned to resume her journey.</p>
+
+<p>"Just a moment," Joe said. "You
+can't go in there, Miss&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Her eyebrows went up again. "The
+name is Haer," she said. "Why can't
+I go in here, captain?"</p>
+
+<p>Now it came to him why he had
+thought he recognized her. She had
+basic features similar to those of that
+overbred poppycock, Balt Haer.</p>
+
+<p>"Sorry," Joe said. "I suppose under
+the circumstances, you can. I was
+about to tell you that they're recruiting
+with lads running around half
+clothed. Medical inspections, that sort
+of thing."</p>
+
+<p>She made a noise through her nose
+and said over her shoulder, even as
+she sailed on. "Besides being a Haer,
+I'm an M.D., captain. At the ludicrous
+sight of a man shuffling about
+in his shorts, I seldom blush."</p>
+
+<p>She was gone.</p>
+
+<p>Joe Mauser looked after her. "I'll
+bet you don't," he muttered.</p>
+
+<p>Had she waited a few minutes he
+could have explained his Upper accent
+and his unlikely education. When
+you'd copped one you had plenty of
+opportunity in hospital beds to read,
+to study, to contemplate&mdash;and to
+fester away in your own schemes of
+rebellion against fate. And Joe had
+copped many in his time.</p>
+
+<hr class="maj" />
+<h2>III</h2>
+
+<p class="cap">By the time Joe Mauser called it a
+day and retired to his quarters he
+was exhausted to the point where his
+basic dissatisfaction with the trade he
+followed was heavily upon him.</p>
+
+<p>He had met his immediate senior
+officers, largely dilettante Uppers
+with precious little field experience,
+and was unimpressed. And he'd met
+his own junior officers and was
+shocked. By the looks of things at
+this stage, Captain Mauser's squadron
+would be going into this fracas
+both undermanned with Rank Privates
+and with junior officers composed
+largely of temporarily promoted
+noncoms. If this was typical of
+Baron Haer's total force, then Balt
+Haer had been correct; unconditional
+surrender was to be considered, no
+matter how disastrous to Haer family
+fortunes.</p>
+
+<p>Joe had been able to take immediate
+delivery of one kilted uniform.
+Now, inside his quarters, he began
+stripping out of his jacket. Somewhat
+to his surprise, the small man he had
+selected earlier in the day to be his
+batman entered from an inner room,
+also resplendent in the Haer uniform
+and obviously happily so.</p>
+
+<p>He helped his superior out of the
+jacket with an ease that held no subservience
+but at the same time was
+correctly respectful. You'd have
+thought him a batman specially
+trained.</p>
+
+<p>Joe grunted, "Max, isn't it? I'd forgotten
+about you. Glad you found
+our billet all right."</p>
+
+<p>Max said, "Yes, sir. Would
+the captain like a drink? I picked up
+a bottle of applejack. Applejack's
+the drink around here, sir. Makes a
+topnotch highball with ginger ale and
+a twist of lemon."</p>
+
+<p>Joe Mauser looked at him. Evidently
+his tapping this man for orderly
+had been sheer fortune. Well,
+Joe Mauser could use some good
+luck on this job. He hoped it didn't
+end with selecting a batman.</p>
+
+<p>Joe said, "An applejack highball
+sounds wonderful, Max. Got ice?"</p>
+
+<p>"Of course, sir." Max left the small
+room.</p>
+
+<p>Joe Mauser and his officers were
+billeted in what had once been a
+motel on the old road between Kingston
+and Woodstock. There was a
+shower and a tiny kitchenette in each
+cottage. That was one advantage in a
+fracas held in an area where there
+were plenty of facilities. Such military
+reservations as that of the Little
+Big Horn in Montana and particularly
+some of those in the South
+West and Mexico, were another
+thing.</p>
+
+<p>Joe lowered himself into the
+room's easy-chair and bent down to
+untie his laces. He kicked his shoes
+off. He could use that drink. He began
+wondering all over again if his
+scheme for winning this Vacuum
+Tube Transport versus Continental
+Hovercraft fracas would come off.
+The more he saw of Baron Haer's
+inadequate forces, the more he wondered.
+He hadn't expected Vacuum
+Tube to be in <i>this</i> bad a shape.
+Baron Haer had been riding high for
+so long that one would have thought
+his reputation for victory would have
+lured many a veteran to his colors.
+Evidently they hadn't bitten. The
+word was out all right.</p>
+
+<p>Max Mainz returned with the
+drink.</p>
+
+<p>Joe said, "You had one yourself?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir."</p>
+
+<p>Joe said, "Well, Zen, go get yourself
+one and come on back and sit
+down. Let's get acquainted."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, yessir." Max disappeared
+back into the kitchenette to return
+almost immediately. The little man
+slid into a chair, drink awkwardly in
+hand.</p>
+
+<p>His superior sized him up, all over
+again. Not much more than a kid,
+really. Surprisingly aggressive for a
+Lower who must have been raised
+from childhood in a trank-bemused,
+Telly-entertained household. The
+fact that he'd broken away from that
+environment at all was to his credit,
+it was considerably easier to conform.
+But then it is always easier to
+conform, to run with the herd, as
+Joe well knew. His own break hadn't
+been an easy one. "Relax," he said
+now.</p>
+
+<p>Max said, "Well, this is my first
+day."</p>
+
+<p>"I know. And you've been seeing
+Telly shows all your life showing
+how an orderly conducts himself in
+the presence of his superior." Joe
+took another pull and yawned.
+"Well, forget about it. With any
+man who goes into a fracas with me,
+I like to be on close terms. When
+things pickle, I want him to be on
+my side, not nursing some peeve
+brought on by his officer trying to
+give him an inferiority complex."</p>
+
+<p>The little man was eying him in
+surprise.</p>
+
+<p>Joe finished his highball and came
+to his feet to get another one. He
+said, "On two occasions I've had an
+orderly save my life. I'm not taking
+any chances but that there might be
+a third opportunity."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, yessir. Does the captain
+want me to get him&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I'll get it," Joe said.</p>
+
+<p>When he'd returned to his chair,
+he said, "Why did you join up with
+Baron Haer, Max?"</p>
+
+<p>The other shrugged it off. "The
+usual. The excitement. The idea of
+all those fans watching me on Telly.
+The share of common stock I'll get.
+And, you never know, maybe a promotion
+in caste. I wouldn't mind
+making Upper-Lower."</p>
+
+<p>Joe said sourly, "One fracas and
+you'll be over that desire to have the
+buffs watching you on Telly while
+they sit around in their front rooms
+sucking on tranks. And you'll probably
+be over the desire for the excitement,
+too. Of course, the share of
+stock is another thing."</p>
+
+<p>"You aren't just countin' down,
+captain," Max said, an almost surly
+overtone in his voice. "You don't
+know what it's like being born with
+no more common stock shares than a
+Mid-Lower."</p>
+
+<p>Joe held his peace, sipping at his
+drink, taking this one more slowly.
+He let his eyebrows rise to encourage
+the other to go on.</p>
+
+<p>Max said doggedly, "Sure, they
+call it People's Capitalism and everybody
+gets issued enough shares to
+insure him a basic living all the way
+from the cradle to the grave, like
+they say. But let me tell you, you're
+a Middle and you don't realize how
+basic the basic living of a Lower can
+be."</p>
+
+<p>Joe yawned. If he hadn't been so
+tired, there would have been more
+amusement in the situation.</p>
+
+<p>Max was still dogged. "Unless you
+can add to those shares of stock, it's
+pretty drab, captain. You wouldn't
+know."</p>
+
+<p>Joe said, "Why don't you work? A
+Lower can always add to his stock
+by working."</p>
+
+<p>Max stirred in indignity. "Work?
+Listen, sir, that's just one more field
+that's been automated right out of
+existence. Category Food Preparation,
+Sub-division Cooking, Branch
+Chef. Cooking isn't left in the hands
+of slobs who might drop a cake of
+soap into the soup. It's done automatic.
+The only new changes made
+in cooking are by real top experts,
+almost scientists like. And most of
+them are Uppers, mind you."</p>
+
+<p>Joe Mauser sighed inwardly. So
+his find in batmen wasn't going to be
+as wonderful as all that, after all.
+The man might have been born into
+the food preparation category from a
+long line of chefs, but evidently he
+knew precious little about his field.
+Joe might have suspected. He himself
+had been born into Clothing Category,
+Sub-division Shoes, Branch
+Repair&mdash;Cobbler&mdash;a meaningless
+trade since shoes were no longer repaired
+but discarded upon showing
+signs of wear. In an economy of
+complete abundance, there is little
+reason for repair of basic commodities.
+It was high time the government
+investigated category assignment and
+reshuffled and reassigned half the
+nation's population. But then, of
+course, was the question of what to
+do with the technologically unemployed.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="cap">Max was saying, "The only way I
+could figure on a promotion to a
+higher caste, or the only way to earn
+stock shares, was by crossing categories.
+And you know what that
+means. Either Category Military, or
+Category Religion and I sure as Zen
+don't know nothing about religion."</p>
+
+<p>Joe said mildly, "Theoretically,
+you can cross categories into any
+field you want, Max."</p>
+
+<p>Max snorted. "Theoretically is
+right ... sir. You ever heard about
+anybody born a Lower, or even a
+Middle like yourself, cross categories
+to, say, some Upper category like
+banking?"</p>
+
+<p>Joe chuckled. He liked this peppery
+little fellow. If Max worked out
+as well as Joe thought he might,
+there was a possibility of taking him
+along to the next fracas.</p>
+
+<p>Max was saying, "I'm not saying
+anything against the old time way of
+doing things or talking against the
+government, but I'll tell you, captain,
+every year goes by it gets harder
+and harder for a man to raise his
+caste or to earn some additional
+stock shares."</p>
+
+<p>The applejack had worked enough
+on Joe for him to rise against one of
+his pet peeves. He said, "That term,
+the old time way, is strictly Telly
+talk, Max. We don't do things <i>the
+old time way</i>. No nation in history
+ever has&mdash;with the possible exception
+of Egypt. Socio-economics are
+in a continual flux and here in this
+country we no more do things in the
+way they did fifty years ago, than
+fifty years ago they did them the
+way the American Revolutionists
+outlined back in the Eighteenth
+Century."</p>
+
+<p>Max was staring at him. "I don't
+get that, sir."</p>
+
+<p>Joe said impatiently, "Max, the
+politico-economic system we have
+today is an outgrowth of what went
+earlier. The welfare state, the freezing
+of the status quo, the Frigid
+Fracas between the West-world and
+the Sov-world, industrial automation
+until useful employment is all but
+needless&mdash;all these things were to be
+found in embryo more than fifty
+years ago."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, maybe the captain's right,
+but you gotta admit, sir, that mostly
+we do things the old way. We still
+got the Constitution and the two-party
+system and&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Joe was wearying of the conversation
+now. You seldom ran into anyone,
+even in Middle caste, the traditionally
+professional class, interested
+enough in such subjects to be worth
+arguing with. He said, "The Constitution,
+Max, has got to the point of
+the Bible. Interpret it the way you
+wish, and you can find anything. If
+not, you can always make a new
+amendment. So far as the two-party
+system is concerned, what effect does
+it have when there are no differences
+between the two parties? That
+phase of pseudo-democracy was beginning
+as far back as the 1930s
+when they began passing State laws
+hindering the emerging of new political
+parties. By the time they were
+insured against a third party working
+its way through the maze of
+election laws, the two parties had
+become so similar that elections became
+almost as big a farce as over
+in the Sov-world."</p>
+
+<p>"A farce?" Max ejaculated indignantly,
+forgetting his servant status.
+"That means not so good, doesn't it?
+Far as I'm concerned, election day is
+tops. The one day a Lower is just as
+good as an Upper. The one day how
+many shares you got makes no difference.
+Everybody has everything."</p>
+
+<p>"Sure, sure, sure," Joe sighed.
+"The modern equivalent of the Roman
+Bacchanalia. Election day in the
+West-world when no one, for just
+that one day, is freer than anyone
+else."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, what's wrong with that?"
+The other was all but belligerent.
+"That's the trouble with you Middles
+and Uppers, you don't know
+how it is to be a Lower and&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Joe snapped suddenly, "I was
+born a Mid-Lower myself, Max.
+Don't give me that nonsense."</p>
+
+<p>Max gaped at him, utterly unbelieving.</p>
+
+<p>Joe's irritation fell away. He held
+out his glass. "Get us a couple of
+more drinks, Max, and I'll tell you a
+story."</p>
+
+<p>By the time the fresh drink came,
+Joe Mauser was sorry he'd made the
+offer. He thought back. He hadn't
+told anyone the Joe Mauser story in
+many a year. And, as he recalled, the
+last time had been when he was well
+into his cups, on an election day at
+that, and his listener had been a
+Low-Upper, a hereditary aristocrat,
+one of the one per cent of the upper
+strata of the nation. Zen! How the
+man had laughed. He'd roared his
+amusement till the tears ran.</p>
+
+<p>However, Joe said, "Max, I was
+born in the same caste you were&mdash;average
+father, mother, sisters and
+brothers. They subsisted on the basic
+income guaranteed from birth, sat
+and watched Telly for an unbelievable
+number of hours each day, took
+trank to keep themselves happy. And
+thought I was crazy because I didn't.
+Dad was the sort of man who'd take
+his belt off to a child of his who questioned
+such school taught slogans as
+<i>What was good enough for Daddy
+is good enough for me</i>.</p>
+
+<p>"They were all fracas fans, of
+course. As far back as I can remember
+the picture is there of them gathered
+around the Telly, screaming excitement."
+Joe Mauser sneered, uncharacteristically.</p>
+
+<p>"You don't sound much like you're
+in favor of your trade, captain," Max
+said.</p>
+
+<p>Joe came to his feet, putting down
+his still half-full glass. "I'll make this
+epic story short, Max. As you said,
+the two actually valid methods of
+rising above the level in which you
+were born are in the Military and
+Religious Categories. Like you, even
+I couldn't stomach the latter."</p>
+
+<p>Joe Mauser hesitated, then finished
+it off. "Max, there have been
+few societies that man has evolved
+that didn't allow in some manner for
+the competent or sly, the intelligent
+or the opportunist, the brave or the
+strong, to work his way to the top. I
+don't know which of these I personally
+fit into, but I rebel against remaining
+in the lower categories of a
+stratified society. Do I make myself
+clear?"</p>
+
+<p>"Well, no sir, not exactly."</p>
+
+<p>Joe said flatly, "I'm going to fight
+my way to the top, and nothing is
+going to stand in the way. Is that
+clearer?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yessir," Max said, taken aback.</p>
+
+<hr class="maj" />
+<h2>IV</h2>
+
+<p class="cap">After routine morning duties, Joe
+Mauser returned to his billet and
+mystified Max Mainz by not only
+changing into mufti himself but having
+Max do the same.</p>
+
+<p>In fact, the new batman protested
+faintly. He hadn't nearly, as yet, got
+over the glory of wearing his kilts
+and was looking forward to parading
+around town in them. He had a
+point, of course. The appointed time
+for the fracas was getting closer and
+buffs were beginning to stream into
+town to bask in the atmosphere of
+threatened death. Everybody knew
+what a military center, on the outskirts
+of a fracas reservation such as
+the Catskills, was like immediately
+preceding a clash between rival
+corporations. The high-strung gaiety,
+the drinking, the overtranking, the
+relaxation of mores. Even a Rank
+Private had it made. Admiring civilians
+to buy drinks and hang on
+your every word, and more important
+still, sensuous-eyed women,
+their faces slack in thinly suppressed
+passion. It was a recognized phenomenon,
+even Max Mainz knew&mdash;this
+desire on the part of women
+Telly fans to date a man, and then
+watch him later, killing or being
+killed.</p>
+
+<p>"Time enough to wear your fancy
+uniform," Joe Mauser growled at
+him. "In fact, tomorrow's a local
+election day. Parlay that up on top
+of all the fracas fans gravitating into
+town and you'll have a wingding the
+likes of nothing you've seen before."</p>
+
+<p>"Well yessir," Max begrudged.
+"Where're we going now, captain?"</p>
+
+<p>"To the airport. Come along."</p>
+
+<p>Joe Mauser led the way to his
+sports hovercar and as soon as the
+two were settled into the bucket
+seats, hit the lift lever with the butt
+of his left hand. Aircushion-borne, he
+trod down on the accelerator.</p>
+
+<p>Max Mainz was impressed. "You
+know," he said. "I never been in one
+of these swanky sports jobs before.
+The kinda car you can afford on the
+income of a Mid-Lower's stock
+aren't&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Knock it off," Joe said wearily.
+"Carping we'll always have with us
+evidently, but in spite of all the beefing
+in every strata from Low-Lower
+to Upper-Middle, I've yet to see any
+signs of organized protest against
+our present politico-economic system."</p>
+
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 164px; margin-bottom: 0;">
+<img src="images/003-1.png" width="164" height="195" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+<div class="figleft" style="width: 541px; margin-top: 0;">
+<img src="images/003-2.png" width="541" height="305" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p>"Hey," Max said. "Don't get me
+wrong. What was good enough for
+Dad is good enough for me. You
+won't catch me talking against the
+government."</p>
+
+<p>"Hm-m-m," Joe murmured. "And
+all the other cliches taught to us to
+preserve the status quo, our People's
+Capitalism." They were reaching the
+outskirts of town, crossing the Esopus.
+The airport lay only a mile or so
+beyond.</p>
+
+<p>It was obviously too deep for Max,
+and since he didn't understand, he
+assumed his superior didn't know
+what he was talking about. He said,
+tolerantly, "Well, what's wrong with
+People's Capitalism? Everybody
+owns the corporations. Damnsight
+better than the Sovs have."</p>
+
+<p>Joe said sourly. "We've got one
+optical illusion, they've got another,
+Max. Over there they claim the
+proletariat owns the means of production.
+Great. But the Party members
+are the ones who control it, and,
+as a result they manage to do all
+right for themselves. The Party hierarchy
+over there are like our Uppers
+over here."</p>
+
+<p>"Yeah." Max was being particularly
+dense. "I've seen a lot about it
+on Telly. You know, when there isn't
+a good fracas on, you tune to one of
+them educational shows, like&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Joe winced at the term <i>educational</i>,
+but held his peace.</p>
+
+<p>"It's pretty rugged over there. But
+in the West-world, the people own a
+corporation's stock and they run it
+and get the benefit."</p>
+
+<p>"At least it makes a beautiful story,"
+Joe said dryly. "Look, Max.
+Suppose you have a corporation that
+has two hundred thousand shares
+out and they're distributed among
+one hundred thousand and one persons.
+One hundred thousand of these
+own one share apiece, but the remaining
+stockholder owns the other
+hundred thousand."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know what you're getting
+at," Max said.</p>
+
+<p>Joe Mauser was tired of the discussion.
+"Briefly," he said, "we have the
+illusion that this is a People's Capitalism,
+with all stock in the hands of
+the People. Actually, as ever before,
+the stock is in the hands of the Uppers,
+all except a mere dribble. They
+own the country and they run it for
+their own benefit."</p>
+
+<p>Max shot a less than military
+glance at him. "Hey, you're not one
+of these Sovs yourself, are you?"</p>
+
+<p>They were coming into the parking
+area near the Administration Building
+of the airport. "No," Joe said so
+softly that Max could hardly hear
+his words. "Only a Mid-Middle on
+the make."</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="cap">Followed by Max, he strode quickly
+to the Administration Building,
+presented his credit identification at
+the desk and requested a light aircraft
+for a period of three hours. The
+clerk, hardly looking up, began going
+through motions, speaking into
+telescreens.</p>
+
+<p>The clerk said finally, "You might
+have a small wait, sir. Quite a few of
+the officers involved in this fracas
+have been renting out taxi-planes almost
+as fast as they're available."</p>
+
+<p>That didn't surprise Joe Mauser.
+Any competent officer made a point
+of an aerial survey of the battle reservation
+before going into a fracas.
+Aircraft, of course, couldn't be used
+<i>during</i> the fray, since they postdated
+the turn of the century, and
+hence were relegated to the cemetery
+of military devices along with such
+items as nuclear weapons, tanks, and
+even gasoline-propelled vehicles of
+size to be useful.</p>
+
+<p>Use an aircraft in a fracas, or even
+<i>build</i> an aircraft for military usage
+and you'd have a howl go up from
+the military attaches from the Sov-world
+that would be heard all the
+way to Budapest. Not a fracas went
+by but there were scores, if not hundreds,
+of military observers, keen-eyed
+to check whether or not any
+really modern tools of war were being
+illegally utilized. Joe Mauser
+sometimes wondered if the West-world
+observers, over in the Sov-world,
+were as hair fine in their living
+up to the rules of the Universal Disarmament
+Pact. Probably. But, for
+that matter, they didn't have the
+same system of fighting fracases over
+there, as in the West.</p>
+
+<p>Joe took a chair while he waited
+and thumbed through a fan magazine.
+From time to time he found his
+own face in such publications. He
+was a third-rate celebrity, really.
+Luck hadn't been with him so far as
+the buffs were concerned. They
+wanted spectacular victories, murderous
+situations in which they could
+lose themselves in vicarious sadistic
+thrills. Joe had reached most of his
+peaks while in retreat, or commanding
+a holding action. His officers appreciated
+him and so did the ultra-knowledgeable
+fracas buffs&mdash;but he
+was all but an unknown to the average
+dim wit who spent most of his
+life glued to the Telly set, watching
+men butcher each other.</p>
+
+<p>On the various occasions when
+matters had pickled and Joe had to
+fight his way out against difficult
+odds, using spectacular tactics in
+desperation, he was almost always
+off camera. Purely luck. On top of
+skill, determination, experience and
+courage, you had to have luck in the
+Military Category to get anywhere.</p>
+
+<p>This time Joe was going to manufacture
+his own.</p>
+
+<p>A voice said, "Ah, Captain Mauser."</p>
+
+<p>Joe looked up, then came to his
+feet quickly. In automatic reflex, he
+began to come to the salute but then
+caught himself. He said stiffly, "My
+compliments, Marshal Cogswell."</p>
+
+<p>The other was a smallish man, but
+strikingly strong of face and strongly
+built. His voice was clipped, clear
+and had the air of command as
+though born with it. He, like Joe,
+wore mufti and now extended his
+hand to be shaken.</p>
+
+<p>"I hear you've signed up with
+Baron Haer, captain. I was rather
+expecting you to come in with me.
+Had a place for a good aide de
+camp. Liked your work in that last
+fracas we went through together."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you, sir," Joe said. Stonewall
+Cogswell was as good a tactician
+as freelanced and he was more
+than that. He was a judge of men
+and a stickler for detail. And right
+now, if Joe Mauser knew Marshal
+Stonewall Cogswell as well as he
+thought, Cogswell was smelling a
+rat. There was no reason why old
+pro Joe Mauser should sign up with
+a sure loser like Vacuum Tube
+when he could have earned more
+shares taking a commission with
+Hovercraft.</p>
+
+<p>He was looking at Joe brightly,
+the question in his eyes. Three or
+four of his staff were behind a few
+paces, looking polite, but Cogswell
+didn't bring them into the conversation.
+Joe knew most by sight. Good
+men all. Old pros all. He felt another
+twinge of doubt.</p>
+
+<p>Joe had to cover. He said, "I was
+offered a particularly good contract,
+sir. Too good to resist."</p>
+
+<p>The other nodded, as though inwardly
+coming to a satisfactory conclusion.
+"Baron Haer's connections,
+eh? He's probably offered to back
+you for a bounce in caste. Is that it,
+Joe?"</p>
+
+<p>Joe Mauser flushed. Stonewall
+Cogswell knew what he was talking
+about. He'd been born into Middle
+status himself and had become an
+Upper the hard way. His path wasn't
+as long as Joe's was going to be, but
+long enough and he knew how rocky
+the climb was. How very rocky.</p>
+
+<p>Joe said, stiffly, "I'm afraid I'm in
+no position to discuss my commander's
+military contracts, marshal.
+We're in mufti, but after all&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Cogswell's lean face registered one
+of his infrequent grimaces of humor.
+"I understand, Joe. Well, good
+luck and I hope things don't pickle
+for you in the coming fracas. Possibly
+we'll find ourselves aligned together
+again at some future time."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you, sir," Joe said, once
+more having to catch himself to prevent
+an automatic salute.</p>
+
+<p>Cogswell and his staff went off,
+leaving Joe looking after them. Even
+the marshal's staff members were top
+men, any of whom could have conducted
+a divisional magnitude fracas.
+Joe felt the coldness in his stomach
+again. Although it must have
+looked like a cinch, the enemy wasn't
+taking any chances whatsoever.
+Cogswell and his officers were undoubtedly
+here at the airport for the
+same reason as Joe. They wanted a
+thorough aerial reconnaissance of the
+battlefield-to-be, before the issue was
+joined.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>Max was standing at his elbow.
+"Who was that, sir? Looks like a real
+tough one."</p>
+
+<p>"He is a real tough one," Joe said
+sourly. "That's Stonewall Cogswell,
+the best field commander in North
+America."</p>
+
+<p>Max pursed his lips. "I never seen
+him out of uniform before. Lots of
+times on Telly, but never out of uniform.
+I thought he was taller than
+that."</p>
+
+<p>"He fights with his brains," Joe
+said, still looking after the craggy
+field marshal. "He doesn't have to be
+any taller."</p>
+
+<p>Max scowled. "Where'd he ever
+get that nickname, sir?"</p>
+
+<p>"Stonewall?" Joe was turning to
+resume his chair and magazine. "He's
+supposed to be a student of a top
+general back in the American Civil
+War. Uses some of the original Stonewall's
+tactics."</p>
+
+<p>Max was out of his depth. "American
+Civil War? Was that much of a
+fracas, captain? It musta been before
+my time."</p>
+
+<p>"It was quite a fracas," Joe said
+dryly. "Lot of good lads died. A
+hundred years after it was fought,
+the <i>reasons</i> it was fought seemed
+about as valid as those we fight fracases
+for today. Personally I&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He had to cut it short. They were
+calling him on the address system.
