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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Invaders, by William Fitzgerald Jenkins
+
+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: The Invaders
+
+Author: William Fitzgerald Jenkins
+
+Release Date: February 21, 2010 [EBook #31343]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE INVADERS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Greg Weeks, Stephen Blundell and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+THE INVADERS
+
+By MURRAY LEINSTER
+
+
+ _It started in Greece on the day after tomorrow. Before the last act
+ raced to a close, Coburn was buried to his ears in assorted
+ adventures, including a revolution and an invasion from outer
+ space!_
+
+ _We're not given to throwing around the word "epic" lightly, but
+ here _is_ one! Swashbuckling action, a great many vivid characters,
+ and a weird mystery--all spun for you by one of the master
+ story-tellers of our time._
+
+
+On a certain day--it may be in the history books eventually--Coburn was
+in the village of Ardea, north of Salonika in the most rugged part of
+Greece. He was making a survey for purposes which later on turned out
+not to matter much. The village of Ardea was small, it was very early in
+the morning, and he was trying to get his car started when he heard the
+yell.
+
+It was a shrill yell, and it traveled fast. Coburn jerked his head
+upright from the hood of the car. A whiskered villager with flapping
+trousers came pounding up the single street. His eyes were
+panic-stricken and his mouth was wide. He emitted the yell in a long,
+sustained note. Other villagers popped into view like ants from a
+disturbed ant-hill. Some instantly ran back into their houses. Others
+began to run toward the outskirts of the village, toward the south.
+
+Coburn, watching blankly, found himself astonished at the number of
+people the village contained. He hadn't dreamed it was so populous. All
+were in instant frenzied flight toward the mountains. An old woman he'd
+seen barely hobbling, now ran like a deer. Children toddled desperately.
+Adults snatched them up and ran. Larger children fled on twinkling legs.
+The inhabitants of Ardea vanished toward the hills in a straggling,
+racing, panting stream. They disappeared around an outcrop of stone
+which was merely the nearest place that would hide them. Then there was
+silence.
+
+Coburn turned his head blankly in the direction from which they had run.
+He saw the mountains--incredibly stony and barren. That was all. No, not
+quite--there was something far away which was subtly different in color
+from the hillsides. It moved. It flowed over a hill crest, coming
+plainly from somewhere beyond the mountains. It was vague in shape.
+Coburn felt a momentary stirring of superstition. There simply couldn't
+be anything so huge....
+
+But there could. There was. It was a column of soldiers in uniforms that
+looked dark-gray at this distance. It flowed slowly out of the mountains
+like a colossal snake--some Midgard monster or river of destruction. It
+moved with an awful, deliberate steadiness toward the village of Ardea.
+
+Coburn caught his breath. Then he was running too. He was out of the
+village almost before he realized it. He did not try to follow the
+villagers. He might lead pursuers after them. There was a narrow defile
+nearby. Tanks could hardly follow it, and it did not lead where they
+would be going. He plunged into it and was instantly hidden. He pelted
+on. It was a trail from somewhere, because he saw ancient
+donkey-droppings on the stones, but he did not know where it led. He
+simply ran to get away from the village and the soldiers who were coming
+toward it.
+
+This was Greece. They were Bulgarian soldiers. This was not war or even
+invasion. This was worse--a cold-war raid. He kept running and presently
+rocky cliffs overhung him on one side, a vast expanse of sky loomed to
+his left. He found himself panting. He began to hope that he was
+actually safe.
+
+Then he heard a voice. It sounded vexed. Quite incredibly, it was
+talking English. "But my dear young lady!" it said severely. "You simply
+mustn't go on! There's the very devil of a mess turning up, and you
+mustn't run into it!"
+
+A girl's voice answered, also in English. "I'm sure--I don't know what
+you're talking about!"
+
+"I'm afraid I can't explain. But, truly, you mustn't go on to the
+village!"
+
+Coburn pushed ahead. He came upon the people who had spoken. There was a
+girl riding on a donkey. She was American. Trim. Neat. Uneasy, but
+reasonably self-confident. And there was a man standing by the trail,
+with a slide of earth behind him and mud on his boots as if he'd slid
+down somewhere very fast to intercept this girl. He wore the distinctive
+costume a British correspondent is apt to affect in the wilds.
+
+They turned as Coburn came into view. The girl goggled at him. He was
+not exactly the sort of third person one expected to find on a very
+lonely, ill-defined rocky trail many miles north of Salonika.
+
+When they turned to him, Coburn recognized the man. He'd met Dillon once
+or twice in Salonika. He panted: "Dillon! There's a column of soldiers
+headed across the border! Bulgarians!"
+
+"How close?" asked Dillon.
+
+"They're coming," said Coburn, with some difficulty due to lack of
+breath. "I saw them across the valley. Everybody's run away from the
+village. I was the last one out."
+
+Dillon nodded composedly. He looked intently at Coburn. "You know me,"
+he said reservedly. "Should I remember you?"
+
+"I've met you once or twice," Coburn told him. "In Salonika."
+
+"Oh," said Dillon. "Oh, yes. Sorry. I've got some cameras up yonder. I
+want a picture or two of those Bulgarians. See if you can persuade this
+young lady not to go on. I fancy it's safe enough here. Not a normal
+raid route through this pass."
+
+Coburn nodded. Dillon expected the raid, evidently. This sort of thing
+had happened in Turkey. Now it would start up here, in Greece. The
+soldiers would strike fast and far, at first. They wouldn't stop to hunt
+down the local inhabitants. Not yet.
+
+"We'll wait," said Coburn. "You'll be back?"
+
+"Oh, surely!" said Dillon. "Five minutes or less."
+
+He started up the precipitous wall, at whose bottom he had slid down. He
+climbed remarkably well. He went up hand-over-hand despite the steepness
+of the stone. It looked almost impossible, but Dillon apparently found
+handgrips by instinct, as a good climber does. In a matter of minutes
+he vanished, some fifty feet up, behind a bulging mass of stone. He did
+not reappear.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Coburn began to get his breath back. The girl looked at him, her
+forehead creased.
+
+"Just to make sure," said Coburn, "I'll see if I can get a view back
+down the trail."
+
+Where the vastness of the sky showed, he might be able to look down. He
+scrambled up a barrier two man-heights high. There was a screen of
+straggly brush, with emptiness beyond. He peered.
+
+He could see a long way down and behind, and actually the village was
+clearly in sight from here. There were rumbling, caterpillar-tread tanks
+in the act of entering it. There were anachronistic mounted men with
+them. Cavalry is outdated, nowadays, but in rocky mountain country they
+can have uses where tanks can't go. But here tanks and cavalry looked
+grim. Coburn squirmed back and beckoned to the girl. She joined him.
+They peered through the brushwood together.
+
+The light tanks were scurrying along the single village street. Horsemen
+raced here and there. A pig squealed. There was a shot. The tanks
+emerged from the other side. They went crawling swiftly toward the
+south. But they did not turn aside where the villagers had. They headed
+along the way Coburn had driven to Ardea.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+Infantrymen appeared, marching into the village. An advance party,
+rifles ready. This was strict discipline and standard military practise.
+Horsemen rode to tell them that all was quiet. They turned and spurred
+away after the tanks.
+
+The girl said in a strained voice. "This is war starting! Invasion!"
+
+Coburn said coldly, "No. No planes. This isn't war. It's a training
+exercise, Iron-Curtain style. This outfit will strike twenty--maybe
+thirty miles south. There's a town there--Kilkis. They'll take it and
+loot it. By the time Athens finds out what's happened, they'll be ready
+to fall back. They'll do a little fighting. They'll carry off the
+people. And they'll deny everything. The West doesn't want war. Greece
+couldn't fight by herself. And America wouldn't believe that such things
+could happen. But they do. It's what's called cold war. Ever hear of
+that?"
+
+The main column of soldiers far below poured up to the village and went
+down the straggly street in a tide of dark figures. The village was very
+small. The soldiers came out of the other end of the village. They
+poured on after the tanks, rippling over irregularities in the way.
+They seemed innumerable.
+
+"Three or four thousand men," said Coburn coldly. "This is a big raid.
+But it's not war. Not yet."
+
+It was not the time for full-scale war. Bulgaria and the other countries
+in its satellite status were under orders to put a strain upon the
+outside world. They were building up border incidents and turmoil for
+the benefit of their masters. Turkey was on a war footing, after a
+number of incidents like this. Indo-China was at war. Korea was an old
+story. Now Greece. It always takes more men to guard against criminal
+actions than to commit them. When this raid was over Greece would have
+to maintain a full-size army in its northern mountains to guard against
+its repetition. Which would be a strain on its treasury and might help
+toward bankruptcy. This was cold war.
+
+The infantry ended. Horse-drawn vehicles appeared in a seemingly endless
+line. Motorized transport would be better, but the Bulgarians were short
+of it. Shaggy, stubby animals plodded in the wake of the tanks and the
+infantry. There were two-wheeled carts in single file all across the
+valley. They went through the village and filed after the soldiers.
+
+"I think," said Coburn in biting anger, "this will be all there is to
+see. They'll go in until they're stopped. They'll kidnap Greek civilians
+and later work them to death in labor camps. They'll carry off some
+children to raise as spies. But their purpose is probably only to make
+such a threat that the Greeks will go broke guarding against them. They
+know the Greeks don't want war."
+
+He began to wriggle back from the brushwood screen. He was filled with
+the sort of sick rage that comes when you can't actively resent
+insolence and arrogance. He hated the people who wanted the world to
+collapse, and this was part of their effort to bring it about.
+
+He helped the girl down. "Dillon said to wait," he said. He found
+himself shaking with anger at the men who had ordered the troops to
+march. "He said he was taking pictures. He must have had an advance tip
+of some sort. If so, he'll have a line of retreat."
+
+Then Coburn frowned. Not quite plausible, come to think of it. But
+Dillon had certainly known about the raid. He was set to take pictures,
+and he hadn't been surprised. One would have expected Greek Army
+photographers on hand to take pictures of a raid of which they had
+warning. Probably United Nations observers on the scene, too. Yes. There
+should be Army men and probably a United Nations team up where Dillon
+was.
+
+Coburn explained to the girl. "That'll be it. And they'll have a radio,
+too. Probably helicopters taking them out also. I'll go up and tell them
+to be sure and have room for you."
+
+He started for the cliff he'd seen Dillon climb. He paused: "I'd better
+have your name for them to report to Athens."
+
+"I'm Janice Ames," she told him. "The Breen Foundation has me going
+around arranging for lessons for the people up here. Sanitation and
+nutrition and midwifery, and so on. The Foundation office is in
+Salonika, though."
+
+He nodded and attacked the cliff.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It hadn't been a difficult climb for Dillon. It wasn't even a long one
+for Coburn, but it was much worse than he'd thought. The crevices for
+handholds were rare, and footholds were almost non-existent. There were
+times when he felt he was holding on by his fingernails. Dillon seemed
+to have made it with perfect ease, but Coburn found it exhausting.
+
+Fifty feet up he came to the place where Dillon had vanished. But it was
+a preposterously difficult task to get across an undercut to where he
+could grasp a stunted tree. It was a strain to scramble up past it. Then
+he found himself on the narrowest of possible ledges, with a sickening
+drop off to one side. But Dillon had made it, so he followed.
+
+He went a hundred yards, and then the ledge came to an end. He saw where
+Dillon must have climbed. It was possible, but Coburn violently did not
+want to try. Still ... He started.
+
+Then something clicked in his throat. There was a rather deep ledge for
+a space of four or five feet. And there was Dillon. No, not Dillon. Just
+Dillon's clothes. They lay flat and deflated, but laid out in one
+assembly beside a starveling twisted bush. It would have been possible
+for a man to stand there to take off his clothes, if he wanted to. But a
+man who takes off his clothes--and why should Dillon do that?--takes
+them off one by one. These garments were fitted together. The coat was
+over the shirt, and the trousers fitted to the bottom of the shirt over
+the coat, and the boots were at the ends of the trouser legs.
+
+Then Coburn saw something he did not believe. It palpably was not true.
+He saw a hand sticking out of the end of the sleeve. But it was not a
+hand, because it had collapsed. It was rather like an unusually thick
+glove, flesh color.
+
+Then he saw what should have been Dillon's head. And it was in place,
+too. But it was not Dillon's head. It was not a head at all. It was
+something quite different. There were no eyes. Merely holes. Openings.
+Like a mask.
+
+Coburn felt a sort of roaring in his ears, and he could not think
+clearly for a moment because of the shrieking impossibility of what he
+was looking at. Dillon's necktie had been very neatly untied, and left
+in place in his collar. His shirt had been precisely unbuttoned. He had
+plainly done it himself. And then--the unbuttoned shirt made it
+clear--he had come out of his body. Physically, he had emerged and gone
+on. The thing lying flat that had lapsed at Coburn's feet was Dillon's
+outside. His outside only. The inside had come out and gone away. It had
+climbed the cliff over Coburn's head.
+
+The outside of Dillon looked remarkably like something made out of
+foam-rubber. Coburn touched it, insanely.
+
+He heard his own voice saying flatly: "It's a sort of suit. A suit that
+looks like Dillon. He was in it. Something was! Something is playing the
+part of Dillon. Maybe it always was. Maybe there isn't any Dillon."
+
+He felt a sort of hysterical composure. He opened the chest. It was
+patently artificial. There were such details on the inside as would be
+imagined in a container needed to fit something snugly. At the edges of
+the opening there were fastenings like the teeth of a zipper, but
+somehow different. Coburn knew that when this was fastened there would
+be no visible seam.
+
+Whatever wore this suit-that-looked-like-Dillon could feel perfectly
+confident of passing for Dillon, clothed or otherwise. It could pass
+without any question for--
+
+Coburn gagged.
+
+_It could pass without question for a human being._
+
+Obviously, whatever was wearing this foam-rubber replica of Dillon was
+not human!
+
+Coburn went back to where he had to climb down the cliffside again. He
+moved like a sleep-walker. He descended the fifty-foot cliff by the
+crevices and the single protruding rock-point that had helped him get
+up. It was much easier going down. In his state of mind it was also more
+dangerous. He moved in a sort of robot-like composure.
+
+He moved toward the girl, trying to make words come out of his throat,
+when a small rock came clattering down the cliff. He looked up. Dillon
+was in the act of swinging to the first part of the descent. He came
+down, very confident and assured. He had two camera-cases slung from his
+shoulders. Coburn stared at him, utterly unable to believe what he'd
+seen ten minutes before.
+
+Dillon reached solid ground and turned. He smiled wryly. His shirt was
+buttoned. His tie was tied.
+
+"I hoped," he said ruefully to Janice Ames, "that the Bulgars would
+toddle off. But they left a guard in the village. We can't hope to take
+an easier trail. We'll have to go back the way you came. We'll get you
+safe to Salonika, though."
+
+The girl smiled, uneasily but gratefully.
+
+"And," added Dillon, "we'd better get started."
+
+He gallantly helped the girl remount her donkey. At the sight, Coburn
+was shaken out of his numbness. He moved fiercely to intervene. But
+Janice settled herself in the saddle and Dillon confidently led the way.
+Coburn grimly walked beside her as she rode. He was convinced that he
+wouldn't leave her side while Dillon was around. But even as he knew
+that desperate certitude, he was filled with confusion and a panicky
+uncertainty.
+
+When they'd traveled about half a mile, another frightening thought
+occurred to Coburn. Perhaps Dillon--passing for human--wasn't alone.
+Perhaps there were thousands like him.
+
+Invaders! Usurpers, pretending to be men. Invaders, obviously, from
+space!
+
+
+II
+
+They made eight miles. At least one mile of that, added together, was
+climbing straight up. Another mile was straight down. The rest was
+boulder-strewn, twisting, donkey-wide, slanting, slippery stone. But
+there was no sign of anyone but themselves. The sky remained
+undisturbed. No planes. They saw no sign of the raiding force from
+across the border, and they heard no gunfire.
+
+Coburn struggled against the stark impossibility of what he had seen.
+The most horrifying concept regarding invasion from space is that of
+creatures who are able to destroy or subjugate humanity. A part of that
+concept was in Coburn's mind now. Dillon marched on ahead, in every way
+convincingly human. But he wasn't. And to Coburn, his presence as a
+non-human invader of Earth made the border-crossing by the Bulgarians
+seem almost benevolent.
+
+They went on. The next hill was long and steep. Then they were at the
+hill crest. They looked down into a village called Náousa. It was larger
+than Ardea, but not much larger. One of the houses burned untended.
+Figures moved about. There were tanks in sight, and many soldiers in the
+uniform that looked dark-gray at a distance. The route by which Dillon
+had traveled had plainly curved into the line-of-march of the Bulgarian
+raiding force.
+
+But the moving figures were not soldiers. The soldiers were still. They
+lay down on the grass in irregular, sprawling windrows. The tanks were
+not in motion. There were two-wheeled carts in sight--reaching back
+along the invasion-route--and they were just as stationary as the men
+and the tanks. The horses had toppled in their shafts. They were
+motionless.
+
+The movement was of civilians--men and women alike. They were Greek
+villagers, and they moved freely among the unmilitarily recumbent
+troops, and even from this distance their occupation was clear. They
+were happily picking the soldiers' pockets. But there was one figure
+which moved from one prone figure to another much too quickly to be
+looting. Coburn saw sunlight glitter on something in his hand.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Dillon noticed the same thing Coburn did at the same instant. He bounded
+forward. He ran toward the village and its tumbled soldiers in great,
+impossible leaps. No man could make such leaps or travel so fast. He
+seemed almost to soar toward the village, shouting. Coburn and Janice
+saw him reach the village. They saw him rush toward the one man who had
+been going swiftly from one prone soldier to another. It was too far to
+see Dillon's action, but the sunlight glittered again on something
+bright, which this time flew through the air and dropped to the ground.
+
+The villagers grouped about Dillon. There was no sign of a struggle.
+
+"What's happened?" demanded Janice uneasily. "Those are soldiers on the
+ground."
+
+Coburn's fright prevented his caution. He shouted furiously. "He's not a
+man! You saw it! No man can run so fast! You saw those jumps! He's not
+human! He's--something else!"
+
+Janice jerked her eyes to Coburn in panic. "What did you say?"
+
+Coburn panted: "Dillon's no man! He's a monster from somewhere in space!
+And he and his kind have killed those soldiers! Murdered them! And the
+soldiers are men! You stay here. I'll go down there and--"
+
+"No!" said Janice, "I'm coming too."
+
+He took the donkey's halter and led the animal down to the village, with
+Janice trembling a little in the saddle. He talked in a tight, taut,
+hysterical tone. He told what he'd found up on the cliffside. He
+described in detail the similitude of a man's body he'd found deflated
+beside a stunted bush.
+
+He did not look at Janice as he talked. He moved doggedly toward the
+village, dragging at the donkey's head. They neared the houses very
+slowly, and Coburn considered that he walked into the probability of a
+group of other creatures from unthinkable other star systems, disguised
+as men. It did not occur to him that his sudden outburst about Dillon
+sounded desperately insane to Janice.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+They reached the first of the fallen soldiers. Janice looked,
+shuddering. Then she said thinly: "He's breathing!"
+
+He was. He was merely a boy. Twenty or thereabouts. He lay on his back,
+his eyes closed. His face was upturned like a dead man's. But his breast
+rose and fell rhythmically. He slept as if he were drugged.
+
+But that was more incredible than if he'd been dead. Regiments of men
+fallen simultaneously asleep....
+
+Coburn's flow of raging speech stopped short. He stared. He saw other
+fallen soldiers. Dozens of them. In coma-like slumber, the soldiers who
+had come to loot and murder lay like straws upon the ground. If they had
+been dead it would have been more believable. At least there are ways to
+kill men. But this ...
+
+Dillon parted the group of villagers about him and came toward Coburn
+and Janice. He was frowning in a remarkably human fashion.
+
+"Here's a mess!" he said irritably. "Those Bulgars came marching down
+out of the pass. The cavalry galloped on ahead and cut the villagers off
+so they couldn't run away. They started to loot the village. They
+weren't pleasant. Women began to scream, and there were shootings--all
+in a matter of minutes. And then the looters began to act strangely.
+They staggered around and sat down and went to sleep!"
+
+He waved his hands in a helpless gesture, but Coburn was not deceived.
+
+"The tanks arrived. And they stopped--and their crews went to sleep!
+Then the infantry appeared, staggering as it marched. The officers
+halted to see what was happening ahead, and the entire infantry dropped
+off to sleep right where it stood!
+
+"It's bad! If it had happened a mile or so back ... The Greeks must have
+played a trick on them, but those cavalrymen raised the devil in the few
+minutes they were out of hand! They killed some villagers and then
+keeled over. And now the villagers aren't pleased. There was one man
+whose son was murdered, and he's been slitting the Bulgars' throats!"
+
+He looked at Coburn, and Coburn said in a grating voice: "I see."
+
+Dillon said distressedly: "One can't let them slit the throats of
+sleeping men! I'll have to stay here to keep them from going at it
+again. I say, Coburn, will you take one of their staff cars and run on
+down somewhere and tell the Greek government what's happened here?
+Something should be done about it! Soldiers should come to keep order
+and take charge of these chaps."
+
+"Yes," said Coburn. "I'll do it. I'll take Janice along, too."
+
+"Splendid!" Dillon nodded as if in relief. "She'd better get out of the
+mess entirely. I fancy there'd have been a full-scale massacre if we
+hadn't come along. The Greeks have no reason to love these chaps, and
+their intentions were hardly amiable. But one can't let them be
+murdered!"
+
+Coburn had his hand on his revolver in his pocket. His finger was on the
+trigger. But if Dillon needed him to run an errand, then there obviously
+were no others of his own kind about.
+
+Dillon turned his back. He gave orders in the barbarous dialect of the
+mountains. His voice was authoritative. Men obeyed him and dragged
+uniformed figures out of a light half-track that was plainly a staff
+car. Dillon beckoned, and Coburn moved toward him. The important thing
+as far as Coburn was concerned was to get Janice to safety. Then to
+report the full event.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"I ... I'm not sure ..." began Janice, her voice shaking.
+
+"I'll prove what I said," raged Coburn in a low tone. "I'm not crazy,
+though I feel like it!"
+
+Dillon beckoned again. Janice slipped off the donkey's back. She looked
+pitifully frightened and irresolute.
+
+"I've located the chap who's the mayor of this village, or something
+like that. Take him along. They might not believe you, but they'll have
+to investigate when he turns up."
+
+A white-bearded villager reluctantly climbed into the back of the car.
+Dillon pleasantly offered to assist Janice into the front seat. She
+climbed in, deathly white, frightened of Coburn and almost ashamed to
+admit that his vehement outburst had made her afraid of Dillon, too.
+
+Dillon came around to Coburn's side of the vehicle. "Privately," he said
+with a confidential air, "I'd advise you to dump this mayor person where
+he can reach authority, and then go away quietly and say nothing of what
+happened up here. If the Greeks are using some contrivance that handles
+an affair like this, it will be top secret. They won't like civilians
+knowing about it."
+
+Coburn's grip on his revolver was savage. It seemed likely, now, that
+Dillon was the only one of his extraordinary kind about.
+
+"I think I know why you say that," he said harshly.
+
+Dillon smiled. "Oh, come now!" he protested. "I'm quite unofficial!"
+
+He was incredibly convincing at that moment. There was a wry half-smile
+on his face. He looked absolutely human; absolutely like the British
+correspondent Coburn had met in Salonika. He was too convincing. Coburn
+knew he would suspect his own sanity unless he made sure.
+
+"You're not only unofficial," said Coburn grimly. His hand came up over
+the edge of the staff-car door. It had his revolver in it. It bore
+inexorably upon the very middle of Dillon's body. "You're not human,
+either! You're not a man! Your name isn't Dillon! You're--something I
+haven't a word for! But if you try anything fancy I'll see if a bullet
+through your middle will stop you!"
+
+Dillon did not move. He said easily: "You're being absurd, my dear
+fellow. Put away that pistol."
+
+"You slipped!" said Coburn thickly. "You said the Greeks played a trick
+on this raiding party. But you played it. At Ardea, when you climbed
+that cliff--no man could climb so fast. No man could run as you ran down
+into this village. And I saw that body you're wearing when you weren't
+in it! I followed you up the cliff when--" Coburn's voice was ragingly
+sarcastic--"when you were taking pictures!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Dillon's face went impassive. Then he said: "Well?"
+
+"Will you let me scratch your finger?" demanded Coburn almost
+hysterically. "If it bleeds, I'll apologize and freely admit I'm crazy!
+But if it doesn't ..."
+
+The thing-that-was-not-Dillon raised its eyebrows. "It wouldn't," it
+said coolly. "You do know. What follows?"
+
+"You're something from space," accused Coburn, "sneaking around Earth
+trying to find out how to conquer us! You're an Invader! You're trying
+out weapons. And you want me to keep my mouth shut so we Earth people
+won't patch up our own quarrels and join forces to hunt you down! But
+we'll do it! We'll do it!"
+
+The thing-that-was-not-Dillon said gently: "No. My dear chap, no one
+will believe you."
+
+"We'll see about that!" snapped Coburn. "Put those cameras in the car!"
+
+The figure that looked so human hesitated a long instant, then obeyed.
+It lowered the two seeming cameras into the back part of the staff car.
+
+Janice started to say, "I ... I ..."
+
+The pseudo-Dillon smiled at her. "You think he's insane, and naturally
+you're scared," it said reassuringly. "But he's sane. He's quite right.
+I am from outer space. And I'm not humoring him either. Look!"
+
+He took a knife from his pocket and snapped it open. He deliberately ran
+the point down the side of one of his fingers.
+
+The skin parted. Something that looked exactly like foam-rubber was
+revealed. There were even bubbles in it.
+
+The pseudo-Dillon said, "You see, you don't have to be afraid of him.
+He's sane, and quite human. You'll feel much better traveling with him."
+Then the figure turned to Coburn. "You won't believe it, but I really
+like you, Coburn. I like the way you've reacted. It's very ... human."
+
+Coburn said to him: "It'll be human, too, when we start to hunt you
+down!" He let the staff car in gear. Dillon smiled at him. He let in the
+clutch, and the car leaped ahead.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the two camera-cases Coburn was sure that he had the cryptic device
+that was responsible for the failure of a cold-war raid. He wouldn't
+have dared drive away from Dillon leaving these devices behind. If they
+were what he thought, they'd be absolute proof of the truth of his
+story, and they should furnish clues to the sort of science the Invaders
+possessed. Show the world that Invaders were upon it, and all the world
+would combine to defend Earth. The cold war would end.
+
+But a bitter doubt came to him. Would they? Or would they offer
+zestfully to be viceroys and overseers for the Invaders, betraying the
+rest of mankind for the privilege of ruling them even under unhuman
+masters?
+
+Janice swayed against his shoulder. He cast a swift glance at her. Her
+face was like marble.
+
+"What's the matter?"
+
+She shook her head. "I'm trying not to faint," she said unsteadily.
+"When you told me he was from another world I ... thought you were
+crazy. But when he admitted it ... when he proved it ..."
+
+Coburn growled. The trail twisted and dived down a steep slope. It
+twisted again and ran across a rushing, frothing stream. Coburn drove
+into the rivulet. Water reared up in wing-like sheets on either side.
+The staff car climbed out, rocking, on the farther side. Coburn put it
+to the ascent beyond. The trail turned and climbed and descended as the
+stony masses of the hills required.
+
+"He's--from another world!" repeated Janice. Her teeth chattered. "What
+do they want--creatures like him? How--how many of them are there?
+Anybody could be one of them! What do they want?"
+
+"This is a pretty good world," said Coburn fiercely. "And his kind will
+want it. We're merely the natives, the aborigines, to them. Maybe they
+plan to wipe us out, or enslave us. But they won't! We can spot them
+now! They don't bleed. Scratch one and you find--foam-rubber. X-rays
+will spot them. We'll learn to pick them out--and when some specialists
+look over those things that look like cameras we'll know more still!
+Enough to do something!"
+
+"Then you think it's an invasion from space?"
+
+"What else?" snapped Coburn.
+
+His stomach was a tight cramped knot now. He drove the car hard!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In air miles the distance to be covered was relatively short. In road
+miles it seemed interminable. The road was bad and curving beyond
+belief. It went many miles east and many miles west for every mile of
+southward gain. The hour grew late. Coburn had fled Ardea at sunrise,
+but they'd reached Náousa after midday and he drove frantically over
+incredible mountain roads until dusk. Despite sheer recklessness,
+however, he could not average thirty miles an hour. There were times
+when even the half-track had to crawl or it would overturn. The sun set,
+and he went on up steep grades and down steeper ones in the twilight.
+Night fell and the headlights glared ahead, and the staff car clanked
+and clanked and grumbled and roared on through the darkness.
+
+They probably passed through villages--the headlights showed stone
+hovels once or twice--but no lights appeared. It was midnight before
+they saw a moving yellow spot of brightness with a glare as of fire upon
+steam above it. There were other small lights in a row behind it, and
+they saw that all the lights moved.
+
+"A railroad!" said Coburn. "We're getting somewhere!"
+
+It was a railroad train on the other side of a valley, but they did not
+reach the track. The highway curved away from it.
+
+At two o'clock in the morning they saw electric lights. The highway
+became suddenly passable. Presently they ran into the still, silent
+streets of a slumbering town--Serrai--an administrative center for this
+part of Greece. They threaded its ways while Coburn watched for a proper
+place to stop. Once a curiously-hatted policeman stared blankly at them
+under an arc lamp as the staff car clanked and rumbled past him. They
+saw a great pile of stone which was a church. They saw a railroad
+station.
+
+Not far away there was a building in which there were lights. A man in
+uniform came out of its door.
+
+Coburn stopped a block away. There were uneasy stirrings, and the
+white-bearded passenger from the village said incomprehensible things in
+a feeble voice. Coburn got Janice out of the car first. She was stiff
+and dizzy when she tried to walk. The Greek was in worse condition
+still. He clung to the side of the staff car.
+
+"We tell the truth," said Coburn curtly, "when we talk to the police. We
+tell the whole truth--except about Dillon. That sounds too crazy. We
+tell it to top-level officials only, after they realize that something
+they don't know anything about has really taken place. Talk of Invaders
+from space would either get us locked up as lunatics or would create a
+panic. This man will tell what happened up there, and they'll
+investigate. But we take these so-called cameras to Salonika, and get to
+an American battleship."
+
+He lifted Dillon's two cameras by the carrying-straps. And the straps
+pulled free. They'd held the cases safely enough during a long journey
+on foot across the mountains. But they pulled clear now.
+
+Coburn had a bitter thought. He struck a match. He saw the leather cases
+on the floor of the staff car. He picked up one of them. He took it to
+the light of the headlights, standing there in the resonant darkness of
+a street in a city of stone houses.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The leather was brittle. It was friable, as if it had been in a fire.
+Coburn plucked it open, and it came apart in his hands. Inside there was
+the smell of scorched things. There was a gritty metallic powder.
+Nothing else. The other carrying-case was in exactly the same condition.
+
+Coburn muttered bitterly: "They were set to destroy themselves if they
+got into other hands than Dillon's. We haven't a bit of proof that he
+wasn't a human being. Not a shred of proof!"
+
+He suddenly felt a sick rage, as if he had been played with and mocked.
+The raid from Bulgaria was serious enough, of course. It would have
+killed hundreds of people and possibly hundreds of others would have
+been enslaved. But even that was secondary in Coburn's mind. The
+important thing was that there were Invaders upon Earth. Non-human
+monsters, who passed for humans through disguise. They had been able to
+travel through space to land secretly upon Earth. They moved unknown
+among men, learning the secrets of mankind, preparing for--what?
+
+
+III
+
+They got into Salonika early afternoon of the next day, after many hours
+upon an antique railroad train that puffed and grunted and groaned among
+interminable mountains. Coburn got a taxi to take Janice to the office
+of the Breen Foundation which had sent her up to the north of Greece to
+establish its philanthropic instruction courses. He hadn't much to say
+to Janice as they rode. He was too disheartened.
+
+In the cab, though, he saw great placards on which newspaper headlines
+appeared in Greek. He could make out the gist of them. Essentially, they
+shrieked that Bulgarians had invaded Greece and had been wiped out. He
+made out the phrase for valiant Greek army. And the Greek army was
+valiant enough, but it hadn't had anything to do with this.
+
+From the police station in Serrai--he had been interviewed there until
+dawn--he knew what action had been taken. Army planes had flown
+northward in the darkness, moved by the Mayor's, and Coburn's, and
+Janice's tale of Bulgarian soldiers on Greek soil, sleeping soundly.
+They had released parachute flares and located the village of Náousa.
+Parachutists with field radios had jumped, while other flares burned to
+light them to the ground. That was that. Judging by the placards, their
+reports had borne out the story Coburn had brought down. There would be
+a motorized Greek division on the way to take charge of the
+four-thousand-odd unconscious raiders. There was probably an advance
+guard there now.
+
+But there was no official news. Even the Greek newspapers called it
+rumors. Actually, it was leaked information. It would be reasonable for
+the Greek government to let it leak, look smug, and blandly say "No
+comment" to all inquiries, including those from Bulgaria.
+
+But behind that appearance of complacency, the Greek government would be
+going quietly mad trying to understand what so fortunately had happened.
+And Coburn could tell them. But he knew better than to try without some
+sort of proof. Yet, he had to tell. The facts were more important than
+what people thought of him.
+
+The cab stopped before his own office. He paid the driver. The driver
+beamed and said happily: "_Tys nikisame, é?_"
+
+Coburn said, "_Poly kala. Orea._"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+His office was empty. It was dustier than usual. His secretary was
+probably taking a holiday since he was supposed to be out of town. He
+grunted and sat down at the telephone. He called a man he knew.
+Hallen--another American--was attached to a non-profit corporation which
+was attached to an agency which was supposed to coöperate with a
+committee which had something to do with NATO. Hallen answered the phone
+in person.
+
+Coburn identified himself. "Have you heard any rumors about a Bulgarian
+raid up-country?" he asked.
+
+"I haven't heard anything else since I got up," Hallen told him.
+
+"I was there," said Coburn. "I brought the news down. Can you come
+over?"
+
+"I'm halfway there now!" said Hallen as he slammed down the phone.
+
+Coburn paced up and down his office. It was very dusty. Even the seat of
+the chair at his secretary's desk was dusty. The odds were that she was
+coming in only to sort the mail, and not even sitting down for that. He
+shrugged.
+
+He heard footsteps. The door opened. His secretary, Helena, came in. She
+looked surprised.
+
+"I was at lunch," she explained. She had a very slight accent. She hung
+up her coat. "I am sorry. I stopped at a store."
+
+He had paused in his pacing to nod at her. Now he stared, but her back
+was turned toward him. He blinked. She had just told a very transparent
+lie. And Helena was normally very truthful.
+
+"You had a good trip?" she asked politely.
+
+"Fair," said Coburn. "Any phone calls this morning?" he asked.
+
+"Not this morning," she said politely.
+
+She reached in a desk drawer. She brought out paper. She put it in the
+typewriter and began to type.
+
+Coburn felt very queer. Then he saw something else. There was a fly in
+the office--a large, green-bodied fly of metallic lustre. The
+inhabitants of Salonika said with morbid pride that it was a specialty
+of the town, with the most painful of all known fly stings. And Helena
+abhorred flies.
+
+It landed on the bare skin of her neck. She did not notice. It stayed
+there. Ordinarily she would have jumped up, exclaiming angrily in Greek,
+and then she would have pursued the fly vengefully with a folded
+newspaper until she killed it. But now she ignored it.
+
+Hallen came in, stamping. Coburn closed the door behind him. He felt
+queer at the pit of his stomach. For Helena to let a fly stay on her
+neck suggested that her skin was ... somehow not like its usual self.
+
+"What happened to those Bulgarians?" demanded Hallen.
+
+Coburn told him precisely what he'd seen when he arrived in Náousa after
+an eight-mile hike through mountains. Then he went back and told Hallen
+precisely what he'd seen up on the cliffside.
+
+"His cameras were some sort of weapon. He played it on the marching
+column, it took effect and they went to sleep," he finished. "I took
+them away from him and brought them down, but--"
+
+He told about the contents of the camera cases being turned to a gritty,
+sooty powder. Then he added: "Dillon set them to destroy themselves. You
+understand. He's not a man. He's a creature from some planet other than
+Earth, passing for a human being. He's an Invader from space."
+
+Hallen's expression was uneasy and compassionate but utterly
+unbelieving. Helena shivered and turned away her face. Coburn's lips
+went taut. He reached down to his desk. He made a sudden, abrupt
+gesture. Hallen caught his breath and started up.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Coburn said curtly: "Another one of them. Helena, is that foam-suit
+comfortable?"
+
+The girl jerked her face around. She looked frightened.
+
+"Helena," said Coburn, "the real Helena, that is, would not sit down on
+a dusty chair. No woman would. But you did. She is a very truthful girl.
+You lied to me. And I just stuck pins in your shoulder and you didn't
+notice. They're sticking in your foam suit now. You and the creature
+that passed for Dillon up-country are both aliens. Invaders. Do you want
+to try to convince me otherwise?"
+
+The girl said evenly: "Mr. Coburn, I do not think you are well--"
+
+Then Coburn said thickly: "I'm crazy enough to put a bullet through you
+if your gang of devils has harmed the real Helena. What's happened to
+her?"
+
+Hallen moved irresolutely to interfere. But the girl's expression
+changed. She smiled. "The real Helena, Mr. Coburn," said an entirely new
+voice, "has gone to the suburbs to visit her fiancé's family. She is
+quite safe."
+
+There was dead silence. The figure--it even moved like Helena--got
+composedly to its feet. It got its coat. It put the coat on. Hallen
+stared with his mouth open. The pins hadn't convinced him, but the
+utterly different voice coming from this girl's mouth had. Yet, waves of
+conflicting disbelief and conviction, horror and a racking doubt, chased
+themselves over his features.
+
+"She admits she's not Helena!" said Coburn with loathing. "It's not
+human! Should I shoot it?"
+
+The girl smiled at him again. Her eyes were very bright. "You will not,
+Mr. Coburn. And you will not even try to keep me prisoner to prove your
+story. If I screamed that you attack me--" the smile widened--"Helena's
+good Greek friends would come to my assistance."
+
+She walked confidently to the door and opened it. Then she said warmly:
+"You are very intelligent, Mr. Coburn. We approve of you very much. But
+nobody will believe you."
+
+The office door closed.
+
+Coburn turned stiffly to the man he'd called to hear him. "Should I have
+shot her, Hallen?"
+
+Hallen sat down as if his knees had given way beneath him. After a long
+time he got out a handkerchief and painfully mopped his face. At the
+same time he shivered.
+
+"N-no...." Then he swallowed. "My God, Coburn! It's true!"
+
+"Yes," said Coburn bitterly, "or you're as crazy as I am."
+
+Hallen's eyes looked haunted. "I--I ..." He swallowed again. "There's no
+question about the Bulgarian business. That did happen! And you were
+there. And--there've been other things.... Rumors.... Reports that
+nobody believed.... I might be able to get somebody to listen...." He
+shivered again. "If it's true, it's the most terrible thing that ever
+happened. Invaders from space.... Where do you think they came from,
+Coburn?"
+
+"The creature that looked like Dillon could climb incredibly fast. I saw
+it run and leap. Nothing on Earth could run or leap like that." Coburn
+shrugged. "Maybe a planet of another sun, with a monstrous gravity."
+
+"Try to get somebody to believe that, eh?" Hallen got painfully to his
+feet. "I'll see what I can do. I ... don't know that I can do anything
+but get myself locked up for observation. But I'll call you in an hour."
+
+He went unsteadily out of the door. Coburn instantly called the Breen
+Foundation on the telephone. He'd left Janice there less than an hour
+before. She came to the phone and gasped when she heard his voice.
+Raging, he told her of Helena, then cautioned her to be especially
+careful--to be suspicious of everybody.
+
+"Don't take anybody's word!" snapped Coburn. "Doubt everybody! Doubt me!
+Until you're absolutely certain. Those creatures are everywhere.... They
+may pretend to be anybody!"
+
+After Coburn hung up on Janice, he sat back and tried to think
+logically. There had to be some way by which an extra-terrestrial
+Invader could be told instantly from a human being. Unmask and prove
+even one such creature, and the whole story would be proved. But how
+detect them? Their skin was perfectly deceptive. Scratched, of course,
+they could be caught. But one couldn't go around scratching people.
+There was nothing of the alien creature's own actual form that showed.
+
+Then Coburn remembered the Dillon foam suit. The head had been hollow.
+Flaccid. Holes instead of eyes. The creature's own eyes showed through.
+
+But he'd have to make certain. He'd have to look at a foam-suited
+creature. He could have examined Helena's eyes, but she was gone now.
+However, there was an alternative. There was a Dillon in Salonika, as
+there was a Helena. If the Dillon in Salonika was the real Dillon--if
+there were a real Dillon--he could look at his eyes. He could tell if he
+were the false Dillon or the real one.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+At this hour of the afternoon a Britisher would consider tea a
+necessity. There was only one place in Salonika where they served tea
+that an Englishman would consider drinkable. Coburn got into a cab and
+gave the driver the address, and made sure of the revolver in his
+pocket. He was frightened. He was either going to meet with a monster
+from outer space, or be on the way to making so colossal a fool of
+himself that a mental asylum would yawn for him.
+
+He went into the one coffee-shop in Salonika which served drinkable tea.
+It was dark and dingy inside, though the tablecloths were spotless. He
+went in, and there was Dillon.
+
+Coburn's flesh crawled. If the figure sitting there with the _London
+Times_ and a cup of tea before him were actually a monster from another
+planet ...
+
+But Dillon read comfortably, and sipped his tea. Coburn approached, and
+the Englishman looked up inquiringly.
+
+"I was ... up in the mountains," said Coburn feverishly, "when those
+Bulgarians came over. I can give you the story."
+
+Dillon said frostily: "I'm not interested. The government's officially
+denied that any such incident took place. It's merely a silly rumor."
+
+It was reasonable that it should be denied. But it had happened,
+nonetheless. Coburn stared, despite a consciousness that he was not
+conspicuously rational in the way his eyes searched Dillon's face
+hungrily. The eyes _were_ different! The eyes of the Dillon up in the
+mountains had been larger, and the brown part--But he had to be sure.
+
+Suddenly, Coburn found himself grinning. There was a simple, a perfect,
+an absolute test for humanity!
+
+Dillon said suspiciously: "What the devil are you staring at me for?"
+
+Coburn continued to grin uncontrollably, even as he said in a tone of
+apology: "I hate to do this, but I have to be sure...."