+His aircraft was ready. Joe made his
+way to the hangars, followed by
+Max Mainz. He was going to pilot the
+airplane himself and old Stonewall
+Cogswell would have been surprised
+at what Joe Mauser was looking for.</p>
+
+<hr class="maj" />
+<h2>V</h2>
+
+<p class="cap">By the time they had returned to
+quarters, there was a message waiting
+for Captain Mauser. He was to
+report to the officer commanding reconnaissance.</p>
+
+<p>Joe redressed in the Haer kilts and
+proceeded to headquarters.</p>
+
+<p>The officer commanding reconnaissance
+turned out to be none other
+than Balt Haer, natty as ever, and,
+as ever, arrogantly tapping his swagger
+stick against his leg.</p>
+
+<p>"Zen! Captain," he complained.
+"Where have you been? Off on a
+trank kick? We've got to get organized."</p>
+
+<p>Joe Mauser snapped him a salute.
+"No, sir. I rented an aircraft to scout
+out the terrain over which we'll be
+fighting."</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed. And what were your impressions,
+captain?" There was an
+overtone which suggested that it
+made little difference what impressions
+a captain of cavalry might have
+gained.</p>
+
+<p>Joe shrugged. "Largely mountains,
+hills, woods. Good reconnaissance
+is going to make the difference
+in this one. And in the fracas itself
+cavalry is going to be more important
+than either artillery or infantry.
+A Nathan Forrest fracas, sir. A matter
+of getting there fustest with the mostest."</p>
+
+<p>Balt Haer said amusedly. "Thanks
+for your opinion, captain. Fortunately,
+our staff has already come largely
+to the same conclusions. Undoubtedly,
+they'll be glad to hear your
+wide experience bears them out."</p>
+
+<p>Joe said evenly, "It's a rather obvious
+conclusion, of course." He took
+this as it came, having been through
+it before. The dilettante amateur's
+dislike of the old pro. The amateur in
+command who knew full well he was
+less capable than many of those below
+him in rank.</p>
+
+<p>"Of course, captain," Balt Haer
+flicked his swagger stick against his
+leg. "But to the point. Your squadron
+is to be deployed as scouts under my
+overall command. You've had cavalry
+experience, I assume."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir. In various fracases over
+the past fifteen years."</p>
+
+<p>"Very well. Now then, to get to
+the reason I have summoned you.
+Yesterday in my father's office you
+intimated that you had some grandiose
+scheme which would bring victory
+to the Haer colors. But then, on
+some thin excuse, refused to divulge
+just what the scheme might be."</p>
+
+<p>Joe Mauser looked at him unblinkingly.</p>
+
+<p>Balt Haer said: "Now I'd like to
+have your opinion on just how Vacuum
+Tube Transport can extract itself
+from what would seem a poor
+position at best."</p>
+
+<p>In all there were four others in the
+office, two women clerks fluttering
+away at typers, and two of Balt
+Haer's junior officers. They seemed
+only mildly interested in the conversation
+between Balt and Joe.</p>
+
+<p>Joe wet his lips carefully. The
+Haer scion was his commanding officer.
+He said, "Sir, what I had in
+mind is a new gimmick. At this stage,
+if I told anybody and it leaked, it'd
+never be effective, not even this first
+time."</p>
+
+<p>Haer observed him coldly. "And
+you think me incapable of keeping
+your secret, ah, <i>gimmick</i>, I believe is
+the idiomatic term you used."</p>
+
+<p>Joe Mauser's eyes shifted around
+the room, taking in the other four,
+who were now looking at him.</p>
+
+<p>Bait Haer rapped, "These members
+of my staff are all trusted Haer
+employees, Captain Mauser. They
+are not fly-by-night freelancers hired
+for a week or two."</p>
+
+<p>Joe said, "Yes, sir. But it's been my
+experience that one person can hold
+a secret. It's twice as hard for two,
+and from there on it's a decreasing
+probability in a geometric ratio."</p>
+
+<p>The younger Haer's stick rapped
+the side of his leg, impatiently. "Suppose
+I inform you that this is a command,
+captain? I have little confidence
+in a supposed gimmick that
+will rescue our forces from disaster
+and I rather dislike the idea of a captain
+of one of my squadrons dashing
+about with such a bee in his bonnet
+when he should be obeying my commands."</p>
+
+<p>Joe kept his voice respectful.
+"Then, sir, I'd request that we take
+the matter to the Commander in
+Chief, your father."</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed!"</p>
+
+<p>Joe said, "Sir, I've been working
+on this a long time. I can't afford to
+risk throwing the idea away."</p>
+
+<p>Bait Haer glared at him. "Very
+well, captain. I'll call your bluff,
+come along." He turned on his heel
+and headed from the room.</p>
+
+<p>Joe Mauser shrugged in resignation
+and followed him.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="cap">The old Baron wasn't much happier
+about Joe Mauser's secrets than
+was his son. It had only been the day
+before that he had taken Joe on, but
+already he had seemed to have aged
+in appearance. Evidently, each hour
+that went by made it increasingly
+clear just how perilous a position he
+had assumed. Vacuum Tube Transport
+had elbowed, buffaloed, bluffed
+and edged itself up to the outskirts
+of the really big time. The Baron's
+ability, his aggressiveness, his flair,
+his political pull, had all helped, but
+now the chips were down. He was
+up against one of the biggies, and
+this particular biggy was tired of ambitious
+little Vacuum Tube Transport.</p>
+
+<p>He listened to his son's words, listened
+to Joe's defense.</p>
+
+<p>He said, looking at Joe, "If I understand
+this, you have some scheme
+which you think will bring victory in
+spite of what seems a disastrous situation."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir."</p>
+
+<p>The two Haers looked at him, one
+impatiently, the other in weariness.</p>
+
+<p>Joe said, "I'm gambling everything
+on this, sir. I'm no Rank Private in
+his first fracas. I deserve to be given
+some leeway."</p>
+
+<p>Balt Haer snorted. "Gambling everything!
+What in Zen would <i>you</i>
+have to gamble, captain? The whole
+Haer family fortunes are tied up.
+Hovercraft is out for blood. They
+won't be satisfied with a token victory
+and a negotiated compromise. They'll
+devastate us. Thousands of mercenaries
+killed, with all that means in
+indemnities; millions upon million in
+expensive military equipment, most
+of which we've had to hire and will
+have to recompensate for. Can you
+imagine the value of our stock after
+Stonewall Cogswell has finished
+with us? Why, every two by four
+trucking outfit in North America will
+be challenging us, and we won't have
+the forces to meet a minor skirmish."</p>
+
+<p>Joe reached into an inner pocket
+and laid a sheaf of documents on the
+desk of Baron Malcolm Haer. The
+Baron scowled down at them.</p>
+
+<p>Joe said simply, "I've been accumulating
+stock since before I was
+eighteen and I've taken good care of
+my portfolio in spite of taxes and the
+various other pitfalls which make the
+accumulation of capital practically
+impossible. Yesterday, I sold all of
+my portfolio I was legally allowed to
+sell and converted to Vacuum Tube
+Transport." He added, dryly, "Getting
+it at an excellent rate, by the
+way."</p>
+
+<p>Balt Haer mulled through the papers,
+unbelievingly. "Zen!" he ejaculated.
+"The fool really did it. He's
+sunk a small fortune into our stock."</p>
+
+<p>Baron Haer growled at his son,
+"You seem considerably more convinced
+of our defeat than the captain,
+here. Perhaps I should reverse
+your positions of command."</p>
+
+<p>His son grunted, but said nothing.</p>
+
+<p>Old Malcolm Haer's eyes came
+back to Joe. "Admittedly, I thought
+you on the romantic side yesterday,
+with your hints of some scheme
+which would lead us out of the wilderness,
+so to speak. Now I wonder
+if you might not really have something.
+Very well, I respect your
+claimed need for secrecy. Espionage
+is not exactly an antiquated military
+field."</p>
+
+<p>"Thank you, sir."</p>
+
+<p>But the Baron was still staring at
+him. "However, there's more to it
+than that. Why not take this great
+scheme to Marshal Cogswell? And
+yesterday you mentioned that the
+Telly sets of the nation would be
+tuned in on this fracas, and obviously
+you are correct. The question becomes,
+what of it?"</p>
+
+<p>The fat was in the fire now. Joe
+Mauser avoided the haughty stare of
+young Balt Haer and addressed himself
+to the older man. "You have political
+pull, sir. Oh, I know you don't
+make and break presidents. You
+couldn't even pull enough wires to
+keep Hovercraft from making this a
+divisional magnitude fracas&mdash;but you
+have pull enough for my needs."</p>
+
+<p>Baron Haer leaned back in his
+chair, his barrel-like body causing
+that article of furniture to creak. He
+crossed his hands over his stomach.
+"And what are your needs, Captain
+Mauser?"</p>
+
+<p>Joe said evenly, "If I can bring this
+off, I'll be a fracas buff celebrity. I
+don't have any illusions about the
+fickleness of the Telly fans, but for a
+day or two I'll be on top. If at the
+same time I had your all out support,
+pulling what strings you could
+reach&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Why then, you'd be promoted to
+Upper, wouldn't you, captain?" Balt
+Haer finished for him, amusement in
+his voice.</p>
+
+<p>"That's what I'm gambling on,"
+Joe said evenly.</p>
+
+<p>The younger Haer grinned at his
+father superciliously. "So our captain
+says he will defeat Stonewall Cogswell
+in return for you sponsoring his
+becoming a member of the nation's
+elite."</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="cap">"Good Heavens, is the supposed
+cream of the nation now selected on
+no higher a level than this?" There
+was sarcasm in the words.</p>
+
+<p>The three men turned. It was the
+girl Joe had bumped into the day before.
+The Haers didn't seem surprised
+at her entrance.</p>
+
+<p>"Nadine," the older man growled.
+"Captain Joseph Mauser who has
+been given a commission in our
+forces."</p>
+
+<p>Joe went through the routine of a
+Middle of officer's rank being introduced
+to a lady of Upper caste. She
+smiled at him, somewhat mockingly,
+and failed to make standard response.</p>
+
+<p>Nadine Haer said, "I repeat, what
+is this service the captain can render
+the house of Haer so important that
+pressure should be brought to raise
+him to Upper caste? It would seem
+unlikely that he is a noted scientist,
+an outstanding artist, a great teacher&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Joe said, uncomfortably, "They
+say the military is a science, too."</p>
+
+<p>Her expression was almost as
+haughty as that of her brother. "Do
+they? I have never thought so."</p>
+
+<p>"Really, Nadine," her father grumbled.
+"This is hardly your affair."</p>
+
+<p>"No? In a few days I shall be repairing
+the damage you have allowed,
+indeed sponsored, to be committed
+upon the bodies of possibly thousands
+of now healthy human beings."</p>
+
+<p>Balt said nastily, "Nobody asked
+you to join the medical staff, Nadine.
+You could have stayed in your laboratory,
+figuring out new methods of
+preventing the human race from replenishing
+itself."</p>
+
+<p>The girl was obviously not the type
+to redden, but her anger was manifest.
+She spun on her brother. "If
+the race continues its present maniac
+course, possibly more effective methods
+of birth control <i>are</i> the most important
+development we could make.
+Even to the ultimate discovery of preventing
+all future conception."</p>
+
+<p>Joe caught himself in mid-chuckle.</p>
+
+<p>But not in time. She spun on him
+in his turn. "Look at yourself in that
+silly skirt. A professional soldier! A
+killer! In my opinion the most useless
+occupation ever devised by man.
+Parasite on the best and useful members
+of society. Destroyer by trade!"</p>
+
+<p>Joe began to open his mouth, but
+she overrode him. "Yes, yes. I know.
+I've read all the nonsense that has
+accumulated down through the ages
+about the need for, the glory of, the
+sacrifice of the professional soldier.
+How they defend their country. How
+they give all for the common good.
+Zen! What nonsense."</p>
+
+<p>Balt Haer was smirking sourly at
+her. "The theory today is, Nadine,
+old thing, that professionals such as
+the captain are gathering experience
+in case a serious fracas with the Sovs
+ever develops. Meanwhile his training
+is kept at a fine edge fighting in
+our inter-corporation, inter-union, or
+union-corporation fracases that develop
+in our private enterprise society."</p>
+
+<p>She laughed her scorn. "And what
+a theory! Limited to the weapons
+which prevailed before 1900. If there
+was ever real conflict between the
+Sov-world and our own, does anyone
+really believe either would stick
+to such arms? Why, aircraft, armored
+vehicles, yes, and nuclear weapons
+and rockets, would be in overnight
+use."</p>
+
+<p>Joe was fascinated by her furious
+attack. He said, "Then, what would
+you say was the purpose of the fracases,
+Miss&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Circuses," she snorted. "The old
+Roman games, all over again, and a
+hundred times worse. Blood and guts
+sadism. The quest of a frustrated
+person for satisfaction in another's
+pain. Our Lowers of today are as
+useless and frustrated as the Roman
+proletariat and potentially they're
+just as dangerous as the mob that
+once dominated Rome. Automation,
+the second industrial revolution, has
+eliminated for all practical purposes
+the need for their labor. So we give
+them bread and circuses. And every
+year that goes by the circuses must
+be increasingly sadistic, death on an
+increasing scale, or they aren't satisfied.
+Once it was enough to have fictional
+mayhem, cowboys and Indians,
+gangsters, or G.I.s versus the
+Nazis, Japs or Commies, but that's
+passed. Now we need <i>real</i> blood and
+guts."</p>
+
+<p>Baron Haer snapped finally, "All
+right, Nadine. We've heard this lecture
+before. I doubt if the captain is
+interested, particularly since you
+don't seem to be able to get beyond
+the protesting stage and have yet to
+come up with an answer."</p>
+
+<p>"I have an answer!"</p>
+
+<p>"Ah?" Balt Haer raised his eyebrows,
+mockingly.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes! Overthrow this silly status
+society. Resume the road to progress.
+Put our people to useful endeavor,
+instead of sitting in front of
+their Telly sets, taking trank pills to
+put them in a happy daze and
+watching sadistic fracases to keep
+them in thrills, and their minds from
+their condition."</p>
+
+<p>Joe had figured on keeping out of
+the controversy with this firebrand,
+but now, really interested, he said,
+"Progress to where?"</p>
+
+<p>She must have caught in his tone
+that he wasn't needling. She frowned
+at him. "I don't know man's goal, if
+there is one. I'm not even sure it's
+important. It's the road that counts.
+The endeavor. The dream. The effort
+expended to make a world a better
+place than it was at the time of
+your birth."</p>
+
+<div class="figleft">
+<img src="images/004.png" width="167" height="500" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p>Balt Haer said mockingly, "That's
+the trouble with you, Sis. Here we've
+reached Utopia and you don't admit
+it."</p>
+
+<p>"Utopia!"</p>
+
+<p>"Certainly. Take a poll. You'll find
+nineteen people out of twenty happy
+with things just the way they are.
+They have full tummies and security,
+lots of leisure and trank pills to make
+matters seem even rosier than they
+are&mdash;and they're rather rosy already."</p>
+
+<p>"Then what's the necessity of this
+endless succession of bloody fracases,
+covered to the most minute bloody
+detail on the Telly?"</p>
+
+<p>Baron Haer cut things short.
+"We've hashed and rehashed this
+before, Nadine and now we're too
+busy to debate further." He turned
+to Joe Mauser. "Very well, captain,
+you have my pledge. I wish I felt as
+optimistic as you seem to be about
+your prospects. That will be all for
+now, captain."</p>
+
+<p>Joe saluted and executed an about
+face.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="cap">In the outer offices, when he had
+closed the door behind him, he
+rolled his eyes upward in mute
+thanks to whatever powers might be.
+He had somehow gained the enmity
+of Balt, his immediate superior, but
+he'd also gained the support of Baron
+Haer himself, which counted considerably
+more.</p>
+
+<p>He considered for a moment, Nadine
+Haer's words. She was obviously
+a malcontent, but, on the other hand,
+her opinions of his chosen profession
+weren't too different than his own.
+However, given this victory, this upgrading
+in caste, and Joe Mauser
+would be in a position to retire.</p>
+
+<p>The door opened and shut behind
+him and he half turned.</p>
+
+<p>Nadine Haer, evidently still caught
+up in the hot words between herself
+and her relatives, glared at him. All
+of which stressed the beauty he had
+noticed the day before. She was an
+almost unbelievably pretty girl, particularly
+when flushed with anger.</p>
+
+<p>It occurred to him with a blowlike
+suddenness that, if his caste was
+raised to Upper, he would be in a position
+to woo such as Nadine Haer.</p>
+
+<p>He looked into her furious face
+and said, "I was intrigued, Miss Haer,
+with what you had to say, and I'd
+like to discuss some of your points. I
+wonder if I could have the pleasure of
+your company at some nearby refreshment&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"My, how formal an invitation,
+captain. I suppose you had in mind
+sitting and flipping back a few trank
+pills."</p>
+
+<p>Joe looked at her. "I don't believe
+I've had a trank in the past twenty
+years, Miss Haer. Even as a boy, I
+didn't particularly take to having my
+senses dulled with drug-induced
+pleasure."</p>
+
+<p>Some of her fury was abating,
+but she was still critical of the professional
+mercenary. Her eyes went
+up and down his uniform in scorn.
+"You seem to make pretenses of being
+cultivated, captain. Then why
+your chosen profession?"</p>
+
+<p>He'd had the answer to that for
+long years. He said now, simply, "I
+told you I was born a Lower. Given
+that, little counts until I fight my
+way out of it. Had I been born in a
+feudalist society, I would have attempted
+to batter myself into the
+nobility. Under classical capitalism,
+I would have done my utmost to accumulate
+a fortune, enough to reach
+an effective position in society. Now,
+under People's Capitalism ..."</p>
+
+<p>She snorted, "Industrial Feudalism
+would be the better term."</p>
+
+<p>"... I realize I can't even start
+to fulfill myself until I am a member
+of the Upper caste."</p>
+
+<p>Her eyes had narrowed, and the
+anger was largely gone. "But you
+chose the military field in which to
+better yourself?"</p>
+
+<p>"Government propaganda to the
+contrary, it is practically impossible
+to raise yourself in other fields. I didn't
+build this world, possibly I don't
+even approve of it, but since I'm in
+it I have no recourse but to follow
+its rules."</p>
+
+<p>Her eyebrows arched. "Why not
+try to change the rules?"</p>
+
+<p>Joe blinked at her.</p>
+
+<p>Nadine Haer said, "Let's look up
+that refreshment you were talking
+about. In fact, there's a small coffee
+bar around the corner where it'd be
+possible for one of Baron Haer's
+brood to have a cup with one of her
+father's officers of Middle caste."</p>
+
+<hr class="maj" />
+<h2>VI</h2>
+
+<p class="cap">The following morning, hands on
+the pillow beneath his head, Joe
+Mauser stared up at the ceiling of
+his room and rehashed his session
+with Nadine Haer. It hadn't taken
+him five minutes to come to the conclusion
+that he was in love with the
+girl, but it had taken him the rest of
+the evening to keep himself under
+rein and not let the fact get through
+to her.</p>
+
+<p>He wanted to talk about the way
+her mouth tucked in at the corners,
+but she was hot on the evolution of
+society. He would have liked to have
+kissed that impossibly perfectly
+shaped ear of hers, but she was all
+for exploring the reasons why man
+had reached his present impasse. Joe
+was for holding hands, and staring
+into each other's eyes, she was for
+delving into the differences between
+the West-world and the Sov-world
+and the possibility of resolving
+them.</p>
+
+<p>Of course, to keep her company
+at all it had been necessary to suppress
+his own desires and to go along.
+It obviously had never occurred to
+her that a Middle might have romantic
+ideas involving Nadine Haer.
+It had simply not occurred to her, no
+matter the radical teachings she advocated.</p>
+
+<p>Most of their world was predictable
+from what had gone before. In
+spite of popular fable to the contrary,
+the division between classes
+had become increasingly clear.
+Among other things, tax systems
+were such that it became all but impossible
+for a citizen born poor to
+accumulate a fortune. Through ability
+he might rise to the point of earning
+fabulous sums&mdash;and wind up in
+debt to the tax collector. A great inventor,
+a great artist, had little chance
+of breaking into the domain of what
+finally became the small percentage
+of the population now known as
+Uppers. Then, too, the rising cost of
+a really good education became such
+that few other than those born into
+the Middle or Upper castes could afford
+the best of schools. Castes tended
+to perpetuate themselves.</p>
+
+<p>Politically, the nation had fallen
+increasingly deeper into the two-party
+system, both parties of which
+were tightly controlled by the same
+group of Uppers. Elections had become
+a farce, a great national holiday
+in which stereotyped patriotic
+speeches, pretenses of unity between
+all castes, picnics, beer busts and
+trank binges predominated for one
+day.</p>
+
+<p>Economically, too, the augurs had
+been there. Production of the basics
+had become so profuse that poverty
+in the old sense of the word had become
+nonsensical. There was an
+abundance of the necessities of life
+for all. Social security, socialized
+medicine, unending unemployment
+insurance, old age pensions, pensions
+for veterans, for widows and children,
+for the unfit, pensions and doles
+for this, that and the other, had
+doubled, and doubled again, until
+everyone had security for life. The
+Uppers, true enough, had opulence
+far beyond that known by the Middles
+and lived like Gods compared
+to the Lowers. But all had security.
+They had agreed, thus far, Joe
+and Nadine. But then had come debate.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="cap">"Then why," Joe had asked her,
+"haven't we achieved what your
+brother called it? Why isn't this
+Utopia? Isn't it what man has been
+yearning for, down through the
+ages? Where did the wheel come
+off? What happened to the dream?"</p>
+
+<p>Nadine had frowned at him&mdash;beautifully,
+he thought. "It's not the
+first time man has found abundance
+in a society, though never to this
+degree. The Incas had it, for instance."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know much about them,"
+Joe admitted. "An early form of
+communism with a sort of military-priesthood
+at the top."</p>
+
+<p>She had nodded, her face serious,
+as always. "And for themselves, the
+Romans more or less had it&mdash;at the
+expense of the nations they conquered,
+of course."</p>
+
+<p>"And&mdash;" Joe prodded.</p>
+
+<p>"And in these examples the same
+thing developed. Society ossified.
+Joe," she said, using his first name
+for the first time, and in a manner
+that set off a new count down in his
+blood, "a ruling caste and a socio-economic
+system perpetuates itself,
+just so long as it ever can. No matter
+what damage it may do to society as
+a whole, it perpetuates itself even to
+the point of complete destruction of
+everything.</p>
+
+<p>"Remember Hitler? Adolf the
+Aryan and his Thousand Year
+Reich? When it became obvious he
+had failed, and the only thing that
+could result from continued resistance
+would be destruction of Germany's
+cities and millions of her
+people, did he and his clique resign
+or surrender? Certainly not. They attempted
+to bring down the whole
+German structure in a G&ouml;tterdammerung."</p>
+
+<p>Nadine Haer was deep into her
+theme, her eyes flashing her conviction.
+"A socio-economic system reacts
+like a living organism. It attempts
+to live on, indefinitely, agonizingly,
+no matter how antiquated it
+might have become. The Roman
+politico-economic system continued
+for centuries after it should have
+been replaced. Such reformers as the
+Gracchus brothers were assassinated
+or thrust aside so that the entrenched
+elements could perpetuate themselves,
+and when Rome finally fell,
+darkness descended for a thousand
+years on Western progress."</p>
+
+<p>Joe had never gone this far in his
+thoughts. He said now, somewhat
+uncomfortably, "Well, what would
+replace what we have now? If you
+took power from you Uppers, who
+could direct the country? The Lowers?
+That's not even funny. Take
+away their fracases and their trank
+pills and they'd go berserk. They
+don't <i>want</i> anything else."</p>
+
+<p>Her mouth worked. "Admittedly,
+we've already allowed things to deteriorate
+much too far. We should
+have done something long ago. I'm
+not sure I know the answer. All I
+know is that in order to maintain the
+status quo, we're not utilizing the
+efforts of more than a fraction of
+our people. Nine out of ten of us
+spend our lives sitting before the
+Telly, sucking tranks. Meanwhile,
+the motivation for continued progress
+seems to have withered away.
+Our Upper political circles are afraid
+some seemingly minor change might
+avalanche, so more and more we
+lean upon the old way of doing
+things."</p>
+
+<p>Joe had put up mild argument.
+"I've heard the case made that the
+Lowers are fools and the reason our
+present socio-economic system makes
+it so difficult to rise from Lower to
+Upper is that you cannot make a
+fool understand he is one. You can
+only make him angry. If some, who
+are not fools, are allowed to advance
+from Lower to Upper, the vast mass
+who are fools will be angry because
+they are not allowed to. That's why
+the Military Category is made a
+channel of advance. To take that
+road, a man gives up his security and
+he'll die if he's a fool."</p>
+
+<p>Nadine had been scornful. "That
+reminds me of the old contention by
+racial segregationalists that the Negroes
+<i>smelled</i> bad. First they put
+them in a position where they had
+insufficient bathing facilities, their
+diet inadequate, and their teeth uncared
+for, and then protested that
+they couldn't be associated with because
+of their odor. Today, we are
+born within our castes. If an Upper
+is inadequate, he nevertheless remains
+an Upper. An accident of birth
+makes him an aristocrat; environment,
+family, training, education,
+friends, traditions and laws maintain
+him in that position. But a Lower
+who potentially has the greatest of
+value to society, is born handicapped
+and he's hard put not to wind up before
+a Telly, in a mental daze from
+trank. Sure he's a fool, he's never
+been <i>allowed</i> to develop himself."</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="cap">Yes, Joe reflected now, it had
+been quite an evening. In a life of
+more than thirty years devoted to
+rebellion, he had never met anyone
+so outspoken as Nadine Haer, nor
+one who had thought it through as
+far as she had.</p>
+
+<p>He grunted. His own revolt was
+against the level at which he had
+found himself in society, not the
+structure of society itself. His whole
+<i>raison d'&ecirc;tre</i> was to lift himself to
+Upper status. It came as a shock to
+him to find a person he admired who
+had been born into Upper caste, desirous
+of tearing the whole system
+down.</p>
+
+<p>His thoughts were interrupted by
+the door opening and the face of Max
+Mainz grinning in at him. Joe was
+mildly surprised at his orderly not
+knocking before opening the door.
+Max evidently had a lot to learn.</p>
+
+<p>The little man blurted, "Come on,
+Joe. Let's go out on the town!"</p>
+
+<p>"<i>Joe?</i>" Joe Mauser raised himself
+to one elbow and stared at the other.
+"Leaving aside the merits of your
+suggestion for the moment, do you
+think you should address an officer
+by his first name?"</p>
+
+<p>Max Mainz came fully into the
+bedroom, his grin still wider. "You
+forgot! It's election day!"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh." Joe Mauser relaxed into his
+pillow. "So it is. No duty for today,
+eh?"</p>
+
+<p>"No duty for anybody," Max
+crowed. "What'd you say we go into
+town and have a few drinks in one
+of the Upper bars?"</p>
+
+<p>Joe grunted, but began to arise.
+"What'll that accomplish? On election
+day, most of the Uppers get
+done up in their oldest clothes and
+go slumming down in the Lower
+quarters."</p>
+
+<p>Max wasn't to be put off so easily.
+"Well, wherever we go, let's get going.
+Zen! I'll bet this town is full of
+fracas buffs from as far as Philly.
+And on election day, to boot. Wouldn't
+it be something if I found me a
+real fracas fan, some Upper-Upper
+dame?"</p>
+
+<p>Joe laughed at him, even as he
+headed for the bathroom. As a matter
+of fact, he rather liked the idea
+of going into town for the show.
+"Max," he said over his shoulder,
+"you're in for a big disappointment.
+They're all the same. Upper, Lower,
+or Middle."</p>
+
+<p>"Yeah?" Max grinned back at him.
+"Well, I'd like the pleasure of finding
+out if that's true by personal experience."</p>
+
+<hr class="maj" />
+<h2>VII</h2>
+
+<p class="cap">In a far away past, Kingston had
+once been the capital of the United
+States. For a short time, when Washington's
+men were in flight after the
+debacle of their defeat in New York
+City, the government of the United
+Colonies had held session in this
+Hudson River town. It had been its
+one moment of historic glory, and
+afterward Kingston had slipped back
+into being a minor city on the edge
+of the Catskills, approximately halfway
+between New York and Albany.</p>
+
+<p>Of most recent years, it had become
+one of the two recruiting centers
+which bordered the Catskill
+Military Reservation, which in turn
+was one of the score or so population
+cleared areas throughout the continent
+where rival corporations or
+unions could meet and settle their
+differences in combat&mdash;given permission
+of the Military Category Department
+of the government. And
+permission was becoming ever easier
+to acquire.</p>
+
+<p>It had slowly evolved, the resorting
+to trial by combat to settle disputes
+between competing corporations,
+disputes between corporations
+and unions, disputes between unions
+over jurisdiction. Slowly, but predictably.
+Since the earliest days of
+the first industrial revolution, conflict
+between these elements had often
+broken into violence, sometimes
+on a scale comparable to minor warfare.
+An early example was the union
+organizing in Colorado when armed
+elements of the Western Federation
+of Miners shot it out with similarly
+armed "detectives" hired by the mine
+owners, and later with the troops of
+an unsympathetic State government.</p>
+
+<p>By the middle of the Twentieth-Century,
+unions had become one of
+the biggest businesses in the country,
+and by this time a considerable
+amount of the industrial conflict had
+shifted to fights between them for
+jurisdiction over dues-paying members.
+Battles on the waterfront, assassination
+and counter-assassination
+by gun-toting goon squads dominated
+by gangsters, industrial sabotage,
+frays between pickets and scabs&mdash;all
+were common occurrences.</p>
+
+<p>But it was the coming of Telly
+which increasingly brought such conflicts
+literally before the public eye.
+Zealous reporters made ever greater
+effort to bring the actual mayhem before
+the eyes of their viewers, and
+never were their efforts more highly
+rewarded.</p>
+
+<p>A society based upon private endeavor
+is as jealous of a vacuum as
+is Mother Nature. Give a desire that
+can be filled profitably, and the
+means can somehow be found to realize
+it.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>At one point in the nation's history,
+the railroad lords had dominated
+the economy, later it became
+the petroleum princes of Texas and
+elsewhere, but toward the end of the
+Twentieth Century the communications
+industries slowly gained prominence.
+Nothing was more greatly in
+demand than feeding the insatiable
+maw of the Telly fan, nothing, ultimately,
+became more profitable.</p>
+
+<p>And increasingly, the Telly buff
+endorsed the more sadistic of the fictional
+and nonfictional programs presented
+him. Even in the earliest years
+of the industry, producers had found
+that murder and mayhem, war and
+frontier gunfights, took precedence
+over less gruesome subjects. Music
+was drowned out by gunfire, the
+dance replaced by the shuffle of cowboy
+and rustler advancing down a
+dusty street toward each other, their
+fingertips brushing the grips of their
+six-shooters, the comedian's banter
+fell away before the chatter of the
+gangster's tommy gun.</p>
+
+<p>And increasing realism was demanded.
+The Telly reporter on the
+scene of a police arrest, preferably a
+murder, a rumble between rival
+gangs of juvenile delinquents, a longshoreman's
+fray in which scores of
+workers were hospitalized. When attempts
+were made to suppress such
+broadcasts, the howl of freedom of
+speech and the press went up, financed
+by tycoons clever enough to
+realize the value of the subjects they
+covered so adequately.</p>
+
+<p>The vacuum was there, the desire,
+the <i>need</i>. Bread the populace had.
+Trank was available to all. But the
+need was for the circus, the vicious,
+sadistic circus, and bit by bit, over
+the years and decades, the way was
+found to circumvent the country's
+laws and traditions to supply the
+need.</p>
+
+<p>Aye, a way is always found. The
+final Universal Disarmament Pact
+which had totally banned all weapons
+invented since the year 1900 and
+provided for complete inspection,
+had not ended the fear of war. And
+thus there was excuse to give the
+would-be soldier, the potential defender
+of the country in some future
+inter-nation conflict, practical experience.</p>
+
+<p>Slowly tolerance grew to allow
+union and corporation to fight it out,
+hiring the services of mercenaries.
+Slowly rules grew up to govern such
+fracases. Slowly a department of government
+evolved. The Military Category
+became as acceptable as the
+next, and the mercenary a valued,
+even idolized, member of society.
+And the field became practically the
+only one in which a status quo orientated
+socio-economic system allowed
+for advancement in caste.</p>
+
+<p>Joe Mauser and Max Mainz
+strolled the streets of Kingston in an
+extreme of atmosphere seldom to be
+enjoyed. Not only was the advent of
+a divisional magnitude fracas only a
+short period away, but the freedom
+of an election day as well. The carnival,
+the Mardi Gras, the fete, the
+fiesta, of an election. Election Day,
+when each aristocrat became only a
+man, and each man an aristocrat,
+free of all society's artificially conceived,
+caste-perpetuating rituals and
+taboos.</p>
+
+<p>Carnival! The day was young, but
+already the streets were thick with
+revelers, with dancers, with drunks.
+A score of bands played, youngsters
+in particular ran about attired in
+costume, there were barbeques and
+flowing beer kegs. On the outskirts
+of town were roller coasters and ferris
+wheels, fun houses and drive-it-yourself
+miniature cars. Carnival!</p>
+
+<p>Max said happily, "You drink,
+Joe? Or maybe you like trank, better."
+Obviously, he loved to roll the
+other's first name over his tongue.</p>
+
+<p>Joe wondered in amusement how
+often the little man had found occasion
+to call a Mid-Middle by his first
+name. "No trank," he said. "Alcohol
+for me. Mankind's old faithful."</p>
+
+<p>"Well," Max debated, "get high on
+alcohol and bingo, a hangover in the
+morning. But trank? You wake up
+with a smile."</p>
+
+<p>"And a desire for more trank to
+keep the mood going," Joe said wryly.
+"Get smashed on alcohol and you
+suffer for it eventually."</p>
+
+<p>"Well, that's one way of looking
+at it," Max argued happily. "So let's
+start off with a couple of quick ones
+in this here Upper joint."</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="cap">Joe looked the place over. He didn't
+know Kingston overly well, but
+by the appearance of the building
+and by the entry, it was probably
+the swankiest hotel in town. He
+shrugged. So far as he was concerned,
+he appreciated the greater
+comfort and the better service of his
+Middle caste bars, restaurants and
+hotels over the ones he had patronized
+when a Lower. However, his
+wasn't an immediate desire to push
+into the preserves of the Uppers; not
+until he had won rightfully to their
+status.</p>
+
+<p>But on this occasion the little fellow
+wanted to drink at an Upper bar.
+Very well, it was election day. "Let's
+go," he said to Max.</p>
+
+<p>In the uniform of a Rank Captain
+of the Military Category, there was
+little to indicate caste level, and ordinarily
+given the correct air of nonchalance,
+Joe Mauser, in uniform,
+would have been able to go anywhere,
+without so much as a raised
+eyebrow&mdash;until he had presented his
+credit card, which indicated his caste.
+But Max was another thing. He was
+obviously a Lower, and probably a
+Low-Lower at that.</p>
+
+<p>But space was made for them at
+a bar packed with election day celebrants,
+politicians involved in the
+day's speeches and voting, higher
+ranking officers of the Haer forces,
+having a day off, and various Uppers
+of both sexes in town for the excitement
+of the fracas to come.</p>
+
+<p>"Beer," Joe said to the bartender.</p>
+
+<p>"Not me," Max crowed. "Champagne.
+Only the best for Max Mainz.
+Give me some of that champagne
+liquor I always been hearing about."</p>
+
+<p>Joe had the bill credited to his
+card, and they took their bottles and
+glasses to a newly abandoned table.
+The place was too packed to have
+awaited the services of a waiter,
+although poor Max probably would
+have loved such attention. Lower,
+and even Middle bars and restaurants
+were universally automated, and
+the waiter or waitress a thing of yesteryear.</p>
+
+<p>Max looked about the room in
+awe. "This is living," he announced.
+"I wonder what they'd say if I went
+to the desk and ordered a room."</p>
+
+<p>Joe Mauser wasn't as highly impressed
+as his batman. In fact, he'd
+often stayed in the larger cities, in
+hostelries as sumptuous as this,
+though only of Middle status. Kingston's
+best was on the mediocre side.
+He said, "They'd probably tell you
+they were filled up."</p>
+
+<p>Max was indignant. "Because I'm
+a Lower? It's <i>election</i> day."</p>
+
+<p>Joe said mildly, "Because they
+probably are filled up. But for that
+matter, they might brush you off.
+It's not as though an Upper went to
+a Middle or Lower hotel and asked
+for accommodations. But what do
+you want, justice?"</p>
+
+<p>Max dropped it. He looked down
+into his glass. "Hey," he complained,
+"what'd they give me? This
+stuff tastes like weak hard cider."</p>
+
+<p>Joe laughed. "What did you think
+it was going to taste like?"</p>
+
+<p>Max took another unhappy sip.
+"I thought it was supposed to be the
+best drink you could buy. You know,
+really strong. It's just bubbly wine."</p>
+
+<p>A voice said, dryly, "Your companion
+doesn't seem to be a connoisseur
+of the French vintages, captain."</p>
+
+<p>Joe turned. Balt Haer and two
+others occupied the table next to
+them.</p>
+
+<p>Joe chuckled amiably and said,
+"Truthfully, it was my own reaction,
+the first time I drank sparkling wine,
+sir."</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed," Haer said. "I can imagine."
+He fluttered a hand. "Lieutenant
+Colonel Paul Warren of Marshal
+Cogswell's staff, and Colonel Lajos
+Arp&agrave;d, of Budapest&mdash;Captain Joseph
+Mauser."</p>
+
+<p>Joe Mauser came to his feet and
+clicked his heels, bowing from the
+waist in approved military protocol.
+The other two didn't bother to come
+to their feet, but did condescend to
+shake hands.</p>
+
+<p>The Sov officer said, disinterestedly,
+"Ah yes, this is one of your fabulous
+customs, isn't it? On an election
+day, everyone is quite entitled to go
+anywhere. Anywhere at all. And,
+ah"&mdash;he made a sound somewhat
+like a giggle&mdash;"associate with anyone
+at all."</p>
+
+<p>Joe Mauser resumed his seat then
+looked at him. "That is correct. A
+custom going back to the early history
+of the country when all men
+were considered equal in such matters
+as law and civil rights. Gentlemen,
+may I present Rank Private
+Max Mainz, my orderly."</p>
+
+<p>Balt Haer, who had obviously already
+had a few, looked at him dourly.
+"You can carry these things to
+the point of the ludicrous, captain.
+For a man with your ambitions, I'm
+surprised."</p>
+
+<p>The infantry officer the younger
+Haer had introduced as Lieutenant
+Colonel Warren, of Stonewall Cogswell's
+staff, said idly, "Ambitions?
+Does the captain have ambitions?
+How in Zen can a Middle have ambitions,
+Balt?" He stared at Joe
+Mauser superciliously, but then
+scowled. "Haven't I seen you somewhere
+before?"</p>
+
+<p>Joe said evenly, "Yes, sir. Five
+years ago we were both with the
+marshal in a fracas on the Little Big
+Horn reservation. Your company
+was pinned down on a knoll by a
+battery of field artillery. The Marshal
+sent me to your relief. We sneaked
+in, up an arroyo, and were able to
+get most of you out."</p>
+
+<p>"I was wounded," the colonel said,
+the superciliousness gone and a
+strange element in his voice above
+the alcohol there earlier.</p>
+
+<p>Joe Mauser said nothing to that.
+Max Mainz was stirring unhappily
+now. These officers were talking
+above his head, even as they ignored
+him. He had a vague feeling that he
+was being defended by Captain
+Mauser, but he didn't know how, or
+why.</p>
+
+<p>Balt Haer had been occupied in
+shouting fresh drinks. Now he turned
+back to the table. "Well, colonel, it's
+all very secret, these ambitions of
+Captain Mauser. I understand he's
+been an aide de camp to Marshal
+Cogswell in the past, but the marshal
+will be distressed to learn that on this
+occasion Captain Mauser has a secret
+by which he expects to rout
+your forces. Indeed, yes, the captain
+is quite the strategist." Balt Haer
+laughed abruptly. "And what good
+will this do the captain? Why on my
+father's word, if he succeeds, all efforts
+will be made to make the captain
+a caste equal of ours. Not just
+on election day, mind you, but all
+three hundred sixty-five days of the
+year."</p>
+
+<p>Joe Mauser was on his feet, his
+face expressionless. He said, "Shall
+we go, Max? Gentlemen, it's been a
+pleasure. Colonel Arp&agrave;d, a privilege
+to meet you. Colonel Warren, a
+pleasure to renew acquaintance."
+Joe Mauser turned and, trailed by
+his orderly, left.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="cap">Lieutenant Colonel Warren, pale,
+was on his feet too.</p>
+
+<p>Balt Haer was chuckling. "Sit
+down, Paul. Sit down. Not important
+enough to be angry about. The
+man's a clod."</p>
+
+<p>Warren looked at him bleakly.
+"I wasn't angry, Balt. The last time
+I saw Captain Mauser I was slung
+over his shoulder. He carried, tugged
+and dragged me some two miles
+through enemy fire."</p>
+
+<p>Balt Haer carried it off with a
+shrug. "Well, that's his profession.
+Category Military. A mercenary for
+hire. I assume he received his pay."</p>
+
+<p>"He could have left me. Common
+sense dictated that he leave me."</p>
+
+<p>Balt Haer was annoyed. "Well,
+then we see what I've contended all
+along. The ambitious captain doesn't
+have common sense."</p>
+
+<p>Colonel Paul Warren shook his
+head. "You're wrong there. Common
+sense Joseph Mauser has. Considerable
+ability, he has. He's one of the
+best combat men in the field. But
+I'd hate to serve under him."</p>
+
+<p>The Hungarian was interested.
+"But why?"</p>
+
+<p>"Because he doesn't have luck,
+and in the dill you need luck." Warren
+grunted in sour memory. "Had
+the Telly cameras been focused on
+Joe Mauser, there at the Little Big
+Horn, he would have been a month
+long sensation to the Telly buffs,
+with all that means." He grunted
+again. "There wasn't a Telly team
+within a mile."</p>
+
+<p>"The captain probably didn't realize
+that," Balt Haer snorted.
+"Otherwise his heroics would have
+been modified."</p>
+
+<p>Warren flushed his displeasure and
+sat down. He said, "Possibly we
+should discuss the business before
+us. If your father is in agreement,
+the fracas can begin in three days."
+He turned to the representative of
+the Sov-world. "You have satisfied
+yourselves that neither force is violating
+the Disarmament Pact?"</p>
+
+<p>Lajos Arp&agrave;d nodded. "We
+will wish to have observers on the
+field, itself, of course. But preliminary
+observation has been satisfactory."
+He had been interested in the
+play between these two and the lower
+caste officer. He said now, "Pardon
+me. As you know, this is my first
+visit to the, uh <i>West</i>. I am fascinated.
+If I understand what just transpired,
+our Captain Mauser is a capable
+junior officer ambitious to rise in
+rank and status in your society." He
+looked at Balt Haer. "Why are you
+opposed to his so rising?"</p>
+
+<p>Young Haer was testy about the
+whole matter. "Of what purpose is
+an Upper caste if every Tom, Dick
+and Harry enters it at will?"</p>
+
+<div class="figright">
+<img src="images/005.png" width="495" height="500" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<p>Warren looked at the door
+through which Joe and Max had
+exited from the cocktail lounge. He
+opened his mouth to say something,
+closed it again, and held his peace.</p>
+
+<p>The Hungarian said, looking from
+one of them to the other, "In the
+Sov-world we seek out such ambitious
+persons and utilize their abilities."</p>
+
+<p>Lieutenant Colonel Warren
+laughed abruptly. "So do we here
+<i>theoretically</i>. We are <i>free</i>, whatever
+that means. However," he added
+sarcastically, "it does help to have
+good schooling, good connections,
+relatives in positions of prominence,
+abundant shares of good stocks, that
+sort of thing. And these one is born
+with, in this free world of ours,
+Colonel Arp&agrave;d."</p>
+
+<p>The Sov military observer clucked
+his tongue. "An indication of a declining
+society."</p>
+
+<p>Balt Haer turned on him. "And is it
+any different in your world?" he said
+sneeringly. "Is it merely coincidence
+that the best positions in the Sov-world
+are held by Party members,
+and that it is all but impossible for
+anyone not born of Party member
+parents to become one? Are not the
+best schools filled with the children of
+Party members? Are not only Party
+members allowed to keep servants?
+And isn't it so that&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Lieutenant Colonel Warren said,
+"Gentlemen, let us not start World
+War Three at this spot, at this late
+occasion."</p>
+
+<hr class="maj" />
+<h2>VIII</h2>
+
+<p class="cap">Baron Malcolm Haer's field headquarters
+were in the ruins of a farm
+house in a town once known as
+Bearsville. His forces, and those of
+Marshal Stonewall Cogswell, were on
+the march but as yet their main bodies
+had not come in contact. Save for
+skirmishes between cavalry units,
+there had been no action. The ruined
+farm house had been a victim of an
+earlier fracas in this reservation
+which had seen in its comparatively
+brief time more combat than Belgium,
+that cockpit of Europe.</p>
+
+<p>There was a sheen of oily moisture
+on the Baron's bulletlike head and
+his officers weren't particularly happy
+about it. Malcolm Haer characteristically
+went into a fracas with
+confidence, an aggressive confidence
+so strong that it often carried the
+day. In battles past, it had become a
+tradition that Haer's morale was
+worth a thousand men; the energy he
+expended was the despair of his doctors
+who had been warning him for a
+decade. But now, something was
+missing.</p>
+
+<p>A forefinger traced over the military
+chart before them. "So far as
+we know, Marshal Cogswell has established
+his command here in
+Saugerties. Anybody have any suggestions
+as to why?"</p>
+
+<p>A major grumbled, "It doesn't
+make much sense, sir. You know the
+marshal. It's probably a fake. If we
+have any superiority at all, it's our
+artillery."</p>
+
+<p>"And the old fox wouldn't want to
+join the issue on the plains, down
+near the river," a colonel added.
+"It's his game to keep up into the
+mountains with his cavalry and light
+infantry. He's got Jack Alshuler's
+cavalry. Most experienced veterans
+in the field."</p>
+
+<p>"I know who he's got," Haer
+growled in irritation. "Stop reminding
+me. Where in the devil is Balt?"</p>
+
+<p>"Coming up, sir," Balt Haer said.
+He had entered only moments ago,
+a sheaf of signals in his hand. "Why
+didn't they make that date 1910, instead
+of 1900? With radio, we could
+speed up communications&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>His father interrupted testily. "Better
+still, why not make it 1945? Then
+we could speed up to the point where
+we could polish ourselves off. What
+have you got?"</p>
+
+<p>Balt Haer said, his face in sulk,
+"Some of my lads based in West Hurley
+report concentrations of Cogswell's
+infantry and artillery near
+Ashokan reservoir."</p>
+
+<p>"Nonsense," somebody snapped.
+"We'd have him."</p>
+
+<p>The younger Haer slapped his
+swagger stick against his bare leg and
+kilt. "Possibly it's a feint," he admitted.</p>
+
+<p>"How much were they able to observe?"
+his father demanded.</p>
+
+<p>"Not much. They were driven off
+by a superior squadron. The Hovercraft
+forces are screening everything
+they do with heavy cavalry units. I
+told you we needed more&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I don't need your advice at this
+point," his father snapped. The older
+Haer went back to the map, scowling
+still. "I don't see what he expects to
+do, working out of Saugerties."</p>
+
+<p>A voice behind them said, "Sir, may
+I have your permission&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Half of the assembled officers
+turned to look at the newcomer.</p>
+
+<p>Balt Haer snapped, "Captain Mauser.
+Why aren't you with your lads?"</p>
+
+<p>"Turned them over to my second in
+command, sir," Joe Mauser said. He
+was standing to attention, looking at
+Baron Haer.</p>
+
+<p>The Baron glowered at him. "What
+is the meaning of this cavalier intrusion,
+captain? Certainly, you must
+have your orders. Are you under the
+illusion that you are part of my staff?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir," Joe Mauser clipped. "I
+came to report that I am ready to put
+into execution&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"The great plan!" Balt Haer ejaculated.
+He laughed brittlely. "The second
+day of the fracas, and nobody really
+knows where old Cogswell is, or
+what he plans to do. And here comes
+the captain with his secret plan."</p>
+
+<p>Joe looked at him. He said, evenly,
+"Yes, sir."</p>
+
+<p>The Baron's face had gone dark, as
+much in anger at his son, as with the
+upstart cavalry captain. He began to
+growl ominously, "Captain Mauser,
+rejoin your command and obey your
+orders."</p>
+
+<p>Joe Mauser's facial expression indicated
+that he had expected this. He
+kept his voice level however, even under
+the chuckling scorn of his immediate
+superior, Balt Haer.</p>
+
+<p>He said, "Sir, I will be able to tell
+you where Marshal Cogswell is, and
+every troop at his command."</p>
+
+<p>For a moment there was silence,
+all but a stunned silence. Then the
+major who had suggested the Saugerties
+field command headquarters were
+a fake, blurted a curt laugh.</p>
+
+<p>"This is no time for levity, captain,"
+Balt Haer clipped. "Get to your
+command."</p>
+
+<p>A colonel said, "Just a moment, sir.
+I've fought with Joe Mauser before.
+He's a good man."</p>
+
+<p>"Not that good," someone else
+huffed. "Does he claim to be clairvoyant?"</p>
+
+<p>Joe Mauser said flatly. "Have a
+semaphore man posted here this afternoon.
+I'll be back at that time." He
+spun on his heel and left them.</p>
+
+<p>Balt Haer rushed to the door after
+him, shouting, "Captain! That's an order!
+Return&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>But the other was obviously gone.
+Enraged, the younger Haer began to
+shrill commands to a noncom in the
+way of organizing a pursuit.</p>
+
+<p>His father called wearily, "That's
+enough, Balt. Mauser has evidently
+taken leave of his senses. We made
+the initial mistake of encouraging this
+idea he had, or thought he had."</p>
+
+<p>"<i>We?</i>" his son snapped in return.
+"I had nothing to do with it."</p>
+
+<p>"All right, all right. Let's tighten
+up, here. Now, what other information
+have your scouts come up with?"</p>
+
+<hr class="maj" />
+<h2>IX</h2>
+
+<p class="cap">At the Kingston airport, Joe Mauser
+rejoined Max Mainz, his face
+drawn now.</p>
+
+<p>"Everything go all right?" the little
+man said anxiously.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know," Joe said. "I still
+couldn't tell them the story. Old
+Cogswell is as quick as a coyote. We
+pull this little caper today, and he'll be
+ready to meet it tomorrow."</p>
+
+<p>He looked at the two-place sailplane
+which sat on the tarmac. "Everything
+all set?"</p>
+
+<p>"Far as I know," Max said. He
+looked at the motorless aircraft. "You
+sure you been checked out on these
+things, captain?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," Joe said. "I bought this particular
+soaring glider more than a
+year ago, and I've put almost a thousand
+hours in it. Now, where's the pilot
+of that light plane?"</p>
+
+<p>A single-engined sports plane was
+attached to the glider by a fifty-foot
+nylon rope. Even as Joe spoke, a
+youngster poked his head from the
+plane's window and grinned back at
+them. "Ready?" he yelled.</p>
+
+<p>"Come on, Max," Joe said. "Let's
+pull the canopy off this thing. We
+don't want it in the way while you're
+semaphoring."</p>
+
+<p>A figure was approaching them
+from the Administration Building. A
+uniformed man, and somehow familiar.</p>
+
+<p>"A moment, Captain Mauser!"</p>
+
+<p>Joe placed him now. The Sov-world
+representative he'd met at Balt
+Haer's table in the Upper bar a couple
+of days ago. What was his name?
+Colonel Arp&agrave;d. Lajos Arp&agrave;d.</p>
+
+<p>The Hungarian approached and
+looked at the sailplane in interest.
+"As a representative of my government,
+a military attache checking
+upon possible violations of the Universal
+Disarmament Pact, may I request
+what you are about to do, captain?"</p>
+
+<p>Joe Mauser looked at him emptily.