+
+He swung. He connected with Dillon's nose. Blood started.
+
+Coburn zestfully let himself be thrown out, while Dillon roared and
+tried to get at him through the flying wedge of waiters. He felt an
+enormous relaxation on the way back to his office in another cab. He was
+a trifle battered, but it was worth it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Back in the office he called Hallen again. And again Hallen answered. He
+sounded guilty and worried.
+
+"I don't know whether I'm crazy or not," he said bitterly. "But I was in
+your office. I saw your secretary there--and she didn't feel pins stuck
+in her. And something did happen to those Bulgarians that the Greeks
+don't know anything about, or the Americans either. So you're to tell
+your story to the high brass down in Athens. I think you'll be locked up
+afterward as a lunatic--and me with you for believing my own eyes. But a
+plane's being readied."
+
+"Where do I meet you?" asked Coburn.
+
+Hallen told him. A certain room out at the airport. Coburn hung up. The
+telephone rang instantly. He was on the way out, but he turned back and
+answered it. Janice's voice--amazingly convincing--came from the
+instrument. And at the first words his throat went dry. Because it
+couldn't be Janice.
+
+"I've been trying to get you. Have you tried to reach me?"
+
+"Why, no. Why?"
+
+Janice's voice said: "I've something interesting to tell you. I left the
+office an hour ago. I'm at the place where I live when I'm in Salonika.
+Write down the address. Can you come here? I've found out something
+astonishing!"
+
+He wrote down the address. He had a feeling of nightmarishness. This was
+not Janice--
+
+"I'm clearing up some matters you'll guess at," he said grimly, "so I
+may be a little while getting there. You'll wait?"
+
+He hung up. And then with a rather ghastly humor he took some pins from
+a box on the desk and worked absorbedly at bending one around the inside
+of the band of the seal ring he wore on his right hand.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But he didn't go to the telephoned address. He went to the Breen
+Foundation. And Janice was there. She was the real Janice. He knew it
+instantly he saw her. She was panic-stricken when he told her of his own
+telephone experience. Her teeth chattered. But she knew--instinctively,
+she said--that he was himself. She got into the cab with him.
+
+They reached the airport and found the office Hallen had named. The
+lettering on it, in Greek and French, said that it was a reception room
+for official visitors only.
+
+"Our status is uncertain," said Coburn drily. "We may be official
+guests, or we may be crazy. It's a toss-up which status sticks."
+
+He opened the door and looked carefully inside before he entered. Hallen
+was there. There was a lean, hard-bitten colonel of the American liaison
+force in Greece. There was a Greek general, pudgy and genial, standing
+with his back to a window and his hands clasped behind him. There were
+two Greek colonels and a major. They regarded him soberly.
+
+"Howdo, Coburn," said Hallen painfully. "You're heading for Athens, you
+know. This is Miss Ames? But these gentlemen have ... ah ... a special
+concern with that business up-country. They'd like to hear your story
+before you leave."
+
+"I suppose," said Coburn curtly, "it's a sort of preliminary commission
+in lunacy."
+
+But he shook hands all around. He kept his left hand in his coat pocket
+as he shook hands with his right. His revolver was in his left-hand
+pocket now too. The Greek general beamed at him. The American colonel's
+eyes were hard and suspicious. One of the two Greek colonels was very
+slightly cross-eyed. The Greek major shook hands solemnly.
+
+Coburn took a deep breath. "I know my tale sounds crazy," he said, "but
+... I had a telephone call just now. Hallen will bear me out that my
+secretary was impersonated by somebody else this afternoon."
+
+"I've told them that," said Hallen unhappily.
+
+"And something was impersonating Dillon up in the hills," finished
+Coburn. "I've reason to believe that at this address"--and he handed the
+address he'd written down to Hallen--"a ... creature will be found who
+will look most convincingly like Miss Ames, here. You might send and
+see."
+
+The American colonel snorted: "This whole tale's preposterous! It's an
+attempt to cash in on the actual mystery of what happened up-country."
+
+The Greek general protested gently. His English was so heavily accented
+as to be hard to understand, but he pointed out that Coburn knew details
+of the event in Náousa that only someone who had been there could know.
+
+"True enough," said the American officer darkly, "but he can tell the
+truth now, before we make fools of ourselves sending him to Athens to be
+unmasked. Suppose," he said unpleasantly, "you give us the actual
+facts!"
+
+Coburn nodded. "The idea you find you can't take is that creatures that
+aren't human can be on Earth and pass for human beings. There's some
+evidence on that right here." He nodded to the Greek major who was the
+junior officer in the room. "Major, will you show these other gentlemen
+the palm of your hand?"
+
+The Greek major frowned perplexedly. He lifted his hand and looked at
+it. Then his face went absolutely impassive.
+
+"I'm ready to shoot!" snapped Coburn. "Show them your hand. I can tell
+now."
+
+He felt the tensing of the others in the room, not toward the major but
+toward him. They were preparing to jump him, thinking him mad.
+
+But the major grinned ruefully: "Clever, Mr. Coburn! But how did you
+pick me out?"
+
+Then there was a sensation of intolerable brightness all around. But it
+was not actual light. It was a sensation inside one's brain.
+
+Coburn felt himself falling. He knew, somehow, that the others were
+falling too. He saw everyone in the room in the act of slumping limply
+to the floor--all but the Greek major. And Coburn felt a bitter,
+despairing fury as consciousness left him.
+
+
+IV
+
+He came to in a hospital room, with a nurse and two doctors and an
+elaborate oxygen-administering apparatus. The apparatus was wheeled out.
+The nurse followed. The two doctors hurried after her. The American
+colonel of the airport was standing by the bed on which Coburn lay,
+fully dressed.
+
+Coburn felt perfectly all right. He stirred. The American colonel said
+sourly: "You're not harmed. Nobody was. But Major Pangalos got away."
+
+Coburn sat up. There was a moment's bare trace of dizziness, and that
+was gone too. Coburn said: "Where's Miss Ames? What happened to her?"
+
+"She's getting oxygen," said the colonel. "We were rushed here from the
+airport, sleeping soundly just like those Bulgarians. Major Pangalos
+ordered it before he disappeared. Helicopters brought some Bulgarians
+down, by the way, and oxygen brought them to. So naturally they gave us
+the same treatment. Very effective."
+
+The colonel looked both chastened and truculent. "How'd you know Major
+Pangalos for what he was? He was accepted everywhere as a man."
+
+"His eyes were queer," said Coburn. He stood up experimentally. "I
+figured they would be, if one looked. I saw the foam suit that creature
+wore up-country, when he wasn't in it. There were holes for the eyes. It
+occurred to me that his eyes weren't likely to be like ours. Not
+exactly. So I hunted up the real Dillon, and his eyes weren't like I
+remembered. I punched him in the nose, by the way, to make sure he'd
+bleed and was human. He was."
+
+Coburn continued, "You see, they obviously come from a heavy planet and
+move differently. They're stronger than we are. Much like the way we'd
+be on the moon with one-sixth Earth gravity. They probably are used to a
+thicker atmosphere. If so, their eyes wouldn't be right for here. They'd
+need eyeglasses."
+
+"Major Pangalos didn't--"
+
+"Contact eyeglasses," said Coburn sourly. "Little cups of plastic. They
+slip under the eyelids and touch the white part of the eye. Familiar
+enough. But that's not all."
+
+The American colonel looked troubled. "I know contact lenses," he
+admitted. "But--"
+
+"If the Invaders have a thick atmosphere at home," Coburn said, "they
+may have a cloudy sky. The pupils of their eyes may need to be larger.
+Perhaps they're a different shape. Or their eyes may be a completely
+alien color. Anyhow, they need contact lenses not only to correct their
+vision, but to make their eyes look like ours. They're painted on the
+inside to change the natural look and color. It's very deceptive. But
+you can tell."
+
+"That goes to Headquarters at once!" snapped the colonel.
+
+He went out briskly. Coburn followed him out of the room to look for
+Janice. And Janice happened to be looking for him at exactly the same
+moment. He was genuinely astonished to realize how relieved he was that
+she was all right.
+
+He said apologetically: "I was worried! When I felt myself passing out I
+felt pretty rotten at having failed to protect you."
+
+She looked at him with nearly the same sort of surprised satisfaction.
+"I'm all right," she said breathlessly. "I was worried about you."
+
+The roaring of motors outside the hospital interrupted them. More and
+more vehicles arrived, until a deep purring filled the air. A Greek
+doctor with a worried expression hurried somewhere. Soldiers appeared,
+hard-bitten, tough, professional Greek soldiers. Hallen came out of a
+hospital room. The Greek general appeared with one of the two colonels
+who'd been at the airport. The general nodded, and his eyes seemed
+cordial. He waved them ahead of him into a waiting elevator. The
+elevator descended. They went out of the hospital and there was an
+armored car waiting. An impressive escort of motorcycle troops waited
+with it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The Greek general saw Coburn's cynical expression at sight of the
+guards. He explained blandly that since oxygen brought sleeping
+Bulgarians out of their slumber--and had been used on them--oxygen was
+handy for use by anybody who experienced a bright flash of light in his
+mind. The Bulgarian soldiers, incidentally, said that outside the
+village of Ardea they'd felt as if the sunlight had brightened
+amazingly, but they felt no effects for two hours afterward, when they
+fell asleep at Náousa. So, said the general almost unintelligibly, if
+anything untoward happened on the way to the airport, everybody would
+start breathing oxygen. A sensation of bright light would be untoward.
+
+The armored car started off, with motorcyclists crowded about it with
+weapons ready. But the ride to the airport was uneventful. To others
+than Janice and Coburn it may even have been tedious. But when she
+understood the general's explanation, she shivered a little. She leaned
+insensibly closer to Coburn. He took her hand protectively in his.
+
+They reached the airport. They roared through the gateway and directly
+out upon the darkened field. Something bellowed and raced down a runway
+and took to the air. Other things followed it. They gained altitude and
+circled back overhead. Tiny bluish flickerings moved across the overcast
+sky. Exhaust flames.
+
+Coburn realized that it was a fighter plane escort.
+
+The huge transport plane that waited for them was dark. They climbed
+into it and found their seats. When it roared down the unlighted field
+and took to the air, everything possible had been done to keep anybody
+from bringing any weapon to bear upon it.
+
+"All safe now!" said the voice of the American colonel in the darkness
+of the unlit plane, as the plane gained height. "Incidentally, Coburn,
+why did you want to look at Pangalos' palm? What did you expect to find
+there?"
+
+"When I started for the airport," Coburn explained, "I bent a pin around
+the band of a ring I wear. I could let it lie flat when I shook hands.
+Or I could make it stand out like a spur. I set it with my thumb. I saw
+Pangalos' eyes, so I had it stand out, and I made a tear in his plastic
+skin when I shook hands with him. He didn't feel it, of course." He
+paused. "Did anybody go to the address I gave Hallen?"
+
+Hallen said, in the darkness: "Major Pangalos got there first."
+
+The blackness outside the plane seemed to grow deeper. There was
+literally nothing to be seen but the instrument dials up at the pilots'
+end of the ship.
+
+The Greek general asked a question in his difficult English.
+
+"Where'd they come from?" repeated Coburn. "I've no idea. Off Earth,
+yes. A heavy planet, yes. I doubt they come from our solar system,
+though. Somewhere among the stars."
+
+The Greek general said something with a sly up-twist of his voice.
+Whatever and whoever the Invaders were, he said, they did not like
+Bulgarians. If they'd knocked out the raiding party simply to test their
+weapons against human subjects, at least they had chosen suitable and
+pleasing subjects for the test.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There was light. For an instant Coburn tensed. But the plane climbed and
+the brightness steadied. It was the top of a cloud bank, brilliantly
+white in the moonlight. They had flown up through it, and it reached as
+far ahead as they could see. A stubby fighter plane swam up out of the
+mist and fell into position alongside. Others appeared. They took
+formation about the transport and all flew steadily through the
+moonlight.
+
+"I wish I knew," said the American colonel vexedly, "if those creatures
+were only testing weapons, or if they were getting set to start
+bargaining with us!"
+
+"Meaning?" asked Coburn.
+
+"If they're here," said the colonel angrily, "and if they do mean to
+meddle in our business, they may set up a sort of auction with us
+bidding against the Iron Curtain gang for their friendship. And _they'd_
+make any deal!"
+
+The Greek general agreed drily. He said that free people were not
+practical people. They were always ready to die rather than cease to be
+free. Surely the Greeks had proved themselves ready to die. But people
+like the Bulgarians thought that to continue to live was the most
+important thing in the world. It was, of course, the practical
+view-point....
+
+"They can have it!" growled Coburn.
+
+Janice said hesitantly: "But the Invaders haven't killed anybody we know
+of. They could have killed the Bulgarians. They didn't. The one who
+called himself Dillon stopped one man from killing them. And they could
+have killed us, earlier today at the airport. Could they want to be
+friends?"
+
+"They're starting the wrong way," said Coburn.
+
+The Greek general stirred in his seat, but he was pointedly silent.
+
+The pilot snapped abruptly from up at the bow of the plane: "Colonel!
+sir! Two of the fighters are climbing as if they've spotted something.
+There go the rest."
+
+Coburn leaned across Janice to stare out the window. When the fighters
+were below the transport, they could be seen in silhouette against the
+clouds. Above, their exhaust flames pin-pointed them. Small blue flames
+climbed steeply.
+
+The big ship went on. The roar of its motors was steady and unvarying.
+From a passenger seat it was not possible to look overhead. But suddenly
+there were streaking sparks against the stars. Tracer bullets. Fighters
+swerved and plunged to intercept something....
+
+ * * * * *
+
+And a Thing came down out of the sky with a terrific velocity. Tracer
+bullets sprayed all around it. Some could be seen to ricochet off its
+sides. Flashings came from the alien craft. They were not explosions
+from guns. They were lurid, actinic, smokeless blasts of pure light. The
+Thing seemed to be made of polished metal. It dodged, trying to approach
+the transport. The fighters lunged to prevent it. The ghastly game of
+interception seemed to rush here and there all over the sky.
+
+The strange object was not possibly of human design or manufacture. It
+had no wings. It left no trail of jet fumes or rocket smoke. It was
+glittering and mirror-like, and it was shaped almost exactly like two
+turtle-shells base to base. It was flat and oval. It had no visible
+external features.
+
+It flung itself about with incredible darts and jerkings. It could stop
+stock still as no plane could possibly stop, and accelerate at a rate no
+human body could endure. It tried savagely to get through the swarming
+fighters to the transport. Its light weapon flashed--but the pilots
+would be wearing oxygen masks and there were no casualties among the
+human planes. Once a fighter did fall off in a steep dive, and fluttered
+almost down to the cloud bank before it recovered and came back with its
+guns spitting.
+
+That one appeared to end the fight. It came straight up, pumping tracers
+at the steel flier from below. And the glittering Thing seemed to stop
+dead in the air. Then it shuddered. It was bathed in the flaring sparks
+of tracers. Then--
+
+It dropped like a stone, tumbling aimlessly over and over as it dropped.
+It plummeted into the cloud bank.
+
+Suddenly the clouds were lighted from within. Something inside flared
+with a momentary, terrifying radiance. No lightning bolt ever flashed
+more luridly.
+
+The transport plane and its escort flew on and on over the moonlit bank
+of clouds.
+
+Presently orders came by radio. On the report of this attack, the flight
+plan would be changed, for safety. If the air convoy had been attacked
+once, it might be attacked again. So it would be wisest to get it
+immediately to where there would be plenty of protection. Therefore, the
+transport plane would head for Naples.
+
+Nearly the whole of the United States Mediterranean fleet was in the Bay
+of Naples just then. It had been there nearly a week, and by day its
+liberty parties swarmed ashore. The merchants and the souvenir salesmen
+were entranced. American sailors had money and they spent it. The
+fleet's officers were social assets, its messes bought satisfyingly of
+local viands, and everybody was happy.
+
+All but one small group. The newspapers of one of the Italian political
+parties howled infuriatedly. They had orders to howl, from behind the
+Iron Curtain. The American fleet, that one party's newspapers bellowed,
+was imperialistic, capitalistic, and decadent. In short, there was
+virulent propaganda against the American fleet in Naples. But most
+people were glad it was there anyway. Certainly nobody stayed awake
+worrying about it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+People were staying awake worrying about the transport plane carrying
+Coburn and Janice, however. On the plane, Janice was fearful and pressed
+close to Coburn, and he found it an absorbing experience and was moved
+to talk in a low tone about other matters than extra-terrestrial
+Invaders and foam suits and interstellar travel. Janice found those
+other subjects surprisingly fitted to make her forget about being
+afraid.
+
+Elsewhere, the people who stayed awake did talk about just the subjects
+Coburn was avoiding. The convoy carrying Coburn to tell what he knew had
+been attacked. By a plane which was definitely not made or manned by
+human beings. The news flashed through the air across continents. It
+went under the ocean over sea beds. It traveled in the tightest and most
+closely-guarded of diplomatic codes. The Greek government gave the other
+NATO nations a confidential account of the Bulgarian raid and what had
+happened to it. These details were past question. The facts brought out
+by Coburn were true, too.
+
+So secret instructions followed the news. At first they went only to
+highly-trusted individuals. In thirty nations, top-ranking officials and
+military officers blindfolded each other in turn and gravely stuck pins
+in each other. The blindfolded person was expected to name the place
+where he had been stuck. This had an historical precedent. In olden
+days, pins were stuck in suspected witches. They had patches of skin in
+which there was no sensation, and discovery of such areas condemned them
+to death. Psychologists in later centuries found that patches of
+anaesthetic skin were typical of certain forms of hysteria, and
+therefore did not execute their patients. But the Invaders, by the fact
+that their seemingly human bodies were not flesh at all, could not pass
+such tests.
+
+There were consequences. A Minister of Defense of a European nation
+amusedly watched the tests on his subordinates, blandly excused himself
+for a moment before his own turn came, and did not come back. A general
+of division vanished into thin air. Diplomatic code clerks painstakingly
+decoded the instructions for such tests, and were nowhere about when
+they themselves were to be tested. An eminent Hollywood director and an
+Olympic champion ceased to be.
+
+In the free world nearly a hundred prominent individuals simply
+disappeared. Few were in position to influence high-level decisions.
+Many were in line to know rather significant details of world affairs.
+There was alarm.
+
+It was plain, too, that not all disguised Invaders would have had to
+vanish. Many would not even be called on for test. They would stay where
+they were. And there were private persons....
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There was consternation. But Janice, in the plane, was saying softly to
+Coburn: "The--creature who telephoned and said she was me. How did you
+know she wasn't?"
+
+"I went to the Breen Foundation first," said Coburn. "I looked into your
+eyes--and they were right. So I didn't need to stick a pin in you."
+
+The thought of Coburn not needing to stick a pin in her impressed Janice
+as beautiful trust. She sighed contentedly. "Of course you'd know," she
+said. "So would I--now!" She laughed a little.
+
+The convoy flew on. The lurid round disk of the moon descended toward
+the west.
+
+"It'll be sunrise soon. But I imagine we'll land before dawn."
+
+They did. The flying group of planes flew lower. Coburn saw a single
+light on the ground. It was very tiny, and it vanished rearward with
+great speed. Later there was another light, and a dull-red glow in the
+sky. Still later, infinitesimal twinklings on the ground at the horizon.
+They increased in number but not in size, and the plane swung hugely to
+the left, and the lights on the ground formed a visible pattern. And
+moonlight--broken by the shadows of clouds--displayed the city and the
+Bay of Naples below.
+
+The transport plane landed. The passengers descended. Coburn saw Hallen,
+the American colonel, the Greek general, and a Greek colonel. The other
+had been left behind to take charge of things in Salonika. Here the
+uniforms were American, and naval. There were some Italian police in
+view, but most of the men about were American seamen, ostensibly on
+shore leave. But Coburn doubted very much if they were as completely
+unarmed as men on shore leave usually are.
+
+A man in a cap with much gold braid greeted the American colonel, the
+Greek general, and the Greek colonel. He came to Coburn, to whose arm
+Janice seemed to cling.
+
+"We're taking you out to the fleet. We've taken care of everything.
+Everybody's had pins stuck in him!"
+
+It was very humorous, of course. They moved away from the plane.
+Surrounded by white-clad sailors, the party from the plane moved into
+the hangar.
+
+Then a voice snapped a startled question, in English. An instant later
+it rasped: "Stop or I'll shoot!"
+
+Then there was a bright flash of light. The interior of the hangar was
+made vivid by it. It went out. And as it disappeared there were the
+sounds of running footsteps. Only they did not run properly. They ran in
+great leaps. Impossible leaps. Monstrous leaps. A man might run like
+that on the moon, with a lesser gravity. A creature accustomed to much
+greater gravity might run like that on Earth. But it would not be human.
+
+It got away.
+
+There was a waiting car. They got into it. They pulled out from the
+airport with other cars close before and behind. The cavalcade raced for
+the city and the shoreline surrounded by a guard less noisy but no less
+effective than the Greek motorcycle troopers.
+
+But the Greek general said something meditative in the dark interior of
+the car.
+
+"What's that?" demanded someone authoritatively.
+
+The Greek general said it again, mildly. This latest attempt to seize
+them or harm them--if it was that--had been surprisingly inept. It was
+strange that creatures able to travel between the stars and put
+regiments and tanks out of action should fail so dismally to kill or
+kidnap Coburn, if they really wanted to. Could it be that they were not
+quite sincere in their efforts?
+
+"That," said the authoritative voice, "is an idea!"
+
+They reached the waterfront. And here in the darkest part of the night
+and with the moon near to setting, the waters of the Bay of Naples
+rolled in small, smooth-surfaced, tranquil waves. There was a Navy barge
+waiting. Those who had come by plane boarded it. It cast off and headed
+out into the middle of the huge harbor.
+
+In minutes there was a giant hull looming overhead. They stepped out
+onto a landing ladder and climbed interminably up the ship's metal side.
+Then there was an open door.
+
+"Now," said the American colonel triumphantly, "now everything's all
+right! Nothing can happen now, short of an atomic bomb!"
+
+The Greek general glanced at him out of the corner of his eyes. He said
+something in that heavy accent of his. He asked mildly if
+creatures--Invaders--who could travel between the stars were unlikely to
+be able to make atom bombs if they wanted to.
+
+There was no answer. But somebody led Coburn into an office where this
+carrier's skipper was at his desk. He looked at Coburn with a sardonic,
+unfriendly eye.
+
+"Mr. Coburn, I believe," he said remotely. "You've been very well
+staged-managed by your friends, Mr. Coburn. They've made it look as if
+they were trying hard to kill you, eh? But we know better, don't we? We
+know it's all a build-up for you to make a deal for them, eh? Well, Mr.
+Coburn, you'll find it's going to be a let-down instead! You're not
+officially under arrest, but I wouldn't advise you to try to start
+anything, Mr. Coburn! We're apt to be rather crude in dealing with
+emissaries of enemies of all the human race. And don't forget it!"
+
+And this was Coburn's first inkling that he was regarded as a traitor of
+his planet who had sold out to the Invaders. All the plans made from his
+information would be based on the supposition that he intended to betray
+mankind by misleading it.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+V
+
+It was not yet forty-eight hours since Coburn had been interrupted in
+the act of starting his car up in Ardea. Greek newspapers had splashed
+lurid headlines of a rumored invasion by Bulgarians, and their rumored
+defeat. The story was not widely copied. It sounded too unlikely. In a
+few hours it would be time for a new set of newspapers to begin to
+appear. Not one of them would print a single word about the most
+important disclosure in human history: that extra-terrestrial Invaders
+moved blandly about among human beings without being suspected.
+
+The newspapers didn't know it. On inside pages and bottom corners, the
+London papers might refer briefly to the remarkable rumor that had swept
+over Greece about an invasion force said to have crossed its border. The
+London papers would say that the Greek government officially denied that
+such a happening had taken place. The New York papers would be full of a
+political scandal among municipal officials, the Washington papers would
+deal largely with a Congressional investigation committee hearing, Los
+Angeles would have a new and gory murder to exploit, San Francisco news
+would be of a waterfront strike, Tokyo would talk of cherry blossoms,
+Delhi of Pakistan, and the French press would discuss the political
+crisis. But no newspaper, anywhere, would talk about Invaders.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the United States, radar technicians had been routed out of bed and
+informed that night fighters had had a fight with an alien ship manned
+by non-humans and had destroyed it, but their radars detected nothing at
+all. An hour after sunrise in Naples they had come up with a
+combination of radar frequencies which were built to detect everything.
+Instructions were going out in code to all radar establishments on how
+to set it up on existing equipment. Long before that time, business
+machines had begun intricate operations with punched cards containing
+all known facts about the people known to have dropped out of sight.
+Other machines began to integrate crackpot reports of things sighted in
+divers places. The stores of Hunter and Nereid rockets--especially the
+remote-control jobs--were broken out. Great Air Transport planes began
+to haul them to where they might be needed.
+
+In England, certain establishments that had never been mentioned even in
+Parliament were put on war alert. There was frantic scurrying-about in
+France. In Sweden, a formerly ignored scientist was called to a
+twice-scrambled telephone connection and consulted at length about
+objects reported over Sweden's skies. The Canadian Air Force tumbled out
+in darkness and was briefed. In Chile there was agitation, and in Peru.
+
+There was earnest effort to secure coöperation from behind the Iron
+Curtain, but that did not work. The Iron Curtain stood pat, demanding
+the most detailed of information and the privilege of inspecting all
+weapons intended for use against anybody so far unnamed, but refusing
+all information of its own. In fact, there was a very normal reaction
+everywhere, except that the newspapers didn't know anything to print.
+
+These secret hassles were continuing as the dawnlight moved over Italy
+and made Naples and its harbor quite the most beautiful place in the
+world. When daylight rolled over France, matters were beginning to fall
+into pattern. As daybreak moved across the Atlantic, at least the
+measures to be taken began to be visualized and orders given for their
+accomplishment.
+
+And then, with sunrise in America, real preparations got under way.
+
+But hours earlier there was consultation on the carrier in the Bay of
+Naples. Coburn sat in a wardroom in a cold fury which was in part
+despair. He had been kept in complete ignorance of all measures taken,
+and he felt the raging indignation of a man accused of treason. He was
+being questioned again. He was treated with an icy courtesy that was
+worse than accusation. The carrier skipper mentioned with detachment
+that, of course, Coburn had never been in any danger. Obviously. The
+event in the airport at Salonika and the attack on the convoy were
+window-dressing. They were not attempts to withdraw him from
+circulation, but to draw attention to him. Which, of course, implied
+that the Invaders--whoever or whatever they might be--considered Coburn
+a useful tool for whatever purpose they intended.
+
+This was before the conference officially began. It took time to
+arrange. There were radio technicians with microphones. The
+consultation--duly scrambled and re-scrambled--would be relayed to
+Washington while it was on. It was a top level conference. Hallen was
+included, but he did not seem happy.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Then things were ready. The skipper of the carrier took over, with full
+awareness that the very highest brass in Washington was listening to
+every word.
+
+"We can skip your technical information, Mr. Coburn," he said with
+ironic courtesy, "unless you've something new to offer."
+
+Coburn shook his head. He seethed.
+
+"For the record," said the skipper, "I repeat that it is obvious that
+your presence at the scene when those Bulgarians were knocked out, that
+you were attacked in Salonika, that the ship carrying you was also
+attacked, and that there was an incident on your landing here:--it's
+obvious that all these things were stage-managed to call attention to
+you, for the purposes of ... whoever staged them. Have you anything more
+to offer?"
+
+"No," growled Coburn. "I've told all I know." He was furiously angry and
+felt completely helpless.
+
+"Your information," purred the Skipper, "and the stage-managed
+incidents, make you look like a very patriotic citizen who is feared by
+the supposedly extra-terrestrial creatures. But we don't have to play
+any longer, Mr. Coburn. What were you told to tell your government? What
+do these ... extra-terrestrials want?"
+
+"My guess," snapped Coburn, "is that they want Earth."
+
+The skipper raised his eyebrows. "Are you threatening us in their name?"
+he asked, purring.
+
+"I'm telling you my guess," said Coburn hotly. "It's just as good as
+yours and no better! I have no instructions from them. I have no message
+from them. I've only my own opinion, which is that we humans had better
+get ready to fight. I believe we ought to join together--all of
+Earth--and get set to defend ourselves."
+
+There was silence. Coburn found himself regarding the faces around him
+with an unexpected truculence. Janice pressed his hand warningly.
+
+"All of Earth," said the skipper softly. "Hmmmm. You advise an
+arrangement with all the Earth.... What are your politics, Mr.
+Coburn?--No, let us say, what are the political views of the
+extra-terrestrial creatures you tell us about? We have to know."
+
+Coburn seethed. "If you're suggesting that this is a cold war trick," he
+said furiously, "--if they were faking it, they wouldn't try tricks!
+They'd make war! They'd try conquest!"
+
+Coburn saw the stout Greek general nodding to himself. But the Skipper
+said suavely: "You were with one of the creatures, you say, up in the
+village of Náousa. Would you say he seemed unfriendly to the
+Bulgarians?"
+
+"He was playing the part of an Englishman," snapped Coburn, "trying to
+stop a raid, and murders, and possibly a war--all of them unnecessary!"
+
+"You don't paint a frightening picture," complained the skipper
+ironically. "First you say we have to fight him and his kind, and then
+you imply that he was highly altruistic. What is the fact?"
+
+"Dammit!" said Coburn. "I hated him because he wasn't human. It made my
+flesh crawl to see him act so much like a man when he wasn't. But he
+made me feel ashamed when I held a gun on him and he proved he wasn't
+human just so Janice--so Miss Ames wouldn't be afraid to drive down to
+Salonika with me!"
+
+"So you have some ... friendly feelings toward him, eh?" the skipper
+said negligently. "How will you get in touch with his kind, by the way?
+_If_ we should ask you to? Of course you've got it all arranged? Just in
+case."
+
+Coburn knew that absolutely nothing could be done with a man who was
+trying to show off his shrewdness to his listening superiors. He said
+disgustedly: "That's the last straw. Go to hell!"
+
+A loud-speaker spoke suddenly. Its tone was authoritative, and there
+were little cracklings of static in it from its passage across the
+Atlantic.
+
+"That line of questioning can be dropped, Captain. Mr. Coburn, did these
+aliens have any other chances to kill you?"
+
+"Plenty!" snapped Coburn. "And easy ones. One of them came into my
+office as my secretary. She could have killed me. The man who passed for
+Major Pangalos could have shot us all while we were unconscious. I don't
+know why they didn't get the transport plane, and I don't know what
+their scheme is. I'm telling the facts. They're contradictory. I can't
+help that. All I have are the facts."
+
+The loud-speaker said crisply: "The attack on the transport plane--any
+pilots present who were in that fight?"
+
+Someone at the back said: "Yes, sir. Here."
+
+"How good was their ship? Could it have been a guided missile?"
+
+"No, sir. No guided missile. Whoever drove that ship was right on board.
+And that ship was good. It could climb as fast as we could dive, and no
+human could have taken the accelerations and the turns it made. Whoever
+drove it learned fast, too. He was clumsy at the beginning, but he
+learned. If we hadn't gotten in a lucky hit, he'd've had us where he
+wanted us in a little while more. Our fifty-calibres just bounced off
+that hull!"
+
+The loud-speaker said curtly: "If that impression is justified, that's
+the first business to be taken up. All but flying officers are excused.
+Mr. Coburn can go, too."
+
+There was a stirring everywhere in the room. Officers got up and walked
+out. Coburn stood. The Greek general came over to him and patted him on
+the shoulder, beaming. Janice went out with him. They arrived on the
+carrier's deck. This was the very earliest hour of dawn, and the
+conference had turned abruptly to a discussion of arms and tactics as
+soon as Washington realized that its planes were inadequate for
+fighting. Which was logical enough, but Coburn was pretty sure it was
+useless.
+
+"If anybody else in the world feels as futile as I do," said Coburn
+bitterly, "I feel sorry for him!"
+
+Janice said softly: "You've got me."
+
+But that was less than complete comfort. It is inborn in a man that he
+needs to feel superior. No man can feel pride before the woman of his
+choice while there is something stronger than himself. And Coburn
+especially wanted to feel that pride just now.
+
+There were very probably discussions of the important part of what
+Coburn had reported, of course, during the rest of the morning. But
+there was much more discussion of purely military measures. And of
+course there were attempts to get military intelligence. Things were
+reported in the sky near South Africa, and from Honolulu--where nobody
+would ignore what a radar said again, especially the juiced-up equipment
+just modified on orders--and from other places. Not all the reports were
+authentic, of course. If there were any observations inside the Iron
+Curtain, the Iron Curtain countries kept them to themselves. Politics
+was much more important than anything else, in that part of the world.
+
+But Coburn need not have felt as futile as he did. There was just one
+really spectacular occurrence in connection with the Invaders that day,
+and it happened where Coburn was. Almost certainly, it happened because
+Coburn was there. Though there is reason to believe that the newspaper
+campaign on shore, declaring that the American fleet risked the lives of
+all Naples by its mere presence, had something to do with it too.
+
+It was very spectacular.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It happened just after midday when the city and its harbor were at their
+most glamorous. Coburn and Janice were above when it began. There was an
+ensign assigned to escort Coburn about and keep an eye on him, and he
+took them on a carefully edited tour of the carrier. He took them to the
+radar room which was not secret any longer. He explained reservedly that
+there was a new tricked-up arrangement of radar which it was believed
+would detect turtle-shaped metal ships if they appeared.
+
+The radar room was manned, of course. It always was, with a cold war in
+being. Overhead, the bowl cages of the radars moved restlessly and
+rhythmically. Outside, on deck, the huge elevator that brought planes up
+from below rose at the most deliberate of peace-time rates.
+
+The ensign said negligently, pointing to the radar-screen: "That little
+speck is a plane making for the landing field on shore. This other one
+is a plane coming down from Genoa. You'd need a good pair of binoculars
+to see it. It's a good thirty-five miles away."
+
+Just then, one of the two radar-men on duty pushed a button and snapped
+into a microphone: "Sir! Radar-pip directly overhead! Does not show on
+normal radar. Elevation three hundred thousand feet, descending
+rapidly." His voice cut off suddenly.
+
+A metallic voice said: "Relay!"
+
+The ensign in charge of Coburn and Janice seemed to freeze. The
+radar-man pressed a button, which would relay that particular
+radar-screen's contents to the control room for the whole ship. There
+was a pause of seconds. Then bells began to ring everywhere. They were
+battle gongs.
+
+There was a sensation of stirring all over the ship. Doors closed with
+soft hissings. Men ran furiously. The gongs rang.
+
+The ensign said politely: "I'll take you below now."
+
+He led them very swiftly to a flight of stairs. There was a monstrous
+bellowing on the carrier's deck. Something dark went hurtling down its
+length, with a tail of pale-blue flame behind it. It vanished. Men were
+still running. The elevator shot into full-speed ascent. A plane rolled
+off it. The elevator dropped.
+
+An engine roared. Another. Yet another. A second dark and deadly thing
+flashed down the deck and was gone. There was a rumbling.
+
+The battle gongs cut off. The rumbling below seemed to increase. There
+was a curious vibration. The ship moved. Coburn could feel that it
+moved. It was turning.
+
+The ensign led them somewhere and said: "This is a good place. You'd
+better stay right here."
+
+He ran. They heard him running. He was gone.
+
+They were in a sort of ward room--not of the morning conference--and
+there were portholes through which they could look. The city which was
+Naples seemed to swing smoothly past the ship. They saw other ships. A
+cruiser was under way with its anchor still rising from the water. It
+dripped mud and a sailor was quite ridiculously playing a hose on it. It
+ascended and swayed and its shank went smoothly into the hawse-hole.
+There were guns swinging skyward. Some were still covered by canvas
+hoods. The hoods vanished before the cruiser swung out of the porthole's
+line of vision.
+
+A destroyer leaped across the space they could see, full speed ahead.
+The water below them began to move more rapidly. It began to pass by
+with the speed of ground past an express train. And continually,
+monotonously, there were roarings which climaxed and died in the
+distance.
+
+"The devil!" said Coburn. "I've got to see this. They can't kill us for
+looking."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+He opened the door. Janice, holding fast to his arm, followed as he went
+down a passage. Another door. They were on the deck side of the island
+which is the superstructure of a carrier, and they were well out of the
+way, and everybody in sight was too busy to notice them.
+
+The elevator worked like the piston of a pump. It vanished and
+reappeared and a plane came off. Men in vividly-colored suits swarmed
+about it, and the elevator was descending again. The plane roared, shot
+down the deck, and was gone to form one of the string of climbing
+objects which grew smaller with incredible swiftness as they shot for
+the sky. Coburn saw another carrier. There was a huge bow-wave before
+it. Destroyers ringed it, seeming to bounce in the choppy sea made by so
+many great ships moving so close together.
+
+The other carrier, too, was shooting planes into the air like bullets
+from a gun. The American Mediterranean fleet was putting out to sea at
+emergency-speed, getting every flying craft aloft that could be gotten
+away. A cruiser swung a peculiar crane-like arm, there was a puff of
+smoke and a plane came into being. The crane retracted. Another plane. A
+third.
+
+The fleet was out of the harbor, speeding at thirty knots, with
+destroyers weaving back and forth at higher speeds still. There were
+barges left behind in the harbor with sailors in them,--shore-parties or
+details who swore bitterly when they were left behind. They surged up
+and down on the mêlée of waves the fleet left behind in its hasty
+departure.
+
+On the fleet itself there was a brisk tenseness as it sped away from the
+land. Vesuvius still loomed high, but the city dwindled to a mere
+blinking mass of white specks which were its buildings. The sea was
+aglitter with sunlight reflected from the waves. There was the smell of
+salt air.
+
+Men began to take cryptic measures for the future. They strung cables
+across the deck from side to side. Arresting gear for planes which would
+presently land.
+
+Their special ensign found Coburn and Janice. "I'm supposed to stay with
+you," he explained politely. "I thought I could be of use. I'm really
+attached to another ship, but I was on board because of the hassle last
+night."
+
+Coburn said: "This would be invader stuff, wouldn't it?"
+
+The ensign shrugged. "Apparently. You heard what the radar said.
+Something at three hundred thousand feet, descending rapidly. It's not a
+human-built ship. Anyway, we've sent up all our planes. Jets will meet
+it first, at fifty thousand. If it gets through them there are ... other
+measures, of course."
+
+"This one beats me!" said Coburn. "Why?"
+
+The ensign shrugged again. "They tried for you last night."
+
+"I'm not that important, to them or anybody else. Or am I?"
+
+"I wouldn't know," said the ensign.
+
+"I don't know anything I haven't told," said Coburn grimly, "and the
+creatures can't suppress any information by killing me now. Anyhow, if
+they'd wanted to they'd have done it."
+
+A dull, faint sound came from high overhead. Coburn stepped out from
+under the shelter of the upper works of the island. He stared up into
+the sky. He saw a lurid spot of blue-white flame. He saw others. He
+realized that all the sky was interlaced with contrails--vapor-trails of
+jet-planes far up out of sight. But they were fine threads. The jets
+were up very high indeed. The pin-points of flame were explosions.
+
+"Using wing-rockets," said the ensign hungrily, "since fifty-calibres
+did no good last night, until one made a lucky hit. Rockets with
+proximity fuses. Our jets don't carry cannon."
+
+There were more explosions. There was a bright glint of reflected
+sunshine. It was momentary, but Coburn knew that it was from a flat,
+bright space-ship, which had tilted in some monstrously abrupt maneuver,
+and the almost vertical sunshine shone down from its surface.
+
+The ensign said in a very quiet voice: "The fight's coming lower."
+
+There was a crashing thump in the air. A battleship was firing
+eight-inch guns almost straight up. Other guns began.
+
+Guns began to fire on the carrier, too, below the deck and beyond it.
+Concussion waves beat at Coburn's body. He thrust Janice behind him to
+shield her, but there could be no shielding.
+
+The air was filled with barkings and snarlings and the unbelievably
+abrupt roar of heavy guns. The carrier swerved, so swiftly that it
+tilted and swerved again. The other ships of the fleet broke their
+straight-away formation and began to move in bewildering patterns. The
+blue sea was criss-crossed with wakes. Once a destroyer seemed to slide
+almost under the bow of the carrier. The destroyer appeared unharmed on
+the other side, its guns all pointed skyward and emitting seemingly
+continuous blasts of flame and thunder.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The ensign grabbed Coburn's shoulder and pointed, his hands shaking.
+
+There was the Invader ship. It was exactly as Coburn had known it would
+be. It was tiny. It seemed hardly larger than some of the planes that
+swooped at it. But the planes were drawing back now. The shining metal
+thing was no more than two thousand feet up and it was moving in
+erratic, unpredictable darts and dashes here and there, like a
+dragon-fly's movements, but a hundred times more swift. Proximity-fused
+shells burst everywhere about it. It burst through a still-expanding
+puff of explosive smoke, darted down a hundred feet, and took a zig-zag
+course of such violent and angular changes of position that it looked
+more like a streak of metal lightning than anything else.
+
+It was down to a thousand feet. It shot toward the fleet at a speed
+which was literally that of a projectile. It angled off to one side and
+back, and suddenly dropped again and plunged crazily through the maze of
+ships from one end to the other, no more than fifty feet above the water
+and with geysers of up-flung sea all about it from the shells that
+missed.
+
+Then it sped away with a velocity which simply was not conceivable. It
+was the speed of a cannonball. It was headed straight toward a distant,
+stubby, draggled tramp-steamer which plodded toward the Bay of Naples.
+
+It rose a little as it flew. And then it checked, in mid-air. It hung
+above the dumpy freighter, and there were salvoes of all the guns in the
+fleet. But at the flashes it shot skyward. When the shells arrived and
+burst, it was gone.
+
+It could still be sighted as a spark of sunlight shooting for the
+heavens. Jets roared toward it. It vanished.
+
+Coburn heard the ensign saying in a flat voice: "If that wasn't
+accelerating at fifteen Gs, I never saw a ship. If it wasn't
+accelerating at fifteen Gs ..."
+
+And that was all. There was nothing else to shoot at. There was nothing
+else to do. Jets ranged widely, looking for something that would offer
+battle, but the radars said that the metal ship had gone up to three
+hundred miles and then headed west and out of radar range. There had not
+been time for the French to set up paired radar-beam outfits anyhow, so
+they couldn't spot it, and in any case its course seemed to be toward
+northern Spain, where there was no radar worth mentioning.
+
+Presently somebody noticed the dingy, stubby, draggled tramp steamer
+over which the Invaders' craft had hovered. It was no longer on course.
+It had turned sidewise and wallowed heavily. Its bow pointed
+successively to every point of the compass.