+"How did you know I was here and
+what I was doing?"</p>
+
+<p>The Sov colonel smiled gently. "It
+was by suggestion of Marshal Cogswell.
+He is a great man for detail. It
+disturbed him that an ... what did
+he call it? ... an <i>old pro</i> like yourself
+should join with Vacuum Tube
+Transport, rather than Continental
+Hovercraft. He didn't think it made
+sense and suggested that possibly you
+had in mind some scheme that would
+utilize weapons of a post 1900 period
+in your efforts to bring success to
+Baron Haer's forces. So I have investigated,
+Captain Mauser."</p>
+
+<p>"And the marshal knows about this
+sail plane?" Joe Mauser's face was
+blank.</p>
+
+<p>"I didn't say that. So far as I know,
+he doesn't."</p>
+
+<p>"Then, Colonel Arp&agrave;d, with your
+permission, I'll be taking off."</p>
+
+<p>The Hungarian said, "With what
+end in mind, captain?"</p>
+
+<p>"Using this glider as a reconnaissance
+aircraft."</p>
+
+<p>"Captain, I warn you! Aircraft were
+not in use in warfare until&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>But Joe Mauser cut him off, equally
+briskly. "Aircraft were first used in
+combat by Pancho Villa's forces a few
+years previous to World War I. They
+were also used in the Balkan Wars of
+about the same period. But those
+were powered craft. This is a glider,
+invented and in use before the year
+1900 and hence open to utilization."</p>
+
+<p>The Hungarian clipped, "But the
+Wright Brothers didn't fly even gliders
+until&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Joe looked him full in the face.
+"But you of the Sov-world do not admit
+that the Wrights were the first to
+fly, do you?"</p>
+
+<p>The Hungarian closed his mouth,
+abruptly.</p>
+
+<p>Joe said evenly, "But even if Ivan
+Ivanovitch, or whatever you claim his
+name was, didn't invent flight of
+heavier than air craft, the glider was
+flown variously before 1900, including
+Otto Lilienthal in the 1890s, and
+was designed as far back as Leonardo
+da Vinci."</p>
+
+<p>The Sov-world colonel stared at
+him for a long moment, then gave an
+inane giggle. He stepped back and
+flicked Joe Mauser a salute. "Very
+well, captain. As a matter of routine,
+I shall report this use of an aircraft
+for reconnaissance purposes, and undoubtedly
+a commission will meet to
+investigate the propriety of the departure.
+Meanwhile, good luck!"</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p class="cap">Joe returned the salute and swung a
+leg over the cockpit's side. Max was
+already in the front seat, his semaphore
+flags, maps and binoculars on
+his lap. He had been staring in dismay
+at the Sov officer, now was relieved
+that Joe had evidently pulled it
+off.</p>
+
+<p>Joe waved to the plane ahead. Two
+mechanics had come up to steady the
+wings for the initial ten or fifteen feet
+of the motorless craft's passage over
+the ground behind the towing craft.</p>
+
+<p>Joe said to Max, "did you explain
+to the pilot that under no circumstances
+was he to pass over the line of
+the military reservation, that we'd cut
+before we reached that point?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir," Max said nervously. He'd
+flown before, on the commercial lines,
+but he'd never been in a glider.</p>
+
+<p>They began lurching across the
+field, slowly, then gathering speed.
+And as the sailplane took speed, it
+took grace. After it had been pulled
+a hundred feet or so, Joe eased back
+the stick and it slipped gently into
+the air, four or five feet off the ground.
+The towing airplane was still taxiing,
+but with its tow airborne it picked up
+speed quickly. Another two hundred
+feet and it, too, was in the air and
+beginning to climb. The glider behind
+held it to a speed of sixty miles
+or so.</p>
+
+<p>At ten thousand feet, the plane leveled
+off and the pilot's head swiveled
+to look back at them. Joe Mauser
+waved to him and dropped the release
+lever which ejected the nylon rope
+from the glider's nose. The plane dove
+away, trailing the rope behind it. Joe
+knew that the plane pilot would later
+drop it over the airport where it could
+easily be retrieved.</p>
+
+<p>In the direction of Mount Overlook
+he could see cumulus clouds and the
+dark turbulence which meant strong
+updraft. He headed in that direction.</p>
+
+<p>Except for the whistling of wind,
+there is complete silence in a soaring
+glider. Max Mainz began to call back
+to his superior, was taken back by the
+volume, and dropped his voice. He
+said, "Look, captain. What keeps it
+up?"</p>
+
+<p>Joe grinned. He liked the buoyance
+of glider flying, the nearest approach
+of man to the bird, and thus far everything
+was going well. He told
+Max, "An airplane plows through the
+air currents, a glider rides on top of
+them."</p>
+
+<p>"Yeah, but suppose the current is
+going down?"</p>
+
+<p>"Then we avoid it. This sailplane
+only has a gliding angle ratio of one
+to twenty-five, but it's a workhorse
+with a payload of some four hundred
+pounds. A really high performance
+glider can have a ratio of as much as
+one to forty."</p>
+
+<p>Joe had found a strong updraft
+where a wind ran up the side of a
+mountain. He banked, went into a
+circling turn. The gauge indicated
+they were climbing at the rate of
+eight meters per second, nearly fifteen
+hundred feet a minute.</p>
+
+<p>Max hadn't got the rundown on
+the theory of the glider. That was
+obvious in his expression.</p>
+
+<p>Joe Mauser, even while searching
+the ground below keenly, went into
+it further. "A wind up against a
+mountain will give an updraft, storm
+clouds will, even a newly plowed
+field in a bright sun. So you go from
+one of these to the next."</p>
+
+<p>"Yeah, great, but when you're between,"
+Max protested.</p>
+
+<p>"Then, when you have a one to
+twenty-five ratio, you go twenty-five
+feet forward for each one you drop.
+If you started a mile high, you could
+go twenty-five miles before you
+touched ground." He cut himself off
+quickly. "Look, what's that, down
+there? Get your glasses on it."</p>
+
+<p>Max caught his excitement. His
+binoculars were tight to his eyes.
+"Sojers. Cavalry. They sure ain't
+ours. They must be Hovercraft lads.
+And look, field artillery."</p>
+
+<p>Joe Mauser was piloting with his
+left hand, his right smoothing out a
+chart on his lap. He growled, "What
+are they doing there? That's at least a
+full brigade of cavalry. Here, let me
+have those glasses."</p>
+
+<p>With his knees gripping the stick,
+he went into a slow circle, as he
+stared down at the column of men.
+"Jack Alshuler," he whistled in surprise.
+"The marshal's crack heavy cavalry.
+And several batteries of artillery."
+He swung the glasses in a
+wider scope and the whistle turned
+into a hiss of comprehension.
+"They're doing a complete circle of
+the reservation. They're going to hit
+the Baron from the direction of
+Phoenicia."</p>
+
+<hr class="maj" />
+<h2>X</h2>
+
+<p class="cap">Marshal Stonewall Cogswell directed
+his old fashioned telescope in the
+direction his chief of staff indicated.</p>
+
+<p>"What is it?" he grunted.</p>
+
+<p>"It's an airplane, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"Over a military reservation with a
+fracas in progress?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir." The other put his glasses
+back on the circling object. "Then
+what is it, sir? Certainly not a free balloon."</p>
+
+<p>"Balloons," the marshal snorted, as
+though to himself. "Legal to use. The
+Union forces had them toward the
+end of the Civil War. But practically
+useless in a fracas of movement."</p>
+
+<p>They were standing before the
+former resort hotel which housed the
+marshal's headquarters. Other staff
+members were streaming from the
+building, and one of the ever-present
+Telly reporting crews were hurriedly
+setting up cameras.</p>
+
+<p>The marshal turned and barked,
+"Does anybody know what in Zen
+that confounded thing, circling up
+there, is?"</p>
+
+<p>Baron Zwerdling, the aging Category
+Transport magnate, head of Continental
+Hovercraft, hobbled onto the
+wooden veranda and stared with the
+others. "An airplane," he croaked.
+"Haer's gone too far this time. Too
+far, too far. This will strip him. Strip
+him, understand." Then he added,
+"Why doesn't it make any noise?"</p>
+
+<p>Lieutenant Colonel Paul Warren
+stood next to his commanding officer.
+"It looks like a glider, sir."</p>
+
+<p>Cogswell glowered at him. "A
+what?"</p>
+
+<p>"A glider, sir. It's a sport not particularly
+popular these days."</p>
+
+<p>"What keeps it up, confound it?"</p>
+
+<p>Paul Warren looked at him. "The
+same thing that keeps a hawk up, an
+albatross, a gull&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"A vulture, you mean," Cogswell
+snarled. He watched it for another
+long moment, his face working. He
+whirled on his chief of artillery. "Jed,
+can you bring that thing down?"</p>
+
+<p>The other had been viewing the
+craft through field binoculars, his face
+as shocked as the rest of them. Now
+he faced his chief, and lowered the
+glasses, shaking his head. "Not with
+the artillery of pre-1900. No, sir."</p>
+
+<p>"What can you do?" Cogswell
+barked.</p>
+
+<p>The artillery man was shaking his
+head. "We could mount some Maxim
+guns on wagon wheels, or something.
+Keep him from coming low."</p>
+
+<p>"He doesn't have to come low,"
+Cogswell growled unhappily. He
+spun on Lieutenant Colonel Warren
+again. "When were they invented?"
+He jerked his thumb upward. "Those
+things."</p>
+
+<p>Warren was twisting his face in
+memory. "Some time about the turn of
+the century."</p>
+
+<p>"How long can the things stay up?"</p>
+
+<p>Warren took in the surrounding
+mountainous countryside. "Indefinitely,
+sir. A single pilot, as long as he is
+physically able to operate. If there are
+two pilots up there to relieve each
+other, they could stay until food and
+water ran out."</p>
+
+<p>"How much weight do they carry?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not sure. One that size, certainly
+enough for two men and any
+equipment they'd need. Say, five hundred
+pounds."</p>
+
+<p>Cogswell had his telescope glued
+to his eyes again, he muttered under
+his breath, "Five hundred pounds!
+They could even unload dynamite
+over our horses. Stampede them all
+over the reservation."</p>
+
+<p>"What's going on?" Baron Zwerdling
+shrilled. "What's going on Marshal
+Cogswell?"</p>
+
+<p>Cogswell ignored him. He watched
+the circling, circling craft for a full
+five minutes, breathing deeply. Then
+he lowered his glass and swept the assembled
+officers of his staff with an
+indignant glare. "Ten Eyck!" he
+grunted.</p>
+
+<p>An infantry colonel came to attention.
+"Yes, sir."</p>
+
+<p>Cogswell said heavily, deliberately.
+"Under a white flag. A dispatch to
+Baron Haer. My compliments and request
+for his terms. While you're at it,
+my compliments also to Captain Joseph
+Mauser."</p>
+
+<p>Zwerdling was bug-eyeing him.
+"Terms!" he rasped.</p>
+
+<p>The marshal turned to him. "Yes,
+sir. Face reality. We're in the dill. I
+suggest you sue for terms as short of
+complete capitulation as you can
+make them."</p>
+
+<p>"You call yourself a soldier&mdash;!" the
+transport tycoon began to shrill.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir," Cogswell snapped. "A
+soldier, not a butcher of the lads under
+me." He called to the Telly reporter
+who was getting as much of
+this as he could. "Mr. Soligen, isn't
+it?"</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>The reporter scurried forward,
+flicking signals to his cameramen for
+proper coverage. "Yes, sir. Freddy
+Soligen, marshal. Could you tell the
+Telly fans what this is all about,
+Marshal Cogswell? Folks, you all
+know the famous marshal. Marshal
+Stonewall Cogswell, who hasn't lost a
+fracas in nearly ten years, now commanding
+the forces of Continental
+Hovercraft."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm losing one now," Cogswell
+said grimly. "Vacuum Tube Transport
+has pulled a gimmick out of the hat
+and things have pickled for us. It
+will be debated before the Military
+Category Department, of course, and
+undoubtedly the Sov-world military
+attaches will have things to say. But
+as it appears now, the fracas as we
+have known it, has been revolutionized."</p>
+
+<p>"Revolutionized?" Even the Telly
+reporter was flabbergasted. "You mean
+by that thing?" He pointed upward,
+and the lenses of the cameras followed
+his finger.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," Cogswell growled unhappily.
+"Do all of you need a blueprint?
+Do you think I can fight a fracas with
+that thing dangling above me,
+throughout the day hours? Do you understand
+the importance of reconnaissance
+in warfare?" His eyes glowered.
+"Do you think Napoleon would have
+lost Waterloo if he'd had the advantage
+of perfect reconnaissance such
+as that thing can deliver? Do you
+think Lee would have lost Gettysburg?
+Don't be ridiculous." He spun
+on Baron Zwerdling, who was stuttering
+his complete confusion.</p>
+
+<p>"As it stands, Baron Haer knows
+every troop dispensation I make. All
+I know of his movements are from
+my cavalry scouts. I repeat, I am no
+butcher, sir. I will gladly cross swords
+with Baron Haer another day, when I,
+too, have ... what did you call the
+confounded things, Paul?"</p>
+
+<p>"Gliders," Lieutenant Colonel Warren
+said.</p>
+
+<hr class="maj" />
+<h2>XI</h2>
+
+<p class="cap">Major Joseph Mauser, now attired
+in his best off-duty Category Military
+uniform, spoke his credentials to
+the receptionist. "I have no definite
+appointment, but I am sure the Baron
+will see me," he said.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir." The receptionist did the
+things that receptionists do, then
+looked up at him again. "Right
+through that door, major."</p>
+
+<p>Joe Mauser gave the door a quick
+double rap and then entered before
+waiting an answer.</p>
+
+<p>Balt Haer, in mufti, was standing
+at a far window, a drink in his hand,
+rather than his customary swagger
+stick. Nadine Haer sat in an easy-chair.
+The girl Joe Mauser loved had
+been crying.</p>
+
+<p>Joe Mauser, suppressing his
+frown, made with the usual amenities.</p>
+
+<p>Balt Haer without answering
+them, finished his drink in a gulp and
+stared at the newcomer. The old
+stare, the aloof stare, an aristocrat
+looking at an underling as though
+wondering what made the fellow
+tick. He said, finally, "I see you have
+been raised to Rank Major."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, sir," Joe said.</p>
+
+<p>"We are obviously occupied, major.
+What can either my sister or I
+possibly do for you?"</p>
+
+<p>Joe kept his voice even. He said,
+"I wanted to see the Baron."</p>
+
+<p>Nadine Haer looked up, a twinge
+of pain crossing her face.</p>
+
+<p>"Indeed," Balt Haer said flatly.
+"You are talking to the Baron, Major
+Mauser."</p>
+
+<p>Joe Mauser looked at him, then at
+his sister, who had taken to her
+handkerchief again. Consternation
+ebbed up and over him in a flood.
+He wanted to say something such as,
+"Oh <i>no</i>," but not even that could
+he utter.</p>
+
+<p>Haer was bitter. "I assume I know
+why you are here, major. You have
+come for your pound of flesh, undoubtedly.
+Even in these hours of
+our grief&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"I ... I didn't know. Please believe ..."</p>
+
+<p>"... You are so constituted that
+your ambition has no decency. Well,
+Major Mauser, I can only say that
+your arrangement was with my father.
+Even if I thought it a reasonable
+one, I doubt if I would sponsor your
+ambitions myself."</p>
+
+<p>Nadine Haer looked up wearily.
+"Oh, Balt, come off it," she said.
+"The fact is, the Haer fortunes contracted
+a debt to you, major. Unfortunately,
+it is a debt we cannot pay."
+She looked into his face. "First, my
+father's governmental connections
+do not apply to us. Second, six
+months ago, my father, worried
+about his health and attempting to
+avoid certain death taxes, transferred
+the family stocks into Balt's name.
+And Balt saw fit, immediately before
+the fracas, to sell all Vacuum Tube
+Transport stocks, and invest in Hovercraft."</p>
+
+<p>"That's enough, Nadine," her
+brother snapped nastily.</p>
+
+<p>"I see," Joe said. He came to attention.
+"Dr. Haer, my apologies for
+intruding upon you in your time of
+bereavement." He turned to the new
+Baron. "Baron Haer, my apologies
+for <i>your</i> bereavement."</p>
+
+<p>Balt Haer glowered at him.</p>
+
+<p>Joe Mauser turned and marched
+for the door which he opened then
+closed behind him.</p>
+
+<p>On the street, before the New
+York offices of Vacuum Tube Transport,
+he turned and for a moment
+looked up at the splendor of the
+building.</p>
+
+<p>Well, at least the common shares
+of the concern had skyrocketed following
+the victory. His rank had
+been upped to Major, and old Stonewall
+Cogswell had offered him a
+permanent position on his staff in
+command of aerial operations, no
+small matter of prestige. The difficulty
+was, he wasn't interested in the
+added money that would accrue to
+him, nor the higher rank&mdash;nor the
+prestige, for that matter.</p>
+
+<p>He turned to go to his hotel.</p>
+
+<p>An unbelievably beautiful girl
+came down the steps of the building.
+She said, "Joe."</p>
+
+<p>He looked at her. "Yes?"</p>
+
+<p>She put a hand on his sleeve.
+"Let's go somewhere and talk, Joe."</p>
+
+<p>"About what?" He was infinitely
+weary now.</p>
+
+<p>"About goals," she said. "As long
+as they exist, whether for individuals,
+or nations, or a whole species,
+life is still worth the living. Things
+are a bit bogged down right now,
+but at the risk of sounding very
+trite, there's tomorrow."</p>
+
+<div class="figcenter">
+<img src="images/006.png" width="144" height="150" alt="" title="" />
+</div>
+
+<div class="trans1"><b>Transcriber's Note:</b><br />
+This etext was produced from <i>Analog</i> April 1962.
+Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
+copyright on this publication was renewed. Minor spelling and
+typographical errors have been corrected without note.</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Mercenary, by Dallas McCord Reynolds
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+</body>
+</html>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Mercenary, by Dallas McCord Reynolds
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Mercenary
+
+Author: Dallas McCord Reynolds
+
+Illustrator: Lloyd Birmingham
+
+Release Date: January 20, 2008 [EBook #24370]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK MERCENARY ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Greg Weeks, Stephen Blundell and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+MERCENARY
+
+ Every status-quo-caste society in history
+ has left open two roads to rise above your
+ caste: The Priest and The Warrior. But in
+ a society of TV and tranquilizers--the
+ Warrior acquires a strange new meaning....
+
+BY MACK REYNOLDS
+
+ILLUSTRATED BY BIRMINGHAM
+
+
+Joseph Mauser spotted the recruiting line-up from two or three blocks
+down the street, shortly after driving into Kingston. The local offices
+of Vacuum Tube Transport, undoubtedly. Baron Haer would be doing his
+recruiting for the fracas with Continental Hovercraft there if for no
+other reason than to save on rents. The Baron was watching pennies on
+this one and that was bad.
+
+In fact, it was so bad that even as Joe Mauser let his sports hovercar
+sink to a parking level and vaulted over its side he was still
+questioning his decision to sign up with the Vacuum Tube outfit rather
+than with their opponents. Joe was an old pro and old pros do not get to
+be old pros in the Category Military without developing an instinct to
+stay away from losing sides.
+
+Fine enough for Low-Lowers and Mid-Lowers to sign up with this outfit,
+as opposed to that, motivated by no other reasoning than the snappiness
+of the uniform and the stock shares offered, but an old pro considered
+carefully such matters as budget. Baron Haer was watching every expense,
+was, it was rumored, figuring on commanding himself and calling upon
+relatives and friends for his staff. Continental Hovercraft, on the
+other hand, was heavy with variable capital and was in a position to
+hire Stonewall Cogswell himself for their tactician.
+
+However, the die was cast. You didn't run up a caste level, not to speak
+of two at once, by playing it careful. Joe had planned this out; for
+once, old pro or not, he was taking risks.
+
+Recruiting line-ups were not for such as he. Not for many a year, many a
+fracas. He strode rapidly along this one, heading for the offices ahead,
+noting only in passing the quality of the men who were taking service
+with Vacuum Tube Transport. These were the soldiers he'd be commanding
+in the immediate future and the prospects looked grim. There were few
+veterans among them. Their stance, their demeanor, their ... well, you
+could tell a veteran even though he be Rank Private. You could tell a
+veteran of even one fracas. It showed.
+
+He knew the situation. The word had gone out. Baron Malcolm Haer was due
+for a defeat. You weren't going to pick up any lush bonuses signing up
+with him, and you definitely weren't going to jump a caste. In short, no
+matter what Haer's past record, choose what was going to be the winning
+side--Continental Hovercraft. Continental Hovercraft and old Stonewall
+Cogswell who had lost so few fracases that many a Telly buff couldn't
+remember a single one.
+
+Individuals among these men showed promise, Joe Mauser estimated even as
+he walked, but promise means little if you don't live long enough to
+cash in on it.
+
+Take that small man up ahead. He'd obviously got himself into a hassle
+maintaining his place in line against two or three heftier would-be
+soldiers. The little fellow wasn't backing down a step in spite of the
+attempts of the other Lowers to usurp his place. Joe Mauser liked to see
+such spirit. You could use it when you were in the dill.
+
+As he drew abreast of the altercation, he snapped from the side of his
+mouth, "Easy, lads. You'll get all the scrapping you want with
+Hovercraft. Wait until then."
+
+He'd expected his tone of authority to be enough, even though he was in
+mufti. He wasn't particularly interested in the situation, beyond giving
+the little man a hand. A veteran would have recognized him as an
+old-timer and probable officer, and heeded, automatically.
+
+These evidently weren't veterans.
+
+"Says who?" one of the Lowers growled back at him. "You one of Baron
+Haer's kids, or something?"
+
+Joe Mauser came to a halt and faced the other. He was irritated, largely
+with himself. He didn't want to be bothered. Nevertheless, there was no
+alternative now.
+
+The line of men, all Lowers so far as Joe could see, had fallen silent
+in an expectant hush. They were bored with their long wait. Now
+something would break the monotony.
+
+By tomorrow, Joe Mauser would be in command of some of these men. In as
+little as a week he would go into a full-fledged fracas with them. He
+couldn't afford to lose face. Not even at this point when all, including
+himself, were still civilian garbed. When matters pickled, in a fracas,
+you wanted men with complete confidence in you.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The man who had grumbled the surly response was a near physical twin of
+Joe Mauser which put him in his early thirties, gave him five foot
+eleven of altitude and about one hundred and eighty pounds. His clothes
+casted him Low-Lower--nothing to lose. As with many who have nothing to
+lose, he was willing to risk all for principle. His face now registered
+that ideal. Joe Mauser had no authority over him, nor his friends.
+
+Joe's eyes flicked to the other two who had been pestering the little
+fellow. They weren't quite so aggressive and as yet had come to no
+conclusion about their stand. Probably the three had been unacquainted
+before their bullying alliance to deprive the smaller man of his place.
+However, a moment of hesitation and Joe would have a trio on his hands.
+
+He went through no further verbal preliminaries. Joe Mauser stepped
+closer. His right hand lanced forward, not doubled in a fist but fingers
+close together and pointed, spear-like. He sank it into the other's
+abdomen, immediately below the rib cage--the solar plexus.
+
+He had misestimated the other two. Even as his opponent crumpled, they
+were upon him, coming in from each side. And at least one of them, he
+could see now, had been in hand-to-hand combat before. In short, another
+pro, like Joe himself.
+
+He took one blow, rolling with it, and his feet automatically went into
+the shuffle of the trained fighter. He retreated slightly to erect
+defenses, plan attack. They pressed him strongly, sensing victory in his
+retreat.
+
+The one mattered little to him. Joe Mauser could have polished off the
+oaf in a matter of seconds, had he been allotted seconds to devote. But
+the second, the experienced one, was the problem. He and Joe were well
+matched and with the oaf as an ally really he had all the best of it.
+
+Support came from a forgotten source, the little chap who had been the
+reason for the whole hassle. He waded in now as big as the next man so
+far as spirit was concerned, but a sorry fate gave him to attack the
+wrong man, the veteran rather than the tyro. He took a crashing blow to
+the side of his head which sent him sailing back into the recruiting
+line, now composed of excited, shouting verbal participants of the fray.
+
+However, the extinction of Joe Mauser's small ally had taken a moment or
+two and time was what Joe needed most. For a double second he had the
+oaf alone on his hands and that was sufficient. He caught a flailing
+arm, turned his back and automatically went into the movements which
+result in that spectacular hold of the wrestler, the Flying Mare. Just
+in time he recalled that his opponent was a future comrade-in-arms and
+twisted the arm so that it bent at the elbow, rather than breaking. He
+hurled the other over his shoulder and as far as possible, to take the
+scrap out of him, and twirled quickly to meet the further attack of his
+sole remaining foe.
+
+That phase of the combat failed to materialize.
+
+A voice of command bit out, "Hold it, you lads!"
+
+The original situation which had precipitated the fight was being
+duplicated. But while the three Lowers had failed to respond to Joe
+Mauser's tone of authority, there was no similar failure now.
+
+The owner of the voice, beautifully done up in the uniform of Vacuum
+Tube Transport, complete to kilts and the swagger stick of the officer
+of Rank Colonel or above, stood glaring at them. Age, Joe estimated,
+even as he came to attention, somewhere in the late twenties--an Upper
+in caste. Born to command. His face holding that arrogant, contemptuous
+expression once common to the patricians of Rome, the Prussian Junkers,
+the British ruling class of the Nineteenth Century. Joe knew the
+expression well. How well he knew it. On more than one occasion, he had
+dreamt of it.
+
+Joe said, "Yes, sir."
+
+"What in Zen goes on here? Are you lads overtranked?"
+
+"No, sir," Joe's veteran opponent grumbled, his eyes on the ground, a
+schoolboy before the principal.
+
+Joe said, evenly, "A private disagreement, sir."
+
+"Disagreement!" the Upper snorted. His eyes went to the three fallen
+combatants, who were in various stages of reviving. "I'd hate to see you
+lads in a real scrap."
+
+That brought a response from the non-combatants in the recruiting line.
+The _bon mot_ wasn't that good but caste has its privileges and the
+laughter was just short of uproarious.
+
+Which seemed to placate the kilted officer. He tapped his swagger stick
+against the side of his leg while he ran his eyes up and down Joe Mauser
+and the others, as though memorizing them for future reference.
+
+"All right," he said. "Get back into the line, and you trouble makers
+quiet down. We're processing as quickly as we can." And at that point he
+added insult to injury with an almost word for word repetition of what
+Joe had said a few moments earlier. "You'll get all the fighting you
+want from Hovercraft, if you can wait until then."
+
+The four original participants of the rumpus resumed their places in
+various stages of sheepishness. The little fellow, nursing an obviously
+aching jaw, made a point of taking up his original position even while
+darting a look of thanks to Joe Mauser who still stood where he had when
+the fight was interrupted.
+
+The Upper looked at Joe. "Well, lad, are you interested in signing up
+with Vacuum Tube Transport or not?"
+
+"Yes, sir," Joe said evenly. Then, "Joseph Mauser, sir. Category
+Military, Rank Captain."
+
+"Indeed." The officer looked him up and down all over again, his
+nostrils high. "A Middle, I assume. And brawling with recruits." He held
+a long silence. "Very well, come with me." He turned and marched off.
+
+Joe inwardly shrugged. This was a fine start for his pitch--a fine
+start. He had half a mind to give it all up, here and now, and head on
+up to Catskill to enlist with Continental Hovercraft. His big scheme
+would wait for another day. Nevertheless, he fell in behind the
+aristocrat and followed him to the offices which had been his original
+destination.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Two Rank Privates with 45-70 Springfields and wearing the Haer kilts in
+such wise as to indicate permanent status in Vacuum Tube Transport came
+to the salute as they approached. The Upper preceding Joe Mauser flicked
+his swagger stick in an easy nonchalance. Joe felt envious amusement.
+How long did it take to learn how to answer a salute with that degree of
+arrogant ease?
+
+There were desks in here, and typers humming, as Vacuum Tube Transport
+office workers, mobilized for this special service, processed volunteers
+for the company forces. Harried noncoms and junior-grade officers buzzed
+everywhere, failing miserably to bring order to the chaos. To the right
+was a door with a medical cross newly painted on it. When it
+occasionally popped open to admit or emit a recruit, white-robed
+doctors, male nurses and half nude men could be glimpsed beyond.
+
+Joe followed the other through the press and to an inner office at which
+door he didn't bother to knock. He pushed his way through, waved in
+greeting with his swagger stick to the single occupant who looked up
+from the paper- and tape-strewn desk at which he sat.
+
+Joe Mauser had seen the face before on Telly though never so tired as
+this and never with the element of defeat to be read in the expression.
+Bullet-headed, barrel-figured Baron Malcolm Haer of Vacuum Tube
+Transport. Category Transportation, Mid-Upper, and strong candidate for
+Upper-Upper upon retirement. However, there would be few who expected
+retirement in the immediate future. Hardly. Malcolm Haer found too
+obvious a lusty enjoyment in the competition between Vacuum Tube
+Transport and its stronger rivals.
+
+ * * *
+
+Joe came to attention, bore the sharp scrutiny of his chosen
+commander-to-be. The older man's eyes went to the kilted Upper officer
+who had brought Joe along. "What is it, Balt?"
+
+The other gestured with his stick at Joe. "Claims to be Rank Captain.
+Looking for a commission with us, Dad. I wouldn't know why." The last
+sentence was added lazily.
+
+The older Haer shot an irritated glance at his son. "Possibly for the
+same reason mercenaries usually enlist for a fracas, Balt." His eyes
+came back to Joe.
+
+Joe Mauser, still at attention even though in mufti, opened his mouth to
+give his name, category and rank, but the older man waved a hand
+negatively. "Captain Mauser, isn't it? I caught the fracas between
+Carbonaceous Fuel and United Miners, down on the Panhandle Reservation.
+Seems to me I've spotted you once or twice before, too."
+
+"Yes, sir," Joe said. This was some improvement in the way things were
+going.
+
+The older Haer was scowling at him. "Confound it, what are you doing
+with no more rank than captain? On the face of it, you're an old hand, a
+highly experienced veteran."
+
+_An old pro, we call ourselves_, Joe said to himself. _Old pros, we call
+ourselves, among ourselves._
+
+Aloud, he said, "I was born a Mid-Lower, sir."
+
+There was understanding in the old man's face, but Balt Haer said
+loftily, "What's that got to do with it? Promotion is quick and based on
+merit in Category Military."
+
+At a certain point, if you are good combat officer material, you speak
+your mind no matter the rank of the man you are addressing. On this
+occasion, Joe Mauser needed few words. He let his eyes go up and down
+Balt Haer's immaculate uniform, taking in the swagger stick of the Rank
+Colonel or above. Joe said evenly, "Yes, sir."
+
+Balt Haer flushed quick temper. "What do you mean by--"
+
+But his father was chuckling. "You have spirit, captain. I need spirit
+now. You are quite correct. My son, though a capable officer, I assure
+you, has probably not participated in a fraction of the fracases you
+have to your credit. However, there is something to be said for the
+training available to we Uppers in the academies. For instance, captain,
+have you ever commanded a body of lads larger than, well, a _company_?"
+
+Joe said flatly, "In the Douglas-Boeing versus Lockheed-Cessna fracas we
+took a high loss of officers when the Douglas-Boeing outfit rang in some
+fast-firing French _mitrailleuse_ we didn't know they had. As my
+superiors took casualties I was field promoted to acting battalion
+commander, to acting regimental commander, to acting brigadier. For
+three days I held the rank of acting commander of brigade. We won."
+
+Balt Haer snapped his fingers. "I remember that. Read quite a paper on
+it." He eyed Joe Mauser, almost respectfully. "Stonewall Cogswell got
+the credit for the victory and received his marshal's baton as a
+result."
+
+"He was one of the few other officers that survived," Joe said dryly.
+
+"But, Zen! You mean you got no promotion at all?"
+
+Joe said, "I was upped to Low-Middle from High-Lower, sir. At my age, at
+the time, quite a promotion."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Baron Haer was remembering, too. "That was the fracas that brought on
+the howl from the Sovs. They claimed those _mitrailleuse_ were post-1900
+and violated the Universal Disarmament Pact. Yes, I recall that.
+Douglas-Boeing was able to prove that the weapon was used by the French
+as far back as the Franco-Prussian War." He eyed Joe with new interest
+now. "Sit down, captain. You too, Balt. Do you realize that Captain
+Mauser is the only recruit of officer rank we've had today?"
+
+"Yes," the younger Haer said dryly. "However, it's too late to call the
+fracas off now. Hovercraft wouldn't stand for it, and the Category
+Military Department would back them. Our only alternative is
+unconditional surrender, and you know what that means."
+
+"It means our family would probably be forced from control of the firm,"
+the older man growled. "But nobody has suggested surrender on any terms.
+Nobody, thus far." He glared at his officer son who took it with an easy
+shrug and swung a leg over the edge of his father's desk in the way of a
+seat.
+
+Joe Mauser found a chair and lowered himself into it. Evidently, the
+foppish Balt Haer had no illusions about the spot his father had got the
+family corporation into. And the younger man was right, of course.
+
+But the Baron wasn't blind to reality any more than he was a coward. He
+dismissed Balt Haer's defeatism from his mind and came back to Joe
+Mauser. "As I say, you're the only officer recruit today. Why?"
+
+Joe said evenly, "I wouldn't know, sir. Perhaps freelance Category
+Military men are occupied elsewhere. There's always a shortage of
+trained officers."
+
+Baron Haer was waggling a finger negatively. "That's not what I mean,
+captain. You are an old hand. This is your category and you must know it
+well. Then why are _you_ signing up with Vacuum Tube Transport rather
+than Hovercraft?"
+
+Joe Mauser looked at him for a moment without speaking.
+
+"Come, come, captain. I am an old hand too, in my category, and not a
+fool. I realize there is scarcely a soul in the West-world that expects
+anything but disaster for my colors. Pay rates have been widely posted.
+I can offer only five common shares of Vacuum Tube for a Rank Captain,
+win or lose. Hovercraft is doubling that, and can pick and choose among
+the best officers in the hemisphere."
+
+Joe said softly, "I have all the shares I need."
+
+Balt Haer had been looking back and forth between his father and the
+newcomer and becoming obviously more puzzled. He put in, "Well, what in
+Zen motivates you if it isn't the stock we offer?"
+
+Joe glanced at the younger Haer to acknowledge the question but he spoke
+to the Baron. "Sir, like you said, you're no fool. However, you've been
+sucked in, this time. When you took on Hovercraft, you were thinking in
+terms of a regional dispute. You wanted to run one of your vacuum tube
+deals up to Fairbanks from Edmonton. You were expecting a minor fracas,
+involving possibly five thousand men. You never expected Hovercraft to
+parlay it up, through their connections in the Category Military
+Department, to a divisional magnitude fracas which you simply aren't
+large enough to afford. But Hovercraft was getting sick of your
+corporation. You've been nicking away at them too long. So they decided
+to do you in. They've hired Marshal Cogswell and the best combat
+officers in North America, and they're hiring the most competent
+veterans they can find. Every fracas buff who watches Telly, figures
+you've had it. They've been watching you come up the aggressive way, the
+hard way, for a long time, but now they're all going to be sitting on
+the edges of their sofas waiting for you to get it."
+
+Baron Haer's heavy face had hardened as Joe Mauser went on relentlessly.
+He growled, "Is this what everyone thinks?"
+
+"Yes. Everyone intelligent enough to have an opinion." Joe made a motion
+of his head to the outer offices where the recruiting was proceeding.
+"Those men out there are rejects from Catskill, where old Baron
+Zwerdling is recruiting. Either that or they're inexperienced
+Low-Lowers, too stupid to realize they're sticking their necks out. Not
+one man in ten is a veteran. And when things begin to pickle, you want
+veterans."
+
+Baron Malcolm Haer sat back in his chair and stared coldly at Captain
+Joe Mauser. He said, "At first I was moderately surprised that an old
+time mercenary like yourself should choose my uniform, rather than
+Zwerdling's. Now I am increasingly mystified about motivation. So all
+over again I ask you, captain: Why are you requesting a commission in my
+forces which you seem convinced will meet disaster?"
+
+Joe wet his lips carefully. "I think I know a way you can win."
+
+
+
+
+II
+
+
+His permanent military rank the Haers had no way to alter, but they were
+short enough of competent officers that they gave him an acting rating
+and pay scale of major and command of a squadron of cavalry. Joe Mauser
+wasn't interested in a cavalry command this fracas, but he said nothing.
+Immediately, he had to size up the situation; it wasn't time as yet to
+reveal the big scheme. And, meanwhile, they could use him to whip the
+Rank Privates into shape.
+
+He had left the offices of Baron Haer to go through the red tape
+involved in being signed up on a temporary basis in the Vacuum Tube
+Transport forces, and reentered the confusion of the outer offices where
+the Lowers were being processed and given medicals. He reentered in time
+to run into a Telly team which was doing a live broadcast.
+
+Joe Mauser remembered the news reporter who headed the team. He'd run
+into him two or three times in fracases. As a matter of fact, although
+Joe held the standard Military Category prejudices against Telly, he had
+a basic respect for this particular newsman. On the occasions he'd seen
+him before, the fellow was hot in the midst of the action even when
+things were in the dill. He took as many chances as did the average
+combatant, and you can't ask for more than that.
+
+The other knew him, too, of course. It was part of his job to be able to
+spot the celebrities and near celebrities. He zeroed in on Joe now,
+making flicks of his hand to direct the cameras. Joe, of course, was
+fully aware of the value of Telly and was glad to co-operate.
+
+"Captain! Captain Mauser, isn't it? Joe Mauser who held out for four
+days in the swamps of Louisiana with a single company while his ranking
+officers reformed behind him."
+
+That was one way of putting it, but both Joe and the newscaster who had
+covered the debacle knew the reality of the situation. When the front
+had collapsed, his commanders--of Upper caste, of course--had hauled
+out, leaving him to fight a delaying action while they mended their
+fences with the enemy, coming to the best terms possible. Yes, that had
+been the United Oil versus Allied Petroleum fracas, and Joe had emerged
+with little either in glory or pelf.
+
+The average fracas fan wasn't on an intellectual level to appreciate
+anything other than victory. The good guys win, the bad guys
+lose--that's obvious, isn't it? Not one out of ten Telly followers of
+the fracases was interested in a well-conducted retreat or holding
+action. They wanted blood, lots of it, and they identified with the
+winning side.
+
+Joe Mauser wasn't particularly bitter about this aspect. It was part of
+his way of life. In fact, his pet peeve was the _real_ buff. The type,
+man or woman, who could remember every fracas you'd ever been in, every
+time you'd copped one, and how long you'd been in the hospital. Fans who
+could remember, even better than you could, every time the situation had
+pickled on you and you'd had to fight your way out as best you could.
+They'd tell you about it, their eyes gleaming, sometimes a slightest
+trickle of spittle at the sides of their mouths. They usually wanted an
+autograph, or a souvenir such as a uniform button.
+
+Now Joe said to the Telly reporter, "That's right, Captain Mauser.
+Acting major, in this fracas, ah--"
+
+"Freddy. Freddy Soligen. You remember me, captain--"
+
+"Of course I do, Freddy. We've been in the dill, side by side, more than
+once, and even when I was too scared to use my side arm, you'd be
+scanning away with your camera."
+
+"Ha ha, listen to the captain, folks. I hope my boss is tuned in. But
+seriously, Captain Mauser, what do you think the chances of Vacuum Tube
+Transport are in this fracas?"
+
+Joe looked into the camera lens, earnestly. "The best, of course, or I
+wouldn't have signed up with Baron Haer, Freddy. Justice triumphs, and
+anybody who is familiar with the issues in this fracas, knows that Baron
+Haer is on the side of true right."
+
+Freddy said, holding any sarcasm he must have felt, "What would you say
+the issues were, captain?"
+
+"The basic North American free enterprise right to compete. Hovercraft
+has held a near monopoly in transport to Fairbanks. Vacuum Tube
+Transport wishes to lower costs and bring the consumers of Fairbanks
+better service through running a vacuum tube to that area. What could be
+more in the traditions of the West-world? Continental Hovercraft stands
+in the way and it is they who have demanded of the Category Military
+Department a trial by arms. On the face of it, justice is on the side of
+Baron Haer."
+
+Freddy Soligen said into the camera, "Well, all you good people of the
+Telly world, that's an able summation the captain has made, but it
+certainly doesn't jibe with the words of Baron Zwerdling we heard this
+morning, does it? However, justice triumphs and we'll see what the field
+of combat will have to offer. Thank you, thank you very much, Captain
+Mauser. All of us, all of us tuned in today, hope that you personally
+will run into no dill in this fracas."
+
+"Thanks, Freddy. Thanks all," Joe said into the camera, before turning
+away. He wasn't particularly keen about this part of the job, but you
+couldn't underrate the importance of pleasing the buffs. In the long run
+it was your career, your chances for promotion both in military rank and
+ultimately in caste. It was the way the fans took you up, boosted you,
+idolized you, worshipped you if you really made it. He, Joe Mauser, was
+only a minor celebrity, he appreciated every chance he had to be
+interviewed by such a popular reporter as Freddy Soligen.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Even as he turned, he spotted the four men with whom he'd had his spat
+earlier. The little fellow was still to the fore. Evidently, the others
+had decided the one place extra that he represented wasn't worth the
+trouble he'd put in their way defending it.
+
+On an impulse he stepped up to the small man who began a grin of
+recognition, a grin that transformed his feisty face. A revelation of
+an inner warmth beyond average in a world which had lost much of its
+human warmth.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+Joe said, "Like a job, soldier?"
+
+"Name's Max. Max Mainz. Sure I want a job. That's why I'm in this
+everlasting line."
+
+Joe said, "First fracas for you, isn't it?"
+
+"Yeah, but I had basic training in school."
+
+"What do you weigh, Max?"
+
+Max's face soured. "About one twenty."
+
+"Did you check out on semaphore in school?"
+
+"Well, sure. I'm Category Food, Sub-division Cooking, Branch Chef, but,
+like I say, I took basic military training, like most everybody else."
+
+"I'm Captain Joe Mauser. How'd you like to be my batman?"
+
+Max screwed up his already not overly handsome face. "Gee, I don't know.
+I kinda joined up to see some action. Get into the dill. You know what I
+mean."
+
+Joe said dryly, "See here, Mainz, you'll probably find more pickled
+situations next to me than you'll want--and you'll come out alive."
+
+The recruiting sergeant looked up from the desk. It was Max Mainz's turn
+to be processed. The sergeant said, "Lad, take a good opportunity when
+it drops in your lap. The captain is one of the best in the field.
+You'll learn more, get better chances for promotion, if you stick with
+him."
+
+Joe couldn't remember ever having run into the sergeant before, but he
+said, "Thanks, sergeant."
+
+The other said, evidently realizing Joe didn't recognize him, "We were
+together on the Chihuahua Reservation, on the jurisdictional fracas
+between the United Miners and the Teamsters, sir."
+
+It had been almost fifteen years ago. About all that Joe Mauser
+remembered of that fracas was the abnormal number of casualties they'd
+taken. His side had lost, but from this distance in time Joe couldn't
+even remember what force he'd been with. But now he said, "That's right.
+I thought I recognized you, sergeant."
+
+"It was my first fracas, sir." The sergeant went businesslike. "If you
+want I should hustle this lad though, captain--"
+
+"Please do, sergeant." Joe added to Max, "I'm not sure where my billet
+will be. When you're through all this, locate the officer's mess and
+wait there for me."
+
+"Well, O.K.," Max said doubtfully, still scowling but evidently a
+servant of an officer, if he wanted to be or not.
+
+"Sir," the sergeant added ominously. "If you've had basic, you know
+enough how to address an officer."
+
+"Well, yessir," Max said hurriedly.
+
+Joe began to turn away, but then spotted the man immediately behind Max
+Mainz. He was one of the three with whom Joe had tangled earlier, the
+one who'd obviously had previous combat experience. He pointed the man
+out to the sergeant. "You'd better give this lad at least temporary rank
+of corporal. He's a veteran and we're short of veterans."
+
+The sergeant said, "Yes, sir. We sure are." Joe's former foe looked
+properly thankful.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Joe Mauser finished off his own red tape and headed for the street to
+locate a military tailor who could do him up a set of the Haer kilts and
+fill his other dress requirements. As he went, he wondered vaguely just
+how many different uniforms he had worn in his time.
+
+In a career as long as his own from time to time you took semi-permanent
+positions in bodyguards, company police, or possibly the permanent
+combat troops of this corporation or that. But largely, if you were
+ambitious, you signed up for the fracases and that meant into a uniform
+and out of it again in as short a period as a couple of weeks.
+
+At the door he tried to move aside but was too slow for the quick moving
+young woman who caromed off him. He caught her arm to prevent her from
+stumbling. She looked at him with less than thanks.
+
+Joe took the blame for the collision. "Sorry," he said. "I'm afraid I
+didn't see you, Miss."
+
+"Obviously," she said coldly. Her eyes went up and down him, and for a
+moment he wondered where he had seen her before. Somewhere, he was sure.
+
+She was dressed as they dress who have never considered cost and she had
+an elusive beauty which would have been even the more hadn't her face
+projected quite such a serious outlook. Her features were more delicate
+than those to which he was usually attracted. Her lips were less full,
+but still-- He was reminded of the classic ideal of the British Romantic
+Period, the women sung of by Byron and Keats, Shelly and Moore.
+
+She said, "Is there any particular reason why you should be staring at
+me, Mr.--"
+
+"Captain Mauser," Joe said hurriedly. "I'm afraid I've been rude,
+Miss--Well, I thought I recognized you."
+
+She took in his civilian dress, typed it automatically, and came to an
+erroneous conclusion. She said, "Captain? You mean that with everyone
+else I know drawing down ranks from Lieutenant Colonel to Brigadier
+General, you can't make anything better than Captain?"
+
+Joe winced. He said carefully, "I came up from the ranks, Miss. Captain
+is quite an achievement, believe me."
+
+"Up from the ranks!" She took in his clothes again. "You mean you're a
+Middle? You neither talk nor look like a Middle, captain." She used the
+caste rating as though it was not _quite_ a derogatory term.
+
+Not that she meant to be deliberately insulting, Joe knew, wearily. How
+well he knew. It was simply born in her. As once a well-educated
+aristocracy had, not necessarily unkindly, named their status inferiors
+_niggers_; or other aristocrats, in another area of the country, had
+named theirs _greasers_. Yes, how well he knew.
+
+He said very evenly, "Mid-Middle now, Miss. However, I was born in the
+Lower castes."
+
+An eyebrow went up. "Zen! You must have put in many an hour studying.
+You talk like an Upper, captain." She dropped all interest in him and
+turned to resume her journey.
+
+"Just a moment," Joe said. "You can't go in there, Miss--"
+
+Her eyebrows went up again. "The name is Haer," she said. "Why can't I
+go in here, captain?"
+
+Now it came to him why he had thought he recognized her. She had basic
+features similar to those of that overbred poppycock, Balt Haer.
+
+"Sorry," Joe said. "I suppose under the circumstances, you can. I was
+about to tell you that they're recruiting with lads running around half
+clothed. Medical inspections, that sort of thing."
+
+She made a noise through her nose and said over her shoulder, even as
+she sailed on. "Besides being a Haer, I'm an M.D., captain. At the
+ludicrous sight of a man shuffling about in his shorts, I seldom blush."
+
+She was gone.
+
+Joe Mauser looked after her. "I'll bet you don't," he muttered.
+
+Had she waited a few minutes he could have explained his Upper accent
+and his unlikely education. When you'd copped one you had plenty of
+opportunity in hospital beds to read, to study, to contemplate--and to
+fester away in your own schemes of rebellion against fate. And Joe had
+copped many in his time.
+
+
+
+
+III
+
+
+By the time Joe Mauser called it a day and retired to his quarters he
+was exhausted to the point where his basic dissatisfaction with the
+trade he followed was heavily upon him.
+
+He had met his immediate senior officers, largely dilettante Uppers with
+precious little field experience, and was unimpressed. And he'd met his
+own junior officers and was shocked. By the looks of things at this
+stage, Captain Mauser's squadron would be going into this fracas both
+undermanned with Rank Privates and with junior officers composed largely
+of temporarily promoted noncoms. If this was typical of Baron Haer's
+total force, then Balt Haer had been correct; unconditional surrender
+was to be considered, no matter how disastrous to Haer family fortunes.
+
+Joe had been able to take immediate delivery of one kilted uniform. Now,
+inside his quarters, he began stripping out of his jacket. Somewhat to
+his surprise, the small man he had selected earlier in the day to be his
+batman entered from an inner room, also resplendent in the Haer uniform
+and obviously happily so.
+
+He helped his superior out of the jacket with an ease that held no
+subservience but at the same time was correctly respectful. You'd have
+thought him a batman specially trained.
+
+Joe grunted, "Max, isn't it? I'd forgotten about you. Glad you found our
+billet all right."
+
+Max said, "Yes, sir. Would the captain like a drink? I picked up a
+bottle of applejack. Applejack's the drink around here, sir. Makes a
+topnotch highball with ginger ale and a twist of lemon."
+
+Joe Mauser looked at him. Evidently his tapping this man for orderly had
+been sheer fortune. Well, Joe Mauser could use some good luck on this
+job. He hoped it didn't end with selecting a batman.
+
+Joe said, "An applejack highball sounds wonderful, Max. Got ice?"
+
+"Of course, sir." Max left the small room.
+
+Joe Mauser and his officers were billeted in what had once been a motel
+on the old road between Kingston and Woodstock. There was a shower and a
+tiny kitchenette in each cottage. That was one advantage in a fracas
+held in an area where there were plenty of facilities. Such military
+reservations as that of the Little Big Horn in Montana and particularly
+some of those in the South West and Mexico, were another thing.
+
+Joe lowered himself into the room's easy-chair and bent down to untie
+his laces. He kicked his shoes off. He could use that drink. He began
+wondering all over again if his scheme for winning this Vacuum Tube
+Transport versus Continental Hovercraft fracas would come off. The more
+he saw of Baron Haer's inadequate forces, the more he wondered. He
+hadn't expected Vacuum Tube to be in _this_ bad a shape. Baron Haer had
+been riding high for so long that one would have thought his reputation
+for victory would have lured many a veteran to his colors. Evidently
+they hadn't bitten. The word was out all right.
+
+Max Mainz returned with the drink.
+
+Joe said, "You had one yourself?"
+
+"No, sir."
+
+Joe said, "Well, Zen, go get yourself one and come on back and sit down.
+Let's get acquainted."
+
+"Well, yessir." Max disappeared back into the kitchenette to return
+almost immediately. The little man slid into a chair, drink awkwardly in
+hand.
+
+His superior sized him up, all over again. Not much more than a kid,
+really. Surprisingly aggressive for a Lower who must have been raised
+from childhood in a trank-bemused, Telly-entertained household. The fact
+that he'd broken away from that environment at all was to his credit, it
+was considerably easier to conform. But then it is always easier to
+conform, to run with the herd, as Joe well knew. His own break hadn't
+been an easy one. "Relax," he said now.
+
+Max said, "Well, this is my first day."
+
+"I know. And you've been seeing Telly shows all your life showing how an
+orderly conducts himself in the presence of his superior." Joe took
+another pull and yawned. "Well, forget about it. With any man who goes
+into a fracas with me, I like to be on close terms. When things pickle,
+I want him to be on my side, not nursing some peeve brought on by his
+officer trying to give him an inferiority complex."
+
+The little man was eying him in surprise.
+
+Joe finished his highball and came to his feet to get another one. He
+said, "On two occasions I've had an orderly save my life. I'm not taking
+any chances but that there might be a third opportunity."
+
+"Well, yessir. Does the captain want me to get him--"
+
+"I'll get it," Joe said.
+
+When he'd returned to his chair, he said, "Why did you join up with
+Baron Haer, Max?"
+
+The other shrugged it off. "The usual. The excitement. The idea of all
+those fans watching me on Telly. The share of common stock I'll get.
+And, you never know, maybe a promotion in caste. I wouldn't mind making
+Upper-Lower."