+
+It looked bad. Salvoes of the heaviest projectiles in the Fleet had been
+fired to explode a thousand feet above it. Perhaps--
+
+A destroyer went racing to see. As it drew near--Coburn learned this
+later--it saw a man's body hanging in a sagging heap over the railing of
+its bridge. There was nobody visible at the wheel. There were four men
+lying on its deck, motionless.
+
+The skipper of the destroyer went cold. He brought his ship closer. It
+was not big, this tramp. Maybe two thousand tons. It was low in the
+water. It swayed and surged and wallowed and rolled.
+
+Men from the destroyer managed to board it. It was completely unharmed.
+They found one small sign of the explosions overhead. One fragment of an
+exploded shell had fallen on board, doing no damage.
+
+Even the crew was unharmed. But every man was asleep. Each one slumbered
+heavily. Each breathed stertorously. They could not be awakened. They
+would need oxygen to bring them to.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A party from the destroyer went on board to bring the ship into harbor.
+The officer in charge tried to find out the ship's name.
+
+There was not a document to be found to show what the ship's name was or
+where it had come from or what it carried as cargo. That was strange.
+The officer looked in the pockets of the two men in the wheel house.
+There was not a single identifying object on either of them. He grew
+disturbed. He made a really thorough search. Every sleeping man was
+absolutely anonymous. Then--still on the way to harbor--a really
+fine-tooth-comb examination of the ship began.
+
+Somebody's radium-dial watch began to glow brightly. The searchers
+looked at each other and went pale. They hunted frantically, fear
+making them clumsy.
+
+They found it. Rather--they found them.
+
+The stubby tramp had an adequate if rather clumsy atomic bomb in each of
+its two holds. The lading of the ship was of materials which--according
+to theory--should be detonated in atomic explosion if an atomic bomb
+went off nearby. Otherwise they could not be detonated.
+
+The anonymous tramp-steamer had been headed for the harbor of Naples,
+whose newspapers--at least those of a certain political party--had been
+screaming of the danger of an atomic explosion while American warships
+were anchored there.
+
+It was not likely that two atom bombs and a shipload of valuable
+secondary atomic explosive had been put on a carefully nameless ship
+just to be taken for a ride. If this ship had anchored among the
+American fleet and if it had exploded in the Bay of Naples ...
+
+The prophecies of a certain political party would seem to have been
+fulfilled. The American ships would be destroyed. Naples itself would be
+destroyed. And it would have appeared that Europeans who loved the great
+United States had made a mistake.
+
+It was, odd, though, that this ship was the only one that the Invaders'
+flying craft had struck with its peculiar weapon.
+
+
+VI
+
+We humans are rational beings, but we are not often reasonable. Those
+who more or less handle us in masses have to take account of that fact.
+It could not be admitted that the fleet had had a fight with a ship
+piloted by Invaders from another solar system. It would produce a wild
+panic, beside which even a war would be relatively harmless. So the
+admiral of the Mediterranean fleet composed an order commending his men
+warmly for their performance in an unrehearsed firing-drill. Their
+target had been--so the order said--a new type of guided missile
+recently developed by hush-hush agencies of the Defense Department. The
+admiral was pleased and proud, and happy....
+
+It was an excellent order, but it wasn't true. The admiral wasn't happy.
+Not after battle photographs were developed and he could see how the
+alien ship had dodged rockets with perfect ease, and had actually taken
+a five-inch shell, which exploded on impact, without a particle of
+damage.
+
+On the carrier, the Greek general said mildly to Coburn that the
+Invaders had used their power very strangely. After stopping an invasion
+of Greece, they had prevented an atomic-bomb explosion which would have
+killed some hundreds of thousands of people. And it was strange that
+the turtle-shaped ship that had attacked the air transport was so
+clumsily handled as compared with this similar craft which had zestfully
+dodged all the missiles a fleet could throw at it.
+
+Coburn thought hard. "I think I see," he said slowly. "You mean, they're
+here and they know all they need to know. But instead of coming out into
+the open, they're making governments recognize their existence. They're
+letting the rulers of Earth know they can't be resisted. But we did
+knock off one of their ships last night!"
+
+The Greek general pointedly said nothing. Coburn caught his meaning. The
+fleet, firing point-blank, had not destroyed its target. The ship last
+night had seemed to fall into a cloud bank and explode. But nobody had
+seen it blow up. Maybe it hadn't.
+
+"Humoring us!" realized Coburn. "They don't want to destroy our
+civilization, so they'll humor us. But they want our governments to know
+that they can do as they please. If our governments know we can't
+resist, they think we'll surrender. But they're wrong."
+
+The Greek general looked at him enigmatically.
+
+"We've still got one trick left," said Coburn. "Atomic bombs. And if
+they fail, we can still get killed fighting them another way."
+
+There was a heavy, droning noise far away. It increased and drew nearer.
+It was a multi-engined plane which came from the west and settled down,
+and hovered over the water and touched and instantly created a spreading
+wake of foam.
+
+The fleet was back at anchor then. It was enclosed in the most beautiful
+combination of city and scene that exists anywhere. Beyond the city the
+blunted cone of Vesuvius rose. In the city, newspaper vendors shrilly
+hawked denunciations of the American ships because of the danger that
+their atom bombs might explode. Well outside the harbor, a Navy crew of
+experts worked to make quite impossible the detonation of atomic bombs
+in a stubby tramp-steamer which had--plausibly, at least--been sent to
+make those same newspapers' prophecies of disaster come true.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A long, long time passed, while consultations took place to which Coburn
+was not invited. Then a messenger led him to the wardroom of the
+previous conference. He recognized the men who had landed by seaplane a
+while since. One was a cabinet member from Washington. There was someone
+of at least equal importance from London, picked up en route. There were
+generals and admirals. The service officers looked at Coburn with
+something like accusation in their eyes. He was the means by which they
+had come to realize their impotence. The Greek general sat quietly in
+the rear.
+
+"Mr. Coburn," said the Secretary from Washington. "We've been canvassing
+the situation. It seems that we simply are not prepared to offer
+effective resistance--not yet--to the ... invaders you tell us about. We
+know of no reason why this entire fleet could not have been disabled as
+effectively as the tramp-steamer offshore. You know about that ship?"
+
+Coburn nodded. The Greek general had told him. The Secretary went on
+painfully: "Now, the phenomena we have to ascribe to Invaders fall into
+two categories. One is the category of their action against the
+Bulgarian raiding force, and today the prevention of the cold-war murder
+of some hundreds of thousands of people. That category suggests that
+they are prepared--on terms--to be amiable. A point in their favor."
+
+Coburn set his lips.
+
+"The other group of events simply points you out and builds you up as a
+person of importance to these Invaders. You seem to be extremely
+important to them. They doubtless could have killed you. They did not.
+What they did do was bring you forward to official attention. Presumably
+they had a realistic motive in this."
+
+"I don't know what it could be," said Coburn coldly. "I blundered into
+one affair. I figured out a way to detect them. I happened to be the
+means by which they were proved to exist. That's all. It was an
+accident."
+
+The Secretary looked skeptical. "Your discoveries were remarkably ...
+apt. And it does seem clear that they made the appearance of hunting
+you, while going to some pains not to catch you. Mr. Coburn, how can we
+make contact with them?"
+
+Coburn wanted to swear furiously. He was still being considered a
+traitor. Only they were trying to make use of his treason.
+
+"I have no idea," he said grimly.
+
+"What do they want?"
+
+"I would say--Earth," he said grimly.
+
+"You deny that you are an authorized intermediary for them?"
+
+"Absolutely," said Coburn. There was silence. The Greek general spoke
+mildly from the back of the room. He said in his difficult English that
+Coburn's personal motives did not matter. But if the Invaders had picked
+him out as especially important, it was possible that they felt him
+especially qualified to talk to them. The question was, would he try to
+make contact with them?
+
+The Secretary looked pained, but he turned to Coburn. "Mr. Coburn?"
+
+Coburn said, "I've no idea how to set about it, but I'll try on one
+condition. There's one thing we haven't tried against them. Set up an
+atom-bomb booby-trap, and I'll sit on it. If they try to contact me, you
+can either listen in or try to blow them up, and me with them!"
+
+There was buzzing comment. Perhaps--Coburn's nails bit into his palms
+when this was suggested--perhaps this was a proposal to let the Invaders
+examine an atomic bomb, American-style. It was said in earnest
+simplicity. But somebody pointed out that a race which could travel
+between the stars and had ships such as the Mediterranean fleet had
+tried to shoot down, would probably find American atomic bombs rather
+primitive. Still--
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The Greek general again spoke mildly. If the Invaders were to be made to
+realize that Coburn was trying to contact them, he should return to
+Greece. He should visibly take up residence where he could be
+approached. He should, in fact, put himself completely at the mercy of
+the Invaders.
+
+"Ostensibly," agreed the Secretary.
+
+The Greek general then said diffidently that he had a small villa some
+twenty miles from the suburbs of Salonika. The prevailing winds were
+such that if an atomic explosion occurred there, it would not endanger
+anybody. He offered it.
+
+"I'll live there," asked Coburn coldly, "and wait for them to come to
+me? I'll have microphones all about so that every word that's said will
+be relayed to your recorders? And there'll be a bomb somewhere about
+that you can set off by remote control? Is that the idea?"
+
+Then Janice spoke up. And Coburn flared into anger against her. But she
+was firm. Coburn saw the Greek general smiling slyly.
+
+They left the conference while the decision was made. And they were in
+private, and Janice talked to him. There are methods of argument against
+which a man is hopeless. She used them. She said that she, not Coburn,
+might be the person the Invaders might have wanted to take out of
+circulation, because she might have noticed something important she
+hadn't realized yet. When Coburn pointed out that he'd be living over an
+atomic bomb, triggered to be set off from a hundred miles away, she
+demanded fiercely to know if he realized how she'd feel if she weren't
+there too....
+
+Next day an aircraft carrier put out of Naples with an escort of
+destroyers. It traveled at full speed down the toe of Italy's boot,
+through the Straits of Messina, across the Adriatic, and rounded the
+end of Greece and went streaking night and day for Salonika. Special
+technicians sent by plane beat her time by days. The Greek general was
+there well ahead. And he expansively supervised while his inherited,
+isolated villa was prepared for the reception of Invaders--and Coburn
+and Janice.
+
+And Coburn and Janice were married. It was an impressive wedding,
+because it was desirable for the Invaders to know about it. It was
+brilliantly military with uniforms and glittering decorations and
+innumerable important people whom neither of them knew or cared about.
+
+If it had been anybody else's wedding Coburn would have found it
+unspeakably dreary. The only person present whom he knew beside Janice
+was Hallen. He acted as groomsman, with the air of someone walking on
+eggs. After it was over he shook hands with a manner of tremendous
+relief.
+
+"Maybe I'll brag about this some day," he told Coburn uneasily. "But
+right now I'm scared to death. What do you two really expect to happen?"
+
+Janice smiled at him. "Why," she said, "we expect to live happily ever
+after."
+
+"Oh yes," said Hallen uncomfortably. "But that wasn't just what I had in
+mind."
+
+
+VII
+
+The world wagged on. The newspapers knew nothing about super-secret
+top-level worries. There was not a single news story printed anywhere
+suggesting an invasion of Earth from outer space. There were a few more
+Flying Saucer yarns than normal, and it was beginning to transpire that
+an unusual number of important people were sick, or on vacation, or
+otherwise out of contact with the world. But, actually, not one of the
+events in which Coburn and Janice had been concerned reached the state
+of being news. Even the shooting off the Bay of Naples was explained as
+an emergency drill.
+
+Quietly, a good many things happened. Cryptic orders passed around, and
+oxygen tanks were accumulated in military posts. Hunter and Nereid
+guided missiles were set up as standard equipment in a number of
+brand-new places. They were loaded for bear. But days went by, and
+nothing happened. Nothing at all. But officialdom was not at ease.
+
+If anything--while the wide world went happily about its
+business--really high-level officialdom grew more unhappy day by day.
+Coburn and Janice flew back to Salonika. They went in a Navy plane with
+a fighter plane escort. They landed at the Salonika airport, and the
+Greek general was among those who greeted them.
+
+He took them out to the villa he'd placed at the disposal of high
+authority for their use. He displayed it proudly. There was absolutely
+no sign that it had been touched by anybody since its original builders
+had finished with it two-hundred-odd years before. The American officer
+who had wired it, though--he looked as if he were short a week's
+sleep--showed them how anywhere on the grounds or in the house they
+would need only to speak a code-word and they'd instantly be answered.
+
+There were servants, and the Greek general took Coburn aside and assured
+him that there was one room which absolutely was not wired for sound. He
+named it.
+
+So they took up a relatively normal way of life. Sometimes they decided
+that it would be pleasant to drive in to Salonika. They mentioned it,
+and went out and got in the car that went with the villa. Oddly, there
+was always some aircraft lazying about overhead by the time they were
+out of the gate. They always returned before sunset. And sometimes they
+swam in the water before the villa's door. Then, also, they were careful
+to be back on solid ground before sunset. That was so their guards out
+on the water wouldn't have to worry.
+
+But it was a nagging and an unhappy business to know that they were
+watched and overheard everywhere save in that one unwired room. It could
+have made for tension between them. But there was another thought to
+hold them together. This was the knowledge that they were literally
+living on top of a bomb. If an Invader's flying ship descended at the
+villa, everything that happened would be heard and seen by microphones
+and concealed television cameras. If the Invaders were too arrogant, or
+if they were arbitrary, there would be a test to see if their ship could
+exist in the heart of an atom-bomb explosion.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Coburn and Janice, then, were happy after a fashion. But nobody could
+call their situation restful.
+
+They had very few visitors. The Greek general came out meticulously
+every day. Hallen came out once, but he knew about the atomic bomb. He
+didn't stay long. When they'd been in residence a week, the General
+telephoned zestfully that he was going to bring out some company. His
+English was so mangled and obscure that Coburn wondered cynically if
+whoever listened to their tapped telephone could understand him. But,
+said the General in high good humor, he was playing a good joke. He had
+hunted up Helena, who was Coburn's secretary, and he had also invited
+Dillon to pay a visit to some charming people he knew. It would be a
+great joke to see Dillon's face.
+
+There was a fire in the living room that night. The Greek servants had
+made it, and Coburn thought grimly that they were braver men and women
+than he'd have been. They didn't have to risk their lives. They could
+have refused this particular secret-service assignment. But they hadn't.
+
+A voice spoke from the living-room ceiling, a clipped American voice.
+"Mr. Coburn, a car is coming."
+
+That was standard. When the General arrived; when the occasional
+delivery of telephoned-for supplies came; on the one occasion when a
+peddler on foot had entered the ground. It lacked something of being the
+perfect atmosphere for a honeymoon, but it was the way things were.
+
+Presently there were headlights outside. The Greek butler went to greet
+the guests. Coburn and Janice heard voices. The General was in
+uproarious good humor. He came in babbling completely uncomprehensible
+English.
+
+There was Helena. She smiled warmly at Coburn. She went at once to
+Janice. "How do you do?" she said in her prettily accented English. "I
+have missed not working for your husband, but this is my fiancé!"
+
+And Janice shook hands with a slick-haired young Greek who looked
+pleasant enough, but did not seem to her as remarkable as Coburn.
+
+Then Dillon stared at Coburn.
+
+"The devil!" he said, with every evidence of indignation. "This is the
+chap--"
+
+The General roared, and Coburn said awkwardly: "I owe you an apology,
+and the privilege of a poke in the nose besides. But it was a
+situation--I was in a state--"
+
+Then the General howled with laughter. Helena laughed. Her fiancé
+laughed. And Dillon grinned amusedly at Coburn.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"My dear fellow!" said Dillon. "We are the guests this whole villa was
+set up to receive! The last time I saw you was in Náousa, and the last
+time Helena saw you you stuck pins in her, and--"
+
+Coburn stiffened. He went slowly pale.
+
+"I--see! You're the foam-suit people, eh?" Then he looked with hot
+passion at the General. "You!" he said grimly. "You I didn't suspect.
+You've made fools of all of us, I think."
+
+The General said something obscure which could have been a proverb. It
+was to the effect that nobody could tell a fat man was cross-eyed when
+he laughed.
+
+"Yes," said Dillon beaming. "He is fat. So his eyes don't look like
+they're different. You have to see past his cheeks and eyebrows. That's
+how he passed muster. And he slept very soundly after the airport
+affair."
+
+Coburn felt a sort of sick horror. The General had passed as a man, and
+he'd loaned this villa, and he knew all about the installation of the
+atomic bomb.... Then Coburn looked through a doorway and there was his
+Greek butler standing in readiness with a submachine-gun in his hands.
+
+"I take it this is an official call," said Coburn steadily. "In that
+case you know we're overheard--or did the General cancel that?"
+
+"Oh, yes!" said Dillon. "We know all about the trap we've walked into.
+But we'd decided that the time had come to appear in the open anyhow.
+You people are very much like us, incidentally. Apparently there's only
+one real way that a truly rational brain can work. And we and you Earth
+people both have it. May we sit down?"
+
+Janice said: "By all means!"
+
+Helena sat, with an absolutely human gesture of spreading her skirt
+beside her. The General plumped into a chair and chuckled. The
+slick-haired young man politely offered Janice a cigarette and lighted
+Helena's for her. Dillon leaned against the mantel above the fire.
+
+"Well?" said Coburn harshly. "You can state your terms. What do you want
+and what do you propose to do to get it?"
+
+Dillon shook his head. He took a deep breath. "I want you to listen,
+Coburn. I know about the atom bomb planted somewhere around, and I know
+I'm talking for my life. You know we aren't natives of Earth. You've
+guessed that we come from a long way off. We do. Now--we found out the
+trick of space travel some time ago. You're quite welcome to it. We
+found it, and we started exploring. We've been in space, you might say,
+just about two of your centuries. You're the only other civilized race
+we've found. That's point one."
+
+Coburn fumbled in his pocket. He found a cigarette. Dillon held a match.
+Coburn started, and then accepted it.
+
+"Go on." He added, "There's a television camera relaying this, by the
+way. Did you know?"
+
+"Yes, I know," said Dillon. "Now, having about two centuries the start
+of you, we have a few tricks you haven't found out yet. For one thing,
+we understand ourselves, and you, better than you do. We've some
+technical gadgets you haven't happened on yet. However, it's entirely
+possible for you to easily kill the four of us here tonight. If you
+do--you do. But there are others of our race here. That's point two."
+
+"Now come the threats and demands," said Coburn.
+
+"Perhaps." But Dillon seemed to hesitate. "Dammit, Coburn, you're a
+reasonable man. Try to think like us a moment. What would you do if
+you'd started to explore space and came upon a civilized race, as we
+have?"
+
+Coburn said formidably, "We'd study them and try to make friends."
+
+"In that order," said Dillon instantly. "That's what we've tried to do.
+We disguised ourselves as you because we wanted to learn how to make
+friends before we tried. But what did we find, Coburn? What's your
+guess?"
+
+"You name it!" said Coburn.
+
+"You Earth people," said Dillon, "are at a turning-point in your
+history. Either you solve your problems and keep on climbing, or you'll
+blast your civilization down to somewhere near a caveman level and have
+to start all over again. You know what I mean. Our two more spectacular
+interferences dealt with it."
+
+"The Iron Curtain," said Coburn. "Yes. But what's that got to do with
+you? It's none of your business. That's ours."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"But it _is_ ours," said Dillon urgently. "Don't you see, Coburn?
+You've a civilization nearly as advanced as ours. If we can make
+friends, we can do each other an infinite lot of good. We can complement
+each other. We can have a most valuable trade, not only in goods, but in
+what you call human values and we call something else. We'd like to
+start that trade.
+
+"But you're desperately close to smashing things. So we've had to rush
+things. We did stop that Bulgarian raid. When you proved too sharp to be
+fooled, we grew hopeful. Here might be our entering wedge. We hammered
+at you. We managed to make your people suspicious that there might be
+something in what you said. We proved it. It was rugged for you, but we
+had to let you people force us into the open. If we'd marched out shyly
+with roses in our hair--what would you have thought?"
+
+Coburn said doggedly: "I'm still waiting for the terms. What do you
+want?"
+
+The General said something plaintive from his chair. It was to the
+effect that Coburn still believed that Earth was in danger of conquest
+from space.
+
+"Look!" said Dillon irritably. "If you people had found the trick of
+space travel first, and you'd found us, would you have tried to conquer
+us? Considering that we're civilized?"
+
+Coburn said coldly, "No. Not my particular people. We know you can't
+conquer a civilized race. You can exterminate them, or you can break
+them down to savagery, but you can't conquer them. You can't conquer
+us!"
+
+Then Dillon said very painstakingly: "But we don't want to conquer you.
+Even your friends inside the Iron Curtain know that the only way to
+conquer a country is to smash it down to savagery. They've done that
+over and over for conquest. But what the devil good would savages be to
+us? We want someone to trade with. We can't trade with savages. We want
+someone to gain something from. What have savages to offer us? A planet?
+Good Heavens, man! We've already found sixty planets for colonies, much
+better for us than Earth. Your gravity here is ... well, it's
+sickeningly low."
+
+"What _do_ you want then?"
+
+"We want to be friends," said Dillon. "We'll gain by it exactly what you
+Earth people gained when you traded freely among yourselves, before
+blocked currencies and quotas and such nonsense strangled trade. We'll
+gain what you gained when you'd stopped having every city a fort and
+every village guarded by the castle of its lord. Look, Coburn: we've got
+people inside the Iron Curtain. We'll keep them there. You won't be able
+to disband your armies, but we can promise you won't have to use
+them--because we certainly won't help you chaps fight among yourselves.
+We'll give you one of our ships to study and work on. But we won't give
+you our arms. You'll have your moon in a year and your whole solar
+system in a decade. You'll trade with us from the time you choose, and
+you'll be roaming space when you can grasp the trick of it. Man, you
+can't refuse. You're too near to certain smashing of your civilization,
+and we can help you to avoid it. Think what we're offering."
+
+Then Coburn said grimly: "And if we don't like the bargain? What if we
+refuse?"
+
+Dillon carefully put the ash from his cigarette into an ashtray. "If you
+won't be our friends," he said with some distaste, "we can't gain
+anything useful from you. We don't want you as slaves. You'd be no good
+to us. For that reason we can't get anything we want from the Iron
+Curtain people. They've nothing to offer that we can use. So our
+ultimatum is--make friends or we go away and leave you alone. Take it or
+leave it!"
+
+There was a dead, absolute silence. After a long time Coburn said:
+"Altruism?"
+
+Dillon grinned. "Enlightened self-interest. Common sense!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There was a clicking in the ceiling. A metallic voice said: "Mr.
+Coburn, the conversation just overheard and recorded has to be
+discussed in detail on high diplomatic levels. It will take time for
+conferences--decisions--arrangements. Assuming that your guests are
+acting in good faith, they have safe conduct from the villa. Their offer
+is very attractive, but it will have to be passed on at high
+policy-making levels."
+
+Dillon said pleasantly, to the ceiling: "Yes. And you've got to keep it
+from being public, of course, until your space ships can discover us
+somewhere. It will have to be handled diplomatically, so your people are
+back of a grand offer to make friends when it happens." He added wryly,
+"We're very much alike, really. Coburn's very much like us. That's
+why--if it's all right with you--you can arrange for him to be our point
+of confidential contact. We'll keep in touch with him."
+
+The ceiling did not reply. Dillon waited, then shrugged. The Greek
+general spoke. He said that since they had come so far out from
+Salonika, it was too early to leave again. It might be a good idea to
+have a party. Some music would be an excellent thing. He said he liked
+Earth music very much.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A long time later Janice and Coburn were alone in the one room of the
+house which was not wired for sound. There were no microphones here.
+
+Coburn said reluctantly in the darkness: "It sounds sensible all right.
+Maybe it's true. But it feels queer to think of it...."
+
+Janice pressed closer to him and whispered in his ear: "I made friends
+with that girl who passed for Helena. I like her. She says we'll be
+invited to make a trip to their planet. They can do something about the
+gravity. And she says she's really going to be married to the ... person
+who was with her...." She hesitated. "She showed me what they really
+look like when they're not disguised as us."
+
+Coburn put his arm around her and smiled gently. "Well? Want to tell
+me?"
+
+Janice caught her breath. "I--I could have cried.... The poor thing--to
+look like that. I'm glad I look like I do. For you, darling. For you."
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Note:
+
+ This etext was produced from _Amazing Stories_ April-May 1953.
+ 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 Project Gutenberg's The Invaders, by William Fitzgerald Jenkins
+
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Invaders, by William Fitzgerald Jenkins
+
+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: The Invaders
+
+Author: William Fitzgerald Jenkins
+
+Release Date: February 21, 2010 [EBook #31343]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
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+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE INVADERS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Greg Weeks, Stephen Blundell and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
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+</pre>
+
+
+<div class="figc"><img src="images/001.jpg" width="600" height="364" alt="" title="" />
+
+<h1><span class="sp1">THE INVADERS</span></h1>
+
+<h2><small>By MURRAY LEINSTER</small></h2>
+
+<div class="bk1"><p><i>It started in Greece on the day after tomorrow. Before
+the last act raced to a close, Coburn was buried to his
+ears in assorted adventures, including a revolution and
+an invasion from outer space!</i></p>
+
+<p><i>We're not given to throwing around the word "epic"
+lightly, but here </i>is<i> one! Swashbuckling action, a great
+many vivid characters, and a weird mystery&mdash;all spun
+for you by one of the master story-tellers of our time.</i></p></div></div>
+
+<p class="cap"><span class="smcap">On</span> a certain day&mdash;it may be in
+the history books eventually&mdash;Coburn
+was in the village of
+Ardea, north of Salonika in the
+most rugged part of Greece. He
+was making a survey for purposes
+which later on turned out not to
+matter much. The village of Ardea
+was small, it was very early in the
+morning, and he was trying to get
+his car started when he heard the
+yell.</p>
+
+<p>It was a shrill yell, and it traveled
+fast. Coburn jerked his head
+upright from the hood of the car.
+A whiskered villager with flapping
+trousers came pounding up the
+single street. His eyes were panic-stricken
+and his mouth was wide.
+He emitted the yell in a long, sustained
+note. Other villagers
+popped into view like ants from a
+disturbed ant-hill. Some instantly
+ran back into their houses. Others
+began to run toward the outskirts
+of the village, toward the south.</p>
+
+<p>Coburn, watching blankly,
+found himself astonished at the
+number of people the village contained.
+He hadn't dreamed it was
+so populous. All were in instant
+frenzied flight toward the mountains.
+An old woman he'd seen
+barely hobbling, now ran like a
+deer. Children toddled desperately.
+Adults snatched them up
+and ran. Larger children fled on
+twinkling legs. The inhabitants of
+Ardea vanished toward the hills in
+a straggling, racing, panting
+stream. They disappeared around
+an outcrop of stone which was
+merely the nearest place that
+would hide them. Then there was
+silence.</p>
+
+<p>Coburn turned his head blankly
+in the direction from which they
+had run. He saw the mountains&mdash;incredibly
+stony and barren. That
+was all. No, not quite&mdash;there
+was something far away which
+was subtly different in color from
+the hillsides. It moved. It flowed
+over a hill crest, coming plainly
+from somewhere beyond the mountains.
+It was vague in shape. Coburn
+felt a momentary stirring of
+superstition. There simply couldn't
+be anything so huge....</p>
+
+<p>But there could. There was. It
+was a column of soldiers in uniforms
+that looked dark-gray at
+this distance. It flowed slowly out
+of the mountains like a colossal
+snake&mdash;some Midgard monster
+or river of destruction. It moved
+with an awful, deliberate steadiness
+toward the village of Ardea.</p>
+
+<p>Coburn caught his breath. Then
+he was running too. He was out of
+the village almost before he realized
+it. He did not try to follow
+the villagers. He might lead pursuers
+after them. There was a
+narrow defile nearby. Tanks could
+hardly follow it, and it did not
+lead where they would be going.
+He plunged into it and was instantly
+hidden. He pelted on. It
+was a trail from somewhere, because
+he saw ancient donkey-droppings
+on the stones, but he
+did not know where it led. He
+simply ran to get away from the
+village and the soldiers who were
+coming toward it.</p>
+
+<p>This was Greece. They were
+Bulgarian soldiers. This was not
+war or even invasion. This was
+worse&mdash;a cold-war raid. He kept
+running and presently rocky cliffs
+overhung him on one side, a vast
+expanse of sky loomed to his left.
+He found himself panting. He
+began to hope that he was actually
+safe.</p>
+
+<p>Then he heard a voice. It
+sounded vexed. Quite incredibly,
+it was talking English. "But my
+dear young lady!" it said severely.
+"You simply mustn't go on!
+There's the very devil of a mess
+turning up, and you mustn't run
+into it!"</p>
+
+<p>A girl's voice answered, also in
+English. "I'm sure&mdash;I don't
+know what you're talking about!"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm afraid I can't explain.
+But, truly, you mustn't go on to
+the village!"</p>
+
+<p>Coburn pushed ahead. He came
+upon the people who had spoken.
+There was a girl riding on a donkey.
+She was American. Trim.
+Neat. Uneasy, but reasonably
+self-confident. And there was a
+man standing by the trail, with a
+slide of earth behind him and mud
+on his boots as if he'd slid down
+somewhere very fast to intercept
+this girl. He wore the distinctive
+costume a British correspondent
+is apt to affect in the wilds.</p>
+
+<p>They turned as Coburn came
+into view. The girl goggled at
+him. He was not exactly the sort
+of third person one expected to
+find on a very lonely, ill-defined
+rocky trail many miles north of
+Salonika.</p>
+
+<p>When they turned to him, Coburn
+recognized the man. He'd
+met Dillon once or twice in Salonika.
+He panted: "Dillon! There's
+a column of soldiers headed across
+the border! Bulgarians!"</p>
+
+<p>"How close?" asked Dillon.</p>
+
+<p>"They're coming," said Coburn,
+with some difficulty due to
+lack of breath. "I saw them across
+the valley. Everybody's run away
+from the village. I was the last
+one out."</p>
+
+<p>Dillon nodded composedly. He
+looked intently at Coburn. "You
+know me," he said reservedly.
+"Should I remember you?"</p>
+
+<p>"I've met you once or twice,"
+Coburn told him. "In Salonika."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh," said Dillon. "Oh, yes.
+Sorry. I've got some cameras up
+yonder. I want a picture or two of
+those Bulgarians. See if you can
+persuade this young lady not to
+go on. I fancy it's safe enough
+here. Not a normal raid route
+through this pass."</p>
+
+<p>Coburn nodded. Dillon expected
+the raid, evidently. This sort of
+thing had happened in Turkey.
+Now it would start up here, in
+Greece. The soldiers would strike
+fast and far, at first. They
+wouldn't stop to hunt down the
+local inhabitants. Not yet.</p>
+
+<p>"We'll wait," said Coburn.
+"You'll be back?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, surely!" said Dillon. "Five
+minutes or less."</p>
+
+<p>He started up the precipitous
+wall, at whose bottom he had slid
+down. He climbed remarkably
+well. He went up hand-over-hand
+despite the steepness of the stone.
+It looked almost impossible, but
+Dillon apparently found handgrips
+by instinct, as a good
+climber does. In a matter of minutes
+he vanished, some fifty feet
+up, behind a bulging mass of
+stone. He did not reappear.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<div class="figr"><a href="images/003-2.jpg"><img src="images/003-1.jpg" width="400" height="255" alt="" title="" /></a></div>
+
+<p>Coburn began to get his breath
+back. The girl looked at him, her
+forehead creased.</p>
+
+<p>"Just to make sure," said Coburn,
+"I'll see if I can get a view
+back down the trail."</p>
+
+<p>Where the vastness of the sky
+showed, he might be able to look
+down. He scrambled up a barrier
+two man-heights high. There was
+a screen of straggly brush, with
+emptiness beyond. He peered.</p>
+
+<p>He could see a long way down
+and behind, and actually the village
+was clearly in sight from here.
+There were rumbling, caterpillar-tread
+tanks in the act of entering
+it. There were anachronistic
+mounted men with them. Cavalry
+is outdated, nowadays, but in
+rocky mountain country they can
+have uses where tanks can't go.
+But here tanks and cavalry looked
+grim. Coburn squirmed back and
+beckoned to the girl. She joined
+him. They peered through the
+brushwood together.</p>
+
+<p>The light tanks were scurrying
+along the single village street.
+Horsemen raced here and there. A
+pig squealed. There was a shot.
+The tanks emerged from the other
+side. They went crawling swiftly
+toward the south. But they did
+not turn aside where the villagers
+had. They headed along the way
+Coburn had driven to Ardea.</p>
+
+<p>Infantrymen appeared, marching
+into the village. An advance
+party, rifles ready. This was strict
+discipline and standard military
+practise. Horsemen rode to tell
+them that all was quiet. They
+turned and spurred away after
+the tanks.</p>
+
+<div class="figl"><a href="images/002-2.jpg"><img src="images/002-1.jpg" width="400" height="258" alt="" title="" /></a></div>
+
+<p>The girl said in a strained voice.
+"This is war starting! Invasion!"</p>
+
+<p>Coburn said coldly, "No. No
+planes. This isn't war. It's a training
+exercise, Iron-Curtain style.
+This outfit will strike twenty&mdash;maybe
+thirty miles south. There's
+a town there&mdash;Kilkis. They'll
+take it and loot it. By the time
+Athens finds out what's happened,
+they'll be ready to fall back.
+They'll do a little fighting. They'll
+carry off the people. And they'll
+deny everything. The West doesn't
+want war. Greece couldn't fight
+by herself. And America wouldn't
+believe that such things could
+happen. But they do. It's what's
+called cold war. Ever hear of
+that?"</p>
+
+<p>The main column of soldiers far
+below poured up to the village
+and went down the straggly street
+in a tide of dark figures. The village
+was very small. The soldiers
+came out of the other end of the
+village. They poured on after the
+tanks, rippling over irregularities
+in the way. They seemed innumerable.</p>
+
+<p>"Three or four thousand men,"
+said Coburn coldly. "This is a big
+raid. But it's not war. Not yet."</p>
+
+<p>It was not the time for full-scale
+war. Bulgaria and the other countries
+in its satellite status were
+under orders to put a strain upon
+the outside world. They were
+building up border incidents and
+turmoil for the benefit of their
+masters. Turkey was on a war
+footing, after a number of incidents
+like this. Indo-China was at
+war. Korea was an old story. Now
+Greece. It always takes more men
+to guard against criminal actions
+than to commit them. When this
+raid was over Greece would have
+to maintain a full-size army in its
+northern mountains to guard
+against its repetition. Which would
+be a strain on its treasury and
+might help toward bankruptcy.
+This was cold war.</p>
+
+<p>The infantry ended. Horse-drawn
+vehicles appeared in a
+seemingly endless line. Motorized
+transport would be better, but
+the Bulgarians were short of it.
+Shaggy, stubby animals plodded
+in the wake of the tanks and the
+infantry. There were two-wheeled
+carts in single file all across the
+valley. They went through the
+village and filed after the soldiers.</p>
+
+<p>"I think," said Coburn in biting
+anger, "this will be all there
+is to see. They'll go in until they're
+stopped. They'll kidnap Greek
+civilians and later work them to
+death in labor camps. They'll
+carry off some children to raise as
+spies. But their purpose is probably
+only to make such a threat
+that the Greeks will go broke
+guarding against them. They
+know the Greeks don't want war."</p>
+
+<p>He began to wriggle back from
+the brushwood screen. He was
+filled with the sort of sick rage
+that comes when you can't actively
+resent insolence and arrogance.
+He hated the people who
+wanted the world to collapse, and
+this was part of their effort to
+bring it about.</p>
+
+<p>He helped the girl down. "Dillon
+said to wait," he said. He
+found himself shaking with anger
+at the men who had ordered the
+troops to march. "He said he was
+taking pictures. He must have had
+an advance tip of some sort. If
+so, he'll have a line of retreat."</p>
+
+<p>Then Coburn frowned. Not
+quite plausible, come to think of
+it. But Dillon had certainly known
+about the raid. He was set to take
+pictures, and he hadn't been surprised.
+One would have expected
+Greek Army photographers on
+hand to take pictures of a raid of
+which they had warning. Probably
+United Nations observers on the
+scene, too. Yes. There should be
+Army men and probably a United
+Nations team up where Dillon
+was.</p>
+
+<p>Coburn explained to the girl.
+"That'll be it. And they'll have a
+radio, too. Probably helicopters
+taking them out also. I'll go up
+and tell them to be sure and have
+room for you."</p>
+
+<p>He started for the cliff he'd
+seen Dillon climb. He paused:
+"I'd better have your name for
+them to report to Athens."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm Janice Ames," she told
+him. "The Breen Foundation has
+me going around arranging for
+lessons for the people up here.
+Sanitation and nutrition and midwifery,
+and so on. The Foundation
+office is in Salonika, though."</p>
+
+<p>He nodded and attacked the
+cliff.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>It hadn't been a difficult climb
+for Dillon. It wasn't even a long
+one for Coburn, but it was much
+worse than he'd thought. The
+crevices for handholds were rare,
+and footholds were almost non-existent.
+There were times when
+he felt he was holding on by his
+fingernails. Dillon seemed to
+have made it with perfect ease,
+but Coburn found it exhausting.</p>
+
+<p>Fifty feet up he came to the
+place where Dillon had vanished.
+But it was a preposterously difficult
+task to get across an undercut
+to where he could grasp a stunted
+tree. It was a strain to scramble
+up past it. Then he found himself
+on the narrowest of possible ledges,
+with a sickening drop off to one
+side. But Dillon had made it, so
+he followed.</p>
+
+<p>He went a hundred yards, and
+then the ledge came to an end. He
+saw where Dillon must have
+climbed. It was possible, but Coburn
+violently did not want to try.
+Still ... He started.</p>
+
+<p>Then something clicked in his
+throat. There was a rather deep
+ledge for a space of four or five
+feet. And there was Dillon. No,
+not Dillon. Just Dillon's clothes.
+They lay flat and deflated, but
+laid out in one assembly beside a
+starveling twisted bush. It would
+have been possible for a man to
+stand there to take off his clothes,
+if he wanted to. But a man who
+takes off his clothes&mdash;and why
+should Dillon do that?&mdash;takes
+them off one by one. These garments
+were fitted together. The
+coat was over the shirt, and the
+trousers fitted to the bottom of
+the shirt over the coat, and the
+boots were at the ends of the
+trouser legs.</p>
+
+<p>Then Coburn saw something he
+did not believe. It palpably was
+not true. He saw a hand sticking
+out of the end of the sleeve. But
+it was not a hand, because it had
+collapsed. It was rather like an
+unusually thick glove, flesh color.</p>
+
+<p>Then he saw what should have
+been Dillon's head. And it was in
+place, too. But it was not Dillon's
+head. It was not a head at all. It
+was something quite different.
+There were no eyes. Merely holes.
+Openings. Like a mask.</p>
+
+<p>Coburn felt a sort of roaring in
+his ears, and he could not think
+clearly for a moment because of
+the shrieking impossibility of
+what he was looking at. Dillon's
+necktie had been very neatly untied,
+and left in place in his collar.
+His shirt had been precisely unbuttoned.
+He had plainly done it
+himself. And then&mdash;the unbuttoned
+shirt made it clear&mdash;he
+had come out of his body. Physically,
+he had emerged and gone
+on. The thing lying flat that had
+lapsed at Coburn's feet was Dillon's
+outside. His outside only.
+The inside had come out and gone
+away. It had climbed the cliff
+over Coburn's head.</p>
+
+<p>The outside of Dillon looked
+remarkably like something made
+out of foam-rubber. Coburn
+touched it, insanely.</p>
+
+<p>He heard his own voice saying
+flatly: "It's a sort of suit. A suit
+that looks like Dillon. He was in
+it. Something was! Something is
+playing the part of Dillon. Maybe
+it always was. Maybe there isn't
+any Dillon."</p>
+
+<p>He felt a sort of hysterical composure.
+He opened the chest. It
+was patently artificial. There were
+such details on the inside as would
+be imagined in a container needed
+to fit something snugly. At the
+edges of the opening there were
+fastenings like the teeth of a zipper,
+but somehow different. Coburn
+knew that when this was
+fastened there would be no visible
+seam.</p>
+
+<p>Whatever wore this suit-that-looked-like-Dillon
+could feel perfectly
+confident of passing for Dillon,
+clothed or otherwise. It could
+pass without any question for&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>Coburn gagged.</p>
+
+<p><i>It could pass without question for
+a human being.</i></p>
+
+<p>Obviously, whatever was wearing
+this foam-rubber replica of
+Dillon was not human!</p>
+
+<p>Coburn went back to where he
+had to climb down the cliffside
+again. He moved like a sleep-walker.
+He descended the fifty-foot
+cliff by the crevices and the
+single protruding rock-point that
+had helped him get up. It was
+much easier going down. In his
+state of mind it was also more
+dangerous. He moved in a sort of
+robot-like composure.</p>
+
+<p>He moved toward the girl,
+trying to make words come out
+of his throat, when a small rock
+came clattering down the cliff.
+He looked up. Dillon was in the
+act of swinging to the first part of
+the descent. He came down, very
+confident and assured. He had
+two camera-cases slung from his
+shoulders. Coburn stared at him,
+utterly unable to believe what
+he'd seen ten minutes before.</p>
+
+<p>Dillon reached solid ground and
+turned. He smiled wryly. His
+shirt was buttoned. His tie was
+tied.</p>
+
+<p>"I hoped," he said ruefully to
+Janice Ames, "that the Bulgars
+would toddle off. But they left a
+guard in the village. We can't
+hope to take an easier trail. We'll
+have to go back the way you
+came. We'll get you safe to Salonika,
+though."</p>
+
+<p>The girl smiled, uneasily but
+gratefully.</p>
+
+<p>"And," added Dillon, "we'd
+better get started."</p>
+
+<p>He gallantly helped the girl
+remount her donkey. At the sight,
+Coburn was shaken out of his
+numbness. He moved fiercely to
+intervene. But Janice settled herself
+in the saddle and Dillon confidently
+led the way. Coburn
+grimly walked beside her as she
+rode. He was convinced that he
+wouldn't leave her side while Dillon
+was around. But even as he
+knew that desperate certitude, he
+was filled with confusion and a
+panicky uncertainty.</p>
+
+<p>When they'd traveled about
+half a mile, another frightening
+thought occurred to Coburn. Perhaps
+Dillon&mdash;passing for human&mdash;wasn't
+alone. Perhaps there
+were thousands like him.</p>
+
+<p>Invaders! Usurpers, pretending
+to be men. Invaders, obviously,
+from space!</p>
+
+<h3>II</h3>
+
+<p>They made eight miles. At least
+one mile of that, added together,
+was climbing straight up. Another
+mile was straight down. The rest
+was boulder-strewn, twisting, donkey-wide,
+slanting, slippery stone.
+But there was no sign of anyone
+but themselves. The sky remained
+undisturbed. No planes. They saw
+no sign of the raiding force from
+across the border, and they heard
+no gunfire.</p>
+
+<p>Coburn struggled against the
+stark impossibility of what he had
+seen. The most horrifying concept
+regarding invasion from space is
+that of creatures who are able to
+destroy or subjugate humanity.
+A part of that concept was in Coburn's
+mind now. Dillon marched
+on ahead, in every way convincingly
+human. But he wasn't.
+And to Coburn, his presence as a
+non-human invader of Earth
+made the border-crossing by the
+Bulgarians seem almost benevolent.</p>
+
+<p>They went on. The next hill was
+long and steep. Then they were at
+the hill crest. They looked down
+into a village called N&aacute;ousa. It
+was larger than Ardea, but not
+much larger. One of the houses
+burned untended. Figures moved
+about. There were tanks in sight,
+and many soldiers in the uniform
+that looked dark-gray at a distance.
+The route by which Dillon
+had traveled had plainly curved
+into the line-of-march of the Bulgarian
+raiding force.</p>
+
+<p>But the moving figures were not
+soldiers. The soldiers were still.
+They lay down on the grass in
+irregular, sprawling windrows.
+The tanks were not in motion.
+There were two-wheeled carts in
+sight&mdash;reaching back along the
+invasion-route&mdash;and they were
+just as stationary as the men and
+the tanks. The horses had toppled
+in their shafts. They were motionless.</p>
+
+<p>The movement was of civilians&mdash;men
+and women alike. They
+were Greek villagers, and they
+moved freely among the unmilitarily
+recumbent troops, and even
+from this distance their occupation
+was clear. They were happily
+picking the soldiers' pockets. But
+there was one figure which moved
+from one prone figure to another
+much too quickly to be looting.
+Coburn saw sunlight glitter on
+something in his hand.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>Dillon noticed the same thing
+Coburn did at the same instant.
+He bounded forward. He ran toward
+the village and its tumbled
+soldiers in great, impossible leaps.
+No man could make such leaps or
+travel so fast. He seemed almost
+to soar toward the village, shouting.
+Coburn and Janice saw him
+reach the village. They saw him
+rush toward the one man who had
+been going swiftly from one prone
+soldier to another. It was too far
+to see Dillon's action, but the sunlight
+glittered again on something
+bright, which this time flew
+through the air and dropped to
+the ground.</p>
+
+<p>The villagers grouped about
+Dillon. There was no sign of a
+struggle.</p>
+
+<p>"What's happened?" demanded
+Janice uneasily. "Those are soldiers
+on the ground."</p>
+
+<p>Coburn's fright prevented his
+caution. He shouted furiously.
+"He's not a man! You saw it!
+No man can run so fast! You saw
+those jumps! He's not human!
+He's&mdash;something else!"</p>
+
+<p>Janice jerked her eyes to Coburn
+in panic. "What did you
+say?"</p>
+
+<p>Coburn panted: "Dillon's no
+man! He's a monster from somewhere
+in space! And he and his
+kind have killed those soldiers!
+Murdered them! And the soldiers
+are men! You stay here. I'll go
+down there and&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"No!" said Janice, "I'm coming
+too."</p>
+
+<p>He took the donkey's halter
+and led the animal down to the
+village, with Janice trembling a
+little in the saddle. He talked in a
+tight, taut, hysterical tone. He
+told what he'd found up on the
+cliffside. He described in detail
+the similitude of a man's body
+he'd found deflated beside a
+stunted bush.</p>
+
+<p>He did not look at Janice as he
+talked. He moved doggedly toward
+the village, dragging at the
+donkey's head. They neared the
+houses very slowly, and Coburn
+considered that he walked into the
+probability of a group of other
+creatures from unthinkable other
+star systems, disguised as men.
+It did not occur to him that his
+sudden outburst about Dillon
+sounded desperately insane to
+Janice.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>They reached the first of the
+fallen soldiers. Janice looked,
+shuddering. Then she said thinly:
+"He's breathing!"</p>
+
+<p>He was. He was merely a boy.
+Twenty or thereabouts. He lay
+on his back, his eyes closed. His
+face was upturned like a dead
+man's. But his breast rose and fell
+rhythmically. He slept as if he
+were drugged.</p>
+
+<p>But that was more incredible
+than if he'd been dead. Regiments
+of men fallen simultaneously
+asleep....</p>
+
+<p>Coburn's flow of raging speech
+stopped short. He stared. He saw
+other fallen soldiers. Dozens of
+them. In coma-like slumber, the
+soldiers who had come to loot and
+murder lay like straws upon the
+ground. If they had been dead it
+would have been more believable.
+At least there are ways to kill
+men. But this ...</p>
+
+<p>Dillon parted the group of villagers
+about him and came toward
+Coburn and Janice. He was
+frowning in a remarkably human
+fashion.</p>
+
+<p>"Here's a mess!" he said irritably.
+"Those Bulgars came
+marching down out of the pass.
+The cavalry galloped on ahead
+and cut the villagers off so they
+couldn't run away. They started
+to loot the village. They weren't
+pleasant. Women began to scream,
+and there were shootings&mdash;all in
+a matter of minutes. And then the
+looters began to act strangely.
+They staggered around and sat
+down and went to sleep!"</p>
+
+<p>He waved his hands in a helpless
+gesture, but Coburn was not
+deceived.</p>
+
+<p>"The tanks arrived. And they
+stopped&mdash;and their crews went
+to sleep! Then the infantry appeared,
+staggering as it marched.
+The officers halted to see what
+was happening ahead, and the
+entire infantry dropped off to
+sleep right where it stood!</p>
+
+<p>"It's bad! If it had happened a
+mile or so back ... The Greeks
+must have played a trick on
+them, but those cavalrymen raised
+the devil in the few minutes they
+were out of hand! They killed
+some villagers and then keeled
+over. And now the villagers aren't
+pleased. There was one man
+whose son was murdered, and he's
+been slitting the Bulgars' throats!"</p>
+
+<p>He looked at Coburn, and Coburn
+said in a grating voice: "I
+see."</p>
+
+<p>Dillon said distressedly: "One
+can't let them slit the throats of
+sleeping men! I'll have to stay
+here to keep them from going at
+it again. I say, Coburn, will you
+take one of their staff cars and run
+on down somewhere and tell the
+Greek government what's happened
+here? Something should be
+done about it! Soldiers should
+come to keep order and take
+charge of these chaps."</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Coburn. "I'll do it.
+I'll take Janice along, too."</p>
+
+<p>"Splendid!" Dillon nodded as
+if in relief. "She'd better get out
+of the mess entirely. I fancy
+there'd have been a full-scale
+massacre if we hadn't come along.
+The Greeks have no reason to
+love these chaps, and their intentions
+were hardly amiable. But
+one can't let them be murdered!"</p>
+
+<p>Coburn had his hand on his revolver
+in his pocket. His finger
+was on the trigger. But if Dillon
+needed him to run an errand, then
+there obviously were no others of
+his own kind about.</p>
+
+<p>Dillon turned his back. He gave
+orders in the barbarous dialect of
+the mountains. His voice was
+authoritative. Men obeyed him
+and dragged uniformed figures out
+of a light half-track that was
+plainly a staff car. Dillon beckoned,
+and Coburn moved toward
+him. The important thing as far
+as Coburn was concerned was to
+get Janice to safety. Then to report
+the full event.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>"I ... I'm not sure ..." began
+Janice, her voice shaking.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll prove what I said," raged
+Coburn in a low tone. "I'm not
+crazy, though I feel like it!"</p>
+
+<p>Dillon beckoned again. Janice
+slipped off the donkey's back.
+She looked pitifully frightened
+and irresolute.</p>
+
+<p>"I've located the chap who's
+the mayor of this village, or something
+like that. Take him along.
+They might not believe you, but
+they'll have to investigate when
+he turns up."</p>
+
+<p>A white-bearded villager reluctantly
+climbed into the back
+of the car. Dillon pleasantly offered
+to assist Janice into the
+front seat. She climbed in, deathly
+white, frightened of Coburn and
+almost ashamed to admit that his
+vehement outburst had made her
+afraid of Dillon, too.</p>
+
+<p>Dillon came around to Coburn's
+side of the vehicle. "Privately,"
+he said with a confidential air,
+"I'd advise you to dump this mayor
+person where he can reach authority,
+and then go away quietly
+and say nothing of what happened
+up here. If the Greeks are
+using some contrivance that handles
+an affair like this, it will be
+top secret. They won't like civilians
+knowing about it."</p>
+
+<p>Coburn's grip on his revolver
+was savage. It seemed likely,
+now, that Dillon was the only
+one of his extraordinary kind
+about.</p>
+
+<p>"I think I know why you say
+that," he said harshly.</p>
+
+<p>Dillon smiled. "Oh, come now!"
+he protested. "I'm quite unofficial!"</p>
+
+<p>He was incredibly convincing
+at that moment. There was a
+wry half-smile on his face. He
+looked absolutely human; absolutely
+like the British correspondent
+Coburn had met in Salonika.
+He was too convincing. Coburn
+knew he would suspect his own
+sanity unless he made sure.</p>
+
+<p>"You're not only unofficial,"
+said Coburn grimly. His hand
+came up over the edge of the
+staff-car door. It had his revolver
+in it. It bore inexorably upon the
+very middle of Dillon's body.
+"You're not human, either!
+You're not a man! Your name
+isn't Dillon! You're&mdash;something
+I haven't a word for! But if you
+try anything fancy I'll see if a
+bullet through your middle will
+stop you!"</p>
+
+<p>Dillon did not move. He said
+easily: "You're being absurd, my
+dear fellow. Put away that pistol."</p>
+
+<p>"You slipped!" said Coburn
+thickly. "You said the Greeks
+played a trick on this raiding
+party. But you played it. At
+Ardea, when you climbed that
+cliff&mdash;no man could climb so
+fast. No man could run as you ran
+down into this village. And I saw
+that body you're wearing when
+you weren't in it! I followed you
+up the cliff when&mdash;" Coburn's
+voice was ragingly sarcastic&mdash;"when
+you were taking pictures!"</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>Dillon's face went impassive.
+Then he said: "Well?"</p>
+
+<p>"Will you let me scratch your
+finger?" demanded Coburn almost
+hysterically. "If it bleeds,
+I'll apologize and freely admit
+I'm crazy! But if it doesn't ..."</p>
+
+<p>The thing-that-was-not-Dillon
+raised its eyebrows. "It wouldn't,"
+it said coolly. "You do know.
+What follows?"</p>
+
+<p>"You're something from space,"
+accused Coburn, "sneaking around
+Earth trying to find out how to
+conquer us! You're an Invader!
+You're trying out weapons. And
+you want me to keep my mouth
+shut so we Earth people won't
+patch up our own quarrels and
+join forces to hunt you down!
+But we'll do it! We'll do it!"</p>
+
+<p>The thing-that-was-not-Dillon
+said gently: "No. My dear chap,
+no one will believe you."</p>
+
+<p>"We'll see about that!" snapped
+Coburn. "Put those cameras in
+the car!"</p>
+
+<p>The figure that looked so human
+hesitated a long instant,
+then obeyed. It lowered the two
+seeming cameras into the back
+part of the staff car.</p>
+
+<p>Janice started to say, "I ...
+I ..."</p>
+
+<p>The pseudo-Dillon smiled at
+her. "You think he's insane, and
+naturally you're scared," it said
+reassuringly. "But he's sane. He's
+quite right. I am from outer space.
+And I'm not humoring him either.
+Look!"</p>
+
+<p>He took a knife from his pocket
+and snapped it open. He deliberately
+ran the point down the side
+of one of his fingers.</p>
+
+<p>The skin parted. Something
+that looked exactly like foam-rubber
+was revealed. There were
+even bubbles in it.</p>
+
+<p>The pseudo-Dillon said, "You
+see, you don't have to be afraid
+of him. He's sane, and quite human.
+You'll feel much better traveling
+with him." Then the figure
+turned to Coburn. "You won't
+believe it, but I really like you,
+Coburn. I like the way you've
+reacted. It's very ... human."</p>
+
+<p>Coburn said to him: "It'll be
+human, too, when we start to
+hunt you down!" He let the staff
+car in gear. Dillon smiled at him.
+He let in the clutch, and the car
+leaped ahead.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>In the two camera-cases Coburn
+was sure that he had the cryptic
+device that was responsible for the
+failure of a cold-war raid. He
+wouldn't have dared drive away
+from Dillon leaving these devices
+behind. If they were what he
+thought, they'd be absolute proof
+of the truth of his story, and they
+should furnish clues to the sort of
+science the Invaders possessed.
+Show the world that Invaders
+were upon it, and all the world
+would combine to defend Earth.
+The cold war would end.</p>
+
+<p>But a bitter doubt came to him.
+Would they? Or would they offer
+zestfully to be viceroys and overseers
+for the Invaders, betraying
+the rest of mankind for the privilege
+of ruling them even under
+unhuman masters?</p>
+
+<p>Janice swayed against his shoulder.
+He cast a swift glance at her.
+Her face was like marble.</p>
+
+<p>"What's the matter?"</p>
+
+<p>She shook her head. "I'm trying
+not to faint," she said unsteadily.
+"When you told me he was from
+another world I ... thought you
+were crazy. But when he admitted
+it ... when he proved it ..."</p>
+
+<p>Coburn growled. The trail
+twisted and dived down a steep
+slope. It twisted again and ran
+across a rushing, frothing stream.
+Coburn drove into the rivulet.
+Water reared up in wing-like
+sheets on either side. The staff
+car climbed out, rocking, on the
+farther side. Coburn put it to the
+ascent beyond. The trail turned
+and climbed and descended as the
+stony masses of the hills required.</p>
+
+<p>"He's&mdash;from another world!"
+repeated Janice. Her teeth chattered.
+"What do they want&mdash;creatures
+like him? How&mdash;how
+many of them are there? Anybody
+could be one of them! What do
+they want?"</p>
+
+<p>"This is a pretty good world,"
+said Coburn fiercely. "And his
+kind will want it. We're merely
+the natives, the aborigines, to
+them. Maybe they plan to wipe
+us out, or enslave us. But they
+won't! We can spot them now!
+They don't bleed. Scratch one and
+you find&mdash;foam-rubber. X-rays
+will spot them. We'll learn to pick
+them out&mdash;and when some specialists
+look over those things that
+look like cameras we'll know more
+still! Enough to do something!"</p>
+
+<p>"Then you think it's an invasion
+from space?"</p>
+
+<p>"What else?" snapped Coburn.</p>
+
+<p>His stomach was a tight
+cramped knot now. He drove the
+car hard!</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>In air miles the distance to be
+covered was relatively short. In
+road miles it seemed interminable.
+The road was bad and curving beyond
+belief. It went many miles
+east and many miles west for
+every mile of southward gain. The
+hour grew late. Coburn had fled
+Ardea at sunrise, but they'd
+reached N&aacute;ousa after midday and
+he drove frantically over incredible
+mountain roads until dusk.
+Despite sheer recklessness, however,
+he could not average thirty
+miles an hour. There were times
+when even the half-track had to
+crawl or it would overturn. The
+sun set, and he went on up steep
+grades and down steeper ones in
+the twilight. Night fell and the
+headlights glared ahead, and the
+staff car clanked and clanked and
+grumbled and roared on through
+the darkness.</p>
+
+<p>They probably passed through
+villages&mdash;the headlights showed
+stone hovels once or twice&mdash;but
+no lights appeared. It was midnight
+before they saw a moving
+yellow spot of brightness with a
+glare as of fire upon steam above
+it. There were other small lights
+in a row behind it, and they
+saw that all the lights moved.</p>
+
+<p>"A railroad!" said Coburn.
+"We're getting somewhere!"</p>
+
+<p>It was a railroad train on the
+other side of a valley, but they did
+not reach the track. The highway
+curved away from it.</p>
+
+<p>At two o'clock in the morning
+they saw electric lights. The highway
+became suddenly passable.
+Presently they ran into the still,
+silent streets of a slumbering
+town&mdash;Serrai&mdash;an administrative
+center for this part of Greece.
+They threaded its ways while
+Coburn watched for a proper
+place to stop. Once a curiously-hatted
+policeman stared blankly
+at them under an arc lamp as the
+staff car clanked and rumbled past
+him. They saw a great pile of stone
+which was a church. They saw a
+railroad station.</p>
+
+<p>Not far away there was a building
+in which there were lights. A
+man in uniform came out of its
+door.</p>
+
+<p>Coburn stopped a block away.
+There were uneasy stirrings, and
+the white-bearded passenger from
+the village said incomprehensible
+things in a feeble voice. Coburn
+got Janice out of the car first. She
+was stiff and dizzy when she tried
+to walk. The Greek was in worse
+condition still. He clung to the
+side of the staff car.</p>
+
+<p>"We tell the truth," said Coburn
+curtly, "when we talk to the
+police. We tell the whole truth&mdash;except
+about Dillon. That sounds
+too crazy. We tell it to top-level
+officials only, after they realize
+that something they don't know
+anything about has really taken
+place. Talk of Invaders from space
+would either get us locked up as
+lunatics or would create a panic.
+This man will tell what happened
+up there, and they'll investigate.
+But we take these so-called cameras
+to Salonika, and get to an
+American battleship."</p>
+
+<p>He lifted Dillon's two cameras
+by the carrying-straps. And the
+straps pulled free. They'd held the
+cases safely enough during a long
+journey on foot across the mountains.
+But they pulled clear now.</p>
+
+<p>Coburn had a bitter thought.
+He struck a match. He saw the
+leather cases on the floor of the
+staff car. He picked up one of
+them. He took it to the light of
+the headlights, standing there in
+the resonant darkness of a street
+in a city of stone houses.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>The leather was brittle. It was
+friable, as if it had been in a fire.
+Coburn plucked it open, and it
+came apart in his hands. Inside
+there was the smell of scorched
+things. There was a gritty metallic
+powder. Nothing else. The other
+carrying-case was in exactly the
+same condition.</p>
+
+<p>Coburn muttered bitterly:
+"They were set to destroy themselves
+if they got into other hands
+than Dillon's. We haven't a bit of
+proof that he wasn't a human
+being. Not a shred of proof!"</p>
+
+<p>He suddenly felt a sick rage, as
+if he had been played with and
+mocked. The raid from Bulgaria
+was serious enough, of course. It
+would have killed hundreds of
+people and possibly hundreds of
+others would have been enslaved.
+But even that was secondary in
+Coburn's mind. The important
+thing was that there were Invaders
+upon Earth. Non-human monsters,
+who passed for humans
+through disguise. They had been
+able to travel through space to
+land secretly upon Earth. They
+moved unknown among men,
+learning the secrets of mankind,
+preparing for&mdash;what?</p>
+
+<h3>III</h3>
+
+<p>They got into Salonika early
+afternoon of the next day, after
+many hours upon an antique railroad
+train that puffed and grunted
+and groaned among interminable
+mountains. Coburn got a taxi to
+take Janice to the office of the
+Breen Foundation which had sent
+her up to the north of Greece to
+establish its philanthropic instruction
+courses. He hadn't much
+to say to Janice as they rode. He
+was too disheartened.</p>
+
+<p>In the cab, though, he saw great
+placards on which newspaper
+headlines appeared in Greek. He
+could make out the gist of them.
+Essentially, they shrieked that
+Bulgarians had invaded Greece
+and had been wiped out. He made
+out the phrase for valiant Greek
+army. And the Greek army was
+valiant enough, but it hadn't had
+anything to do with this.</p>
+
+<p>From the police station in
+Serrai&mdash;he had been interviewed
+there until dawn&mdash;he knew what
+action had been taken. Army
+planes had flown northward in
+the darkness, moved by the Mayor's,
+and Coburn's, and Janice's
+tale of Bulgarian soldiers on
+Greek soil, sleeping soundly. They
+had released parachute flares and
+located the village of N&aacute;ousa.
+Parachutists with field radios had
+jumped, while other flares burned
+to light them to the ground. That
+was that. Judging by the placards,
+their reports had borne out the
+story Coburn had brought down.
+There would be a motorized Greek
+division on the way to take charge
+of the four-thousand-odd unconscious
+raiders. There was probably
+an advance guard there now.</p>
+
+<p>But there was no official news.
+Even the Greek newspapers called
+it rumors. Actually, it was leaked
+information. It would be reasonable
+for the Greek government to
+let it leak, look smug, and blandly
+say "No comment" to all inquiries,
+including those from Bulgaria.</p>
+
+<p>But behind that appearance of
+complacency, the Greek government
+would be going quietly mad
+trying to understand what so fortunately
+had happened. And Coburn
+could tell them. But he knew
+better than to try without some
+sort of proof. Yet, he had to tell.
+The facts were more important
+than what people thought of him.</p>
+
+<p>The cab stopped before his own
+office. He paid the driver. The
+driver beamed and said happily:
+"<i>Tys nikisame, &eacute;?</i>"</p>
+
+<p>Coburn said, "<i>Poly kala. Orea.</i>"</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>His office was empty. It was
+dustier than usual. His secretary
+was probably taking a holiday
+since he was supposed to be out of
+town. He grunted and sat down at
+the telephone. He called a man he
+knew. Hallen&mdash;another American&mdash;was
+attached to a non-profit
+corporation which was attached
+to an agency which was
+supposed to co&ouml;perate with a
+committee which had something
+to do with NATO. Hallen answered
+the phone in person.</p>
+
+<p>Coburn identified himself.
+"Have you heard any rumors
+about a Bulgarian raid up-country?"
+he asked.</p>
+
+<p>"I haven't heard anything else
+since I got up," Hallen told him.</p>
+
+<p>"I was there," said Coburn. "I
+brought the news down. Can you
+come over?"</p>
+
+<p>"I'm halfway there now!" said
+Hallen as he slammed down the
+phone.</p>
+
+<p>Coburn paced up and down his
+office. It was very dusty. Even
+the seat of the chair at his secretary's
+desk was dusty. The odds
+were that she was coming in only
+to sort the mail, and not even sitting
+down for that. He shrugged.</p>
+
+<p>He heard footsteps. The door
+opened. His secretary, Helena,
+came in. She looked surprised.</p>
+
+<p>"I was at lunch," she explained.
+She had a very slight accent. She
+hung up her coat. "I am sorry. I
+stopped at a store."</p>
+
+<p>He had paused in his pacing to
+nod at her. Now he stared, but
+her back was turned toward him.
+He blinked. She had just told a
+very transparent lie. And Helena
+was normally very truthful.</p>
+
+<p>"You had a good trip?" she
+asked politely.</p>
+
+<p>"Fair," said Coburn. "Any
+phone calls this morning?" he
+asked.</p>
+
+<p>"Not this morning," she said
+politely.</p>
+
+<p>She reached in a desk drawer.
+She brought out paper. She put
+it in the typewriter and began to
+type.</p>
+
+<p>Coburn felt very queer. Then he
+saw something else. There was a
+fly in the office&mdash;a large, green-bodied
+fly of metallic lustre. The
+inhabitants of Salonika said with
+morbid pride that it was a specialty
+of the town, with the most
+painful of all known fly stings.
+And Helena abhorred flies.</p>
+
+<p>It landed on the bare skin of her
+neck. She did not notice. It stayed
+there. Ordinarily she would have
+jumped up, exclaiming angrily in
+Greek, and then she would have
+pursued the fly vengefully with a
+folded newspaper until she killed
+it. But now she ignored it.</p>
+
+<p>Hallen came in, stamping. Coburn
+closed the door behind him.
+He felt queer at the pit of his
+stomach. For Helena to let a fly
+stay on her neck suggested that
+her skin was ... somehow not
+like its usual self.</p>
+
+<p>"What happened to those Bulgarians?"
+demanded Hallen.</p>
+
+<p>Coburn told him precisely what
+he'd seen when he arrived in
+N&aacute;ousa after an eight-mile hike
+through mountains. Then he went
+back and told Hallen precisely
+what he'd seen up on the cliffside.</p>
+
+<p>"His cameras were some sort of
+weapon. He played it on the
+marching column, it took effect
+and they went to sleep," he finished.
+"I took them away from
+him and brought them down,
+but&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>He told about the contents of
+the camera cases being turned to
+a gritty, sooty powder. Then he
+added: "Dillon set them to destroy
+themselves. You understand.
+He's not a man. He's a
+creature from some planet other
+than Earth, passing for a human
+being. He's an Invader from
+space."</p>
+
+<p>Hallen's expression was uneasy
+and compassionate but utterly
+unbelieving. Helena shivered and
+turned away her face. Coburn's
+lips went taut. He reached down
+to his desk. He made a sudden,
+abrupt gesture. Hallen caught his
+breath and started up.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>Coburn said curtly: "Another
+one of them. Helena, is that
+foam-suit comfortable?"</p>
+
+<p>The girl jerked her face around.
+She looked frightened.</p>
+
+<p>"Helena," said Coburn, "the
+real Helena, that is, would not
+sit down on a dusty chair. No
+woman would. But you did. She is
+a very truthful girl. You lied to
+me. And I just stuck pins in your
+shoulder and you didn't notice.
+They're sticking in your foam suit
+now. You and the creature that
+passed for Dillon up-country are
+both aliens. Invaders. Do you
+want to try to convince me otherwise?"</p>
+
+<p>The girl said evenly: "Mr. Coburn,
+I do not think you are
+well&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Then Coburn said thickly: "I'm
+crazy enough to put a bullet
+through you if your gang of devils
+has harmed the real Helena.
+What's happened to her?"</p>
+
+<p>Hallen moved irresolutely to
+interfere. But the girl's expression
+changed. She smiled. "The real
+Helena, Mr. Coburn," said an
+entirely new voice, "has gone to
+the suburbs to visit her fianc&eacute;'s
+family. She is quite safe."</p>
+
+<p>There was dead silence. The
+figure&mdash;it even moved like Helena&mdash;got
+composedly to its feet.
+It got its coat. It put the coat on.
+Hallen stared with his mouth
+open. The pins hadn't convinced
+him, but the utterly different
+voice coming from this girl's
+mouth had. Yet, waves of conflicting
+disbelief and conviction,
+horror and a racking doubt,
+chased themselves over his features.</p>
+
+<p>"She admits she's not Helena!"
+said Coburn with loathing. "It's
+not human! Should I shoot it?"</p>
+
+<p>The girl smiled at him again.
+Her eyes were very bright. "You
+will not, Mr. Coburn. And you
+will not even try to keep me
+prisoner to prove your story. If I
+screamed that you attack me&mdash;"
+the smile widened&mdash;"Helena's
+good Greek friends would come to
+my assistance."</p>
+
+<p>She walked confidently to the
+door and opened it. Then she said
+warmly: "You are very intelligent,
+Mr. Coburn. We approve of
+you very much. But nobody will
+believe you."</p>
+
+<p>The office door closed.</p>
+
+<p>Coburn turned stiffly to the
+man he'd called to hear him.
+"Should I have shot her, Hallen?"</p>
+
+<p>Hallen sat down as if his knees
+had given way beneath him.
+After a long time he got out a
+handkerchief and painfully mopped
+his face. At the same time he shivered.</p>
+
+<p>"N-no...." Then he swallowed.
+"My God, Coburn! It's
+true!"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Coburn bitterly,
+"or you're as crazy as I am."</p>
+
+<p>Hallen's eyes looked haunted.
+"I&mdash;I ..." He swallowed
+again. "There's no question about
+the Bulgarian business. That did
+happen! And you were there. And&mdash;there've
+been other things....
+Rumors.... Reports that
+nobody believed.... I might
+be able to get somebody to listen...."
+He shivered again. "If it's
+true, it's the most terrible thing
+that ever happened. Invaders
+from space.... Where do you
+think they came from, Coburn?"</p>
+
+<p>"The creature that looked like
+Dillon could climb incredibly fast.
+I saw it run and leap. Nothing on
+Earth could run or leap like that."
+Coburn shrugged. "Maybe a planet
+of another sun, with a monstrous
+gravity."</p>
+
+<p>"Try to get somebody to believe
+that, eh?" Hallen got painfully
+to his feet. "I'll see what I
+can do. I ... don't know that I
+can do anything but get myself
+locked up for observation. But I'll
+call you in an hour."</p>
+
+<p>He went unsteadily out of the
+door. Coburn instantly called the
+Breen Foundation on the telephone.
+He'd left Janice there less
+than an hour before. She came to
+the phone and gasped when she
+heard his voice. Raging, he told
+her of Helena, then cautioned her
+to be especially careful&mdash;to be
+suspicious of everybody.</p>
+
+<p>"Don't take anybody's word!"
+snapped Coburn. "Doubt everybody!
+Doubt me! Until you're absolutely
+certain. Those creatures
+are everywhere.... They may
+pretend to be anybody!"</p>
+
+<p>After Coburn hung up on
+Janice, he sat back and tried to
+think logically. There had to be
+some way by which an extra-terrestrial
+Invader could be told
+instantly from a human being.
+Unmask and prove even one such
+creature, and the whole story
+would be proved. But how detect
+them? Their skin was perfectly
+deceptive. Scratched, of course,
+they could be caught. But one
+couldn't go around scratching
+people. There was nothing of the
+alien creature's own actual form
+that showed.</p>
+
+<p>Then Coburn remembered the
+Dillon foam suit. The head had
+been hollow. Flaccid. Holes instead
+of eyes. The creature's own
+eyes showed through.</p>
+
+<p>But he'd have to make certain.
+He'd have to look at a foam-suited
+creature. He could have examined
+Helena's eyes, but she was gone
+now. However, there was an alternative.
+There was a Dillon in
+Salonika, as there was a Helena.
+If the Dillon in Salonika was the
+real Dillon&mdash;if there were a real
+Dillon&mdash;he could look at his
+eyes. He could tell if he were the
+false Dillon or the real one.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>At this hour of the afternoon a
+Britisher would consider tea a
+necessity. There was only one
+place in Salonika where they
+served tea that an Englishman
+would consider drinkable. Coburn
+got into a cab and gave the driver
+the address, and made sure of the
+revolver in his pocket. He was
+frightened. He was either going to
+meet with a monster from outer
+space, or be on the way to making
+so colossal a fool of himself that a
+mental asylum would yawn for
+him.</p>
+
+<p>He went into the one coffee-shop
+in Salonika which served
+drinkable tea. It was dark and
+dingy inside, though the tablecloths
+were spotless. He went in,
+and there was Dillon.</p>
+
+<p>Coburn's flesh crawled. If the
+figure sitting there with the <i>London
+Times</i> and a cup of tea before
+him were actually a monster from
+another planet ...</p>
+
+<p>But Dillon read comfortably,
+and sipped his tea. Coburn approached,
+and the Englishman
+looked up inquiringly.</p>
+
+<p>"I was ... up in the mountains,"
+said Coburn feverishly,
+"when those Bulgarians came
+over. I can give you the story."</p>
+
+<p>Dillon said frostily: "I'm not
+interested. The government's officially
+denied that any such incident
+took place. It's merely a
+silly rumor."</p>
+
+<p>It was reasonable that it should
+be denied. But it had happened,
+nonetheless. Coburn stared, despite
+a consciousness that he was
+not conspicuously rational in the
+way his eyes searched Dillon's
+face hungrily. The eyes <i>were</i> different!
+The eyes of the Dillon up
+in the mountains had been larger,
+and the brown part&mdash;But he had
+to be sure.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly, Coburn found himself
+grinning. There was a simple,
+a perfect, an absolute test for
+humanity!</p>
+
+<p>Dillon said suspiciously: "What
+the devil are you staring at me
+for?"</p>
+
+<p>Coburn continued to grin uncontrollably,
+even as he said in a
+tone of apology: "I hate to do this,
+but I have to be sure...."</p>
+
+<p>He swung. He connected with
+Dillon's nose. Blood started.</p>
+
+<p>Coburn zestfully let himself
+be thrown out, while Dillon
+roared and tried to get at him
+through the flying wedge of waiters.
+He felt an enormous relaxation
+on the way back to his office
+in another cab. He was a trifle
+battered, but it was worth it.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>Back in the office he called
+Hallen again. And again Hallen
+answered. He sounded guilty and
+worried.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know whether I'm
+crazy or not," he said bitterly.
+"But I was in your office. I saw
+your secretary there&mdash;and she
+didn't feel pins stuck in her. And
+something did happen to those
+Bulgarians that the Greeks don't
+know anything about, or the
+Americans either. So you're to tell
+your story to the high brass down
+in Athens. I think you'll be locked
+up afterward as a lunatic&mdash;and
+me with you for believing my own
+eyes. But a plane's being readied."</p>
+
+<p>"Where do I meet you?" asked
+Coburn.</p>
+
+<p>Hallen told him. A certain room
+out at the airport. Coburn hung
+up. The telephone rang instantly.
+He was on the way out, but he
+turned back and answered it.
+Janice's voice&mdash;amazingly convincing&mdash;came
+from the instrument.
+And at the first words his
+throat went dry. Because it
+couldn't be Janice.</p>
+
+<p>"I've been trying to get you.
+Have you tried to reach me?"</p>
+
+<p>"Why, no. Why?"</p>
+
+<p>Janice's voice said: "I've something
+interesting to tell you. I
+left the office an hour ago. I'm at
+the place where I live when I'm in
+Salonika. Write down the address.
+Can you come here? I've found out
+something astonishing!"</p>
+
+<p>He wrote down the address. He
+had a feeling of nightmarishness.
+This was not Janice&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>"I'm clearing up some matters
+you'll guess at," he said grimly,
+"so I may be a little while getting
+there. You'll wait?"</p>
+
+<p>He hung up. And then with a
+rather ghastly humor he took
+some pins from a box on the desk
+and worked absorbedly at bending
+one around the inside of the band
+of the seal ring he wore on his
+right hand.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>But he didn't go to the telephoned
+address. He went to the
+Breen Foundation. And Janice
+was there. She was the real Janice.
+He knew it instantly he saw her.
+She was panic-stricken when he
+told her of his own telephone experience.
+Her teeth chattered. But
+she knew&mdash;instinctively, she said&mdash;that
+he was himself. She got
+into the cab with him.</p>
+
+<p>They reached the airport and
+found the office Hallen had
+named. The lettering on it, in
+Greek and French, said that it
+was a reception room for official
+visitors only.</p>
+
+<p>"Our status is uncertain," said
+Coburn drily. "We may be official
+guests, or we may be crazy. It's a
+toss-up which status sticks."</p>
+
+<p>He opened the door and looked
+carefully inside before he entered.
+Hallen was there. There was a
+lean, hard-bitten colonel of the
+American liaison force in Greece.
+There was a Greek general, pudgy
+and genial, standing with his back
+to a window and his hands clasped
+behind him. There were two
+Greek colonels and a major. They
+regarded him soberly.</p>
+
+<p>"Howdo, Coburn," said Hallen
+painfully. "You're heading for
+Athens, you know. This is Miss
+Ames? But these gentlemen have
+... ah ... a special concern
+with that business up-country.
+They'd like to hear your story
+before you leave."</p>
+
+<p>"I suppose," said Coburn
+curtly, "it's a sort of preliminary
+commission in lunacy."</p>
+
+<p>But he shook hands all around.
+He kept his left hand in his coat
+pocket as he shook hands with his
+right. His revolver was in his left-hand
+pocket now too. The Greek
+general beamed at him. The
+American colonel's eyes were hard
+and suspicious. One of the two
+Greek colonels was very slightly
+cross-eyed. The Greek major
+shook hands solemnly.</p>
+
+<p>Coburn took a deep breath. "I
+know my tale sounds crazy," he
+said, "but ... I had a telephone
+call just now. Hallen will bear me
+out that my secretary was impersonated
+by somebody else this
+afternoon."</p>
+
+<p>"I've told them that," said
+Hallen unhappily.</p>
+
+<p>"And something was impersonating
+Dillon up in the hills,"
+finished Coburn. "I've reason to
+believe that at this address"&mdash;and
+he handed the address he'd
+written down to Hallen&mdash;"a
+... creature will be found who
+will look most convincingly like
+Miss Ames, here. You might send
+and see."</p>
+
+<p>The American colonel snorted:
+"This whole tale's preposterous!
+It's an attempt to cash in on the
+actual mystery of what happened
+up-country."</p>
+
+<p>The Greek general protested
+gently. His English was so heavily
+accented as to be hard to understand,
+but he pointed out that
+Coburn knew details of the event
+in N&aacute;ousa that only someone who
+had been there could know.</p>
+
+<p>"True enough," said the American
+officer darkly, "but he can
+tell the truth now, before we make
+fools of ourselves sending him to
+Athens to be unmasked. Suppose,"
+he said unpleasantly, "you
+give us the actual facts!"</p>
+
+<p>Coburn nodded. "The idea you
+find you can't take is that creatures
+that aren't human can be on
+Earth and pass for human beings.
+There's some evidence on that
+right here." He nodded to the
+Greek major who was the junior
+officer in the room. "Major, will
+you show these other gentlemen
+the palm of your hand?"</p>
+
+<p>The Greek major frowned perplexedly.
+He lifted his hand and
+looked at it. Then his face went
+absolutely impassive.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm ready to shoot!" snapped
+Coburn. "Show them your hand.
+I can tell now."</p>
+
+<p>He felt the tensing of the others
+in the room, not toward the major
+but toward him. They were preparing
+to jump him, thinking him
+mad.</p>
+
+<p>But the major grinned ruefully:
+"Clever, Mr. Coburn! But how
+did you pick me out?"</p>
+
+<p>Then there was a sensation of
+intolerable brightness all around.
+But it was not actual light. It was
+a sensation inside one's brain.</p>
+
+<p>Coburn felt himself falling. He
+knew, somehow, that the others
+were falling too. He saw everyone
+in the room in the act of slumping
+limply to the floor&mdash;all but the
+Greek major. And Coburn felt a
+bitter, despairing fury as consciousness
+left him.</p>
+
+<h3>IV</h3>
+
+<p>He came to in a hospital room,
+with a nurse and two doctors and
+an elaborate oxygen-administering
+apparatus. The apparatus was
+wheeled out. The nurse followed.
+The two doctors hurried after her.
+The American colonel of the airport
+was standing by the bed on
+which Coburn lay, fully dressed.</p>
+
+<p>Coburn felt perfectly all right.
+He stirred. The American colonel
+said sourly: "You're not harmed.
+Nobody was. But Major Pangalos
+got away."</p>
+
+<p>Coburn sat up. There was a
+moment's bare trace of dizziness,
+and that was gone too. Coburn
+said: "Where's Miss Ames? What
+happened to her?"</p>
+
+<p>"She's getting oxygen," said
+the colonel. "We were rushed here
+from the airport, sleeping soundly
+just like those Bulgarians. Major
+Pangalos ordered it before he disappeared.
+Helicopters brought
+some Bulgarians down, by the
+way, and oxygen brought them to.
+So naturally they gave us the same
+treatment. Very effective."</p>
+
+<p>The colonel looked both chastened
+and truculent. "How'd you
+know Major Pangalos for what he
+was? He was accepted everywhere
+as a man."</p>
+
+<p>"His eyes were queer," said
+Coburn. He stood up experimentally.
+"I figured they would be, if
+one looked. I saw the foam suit
+that creature wore up-country,
+when he wasn't in it. There were
+holes for the eyes. It occurred to
+me that his eyes weren't likely to
+be like ours. Not exactly. So I
+hunted up the real Dillon, and his
+eyes weren't like I remembered. I
+punched him in the nose, by the
+way, to make sure he'd bleed and
+was human. He was."</p>
+
+<p>Coburn continued, "You see,
+they obviously come from a heavy
+planet and move differently.
+They're stronger than we are.
+Much like the way we'd be on the
+moon with one-sixth Earth gravity.
+They probably are used to a
+thicker atmosphere. If so, their
+eyes wouldn't be right for here.
+They'd need eyeglasses."</p>
+
+<p>"Major Pangalos didn't&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"Contact eyeglasses," said Coburn
+sourly. "Little cups of plastic.
+They slip under the eyelids
+and touch the white part of the
+eye. Familiar enough. But that's
+not all."</p>
+
+<p>The American colonel looked
+troubled. "I know contact lenses,"
+he admitted. "But&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>"If the Invaders have a thick
+atmosphere at home," Coburn
+said, "they may have a cloudy
+sky. The pupils of their eyes may
+need to be larger. Perhaps they're
+a different shape. Or their eyes
+may be a completely alien color.
+Anyhow, they need contact lenses
+not only to correct their vision,
+but to make their eyes look like
+ours. They're painted on the inside
+to change the natural look
+and color. It's very deceptive.
+But you can tell."</p>
+
+<p>"That goes to Headquarters at
+once!" snapped the colonel.</p>
+
+<p>He went out briskly. Coburn
+followed him out of the room to
+look for Janice. And Janice happened
+to be looking for him at
+exactly the same moment. He was
+genuinely astonished to realize
+how relieved he was that she was
+all right.</p>
+
+<p>He said apologetically: "I was
+worried! When I felt myself passing
+out I felt pretty rotten at
+having failed to protect you."</p>
+
+<p>She looked at him with nearly
+the same sort of surprised satisfaction.
+"I'm all right," she said
+breathlessly. "I was worried about
+you."</p>
+
+<p>The roaring of motors outside
+the hospital interrupted them.
+More and more vehicles arrived,
+until a deep purring filled the air.
+A Greek doctor with a worried
+expression hurried somewhere.
+Soldiers appeared, hard-bitten,
+tough, professional Greek soldiers.
+Hallen came out of a hospital
+room. The Greek general appeared
+with one of the two colonels who'd
+been at the airport. The general
+nodded, and his eyes seemed cordial.
+He waved them ahead of
+him into a waiting elevator. The
+elevator descended. They went
+out of the hospital and there was
+an armored car waiting. An impressive
+escort of motorcycle
+troops waited with it.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>The Greek general saw Coburn's
+cynical expression at sight
+of the guards. He explained
+blandly that since oxygen brought
+sleeping Bulgarians out of their
+slumber&mdash;and had been used on
+them&mdash;oxygen was handy for use
+by anybody who experienced a
+bright flash of light in his mind.