+
+Joe said sourly, "One fracas and you'll be over that desire to have the
+buffs watching you on Telly while they sit around in their front rooms
+sucking on tranks. And you'll probably be over the desire for the
+excitement, too. Of course, the share of stock is another thing."
+
+"You aren't just countin' down, captain," Max said, an almost surly
+overtone in his voice. "You don't know what it's like being born with no
+more common stock shares than a Mid-Lower."
+
+Joe held his peace, sipping at his drink, taking this one more slowly.
+He let his eyebrows rise to encourage the other to go on.
+
+Max said doggedly, "Sure, they call it People's Capitalism and everybody
+gets issued enough shares to insure him a basic living all the way from
+the cradle to the grave, like they say. But let me tell you, you're a
+Middle and you don't realize how basic the basic living of a Lower can
+be."
+
+Joe yawned. If he hadn't been so tired, there would have been more
+amusement in the situation.
+
+Max was still dogged. "Unless you can add to those shares of stock, it's
+pretty drab, captain. You wouldn't know."
+
+Joe said, "Why don't you work? A Lower can always add to his stock by
+working."
+
+Max stirred in indignity. "Work? Listen, sir, that's just one more field
+that's been automated right out of existence. Category Food Preparation,
+Sub-division Cooking, Branch Chef. Cooking isn't left in the hands of
+slobs who might drop a cake of soap into the soup. It's done automatic.
+The only new changes made in cooking are by real top experts, almost
+scientists like. And most of them are Uppers, mind you."
+
+Joe Mauser sighed inwardly. So his find in batmen wasn't going to be as
+wonderful as all that, after all. The man might have been born into the
+food preparation category from a long line of chefs, but evidently he
+knew precious little about his field. Joe might have suspected. He
+himself had been born into Clothing Category, Sub-division Shoes, Branch
+Repair--Cobbler--a meaningless trade since shoes were no longer
+repaired but discarded upon showing signs of wear. In an economy of
+complete abundance, there is little reason for repair of basic
+commodities. It was high time the government investigated category
+assignment and reshuffled and reassigned half the nation's population.
+But then, of course, was the question of what to do with the
+technologically unemployed.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Max was saying, "The only way I could figure on a promotion to a higher
+caste, or the only way to earn stock shares, was by crossing categories.
+And you know what that means. Either Category Military, or Category
+Religion and I sure as Zen don't know nothing about religion."
+
+Joe said mildly, "Theoretically, you can cross categories into any field
+you want, Max."
+
+Max snorted. "Theoretically is right ... sir. You ever heard about
+anybody born a Lower, or even a Middle like yourself, cross categories
+to, say, some Upper category like banking?"
+
+Joe chuckled. He liked this peppery little fellow. If Max worked out as
+well as Joe thought he might, there was a possibility of taking him
+along to the next fracas.
+
+Max was saying, "I'm not saying anything against the old time way of
+doing things or talking against the government, but I'll tell you,
+captain, every year goes by it gets harder and harder for a man to raise
+his caste or to earn some additional stock shares."
+
+The applejack had worked enough on Joe for him to rise against one of
+his pet peeves. He said, "That term, the old time way, is strictly Telly
+talk, Max. We don't do things _the old time way_. No nation in history
+ever has--with the possible exception of Egypt. Socio-economics are in a
+continual flux and here in this country we no more do things in the way
+they did fifty years ago, than fifty years ago they did them the way the
+American Revolutionists outlined back in the Eighteenth Century."
+
+Max was staring at him. "I don't get that, sir."
+
+Joe said impatiently, "Max, the politico-economic system we have today
+is an outgrowth of what went earlier. The welfare state, the freezing of
+the status quo, the Frigid Fracas between the West-world and the
+Sov-world, industrial automation until useful employment is all but
+needless--all these things were to be found in embryo more than fifty
+years ago."
+
+"Well, maybe the captain's right, but you gotta admit, sir, that mostly
+we do things the old way. We still got the Constitution and the
+two-party system and--"
+
+Joe was wearying of the conversation now. You seldom ran into anyone,
+even in Middle caste, the traditionally professional class, interested
+enough in such subjects to be worth arguing with. He said, "The
+Constitution, Max, has got to the point of the Bible. Interpret it the
+way you wish, and you can find anything. If not, you can always make a
+new amendment. So far as the two-party system is concerned, what effect
+does it have when there are no differences between the two parties? That
+phase of pseudo-democracy was beginning as far back as the 1930s when
+they began passing State laws hindering the emerging of new political
+parties. By the time they were insured against a third party working its
+way through the maze of election laws, the two parties had become so
+similar that elections became almost as big a farce as over in the
+Sov-world."
+
+"A farce?" Max ejaculated indignantly, forgetting his servant status.
+"That means not so good, doesn't it? Far as I'm concerned, election day
+is tops. The one day a Lower is just as good as an Upper. The one day
+how many shares you got makes no difference. Everybody has everything."
+
+"Sure, sure, sure," Joe sighed. "The modern equivalent of the Roman
+Bacchanalia. Election day in the West-world when no one, for just that
+one day, is freer than anyone else."
+
+"Well, what's wrong with that?" The other was all but belligerent.
+"That's the trouble with you Middles and Uppers, you don't know how it
+is to be a Lower and--"
+
+Joe snapped suddenly, "I was born a Mid-Lower myself, Max. Don't give me
+that nonsense."
+
+Max gaped at him, utterly unbelieving.
+
+Joe's irritation fell away. He held out his glass. "Get us a couple of
+more drinks, Max, and I'll tell you a story."
+
+By the time the fresh drink came, Joe Mauser was sorry he'd made the
+offer. He thought back. He hadn't told anyone the Joe Mauser story in
+many a year. And, as he recalled, the last time had been when he was
+well into his cups, on an election day at that, and his listener had
+been a Low-Upper, a hereditary aristocrat, one of the one per cent of
+the upper strata of the nation. Zen! How the man had laughed. He'd
+roared his amusement till the tears ran.
+
+However, Joe said, "Max, I was born in the same caste you were--average
+father, mother, sisters and brothers. They subsisted on the basic income
+guaranteed from birth, sat and watched Telly for an unbelievable number
+of hours each day, took trank to keep themselves happy. And thought I
+was crazy because I didn't. Dad was the sort of man who'd take his belt
+off to a child of his who questioned such school taught slogans as _What
+was good enough for Daddy is good enough for me_.
+
+"They were all fracas fans, of course. As far back as I can remember the
+picture is there of them gathered around the Telly, screaming
+excitement." Joe Mauser sneered, uncharacteristically.
+
+"You don't sound much like you're in favor of your trade, captain," Max
+said.
+
+Joe came to his feet, putting down his still half-full glass. "I'll make
+this epic story short, Max. As you said, the two actually valid methods
+of rising above the level in which you were born are in the Military and
+Religious Categories. Like you, even I couldn't stomach the latter."
+
+Joe Mauser hesitated, then finished it off. "Max, there have been few
+societies that man has evolved that didn't allow in some manner for the
+competent or sly, the intelligent or the opportunist, the brave or the
+strong, to work his way to the top. I don't know which of these I
+personally fit into, but I rebel against remaining in the lower
+categories of a stratified society. Do I make myself clear?"
+
+"Well, no sir, not exactly."
+
+Joe said flatly, "I'm going to fight my way to the top, and nothing is
+going to stand in the way. Is that clearer?"
+
+"Yessir," Max said, taken aback.
+
+
+
+
+IV
+
+
+After routine morning duties, Joe Mauser returned to his billet and
+mystified Max Mainz by not only changing into mufti himself but having
+Max do the same.
+
+In fact, the new batman protested faintly. He hadn't nearly, as yet, got
+over the glory of wearing his kilts and was looking forward to parading
+around town in them. He had a point, of course. The appointed time for
+the fracas was getting closer and buffs were beginning to stream into
+town to bask in the atmosphere of threatened death. Everybody knew what
+a military center, on the outskirts of a fracas reservation such as the
+Catskills, was like immediately preceding a clash between rival
+corporations. The high-strung gaiety, the drinking, the overtranking,
+the relaxation of mores. Even a Rank Private had it made. Admiring
+civilians to buy drinks and hang on your every word, and more important
+still, sensuous-eyed women, their faces slack in thinly suppressed
+passion. It was a recognized phenomenon, even Max Mainz knew--this
+desire on the part of women Telly fans to date a man, and then watch him
+later, killing or being killed.
+
+"Time enough to wear your fancy uniform," Joe Mauser growled at him. "In
+fact, tomorrow's a local election day. Parlay that up on top of all the
+fracas fans gravitating into town and you'll have a wingding the likes
+of nothing you've seen before."
+
+"Well yessir," Max begrudged. "Where're we going now, captain?"
+
+"To the airport. Come along."
+
+Joe Mauser led the way to his sports hovercar and as soon as the two
+were settled into the bucket seats, hit the lift lever with the butt of
+his left hand. Aircushion-borne, he trod down on the accelerator.
+
+Max Mainz was impressed. "You know," he said. "I never been in one of
+these swanky sports jobs before. The kinda car you can afford on the
+income of a Mid-Lower's stock aren't--"
+
+"Knock it off," Joe said wearily. "Carping we'll always have with us
+evidently, but in spite of all the beefing in every strata from
+Low-Lower to Upper-Middle, I've yet to see any signs of organized
+protest against our present politico-economic system."
+
+[Illustration]
+
+"Hey," Max said. "Don't get me wrong. What was good enough for Dad is
+good enough for me. You won't catch me talking against the government."
+
+"Hm-m-m," Joe murmured. "And all the other cliches taught to us to
+preserve the status quo, our People's Capitalism." They were reaching
+the outskirts of town, crossing the Esopus. The airport lay only a mile
+or so beyond.
+
+It was obviously too deep for Max, and since he didn't understand, he
+assumed his superior didn't know what he was talking about. He said,
+tolerantly, "Well, what's wrong with People's Capitalism? Everybody
+owns the corporations. Damnsight better than the Sovs have."
+
+Joe said sourly. "We've got one optical illusion, they've got another,
+Max. Over there they claim the proletariat owns the means of production.
+Great. But the Party members are the ones who control it, and, as a
+result they manage to do all right for themselves. The Party hierarchy
+over there are like our Uppers over here."
+
+"Yeah." Max was being particularly dense. "I've seen a lot about it on
+Telly. You know, when there isn't a good fracas on, you tune to one of
+them educational shows, like--"
+
+Joe winced at the term _educational_, but held his peace.
+
+"It's pretty rugged over there. But in the West-world, the people own a
+corporation's stock and they run it and get the benefit."
+
+"At least it makes a beautiful story," Joe said dryly. "Look, Max.
+Suppose you have a corporation that has two hundred thousand shares out
+and they're distributed among one hundred thousand and one persons. One
+hundred thousand of these own one share apiece, but the remaining
+stockholder owns the other hundred thousand."
+
+"I don't know what you're getting at," Max said.
+
+Joe Mauser was tired of the discussion. "Briefly," he said, "we have the
+illusion that this is a People's Capitalism, with all stock in the hands
+of the People. Actually, as ever before, the stock is in the hands of
+the Uppers, all except a mere dribble. They own the country and they run
+it for their own benefit."
+
+Max shot a less than military glance at him. "Hey, you're not one of
+these Sovs yourself, are you?"
+
+They were coming into the parking area near the Administration Building
+of the airport. "No," Joe said so softly that Max could hardly hear his
+words. "Only a Mid-Middle on the make."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Followed by Max, he strode quickly to the Administration Building,
+presented his credit identification at the desk and requested a light
+aircraft for a period of three hours. The clerk, hardly looking up,
+began going through motions, speaking into telescreens.
+
+The clerk said finally, "You might have a small wait, sir. Quite a few
+of the officers involved in this fracas have been renting out
+taxi-planes almost as fast as they're available."
+
+That didn't surprise Joe Mauser. Any competent officer made a point of
+an aerial survey of the battle reservation before going into a fracas.
+Aircraft, of course, couldn't be used _during_ the fray, since they
+postdated the turn of the century, and hence were relegated to the
+cemetery of military devices along with such items as nuclear weapons,
+tanks, and even gasoline-propelled vehicles of size to be useful.
+
+Use an aircraft in a fracas, or even _build_ an aircraft for military
+usage and you'd have a howl go up from the military attaches from the
+Sov-world that would be heard all the way to Budapest. Not a fracas
+went by but there were scores, if not hundreds, of military observers,
+keen-eyed to check whether or not any really modern tools of war were
+being illegally utilized. Joe Mauser sometimes wondered if the
+West-world observers, over in the Sov-world, were as hair fine in their
+living up to the rules of the Universal Disarmament Pact. Probably. But,
+for that matter, they didn't have the same system of fighting fracases
+over there, as in the West.
+
+Joe took a chair while he waited and thumbed through a fan magazine.
+From time to time he found his own face in such publications. He was a
+third-rate celebrity, really. Luck hadn't been with him so far as the
+buffs were concerned. They wanted spectacular victories, murderous
+situations in which they could lose themselves in vicarious sadistic
+thrills. Joe had reached most of his peaks while in retreat, or
+commanding a holding action. His officers appreciated him and so did the
+ultra-knowledgeable fracas buffs--but he was all but an unknown to the
+average dim wit who spent most of his life glued to the Telly set,
+watching men butcher each other.
+
+On the various occasions when matters had pickled and Joe had to fight
+his way out against difficult odds, using spectacular tactics in
+desperation, he was almost always off camera. Purely luck. On top of
+skill, determination, experience and courage, you had to have luck in
+the Military Category to get anywhere.
+
+This time Joe was going to manufacture his own.
+
+A voice said, "Ah, Captain Mauser."
+
+Joe looked up, then came to his feet quickly. In automatic reflex, he
+began to come to the salute but then caught himself. He said stiffly,
+"My compliments, Marshal Cogswell."
+
+The other was a smallish man, but strikingly strong of face and strongly
+built. His voice was clipped, clear and had the air of command as though
+born with it. He, like Joe, wore mufti and now extended his hand to be
+shaken.
+
+"I hear you've signed up with Baron Haer, captain. I was rather
+expecting you to come in with me. Had a place for a good aide de camp.
+Liked your work in that last fracas we went through together."
+
+"Thank you, sir," Joe said. Stonewall Cogswell was as good a tactician
+as freelanced and he was more than that. He was a judge of men and a
+stickler for detail. And right now, if Joe Mauser knew Marshal Stonewall
+Cogswell as well as he thought, Cogswell was smelling a rat. There was
+no reason why old pro Joe Mauser should sign up with a sure loser like
+Vacuum Tube when he could have earned more shares taking a commission
+with Hovercraft.
+
+He was looking at Joe brightly, the question in his eyes. Three or four
+of his staff were behind a few paces, looking polite, but Cogswell
+didn't bring them into the conversation. Joe knew most by sight. Good
+men all. Old pros all. He felt another twinge of doubt.
+
+Joe had to cover. He said, "I was offered a particularly good contract,
+sir. Too good to resist."
+
+The other nodded, as though inwardly coming to a satisfactory
+conclusion. "Baron Haer's connections, eh? He's probably offered to back
+you for a bounce in caste. Is that it, Joe?"
+
+Joe Mauser flushed. Stonewall Cogswell knew what he was talking about.
+He'd been born into Middle status himself and had become an Upper the
+hard way. His path wasn't as long as Joe's was going to be, but long
+enough and he knew how rocky the climb was. How very rocky.
+
+Joe said, stiffly, "I'm afraid I'm in no position to discuss my
+commander's military contracts, marshal. We're in mufti, but after
+all--"
+
+Cogswell's lean face registered one of his infrequent grimaces of humor.
+"I understand, Joe. Well, good luck and I hope things don't pickle for
+you in the coming fracas. Possibly we'll find ourselves aligned together
+again at some future time."
+
+"Thank you, sir," Joe said, once more having to catch himself to prevent
+an automatic salute.
+
+Cogswell and his staff went off, leaving Joe looking after them. Even
+the marshal's staff members were top men, any of whom could have
+conducted a divisional magnitude fracas. Joe felt the coldness in his
+stomach again. Although it must have looked like a cinch, the enemy
+wasn't taking any chances whatsoever. Cogswell and his officers were
+undoubtedly here at the airport for the same reason as Joe. They wanted
+a thorough aerial reconnaissance of the battlefield-to-be, before the
+issue was joined.
+
+ * * *
+
+Max was standing at his elbow. "Who was that, sir? Looks like a real
+tough one."
+
+"He is a real tough one," Joe said sourly. "That's Stonewall Cogswell,
+the best field commander in North America."
+
+Max pursed his lips. "I never seen him out of uniform before. Lots of
+times on Telly, but never out of uniform. I thought he was taller than
+that."
+
+"He fights with his brains," Joe said, still looking after the craggy
+field marshal. "He doesn't have to be any taller."
+
+Max scowled. "Where'd he ever get that nickname, sir?"
+
+"Stonewall?" Joe was turning to resume his chair and magazine. "He's
+supposed to be a student of a top general back in the American Civil
+War. Uses some of the original Stonewall's tactics."
+
+Max was out of his depth. "American Civil War? Was that much of a
+fracas, captain? It musta been before my time."
+
+"It was quite a fracas," Joe said dryly. "Lot of good lads died. A
+hundred years after it was fought, the _reasons_ it was fought seemed
+about as valid as those we fight fracases for today. Personally I--"
+
+He had to cut it short. They were calling him on the address system. His
+aircraft was ready. Joe made his way to the hangars, followed by Max
+Mainz. He was going to pilot the airplane himself and old Stonewall
+Cogswell would have been surprised at what Joe Mauser was looking for.
+
+
+
+
+V
+
+
+By the time they had returned to quarters, there was a message waiting
+for Captain Mauser. He was to report to the officer commanding
+reconnaissance.
+
+Joe redressed in the Haer kilts and proceeded to headquarters.
+
+The officer commanding reconnaissance turned out to be none other than
+Balt Haer, natty as ever, and, as ever, arrogantly tapping his swagger
+stick against his leg.
+
+"Zen! Captain," he complained. "Where have you been? Off on a trank
+kick? We've got to get organized."
+
+Joe Mauser snapped him a salute. "No, sir. I rented an aircraft to scout
+out the terrain over which we'll be fighting."
+
+"Indeed. And what were your impressions, captain?" There was an overtone
+which suggested that it made little difference what impressions a
+captain of cavalry might have gained.
+
+Joe shrugged. "Largely mountains, hills, woods. Good reconnaissance is
+going to make the difference in this one. And in the fracas itself
+cavalry is going to be more important than either artillery or infantry.
+A Nathan Forrest fracas, sir. A matter of getting there fustest with the
+mostest."
+
+Balt Haer said amusedly. "Thanks for your opinion, captain. Fortunately,
+our staff has already come largely to the same conclusions. Undoubtedly,
+they'll be glad to hear your wide experience bears them out."
+
+Joe said evenly, "It's a rather obvious conclusion, of course." He took
+this as it came, having been through it before. The dilettante amateur's
+dislike of the old pro. The amateur in command who knew full well he was
+less capable than many of those below him in rank.
+
+"Of course, captain," Balt Haer flicked his swagger stick against his
+leg. "But to the point. Your squadron is to be deployed as scouts under
+my overall command. You've had cavalry experience, I assume."
+
+"Yes, sir. In various fracases over the past fifteen years."
+
+"Very well. Now then, to get to the reason I have summoned you.
+Yesterday in my father's office you intimated that you had some
+grandiose scheme which would bring victory to the Haer colors. But then,
+on some thin excuse, refused to divulge just what the scheme might be."
+
+Joe Mauser looked at him unblinkingly.
+
+Balt Haer said: "Now I'd like to have your opinion on just how Vacuum
+Tube Transport can extract itself from what would seem a poor position
+at best."
+
+In all there were four others in the office, two women clerks
+fluttering away at typers, and two of Balt Haer's junior officers. They
+seemed only mildly interested in the conversation between Balt and Joe.
+
+Joe wet his lips carefully. The Haer scion was his commanding officer.
+He said, "Sir, what I had in mind is a new gimmick. At this stage, if I
+told anybody and it leaked, it'd never be effective, not even this first
+time."
+
+Haer observed him coldly. "And you think me incapable of keeping your
+secret, ah, _gimmick_, I believe is the idiomatic term you used."
+
+Joe Mauser's eyes shifted around the room, taking in the other four, who
+were now looking at him.
+
+Bait Haer rapped, "These members of my staff are all trusted Haer
+employees, Captain Mauser. They are not fly-by-night freelancers hired
+for a week or two."
+
+Joe said, "Yes, sir. But it's been my experience that one person can
+hold a secret. It's twice as hard for two, and from there on it's a
+decreasing probability in a geometric ratio."
+
+The younger Haer's stick rapped the side of his leg, impatiently.
+"Suppose I inform you that this is a command, captain? I have little
+confidence in a supposed gimmick that will rescue our forces from
+disaster and I rather dislike the idea of a captain of one of my
+squadrons dashing about with such a bee in his bonnet when he should be
+obeying my commands."
+
+Joe kept his voice respectful. "Then, sir, I'd request that we take the
+matter to the Commander in Chief, your father."
+
+"Indeed!"
+
+Joe said, "Sir, I've been working on this a long time. I can't afford to
+risk throwing the idea away."
+
+Bait Haer glared at him. "Very well, captain. I'll call your bluff, come
+along." He turned on his heel and headed from the room.
+
+Joe Mauser shrugged in resignation and followed him.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The old Baron wasn't much happier about Joe Mauser's secrets than was
+his son. It had only been the day before that he had taken Joe on, but
+already he had seemed to have aged in appearance. Evidently, each hour
+that went by made it increasingly clear just how perilous a position he
+had assumed. Vacuum Tube Transport had elbowed, buffaloed, bluffed and
+edged itself up to the outskirts of the really big time. The Baron's
+ability, his aggressiveness, his flair, his political pull, had all
+helped, but now the chips were down. He was up against one of the
+biggies, and this particular biggy was tired of ambitious little Vacuum
+Tube Transport.
+
+He listened to his son's words, listened to Joe's defense.
+
+He said, looking at Joe, "If I understand this, you have some scheme
+which you think will bring victory in spite of what seems a disastrous
+situation."
+
+"Yes, sir."
+
+The two Haers looked at him, one impatiently, the other in weariness.
+
+Joe said, "I'm gambling everything on this, sir. I'm no Rank Private in
+his first fracas. I deserve to be given some leeway."
+
+Balt Haer snorted. "Gambling everything! What in Zen would _you_ have to
+gamble, captain? The whole Haer family fortunes are tied up. Hovercraft
+is out for blood. They won't be satisfied with a token victory and a
+negotiated compromise. They'll devastate us. Thousands of mercenaries
+killed, with all that means in indemnities; millions upon million in
+expensive military equipment, most of which we've had to hire and will
+have to recompensate for. Can you imagine the value of our stock after
+Stonewall Cogswell has finished with us? Why, every two by four trucking
+outfit in North America will be challenging us, and we won't have the
+forces to meet a minor skirmish."
+
+Joe reached into an inner pocket and laid a sheaf of documents on the
+desk of Baron Malcolm Haer. The Baron scowled down at them.
+
+Joe said simply, "I've been accumulating stock since before I was
+eighteen and I've taken good care of my portfolio in spite of taxes and
+the various other pitfalls which make the accumulation of capital
+practically impossible. Yesterday, I sold all of my portfolio I was
+legally allowed to sell and converted to Vacuum Tube Transport." He
+added, dryly, "Getting it at an excellent rate, by the way."
+
+Balt Haer mulled through the papers, unbelievingly. "Zen!" he
+ejaculated. "The fool really did it. He's sunk a small fortune into our
+stock."
+
+Baron Haer growled at his son, "You seem considerably more convinced of
+our defeat than the captain, here. Perhaps I should reverse your
+positions of command."
+
+His son grunted, but said nothing.
+
+Old Malcolm Haer's eyes came back to Joe. "Admittedly, I thought you on
+the romantic side yesterday, with your hints of some scheme which would
+lead us out of the wilderness, so to speak. Now I wonder if you might
+not really have something. Very well, I respect your claimed need for
+secrecy. Espionage is not exactly an antiquated military field."
+
+"Thank you, sir."
+
+But the Baron was still staring at him. "However, there's more to it
+than that. Why not take this great scheme to Marshal Cogswell? And
+yesterday you mentioned that the Telly sets of the nation would be tuned
+in on this fracas, and obviously you are correct. The question becomes,
+what of it?"
+
+The fat was in the fire now. Joe Mauser avoided the haughty stare of
+young Balt Haer and addressed himself to the older man. "You have
+political pull, sir. Oh, I know you don't make and break presidents. You
+couldn't even pull enough wires to keep Hovercraft from making this a
+divisional magnitude fracas--but you have pull enough for my needs."
+
+Baron Haer leaned back in his chair, his barrel-like body causing that
+article of furniture to creak. He crossed his hands over his stomach.
+"And what are your needs, Captain Mauser?"
+
+Joe said evenly, "If I can bring this off, I'll be a fracas buff
+celebrity. I don't have any illusions about the fickleness of the Telly
+fans, but for a day or two I'll be on top. If at the same time I had
+your all out support, pulling what strings you could reach--"
+
+"Why then, you'd be promoted to Upper, wouldn't you, captain?" Balt Haer
+finished for him, amusement in his voice.
+
+"That's what I'm gambling on," Joe said evenly.
+
+The younger Haer grinned at his father superciliously. "So our captain
+says he will defeat Stonewall Cogswell in return for you sponsoring his
+becoming a member of the nation's elite."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Good Heavens, is the supposed cream of the nation now selected on no
+higher a level than this?" There was sarcasm in the words.
+
+The three men turned. It was the girl Joe had bumped into the day
+before. The Haers didn't seem surprised at her entrance.
+
+"Nadine," the older man growled. "Captain Joseph Mauser who has been
+given a commission in our forces."
+
+Joe went through the routine of a Middle of officer's rank being
+introduced to a lady of Upper caste. She smiled at him, somewhat
+mockingly, and failed to make standard response.
+
+Nadine Haer said, "I repeat, what is this service the captain can render
+the house of Haer so important that pressure should be brought to raise
+him to Upper caste? It would seem unlikely that he is a noted scientist,
+an outstanding artist, a great teacher--"
+
+Joe said, uncomfortably, "They say the military is a science, too."