+The Bulgarian soldiers, incidentally,
+said that outside the village
+of Ardea they'd felt as if the
+sunlight had brightened amazingly,
+but they felt no effects for
+two hours afterward, when they
+fell asleep at N&aacute;ousa. So, said the
+general almost unintelligibly, if
+anything untoward happened on
+the way to the airport, everybody
+would start breathing oxygen. A
+sensation of bright light would be
+untoward.</p>
+
+<p>The armored car started off,
+with motorcyclists crowded about
+it with weapons ready. But the
+ride to the airport was uneventful.
+To others than Janice and Coburn
+it may even have been tedious.
+But when she understood the
+general's explanation, she shivered
+a little. She leaned insensibly
+closer to Coburn. He took her
+hand protectively in his.</p>
+
+<p>They reached the airport. They
+roared through the gateway and
+directly out upon the darkened
+field. Something bellowed and
+raced down a runway and took to
+the air. Other things followed it.
+They gained altitude and circled
+back overhead. Tiny bluish flickerings
+moved across the overcast
+sky. Exhaust flames.</p>
+
+<p>Coburn realized that it was a
+fighter plane escort.</p>
+
+<p>The huge transport plane that
+waited for them was dark. They
+climbed into it and found their
+seats. When it roared down the
+unlighted field and took to the
+air, everything possible had been
+done to keep anybody from bringing
+any weapon to bear upon it.</p>
+
+<p>"All safe now!" said the voice
+of the American colonel in the
+darkness of the unlit plane, as the
+plane gained height. "Incidentally,
+Coburn, why did you want
+to look at Pangalos' palm? What
+did you expect to find there?"</p>
+
+<p>"When I started for the airport,"
+Coburn explained, "I bent
+a pin around the band of a ring I
+wear. I could let it lie flat when I
+shook hands. Or I could make it
+stand out like a spur. I set it with
+my thumb. I saw Pangalos' eyes,
+so I had it stand out, and I made a
+tear in his plastic skin when I
+shook hands with him. He didn't
+feel it, of course." He paused.
+"Did anybody go to the address I
+gave Hallen?"</p>
+
+<p>Hallen said, in the darkness:
+"Major Pangalos got there first."</p>
+
+<p>The blackness outside the plane
+seemed to grow deeper. There was
+literally nothing to be seen but the
+instrument dials up at the pilots'
+end of the ship.</p>
+
+<p>The Greek general asked a question
+in his difficult English.</p>
+
+<p>"Where'd they come from?"
+repeated Coburn. "I've no idea.
+Off Earth, yes. A heavy planet,
+yes. I doubt they come from our
+solar system, though. Somewhere
+among the stars."</p>
+
+<p>The Greek general said something
+with a sly up-twist of his
+voice. Whatever and whoever the
+Invaders were, he said, they did
+not like Bulgarians. If they'd
+knocked out the raiding party
+simply to test their weapons
+against human subjects, at least
+they had chosen suitable and
+pleasing subjects for the test.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>There was light. For an instant
+Coburn tensed. But the plane
+climbed and the brightness steadied.
+It was the top of a cloud
+bank, brilliantly white in the
+moonlight. They had flown up
+through it, and it reached as far
+ahead as they could see. A stubby
+fighter plane swam up out of the
+mist and fell into position alongside.
+Others appeared. They took
+formation about the transport and
+all flew steadily through the
+moonlight.</p>
+
+<p>"I wish I knew," said the
+American colonel vexedly, "if
+those creatures were only testing
+weapons, or if they were getting
+set to start bargaining with us!"</p>
+
+<p>"Meaning?" asked Coburn.</p>
+
+<p>"If they're here," said the
+colonel angrily, "and if they do
+mean to meddle in our business,
+they may set up a sort of auction
+with us bidding against the Iron
+Curtain gang for their friendship.
+And <i>they'd</i> make any deal!"</p>
+
+<p>The Greek general agreed drily.
+He said that free people were not
+practical people. They were always
+ready to die rather than
+cease to be free. Surely the
+Greeks had proved themselves
+ready to die. But people like the
+Bulgarians thought that to continue
+to live was the most important
+thing in the world. It was,
+of course, the practical view-point....</p>
+
+<p>"They can have it!" growled
+Coburn.</p>
+
+<p>Janice said hesitantly: "But
+the Invaders haven't killed anybody
+we know of. They could
+have killed the Bulgarians. They
+didn't. The one who called himself
+Dillon stopped one man from
+killing them. And they could have
+killed us, earlier today at the airport.
+Could they want to be
+friends?"</p>
+
+<p>"They're starting the wrong
+way," said Coburn.</p>
+
+<p>The Greek general stirred in his
+seat, but he was pointedly silent.</p>
+
+<p>The pilot snapped abruptly
+from up at the bow of the plane:
+"Colonel! sir! Two of the fighters
+are climbing as if they've spotted
+something. There go the rest."</p>
+
+<p>Coburn leaned across Janice to
+stare out the window. When the
+fighters were below the transport,
+they could be seen in silhouette
+against the clouds. Above, their
+exhaust flames pin-pointed them.
+Small blue flames climbed steeply.</p>
+
+<p>The big ship went on. The roar
+of its motors was steady and
+unvarying. From a passenger seat
+it was not possible to look overhead.
+But suddenly there were
+streaking sparks against the stars.
+Tracer bullets. Fighters swerved
+and plunged to intercept something....</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>And a Thing came down out of
+the sky with a terrific velocity.
+Tracer bullets sprayed all around
+it. Some could be seen to ricochet
+off its sides. Flashings came from
+the alien craft. They were not explosions
+from guns. They were
+lurid, actinic, smokeless blasts
+of pure light. The Thing seemed
+to be made of polished metal. It
+dodged, trying to approach the
+transport. The fighters lunged to
+prevent it. The ghastly game of
+interception seemed to rush here
+and there all over the sky.</p>
+
+<p>The strange object was not possibly
+of human design or manufacture.
+It had no wings. It left
+no trail of jet fumes or rocket
+smoke. It was glittering and mirror-like,
+and it was shaped almost
+exactly like two turtle-shells base
+to base. It was flat and oval. It
+had no visible external features.</p>
+
+<p>It flung itself about with incredible
+darts and jerkings. It
+could stop stock still as no plane
+could possibly stop, and accelerate
+at a rate no human body could
+endure. It tried savagely to get
+through the swarming fighters to
+the transport. Its light weapon
+flashed&mdash;but the pilots would be
+wearing oxygen masks and there
+were no casualties among the human
+planes. Once a fighter did
+fall off in a steep dive, and fluttered
+almost down to the cloud
+bank before it recovered and came
+back with its guns spitting.</p>
+
+<p>That one appeared to end the
+fight. It came straight up, pumping
+tracers at the steel flier from
+below. And the glittering Thing
+seemed to stop dead in the air.
+Then it shuddered. It was bathed
+in the flaring sparks of tracers.
+Then&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>It dropped like a stone, tumbling
+aimlessly over and over as it
+dropped. It plummeted into the
+cloud bank.</p>
+
+<p>Suddenly the clouds were
+lighted from within. Something
+inside flared with a momentary,
+terrifying radiance. No lightning
+bolt ever flashed more luridly.</p>
+
+<p>The transport plane and its
+escort flew on and on over the
+moonlit bank of clouds.</p>
+
+<p>Presently orders came by radio.
+On the report of this attack, the
+flight plan would be changed, for
+safety. If the air convoy had been
+attacked once, it might be attacked
+again. So it would be
+wisest to get it immediately to
+where there would be plenty of
+protection. Therefore, the transport
+plane would head for Naples.</p>
+
+<p>Nearly the whole of the United
+States Mediterranean fleet was in
+the Bay of Naples just then. It
+had been there nearly a week, and
+by day its liberty parties swarmed
+ashore. The merchants and the
+souvenir salesmen were entranced.
+American sailors had money and
+they spent it. The fleet's officers
+were social assets, its messes
+bought satisfyingly of local viands,
+and everybody was happy.</p>
+
+<p>All but one small group. The
+newspapers of one of the Italian
+political parties howled infuriatedly.
+They had orders to howl,
+from behind the Iron Curtain.
+The American fleet, that one
+party's newspapers bellowed, was
+imperialistic, capitalistic, and decadent.
+In short, there was virulent
+propaganda against the American
+fleet in Naples. But most
+people were glad it was there anyway.
+Certainly nobody stayed
+awake worrying about it.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>People were staying awake
+worrying about the transport
+plane carrying Coburn and Janice,
+however. On the plane, Janice was
+fearful and pressed close to Coburn,
+and he found it an absorbing
+experience and was moved to talk
+in a low tone about other matters
+than extra-terrestrial Invaders
+and foam suits and interstellar
+travel. Janice found those other
+subjects surprisingly fitted to
+make her forget about being
+afraid.</p>
+
+<p>Elsewhere, the people who
+stayed awake did talk about just
+the subjects Coburn was avoiding.
+The convoy carrying Coburn to
+tell what he knew had been
+attacked. By a plane which was
+definitely not made or manned
+by human beings. The news
+flashed through the air across
+continents. It went under the
+ocean over sea beds. It traveled
+in the tightest and most closely-guarded
+of diplomatic codes. The
+Greek government gave the other
+NATO nations a confidential account
+of the Bulgarian raid and
+what had happened to it. These
+details were past question. The
+facts brought out by Coburn were
+true, too.</p>
+
+<p>So secret instructions followed
+the news. At first they went only
+to highly-trusted individuals. In
+thirty nations, top-ranking officials
+and military officers blindfolded
+each other in turn and gravely
+stuck pins in each other. The
+blindfolded person was expected
+to name the place where he had
+been stuck. This had an historical
+precedent. In olden days, pins
+were stuck in suspected witches.
+They had patches of skin in which
+there was no sensation, and discovery
+of such areas condemned
+them to death. Psychologists in
+later centuries found that patches
+of anaesthetic skin were typical of
+certain forms of hysteria, and
+therefore did not execute their patients.
+But the Invaders, by the
+fact that their seemingly human
+bodies were not flesh at all, could
+not pass such tests.</p>
+
+<p>There were consequences. A
+Minister of Defense of a European
+nation amusedly watched the
+tests on his subordinates, blandly
+excused himself for a moment before
+his own turn came, and did
+not come back. A general of division
+vanished into thin air.
+Diplomatic code clerks painstakingly
+decoded the instructions for
+such tests, and were nowhere
+about when they themselves were
+to be tested. An eminent Hollywood
+director and an Olympic
+champion ceased to be.</p>
+
+<p>In the free world nearly a hundred
+prominent individuals simply
+disappeared. Few were in position
+to influence high-level decisions.
+Many were in line to know rather
+significant details of world affairs.
+There was alarm.</p>
+
+<p>It was plain, too, that not all
+disguised Invaders would have
+had to vanish. Many would not
+even be called on for test. They
+would stay where they were. And
+there were private persons....</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>There was consternation. But
+Janice, in the plane, was saying
+softly to Coburn: "The&mdash;creature
+who telephoned and said she
+was me. How did you know she
+wasn't?"</p>
+
+<p>"I went to the Breen Foundation
+first," said Coburn. "I looked
+into your eyes&mdash;and they were
+right. So I didn't need to stick a
+pin in you."</p>
+
+<p>The thought of Coburn not
+needing to stick a pin in her impressed
+Janice as beautiful trust.
+She sighed contentedly. "Of
+course you'd know," she said.
+"So would I&mdash;now!" She laughed
+a little.</p>
+
+<p>The convoy flew on. The lurid
+round disk of the moon descended
+toward the west.</p>
+
+<p>"It'll be sunrise soon. But I
+imagine we'll land before dawn."</p>
+
+<p>They did. The flying group of
+planes flew lower. Coburn saw
+a single light on the ground. It
+was very tiny, and it vanished
+rearward with great speed. Later
+there was another light, and a
+dull-red glow in the sky. Still later,
+infinitesimal twinklings on the
+ground at the horizon. They increased
+in number but not in size,
+and the plane swung hugely to the
+left, and the lights on the ground
+formed a visible pattern. And
+moonlight&mdash;broken by the shadows
+of clouds&mdash;displayed the
+city and the Bay of Naples below.</p>
+
+<p>The transport plane landed.
+The passengers descended. Coburn
+saw Hallen, the American
+colonel, the Greek general, and a
+Greek colonel. The other had been
+left behind to take charge of
+things in Salonika. Here the uniforms
+were American, and naval.
+There were some Italian police
+in view, but most of the men
+about were American seamen, ostensibly
+on shore leave. But Coburn
+doubted very much if they
+were as completely unarmed as
+men on shore leave usually are.</p>
+
+<p>A man in a cap with much gold
+braid greeted the American colonel,
+the Greek general, and the
+Greek colonel. He came to Coburn,
+to whose arm Janice seemed
+to cling.</p>
+
+<p>"We're taking you out to the
+fleet. We've taken care of everything.
+Everybody's had pins stuck
+in him!"</p>
+
+<p>It was very humorous, of
+course. They moved away from
+the plane. Surrounded by white-clad
+sailors, the party from the
+plane moved into the hangar.</p>
+
+<p>Then a voice snapped a startled
+question, in English. An instant
+later it rasped: "Stop or I'll
+shoot!"</p>
+
+<p>Then there was a bright flash of
+light. The interior of the hangar
+was made vivid by it. It went out.
+And as it disappeared there were
+the sounds of running footsteps.
+Only they did not run properly.
+They ran in great leaps. Impossible
+leaps. Monstrous leaps. A
+man might run like that on the
+moon, with a lesser gravity. A
+creature accustomed to much
+greater gravity might run like
+that on Earth. But it would not
+be human.</p>
+
+<p>It got away.</p>
+
+<p>There was a waiting car. They
+got into it. They pulled out from
+the airport with other cars close
+before and behind. The cavalcade
+raced for the city and the shoreline
+surrounded by a guard less
+noisy but no less effective than
+the Greek motorcycle troopers.</p>
+
+<p>But the Greek general said
+something meditative in the dark
+interior of the car.</p>
+
+<p>"What's that?" demanded
+someone authoritatively.</p>
+
+<p>The Greek general said it
+again, mildly. This latest attempt
+to seize them or harm them&mdash;if
+it was that&mdash;had been surprisingly
+inept. It was strange that
+creatures able to travel between
+the stars and put regiments and
+tanks out of action should fail so
+dismally to kill or kidnap Coburn,
+if they really wanted to. Could it
+be that they were not quite sincere
+in their efforts?</p>
+
+<p>"That," said the authoritative
+voice, "is an idea!"</p>
+
+<p>They reached the waterfront.
+And here in the darkest part of
+the night and with the moon near
+to setting, the waters of the Bay
+of Naples rolled in small, smooth-surfaced,
+tranquil waves. There
+was a Navy barge waiting. Those
+who had come by plane boarded
+it. It cast off and headed out into
+the middle of the huge harbor.</p>
+
+<p>In minutes there was a giant
+hull looming overhead. They
+stepped out onto a landing ladder
+and climbed interminably up the
+ship's metal side. Then there was
+an open door.</p>
+
+<p>"Now," said the American
+colonel triumphantly, "now everything's
+all right! Nothing can
+happen now, short of an atomic
+bomb!"</p>
+
+<p>The Greek general glanced at
+him out of the corner of his eyes.
+He said something in that heavy
+accent of his. He asked mildly if
+creatures&mdash;Invaders&mdash;who
+could travel between the stars
+were unlikely to be able to make
+atom bombs if they wanted to.</p>
+
+<p>There was no answer. But somebody
+led Coburn into an office
+where this carrier's skipper was
+at his desk. He looked at Coburn
+with a sardonic, unfriendly eye.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Coburn, I believe," he
+said remotely. "You've been very
+well staged-managed by your
+friends, Mr. Coburn. They've
+made it look as if they were trying
+hard to kill you, eh? But we know
+better, don't we? We know it's all
+a build-up for you to make a deal
+for them, eh? Well, Mr. Coburn,
+you'll find it's going to be a let-down
+instead! You're not officially
+under arrest, but I wouldn't
+advise you to try to start anything,
+Mr. Coburn! We're apt to
+be rather crude in dealing with
+emissaries of enemies of all the
+human race. And don't forget it!"</p>
+
+<p>And this was Coburn's first
+inkling that he was regarded as a
+traitor of his planet who had sold
+out to the Invaders. All the plans
+made from his information would
+be based on the supposition that
+he intended to betray mankind
+by misleading it.</p>
+
+<div class="figc"><img src="images/004.jpg" width="600" height="527" alt="" title="" /></div>
+
+<h3>V</h3>
+
+<p>It was not yet forty-eight hours
+since Coburn had been interrupted
+in the act of starting his
+car up in Ardea. Greek newspapers
+had splashed lurid headlines
+of a rumored invasion by Bulgarians,
+and their rumored defeat.
+The story was not widely copied.
+It sounded too unlikely. In a
+few hours it would be time for a
+new set of newspapers to begin to
+appear. Not one of them would
+print a single word about the most
+important disclosure in human
+history: that extra-terrestrial Invaders
+moved blandly about
+among human beings without
+being suspected.</p>
+
+<p>The newspapers didn't know it.
+On inside pages and bottom corners,
+the London papers might
+refer briefly to the remarkable
+rumor that had swept over Greece
+about an invasion force said to
+have crossed its border. The London
+papers would say that the
+Greek government officially denied
+that such a happening had
+taken place. The New York papers
+would be full of a political
+scandal among municipal officials,
+the Washington papers would deal
+largely with a Congressional investigation
+committee hearing,
+Los Angeles would have a new
+and gory murder to exploit, San
+Francisco news would be of a
+waterfront strike, Tokyo would
+talk of cherry blossoms, Delhi
+of Pakistan, and the French press
+would discuss the political crisis.
+But no newspaper, anywhere,
+would talk about Invaders.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>In the United States, radar
+technicians had been routed out of
+bed and informed that night
+fighters had had a fight with an
+alien ship manned by non-humans
+and had destroyed it, but
+their radars detected nothing at
+all. An hour after sunrise in Naples
+they had come up with a combination
+of radar frequencies which
+were built to detect everything.
+Instructions were going out in
+code to all radar establishments
+on how to set it up on existing
+equipment. Long before that time,
+business machines had begun intricate
+operations with punched
+cards containing all known facts
+about the people known to have
+dropped out of sight. Other machines
+began to integrate crackpot
+reports of things sighted in divers
+places. The stores of Hunter and
+Nereid rockets&mdash;especially the
+remote-control jobs&mdash;were broken
+out. Great Air Transport
+planes began to haul them to
+where they might be needed.</p>
+
+<p>In England, certain establishments
+that had never been mentioned
+even in Parliament were
+put on war alert. There was frantic
+scurrying-about in France. In
+Sweden, a formerly ignored scientist
+was called to a twice-scrambled
+telephone connection and
+consulted at length about objects
+reported over Sweden's skies.
+The Canadian Air Force tumbled
+out in darkness and was briefed.
+In Chile there was agitation, and
+in Peru.</p>
+
+<p>There was earnest effort to
+secure co&ouml;peration from behind
+the Iron Curtain, but that did not
+work. The Iron Curtain stood pat,
+demanding the most detailed of
+information and the privilege of
+inspecting all weapons intended
+for use against anybody so far
+unnamed, but refusing all information
+of its own. In fact, there
+was a very normal reaction everywhere,
+except that the newspapers
+didn't know anything to print.</p>
+
+<p>These secret hassles were continuing
+as the dawnlight moved
+over Italy and made Naples and
+its harbor quite the most beautiful
+place in the world. When daylight
+rolled over France, matters
+were beginning to fall into pattern.
+As daybreak moved across
+the Atlantic, at least the measures
+to be taken began to be visualized
+and orders given for their accomplishment.</p>
+
+<p>And then, with sunrise in America,
+real preparations got under
+way.</p>
+
+<p>But hours earlier there was consultation
+on the carrier in the Bay
+of Naples. Coburn sat in a wardroom
+in a cold fury which was in
+part despair. He had been kept in
+complete ignorance of all measures
+taken, and he felt the raging
+indignation of a man accused of
+treason. He was being questioned
+again. He was treated with an icy
+courtesy that was worse than
+accusation. The carrier skipper
+mentioned with detachment that,
+of course, Coburn had never been
+in any danger. Obviously. The
+event in the airport at Salonika
+and the attack on the convoy
+were window-dressing. They were
+not attempts to withdraw him
+from circulation, but to draw attention
+to him. Which, of course,
+implied that the Invaders&mdash;whoever
+or whatever they might be&mdash;considered
+Coburn a useful tool
+for whatever purpose they intended.</p>
+
+<p>This was before the conference
+officially began. It took time to
+arrange. There were radio technicians
+with microphones. The
+consultation&mdash;duly scrambled
+and re-scrambled&mdash;would be relayed
+to Washington while it was
+on. It was a top level conference.
+Hallen was included, but he did
+not seem happy.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>Then things were ready. The
+skipper of the carrier took over,
+with full awareness that the very
+highest brass in Washington was
+listening to every word.</p>
+
+<p>"We can skip your technical
+information, Mr. Coburn," he
+said with ironic courtesy, "unless
+you've something new to offer."</p>
+
+<p>Coburn shook his head. He
+seethed.</p>
+
+<p>"For the record," said the skipper,
+"I repeat that it is obvious
+that your presence at the scene
+when those Bulgarians were
+knocked out, that you were attacked
+in Salonika, that the ship
+carrying you was also attacked,
+and that there was an incident on
+your landing here:&mdash;it's obvious
+that all these things were stage-managed
+to call attention to you,
+for the purposes of ... whoever
+staged them. Have you anything
+more to offer?"</p>
+
+<p>"No," growled Coburn. "I've
+told all I know." He was furiously
+angry and felt completely helpless.</p>
+
+<p>"Your information," purred the
+Skipper, "and the stage-managed
+incidents, make you look like a
+very patriotic citizen who is
+feared by the supposedly extra-terrestrial
+creatures. But we don't
+have to play any longer, Mr. Coburn.
+What were you told to tell
+your government? What do these ...
+extra-terrestrials want?"</p>
+
+<p>"My guess," snapped Coburn,
+"is that they want Earth."</p>
+
+<p>The skipper raised his eyebrows.
+"Are you threatening us in their
+name?" he asked, purring.</p>
+
+<p>"I'm telling you my guess,"
+said Coburn hotly. "It's just as
+good as yours and no better! I
+have no instructions from them.
+I have no message from them.
+I've only my own opinion, which
+is that we humans had better get
+ready to fight. I believe we ought
+to join together&mdash;all of Earth&mdash;and
+get set to defend ourselves."</p>
+
+<p>There was silence. Coburn found
+himself regarding the faces around
+him with an unexpected truculence.
+Janice pressed his hand
+warningly.</p>
+
+<p>"All of Earth," said the skipper
+softly. "Hmmmm. You advise an
+arrangement with all the Earth....
+What are your politics, Mr.
+Coburn?&mdash;No, let us say, what
+are the political views of the extra-terrestrial
+creatures you tell
+us about? We have to know."</p>
+
+<p>Coburn seethed. "If you're suggesting
+that this is a cold war
+trick," he said furiously, "&mdash;if
+they were faking it, they wouldn't
+try tricks! They'd make war!
+They'd try conquest!"</p>
+
+<p>Coburn saw the stout Greek
+general nodding to himself. But
+the Skipper said suavely: "You
+were with one of the creatures,
+you say, up in the village of
+N&aacute;ousa. Would you say he seemed
+unfriendly to the Bulgarians?"</p>
+
+<p>"He was playing the part of an
+Englishman," snapped Coburn,
+"trying to stop a raid, and murders,
+and possibly a war&mdash;all of
+them unnecessary!"</p>
+
+<p>"You don't paint a frightening
+picture," complained the skipper
+ironically. "First you say we have
+to fight him and his kind, and then
+you imply that he was highly altruistic.
+What is the fact?"</p>
+
+<p>"Dammit!" said Coburn. "I
+hated him because he wasn't human.
+It made my flesh crawl to
+see him act so much like a man
+when he wasn't. But he made me
+feel ashamed when I held a gun on
+him and he proved he wasn't human
+just so Janice&mdash;so Miss
+Ames wouldn't be afraid to drive
+down to Salonika with me!"</p>
+
+<p>"So you have some ...
+friendly feelings toward him, eh?"
+the skipper said negligently.
+"How will you get in touch with
+his kind, by the way? <i>If</i> we should
+ask you to? Of course you've got
+it all arranged? Just in case."</p>
+
+<p>Coburn knew that absolutely
+nothing could be done with a man
+who was trying to show off his
+shrewdness to his listening superiors.
+He said disgustedly: "That's
+the last straw. Go to hell!"</p>
+
+<p>A loud-speaker spoke suddenly.
+Its tone was authoritative, and
+there were little cracklings of
+static in it from its passage across
+the Atlantic.</p>
+
+<p>"That line of questioning can
+be dropped, Captain. Mr. Coburn,
+did these aliens have any other
+chances to kill you?"</p>
+
+<p>"Plenty!" snapped Coburn.
+"And easy ones. One of them
+came into my office as my secretary.
+She could have killed me.
+The man who passed for Major
+Pangalos could have shot us all
+while we were unconscious. I
+don't know why they didn't get
+the transport plane, and I don't
+know what their scheme is. I'm
+telling the facts. They're contradictory.
+I can't help that. All I
+have are the facts."</p>
+
+<p>The loud-speaker said crisply:
+"The attack on the transport
+plane&mdash;any pilots present who
+were in that fight?"</p>
+
+<p>Someone at the back said:
+"Yes, sir. Here."</p>
+
+<p>"How good was their ship?
+Could it have been a guided missile?"</p>
+
+<p>"No, sir. No guided missile.
+Whoever drove that ship was
+right on board. And that ship was
+good. It could climb as fast as we
+could dive, and no human could
+have taken the accelerations and
+the turns it made. Whoever drove
+it learned fast, too. He was clumsy
+at the beginning, but he learned.
+If we hadn't gotten in a lucky hit,
+he'd've had us where he wanted
+us in a little while more. Our
+fifty-calibres just bounced off that
+hull!"</p>
+
+<p>The loud-speaker said curtly:
+"If that impression is justified,
+that's the first business to be
+taken up. All but flying officers
+are excused. Mr. Coburn can go,
+too."</p>
+
+<p>There was a stirring everywhere
+in the room. Officers got up and
+walked out. Coburn stood. The
+Greek general came over to him
+and patted him on the shoulder,
+beaming. Janice went out with
+him. They arrived on the carrier's
+deck. This was the very earliest
+hour of dawn, and the conference
+had turned abruptly to a discussion
+of arms and tactics as soon as
+Washington realized that its
+planes were inadequate for fighting.
+Which was logical enough,
+but Coburn was pretty sure it was
+useless.</p>
+
+<p>"If anybody else in the world
+feels as futile as I do," said Coburn
+bitterly, "I feel sorry for
+him!"</p>
+
+<p>Janice said softly: "You've got
+me."</p>
+
+<p>But that was less than complete
+comfort. It is inborn in a man that
+he needs to feel superior. No man
+can feel pride before the woman
+of his choice while there is something
+stronger than himself. And
+Coburn especially wanted to feel
+that pride just now.</p>
+
+<p>There were very probably discussions
+of the important part of
+what Coburn had reported, of
+course, during the rest of the
+morning. But there was much
+more discussion of purely military
+measures. And of course there
+were attempts to get military intelligence.
+Things were reported
+in the sky near South Africa, and
+from Honolulu&mdash;where nobody
+would ignore what a radar said
+again, especially the juiced-up
+equipment just modified on orders&mdash;and
+from other places.
+Not all the reports were authentic,
+of course. If there were any observations
+inside the Iron Curtain,
+the Iron Curtain countries kept
+them to themselves. Politics was
+much more important than anything
+else, in that part of the
+world.</p>
+
+<p>But Coburn need not have felt
+as futile as he did. There was just
+one really spectacular occurrence
+in connection with the Invaders
+that day, and it happened where
+Coburn was. Almost certainly, it
+happened because Coburn was
+there. Though there is reason to
+believe that the newspaper campaign
+on shore, declaring that the
+American fleet risked the lives of
+all Naples by its mere presence,
+had something to do with it too.</p>
+
+<p>It was very spectacular.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>It happened just after midday
+when the city and its harbor were
+at their most glamorous. Coburn
+and Janice were above when it
+began. There was an ensign assigned
+to escort Coburn about
+and keep an eye on him, and he
+took them on a carefully edited
+tour of the carrier. He took them
+to the radar room which was not
+secret any longer. He explained
+reservedly that there was a new
+tricked-up arrangement of radar
+which it was believed would detect
+turtle-shaped metal ships if
+they appeared.</p>
+
+<p>The radar room was manned, of
+course. It always was, with a cold
+war in being. Overhead, the bowl
+cages of the radars moved restlessly
+and rhythmically. Outside,
+on deck, the huge elevator that
+brought planes up from below
+rose at the most deliberate of
+peace-time rates.</p>
+
+<p>The ensign said negligently,
+pointing to the radar-screen:
+"That little speck is a plane making
+for the landing field on shore.
+This other one is a plane coming
+down from Genoa. You'd need a
+good pair of binoculars to see it.
+It's a good thirty-five miles away."</p>
+
+<p>Just then, one of the two radar-men
+on duty pushed a button and
+snapped into a microphone: "Sir!
+Radar-pip directly overhead! Does
+not show on normal radar. Elevation
+three hundred thousand
+feet, descending rapidly." His
+voice cut off suddenly.</p>
+
+<p>A metallic voice said: "Relay!"</p>
+
+<p>The ensign in charge of Coburn
+and Janice seemed to freeze. The
+radar-man pressed a button, which
+would relay that particular radar-screen's
+contents to the control
+room for the whole ship. There
+was a pause of seconds. Then bells
+began to ring everywhere. They
+were battle gongs.</p>
+
+<p>There was a sensation of stirring
+all over the ship. Doors closed
+with soft hissings. Men ran furiously.
+The gongs rang.</p>
+
+<p>The ensign said politely: "I'll
+take you below now."</p>
+
+<p>He led them very swiftly to a
+flight of stairs. There was a monstrous
+bellowing on the carrier's
+deck. Something dark went hurtling
+down its length, with a tail of
+pale-blue flame behind it. It vanished.
+Men were still running.
+The elevator shot into full-speed
+ascent. A plane rolled off it. The
+elevator dropped.</p>
+
+<p>An engine roared. Another. Yet
+another. A second dark and deadly
+thing flashed down the deck and
+was gone. There was a rumbling.</p>
+
+<p>The battle gongs cut off. The
+rumbling below seemed to increase.
+There was a curious vibration.
+The ship moved. Coburn
+could feel that it moved. It was
+turning.</p>
+
+<p>The ensign led them somewhere
+and said: "This is a good place.
+You'd better stay right here."</p>
+
+<p>He ran. They heard him running.
+He was gone.</p>
+
+<p>They were in a sort of ward
+room&mdash;not of the morning conference&mdash;and
+there were portholes
+through which they could
+look. The city which was Naples
+seemed to swing smoothly past
+the ship. They saw other ships. A
+cruiser was under way with its
+anchor still rising from the water.
+It dripped mud and a sailor was
+quite ridiculously playing a hose
+on it. It ascended and swayed and
+its shank went smoothly into the
+hawse-hole. There were guns
+swinging skyward. Some were
+still covered by canvas hoods. The
+hoods vanished before the cruiser
+swung out of the porthole's line of
+vision.</p>
+
+<p>A destroyer leaped across the
+space they could see, full speed
+ahead. The water below them began
+to move more rapidly. It
+began to pass by with the speed of
+ground past an express train.
+And continually, monotonously,
+there were roarings which climaxed
+and died in the distance.</p>
+
+<p>"The devil!" said Coburn.
+"I've got to see this. They can't
+kill us for looking."</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>He opened the door. Janice,
+holding fast to his arm, followed
+as he went down a passage. Another
+door. They were on the deck
+side of the island which is the
+superstructure of a carrier, and
+they were well out of the way,
+and everybody in sight was too
+busy to notice them.</p>
+
+<p>The elevator worked like the
+piston of a pump. It vanished and
+reappeared and a plane came off.
+Men in vividly-colored suits
+swarmed about it, and the elevator
+was descending again. The
+plane roared, shot down the deck,
+and was gone to form one of the
+string of climbing objects which
+grew smaller with incredible
+swiftness as they shot for the sky.
+Coburn saw another carrier. There
+was a huge bow-wave before it.
+Destroyers ringed it, seeming to
+bounce in the choppy sea made
+by so many great ships moving so
+close together.</p>
+
+<p>The other carrier, too, was
+shooting planes into the air like
+bullets from a gun. The American
+Mediterranean fleet was putting
+out to sea at emergency-speed,
+getting every flying craft aloft
+that could be gotten away. A
+cruiser swung a peculiar crane-like
+arm, there was a puff of smoke
+and a plane came into being. The
+crane retracted. Another plane.
+A third.</p>
+
+<p>The fleet was out of the harbor,
+speeding at thirty knots, with
+destroyers weaving back and forth
+at higher speeds still. There were
+barges left behind in the harbor
+with sailors in them,&mdash;shore-parties
+or details who swore bitterly
+when they were left behind.
+They surged up and down on the
+m&ecirc;l&eacute;e of waves the fleet left
+behind in its hasty departure.</p>
+
+<p>On the fleet itself there was a
+brisk tenseness as it sped away
+from the land. Vesuvius still
+loomed high, but the city dwindled
+to a mere blinking mass of
+white specks which were its buildings.
+The sea was aglitter with
+sunlight reflected from the waves.
+There was the smell of salt air.</p>
+
+<p>Men began to take cryptic
+measures for the future. They
+strung cables across the deck
+from side to side. Arresting gear
+for planes which would presently
+land.</p>
+
+<p>Their special ensign found Coburn
+and Janice. "I'm supposed
+to stay with you," he explained
+politely. "I thought I could be of
+use. I'm really attached to another
+ship, but I was on board because
+of the hassle last night."</p>
+
+<p>Coburn said: "This would be
+invader stuff, wouldn't it?"</p>
+
+<p>The ensign shrugged. "Apparently.
+You heard what the radar
+said. Something at three hundred
+thousand feet, descending rapidly.
+It's not a human-built ship. Anyway,
+we've sent up all our planes.
+Jets will meet it first, at fifty
+thousand. If it gets through them
+there are ... other measures,
+of course."</p>
+
+<p>"This one beats me!" said Coburn.
+"Why?"</p>
+
+<p>The ensign shrugged again.
+"They tried for you last night."</p>
+
+<p>"I'm not that important, to
+them or anybody else. Or am I?"</p>
+
+<p>"I wouldn't know," said the
+ensign.</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know anything I
+haven't told," said Coburn grimly,
+"and the creatures can't suppress
+any information by killing me
+now. Anyhow, if they'd wanted to
+they'd have done it."</p>
+
+<p>A dull, faint sound came from
+high overhead. Coburn stepped
+out from under the shelter of the
+upper works of the island. He
+stared up into the sky. He saw a
+lurid spot of blue-white flame. He
+saw others. He realized that all
+the sky was interlaced with contrails&mdash;vapor-trails
+of jet-planes
+far up out of sight. But they were
+fine threads. The jets were up very
+high indeed. The pin-points of
+flame were explosions.</p>
+
+<p>"Using wing-rockets," said the
+ensign hungrily, "since fifty-calibres
+did no good last night, until
+one made a lucky hit. Rockets
+with proximity fuses. Our jets
+don't carry cannon."</p>
+
+<p>There were more explosions.
+There was a bright glint of reflected
+sunshine. It was momentary,
+but Coburn knew that it
+was from a flat, bright space-ship,
+which had tilted in some monstrously
+abrupt maneuver, and
+the almost vertical sunshine shone
+down from its surface.</p>
+
+<p>The ensign said in a very quiet
+voice: "The fight's coming lower."</p>
+
+<p>There was a crashing thump in
+the air. A battleship was firing
+eight-inch guns almost straight
+up. Other guns began.</p>
+
+<p>Guns began to fire on the carrier,
+too, below the deck and beyond
+it. Concussion waves beat
+at Coburn's body. He thrust
+Janice behind him to shield her,
+but there could be no shielding.</p>
+
+<p>The air was filled with barkings
+and snarlings and the unbelievably
+abrupt roar of heavy guns.
+The carrier swerved, so swiftly
+that it tilted and swerved again.
+The other ships of the fleet broke
+their straight-away formation and
+began to move in bewildering
+patterns. The blue sea was criss-crossed
+with wakes. Once a destroyer
+seemed to slide almost
+under the bow of the carrier. The
+destroyer appeared unharmed on
+the other side, its guns all pointed
+skyward and emitting seemingly
+continuous blasts of flame and
+thunder.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>The ensign grabbed Coburn's
+shoulder and pointed, his hands
+shaking.</p>
+
+<p>There was the Invader ship. It
+was exactly as Coburn had known
+it would be. It was tiny. It seemed
+hardly larger than some of the
+planes that swooped at it. But the
+planes were drawing back now.
+The shining metal thing was no
+more than two thousand feet up
+and it was moving in erratic, unpredictable
+darts and dashes here
+and there, like a dragon-fly's
+movements, but a hundred times
+more swift. Proximity-fused shells
+burst everywhere about it. It
+burst through a still-expanding
+puff of explosive smoke, darted
+down a hundred feet, and took a
+zig-zag course of such violent and
+angular changes of position that it
+looked more like a streak of metal
+lightning than anything else.</p>
+
+<p>It was down to a thousand feet.
+It shot toward the fleet at a speed
+which was literally that of a
+projectile. It angled off to one side
+and back, and suddenly dropped
+again and plunged crazily through
+the maze of ships from one end to
+the other, no more than fifty feet
+above the water and with geysers
+of up-flung sea all about it from
+the shells that missed.</p>
+
+<p>Then it sped away with a velocity
+which simply was not conceivable.
+It was the speed of a
+cannonball. It was headed straight
+toward a distant, stubby, draggled
+tramp-steamer which plodded
+toward the Bay of Naples.</p>
+
+<p>It rose a little as it flew. And
+then it checked, in mid-air. It
+hung above the dumpy freighter,
+and there were salvoes of all the
+guns in the fleet. But at the
+flashes it shot skyward. When
+the shells arrived and burst, it
+was gone.</p>
+
+<p>It could still be sighted as a
+spark of sunlight shooting for the
+heavens. Jets roared toward it. It
+vanished.</p>
+
+<p>Coburn heard the ensign saying
+in a flat voice: "If that wasn't
+accelerating at fifteen Gs, I never
+saw a ship. If it wasn't accelerating
+at fifteen Gs ..."</p>
+
+<p>And that was all. There was
+nothing else to shoot at. There
+was nothing else to do. Jets
+ranged widely, looking for something
+that would offer battle, but
+the radars said that the metal
+ship had gone up to three hundred
+miles and then headed west and
+out of radar range. There had
+not been time for the French to set
+up paired radar-beam outfits anyhow,
+so they couldn't spot it, and
+in any case its course seemed to be
+toward northern Spain, where
+there was no radar worth mentioning.</p>
+
+<p>Presently somebody noticed the
+dingy, stubby, draggled tramp
+steamer over which the Invaders'
+craft had hovered. It was no
+longer on course. It had turned
+sidewise and wallowed heavily.
+Its bow pointed successively to
+every point of the compass.</p>
+
+<p>It looked bad. Salvoes of the
+heaviest projectiles in the Fleet
+had been fired to explode a thousand
+feet above it. Perhaps&mdash;</p>
+
+<p>A destroyer went racing to see.
+As it drew near&mdash;Coburn learned
+this later&mdash;it saw a man's body
+hanging in a sagging heap over
+the railing of its bridge. There
+was nobody visible at the wheel.
+There were four men lying on its
+deck, motionless.</p>
+
+<p>The skipper of the destroyer
+went cold. He brought his ship
+closer. It was not big, this tramp.
+Maybe two thousand tons. It was
+low in the water. It swayed and
+surged and wallowed and rolled.</p>
+
+<p>Men from the destroyer managed
+to board it. It was completely
+unharmed. They found one small
+sign of the explosions overhead.
+One fragment of an exploded shell
+had fallen on board, doing no
+damage.</p>
+
+<p>Even the crew was unharmed.
+But every man was asleep. Each
+one slumbered heavily. Each
+breathed stertorously. They could
+not be awakened. They would
+need oxygen to bring them to.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>A party from the destroyer
+went on board to bring the ship
+into harbor. The officer in charge
+tried to find out the ship's name.</p>
+
+<p>There was not a document to
+be found to show what the ship's
+name was or where it had come
+from or what it carried as cargo.
+That was strange. The officer
+looked in the pockets of the two
+men in the wheel house. There was
+not a single identifying object on
+either of them. He grew disturbed.
+He made a really thorough search.
+Every sleeping man was absolutely
+anonymous. Then&mdash;still
+on the way to harbor&mdash;a really
+fine-tooth-comb examination of
+the ship began.</p>
+
+<p>Somebody's radium-dial watch
+began to glow brightly. The
+searchers looked at each other and
+went pale. They hunted frantically,
+fear making them clumsy.</p>
+
+<p>They found it. Rather&mdash;they
+found them.</p>
+
+<p>The stubby tramp had an adequate
+if rather clumsy atomic
+bomb in each of its two holds.
+The lading of the ship was of materials
+which&mdash;according to theory&mdash;should
+be detonated in
+atomic explosion if an atomic
+bomb went off nearby. Otherwise
+they could not be detonated.</p>
+
+<p>The anonymous tramp-steamer
+had been headed for the harbor of
+Naples, whose newspapers&mdash;at
+least those of a certain political
+party&mdash;had been screaming of
+the danger of an atomic explosion
+while American warships were
+anchored there.</p>
+
+<p>It was not likely that two atom
+bombs and a shipload of valuable
+secondary atomic explosive had
+been put on a carefully nameless
+ship just to be taken for a ride. If
+this ship had anchored among
+the American fleet and if it had
+exploded in the Bay of Naples ...</p>
+
+<p>The prophecies of a certain
+political party would seem to have
+been fulfilled. The American ships
+would be destroyed. Naples itself
+would be destroyed. And it would
+have appeared that Europeans
+who loved the great United States
+had made a mistake.</p>
+
+<p>It was, odd, though, that this
+ship was the only one that the Invaders'
+flying craft had struck
+with its peculiar weapon.</p>
+
+<h3>VI</h3>
+
+<p>We humans are rational beings,
+but we are not often reasonable.
+Those who more or less handle us
+in masses have to take account of
+that fact. It could not be admitted
+that the fleet had had a
+fight with a ship piloted by Invaders
+from another solar system.
+It would produce a wild panic,
+beside which even a war would be
+relatively harmless. So the admiral
+of the Mediterranean fleet
+composed an order commending
+his men warmly for their performance
+in an unrehearsed firing-drill.