+
+Her expression was almost as haughty as that of her brother. "Do they? I
+have never thought so."
+
+"Really, Nadine," her father grumbled. "This is hardly your affair."
+
+"No? In a few days I shall be repairing the damage you have allowed,
+indeed sponsored, to be committed upon the bodies of possibly thousands
+of now healthy human beings."
+
+Balt said nastily, "Nobody asked you to join the medical staff, Nadine.
+You could have stayed in your laboratory, figuring out new methods of
+preventing the human race from replenishing itself."
+
+The girl was obviously not the type to redden, but her anger was
+manifest. She spun on her brother. "If the race continues its present
+maniac course, possibly more effective methods of birth control _are_
+the most important development we could make. Even to the ultimate
+discovery of preventing all future conception."
+
+Joe caught himself in mid-chuckle.
+
+But not in time. She spun on him in his turn. "Look at yourself in that
+silly skirt. A professional soldier! A killer! In my opinion the most
+useless occupation ever devised by man. Parasite on the best and useful
+members of society. Destroyer by trade!"
+
+Joe began to open his mouth, but she overrode him. "Yes, yes. I know.
+I've read all the nonsense that has accumulated down through the ages
+about the need for, the glory of, the sacrifice of the professional
+soldier. How they defend their country. How they give all for the common
+good. Zen! What nonsense."
+
+Balt Haer was smirking sourly at her. "The theory today is, Nadine, old
+thing, that professionals such as the captain are gathering experience
+in case a serious fracas with the Sovs ever develops. Meanwhile his
+training is kept at a fine edge fighting in our inter-corporation,
+inter-union, or union-corporation fracases that develop in our private
+enterprise society."
+
+She laughed her scorn. "And what a theory! Limited to the weapons which
+prevailed before 1900. If there was ever real conflict between the
+Sov-world and our own, does anyone really believe either would stick to
+such arms? Why, aircraft, armored vehicles, yes, and nuclear weapons and
+rockets, would be in overnight use."
+
+Joe was fascinated by her furious attack. He said, "Then, what would you
+say was the purpose of the fracases, Miss--"
+
+"Circuses," she snorted. "The old Roman games, all over again, and a
+hundred times worse. Blood and guts sadism. The quest of a frustrated
+person for satisfaction in another's pain. Our Lowers of today are as
+useless and frustrated as the Roman proletariat and potentially they're
+just as dangerous as the mob that once dominated Rome. Automation, the
+second industrial revolution, has eliminated for all practical purposes
+the need for their labor. So we give them bread and circuses. And every
+year that goes by the circuses must be increasingly sadistic, death on
+an increasing scale, or they aren't satisfied. Once it was enough to
+have fictional mayhem, cowboys and Indians, gangsters, or G.I.s versus
+the Nazis, Japs or Commies, but that's passed. Now we need _real_ blood
+and guts."
+
+Baron Haer snapped finally, "All right, Nadine. We've heard this lecture
+before. I doubt if the captain is interested, particularly since you
+don't seem to be able to get beyond the protesting stage and have yet to
+come up with an answer."
+
+"I have an answer!"
+
+"Ah?" Balt Haer raised his eyebrows, mockingly.
+
+"Yes! Overthrow this silly status society. Resume the road to progress.
+Put our people to useful endeavor, instead of sitting in front of their
+Telly sets, taking trank pills to put them in a happy daze and watching
+sadistic fracases to keep them in thrills, and their minds from their
+condition."
+
+Joe had figured on keeping out of the controversy with this firebrand,
+but now, really interested, he said, "Progress to where?"
+
+She must have caught in his tone that he wasn't needling. She frowned at
+him. "I don't know man's goal, if there is one. I'm not even sure it's
+important. It's the road that counts. The endeavor. The dream. The
+effort expended to make a world a better place than it was at the time
+of your birth."
+
+[Illustration]
+
+Balt Haer said mockingly, "That's the trouble with you, Sis. Here we've
+reached Utopia and you don't admit it."
+
+"Utopia!"
+
+"Certainly. Take a poll. You'll find nineteen people out of twenty happy
+with things just the way they are. They have full tummies and security,
+lots of leisure and trank pills to make matters seem even rosier than
+they are--and they're rather rosy already."
+
+"Then what's the necessity of this endless succession of bloody
+fracases, covered to the most minute bloody detail on the Telly?"
+
+Baron Haer cut things short. "We've hashed and rehashed this before,
+Nadine and now we're too busy to debate further." He turned to Joe
+Mauser. "Very well, captain, you have my pledge. I wish I felt as
+optimistic as you seem to be about your prospects. That will be all for
+now, captain."
+
+Joe saluted and executed an about face.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the outer offices, when he had closed the door behind him, he rolled
+his eyes upward in mute thanks to whatever powers might be. He had
+somehow gained the enmity of Balt, his immediate superior, but he'd
+also gained the support of Baron Haer himself, which counted
+considerably more.
+
+He considered for a moment, Nadine Haer's words. She was obviously a
+malcontent, but, on the other hand, her opinions of his chosen
+profession weren't too different than his own. However, given this
+victory, this upgrading in caste, and Joe Mauser would be in a position
+to retire.
+
+The door opened and shut behind him and he half turned.
+
+Nadine Haer, evidently still caught up in the hot words between herself
+and her relatives, glared at him. All of which stressed the beauty he
+had noticed the day before. She was an almost unbelievably pretty girl,
+particularly when flushed with anger.
+
+It occurred to him with a blowlike suddenness that, if his caste was
+raised to Upper, he would be in a position to woo such as Nadine Haer.
+
+He looked into her furious face and said, "I was intrigued, Miss Haer,
+with what you had to say, and I'd like to discuss some of your points. I
+wonder if I could have the pleasure of your company at some nearby
+refreshment--"
+
+"My, how formal an invitation, captain. I suppose you had in mind
+sitting and flipping back a few trank pills."
+
+Joe looked at her. "I don't believe I've had a trank in the past twenty
+years, Miss Haer. Even as a boy, I didn't particularly take to having my
+senses dulled with drug-induced pleasure."
+
+Some of her fury was abating, but she was still critical of the
+professional mercenary. Her eyes went up and down his uniform in scorn.
+"You seem to make pretenses of being cultivated, captain. Then why your
+chosen profession?"
+
+He'd had the answer to that for long years. He said now, simply, "I told
+you I was born a Lower. Given that, little counts until I fight my way
+out of it. Had I been born in a feudalist society, I would have
+attempted to batter myself into the nobility. Under classical
+capitalism, I would have done my utmost to accumulate a fortune, enough
+to reach an effective position in society. Now, under People's
+Capitalism ..."
+
+She snorted, "Industrial Feudalism would be the better term."
+
+"... I realize I can't even start to fulfill myself until I am a member
+of the Upper caste."
+
+Her eyes had narrowed, and the anger was largely gone. "But you chose
+the military field in which to better yourself?"
+
+"Government propaganda to the contrary, it is practically impossible to
+raise yourself in other fields. I didn't build this world, possibly I
+don't even approve of it, but since I'm in it I have no recourse but to
+follow its rules."
+
+Her eyebrows arched. "Why not try to change the rules?"
+
+Joe blinked at her.
+
+Nadine Haer said, "Let's look up that refreshment you were talking
+about. In fact, there's a small coffee bar around the corner where it'd
+be possible for one of Baron Haer's brood to have a cup with one of her
+father's officers of Middle caste."
+
+
+
+
+VI
+
+
+The following morning, hands on the pillow beneath his head, Joe Mauser
+stared up at the ceiling of his room and rehashed his session with
+Nadine Haer. It hadn't taken him five minutes to come to the conclusion
+that he was in love with the girl, but it had taken him the rest of the
+evening to keep himself under rein and not let the fact get through to
+her.
+
+He wanted to talk about the way her mouth tucked in at the corners, but
+she was hot on the evolution of society. He would have liked to have
+kissed that impossibly perfectly shaped ear of hers, but she was all for
+exploring the reasons why man had reached his present impasse. Joe was
+for holding hands, and staring into each other's eyes, she was for
+delving into the differences between the West-world and the Sov-world
+and the possibility of resolving them.
+
+Of course, to keep her company at all it had been necessary to suppress
+his own desires and to go along. It obviously had never occurred to her
+that a Middle might have romantic ideas involving Nadine Haer. It had
+simply not occurred to her, no matter the radical teachings she
+advocated.
+
+Most of their world was predictable from what had gone before. In spite
+of popular fable to the contrary, the division between classes had
+become increasingly clear. Among other things, tax systems were such
+that it became all but impossible for a citizen born poor to accumulate
+a fortune. Through ability he might rise to the point of earning
+fabulous sums--and wind up in debt to the tax collector. A great
+inventor, a great artist, had little chance of breaking into the domain
+of what finally became the small percentage of the population now known
+as Uppers. Then, too, the rising cost of a really good education became
+such that few other than those born into the Middle or Upper castes
+could afford the best of schools. Castes tended to perpetuate
+themselves.
+
+Politically, the nation had fallen increasingly deeper into the
+two-party system, both parties of which were tightly controlled by the
+same group of Uppers. Elections had become a farce, a great national
+holiday in which stereotyped patriotic speeches, pretenses of unity
+between all castes, picnics, beer busts and trank binges predominated
+for one day.
+
+Economically, too, the augurs had been there. Production of the basics
+had become so profuse that poverty in the old sense of the word had
+become nonsensical. There was an abundance of the necessities of life
+for all. Social security, socialized medicine, unending unemployment
+insurance, old age pensions, pensions for veterans, for widows and
+children, for the unfit, pensions and doles for this, that and the
+other, had doubled, and doubled again, until everyone had security for
+life. The Uppers, true enough, had opulence far beyond that known by the
+Middles and lived like Gods compared to the Lowers. But all had
+security. They had agreed, thus far, Joe and Nadine. But then had come
+debate.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Then why," Joe had asked her, "haven't we achieved what your brother
+called it? Why isn't this Utopia? Isn't it what man has been yearning
+for, down through the ages? Where did the wheel come off? What happened
+to the dream?"
+
+Nadine had frowned at him--beautifully, he thought. "It's not the first
+time man has found abundance in a society, though never to this degree.
+The Incas had it, for instance."
+
+"I don't know much about them," Joe admitted. "An early form of
+communism with a sort of military-priesthood at the top."
+
+She had nodded, her face serious, as always. "And for themselves, the
+Romans more or less had it--at the expense of the nations they
+conquered, of course."
+
+"And--" Joe prodded.
+
+"And in these examples the same thing developed. Society ossified. Joe,"
+she said, using his first name for the first time, and in a manner that
+set off a new count down in his blood, "a ruling caste and a
+socio-economic system perpetuates itself, just so long as it ever can.
+No matter what damage it may do to society as a whole, it perpetuates
+itself even to the point of complete destruction of everything.
+
+"Remember Hitler? Adolf the Aryan and his Thousand Year Reich? When it
+became obvious he had failed, and the only thing that could result from
+continued resistance would be destruction of Germany's cities and
+millions of her people, did he and his clique resign or surrender?
+Certainly not. They attempted to bring down the whole German structure
+in a Goetterdammerung."
+
+Nadine Haer was deep into her theme, her eyes flashing her conviction.
+"A socio-economic system reacts like a living organism. It attempts to
+live on, indefinitely, agonizingly, no matter how antiquated it might
+have become. The Roman politico-economic system continued for centuries
+after it should have been replaced. Such reformers as the Gracchus
+brothers were assassinated or thrust aside so that the entrenched
+elements could perpetuate themselves, and when Rome finally fell,
+darkness descended for a thousand years on Western progress."
+
+Joe had never gone this far in his thoughts. He said now, somewhat
+uncomfortably, "Well, what would replace what we have now? If you took
+power from you Uppers, who could direct the country? The Lowers? That's
+not even funny. Take away their fracases and their trank pills and
+they'd go berserk. They don't _want_ anything else."
+
+Her mouth worked. "Admittedly, we've already allowed things to
+deteriorate much too far. We should have done something long ago. I'm
+not sure I know the answer. All I know is that in order to maintain the
+status quo, we're not utilizing the efforts of more than a fraction of
+our people. Nine out of ten of us spend our lives sitting before the
+Telly, sucking tranks. Meanwhile, the motivation for continued progress
+seems to have withered away. Our Upper political circles are afraid some
+seemingly minor change might avalanche, so more and more we lean upon
+the old way of doing things."
+
+Joe had put up mild argument. "I've heard the case made that the Lowers
+are fools and the reason our present socio-economic system makes it so
+difficult to rise from Lower to Upper is that you cannot make a fool
+understand he is one. You can only make him angry. If some, who are not
+fools, are allowed to advance from Lower to Upper, the vast mass who are
+fools will be angry because they are not allowed to. That's why the
+Military Category is made a channel of advance. To take that road, a man
+gives up his security and he'll die if he's a fool."
+
+Nadine had been scornful. "That reminds me of the old contention by
+racial segregationalists that the Negroes _smelled_ bad. First they put
+them in a position where they had insufficient bathing facilities, their
+diet inadequate, and their teeth uncared for, and then protested that
+they couldn't be associated with because of their odor. Today, we are
+born within our castes. If an Upper is inadequate, he nevertheless
+remains an Upper. An accident of birth makes him an aristocrat;
+environment, family, training, education, friends, traditions and laws
+maintain him in that position. But a Lower who potentially has the
+greatest of value to society, is born handicapped and he's hard put not
+to wind up before a Telly, in a mental daze from trank. Sure he's a
+fool, he's never been _allowed_ to develop himself."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Yes, Joe reflected now, it had been quite an evening. In a life of more
+than thirty years devoted to rebellion, he had never met anyone so
+outspoken as Nadine Haer, nor one who had thought it through as far as
+she had.
+
+He grunted. His own revolt was against the level at which he had found
+himself in society, not the structure of society itself. His whole
+_raison d'etre_ was to lift himself to Upper status. It came as a shock
+to him to find a person he admired who had been born into Upper caste,
+desirous of tearing the whole system down.
+
+His thoughts were interrupted by the door opening and the face of Max
+Mainz grinning in at him. Joe was mildly surprised at his orderly not
+knocking before opening the door. Max evidently had a lot to learn.
+
+The little man blurted, "Come on, Joe. Let's go out on the town!"
+
+"_Joe?_" Joe Mauser raised himself to one elbow and stared at the other.
+"Leaving aside the merits of your suggestion for the moment, do you
+think you should address an officer by his first name?"
+
+Max Mainz came fully into the bedroom, his grin still wider. "You
+forgot! It's election day!"
+
+"Oh." Joe Mauser relaxed into his pillow. "So it is. No duty for today,
+eh?"
+
+"No duty for anybody," Max crowed. "What'd you say we go into town and
+have a few drinks in one of the Upper bars?"
+
+Joe grunted, but began to arise. "What'll that accomplish? On election
+day, most of the Uppers get done up in their oldest clothes and go
+slumming down in the Lower quarters."
+
+Max wasn't to be put off so easily. "Well, wherever we go, let's get
+going. Zen! I'll bet this town is full of fracas buffs from as far as
+Philly. And on election day, to boot. Wouldn't it be something if I
+found me a real fracas fan, some Upper-Upper dame?"
+
+Joe laughed at him, even as he headed for the bathroom. As a matter of
+fact, he rather liked the idea of going into town for the show. "Max,"
+he said over his shoulder, "you're in for a big disappointment. They're
+all the same. Upper, Lower, or Middle."
+
+"Yeah?" Max grinned back at him. "Well, I'd like the pleasure of finding
+out if that's true by personal experience."
+
+
+
+
+VII
+
+
+In a far away past, Kingston had once been the capital of the United
+States. For a short time, when Washington's men were in flight after the
+debacle of their defeat in New York City, the government of the United
+Colonies had held session in this Hudson River town. It had been its one
+moment of historic glory, and afterward Kingston had slipped back into
+being a minor city on the edge of the Catskills, approximately halfway
+between New York and Albany.
+
+Of most recent years, it had become one of the two recruiting centers
+which bordered the Catskill Military Reservation, which in turn was one
+of the score or so population cleared areas throughout the continent
+where rival corporations or unions could meet and settle their
+differences in combat--given permission of the Military Category
+Department of the government. And permission was becoming ever easier to
+acquire.
+
+It had slowly evolved, the resorting to trial by combat to settle
+disputes between competing corporations, disputes between corporations
+and unions, disputes between unions over jurisdiction. Slowly, but
+predictably. Since the earliest days of the first industrial revolution,
+conflict between these elements had often broken into violence,
+sometimes on a scale comparable to minor warfare. An early example was
+the union organizing in Colorado when armed elements of the Western
+Federation of Miners shot it out with similarly armed "detectives" hired
+by the mine owners, and later with the troops of an unsympathetic State
+government.
+
+By the middle of the Twentieth-Century, unions had become one of the
+biggest businesses in the country, and by this time a considerable
+amount of the industrial conflict had shifted to fights between them for
+jurisdiction over dues-paying members. Battles on the waterfront,
+assassination and counter-assassination by gun-toting goon squads
+dominated by gangsters, industrial sabotage, frays between pickets and
+scabs--all were common occurrences.
+
+But it was the coming of Telly which increasingly brought such conflicts
+literally before the public eye. Zealous reporters made ever greater
+effort to bring the actual mayhem before the eyes of their viewers, and
+never were their efforts more highly rewarded.
+
+A society based upon private endeavor is as jealous of a vacuum as is
+Mother Nature. Give a desire that can be filled profitably, and the
+means can somehow be found to realize it.
+
+ * * *
+
+At one point in the nation's history, the railroad lords had dominated
+the economy, later it became the petroleum princes of Texas and
+elsewhere, but toward the end of the Twentieth Century the
+communications industries slowly gained prominence. Nothing was more
+greatly in demand than feeding the insatiable maw of the Telly fan,
+nothing, ultimately, became more profitable.
+
+And increasingly, the Telly buff endorsed the more sadistic of the
+fictional and nonfictional programs presented him. Even in the earliest
+years of the industry, producers had found that murder and mayhem, war
+and frontier gunfights, took precedence over less gruesome subjects.
+Music was drowned out by gunfire, the dance replaced by the shuffle of
+cowboy and rustler advancing down a dusty street toward each other,
+their fingertips brushing the grips of their six-shooters, the
+comedian's banter fell away before the chatter of the gangster's tommy
+gun.
+
+And increasing realism was demanded. The Telly reporter on the scene of
+a police arrest, preferably a murder, a rumble between rival gangs of
+juvenile delinquents, a longshoreman's fray in which scores of workers
+were hospitalized. When attempts were made to suppress such broadcasts,
+the howl of freedom of speech and the press went up, financed by tycoons
+clever enough to realize the value of the subjects they covered so
+adequately.
+
+The vacuum was there, the desire, the _need_. Bread the populace had.
+Trank was available to all. But the need was for the circus, the
+vicious, sadistic circus, and bit by bit, over the years and decades,
+the way was found to circumvent the country's laws and traditions to
+supply the need.
+
+Aye, a way is always found. The final Universal Disarmament Pact which
+had totally banned all weapons invented since the year 1900 and provided
+for complete inspection, had not ended the fear of war. And thus there
+was excuse to give the would-be soldier, the potential defender of the
+country in some future inter-nation conflict, practical experience.
+
+Slowly tolerance grew to allow union and corporation to fight it out,
+hiring the services of mercenaries. Slowly rules grew up to govern such
+fracases. Slowly a department of government evolved. The Military
+Category became as acceptable as the next, and the mercenary a valued,
+even idolized, member of society. And the field became practically the
+only one in which a status quo orientated socio-economic system allowed
+for advancement in caste.
+
+Joe Mauser and Max Mainz strolled the streets of Kingston in an extreme
+of atmosphere seldom to be enjoyed. Not only was the advent of a
+divisional magnitude fracas only a short period away, but the freedom of
+an election day as well. The carnival, the Mardi Gras, the fete, the
+fiesta, of an election. Election Day, when each aristocrat became only a
+man, and each man an aristocrat, free of all society's artificially
+conceived, caste-perpetuating rituals and taboos.
+
+Carnival! The day was young, but already the streets were thick with
+revelers, with dancers, with drunks. A score of bands played, youngsters
+in particular ran about attired in costume, there were barbeques and
+flowing beer kegs. On the outskirts of town were roller coasters and
+ferris wheels, fun houses and drive-it-yourself miniature cars.
+Carnival!
+
+Max said happily, "You drink, Joe? Or maybe you like trank, better."
+Obviously, he loved to roll the other's first name over his tongue.
+
+Joe wondered in amusement how often the little man had found occasion to
+call a Mid-Middle by his first name. "No trank," he said. "Alcohol for
+me. Mankind's old faithful."
+
+"Well," Max debated, "get high on alcohol and bingo, a hangover in the
+morning. But trank? You wake up with a smile."
+
+"And a desire for more trank to keep the mood going," Joe said wryly.
+"Get smashed on alcohol and you suffer for it eventually."
+
+"Well, that's one way of looking at it," Max argued happily. "So let's
+start off with a couple of quick ones in this here Upper joint."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Joe looked the place over. He didn't know Kingston overly well, but by
+the appearance of the building and by the entry, it was probably the
+swankiest hotel in town. He shrugged. So far as he was concerned, he
+appreciated the greater comfort and the better service of his Middle
+caste bars, restaurants and hotels over the ones he had patronized when
+a Lower. However, his wasn't an immediate desire to push into the
+preserves of the Uppers; not until he had won rightfully to their
+status.
+
+But on this occasion the little fellow wanted to drink at an Upper bar.
+Very well, it was election day. "Let's go," he said to Max.
+
+In the uniform of a Rank Captain of the Military Category, there was
+little to indicate caste level, and ordinarily given the correct air of
+nonchalance, Joe Mauser, in uniform, would have been able to go
+anywhere, without so much as a raised eyebrow--until he had presented
+his credit card, which indicated his caste. But Max was another thing.
+He was obviously a Lower, and probably a Low-Lower at that.
+
+But space was made for them at a bar packed with election day
+celebrants, politicians involved in the day's speeches and voting,
+higher ranking officers of the Haer forces, having a day off, and
+various Uppers of both sexes in town for the excitement of the fracas to
+come.
+
+"Beer," Joe said to the bartender.
+
+"Not me," Max crowed. "Champagne. Only the best for Max Mainz. Give me
+some of that champagne liquor I always been hearing about."
+
+Joe had the bill credited to his card, and they took their bottles and
+glasses to a newly abandoned table. The place was too packed to have
+awaited the services of a waiter, although poor Max probably would have
+loved such attention. Lower, and even Middle bars and restaurants were
+universally automated, and the waiter or waitress a thing of yesteryear.
+
+Max looked about the room in awe. "This is living," he announced. "I
+wonder what they'd say if I went to the desk and ordered a room."
+
+Joe Mauser wasn't as highly impressed as his batman. In fact, he'd often
+stayed in the larger cities, in hostelries as sumptuous as this, though
+only of Middle status. Kingston's best was on the mediocre side. He
+said, "They'd probably tell you they were filled up."
+
+Max was indignant. "Because I'm a Lower? It's _election_ day."
+
+Joe said mildly, "Because they probably are filled up. But for that
+matter, they might brush you off. It's not as though an Upper went to a
+Middle or Lower hotel and asked for accommodations. But what do you
+want, justice?"
+
+Max dropped it. He looked down into his glass. "Hey," he complained,
+"what'd they give me? This stuff tastes like weak hard cider."
+
+Joe laughed. "What did you think it was going to taste like?"
+
+Max took another unhappy sip. "I thought it was supposed to be the best
+drink you could buy. You know, really strong. It's just bubbly wine."
+
+A voice said, dryly, "Your companion doesn't seem to be a connoisseur of
+the French vintages, captain."
+
+Joe turned. Balt Haer and two others occupied the table next to them.
+
+Joe chuckled amiably and said, "Truthfully, it was my own reaction, the
+first time I drank sparkling wine, sir."
+
+"Indeed," Haer said. "I can imagine." He fluttered a hand. "Lieutenant
+Colonel Paul Warren of Marshal Cogswell's staff, and Colonel Lajos
+Arpad, of Budapest--Captain Joseph Mauser."
+
+Joe Mauser came to his feet and clicked his heels, bowing from the waist
+in approved military protocol. The other two didn't bother to come to
+their feet, but did condescend to shake hands.
+
+The Sov officer said, disinterestedly, "Ah yes, this is one of your
+fabulous customs, isn't it? On an election day, everyone is quite
+entitled to go anywhere. Anywhere at all. And, ah"--he made a sound
+somewhat like a giggle--"associate with anyone at all."
+
+Joe Mauser resumed his seat then looked at him. "That is correct. A
+custom going back to the early history of the country when all men were
+considered equal in such matters as law and civil rights. Gentlemen, may
+I present Rank Private Max Mainz, my orderly."
+
+Balt Haer, who had obviously already had a few, looked at him dourly.
+"You can carry these things to the point of the ludicrous, captain. For
+a man with your ambitions, I'm surprised."
+
+The infantry officer the younger Haer had introduced as Lieutenant
+Colonel Warren, of Stonewall Cogswell's staff, said idly, "Ambitions?
+Does the captain have ambitions? How in Zen can a Middle have ambitions,
+Balt?" He stared at Joe Mauser superciliously, but then scowled.
+"Haven't I seen you somewhere before?"
+
+Joe said evenly, "Yes, sir. Five years ago we were both with the marshal
+in a fracas on the Little Big Horn reservation. Your company was pinned
+down on a knoll by a battery of field artillery. The Marshal sent me to
+your relief. We sneaked in, up an arroyo, and were able to get most of
+you out."
+
+"I was wounded," the colonel said, the superciliousness gone and a
+strange element in his voice above the alcohol there earlier.
+
+Joe Mauser said nothing to that. Max Mainz was stirring unhappily now.
+These officers were talking above his head, even as they ignored him. He
+had a vague feeling that he was being defended by Captain Mauser, but he
+didn't know how, or why.
+
+Balt Haer had been occupied in shouting fresh drinks. Now he turned back
+to the table. "Well, colonel, it's all very secret, these ambitions of
+Captain Mauser. I understand he's been an aide de camp to Marshal
+Cogswell in the past, but the marshal will be distressed to learn that
+on this occasion Captain Mauser has a secret by which he expects to rout
+your forces. Indeed, yes, the captain is quite the strategist." Balt
+Haer laughed abruptly. "And what good will this do the captain? Why on
+my father's word, if he succeeds, all efforts will be made to make the
+captain a caste equal of ours. Not just on election day, mind you, but
+all three hundred sixty-five days of the year."
+
+Joe Mauser was on his feet, his face expressionless. He said, "Shall we
+go, Max? Gentlemen, it's been a pleasure. Colonel Arpad, a privilege to
+meet you. Colonel Warren, a pleasure to renew acquaintance." Joe Mauser
+turned and, trailed by his orderly, left.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Lieutenant Colonel Warren, pale, was on his feet too.
+
+Balt Haer was chuckling. "Sit down, Paul. Sit down. Not important enough
+to be angry about. The man's a clod."
+
+Warren looked at him bleakly. "I wasn't angry, Balt. The last time I saw
+Captain Mauser I was slung over his shoulder. He carried, tugged and
+dragged me some two miles through enemy fire."
+
+Balt Haer carried it off with a shrug. "Well, that's his profession.
+Category Military. A mercenary for hire. I assume he received his pay."
+
+"He could have left me. Common sense dictated that he leave me."
+
+Balt Haer was annoyed. "Well, then we see what I've contended all along.
+The ambitious captain doesn't have common sense."
+
+Colonel Paul Warren shook his head. "You're wrong there. Common sense
+Joseph Mauser has. Considerable ability, he has. He's one of the best
+combat men in the field. But I'd hate to serve under him."
+
+The Hungarian was interested. "But why?"
+
+"Because he doesn't have luck, and in the dill you need luck." Warren
+grunted in sour memory. "Had the Telly cameras been focused on Joe
+Mauser, there at the Little Big Horn, he would have been a month long
+sensation to the Telly buffs, with all that means." He grunted again.
+"There wasn't a Telly team within a mile."
+
+"The captain probably didn't realize that," Balt Haer snorted.
+"Otherwise his heroics would have been modified."
+
+Warren flushed his displeasure and sat down. He said, "Possibly we
+should discuss the business before us. If your father is in agreement,
+the fracas can begin in three days." He turned to the representative of
+the Sov-world. "You have satisfied yourselves that neither force is
+violating the Disarmament Pact?"
+
+Lajos Arpad nodded. "We will wish to have observers on the field,
+itself, of course. But preliminary observation has been satisfactory."
+He had been interested in the play between these two and the lower caste
+officer. He said now, "Pardon me. As you know, this is my first visit to
+the, uh _West_. I am fascinated. If I understand what just transpired,
+our Captain Mauser is a capable junior officer ambitious to rise in rank
+and status in your society." He looked at Balt Haer. "Why are you
+opposed to his so rising?"
+
+Young Haer was testy about the whole matter. "Of what purpose is an
+Upper caste if every Tom, Dick and Harry enters it at will?"
+
+Warren looked at the door through which Joe and Max had exited from the
+cocktail lounge. He opened his mouth to say something, closed it again,
+and held his peace.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+The Hungarian said, looking from one of them to the other, "In the
+Sov-world we seek out such ambitious persons and utilize their
+abilities."
+
+Lieutenant Colonel Warren laughed abruptly. "So do we here
+_theoretically_. We are _free_, whatever that means. However," he added
+sarcastically, "it does help to have good schooling, good connections,
+relatives in positions of prominence, abundant shares of good stocks,
+that sort of thing. And these one is born with, in this free world of
+ours, Colonel Arpad."
+
+The Sov military observer clucked his tongue. "An indication of a
+declining society."
+
+Balt Haer turned on him. "And is it any different in your world?" he
+said sneeringly. "Is it merely coincidence that the best positions in
+the Sov-world are held by Party members, and that it is all but
+impossible for anyone not born of Party member parents to become one?
+Are not the best schools filled with the children of Party members? Are
+not only Party members allowed to keep servants? And isn't it so that--"
+
+Lieutenant Colonel Warren said, "Gentlemen, let us not start World War
+Three at this spot, at this late occasion."
+
+
+
+
+VIII
+
+
+Baron Malcolm Haer's field headquarters were in the ruins of a farm
+house in a town once known as Bearsville. His forces, and those of
+Marshal Stonewall Cogswell, were on the march but as yet their main
+bodies had not come in contact. Save for skirmishes between cavalry
+units, there had been no action. The ruined farm house had been a victim
+of an earlier fracas in this reservation which had seen in its
+comparatively brief time more combat than Belgium, that cockpit of
+Europe.
+
+There was a sheen of oily moisture on the Baron's bulletlike head and
+his officers weren't particularly happy about it. Malcolm Haer
+characteristically went into a fracas with confidence, an aggressive
+confidence so strong that it often carried the day. In battles past, it
+had become a tradition that Haer's morale was worth a thousand men; the
+energy he expended was the despair of his doctors who had been warning
+him for a decade. But now, something was missing.
+
+A forefinger traced over the military chart before them. "So far as we
+know, Marshal Cogswell has established his command here in Saugerties.
+Anybody have any suggestions as to why?"
+
+A major grumbled, "It doesn't make much sense, sir. You know the
+marshal. It's probably a fake. If we have any superiority at all, it's
+our artillery."
+
+"And the old fox wouldn't want to join the issue on the plains, down
+near the river," a colonel added. "It's his game to keep up into the
+mountains with his cavalry and light infantry. He's got Jack Alshuler's
+cavalry. Most experienced veterans in the field."
+
+"I know who he's got," Haer growled in irritation. "Stop reminding me.
+Where in the devil is Balt?"
+
+"Coming up, sir," Balt Haer said. He had entered only moments ago, a
+sheaf of signals in his hand. "Why didn't they make that date 1910,
+instead of 1900? With radio, we could speed up communications--"
+
+His father interrupted testily. "Better still, why not make it 1945?
+Then we could speed up to the point where we could polish ourselves off.
+What have you got?"
+
+Balt Haer said, his face in sulk, "Some of my lads based in West Hurley
+report concentrations of Cogswell's infantry and artillery near Ashokan
+reservoir."
+
+"Nonsense," somebody snapped. "We'd have him."
+
+The younger Haer slapped his swagger stick against his bare leg and
+kilt. "Possibly it's a feint," he admitted.
+
+"How much were they able to observe?" his father demanded.
+
+"Not much. They were driven off by a superior squadron. The Hovercraft
+forces are screening everything they do with heavy cavalry units. I told
+you we needed more--"
+
+"I don't need your advice at this point," his father snapped. The older
+Haer went back to the map, scowling still. "I don't see what he expects
+to do, working out of Saugerties."
+
+A voice behind them said, "Sir, may I have your permission--"
+
+Half of the assembled officers turned to look at the newcomer.
+
+Balt Haer snapped, "Captain Mauser. Why aren't you with your lads?"
+
+"Turned them over to my second in command, sir," Joe Mauser said. He was
+standing to attention, looking at Baron Haer.
+
+The Baron glowered at him. "What is the meaning of this cavalier
+intrusion, captain? Certainly, you must have your orders. Are you under
+the illusion that you are part of my staff?"
+
+"No, sir," Joe Mauser clipped. "I came to report that I am ready to put
+into execution--"
+
+"The great plan!" Balt Haer ejaculated. He laughed brittlely. "The
+second day of the fracas, and nobody really knows where old Cogswell is,
+or what he plans to do. And here comes the captain with his secret
+plan."
+
+Joe looked at him. He said, evenly, "Yes, sir."
+
+The Baron's face had gone dark, as much in anger at his son, as with the
+upstart cavalry captain. He began to growl ominously, "Captain Mauser,
+rejoin your command and obey your orders."
+
+Joe Mauser's facial expression indicated that he had expected this. He
+kept his voice level however, even under the chuckling scorn of his
+immediate superior, Balt Haer.
+
+He said, "Sir, I will be able to tell you where Marshal Cogswell is, and
+every troop at his command."
+
+For a moment there was silence, all but a stunned silence. Then the
+major who had suggested the Saugerties field command headquarters were a
+fake, blurted a curt laugh.
+
+"This is no time for levity, captain," Balt Haer clipped. "Get to your
+command."
+
+A colonel said, "Just a moment, sir. I've fought with Joe Mauser before.
+He's a good man."
+
+"Not that good," someone else huffed. "Does he claim to be clairvoyant?"
+
+Joe Mauser said flatly. "Have a semaphore man posted here this
+afternoon. I'll be back at that time." He spun on his heel and left
+them.
+
+Balt Haer rushed to the door after him, shouting, "Captain! That's an
+order! Return--"
+
+But the other was obviously gone. Enraged, the younger Haer began to
+shrill commands to a noncom in the way of organizing a pursuit.
+
+His father called wearily, "That's enough, Balt. Mauser has evidently
+taken leave of his senses. We made the initial mistake of encouraging
+this idea he had, or thought he had."
+
+"_We?_" his son snapped in return. "I had nothing to do with it."
+
+"All right, all right. Let's tighten up, here. Now, what other
+information have your scouts come up with?"
+
+
+
+
+IX
+
+
+At the Kingston airport, Joe Mauser rejoined Max Mainz, his face drawn
+now.
+
+"Everything go all right?" the little man said anxiously.
+
+"I don't know," Joe said. "I still couldn't tell them the story. Old
+Cogswell is as quick as a coyote. We pull this little caper today, and
+he'll be ready to meet it tomorrow."
+
+He looked at the two-place sailplane which sat on the tarmac.
+"Everything all set?"
+
+"Far as I know," Max said. He looked at the motorless aircraft. "You
+sure you been checked out on these things, captain?"
+
+"Yes," Joe said. "I bought this particular soaring glider more than a
+year ago, and I've put almost a thousand hours in it. Now, where's the
+pilot of that light plane?"
+
+A single-engined sports plane was attached to the glider by a fifty-foot
+nylon rope. Even as Joe spoke, a youngster poked his head from the
+plane's window and grinned back at them. "Ready?" he yelled.
+
+"Come on, Max," Joe said. "Let's pull the canopy off this thing. We
+don't want it in the way while you're semaphoring."
+
+A figure was approaching them from the Administration Building. A
+uniformed man, and somehow familiar.
+
+"A moment, Captain Mauser!"
+
+Joe placed him now. The Sov-world representative he'd met at Balt Haer's
+table in the Upper bar a couple of days ago. What was his name? Colonel
+Arpad. Lajos Arpad.
+
+The Hungarian approached and looked at the sailplane in interest. "As a
+representative of my government, a military attache checking upon
+possible violations of the Universal Disarmament Pact, may I request
+what you are about to do, captain?"
+
+Joe Mauser looked at him emptily. "How did you know I was here and what
+I was doing?"
+
+The Sov colonel smiled gently. "It was by suggestion of Marshal
+Cogswell. He is a great man for detail. It disturbed him that an ...
+what did he call it? ... an _old pro_ like yourself should join with
+Vacuum Tube Transport, rather than Continental Hovercraft. He didn't
+think it made sense and suggested that possibly you had in mind some
+scheme that would utilize weapons of a post 1900 period in your efforts
+to bring success to Baron Haer's forces. So I have investigated, Captain
+Mauser."
+
+"And the marshal knows about this sail plane?" Joe Mauser's face was
+blank.
+
+"I didn't say that. So far as I know, he doesn't."
+
+"Then, Colonel Arpad, with your permission, I'll be taking off."
+
+The Hungarian said, "With what end in mind, captain?"
+
+"Using this glider as a reconnaissance aircraft."
+
+"Captain, I warn you! Aircraft were not in use in warfare until--"
+
+But Joe Mauser cut him off, equally briskly. "Aircraft were first used
+in combat by Pancho Villa's forces a few years previous to World War I.
+They were also used in the Balkan Wars of about the same period. But
+those were powered craft. This is a glider, invented and in use before
+the year 1900 and hence open to utilization."
+
+The Hungarian clipped, "But the Wright Brothers didn't fly even gliders
+until--"
+
+Joe looked him full in the face. "But you of the Sov-world do not admit
+that the Wrights were the first to fly, do you?"
+
+The Hungarian closed his mouth, abruptly.
+
+Joe said evenly, "But even if Ivan Ivanovitch, or whatever you claim his
+name was, didn't invent flight of heavier than air craft, the glider was
+flown variously before 1900, including Otto Lilienthal in the 1890s, and
+was designed as far back as Leonardo da Vinci."
+
+The Sov-world colonel stared at him for a long moment, then gave an
+inane giggle. He stepped back and flicked Joe Mauser a salute. "Very
+well, captain. As a matter of routine, I shall report this use of an
+aircraft for reconnaissance purposes, and undoubtedly a commission will
+meet to investigate the propriety of the departure. Meanwhile, good
+luck!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Joe returned the salute and swung a leg over the cockpit's side. Max was
+already in the front seat, his semaphore flags, maps and binoculars on
+his lap. He had been staring in dismay at the Sov officer, now was
+relieved that Joe had evidently pulled it off.
+
+Joe waved to the plane ahead. Two mechanics had come up to steady the
+wings for the initial ten or fifteen feet of the motorless craft's
+passage over the ground behind the towing craft.
+
+Joe said to Max, "did you explain to the pilot that under no
+circumstances was he to pass over the line of the military reservation,
+that we'd cut before we reached that point?"
+
+"Yes, sir," Max said nervously. He'd flown before, on the commercial
+lines, but he'd never been in a glider.
+
+They began lurching across the field, slowly, then gathering speed. And
+as the sailplane took speed, it took grace. After it had been pulled a
+hundred feet or so, Joe eased back the stick and it slipped gently into
+the air, four or five feet off the ground. The towing airplane was
+still taxiing, but with its tow airborne it picked up speed quickly.
+Another two hundred feet and it, too, was in the air and beginning to
+climb. The glider behind held it to a speed of sixty miles or so.
+
+At ten thousand feet, the plane leveled off and the pilot's head
+swiveled to look back at them. Joe Mauser waved to him and dropped the
+release lever which ejected the nylon rope from the glider's nose. The
+plane dove away, trailing the rope behind it. Joe knew that the plane
+pilot would later drop it over the airport where it could easily be
+retrieved.
+
+In the direction of Mount Overlook he could see cumulus clouds and the
+dark turbulence which meant strong updraft. He headed in that direction.
+
+Except for the whistling of wind, there is complete silence in a soaring
+glider. Max Mainz began to call back to his superior, was taken back by
+the volume, and dropped his voice. He said, "Look, captain. What keeps
+it up?"
+
+Joe grinned. He liked the buoyance of glider flying, the nearest
+approach of man to the bird, and thus far everything was going well. He
+told Max, "An airplane plows through the air currents, a glider rides on
+top of them."
+
+"Yeah, but suppose the current is going down?"
+
+"Then we avoid it. This sailplane only has a gliding angle ratio of one
+to twenty-five, but it's a workhorse with a payload of some four hundred
+pounds. A really high performance glider can have a ratio of as much as
+one to forty."
+
+Joe had found a strong updraft where a wind ran up the side of a
+mountain. He banked, went into a circling turn. The gauge indicated they
+were climbing at the rate of eight meters per second, nearly fifteen
+hundred feet a minute.
+
+Max hadn't got the rundown on the theory of the glider. That was obvious
+in his expression.
+
+Joe Mauser, even while searching the ground below keenly, went into it
+further. "A wind up against a mountain will give an updraft, storm
+clouds will, even a newly plowed field in a bright sun. So you go from
+one of these to the next."
+
+"Yeah, great, but when you're between," Max protested.
+
+"Then, when you have a one to twenty-five ratio, you go twenty-five feet
+forward for each one you drop. If you started a mile high, you could go
+twenty-five miles before you touched ground." He cut himself off
+quickly. "Look, what's that, down there? Get your glasses on it."
+
+Max caught his excitement. His binoculars were tight to his eyes.
+"Sojers. Cavalry. They sure ain't ours. They must be Hovercraft lads.
+And look, field artillery."
+
+Joe Mauser was piloting with his left hand, his right smoothing out a
+chart on his lap. He growled, "What are they doing there? That's at
+least a full brigade of cavalry. Here, let me have those glasses."
+
+With his knees gripping the stick, he went into a slow circle, as he
+stared down at the column of men. "Jack Alshuler," he whistled in
+surprise. "The marshal's crack heavy cavalry. And several batteries of
+artillery." He swung the glasses in a wider scope and the whistle turned
+into a hiss of comprehension. "They're doing a complete circle of the
+reservation. They're going to hit the Baron from the direction of
+Phoenicia."
+
+
+
+
+X
+
+
+Marshal Stonewall Cogswell directed his old fashioned telescope in the
+direction his chief of staff indicated.
+
+"What is it?" he grunted.
+
+"It's an airplane, sir."
+
+"Over a military reservation with a fracas in progress?"
+
+"Yes, sir." The other put his glasses back on the circling object. "Then
+what is it, sir? Certainly not a free balloon."
+
+"Balloons," the marshal snorted, as though to himself. "Legal to use.
+The Union forces had them toward the end of the Civil War. But
+practically useless in a fracas of movement."
+
+They were standing before the former resort hotel which housed the
+marshal's headquarters. Other staff members were streaming from the
+building, and one of the ever-present Telly reporting crews were
+hurriedly setting up cameras.
+
+The marshal turned and barked, "Does anybody know what in Zen that
+confounded thing, circling up there, is?"
+
+Baron Zwerdling, the aging Category Transport magnate, head of
+Continental Hovercraft, hobbled onto the wooden veranda and stared with
+the others. "An airplane," he croaked. "Haer's gone too far this time.
+Too far, too far. This will strip him. Strip him, understand." Then he
+added, "Why doesn't it make any noise?"
+
+Lieutenant Colonel Paul Warren stood next to his commanding officer. "It
+looks like a glider, sir."
+
+Cogswell glowered at him. "A what?"
+
+"A glider, sir. It's a sport not particularly popular these days."
+
+"What keeps it up, confound it?"
+
+Paul Warren looked at him. "The same thing that keeps a hawk up, an
+albatross, a gull--"
+
+"A vulture, you mean," Cogswell snarled. He watched it for another long
+moment, his face working. He whirled on his chief of artillery. "Jed,
+can you bring that thing down?"
+
+The other had been viewing the craft through field binoculars, his face
+as shocked as the rest of them. Now he faced his chief, and lowered the
+glasses, shaking his head. "Not with the artillery of pre-1900. No,
+sir."
+
+"What can you do?" Cogswell barked.
+
+The artillery man was shaking his head. "We could mount some Maxim guns
+on wagon wheels, or something. Keep him from coming low."
+
+"He doesn't have to come low," Cogswell growled unhappily. He spun on
+Lieutenant Colonel Warren again. "When were they invented?" He jerked
+his thumb upward. "Those things."
+
+Warren was twisting his face in memory. "Some time about the turn of the
+century."
+
+"How long can the things stay up?"
+
+Warren took in the surrounding mountainous countryside. "Indefinitely,
+sir. A single pilot, as long as he is physically able to operate. If
+there are two pilots up there to relieve each other, they could stay
+until food and water ran out."
+
+"How much weight do they carry?"
+
+"I'm not sure. One that size, certainly enough for two men and any
+equipment they'd need. Say, five hundred pounds."
+
+Cogswell had his telescope glued to his eyes again, he muttered under
+his breath, "Five hundred pounds! They could even unload dynamite over
+our horses. Stampede them all over the reservation."
+
+"What's going on?" Baron Zwerdling shrilled. "What's going on Marshal
+Cogswell?"
+
+Cogswell ignored him. He watched the circling, circling craft for a full
+five minutes, breathing deeply. Then he lowered his glass and swept the
+assembled officers of his staff with an indignant glare. "Ten Eyck!" he
+grunted.
+
+An infantry colonel came to attention. "Yes, sir."
+
+Cogswell said heavily, deliberately. "Under a white flag. A dispatch to
+Baron Haer. My compliments and request for his terms. While you're at
+it, my compliments also to Captain Joseph Mauser."
+
+Zwerdling was bug-eyeing him. "Terms!" he rasped.
+
+The marshal turned to him. "Yes, sir. Face reality. We're in the dill. I
+suggest you sue for terms as short of complete capitulation as you can
+make them."
+
+"You call yourself a soldier--!" the transport tycoon began to shrill.
+
+"Yes, sir," Cogswell snapped. "A soldier, not a butcher of the lads
+under me." He called to the Telly reporter who was getting as much of
+this as he could. "Mr. Soligen, isn't it?"
+
+ * * *
+
+The reporter scurried forward, flicking signals to his cameramen for
+proper coverage. "Yes, sir. Freddy Soligen, marshal. Could you tell the
+Telly fans what this is all about, Marshal Cogswell? Folks, you all know
+the famous marshal. Marshal Stonewall Cogswell, who hasn't lost a fracas
+in nearly ten years, now commanding the forces of Continental
+Hovercraft."
+
+"I'm losing one now," Cogswell said grimly. "Vacuum Tube Transport has
+pulled a gimmick out of the hat and things have pickled for us. It will
+be debated before the Military Category Department, of course, and
+undoubtedly the Sov-world military attaches will have things to say. But
+as it appears now, the fracas as we have known it, has been
+revolutionized."
+
+"Revolutionized?" Even the Telly reporter was flabbergasted. "You mean
+by that thing?" He pointed upward, and the lenses of the cameras
+followed his finger.
+
+"Yes," Cogswell growled unhappily. "Do all of you need a blueprint? Do
+you think I can fight a fracas with that thing dangling above me,
+throughout the day hours? Do you understand the importance of
+reconnaissance in warfare?" His eyes glowered. "Do you think Napoleon
+would have lost Waterloo if he'd had the advantage of perfect
+reconnaissance such as that thing can deliver? Do you think Lee would
+have lost Gettysburg? Don't be ridiculous." He spun on Baron Zwerdling,
+who was stuttering his complete confusion.
+
+"As it stands, Baron Haer knows every troop dispensation I make. All I
+know of his movements are from my cavalry scouts. I repeat, I am no
+butcher, sir. I will gladly cross swords with Baron Haer another day,
+when I, too, have ... what did you call the confounded things, Paul?"
+
+"Gliders," Lieutenant Colonel Warren said.
+
+
+
+
+XI
+
+
+Major Joseph Mauser, now attired in his best off-duty Category Military
+uniform, spoke his credentials to the receptionist. "I have no definite
+appointment, but I am sure the Baron will see me," he said.
+
+"Yes, sir." The receptionist did the things that receptionists do, then
+looked up at him again. "Right through that door, major."
+
+Joe Mauser gave the door a quick double rap and then entered before
+waiting an answer.
+
+Balt Haer, in mufti, was standing at a far window, a drink in his hand,
+rather than his customary swagger stick. Nadine Haer sat in an
+easy-chair. The girl Joe Mauser loved had been crying.
+
+Joe Mauser, suppressing his frown, made with the usual amenities.
+
+Balt Haer without answering them, finished his drink in a gulp and
+stared at the newcomer. The old stare, the aloof stare, an aristocrat
+looking at an underling as though wondering what made the fellow tick.
+He said, finally, "I see you have been raised to Rank Major."
+
+"Yes, sir," Joe said.
+
+"We are obviously occupied, major. What can either my sister or I
+possibly do for you?"
+
+Joe kept his voice even. He said, "I wanted to see the Baron."
+
+Nadine Haer looked up, a twinge of pain crossing her face.
+
+"Indeed," Balt Haer said flatly. "You are talking to the Baron, Major
+Mauser."
+
+Joe Mauser looked at him, then at his sister, who had taken to her
+handkerchief again. Consternation ebbed up and over him in a flood. He
+wanted to say something such as, "Oh _no_," but not even that could he
+utter.
+
+Haer was bitter. "I assume I know why you are here, major. You have come
+for your pound of flesh, undoubtedly. Even in these hours of our
+grief--"
+
+"I ... I didn't know. Please believe ..."
+
+"... You are so constituted that your ambition has no decency. Well,
+Major Mauser, I can only say that your arrangement was with my father.
+Even if I thought it a reasonable one, I doubt if I would sponsor your
+ambitions myself."
+
+Nadine Haer looked up wearily. "Oh, Balt, come off it," she said. "The
+fact is, the Haer fortunes contracted a debt to you, major.
+Unfortunately, it is a debt we cannot pay." She looked into his face.
+"First, my father's governmental connections do not apply to us. Second,
+six months ago, my father, worried about his health and attempting to
+avoid certain death taxes, transferred the family stocks into Balt's
+name. And Balt saw fit, immediately before the fracas, to sell all
+Vacuum Tube Transport stocks, and invest in Hovercraft."
+
+"That's enough, Nadine," her brother snapped nastily.
+
+"I see," Joe said. He came to attention. "Dr. Haer, my apologies for
+intruding upon you in your time of bereavement." He turned to the new
+Baron. "Baron Haer, my apologies for _your_ bereavement."
+
+Balt Haer glowered at him.
+
+Joe Mauser turned and marched for the door which he opened then closed
+behind him.
+
+On the street, before the New York offices of Vacuum Tube Transport, he
+turned and for a moment looked up at the splendor of the building.
+
+Well, at least the common shares of the concern had skyrocketed
+following the victory. His rank had been upped to Major, and old
+Stonewall Cogswell had offered him a permanent position on his staff in
+command of aerial operations, no small matter of prestige. The
+difficulty was, he wasn't interested in the added money that would
+accrue to him, nor the higher rank--nor the prestige, for that matter.
+
+He turned to go to his hotel.
+
+An unbelievably beautiful girl came down the steps of the building. She
+said, "Joe."
+
+He looked at her. "Yes?"
+
+She put a hand on his sleeve. "Let's go somewhere and talk, Joe."
+
+"About what?" He was infinitely weary now.
+
+"About goals," she said. "As long as they exist, whether for
+individuals, or nations, or a whole species, life is still worth the
+living. Things are a bit bogged down right now, but at the risk of
+sounding very trite, there's tomorrow."
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Note:
+
+ This etext was produced from _Analog_ April 1962. Extensive research
+ did not uncover any evidence that the U.S. copyright on this
+ publication was renewed. Minor spelling and typographical errors
+ have been corrected without note.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Mercenary, by Dallas McCord Reynolds
+
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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #24370 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/24370)