+Their target had been&mdash;so
+the order said&mdash;a new type of
+guided missile recently developed
+by hush-hush agencies of the Defense
+Department. The admiral
+was pleased and proud, and
+happy....</p>
+
+<p>It was an excellent order, but
+it wasn't true. The admiral wasn't
+happy. Not after battle photographs
+were developed and he
+could see how the alien ship had
+dodged rockets with perfect ease,
+and had actually taken a five-inch
+shell, which exploded on
+impact, without a particle of
+damage.</p>
+
+<p>On the carrier, the Greek general
+said mildly to Coburn that
+the Invaders had used their power
+very strangely. After stopping
+an invasion of Greece, they had
+prevented an atomic-bomb explosion
+which would have killed
+some hundreds of thousands of
+people. And it was strange that
+the turtle-shaped ship that had
+attacked the air transport was so
+clumsily handled as compared
+with this similar craft which had
+zestfully dodged all the missiles a
+fleet could throw at it.</p>
+
+<p>Coburn thought hard. "I think
+I see," he said slowly. "You
+mean, they're here and they know
+all they need to know. But instead
+of coming out into the open,
+they're making governments recognize
+their existence. They're
+letting the rulers of Earth know
+they can't be resisted. But we did
+knock off one of their ships last
+night!"</p>
+
+<p>The Greek general pointedly
+said nothing. Coburn caught his
+meaning. The fleet, firing point-blank,
+had not destroyed its target.
+The ship last night had seemed
+to fall into a cloud bank and explode.
+But nobody had seen it
+blow up. Maybe it hadn't.</p>
+
+<p>"Humoring us!" realized Coburn.
+"They don't want to destroy
+our civilization, so they'll
+humor us. But they want our
+governments to know that they
+can do as they please. If our governments
+know we can't resist,
+they think we'll surrender. But
+they're wrong."</p>
+
+<p>The Greek general looked at
+him enigmatically.</p>
+
+<p>"We've still got one trick left,"
+said Coburn. "Atomic bombs.
+And if they fail, we can still get
+killed fighting them another way."</p>
+
+<p>There was a heavy, droning
+noise far away. It increased and
+drew nearer. It was a multi-engined
+plane which came from
+the west and settled down, and
+hovered over the water and
+touched and instantly created a
+spreading wake of foam.</p>
+
+<p>The fleet was back at anchor
+then. It was enclosed in the most
+beautiful combination of city and
+scene that exists anywhere. Beyond
+the city the blunted cone of
+Vesuvius rose. In the city, newspaper
+vendors shrilly hawked denunciations
+of the American ships
+because of the danger that their
+atom bombs might explode. Well
+outside the harbor, a Navy crew
+of experts worked to make quite
+impossible the detonation of
+atomic bombs in a stubby tramp-steamer
+which had&mdash;plausibly,
+at least&mdash;been sent to make
+those same newspapers' prophecies
+of disaster come true.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>A long, long time passed, while
+consultations took place to which
+Coburn was not invited. Then a
+messenger led him to the wardroom
+of the previous conference.
+He recognized the men who had
+landed by seaplane a while since.
+One was a cabinet member from
+Washington. There was someone
+of at least equal importance from
+London, picked up en route. There
+were generals and admirals. The
+service officers looked at Coburn
+with something like accusation in
+their eyes. He was the means by
+which they had come to realize
+their impotence. The Greek general
+sat quietly in the rear.</p>
+
+<p>"Mr. Coburn," said the Secretary
+from Washington. "We've
+been canvassing the situation. It
+seems that we simply are not prepared
+to offer effective resistance&mdash;not
+yet&mdash;to the ... invaders
+you tell us about. We know of
+no reason why this entire fleet
+could not have been disabled as
+effectively as the tramp-steamer
+offshore. You know about that
+ship?"</p>
+
+<p>Coburn nodded. The Greek
+general had told him. The Secretary
+went on painfully: "Now,
+the phenomena we have to ascribe
+to Invaders fall into two
+categories. One is the category of
+their action against the Bulgarian
+raiding force, and today the prevention
+of the cold-war murder of
+some hundreds of thousands of
+people. That category suggests
+that they are prepared&mdash;on terms&mdash;to
+be amiable. A point in their
+favor."</p>
+
+<p>Coburn set his lips.</p>
+
+<p>"The other group of events
+simply points you out and builds
+you up as a person of importance
+to these Invaders. You seem to be
+extremely important to them.
+They doubtless could have killed
+you. They did not. What they did
+do was bring you forward to official
+attention. Presumably they
+had a realistic motive in this."</p>
+
+<p>"I don't know what it could
+be," said Coburn coldly. "I
+blundered into one affair. I figured
+out a way to detect them. I happened
+to be the means by which
+they were proved to exist. That's
+all. It was an accident."</p>
+
+<p>The Secretary looked skeptical.
+"Your discoveries were remarkably ...
+apt. And it does seem
+clear that they made the appearance
+of hunting you, while going
+to some pains not to catch you.
+Mr. Coburn, how can we make
+contact with them?"</p>
+
+<p>Coburn wanted to swear furiously.
+He was still being considered
+a traitor. Only they were
+trying to make use of his treason.</p>
+
+<p>"I have no idea," he said
+grimly.</p>
+
+<p>"What do they want?"</p>
+
+<p>"I would say&mdash;Earth," he
+said grimly.</p>
+
+<p>"You deny that you are an
+authorized intermediary for
+them?"</p>
+
+<p>"Absolutely," said Coburn.
+There was silence. The Greek
+general spoke mildly from the
+back of the room. He said in his
+difficult English that Coburn's
+personal motives did not matter.
+But if the Invaders had picked
+him out as especially important,
+it was possible that they felt him
+especially qualified to talk to
+them. The question was, would he
+try to make contact with them?</p>
+
+<p>The Secretary looked pained,
+but he turned to Coburn. "Mr.
+Coburn?"</p>
+
+<p>Coburn said, "I've no idea how
+to set about it, but I'll try on one
+condition. There's one thing we
+haven't tried against them. Set
+up an atom-bomb booby-trap, and
+I'll sit on it. If they try to contact
+me, you can either listen in or try
+to blow them up, and me with
+them!"</p>
+
+<p>There was buzzing comment.
+Perhaps&mdash;Coburn's nails bit into
+his palms when this was suggested&mdash;perhaps
+this was a proposal to
+let the Invaders examine an
+atomic bomb, American-style. It
+was said in earnest simplicity.
+But somebody pointed out that a
+race which could travel between
+the stars and had ships such as
+the Mediterranean fleet had tried
+to shoot down, would probably
+find American atomic bombs
+rather primitive. Still&mdash;</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>The Greek general again spoke
+mildly. If the Invaders were to be
+made to realize that Coburn was
+trying to contact them, he should
+return to Greece. He should visibly
+take up residence where he
+could be approached. He should,
+in fact, put himself completely
+at the mercy of the Invaders.</p>
+
+<p>"Ostensibly," agreed the Secretary.</p>
+
+<p>The Greek general then said
+diffidently that he had a small
+villa some twenty miles from the
+suburbs of Salonika. The prevailing
+winds were such that if an
+atomic explosion occurred there,
+it would not endanger anybody.
+He offered it.</p>
+
+<p>"I'll live there," asked Coburn
+coldly, "and wait for them to
+come to me? I'll have microphones
+all about so that every word that's
+said will be relayed to your recorders?
+And there'll be a bomb
+somewhere about that you can set
+off by remote control? Is that the
+idea?"</p>
+
+<p>Then Janice spoke up. And Coburn
+flared into anger against her.
+But she was firm. Coburn saw the
+Greek general smiling slyly.</p>
+
+<p>They left the conference while
+the decision was made. And they
+were in private, and Janice talked
+to him. There are methods of argument
+against which a man is
+hopeless. She used them. She
+said that she, not Coburn, might
+be the person the Invaders might
+have wanted to take out of circulation,
+because she might have
+noticed something important she
+hadn't realized yet. When Coburn
+pointed out that he'd be living
+over an atomic bomb, triggered to
+be set off from a hundred miles
+away, she demanded fiercely to
+know if he realized how she'd feel
+if she weren't there too....</p>
+
+<p>Next day an aircraft carrier
+put out of Naples with an escort
+of destroyers. It traveled at full
+speed down the toe of Italy's
+boot, through the Straits of Messina,
+across the Adriatic, and
+rounded the end of Greece and
+went streaking night and day for
+Salonika. Special technicians sent
+by plane beat her time by days.
+The Greek general was there well
+ahead. And he expansively supervised
+while his inherited, isolated
+villa was prepared for the reception
+of Invaders&mdash;and Coburn
+and Janice.</p>
+
+<p>And Coburn and Janice were
+married. It was an impressive
+wedding, because it was desirable
+for the Invaders to know about it.
+It was brilliantly military with
+uniforms and glittering decorations
+and innumerable important
+people whom neither of them
+knew or cared about.</p>
+
+<p>If it had been anybody else's
+wedding Coburn would have
+found it unspeakably dreary. The
+only person present whom he
+knew beside Janice was Hallen.
+He acted as groomsman, with the
+air of someone walking on eggs.
+After it was over he shook hands
+with a manner of tremendous relief.</p>
+
+<p>"Maybe I'll brag about this
+some day," he told Coburn uneasily.
+"But right now I'm scared
+to death. What do you two really
+expect to happen?"</p>
+
+<p>Janice smiled at him. "Why,"
+she said, "we expect to live happily
+ever after."</p>
+
+<p>"Oh yes," said Hallen uncomfortably.
+"But that wasn't just
+what I had in mind."</p>
+
+<h3>VII</h3>
+
+<p>The world wagged on. The
+newspapers knew nothing about
+super-secret top-level worries.
+There was not a single news story
+printed anywhere suggesting an
+invasion of Earth from outer
+space. There were a few more
+Flying Saucer yarns than normal,
+and it was beginning to transpire
+that an unusual number of important
+people were sick, or on
+vacation, or otherwise out of contact
+with the world. But, actually,
+not one of the events in which Coburn
+and Janice had been concerned
+reached the state of being
+news. Even the shooting off the
+Bay of Naples was explained as
+an emergency drill.</p>
+
+<p>Quietly, a good many things
+happened. Cryptic orders passed
+around, and oxygen tanks were
+accumulated in military posts.
+Hunter and Nereid guided missiles
+were set up as standard equipment
+in a number of brand-new
+places. They were loaded for bear.
+But days went by, and nothing
+happened. Nothing at all. But
+officialdom was not at ease.</p>
+
+<p>If anything&mdash;while the wide
+world went happily about its
+business&mdash;really high-level officialdom
+grew more unhappy day
+by day. Coburn and Janice flew
+back to Salonika. They went in
+a Navy plane with a fighter plane
+escort. They landed at the Salonika
+airport, and the Greek general
+was among those who greeted
+them.</p>
+
+<p>He took them out to the villa
+he'd placed at the disposal of
+high authority for their use. He
+displayed it proudly. There was
+absolutely no sign that it had
+been touched by anybody since
+its original builders had finished
+with it two-hundred-odd years
+before. The American officer who
+had wired it, though&mdash;he looked
+as if he were short a week's sleep&mdash;showed
+them how anywhere on
+the grounds or in the house they
+would need only to speak a code-word
+and they'd instantly be
+answered.</p>
+
+<p>There were servants, and the
+Greek general took Coburn aside
+and assured him that there was
+one room which absolutely was
+not wired for sound. He named it.</p>
+
+<p>So they took up a relatively
+normal way of life. Sometimes
+they decided that it would be
+pleasant to drive in to Salonika.
+They mentioned it, and went out
+and got in the car that went with
+the villa. Oddly, there was always
+some aircraft lazying about overhead
+by the time they were out of
+the gate. They always returned
+before sunset. And sometimes they
+swam in the water before the
+villa's door. Then, also, they were
+careful to be back on solid ground
+before sunset. That was so their
+guards out on the water wouldn't
+have to worry.</p>
+
+<p>But it was a nagging and an unhappy
+business to know that they
+were watched and overheard everywhere
+save in that one unwired
+room. It could have made for tension
+between them. But there was
+another thought to hold them
+together. This was the knowledge
+that they were literally living on
+top of a bomb. If an Invader's
+flying ship descended at the villa,
+everything that happened would
+be heard and seen by microphones
+and concealed television cameras.
+If the Invaders were too arrogant,
+or if they were arbitrary, there
+would be a test to see if their ship
+could exist in the heart of an atom-bomb
+explosion.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>Coburn and Janice, then, were
+happy after a fashion. But nobody
+could call their situation
+restful.</p>
+
+<p>They had very few visitors.
+The Greek general came out meticulously
+every day. Hallen came
+out once, but he knew about the
+atomic bomb. He didn't stay long.
+When they'd been in residence a
+week, the General telephoned
+zestfully that he was going to
+bring out some company. His
+English was so mangled and obscure
+that Coburn wondered cynically
+if whoever listened to their
+tapped telephone could understand
+him. But, said the General
+in high good humor, he was playing
+a good joke. He had hunted
+up Helena, who was Coburn's
+secretary, and he had also invited
+Dillon to pay a visit to some
+charming people he knew. It
+would be a great joke to see Dillon's
+face.</p>
+
+<p>There was a fire in the living
+room that night. The Greek servants
+had made it, and Coburn
+thought grimly that they were
+braver men and women than he'd
+have been. They didn't have to
+risk their lives. They could have
+refused this particular secret-service
+assignment. But they
+hadn't.</p>
+
+<p>A voice spoke from the living-room
+ceiling, a clipped American
+voice. "Mr. Coburn, a car is
+coming."</p>
+
+<p>That was standard. When the
+General arrived; when the occasional
+delivery of telephoned-for
+supplies came; on the one occasion
+when a peddler on foot had
+entered the ground. It lacked
+something of being the perfect
+atmosphere for a honeymoon, but
+it was the way things were.</p>
+
+<p>Presently there were headlights
+outside. The Greek butler went to
+greet the guests. Coburn and
+Janice heard voices. The General
+was in uproarious good humor.
+He came in babbling completely
+uncomprehensible English.</p>
+
+<p>There was Helena. She smiled
+warmly at Coburn. She went at
+once to Janice. "How do you
+do?" she said in her prettily accented
+English. "I have missed
+not working for your husband, but
+this is my fianc&eacute;!"</p>
+
+<p>And Janice shook hands with a
+slick-haired young Greek who
+looked pleasant enough, but did
+not seem to her as remarkable as
+Coburn.</p>
+
+<p>Then Dillon stared at Coburn.</p>
+
+<p>"The devil!" he said, with every
+evidence of indignation. "This is
+the chap&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>The General roared, and Coburn
+said awkwardly: "I owe you
+an apology, and the privilege of a
+poke in the nose besides. But it
+was a situation&mdash;I was in a
+state&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Then the General howled with
+laughter. Helena laughed. Her
+fianc&eacute; laughed. And Dillon grinned
+amusedly at Coburn.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>"My dear fellow!" said Dillon.
+"We are the guests this whole
+villa was set up to receive! The
+last time I saw you was in N&aacute;ousa,
+and the last time Helena saw you
+you stuck pins in her, and&mdash;"</p>
+
+<p>Coburn stiffened. He went
+slowly pale.</p>
+
+<p>"I&mdash;see! You're the foam-suit
+people, eh?" Then he looked with
+hot passion at the General.
+"You!" he said grimly. "You I
+didn't suspect. You've made fools
+of all of us, I think."</p>
+
+<p>The General said something obscure
+which could have been a
+proverb. It was to the effect that
+nobody could tell a fat man was
+cross-eyed when he laughed.</p>
+
+<p>"Yes," said Dillon beaming.
+"He is fat. So his eyes don't look
+like they're different. You have to
+see past his cheeks and eyebrows.
+That's how he passed muster.
+And he slept very soundly after
+the airport affair."</p>
+
+<p>Coburn felt a sort of sick horror.
+The General had passed as a
+man, and he'd loaned this villa,
+and he knew all about the installation
+of the atomic bomb....
+Then Coburn looked through
+a doorway and there was his
+Greek butler standing in readiness
+with a submachine-gun in his
+hands.</p>
+
+<p>"I take it this is an official
+call," said Coburn steadily. "In
+that case you know we're overheard&mdash;or
+did the General cancel that?"</p>
+
+<p>"Oh, yes!" said Dillon. "We
+know all about the trap we've
+walked into. But we'd decided
+that the time had come to appear
+in the open anyhow. You people
+are very much like us, incidentally.
+Apparently there's only
+one real way that a truly rational
+brain can work. And we and you
+Earth people both have it. May
+we sit down?"</p>
+
+<p>Janice said: "By all means!"</p>
+
+<p>Helena sat, with an absolutely
+human gesture of spreading her
+skirt beside her. The General
+plumped into a chair and chuckled.
+The slick-haired young man
+politely offered Janice a cigarette
+and lighted Helena's for her.
+Dillon leaned against the mantel
+above the fire.</p>
+
+<p>"Well?" said Coburn harshly.
+"You can state your terms. What
+do you want and what do you
+propose to do to get it?"</p>
+
+<p>Dillon shook his head. He took
+a deep breath. "I want you to
+listen, Coburn. I know about the
+atom bomb planted somewhere
+around, and I know I'm talking
+for my life. You know we aren't
+natives of Earth. You've guessed
+that we come from a long way off.
+We do. Now&mdash;we found out the
+trick of space travel some time
+ago. You're quite welcome to it.
+We found it, and we started exploring.
+We've been in space,
+you might say, just about two of
+your centuries. You're the only
+other civilized race we've found.
+That's point one."</p>
+
+<p>Coburn fumbled in his pocket.
+He found a cigarette. Dillon held
+a match. Coburn started, and then
+accepted it.</p>
+
+<p>"Go on." He added, "There's a
+television camera relaying this,
+by the way. Did you know?"</p>
+
+<p>"Yes, I know," said Dillon.
+"Now, having about two centuries
+the start of you, we have a
+few tricks you haven't found out
+yet. For one thing, we understand
+ourselves, and you, better than
+you do. We've some technical
+gadgets you haven't happened on
+yet. However, it's entirely possible
+for you to easily kill the four
+of us here tonight. If you do&mdash;you
+do. But there are others of
+our race here. That's point two."</p>
+
+<p>"Now come the threats and demands,"
+said Coburn.</p>
+
+<p>"Perhaps." But Dillon seemed
+to hesitate. "Dammit, Coburn,
+you're a reasonable man. Try to
+think like us a moment. What
+would you do if you'd started to
+explore space and came upon a
+civilized race, as we have?"</p>
+
+<p>Coburn said formidably, "We'd
+study them and try to make
+friends."</p>
+
+<p>"In that order," said Dillon
+instantly. "That's what we've
+tried to do. We disguised ourselves
+as you because we wanted
+to learn how to make friends before
+we tried. But what did we
+find, Coburn? What's your guess?"</p>
+
+<p>"You name it!" said Coburn.</p>
+
+<p>"You Earth people," said Dillon,
+"are at a turning-point in
+your history. Either you solve
+your problems and keep on climbing,
+or you'll blast your civilization
+down to somewhere near a
+caveman level and have to start
+all over again. You know what I
+mean. Our two more spectacular
+interferences dealt with it."</p>
+
+<p>"The Iron Curtain," said Coburn.
+"Yes. But what's that got
+to do with you? It's none of your
+business. That's ours."</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>"But it <i>is</i> ours," said Dillon
+urgently. "Don't you see, Coburn?
+You've a civilization nearly
+as advanced as ours. If we can
+make friends, we can do each
+other an infinite lot of good. We
+can complement each other. We
+can have a most valuable trade,
+not only in goods, but in what you
+call human values and we call
+something else. We'd like to start
+that trade.</p>
+
+<p>"But you're desperately close
+to smashing things. So we've had
+to rush things. We did stop that
+Bulgarian raid. When you proved
+too sharp to be fooled, we grew
+hopeful. Here might be our entering
+wedge. We hammered at you.
+We managed to make your people
+suspicious that there might be
+something in what you said. We
+proved it. It was rugged for you,
+but we had to let you people force
+us into the open. If we'd marched
+out shyly with roses in our hair&mdash;what
+would you have thought?"</p>
+
+<p>Coburn said doggedly: "I'm
+still waiting for the terms. What
+do you want?"</p>
+
+<p>The General said something
+plaintive from his chair. It was to
+the effect that Coburn still believed
+that Earth was in danger of
+conquest from space.</p>
+
+<p>"Look!" said Dillon irritably.
+"If you people had found the trick
+of space travel first, and you'd
+found us, would you have tried to
+conquer us? Considering that
+we're civilized?"</p>
+
+<p>Coburn said coldly, "No. Not
+my particular people. We know
+you can't conquer a civilized race.
+You can exterminate them, or
+you can break them down to
+savagery, but you can't conquer
+them. You can't conquer us!"</p>
+
+<p>Then Dillon said very painstakingly:
+"But we don't want to
+conquer you. Even your friends
+inside the Iron Curtain know that
+the only way to conquer a country
+is to smash it down to savagery.
+They've done that over and over
+for conquest. But what the devil
+good would savages be to us? We
+want someone to trade with. We
+can't trade with savages. We want
+someone to gain something from.
+What have savages to offer us?
+A planet? Good Heavens, man!
+We've already found sixty planets
+for colonies, much better for us
+than Earth. Your gravity here is
+... well, it's sickeningly low."</p>
+
+<p>"What <i>do</i> you want then?"</p>
+
+<p>"We want to be friends," said
+Dillon. "We'll gain by it exactly
+what you Earth people gained
+when you traded freely among
+yourselves, before blocked currencies
+and quotas and such nonsense
+strangled trade. We'll gain
+what you gained when you'd
+stopped having every city a fort
+and every village guarded by the
+castle of its lord. Look, Coburn:
+we've got people inside the Iron
+Curtain. We'll keep them there.
+You won't be able to disband your
+armies, but we can promise you
+won't have to use them&mdash;because
+we certainly won't help you
+chaps fight among yourselves.
+We'll give you one of our ships to
+study and work on. But we won't
+give you our arms. You'll have
+your moon in a year and your
+whole solar system in a decade.
+You'll trade with us from the time
+you choose, and you'll be roaming
+space when you can grasp the
+trick of it. Man, you can't refuse.
+You're too near to certain smashing
+of your civilization, and we
+can help you to avoid it. Think
+what we're offering."</p>
+
+<p>Then Coburn said grimly: "And
+if we don't like the bargain? What
+if we refuse?"</p>
+
+<p>Dillon carefully put the ash
+from his cigarette into an ashtray.
+"If you won't be our friends," he
+said with some distaste, "we can't
+gain anything useful from you.
+We don't want you as slaves.
+You'd be no good to us. For that
+reason we can't get anything we
+want from the Iron Curtain people.
+They've nothing to offer
+that we can use. So our ultimatum
+is&mdash;make friends or we go away
+and leave you alone. Take it or
+leave it!"</p>
+
+<p>There was a dead, absolute
+silence. After a long time Coburn
+said: "Altruism?"</p>
+
+<p>Dillon grinned. "Enlightened
+self-interest. Common sense!"</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>There was a clicking in the ceiling.
+A metallic voice said: "Mr.
+Coburn, the conversation just
+overheard and recorded has to be
+discussed in detail on high diplomatic
+levels. It will take time
+for conferences&mdash;decisions&mdash;arrangements.
+Assuming that your
+guests are acting in good faith,
+they have safe conduct from the
+villa. Their offer is very attractive,
+but it will have to be passed on at
+high policy-making levels."</p>
+
+<p>Dillon said pleasantly, to the
+ceiling: "Yes. And you've got to
+keep it from being public, of
+course, until your space ships can
+discover us somewhere. It will
+have to be handled diplomatically,
+so your people are back of a grand
+offer to make friends when it
+happens." He added wryly, "We're
+very much alike, really. Coburn's
+very much like us. That's why&mdash;if
+it's all right with you&mdash;you
+can arrange for him to be our
+point of confidential contact. We'll
+keep in touch with him."</p>
+
+<p>The ceiling did not reply. Dillon
+waited, then shrugged. The Greek
+general spoke. He said that since
+they had come so far out from
+Salonika, it was too early to leave
+again. It might be a good idea to
+have a party. Some music would
+be an excellent thing. He said he
+liked Earth music very much.</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>A long time later Janice and
+Coburn were alone in the one room
+of the house which was not wired
+for sound. There were no microphones
+here.</p>
+
+<p>Coburn said reluctantly in the
+darkness: "It sounds sensible all
+right. Maybe it's true. But it feels
+queer to think of it...."</p>
+
+<p>Janice pressed closer to him and
+whispered in his ear: "I made
+friends with that girl who passed
+for Helena. I like her. She says
+we'll be invited to make a trip to
+their planet. They can do something
+about the gravity. And she
+says she's really going to be married
+to the ... person who was
+with her...." She hesitated.
+"She showed me what they really
+look like when they're not disguised
+as us."</p>
+
+<p>Coburn put his arm around her
+and smiled gently. "Well? Want
+to tell me?"</p>
+
+<p>Janice caught her breath. "I&mdash;I
+could have cried.... The poor
+thing&mdash;to look like that. I'm
+glad I look like I do. For you,
+darling. For you."</p>
+
+<div class="trn"><b>Transcriber's Note:</b>
+This etext was produced from <i>Amazing Stories</i> April-May 1953.
+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 Project Gutenberg's The Invaders, by William Fitzgerald Jenkins
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+</body>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of The Invaders, by William Fitzgerald Jenkins
+
+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: The Invaders
+
+Author: William Fitzgerald Jenkins
+
+Release Date: February 21, 2010 [EBook #31343]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE INVADERS ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Greg Weeks, Stephen Blundell and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+THE INVADERS
+
+By MURRAY LEINSTER
+
+
+ _It started in Greece on the day after tomorrow. Before the last act
+ raced to a close, Coburn was buried to his ears in assorted
+ adventures, including a revolution and an invasion from outer
+ space!_
+
+ _We're not given to throwing around the word "epic" lightly, but
+ here _is_ one! Swashbuckling action, a great many vivid characters,
+ and a weird mystery--all spun for you by one of the master
+ story-tellers of our time._
+
+
+On a certain day--it may be in the history books eventually--Coburn was
+in the village of Ardea, north of Salonika in the most rugged part of
+Greece. He was making a survey for purposes which later on turned out
+not to matter much. The village of Ardea was small, it was very early in
+the morning, and he was trying to get his car started when he heard the
+yell.
+
+It was a shrill yell, and it traveled fast. Coburn jerked his head
+upright from the hood of the car. A whiskered villager with flapping
+trousers came pounding up the single street. His eyes were
+panic-stricken and his mouth was wide. He emitted the yell in a long,
+sustained note. Other villagers popped into view like ants from a
+disturbed ant-hill. Some instantly ran back into their houses. Others
+began to run toward the outskirts of the village, toward the south.
+
+Coburn, watching blankly, found himself astonished at the number of
+people the village contained. He hadn't dreamed it was so populous. All
+were in instant frenzied flight toward the mountains. An old woman he'd
+seen barely hobbling, now ran like a deer. Children toddled desperately.
+Adults snatched them up and ran. Larger children fled on twinkling legs.
+The inhabitants of Ardea vanished toward the hills in a straggling,
+racing, panting stream. They disappeared around an outcrop of stone
+which was merely the nearest place that would hide them. Then there was
+silence.
+
+Coburn turned his head blankly in the direction from which they had run.
+He saw the mountains--incredibly stony and barren. That was all. No, not
+quite--there was something far away which was subtly different in color
+from the hillsides. It moved. It flowed over a hill crest, coming
+plainly from somewhere beyond the mountains. It was vague in shape.
+Coburn felt a momentary stirring of superstition. There simply couldn't
+be anything so huge....
+
+But there could. There was. It was a column of soldiers in uniforms that
+looked dark-gray at this distance. It flowed slowly out of the mountains
+like a colossal snake--some Midgard monster or river of destruction. It
+moved with an awful, deliberate steadiness toward the village of Ardea.
+
+Coburn caught his breath. Then he was running too. He was out of the
+village almost before he realized it. He did not try to follow the
+villagers. He might lead pursuers after them. There was a narrow defile
+nearby. Tanks could hardly follow it, and it did not lead where they
+would be going. He plunged into it and was instantly hidden. He pelted
+on. It was a trail from somewhere, because he saw ancient
+donkey-droppings on the stones, but he did not know where it led. He
+simply ran to get away from the village and the soldiers who were coming
+toward it.
+
+This was Greece. They were Bulgarian soldiers. This was not war or even
+invasion. This was worse--a cold-war raid. He kept running and presently
+rocky cliffs overhung him on one side, a vast expanse of sky loomed to
+his left. He found himself panting. He began to hope that he was
+actually safe.
+
+Then he heard a voice. It sounded vexed. Quite incredibly, it was
+talking English. "But my dear young lady!" it said severely. "You simply
+mustn't go on! There's the very devil of a mess turning up, and you
+mustn't run into it!"
+
+A girl's voice answered, also in English. "I'm sure--I don't know what
+you're talking about!"
+
+"I'm afraid I can't explain. But, truly, you mustn't go on to the
+village!"
+
+Coburn pushed ahead. He came upon the people who had spoken. There was a
+girl riding on a donkey. She was American. Trim. Neat. Uneasy, but
+reasonably self-confident. And there was a man standing by the trail,
+with a slide of earth behind him and mud on his boots as if he'd slid
+down somewhere very fast to intercept this girl. He wore the distinctive
+costume a British correspondent is apt to affect in the wilds.
+
+They turned as Coburn came into view. The girl goggled at him. He was
+not exactly the sort of third person one expected to find on a very
+lonely, ill-defined rocky trail many miles north of Salonika.
+
+When they turned to him, Coburn recognized the man. He'd met Dillon once
+or twice in Salonika. He panted: "Dillon! There's a column of soldiers
+headed across the border! Bulgarians!"
+
+"How close?" asked Dillon.
+
+"They're coming," said Coburn, with some difficulty due to lack of
+breath. "I saw them across the valley. Everybody's run away from the
+village. I was the last one out."
+
+Dillon nodded composedly. He looked intently at Coburn. "You know me,"
+he said reservedly. "Should I remember you?"
+
+"I've met you once or twice," Coburn told him. "In Salonika."
+
+"Oh," said Dillon. "Oh, yes. Sorry. I've got some cameras up yonder. I
+want a picture or two of those Bulgarians. See if you can persuade this
+young lady not to go on. I fancy it's safe enough here. Not a normal
+raid route through this pass."
+
+Coburn nodded. Dillon expected the raid, evidently. This sort of thing
+had happened in Turkey. Now it would start up here, in Greece. The
+soldiers would strike fast and far, at first. They wouldn't stop to hunt
+down the local inhabitants. Not yet.
+
+"We'll wait," said Coburn. "You'll be back?"
+
+"Oh, surely!" said Dillon. "Five minutes or less."
+
+He started up the precipitous wall, at whose bottom he had slid down. He
+climbed remarkably well. He went up hand-over-hand despite the steepness
+of the stone. It looked almost impossible, but Dillon apparently found
+handgrips by instinct, as a good climber does. In a matter of minutes
+he vanished, some fifty feet up, behind a bulging mass of stone. He did
+not reappear.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Coburn began to get his breath back. The girl looked at him, her
+forehead creased.
+
+"Just to make sure," said Coburn, "I'll see if I can get a view back
+down the trail."
+
+Where the vastness of the sky showed, he might be able to look down. He
+scrambled up a barrier two man-heights high. There was a screen of
+straggly brush, with emptiness beyond. He peered.
+
+He could see a long way down and behind, and actually the village was
+clearly in sight from here. There were rumbling, caterpillar-tread tanks
+in the act of entering it. There were anachronistic mounted men with
+them. Cavalry is outdated, nowadays, but in rocky mountain country they
+can have uses where tanks can't go. But here tanks and cavalry looked
+grim. Coburn squirmed back and beckoned to the girl. She joined him.
+They peered through the brushwood together.
+
+The light tanks were scurrying along the single village street. Horsemen
+raced here and there. A pig squealed. There was a shot. The tanks
+emerged from the other side. They went crawling swiftly toward the
+south. But they did not turn aside where the villagers had. They headed
+along the way Coburn had driven to Ardea.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+Infantrymen appeared, marching into the village. An advance party,
+rifles ready. This was strict discipline and standard military practise.
+Horsemen rode to tell them that all was quiet. They turned and spurred
+away after the tanks.
+
+The girl said in a strained voice. "This is war starting! Invasion!"
+
+Coburn said coldly, "No. No planes. This isn't war. It's a training
+exercise, Iron-Curtain style. This outfit will strike twenty--maybe
+thirty miles south. There's a town there--Kilkis. They'll take it and
+loot it. By the time Athens finds out what's happened, they'll be ready
+to fall back. They'll do a little fighting. They'll carry off the
+people. And they'll deny everything. The West doesn't want war. Greece
+couldn't fight by herself. And America wouldn't believe that such things
+could happen. But they do. It's what's called cold war. Ever hear of
+that?"
+
+The main column of soldiers far below poured up to the village and went
+down the straggly street in a tide of dark figures. The village was very
+small. The soldiers came out of the other end of the village. They
+poured on after the tanks, rippling over irregularities in the way.
+They seemed innumerable.
+
+"Three or four thousand men," said Coburn coldly. "This is a big raid.
+But it's not war. Not yet."
+
+It was not the time for full-scale war. Bulgaria and the other countries
+in its satellite status were under orders to put a strain upon the
+outside world. They were building up border incidents and turmoil for
+the benefit of their masters. Turkey was on a war footing, after a
+number of incidents like this. Indo-China was at war. Korea was an old
+story. Now Greece. It always takes more men to guard against criminal
+actions than to commit them. When this raid was over Greece would have
+to maintain a full-size army in its northern mountains to guard against
+its repetition. Which would be a strain on its treasury and might help
+toward bankruptcy. This was cold war.
+
+The infantry ended. Horse-drawn vehicles appeared in a seemingly endless
+line. Motorized transport would be better, but the Bulgarians were short
+of it. Shaggy, stubby animals plodded in the wake of the tanks and the
+infantry. There were two-wheeled carts in single file all across the
+valley. They went through the village and filed after the soldiers.
+
+"I think," said Coburn in biting anger, "this will be all there is to
+see. They'll go in until they're stopped. They'll kidnap Greek civilians
+and later work them to death in labor camps. They'll carry off some
+children to raise as spies. But their purpose is probably only to make
+such a threat that the Greeks will go broke guarding against them. They
+know the Greeks don't want war."
+
+He began to wriggle back from the brushwood screen. He was filled with
+the sort of sick rage that comes when you can't actively resent
+insolence and arrogance. He hated the people who wanted the world to
+collapse, and this was part of their effort to bring it about.
+
+He helped the girl down. "Dillon said to wait," he said. He found
+himself shaking with anger at the men who had ordered the troops to
+march. "He said he was taking pictures. He must have had an advance tip
+of some sort. If so, he'll have a line of retreat."
+
+Then Coburn frowned. Not quite plausible, come to think of it. But
+Dillon had certainly known about the raid. He was set to take pictures,
+and he hadn't been surprised. One would have expected Greek Army
+photographers on hand to take pictures of a raid of which they had
+warning. Probably United Nations observers on the scene, too. Yes. There
+should be Army men and probably a United Nations team up where Dillon
+was.
+
+Coburn explained to the girl. "That'll be it. And they'll have a radio,
+too. Probably helicopters taking them out also. I'll go up and tell them
+to be sure and have room for you."
+
+He started for the cliff he'd seen Dillon climb. He paused: "I'd better
+have your name for them to report to Athens."
+
+"I'm Janice Ames," she told him. "The Breen Foundation has me going
+around arranging for lessons for the people up here. Sanitation and
+nutrition and midwifery, and so on. The Foundation office is in
+Salonika, though."
+
+He nodded and attacked the cliff.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It hadn't been a difficult climb for Dillon. It wasn't even a long one
+for Coburn, but it was much worse than he'd thought. The crevices for
+handholds were rare, and footholds were almost non-existent. There were
+times when he felt he was holding on by his fingernails. Dillon seemed
+to have made it with perfect ease, but Coburn found it exhausting.
+
+Fifty feet up he came to the place where Dillon had vanished. But it was
+a preposterously difficult task to get across an undercut to where he
+could grasp a stunted tree. It was a strain to scramble up past it. Then
+he found himself on the narrowest of possible ledges, with a sickening
+drop off to one side. But Dillon had made it, so he followed.
+
+He went a hundred yards, and then the ledge came to an end. He saw where
+Dillon must have climbed. It was possible, but Coburn violently did not
+want to try. Still ... He started.
+
+Then something clicked in his throat. There was a rather deep ledge for
+a space of four or five feet. And there was Dillon. No, not Dillon. Just
+Dillon's clothes. They lay flat and deflated, but laid out in one
+assembly beside a starveling twisted bush. It would have been possible
+for a man to stand there to take off his clothes, if he wanted to. But a
+man who takes off his clothes--and why should Dillon do that?--takes
+them off one by one. These garments were fitted together. The coat was
+over the shirt, and the trousers fitted to the bottom of the shirt over
+the coat, and the boots were at the ends of the trouser legs.
+
+Then Coburn saw something he did not believe. It palpably was not true.
+He saw a hand sticking out of the end of the sleeve. But it was not a
+hand, because it had collapsed. It was rather like an unusually thick
+glove, flesh color.
+
+Then he saw what should have been Dillon's head. And it was in place,
+too. But it was not Dillon's head. It was not a head at all. It was
+something quite different. There were no eyes. Merely holes. Openings.
+Like a mask.
+
+Coburn felt a sort of roaring in his ears, and he could not think
+clearly for a moment because of the shrieking impossibility of what he
+was looking at. Dillon's necktie had been very neatly untied, and left
+in place in his collar. His shirt had been precisely unbuttoned. He had
+plainly done it himself. And then--the unbuttoned shirt made it
+clear--he had come out of his body. Physically, he had emerged and gone
+on. The thing lying flat that had lapsed at Coburn's feet was Dillon's
+outside. His outside only. The inside had come out and gone away. It had
+climbed the cliff over Coburn's head.
+
+The outside of Dillon looked remarkably like something made out of
+foam-rubber. Coburn touched it, insanely.
+
+He heard his own voice saying flatly: "It's a sort of suit. A suit that
+looks like Dillon. He was in it. Something was! Something is playing the
+part of Dillon. Maybe it always was. Maybe there isn't any Dillon."
+
+He felt a sort of hysterical composure. He opened the chest. It was
+patently artificial. There were such details on the inside as would be
+imagined in a container needed to fit something snugly. At the edges of
+the opening there were fastenings like the teeth of a zipper, but
+somehow different. Coburn knew that when this was fastened there would
+be no visible seam.
+
+Whatever wore this suit-that-looked-like-Dillon could feel perfectly
+confident of passing for Dillon, clothed or otherwise. It could pass
+without any question for--
+
+Coburn gagged.
+
+_It could pass without question for a human being._
+
+Obviously, whatever was wearing this foam-rubber replica of Dillon was
+not human!
+
+Coburn went back to where he had to climb down the cliffside again. He
+moved like a sleep-walker. He descended the fifty-foot cliff by the
+crevices and the single protruding rock-point that had helped him get
+up. It was much easier going down. In his state of mind it was also more
+dangerous. He moved in a sort of robot-like composure.
+
+He moved toward the girl, trying to make words come out of his throat,
+when a small rock came clattering down the cliff. He looked up. Dillon
+was in the act of swinging to the first part of the descent. He came
+down, very confident and assured. He had two camera-cases slung from his
+shoulders. Coburn stared at him, utterly unable to believe what he'd
+seen ten minutes before.
+
+Dillon reached solid ground and turned. He smiled wryly. His shirt was
+buttoned. His tie was tied.
+
+"I hoped," he said ruefully to Janice Ames, "that the Bulgars would
+toddle off. But they left a guard in the village. We can't hope to take
+an easier trail. We'll have to go back the way you came. We'll get you
+safe to Salonika, though."
+
+The girl smiled, uneasily but gratefully.
+
+"And," added Dillon, "we'd better get started."
+
+He gallantly helped the girl remount her donkey. At the sight, Coburn
+was shaken out of his numbness. He moved fiercely to intervene. But
+Janice settled herself in the saddle and Dillon confidently led the way.
+Coburn grimly walked beside her as she rode. He was convinced that he
+wouldn't leave her side while Dillon was around. But even as he knew
+that desperate certitude, he was filled with confusion and a panicky
+uncertainty.
+
+When they'd traveled about half a mile, another frightening thought
+occurred to Coburn. Perhaps Dillon--passing for human--wasn't alone.
+Perhaps there were thousands like him.
+
+Invaders! Usurpers, pretending to be men. Invaders, obviously, from
+space!
+
+
+II
+
+They made eight miles. At least one mile of that, added together, was
+climbing straight up. Another mile was straight down. The rest was
+boulder-strewn, twisting, donkey-wide, slanting, slippery stone. But
+there was no sign of anyone but themselves. The sky remained
+undisturbed. No planes. They saw no sign of the raiding force from
+across the border, and they heard no gunfire.
+
+Coburn struggled against the stark impossibility of what he had seen.
+The most horrifying concept regarding invasion from space is that of
+creatures who are able to destroy or subjugate humanity. A part of that
+concept was in Coburn's mind now. Dillon marched on ahead, in every way
+convincingly human. But he wasn't. And to Coburn, his presence as a
+non-human invader of Earth made the border-crossing by the Bulgarians
+seem almost benevolent.
+
+They went on. The next hill was long and steep. Then they were at the
+hill crest. They looked down into a village called Naousa. It was larger
+than Ardea, but not much larger. One of the houses burned untended.
+Figures moved about. There were tanks in sight, and many soldiers in the
+uniform that looked dark-gray at a distance. The route by which Dillon
+had traveled had plainly curved into the line-of-march of the Bulgarian
+raiding force.
+
+But the moving figures were not soldiers. The soldiers were still. They
+lay down on the grass in irregular, sprawling windrows. The tanks were
+not in motion. There were two-wheeled carts in sight--reaching back
+along the invasion-route--and they were just as stationary as the men
+and the tanks. The horses had toppled in their shafts. They were
+motionless.
+
+The movement was of civilians--men and women alike. They were Greek
+villagers, and they moved freely among the unmilitarily recumbent
+troops, and even from this distance their occupation was clear. They
+were happily picking the soldiers' pockets. But there was one figure
+which moved from one prone figure to another much too quickly to be
+looting. Coburn saw sunlight glitter on something in his hand.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Dillon noticed the same thing Coburn did at the same instant. He bounded
+forward. He ran toward the village and its tumbled soldiers in great,
+impossible leaps. No man could make such leaps or travel so fast. He
+seemed almost to soar toward the village, shouting. Coburn and Janice
+saw him reach the village. They saw him rush toward the one man who had
+been going swiftly from one prone soldier to another. It was too far to
+see Dillon's action, but the sunlight glittered again on something
+bright, which this time flew through the air and dropped to the ground.
+
+The villagers grouped about Dillon. There was no sign of a struggle.
+
+"What's happened?" demanded Janice uneasily. "Those are soldiers on the
+ground."
+
+Coburn's fright prevented his caution. He shouted furiously. "He's not a
+man! You saw it! No man can run so fast! You saw those jumps! He's not
+human! He's--something else!"
+
+Janice jerked her eyes to Coburn in panic. "What did you say?"
+
+Coburn panted: "Dillon's no man! He's a monster from somewhere in space!
+And he and his kind have killed those soldiers! Murdered them! And the
+soldiers are men! You stay here. I'll go down there and--"
+
+"No!" said Janice, "I'm coming too."
+
+He took the donkey's halter and led the animal down to the village, with
+Janice trembling a little in the saddle. He talked in a tight, taut,
+hysterical tone. He told what he'd found up on the cliffside. He
+described in detail the similitude of a man's body he'd found deflated
+beside a stunted bush.
+
+He did not look at Janice as he talked. He moved doggedly toward the
+village, dragging at the donkey's head. They neared the houses very
+slowly, and Coburn considered that he walked into the probability of a
+group of other creatures from unthinkable other star systems, disguised
+as men. It did not occur to him that his sudden outburst about Dillon
+sounded desperately insane to Janice.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+They reached the first of the fallen soldiers. Janice looked,
+shuddering. Then she said thinly: "He's breathing!"
+
+He was. He was merely a boy. Twenty or thereabouts. He lay on his back,
+his eyes closed. His face was upturned like a dead man's. But his breast
+rose and fell rhythmically. He slept as if he were drugged.
+
+But that was more incredible than if he'd been dead. Regiments of men
+fallen simultaneously asleep....
+
+Coburn's flow of raging speech stopped short. He stared. He saw other
+fallen soldiers. Dozens of them. In coma-like slumber, the soldiers who
+had come to loot and murder lay like straws upon the ground. If they had
+been dead it would have been more believable. At least there are ways to
+kill men. But this ...
+
+Dillon parted the group of villagers about him and came toward Coburn
+and Janice. He was frowning in a remarkably human fashion.
+
+"Here's a mess!" he said irritably. "Those Bulgars came marching down
+out of the pass. The cavalry galloped on ahead and cut the villagers off
+so they couldn't run away. They started to loot the village. They
+weren't pleasant. Women began to scream, and there were shootings--all
+in a matter of minutes. And then the looters began to act strangely.
+They staggered around and sat down and went to sleep!"
+
+He waved his hands in a helpless gesture, but Coburn was not deceived.
+
+"The tanks arrived. And they stopped--and their crews went to sleep!
+Then the infantry appeared, staggering as it marched. The officers
+halted to see what was happening ahead, and the entire infantry dropped
+off to sleep right where it stood!
+
+"It's bad! If it had happened a mile or so back ... The Greeks must have
+played a trick on them, but those cavalrymen raised the devil in the few
+minutes they were out of hand! They killed some villagers and then
+keeled over. And now the villagers aren't pleased. There was one man
+whose son was murdered, and he's been slitting the Bulgars' throats!"
+
+He looked at Coburn, and Coburn said in a grating voice: "I see."
+
+Dillon said distressedly: "One can't let them slit the throats of
+sleeping men! I'll have to stay here to keep them from going at it
+again. I say, Coburn, will you take one of their staff cars and run on
+down somewhere and tell the Greek government what's happened here?
+Something should be done about it! Soldiers should come to keep order
+and take charge of these chaps."
+
+"Yes," said Coburn. "I'll do it. I'll take Janice along, too."
+
+"Splendid!" Dillon nodded as if in relief. "She'd better get out of the
+mess entirely. I fancy there'd have been a full-scale massacre if we
+hadn't come along. The Greeks have no reason to love these chaps, and
+their intentions were hardly amiable. But one can't let them be
+murdered!"
+
+Coburn had his hand on his revolver in his pocket. His finger was on the
+trigger. But if Dillon needed him to run an errand, then there obviously
+were no others of his own kind about.
+
+Dillon turned his back. He gave orders in the barbarous dialect of the
+mountains. His voice was authoritative. Men obeyed him and dragged
+uniformed figures out of a light half-track that was plainly a staff
+car. Dillon beckoned, and Coburn moved toward him. The important thing
+as far as Coburn was concerned was to get Janice to safety. Then to
+report the full event.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"I ... I'm not sure ..." began Janice, her voice shaking.
+
+"I'll prove what I said," raged Coburn in a low tone. "I'm not crazy,
+though I feel like it!"
+
+Dillon beckoned again. Janice slipped off the donkey's back. She looked
+pitifully frightened and irresolute.
+
+"I've located the chap who's the mayor of this village, or something
+like that. Take him along. They might not believe you, but they'll have
+to investigate when he turns up."
+
+A white-bearded villager reluctantly climbed into the back of the car.
+Dillon pleasantly offered to assist Janice into the front seat. She
+climbed in, deathly white, frightened of Coburn and almost ashamed to
+admit that his vehement outburst had made her afraid of Dillon, too.
+
+Dillon came around to Coburn's side of the vehicle. "Privately," he said
+with a confidential air, "I'd advise you to dump this mayor person where
+he can reach authority, and then go away quietly and say nothing of what
+happened up here. If the Greeks are using some contrivance that handles
+an affair like this, it will be top secret. They won't like civilians
+knowing about it."
+
+Coburn's grip on his revolver was savage. It seemed likely, now, that
+Dillon was the only one of his extraordinary kind about.
+
+"I think I know why you say that," he said harshly.
+
+Dillon smiled. "Oh, come now!" he protested. "I'm quite unofficial!"
+
+He was incredibly convincing at that moment. There was a wry half-smile
+on his face. He looked absolutely human; absolutely like the British
+correspondent Coburn had met in Salonika. He was too convincing. Coburn
+knew he would suspect his own sanity unless he made sure.
+
+"You're not only unofficial," said Coburn grimly. His hand came up over
+the edge of the staff-car door. It had his revolver in it. It bore
+inexorably upon the very middle of Dillon's body. "You're not human,
+either! You're not a man! Your name isn't Dillon! You're--something I
+haven't a word for! But if you try anything fancy I'll see if a bullet
+through your middle will stop you!"
+
+Dillon did not move. He said easily: "You're being absurd, my dear
+fellow. Put away that pistol."
+
+"You slipped!" said Coburn thickly. "You said the Greeks played a trick
+on this raiding party. But you played it. At Ardea, when you climbed
+that cliff--no man could climb so fast. No man could run as you ran down
+into this village. And I saw that body you're wearing when you weren't
+in it! I followed you up the cliff when--" Coburn's voice was ragingly
+sarcastic--"when you were taking pictures!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Dillon's face went impassive. Then he said: "Well?"
+
+"Will you let me scratch your finger?" demanded Coburn almost
+hysterically. "If it bleeds, I'll apologize and freely admit I'm crazy!
+But if it doesn't ..."
+
+The thing-that-was-not-Dillon raised its eyebrows. "It wouldn't," it
+said coolly. "You do know. What follows?"
+
+"You're something from space," accused Coburn, "sneaking around Earth
+trying to find out how to conquer us! You're an Invader! You're trying
+out weapons. And you want me to keep my mouth shut so we Earth people
+won't patch up our own quarrels and join forces to hunt you down! But
+we'll do it! We'll do it!"
+
+The thing-that-was-not-Dillon said gently: "No. My dear chap, no one
+will believe you."
+
+"We'll see about that!" snapped Coburn. "Put those cameras in the car!"
+
+The figure that looked so human hesitated a long instant, then obeyed.
+It lowered the two seeming cameras into the back part of the staff car.
+
+Janice started to say, "I ... I ..."
+
+The pseudo-Dillon smiled at her. "You think he's insane, and naturally
+you're scared," it said reassuringly. "But he's sane. He's quite right.
+I am from outer space. And I'm not humoring him either. Look!"
+
+He took a knife from his pocket and snapped it open. He deliberately ran
+the point down the side of one of his fingers.
+
+The skin parted. Something that looked exactly like foam-rubber was
+revealed. There were even bubbles in it.
+
+The pseudo-Dillon said, "You see, you don't have to be afraid of him.
+He's sane, and quite human. You'll feel much better traveling with him."
+Then the figure turned to Coburn. "You won't believe it, but I really
+like you, Coburn. I like the way you've reacted. It's very ... human."
+
+Coburn said to him: "It'll be human, too, when we start to hunt you
+down!" He let the staff car in gear. Dillon smiled at him. He let in the
+clutch, and the car leaped ahead.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the two camera-cases Coburn was sure that he had the cryptic device
+that was responsible for the failure of a cold-war raid. He wouldn't
+have dared drive away from Dillon leaving these devices behind. If they
+were what he thought, they'd be absolute proof of the truth of his
+story, and they should furnish clues to the sort of science the Invaders
+possessed. Show the world that Invaders were upon it, and all the world
+would combine to defend Earth. The cold war would end.
+
+But a bitter doubt came to him. Would they? Or would they offer
+zestfully to be viceroys and overseers for the Invaders, betraying the
+rest of mankind for the privilege of ruling them even under unhuman
+masters?
+
+Janice swayed against his shoulder. He cast a swift glance at her. Her
+face was like marble.
+
+"What's the matter?"
+
+She shook her head. "I'm trying not to faint," she said unsteadily.
+"When you told me he was from another world I ... thought you were
+crazy. But when he admitted it ... when he proved it ..."
+
+Coburn growled. The trail twisted and dived down a steep slope. It
+twisted again and ran across a rushing, frothing stream. Coburn drove
+into the rivulet. Water reared up in wing-like sheets on either side.
+The staff car climbed out, rocking, on the farther side. Coburn put it
+to the ascent beyond. The trail turned and climbed and descended as the
+stony masses of the hills required.
+
+"He's--from another world!" repeated Janice. Her teeth chattered. "What
+do they want--creatures like him? How--how many of them are there?
+Anybody could be one of them! What do they want?"
+
+"This is a pretty good world," said Coburn fiercely. "And his kind will
+want it. We're merely the natives, the aborigines, to them. Maybe they
+plan to wipe us out, or enslave us. But they won't! We can spot them
+now! They don't bleed. Scratch one and you find--foam-rubber. X-rays
+will spot them. We'll learn to pick them out--and when some specialists
+look over those things that look like cameras we'll know more still!
+Enough to do something!"
+
+"Then you think it's an invasion from space?"
+
+"What else?" snapped Coburn.
+
+His stomach was a tight cramped knot now. He drove the car hard!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In air miles the distance to be covered was relatively short. In road
+miles it seemed interminable. The road was bad and curving beyond
+belief. It went many miles east and many miles west for every mile of
+southward gain. The hour grew late. Coburn had fled Ardea at sunrise,
+but they'd reached Naousa after midday and he drove frantically over
+incredible mountain roads until dusk. Despite sheer recklessness,
+however, he could not average thirty miles an hour. There were times
+when even the half-track had to crawl or it would overturn. The sun set,
+and he went on up steep grades and down steeper ones in the twilight.
+Night fell and the headlights glared ahead, and the staff car clanked
+and clanked and grumbled and roared on through the darkness.
+
+They probably passed through villages--the headlights showed stone
+hovels once or twice--but no lights appeared. It was midnight before
+they saw a moving yellow spot of brightness with a glare as of fire upon
+steam above it. There were other small lights in a row behind it, and
+they saw that all the lights moved.
+
+"A railroad!" said Coburn. "We're getting somewhere!"
+
+It was a railroad train on the other side of a valley, but they did not
+reach the track. The highway curved away from it.
+
+At two o'clock in the morning they saw electric lights. The highway
+became suddenly passable. Presently they ran into the still, silent
+streets of a slumbering town--Serrai--an administrative center for this
+part of Greece. They threaded its ways while Coburn watched for a proper
+place to stop. Once a curiously-hatted policeman stared blankly at them
+under an arc lamp as the staff car clanked and rumbled past him. They
+saw a great pile of stone which was a church. They saw a railroad
+station.
+
+Not far away there was a building in which there were lights. A man in
+uniform came out of its door.
+
+Coburn stopped a block away. There were uneasy stirrings, and the
+white-bearded passenger from the village said incomprehensible things in
+a feeble voice. Coburn got Janice out of the car first. She was stiff
+and dizzy when she tried to walk. The Greek was in worse condition
+still. He clung to the side of the staff car.
+
+"We tell the truth," said Coburn curtly, "when we talk to the police. We
+tell the whole truth--except about Dillon. That sounds too crazy. We
+tell it to top-level officials only, after they realize that something
+they don't know anything about has really taken place. Talk of Invaders
+from space would either get us locked up as lunatics or would create a
+panic. This man will tell what happened up there, and they'll
+investigate. But we take these so-called cameras to Salonika, and get to
+an American battleship."
+
+He lifted Dillon's two cameras by the carrying-straps. And the straps
+pulled free. They'd held the cases safely enough during a long journey
+on foot across the mountains. But they pulled clear now.
+
+Coburn had a bitter thought. He struck a match. He saw the leather cases
+on the floor of the staff car. He picked up one of them. He took it to
+the light of the headlights, standing there in the resonant darkness of
+a street in a city of stone houses.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The leather was brittle. It was friable, as if it had been in a fire.
+Coburn plucked it open, and it came apart in his hands. Inside there was
+the smell of scorched things. There was a gritty metallic powder.
+Nothing else. The other carrying-case was in exactly the same condition.
+
+Coburn muttered bitterly: "They were set to destroy themselves if they
+got into other hands than Dillon's. We haven't a bit of proof that he
+wasn't a human being. Not a shred of proof!"
+
+He suddenly felt a sick rage, as if he had been played with and mocked.
+The raid from Bulgaria was serious enough, of course. It would have
+killed hundreds of people and possibly hundreds of others would have
+been enslaved. But even that was secondary in Coburn's mind. The
+important thing was that there were Invaders upon Earth. Non-human
+monsters, who passed for humans through disguise. They had been able to
+travel through space to land secretly upon Earth. They moved unknown
+among men, learning the secrets of mankind, preparing for--what?
+
+
+III
+
+They got into Salonika early afternoon of the next day, after many hours
+upon an antique railroad train that puffed and grunted and groaned among
+interminable mountains. Coburn got a taxi to take Janice to the office
+of the Breen Foundation which had sent her up to the north of Greece to
+establish its philanthropic instruction courses. He hadn't much to say
+to Janice as they rode. He was too disheartened.
+
+In the cab, though, he saw great placards on which newspaper headlines
+appeared in Greek. He could make out the gist of them. Essentially, they
+shrieked that Bulgarians had invaded Greece and had been wiped out. He
+made out the phrase for valiant Greek army. And the Greek army was
+valiant enough, but it hadn't had anything to do with this.
+
+From the police station in Serrai--he had been interviewed there until
+dawn--he knew what action had been taken. Army planes had flown
+northward in the darkness, moved by the Mayor's, and Coburn's, and
+Janice's tale of Bulgarian soldiers on Greek soil, sleeping soundly.
+They had released parachute flares and located the village of Naousa.
+Parachutists with field radios had jumped, while other flares burned to
+light them to the ground. That was that. Judging by the placards, their
+reports had borne out the story Coburn had brought down. There would be
+a motorized Greek division on the way to take charge of the
+four-thousand-odd unconscious raiders. There was probably an advance
+guard there now.
+
+But there was no official news. Even the Greek newspapers called it
+rumors. Actually, it was leaked information. It would be reasonable for
+the Greek government to let it leak, look smug, and blandly say "No
+comment" to all inquiries, including those from Bulgaria.
+
+But behind that appearance of complacency, the Greek government would be
+going quietly mad trying to understand what so fortunately had happened.
+And Coburn could tell them. But he knew better than to try without some
+sort of proof. Yet, he had to tell. The facts were more important than
+what people thought of him.
+
+The cab stopped before his own office. He paid the driver. The driver
+beamed and said happily: "_Tys nikisame, e?_"
+
+Coburn said, "_Poly kala. Orea._"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+His office was empty. It was dustier than usual. His secretary was
+probably taking a holiday since he was supposed to be out of town. He
+grunted and sat down at the telephone. He called a man he knew.
+Hallen--another American--was attached to a non-profit corporation which
+was attached to an agency which was supposed to cooeperate with a
+committee which had something to do with NATO. Hallen answered the phone
+in person.
+
+Coburn identified himself. "Have you heard any rumors about a Bulgarian
+raid up-country?" he asked.
+
+"I haven't heard anything else since I got up," Hallen told him.
+
+"I was there," said Coburn. "I brought the news down. Can you come
+over?"
+
+"I'm halfway there now!" said Hallen as he slammed down the phone.
+
+Coburn paced up and down his office. It was very dusty. Even the seat of
+the chair at his secretary's desk was dusty. The odds were that she was
+coming in only to sort the mail, and not even sitting down for that. He
+shrugged.
+
+He heard footsteps. The door opened. His secretary, Helena, came in. She
+looked surprised.
+
+"I was at lunch," she explained. She had a very slight accent. She hung
+up her coat. "I am sorry. I stopped at a store."
+
+He had paused in his pacing to nod at her. Now he stared, but her back
+was turned toward him. He blinked. She had just told a very transparent
+lie. And Helena was normally very truthful.
+
+"You had a good trip?" she asked politely.
+
+"Fair," said Coburn. "Any phone calls this morning?" he asked.
+
+"Not this morning," she said politely.
+
+She reached in a desk drawer. She brought out paper. She put it in the
+typewriter and began to type.
+
+Coburn felt very queer. Then he saw something else. There was a fly in
+the office--a large, green-bodied fly of metallic lustre. The
+inhabitants of Salonika said with morbid pride that it was a specialty
+of the town, with the most painful of all known fly stings. And Helena
+abhorred flies.
+
+It landed on the bare skin of her neck. She did not notice. It stayed
+there. Ordinarily she would have jumped up, exclaiming angrily in Greek,
+and then she would have pursued the fly vengefully with a folded
+newspaper until she killed it. But now she ignored it.
+
+Hallen came in, stamping. Coburn closed the door behind him. He felt
+queer at the pit of his stomach. For Helena to let a fly stay on her
+neck suggested that her skin was ... somehow not like its usual self.
+
+"What happened to those Bulgarians?" demanded Hallen.
+
+Coburn told him precisely what he'd seen when he arrived in Naousa after
+an eight-mile hike through mountains. Then he went back and told Hallen
+precisely what he'd seen up on the cliffside.
+
+"His cameras were some sort of weapon. He played it on the marching
+column, it took effect and they went to sleep," he finished. "I took
+them away from him and brought them down, but--"
+
+He told about the contents of the camera cases being turned to a gritty,
+sooty powder. Then he added: "Dillon set them to destroy themselves. You
+understand. He's not a man. He's a creature from some planet other than
+Earth, passing for a human being. He's an Invader from space."
+
+Hallen's expression was uneasy and compassionate but utterly
+unbelieving. Helena shivered and turned away her face. Coburn's lips
+went taut. He reached down to his desk. He made a sudden, abrupt
+gesture. Hallen caught his breath and started up.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Coburn said curtly: "Another one of them. Helena, is that foam-suit
+comfortable?"
+
+The girl jerked her face around. She looked frightened.
+
+"Helena," said Coburn, "the real Helena, that is, would not sit down on
+a dusty chair. No woman would. But you did. She is a very truthful girl.
+You lied to me. And I just stuck pins in your shoulder and you didn't
+notice. They're sticking in your foam suit now. You and the creature
+that passed for Dillon up-country are both aliens. Invaders. Do you want
+to try to convince me otherwise?"
+
+The girl said evenly: "Mr. Coburn, I do not think you are well--"
+
+Then Coburn said thickly: "I'm crazy enough to put a bullet through you
+if your gang of devils has harmed the real Helena. What's happened to
+her?"
+
+Hallen moved irresolutely to interfere. But the girl's expression
+changed. She smiled. "The real Helena, Mr. Coburn," said an entirely new
+voice, "has gone to the suburbs to visit her fiance's family. She is
+quite safe."
+
+There was dead silence. The figure--it even moved like Helena--got
+composedly to its feet. It got its coat. It put the coat on. Hallen
+stared with his mouth open. The pins hadn't convinced him, but the
+utterly different voice coming from this girl's mouth had. Yet, waves of
+conflicting disbelief and conviction, horror and a racking doubt, chased
+themselves over his features.
+
+"She admits she's not Helena!" said Coburn with loathing. "It's not
+human! Should I shoot it?"
+
+The girl smiled at him again. Her eyes were very bright. "You will not,
+Mr. Coburn. And you will not even try to keep me prisoner to prove your
+story. If I screamed that you attack me--" the smile widened--"Helena's
+good Greek friends would come to my assistance."
+
+She walked confidently to the door and opened it. Then she said warmly:
+"You are very intelligent, Mr. Coburn. We approve of you very much. But
+nobody will believe you."
+
+The office door closed.
+
+Coburn turned stiffly to the man he'd called to hear him. "Should I have
+shot her, Hallen?"
+
+Hallen sat down as if his knees had given way beneath him. After a long
+time he got out a handkerchief and painfully mopped his face. At the
+same time he shivered.
+
+"N-no...." Then he swallowed. "My God, Coburn! It's true!"
+
+"Yes," said Coburn bitterly, "or you're as crazy as I am."
+
+Hallen's eyes looked haunted. "I--I ..." He swallowed again. "There's no
+question about the Bulgarian business. That did happen! And you were
+there. And--there've been other things.... Rumors.... Reports that
+nobody believed.... I might be able to get somebody to listen...." He
+shivered again. "If it's true, it's the most terrible thing that ever
+happened. Invaders from space.... Where do you think they came from,
+Coburn?"
+
+"The creature that looked like Dillon could climb incredibly fast. I saw
+it run and leap. Nothing on Earth could run or leap like that." Coburn
+shrugged. "Maybe a planet of another sun, with a monstrous gravity."
+
+"Try to get somebody to believe that, eh?" Hallen got painfully to his
+feet. "I'll see what I can do. I ... don't know that I can do anything
+but get myself locked up for observation. But I'll call you in an hour."
+
+He went unsteadily out of the door. Coburn instantly called the Breen
+Foundation on the telephone. He'd left Janice there less than an hour
+before. She came to the phone and gasped when she heard his voice.
+Raging, he told her of Helena, then cautioned her to be especially
+careful--to be suspicious of everybody.
+
+"Don't take anybody's word!" snapped Coburn. "Doubt everybody! Doubt me!
+Until you're absolutely certain. Those creatures are everywhere.... They
+may pretend to be anybody!"
+
+After Coburn hung up on Janice, he sat back and tried to think
+logically. There had to be some way by which an extra-terrestrial
+Invader could be told instantly from a human being. Unmask and prove
+even one such creature, and the whole story would be proved. But how
+detect them? Their skin was perfectly deceptive. Scratched, of course,
+they could be caught. But one couldn't go around scratching people.
+There was nothing of the alien creature's own actual form that showed.
+
+Then Coburn remembered the Dillon foam suit. The head had been hollow.
+Flaccid. Holes instead of eyes. The creature's own eyes showed through.
+
+But he'd have to make certain. He'd have to look at a foam-suited
+creature. He could have examined Helena's eyes, but she was gone now.
+However, there was an alternative. There was a Dillon in Salonika, as
+there was a Helena. If the Dillon in Salonika was the real Dillon--if
+there were a real Dillon--he could look at his eyes. He could tell if he
+were the false Dillon or the real one.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+At this hour of the afternoon a Britisher would consider tea a
+necessity. There was only one place in Salonika where they served tea
+that an Englishman would consider drinkable. Coburn got into a cab and
+gave the driver the address, and made sure of the revolver in his
+pocket. He was frightened. He was either going to meet with a monster
+from outer space, or be on the way to making so colossal a fool of
+himself that a mental asylum would yawn for him.
+
+He went into the one coffee-shop in Salonika which served drinkable tea.
+It was dark and dingy inside, though the tablecloths were spotless. He
+went in, and there was Dillon.
+
+Coburn's flesh crawled. If the figure sitting there with the _London
+Times_ and a cup of tea before him were actually a monster from another
+planet ...
+
+But Dillon read comfortably, and sipped his tea. Coburn approached, and
+the Englishman looked up inquiringly.
+
+"I was ... up in the mountains," said Coburn feverishly, "when those
+Bulgarians came over. I can give you the story."
+
+Dillon said frostily: "I'm not interested. The government's officially
+denied that any such incident took place. It's merely a silly rumor."
+
+It was reasonable that it should be denied. But it had happened,
+nonetheless. Coburn stared, despite a consciousness that he was not
+conspicuously rational in the way his eyes searched Dillon's face
+hungrily. The eyes _were_ different! The eyes of the Dillon up in the
+mountains had been larger, and the brown part--But he had to be sure.
+
+Suddenly, Coburn found himself grinning. There was a simple, a perfect,
+an absolute test for humanity!
+
+Dillon said suspiciously: "What the devil are you staring at me for?"
+
+Coburn continued to grin uncontrollably, even as he said in a tone of
+apology: "I hate to do this, but I have to be sure...."
+
+He swung. He connected with Dillon's nose. Blood started.
+
+Coburn zestfully let himself be thrown out, while Dillon roared and
+tried to get at him through the flying wedge of waiters. He felt an
+enormous relaxation on the way back to his office in another cab. He was
+a trifle battered, but it was worth it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Back in the office he called Hallen again. And again Hallen answered. He
+sounded guilty and worried.
+
+"I don't know whether I'm crazy or not," he said bitterly. "But I was in
+your office. I saw your secretary there--and she didn't feel pins stuck
+in her. And something did happen to those Bulgarians that the Greeks
+don't know anything about, or the Americans either. So you're to tell
+your story to the high brass down in Athens. I think you'll be locked up
+afterward as a lunatic--and me with you for believing my own eyes. But a
+plane's being readied."
+
+"Where do I meet you?" asked Coburn.
+
+Hallen told him. A certain room out at the airport. Coburn hung up. The
+telephone rang instantly. He was on the way out, but he turned back and
+answered it. Janice's voice--amazingly convincing--came from the
+instrument. And at the first words his throat went dry. Because it
+couldn't be Janice.
+
+"I've been trying to get you. Have you tried to reach me?"
+
+"Why, no. Why?"
+
+Janice's voice said: "I've something interesting to tell you. I left the
+office an hour ago. I'm at the place where I live when I'm in Salonika.
+Write down the address. Can you come here? I've found out something
+astonishing!"
+
+He wrote down the address. He had a feeling of nightmarishness. This was
+not Janice--
+
+"I'm clearing up some matters you'll guess at," he said grimly, "so I
+may be a little while getting there. You'll wait?"
+
+He hung up. And then with a rather ghastly humor he took some pins from
+a box on the desk and worked absorbedly at bending one around the inside
+of the band of the seal ring he wore on his right hand.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But he didn't go to the telephoned address. He went to the Breen
+Foundation. And Janice was there. She was the real Janice. He knew it
+instantly he saw her. She was panic-stricken when he told her of his own
+telephone experience. Her teeth chattered. But she knew--instinctively,
+she said--that he was himself. She got into the cab with him.
+
+They reached the airport and found the office Hallen had named. The
+lettering on it, in Greek and French, said that it was a reception room
+for official visitors only.
+
+"Our status is uncertain," said Coburn drily. "We may be official
+guests, or we may be crazy. It's a toss-up which status sticks."
+
+He opened the door and looked carefully inside before he entered. Hallen
+was there. There was a lean, hard-bitten colonel of the American liaison
+force in Greece. There was a Greek general, pudgy and genial, standing
+with his back to a window and his hands clasped behind him. There were
+two Greek colonels and a major. They regarded him soberly.
+
+"Howdo, Coburn," said Hallen painfully. "You're heading for Athens, you
+know. This is Miss Ames? But these gentlemen have ... ah ... a special
+concern with that business up-country. They'd like to hear your story
+before you leave."
+
+"I suppose," said Coburn curtly, "it's a sort of preliminary commission
+in lunacy."
+
+But he shook hands all around. He kept his left hand in his coat pocket
+as he shook hands with his right. His revolver was in his left-hand
+pocket now too. The Greek general beamed at him. The American colonel's
+eyes were hard and suspicious. One of the two Greek colonels was very
+slightly cross-eyed. The Greek major shook hands solemnly.
+
+Coburn took a deep breath. "I know my tale sounds crazy," he said, "but
+... I had a telephone call just now. Hallen will bear me out that my
+secretary was impersonated by somebody else this afternoon."
+
+"I've told them that," said Hallen unhappily.
+
+"And something was impersonating Dillon up in the hills," finished
+Coburn. "I've reason to believe that at this address"--and he handed the
+address he'd written down to Hallen--"a ... creature will be found who
+will look most convincingly like Miss Ames, here. You might send and
+see."
+
+The American colonel snorted: "This whole tale's preposterous! It's an
+attempt to cash in on the actual mystery of what happened up-country."
+
+The Greek general protested gently. His English was so heavily accented
+as to be hard to understand, but he pointed out that Coburn knew details
+of the event in Naousa that only someone who had been there could know.
+
+"True enough," said the American officer darkly, "but he can tell the
+truth now, before we make fools of ourselves sending him to Athens to be
+unmasked. Suppose," he said unpleasantly, "you give us the actual
+facts!"
+
+Coburn nodded. "The idea you find you can't take is that creatures that
+aren't human can be on Earth and pass for human beings. There's some
+evidence on that right here." He nodded to the Greek major who was the
+junior officer in the room. "Major, will you show these other gentlemen
+the palm of your hand?"
+
+The Greek major frowned perplexedly. He lifted his hand and looked at
+it. Then his face went absolutely impassive.
+
+"I'm ready to shoot!" snapped Coburn. "Show them your hand. I can tell
+now."
+
+He felt the tensing of the others in the room, not toward the major but
+toward him. They were preparing to jump him, thinking him mad.
+
+But the major grinned ruefully: "Clever, Mr. Coburn! But how did you
+pick me out?"
+
+Then there was a sensation of intolerable brightness all around. But it
+was not actual light. It was a sensation inside one's brain.
+
+Coburn felt himself falling. He knew, somehow, that the others were
+falling too. He saw everyone in the room in the act of slumping limply
+to the floor--all but the Greek major. And Coburn felt a bitter,
+despairing fury as consciousness left him.
+
+
+IV
+
+He came to in a hospital room, with a nurse and two doctors and an
+elaborate oxygen-administering apparatus. The apparatus was wheeled out.
+The nurse followed. The two doctors hurried after her. The American
+colonel of the airport was standing by the bed on which Coburn lay,
+fully dressed.
+
+Coburn felt perfectly all right. He stirred. The American colonel said
+sourly: "You're not harmed. Nobody was. But Major Pangalos got away."
+
+Coburn sat up. There was a moment's bare trace of dizziness, and that
+was gone too. Coburn said: "Where's Miss Ames? What happened to her?"
+
+"She's getting oxygen," said the colonel. "We were rushed here from the
+airport, sleeping soundly just like those Bulgarians. Major Pangalos
+ordered it before he disappeared. Helicopters brought some Bulgarians
+down, by the way, and oxygen brought them to. So naturally they gave us
+the same treatment. Very effective."
+
+The colonel looked both chastened and truculent. "How'd you know Major
+Pangalos for what he was? He was accepted everywhere as a man."
+
+"His eyes were queer," said Coburn. He stood up experimentally. "I
+figured they would be, if one looked. I saw the foam suit that creature
+wore up-country, when he wasn't in it. There were holes for the eyes. It
+occurred to me that his eyes weren't likely to be like ours. Not
+exactly. So I hunted up the real Dillon, and his eyes weren't like I
+remembered. I punched him in the nose, by the way, to make sure he'd
+bleed and was human. He was."
+
+Coburn continued, "You see, they obviously come from a heavy planet and
+move differently. They're stronger than we are. Much like the way we'd
+be on the moon with one-sixth Earth gravity. They probably are used to a
+thicker atmosphere. If so, their eyes wouldn't be right for here. They'd
+need eyeglasses."
+
+"Major Pangalos didn't--"
+
+"Contact eyeglasses," said Coburn sourly. "Little cups of plastic. They
+slip under the eyelids and touch the white part of the eye. Familiar
+enough. But that's not all."
+
+The American colonel looked troubled. "I know contact lenses," he
+admitted. "But--"
+
+"If the Invaders have a thick atmosphere at home," Coburn said, "they
+may have a cloudy sky. The pupils of their eyes may need to be larger.
+Perhaps they're a different shape. Or their eyes may be a completely
+alien color. Anyhow, they need contact lenses not only to correct their
+vision, but to make their eyes look like ours. They're painted on the
+inside to change the natural look and color. It's very deceptive. But
+you can tell."
+
+"That goes to Headquarters at once!" snapped the colonel.
+
+He went out briskly. Coburn followed him out of the room to look for
+Janice. And Janice happened to be looking for him at exactly the same
+moment. He was genuinely astonished to realize how relieved he was that
+she was all right.
+
+He said apologetically: "I was worried! When I felt myself passing out I
+felt pretty rotten at having failed to protect you."
+
+She looked at him with nearly the same sort of surprised satisfaction.
+"I'm all right," she said breathlessly. "I was worried about you."
+
+The roaring of motors outside the hospital interrupted them. More and
+more vehicles arrived, until a deep purring filled the air. A Greek
+doctor with a worried expression hurried somewhere. Soldiers appeared,
+hard-bitten, tough, professional Greek soldiers. Hallen came out of a
+hospital room. The Greek general appeared with one of the two colonels
+who'd been at the airport. The general nodded, and his eyes seemed
+cordial. He waved them ahead of him into a waiting elevator. The
+elevator descended. They went out of the hospital and there was an
+armored car waiting. An impressive escort of motorcycle troops waited
+with it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The Greek general saw Coburn's cynical expression at sight of the
+guards. He explained blandly that since oxygen brought sleeping
+Bulgarians out of their slumber--and had been used on them--oxygen was
+handy for use by anybody who experienced a bright flash of light in his
+mind. The Bulgarian soldiers, incidentally, said that outside the
+village of Ardea they'd felt as if the sunlight had brightened
+amazingly, but they felt no effects for two hours afterward, when they
+fell asleep at Naousa. So, said the general almost unintelligibly, if
+anything untoward happened on the way to the airport, everybody would
+start breathing oxygen. A sensation of bright light would be untoward.
+
+The armored car started off, with motorcyclists crowded about it with
+weapons ready. But the ride to the airport was uneventful. To others
+than Janice and Coburn it may even have been tedious. But when she
+understood the general's explanation, she shivered a little. She leaned
+insensibly closer to Coburn. He took her hand protectively in his.
+
+They reached the airport. They roared through the gateway and directly
+out upon the darkened field. Something bellowed and raced down a runway
+and took to the air. Other things followed it. They gained altitude and
+circled back overhead. Tiny bluish flickerings moved across the overcast
+sky. Exhaust flames.
+
+Coburn realized that it was a fighter plane escort.
+
+The huge transport plane that waited for them was dark. They climbed
+into it and found their seats. When it roared down the unlighted field
+and took to the air, everything possible had been done to keep anybody
+from bringing any weapon to bear upon it.
+
+"All safe now!" said the voice of the American colonel in the darkness
+of the unlit plane, as the plane gained height. "Incidentally, Coburn,
+why did you want to look at Pangalos' palm? What did you expect to find
+there?"
+
+"When I started for the airport," Coburn explained, "I bent a pin around
+the band of a ring I wear. I could let it lie flat when I shook hands.
+Or I could make it stand out like a spur. I set it with my thumb. I saw
+Pangalos' eyes, so I had it stand out, and I made a tear in his plastic
+skin when I shook hands with him. He didn't feel it, of course." He
+paused. "Did anybody go to the address I gave Hallen?"
+
+Hallen said, in the darkness: "Major Pangalos got there first."
+
+The blackness outside the plane seemed to grow deeper. There was
+literally nothing to be seen but the instrument dials up at the pilots'
+end of the ship.
+
+The Greek general asked a question in his difficult English.
+
+"Where'd they come from?" repeated Coburn. "I've no idea. Off Earth,
+yes. A heavy planet, yes. I doubt they come from our solar system,
+though. Somewhere among the stars."
+
+The Greek general said something with a sly up-twist of his voice.
+Whatever and whoever the Invaders were, he said, they did not like
+Bulgarians. If they'd knocked out the raiding party simply to test their
+weapons against human subjects, at least they had chosen suitable and
+pleasing subjects for the test.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There was light. For an instant Coburn tensed. But the plane climbed and
+the brightness steadied. It was the top of a cloud bank, brilliantly
+white in the moonlight. They had flown up through it, and it reached as
+far ahead as they could see. A stubby fighter plane swam up out of the
+mist and fell into position alongside. Others appeared. They took
+formation about the transport and all flew steadily through the
+moonlight.
+
+"I wish I knew," said the American colonel vexedly, "if those creatures
+were only testing weapons, or if they were getting set to start
+bargaining with us!"
+
+"Meaning?" asked Coburn.
+
+"If they're here," said the colonel angrily, "and if they do mean to
+meddle in our business, they may set up a sort of auction with us
+bidding against the Iron Curtain gang for their friendship. And _they'd_
+make any deal!"
+
+The Greek general agreed drily. He said that free people were not
+practical people. They were always ready to die rather than cease to be
+free. Surely the Greeks had proved themselves ready to die. But people
+like the Bulgarians thought that to continue to live was the most
+important thing in the world. It was, of course, the practical
+view-point....
+
+"They can have it!" growled Coburn.
+
+Janice said hesitantly: "But the Invaders haven't killed anybody we know
+of. They could have killed the Bulgarians. They didn't. The one who
+called himself Dillon stopped one man from killing them. And they could
+have killed us, earlier today at the airport. Could they want to be
+friends?"
+
+"They're starting the wrong way," said Coburn.
+
+The Greek general stirred in his seat, but he was pointedly silent.
+
+The pilot snapped abruptly from up at the bow of the plane: "Colonel!
+sir! Two of the fighters are climbing as if they've spotted something.
+There go the rest."
+
+Coburn leaned across Janice to stare out the window. When the fighters
+were below the transport, they could be seen in silhouette against the
+clouds. Above, their exhaust flames pin-pointed them. Small blue flames
+climbed steeply.
+
+The big ship went on. The roar of its motors was steady and unvarying.
+From a passenger seat it was not possible to look overhead. But suddenly
+there were streaking sparks against the stars. Tracer bullets. Fighters
+swerved and plunged to intercept something....
+
+ * * * * *
+
+And a Thing came down out of the sky with a terrific velocity. Tracer
+bullets sprayed all around it. Some could be seen to ricochet off its
+sides. Flashings came from the alien craft. They were not explosions
+from guns. They were lurid, actinic, smokeless blasts of pure light. The
+Thing seemed to be made of polished metal. It dodged, trying to approach
+the transport. The fighters lunged to prevent it. The ghastly game of
+interception seemed to rush here and there all over the sky.
+
+The strange object was not possibly of human design or manufacture. It
+had no wings. It left no trail of jet fumes or rocket smoke. It was
+glittering and mirror-like, and it was shaped almost exactly like two
+turtle-shells base to base. It was flat and oval. It had no visible
+external features.
+
+It flung itself about with incredible darts and jerkings. It could stop
+stock still as no plane could possibly stop, and accelerate at a rate no
+human body could endure. It tried savagely to get through the swarming
+fighters to the transport. Its light weapon flashed--but the pilots
+would be wearing oxygen masks and there were no casualties among the
+human planes. Once a fighter did fall off in a steep dive, and fluttered
+almost down to the cloud bank before it recovered and came back with its
+guns spitting.
+
+That one appeared to end the fight. It came straight up, pumping tracers
+at the steel flier from below. And the glittering Thing seemed to stop
+dead in the air. Then it shuddered. It was bathed in the flaring sparks
+of tracers. Then--
+
+It dropped like a stone, tumbling aimlessly over and over as it dropped.
+It plummeted into the cloud bank.
+
+Suddenly the clouds were lighted from within. Something inside flared
+with a momentary, terrifying radiance. No lightning bolt ever flashed
+more luridly.
+
+The transport plane and its escort flew on and on over the moonlit bank
+of clouds.
+
+Presently orders came by radio. On the report of this attack, the flight
+plan would be changed, for safety. If the air convoy had been attacked
+once, it might be attacked again. So it would be wisest to get it
+immediately to where there would be plenty of protection. Therefore, the
+transport plane would head for Naples.
+
+Nearly the whole of the United States Mediterranean fleet was in the Bay
+of Naples just then. It had been there nearly a week, and by day its
+liberty parties swarmed ashore. The merchants and the souvenir salesmen
+were entranced. American sailors had money and they spent it. The
+fleet's officers were social assets, its messes bought satisfyingly of
+local viands, and everybody was happy.
+
+All but one small group. The newspapers of one of the Italian political
+parties howled infuriatedly. They had orders to howl, from behind the
+Iron Curtain. The American fleet, that one party's newspapers bellowed,
+was imperialistic, capitalistic, and decadent. In short, there was
+virulent propaganda against the American fleet in Naples. But most
+people were glad it was there anyway. Certainly nobody stayed awake
+worrying about it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+People were staying awake worrying about the transport plane carrying
+Coburn and Janice, however. On the plane, Janice was fearful and pressed
+close to Coburn, and he found it an absorbing experience and was moved
+to talk in a low tone about other matters than extra-terrestrial
+Invaders and foam suits and interstellar travel. Janice found those
+other subjects surprisingly fitted to make her forget about being
+afraid.
+
+Elsewhere, the people who stayed awake did talk about just the subjects
+Coburn was avoiding. The convoy carrying Coburn to tell what he knew had
+been attacked. By a plane which was definitely not made or manned by
+human beings. The news flashed through the air across continents. It
+went under the ocean over sea beds. It traveled in the tightest and most
+closely-guarded of diplomatic codes. The Greek government gave the other
+NATO nations a confidential account of the Bulgarian raid and what had
+happened to it. These details were past question. The facts brought out
+by Coburn were true, too.
+
+So secret instructions followed the news. At first they went only to
+highly-trusted individuals. In thirty nations, top-ranking officials and
+military officers blindfolded each other in turn and gravely stuck pins
+in each other. The blindfolded person was expected to name the place
+where he had been stuck. This had an historical precedent. In olden
+days, pins were stuck in suspected witches. They had patches of skin in
+which there was no sensation, and discovery of such areas condemned them
+to death. Psychologists in later centuries found that patches of
+anaesthetic skin were typical of certain forms of hysteria, and
+therefore did not execute their patients. But the Invaders, by the fact
+that their seemingly human bodies were not flesh at all, could not pass
+such tests.
+
+There were consequences. A Minister of Defense of a European nation
+amusedly watched the tests on his subordinates, blandly excused himself
+for a moment before his own turn came, and did not come back. A general
+of division vanished into thin air. Diplomatic code clerks painstakingly
+decoded the instructions for such tests, and were nowhere about when
+they themselves were to be tested. An eminent Hollywood director and an
+Olympic champion ceased to be.
+
+In the free world nearly a hundred prominent individuals simply
+disappeared. Few were in position to influence high-level decisions.
+Many were in line to know rather significant details of world affairs.
+There was alarm.
+
+It was plain, too, that not all disguised Invaders would have had to
+vanish. Many would not even be called on for test. They would stay where
+they were. And there were private persons....
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There was consternation. But Janice, in the plane, was saying softly to
+Coburn: "The--creature who telephoned and said she was me. How did you
+know she wasn't?"
+
+"I went to the Breen Foundation first," said Coburn. "I looked into your
+eyes--and they were right. So I didn't need to stick a pin in you."
+
+The thought of Coburn not needing to stick a pin in her impressed Janice
+as beautiful trust. She sighed contentedly. "Of course you'd know," she
+said. "So would I--now!" She laughed a little.
+
+The convoy flew on. The lurid round disk of the moon descended toward
+the west.
+
+"It'll be sunrise soon. But I imagine we'll land before dawn."
+
+They did. The flying group of planes flew lower. Coburn saw a single
+light on the ground. It was very tiny, and it vanished rearward with
+great speed. Later there was another light, and a dull-red glow in the
+sky. Still later, infinitesimal twinklings on the ground at the horizon.
+They increased in number but not in size, and the plane swung hugely to
+the left, and the lights on the ground formed a visible pattern. And
+moonlight--broken by the shadows of clouds--displayed the city and the
+Bay of Naples below.
+
+The transport plane landed. The passengers descended. Coburn saw Hallen,
+the American colonel, the Greek general, and a Greek colonel. The other
+had been left behind to take charge of things in Salonika. Here the
+uniforms were American, and naval. There were some Italian police in
+view, but most of the men about were American seamen, ostensibly on
+shore leave. But Coburn doubted very much if they were as completely
+unarmed as men on shore leave usually are.
+
+A man in a cap with much gold braid greeted the American colonel, the
+Greek general, and the Greek colonel. He came to Coburn, to whose arm
+Janice seemed to cling.
+
+"We're taking you out to the fleet. We've taken care of everything.
+Everybody's had pins stuck in him!"
+
+It was very humorous, of course. They moved away from the plane.
+Surrounded by white-clad sailors, the party from the plane moved into
+the hangar.
+
+Then a voice snapped a startled question, in English. An instant later
+it rasped: "Stop or I'll shoot!"
+
+Then there was a bright flash of light. The interior of the hangar was
+made vivid by it. It went out. And as it disappeared there were the
+sounds of running footsteps. Only they did not run properly. They ran in
+great leaps. Impossible leaps. Monstrous leaps. A man might run like
+that on the moon, with a lesser gravity. A creature accustomed to much
+greater gravity might run like that on Earth. But it would not be human.
+
+It got away.
+
+There was a waiting car. They got into it. They pulled out from the
+airport with other cars close before and behind. The cavalcade raced for
+the city and the shoreline surrounded by a guard less noisy but no less
+effective than the Greek motorcycle troopers.
+
+But the Greek general said something meditative in the dark interior of
+the car.
+
+"What's that?" demanded someone authoritatively.
+
+The Greek general said it again, mildly. This latest attempt to seize
+them or harm them--if it was that--had been surprisingly inept. It was
+strange that creatures able to travel between the stars and put
+regiments and tanks out of action should fail so dismally to kill or
+kidnap Coburn, if they really wanted to. Could it be that they were not
+quite sincere in their efforts?
+
+"That," said the authoritative voice, "is an idea!"
+
+They reached the waterfront. And here in the darkest part of the night
+and with the moon near to setting, the waters of the Bay of Naples
+rolled in small, smooth-surfaced, tranquil waves. There was a Navy barge
+waiting. Those who had come by plane boarded it. It cast off and headed
+out into the middle of the huge harbor.
+
+In minutes there was a giant hull looming overhead. They stepped out
+onto a landing ladder and climbed interminably up the ship's metal side.
+Then there was an open door.
+
+"Now," said the American colonel triumphantly, "now everything's all
+right! Nothing can happen now, short of an atomic bomb!"
+
+The Greek general glanced at him out of the corner of his eyes. He said
+something in that heavy accent of his. He asked mildly if
+creatures--Invaders--who could travel between the stars were unlikely to
+be able to make atom bombs if they wanted to.
+
+There was no answer. But somebody led Coburn into an office where this
+carrier's skipper was at his desk. He looked at Coburn with a sardonic,
+unfriendly eye.
+
+"Mr. Coburn, I believe," he said remotely. "You've been very well
+staged-managed by your friends, Mr. Coburn. They've made it look as if
+they were trying hard to kill you, eh? But we know better, don't we? We
+know it's all a build-up for you to make a deal for them, eh? Well, Mr.
+Coburn, you'll find it's going to be a let-down instead! You're not
+officially under arrest, but I wouldn't advise you to try to start
+anything, Mr. Coburn! We're apt to be rather crude in dealing with
+emissaries of enemies of all the human race. And don't forget it!"
+
+And this was Coburn's first inkling that he was regarded as a traitor of
+his planet who had sold out to the Invaders. All the plans made from his
+information would be based on the supposition that he intended to betray
+mankind by misleading it.
+
+[Illustration]
+
+
+V
+
+It was not yet forty-eight hours since Coburn had been interrupted in
+the act of starting his car up in Ardea. Greek newspapers had splashed
+lurid headlines of a rumored invasion by Bulgarians, and their rumored
+defeat. The story was not widely copied. It sounded too unlikely. In a
+few hours it would be time for a new set of newspapers to begin to
+appear. Not one of them would print a single word about the most
+important disclosure in human history: that extra-terrestrial Invaders
+moved blandly about among human beings without being suspected.
+
+The newspapers didn't know it. On inside pages and bottom corners, the
+London papers might refer briefly to the remarkable rumor that had swept
+over Greece about an invasion force said to have crossed its border. The
+London papers would say that the Greek government officially denied that
+such a happening had taken place. The New York papers would be full of a
+political scandal among municipal officials, the Washington papers would
+deal largely with a Congressional investigation committee hearing, Los
+Angeles would have a new and gory murder to exploit, San Francisco news
+would be of a waterfront strike, Tokyo would talk of cherry blossoms,
+Delhi of Pakistan, and the French press would discuss the political
+crisis. But no newspaper, anywhere, would talk about Invaders.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the United States, radar technicians had been routed out of bed and
+informed that night fighters had had a fight with an alien ship manned
+by non-humans and had destroyed it, but their radars detected nothing at
+all. An hour after sunrise in Naples they had come up with a
+combination of radar frequencies which were built to detect everything.
+Instructions were going out in code to all radar establishments on how
+to set it up on existing equipment. Long before that time, business
+machines had begun intricate operations with punched cards containing
+all known facts about the people known to have dropped out of sight.
+Other machines began to integrate crackpot reports of things sighted in
+divers places. The stores of Hunter and Nereid rockets--especially the
+remote-control jobs--were broken out. Great Air Transport planes began
+to haul them to where they might be needed.
+
+In England, certain establishments that had never been mentioned even in
+Parliament were put on war alert. There was frantic scurrying-about in
+France. In Sweden, a formerly ignored scientist was called to a
+twice-scrambled telephone connection and consulted at length about
+objects reported over Sweden's skies. The Canadian Air Force tumbled out
+in darkness and was briefed. In Chile there was agitation, and in Peru.
+
+There was earnest effort to secure cooeperation from behind the Iron
+Curtain, but that did not work. The Iron Curtain stood pat, demanding
+the most detailed of information and the privilege of inspecting all
+weapons intended for use against anybody so far unnamed, but refusing
+all information of its own. In fact, there was a very normal reaction
+everywhere, except that the newspapers didn't know anything to print.
+
+These secret hassles were continuing as the dawnlight moved over Italy
+and made Naples and its harbor quite the most beautiful place in the
+world. When daylight rolled over France, matters were beginning to fall
+into pattern. As daybreak moved across the Atlantic, at least the
+measures to be taken began to be visualized and orders given for their
+accomplishment.
+
+And then, with sunrise in America, real preparations got under way.
+
+But hours earlier there was consultation on the carrier in the Bay of
+Naples. Coburn sat in a wardroom in a cold fury which was in part
+despair. He had been kept in complete ignorance of all measures taken,
+and he felt the raging indignation of a man accused of treason. He was
+being questioned again. He was treated with an icy courtesy that was
+worse than accusation. The carrier skipper mentioned with detachment
+that, of course, Coburn had never been in any danger. Obviously. The
+event in the airport at Salonika and the attack on the convoy were
+window-dressing. They were not attempts to withdraw him from
+circulation, but to draw attention to him. Which, of course, implied
+that the Invaders--whoever or whatever they might be--considered Coburn
+a useful tool for whatever purpose they intended.
+
+This was before the conference officially began. It took time to
+arrange. There were radio technicians with microphones. The
+consultation--duly scrambled and re-scrambled--would be relayed to
+Washington while it was on. It was a top level conference. Hallen was
+included, but he did not seem happy.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Then things were ready. The skipper of the carrier took over, with full
+awareness that the very highest brass in Washington was listening to
+every word.
+
+"We can skip your technical information, Mr. Coburn," he said with
+ironic courtesy, "unless you've something new to offer."
+
+Coburn shook his head. He seethed.
+
+"For the record," said the skipper, "I repeat that it is obvious that
+your presence at the scene when those Bulgarians were knocked out, that
+you were attacked in Salonika, that the ship carrying you was also
+attacked, and that there was an incident on your landing here:--it's
+obvious that all these things were stage-managed to call attention to
+you, for the purposes of ... whoever staged them. Have you anything more
+to offer?"
+
+"No," growled Coburn. "I've told all I know." He was furiously angry and
+felt completely helpless.
+
+"Your information," purred the Skipper, "and the stage-managed
+incidents, make you look like a very patriotic citizen who is feared by
+the supposedly extra-terrestrial creatures. But we don't have to play
+any longer, Mr. Coburn. What were you told to tell your government? What
+do these ... extra-terrestrials want?"
+
+"My guess," snapped Coburn, "is that they want Earth."
+
+The skipper raised his eyebrows. "Are you threatening us in their name?"
+he asked, purring.
+
+"I'm telling you my guess," said Coburn hotly. "It's just as good as
+yours and no better! I have no instructions from them. I have no message
+from them. I've only my own opinion, which is that we humans had better
+get ready to fight. I believe we ought to join together--all of
+Earth--and get set to defend ourselves."
+
+There was silence. Coburn found himself regarding the faces around him
+with an unexpected truculence. Janice pressed his hand warningly.
+
+"All of Earth," said the skipper softly. "Hmmmm. You advise an
+arrangement with all the Earth.... What are your politics, Mr.
+Coburn?--No, let us say, what are the political views of the
+extra-terrestrial creatures you tell us about? We have to know."
+
+Coburn seethed. "If you're suggesting that this is a cold war trick," he
+said furiously, "--if they were faking it, they wouldn't try tricks!
+They'd make war! They'd try conquest!"
+
+Coburn saw the stout Greek general nodding to himself. But the Skipper
+said suavely: "You were with one of the creatures, you say, up in the
+village of Naousa. Would you say he seemed unfriendly to the
+Bulgarians?"
+
+"He was playing the part of an Englishman," snapped Coburn, "trying to
+stop a raid, and murders, and possibly a war--all of them unnecessary!"
+
+"You don't paint a frightening picture," complained the skipper
+ironically. "First you say we have to fight him and his kind, and then
+you imply that he was highly altruistic. What is the fact?"
+
+"Dammit!" said Coburn. "I hated him because he wasn't human. It made my
+flesh crawl to see him act so much like a man when he wasn't. But he
+made me feel ashamed when I held a gun on him and he proved he wasn't
+human just so Janice--so Miss Ames wouldn't be afraid to drive down to
+Salonika with me!"
+
+"So you have some ... friendly feelings toward him, eh?" the skipper
+said negligently. "How will you get in touch with his kind, by the way?
+_If_ we should ask you to? Of course you've got it all arranged? Just in
+case."
+
+Coburn knew that absolutely nothing could be done with a man who was
+trying to show off his shrewdness to his listening superiors. He said
+disgustedly: "That's the last straw. Go to hell!"
+
+A loud-speaker spoke suddenly. Its tone was authoritative, and there
+were little cracklings of static in it from its passage across the
+Atlantic.
+
+"That line of questioning can be dropped, Captain. Mr. Coburn, did these
+aliens have any other chances to kill you?"
+
+"Plenty!" snapped Coburn. "And easy ones. One of them came into my
+office as my secretary. She could have killed me. The man who passed for
+Major Pangalos could have shot us all while we were unconscious. I don't
+know why they didn't get the transport plane, and I don't know what
+their scheme is. I'm telling the facts. They're contradictory. I can't
+help that. All I have are the facts."
+
+The loud-speaker said crisply: "The attack on the transport plane--any
+pilots present who were in that fight?"
+
+Someone at the back said: "Yes, sir. Here."
+
+"How good was their ship? Could it have been a guided missile?"
+
+"No, sir. No guided missile. Whoever drove that ship was right on board.
+And that ship was good. It could climb as fast as we could dive, and no
+human could have taken the accelerations and the turns it made. Whoever
+drove it learned fast, too. He was clumsy at the beginning, but he
+learned. If we hadn't gotten in a lucky hit, he'd've had us where he
+wanted us in a little while more. Our fifty-calibres just bounced off
+that hull!"
+
+The loud-speaker said curtly: "If that impression is justified, that's
+the first business to be taken up. All but flying officers are excused.
+Mr. Coburn can go, too."
+
+There was a stirring everywhere in the room. Officers got up and walked
+out. Coburn stood. The Greek general came over to him and patted him on
+the shoulder, beaming. Janice went out with him. They arrived on the
+carrier's deck. This was the very earliest hour of dawn, and the
+conference had turned abruptly to a discussion of arms and tactics as
+soon as Washington realized that its planes were inadequate for
+fighting. Which was logical enough, but Coburn was pretty sure it was
+useless.
+
+"If anybody else in the world feels as futile as I do," said Coburn
+bitterly, "I feel sorry for him!"
+
+Janice said softly: "You've got me."
+
+But that was less than complete comfort. It is inborn in a man that he
+needs to feel superior. No man can feel pride before the woman of his
+choice while there is something stronger than himself. And Coburn
+especially wanted to feel that pride just now.
+
+There were very probably discussions of the important part of what
+Coburn had reported, of course, during the rest of the morning. But
+there was much more discussion of purely military measures. And of
+course there were attempts to get military intelligence. Things were
+reported in the sky near South Africa, and from Honolulu--where nobody
+would ignore what a radar said again, especially the juiced-up equipment
+just modified on orders--and from other places. Not all the reports were
+authentic, of course. If there were any observations inside the Iron
+Curtain, the Iron Curtain countries kept them to themselves. Politics
+was much more important than anything else, in that part of the world.
+
+But Coburn need not have felt as futile as he did. There was just one
+really spectacular occurrence in connection with the Invaders that day,
+and it happened where Coburn was. Almost certainly, it happened because
+Coburn was there. Though there is reason to believe that the newspaper
+campaign on shore, declaring that the American fleet risked the lives of
+all Naples by its mere presence, had something to do with it too.
+
+It was very spectacular.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It happened just after midday when the city and its harbor were at their
+most glamorous. Coburn and Janice were above when it began. There was an
+ensign assigned to escort Coburn about and keep an eye on him, and he
+took them on a carefully edited tour of the carrier. He took them to the
+radar room which was not secret any longer. He explained reservedly that
+there was a new tricked-up arrangement of radar which it was believed
+would detect turtle-shaped metal ships if they appeared.
+
+The radar room was manned, of course. It always was, with a cold war in
+being. Overhead, the bowl cages of the radars moved restlessly and
+rhythmically. Outside, on deck, the huge elevator that brought planes up
+from below rose at the most deliberate of peace-time rates.
+
+The ensign said negligently, pointing to the radar-screen: "That little
+speck is a plane making for the landing field on shore. This other one
+is a plane coming down from Genoa. You'd need a good pair of binoculars
+to see it. It's a good thirty-five miles away."
+
+Just then, one of the two radar-men on duty pushed a button and snapped
+into a microphone: "Sir! Radar-pip directly overhead! Does not show on
+normal radar. Elevation three hundred thousand feet, descending
+rapidly." His voice cut off suddenly.
+
+A metallic voice said: "Relay!"
+
+The ensign in charge of Coburn and Janice seemed to freeze. The
+radar-man pressed a button, which would relay that particular
+radar-screen's contents to the control room for the whole ship. There
+was a pause of seconds. Then bells began to ring everywhere. They were
+battle gongs.
+
+There was a sensation of stirring all over the ship. Doors closed with
+soft hissings. Men ran furiously. The gongs rang.
+
+The ensign said politely: "I'll take you below now."
+
+He led them very swiftly to a flight of stairs. There was a monstrous
+bellowing on the carrier's deck. Something dark went hurtling down its
+length, with a tail of pale-blue flame behind it. It vanished. Men were
+still running. The elevator shot into full-speed ascent. A plane rolled
+off it. The elevator dropped.
+
+An engine roared. Another. Yet another. A second dark and deadly thing
+flashed down the deck and was gone. There was a rumbling.
+
+The battle gongs cut off. The rumbling below seemed to increase. There
+was a curious vibration. The ship moved. Coburn could feel that it
+moved. It was turning.
+
+The ensign led them somewhere and said: "This is a good place. You'd
+better stay right here."
+
+He ran. They heard him running. He was gone.
+
+They were in a sort of ward room--not of the morning conference--and
+there were portholes through which they could look. The city which was
+Naples seemed to swing smoothly past the ship. They saw other ships. A
+cruiser was under way with its anchor still rising from the water. It
+dripped mud and a sailor was quite ridiculously playing a hose on it. It
+ascended and swayed and its shank went smoothly into the hawse-hole.
+There were guns swinging skyward. Some were still covered by canvas
+hoods. The hoods vanished before the cruiser swung out of the porthole's
+line of vision.
+
+A destroyer leaped across the space they could see, full speed ahead.
+The water below them began to move more rapidly. It began to pass by
+with the speed of ground past an express train. And continually,
+monotonously, there were roarings which climaxed and died in the
+distance.
+
+"The devil!" said Coburn. "I've got to see this. They can't kill us for
+looking."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+He opened the door. Janice, holding fast to his arm, followed as he went
+down a passage. Another door. They were on the deck side of the island
+which is the superstructure of a carrier, and they were well out of the
+way, and everybody in sight was too busy to notice them.
+
+The elevator worked like the piston of a pump. It vanished and
+reappeared and a plane came off. Men in vividly-colored suits swarmed
+about it, and the elevator was descending again. The plane roared, shot
+down the deck, and was gone to form one of the string of climbing
+objects which grew smaller with incredible swiftness as they shot for
+the sky. Coburn saw another carrier. There was a huge bow-wave before
+it. Destroyers ringed it, seeming to bounce in the choppy sea made by so
+many great ships moving so close together.
+
+The other carrier, too, was shooting planes into the air like bullets
+from a gun. The American Mediterranean fleet was putting out to sea at
+emergency-speed, getting every flying craft aloft that could be gotten
+away. A cruiser swung a peculiar crane-like arm, there was a puff of
+smoke and a plane came into being. The crane retracted. Another plane. A
+third.
+
+The fleet was out of the harbor, speeding at thirty knots, with
+destroyers weaving back and forth at higher speeds still. There were
+barges left behind in the harbor with sailors in them,--shore-parties or
+details who swore bitterly when they were left behind. They surged up
+and down on the melee of waves the fleet left behind in its hasty
+departure.
+
+On the fleet itself there was a brisk tenseness as it sped away from the
+land. Vesuvius still loomed high, but the city dwindled to a mere
+blinking mass of white specks which were its buildings. The sea was
+aglitter with sunlight reflected from the waves. There was the smell of
+salt air.
+
+Men began to take cryptic measures for the future. They strung cables
+across the deck from side to side. Arresting gear for planes which would
+presently land.
+
+Their special ensign found Coburn and Janice. "I'm supposed to stay with
+you," he explained politely. "I thought I could be of use. I'm really
+attached to another ship, but I was on board because of the hassle last
+night."
+
+Coburn said: "This would be invader stuff, wouldn't it?"
+
+The ensign shrugged. "Apparently. You heard what the radar said.
+Something at three hundred thousand feet, descending rapidly. It's not a
+human-built ship. Anyway, we've sent up all our planes. Jets will meet
+it first, at fifty thousand. If it gets through them there are ... other
+measures, of course."
+
+"This one beats me!" said Coburn. "Why?"
+
+The ensign shrugged again. "They tried for you last night."
+
+"I'm not that important, to them or anybody else. Or am I?"
+
+"I wouldn't know," said the ensign.
+
+"I don't know anything I haven't told," said Coburn grimly, "and the
+creatures can't suppress any information by killing me now. Anyhow, if
+they'd wanted to they'd have done it."
+
+A dull, faint sound came from high overhead. Coburn stepped out from
+under the shelter of the upper works of the island. He stared up into
+the sky. He saw a lurid spot of blue-white flame. He saw others. He
+realized that all the sky was interlaced with contrails--vapor-trails of
+jet-planes far up out of sight. But they were fine threads. The jets
+were up very high indeed. The pin-points of flame were explosions.
+
+"Using wing-rockets," said the ensign hungrily, "since fifty-calibres
+did no good last night, until one made a lucky hit. Rockets with
+proximity fuses. Our jets don't carry cannon."
+
+There were more explosions. There was a bright glint of reflected
+sunshine. It was momentary, but Coburn knew that it was from a flat,
+bright space-ship, which had tilted in some monstrously abrupt maneuver,
+and the almost vertical sunshine shone down from its surface.
+
+The ensign said in a very quiet voice: "The fight's coming lower."
+
+There was a crashing thump in the air. A battleship was firing
+eight-inch guns almost straight up. Other guns began.
+
+Guns began to fire on the carrier, too, below the deck and beyond it.
+Concussion waves beat at Coburn's body. He thrust Janice behind him to
+shield her, but there could be no shielding.
+
+The air was filled with barkings and snarlings and the unbelievably
+abrupt roar of heavy guns. The carrier swerved, so swiftly that it
+tilted and swerved again. The other ships of the fleet broke their
+straight-away formation and began to move in bewildering patterns. The
+blue sea was criss-crossed with wakes. Once a destroyer seemed to slide
+almost under the bow of the carrier. The destroyer appeared unharmed on
+the other side, its guns all pointed skyward and emitting seemingly
+continuous blasts of flame and thunder.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The ensign grabbed Coburn's shoulder and pointed, his hands shaking.
+
+There was the Invader ship. It was exactly as Coburn had known it would
+be. It was tiny. It seemed hardly larger than some of the planes that
+swooped at it. But the planes were drawing back now. The shining metal
+thing was no more than two thousand feet up and it was moving in
+erratic, unpredictable darts and dashes here and there, like a
+dragon-fly's movements, but a hundred times more swift. Proximity-fused
+shells burst everywhere about it. It burst through a still-expanding
+puff of explosive smoke, darted down a hundred feet, and took a zig-zag
+course of such violent and angular changes of position that it looked
+more like a streak of metal lightning than anything else.
+
+It was down to a thousand feet. It shot toward the fleet at a speed
+which was literally that of a projectile. It angled off to one side and
+back, and suddenly dropped again and plunged crazily through the maze of
+ships from one end to the other, no more than fifty feet above the water
+and with geysers of up-flung sea all about it from the shells that
+missed.
+
+Then it sped away with a velocity which simply was not conceivable. It
+was the speed of a cannonball. It was headed straight toward a distant,
+stubby, draggled tramp-steamer which plodded toward the Bay of Naples.
+
+It rose a little as it flew. And then it checked, in mid-air. It hung
+above the dumpy freighter, and there were salvoes of all the guns in the
+fleet. But at the flashes it shot skyward. When the shells arrived and
+burst, it was gone.
+
+It could still be sighted as a spark of sunlight shooting for the
+heavens. Jets roared toward it. It vanished.
+
+Coburn heard the ensign saying in a flat voice: "If that wasn't
+accelerating at fifteen Gs, I never saw a ship. If it wasn't
+accelerating at fifteen Gs ..."
+
+And that was all. There was nothing else to shoot at. There was nothing
+else to do. Jets ranged widely, looking for something that would offer
+battle, but the radars said that the metal ship had gone up to three
+hundred miles and then headed west and out of radar range. There had not
+been time for the French to set up paired radar-beam outfits anyhow, so
+they couldn't spot it, and in any case its course seemed to be toward
+northern Spain, where there was no radar worth mentioning.
+
+Presently somebody noticed the dingy, stubby, draggled tramp steamer
+over which the Invaders' craft had hovered. It was no longer on course.
+It had turned sidewise and wallowed heavily. Its bow pointed
+successively to every point of the compass.
+
+It looked bad. Salvoes of the heaviest projectiles in the Fleet had been
+fired to explode a thousand feet above it. Perhaps--
+
+A destroyer went racing to see. As it drew near--Coburn learned this
+later--it saw a man's body hanging in a sagging heap over the railing of
+its bridge. There was nobody visible at the wheel. There were four men
+lying on its deck, motionless.
+
+The skipper of the destroyer went cold. He brought his ship closer. It
+was not big, this tramp. Maybe two thousand tons. It was low in the
+water. It swayed and surged and wallowed and rolled.
+
+Men from the destroyer managed to board it. It was completely unharmed.
+They found one small sign of the explosions overhead. One fragment of an
+exploded shell had fallen on board, doing no damage.
+
+Even the crew was unharmed. But every man was asleep. Each one slumbered
+heavily. Each breathed stertorously. They could not be awakened. They
+would need oxygen to bring them to.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A party from the destroyer went on board to bring the ship into harbor.
+The officer in charge tried to find out the ship's name.
+
+There was not a document to be found to show what the ship's name was or
+where it had come from or what it carried as cargo. That was strange.
+The officer looked in the pockets of the two men in the wheel house.
+There was not a single identifying object on either of them. He grew
+disturbed. He made a really thorough search. Every sleeping man was
+absolutely anonymous. Then--still on the way to harbor--a really
+fine-tooth-comb examination of the ship began.
+
+Somebody's radium-dial watch began to glow brightly. The searchers
+looked at each other and went pale. They hunted frantically, fear
+making them clumsy.
+
+They found it. Rather--they found them.
+
+The stubby tramp had an adequate if rather clumsy atomic bomb in each of
+its two holds. The lading of the ship was of materials which--according
+to theory--should be detonated in atomic explosion if an atomic bomb
+went off nearby. Otherwise they could not be detonated.
+
+The anonymous tramp-steamer had been headed for the harbor of Naples,
+whose newspapers--at least those of a certain political party--had been
+screaming of the danger of an atomic explosion while American warships
+were anchored there.
+
+It was not likely that two atom bombs and a shipload of valuable
+secondary atomic explosive had been put on a carefully nameless ship
+just to be taken for a ride. If this ship had anchored among the
+American fleet and if it had exploded in the Bay of Naples ...
+
+The prophecies of a certain political party would seem to have been
+fulfilled. The American ships would be destroyed. Naples itself would be
+destroyed. And it would have appeared that Europeans who loved the great
+United States had made a mistake.
+
+It was, odd, though, that this ship was the only one that the Invaders'
+flying craft had struck with its peculiar weapon.
+
+
+VI
+
+We humans are rational beings, but we are not often reasonable. Those
+who more or less handle us in masses have to take account of that fact.
+It could not be admitted that the fleet had had a fight with a ship
+piloted by Invaders from another solar system. It would produce a wild
+panic, beside which even a war would be relatively harmless. So the
+admiral of the Mediterranean fleet composed an order commending his men
+warmly for their performance in an unrehearsed firing-drill. Their
+target had been--so the order said--a new type of guided missile
+recently developed by hush-hush agencies of the Defense Department. The
+admiral was pleased and proud, and happy....
+
+It was an excellent order, but it wasn't true. The admiral wasn't happy.
+Not after battle photographs were developed and he could see how the
+alien ship had dodged rockets with perfect ease, and had actually taken
+a five-inch shell, which exploded on impact, without a particle of
+damage.
+
+On the carrier, the Greek general said mildly to Coburn that the
+Invaders had used their power very strangely. After stopping an invasion
+of Greece, they had prevented an atomic-bomb explosion which would have
+killed some hundreds of thousands of people. And it was strange that
+the turtle-shaped ship that had attacked the air transport was so
+clumsily handled as compared with this similar craft which had zestfully
+dodged all the missiles a fleet could throw at it.
+
+Coburn thought hard. "I think I see," he said slowly. "You mean, they're
+here and they know all they need to know. But instead of coming out into
+the open, they're making governments recognize their existence. They're
+letting the rulers of Earth know they can't be resisted. But we did
+knock off one of their ships last night!"
+
+The Greek general pointedly said nothing. Coburn caught his meaning. The
+fleet, firing point-blank, had not destroyed its target. The ship last
+night had seemed to fall into a cloud bank and explode. But nobody had
+seen it blow up. Maybe it hadn't.
+
+"Humoring us!" realized Coburn. "They don't want to destroy our
+civilization, so they'll humor us. But they want our governments to know
+that they can do as they please. If our governments know we can't
+resist, they think we'll surrender. But they're wrong."
+
+The Greek general looked at him enigmatically.
+
+"We've still got one trick left," said Coburn. "Atomic bombs. And if
+they fail, we can still get killed fighting them another way."
+
+There was a heavy, droning noise far away. It increased and drew nearer.
+It was a multi-engined plane which came from the west and settled down,
+and hovered over the water and touched and instantly created a spreading
+wake of foam.
+
+The fleet was back at anchor then. It was enclosed in the most beautiful
+combination of city and scene that exists anywhere. Beyond the city the
+blunted cone of Vesuvius rose. In the city, newspaper vendors shrilly
+hawked denunciations of the American ships because of the danger that
+their atom bombs might explode. Well outside the harbor, a Navy crew of
+experts worked to make quite impossible the detonation of atomic bombs
+in a stubby tramp-steamer which had--plausibly, at least--been sent to
+make those same newspapers' prophecies of disaster come true.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A long, long time passed, while consultations took place to which Coburn
+was not invited. Then a messenger led him to the wardroom of the
+previous conference. He recognized the men who had landed by seaplane a
+while since. One was a cabinet member from Washington. There was someone
+of at least equal importance from London, picked up en route. There were
+generals and admirals. The service officers looked at Coburn with
+something like accusation in their eyes. He was the means by which they
+had come to realize their impotence. The Greek general sat quietly in
+the rear.
+
+"Mr. Coburn," said the Secretary from Washington. "We've been canvassing
+the situation. It seems that we simply are not prepared to offer
+effective resistance--not yet--to the ... invaders you tell us about. We
+know of no reason why this entire fleet could not have been disabled as
+effectively as the tramp-steamer offshore. You know about that ship?"
+
+Coburn nodded. The Greek general had told him. The Secretary went on
+painfully: "Now, the phenomena we have to ascribe to Invaders fall into
+two categories. One is the category of their action against the
+Bulgarian raiding force, and today the prevention of the cold-war murder
+of some hundreds of thousands of people. That category suggests that
+they are prepared--on terms--to be amiable. A point in their favor."
+
+Coburn set his lips.
+
+"The other group of events simply points you out and builds you up as a
+person of importance to these Invaders. You seem to be extremely
+important to them. They doubtless could have killed you. They did not.
+What they did do was bring you forward to official attention. Presumably
+they had a realistic motive in this."
+
+"I don't know what it could be," said Coburn coldly. "I blundered into
+one affair. I figured out a way to detect them. I happened to be the
+means by which they were proved to exist. That's all. It was an
+accident."
+
+The Secretary looked skeptical. "Your discoveries were remarkably ...
+apt. And it does seem clear that they made the appearance of hunting
+you, while going to some pains not to catch you. Mr. Coburn, how can we
+make contact with them?"
+
+Coburn wanted to swear furiously. He was still being considered a
+traitor. Only they were trying to make use of his treason.
+
+"I have no idea," he said grimly.
+
+"What do they want?"
+
+"I would say--Earth," he said grimly.
+
+"You deny that you are an authorized intermediary for them?"
+
+"Absolutely," said Coburn. There was silence. The Greek general spoke
+mildly from the back of the room. He said in his difficult English that
+Coburn's personal motives did not matter. But if the Invaders had picked
+him out as especially important, it was possible that they felt him
+especially qualified to talk to them. The question was, would he try to
+make contact with them?
+
+The Secretary looked pained, but he turned to Coburn. "Mr. Coburn?"
+
+Coburn said, "I've no idea how to set about it, but I'll try on one
+condition. There's one thing we haven't tried against them. Set up an
+atom-bomb booby-trap, and I'll sit on it. If they try to contact me, you
+can either listen in or try to blow them up, and me with them!"
+
+There was buzzing comment. Perhaps--Coburn's nails bit into his palms
+when this was suggested--perhaps this was a proposal to let the Invaders
+examine an atomic bomb, American-style. It was said in earnest
+simplicity. But somebody pointed out that a race which could travel
+between the stars and had ships such as the Mediterranean fleet had
+tried to shoot down, would probably find American atomic bombs rather
+primitive. Still--
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The Greek general again spoke mildly. If the Invaders were to be made to
+realize that Coburn was trying to contact them, he should return to
+Greece. He should visibly take up residence where he could be
+approached. He should, in fact, put himself completely at the mercy of
+the Invaders.
+
+"Ostensibly," agreed the Secretary.
+
+The Greek general then said diffidently that he had a small villa some
+twenty miles from the suburbs of Salonika. The prevailing winds were
+such that if an atomic explosion occurred there, it would not endanger
+anybody. He offered it.
+
+"I'll live there," asked Coburn coldly, "and wait for them to come to
+me? I'll have microphones all about so that every word that's said will
+be relayed to your recorders? And there'll be a bomb somewhere about
+that you can set off by remote control? Is that the idea?"
+
+Then Janice spoke up. And Coburn flared into anger against her. But she
+was firm. Coburn saw the Greek general smiling slyly.
+
+They left the conference while the decision was made. And they were in
+private, and Janice talked to him. There are methods of argument against
+which a man is hopeless. She used them. She said that she, not Coburn,
+might be the person the Invaders might have wanted to take out of
+circulation, because she might have noticed something important she
+hadn't realized yet. When Coburn pointed out that he'd be living over an
+atomic bomb, triggered to be set off from a hundred miles away, she
+demanded fiercely to know if he realized how she'd feel if she weren't
+there too....
+
+Next day an aircraft carrier put out of Naples with an escort of
+destroyers. It traveled at full speed down the toe of Italy's boot,
+through the Straits of Messina, across the Adriatic, and rounded the
+end of Greece and went streaking night and day for Salonika. Special
+technicians sent by plane beat her time by days. The Greek general was
+there well ahead. And he expansively supervised while his inherited,
+isolated villa was prepared for the reception of Invaders--and Coburn
+and Janice.
+
+And Coburn and Janice were married. It was an impressive wedding,
+because it was desirable for the Invaders to know about it. It was
+brilliantly military with uniforms and glittering decorations and
+innumerable important people whom neither of them knew or cared about.
+
+If it had been anybody else's wedding Coburn would have found it
+unspeakably dreary. The only person present whom he knew beside Janice
+was Hallen. He acted as groomsman, with the air of someone walking on
+eggs. After it was over he shook hands with a manner of tremendous
+relief.
+
+"Maybe I'll brag about this some day," he told Coburn uneasily. "But
+right now I'm scared to death. What do you two really expect to happen?"
+
+Janice smiled at him. "Why," she said, "we expect to live happily ever
+after."
+
+"Oh yes," said Hallen uncomfortably. "But that wasn't just what I had in
+mind."
+
+
+VII
+
+The world wagged on. The newspapers knew nothing about super-secret
+top-level worries. There was not a single news story printed anywhere
+suggesting an invasion of Earth from outer space. There were a few more
+Flying Saucer yarns than normal, and it was beginning to transpire that
+an unusual number of important people were sick, or on vacation, or
+otherwise out of contact with the world. But, actually, not one of the
+events in which Coburn and Janice had been concerned reached the state
+of being news. Even the shooting off the Bay of Naples was explained as
+an emergency drill.
+
+Quietly, a good many things happened. Cryptic orders passed around, and
+oxygen tanks were accumulated in military posts. Hunter and Nereid
+guided missiles were set up as standard equipment in a number of
+brand-new places. They were loaded for bear. But days went by, and
+nothing happened. Nothing at all. But officialdom was not at ease.
+
+If anything--while the wide world went happily about its
+business--really high-level officialdom grew more unhappy day by day.
+Coburn and Janice flew back to Salonika. They went in a Navy plane with
+a fighter plane escort. They landed at the Salonika airport, and the
+Greek general was among those who greeted them.
+
+He took them out to the villa he'd placed at the disposal of high
+authority for their use. He displayed it proudly. There was absolutely
+no sign that it had been touched by anybody since its original builders
+had finished with it two-hundred-odd years before. The American officer
+who had wired it, though--he looked as if he were short a week's
+sleep--showed them how anywhere on the grounds or in the house they
+would need only to speak a code-word and they'd instantly be answered.
+
+There were servants, and the Greek general took Coburn aside and assured
+him that there was one room which absolutely was not wired for sound. He
+named it.
+
+So they took up a relatively normal way of life. Sometimes they decided
+that it would be pleasant to drive in to Salonika. They mentioned it,
+and went out and got in the car that went with the villa. Oddly, there
+was always some aircraft lazying about overhead by the time they were
+out of the gate. They always returned before sunset. And sometimes they
+swam in the water before the villa's door. Then, also, they were careful
+to be back on solid ground before sunset. That was so their guards out
+on the water wouldn't have to worry.
+
+But it was a nagging and an unhappy business to know that they were
+watched and overheard everywhere save in that one unwired room. It could
+have made for tension between them. But there was another thought to
+hold them together. This was the knowledge that they were literally
+living on top of a bomb. If an Invader's flying ship descended at the
+villa, everything that happened would be heard and seen by microphones
+and concealed television cameras. If the Invaders were too arrogant, or
+if they were arbitrary, there would be a test to see if their ship could
+exist in the heart of an atom-bomb explosion.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Coburn and Janice, then, were happy after a fashion. But nobody could
+call their situation restful.
+
+They had very few visitors. The Greek general came out meticulously
+every day. Hallen came out once, but he knew about the atomic bomb. He
+didn't stay long. When they'd been in residence a week, the General
+telephoned zestfully that he was going to bring out some company. His
+English was so mangled and obscure that Coburn wondered cynically if
+whoever listened to their tapped telephone could understand him. But,
+said the General in high good humor, he was playing a good joke. He had
+hunted up Helena, who was Coburn's secretary, and he had also invited
+Dillon to pay a visit to some charming people he knew. It would be a
+great joke to see Dillon's face.
+
+There was a fire in the living room that night. The Greek servants had
+made it, and Coburn thought grimly that they were braver men and women
+than he'd have been. They didn't have to risk their lives. They could
+have refused this particular secret-service assignment. But they hadn't.
+
+A voice spoke from the living-room ceiling, a clipped American voice.
+"Mr. Coburn, a car is coming."
+
+That was standard. When the General arrived; when the occasional
+delivery of telephoned-for supplies came; on the one occasion when a
+peddler on foot had entered the ground. It lacked something of being the
+perfect atmosphere for a honeymoon, but it was the way things were.
+
+Presently there were headlights outside. The Greek butler went to greet
+the guests. Coburn and Janice heard voices. The General was in
+uproarious good humor. He came in babbling completely uncomprehensible
+English.
+
+There was Helena. She smiled warmly at Coburn. She went at once to
+Janice. "How do you do?" she said in her prettily accented English. "I
+have missed not working for your husband, but this is my fiance!"
+
+And Janice shook hands with a slick-haired young Greek who looked
+pleasant enough, but did not seem to her as remarkable as Coburn.
+
+Then Dillon stared at Coburn.
+
+"The devil!" he said, with every evidence of indignation. "This is the
+chap--"
+
+The General roared, and Coburn said awkwardly: "I owe you an apology,
+and the privilege of a poke in the nose besides. But it was a
+situation--I was in a state--"
+
+Then the General howled with laughter. Helena laughed. Her fiance
+laughed. And Dillon grinned amusedly at Coburn.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"My dear fellow!" said Dillon. "We are the guests this whole villa was
+set up to receive! The last time I saw you was in Naousa, and the last
+time Helena saw you you stuck pins in her, and--"
+
+Coburn stiffened. He went slowly pale.
+
+"I--see! You're the foam-suit people, eh?" Then he looked with hot
+passion at the General. "You!" he said grimly. "You I didn't suspect.
+You've made fools of all of us, I think."
+
+The General said something obscure which could have been a proverb. It
+was to the effect that nobody could tell a fat man was cross-eyed when
+he laughed.
+
+"Yes," said Dillon beaming. "He is fat. So his eyes don't look like
+they're different. You have to see past his cheeks and eyebrows. That's
+how he passed muster. And he slept very soundly after the airport
+affair."
+
+Coburn felt a sort of sick horror. The General had passed as a man, and
+he'd loaned this villa, and he knew all about the installation of the
+atomic bomb.... Then Coburn looked through a doorway and there was his
+Greek butler standing in readiness with a submachine-gun in his hands.
+
+"I take it this is an official call," said Coburn steadily. "In that
+case you know we're overheard--or did the General cancel that?"
+
+"Oh, yes!" said Dillon. "We know all about the trap we've walked into.
+But we'd decided that the time had come to appear in the open anyhow.
+You people are very much like us, incidentally. Apparently there's only
+one real way that a truly rational brain can work. And we and you Earth
+people both have it. May we sit down?"
+
+Janice said: "By all means!"
+
+Helena sat, with an absolutely human gesture of spreading her skirt
+beside her. The General plumped into a chair and chuckled. The
+slick-haired young man politely offered Janice a cigarette and lighted
+Helena's for her. Dillon leaned against the mantel above the fire.
+
+"Well?" said Coburn harshly. "You can state your terms. What do you want
+and what do you propose to do to get it?"
+
+Dillon shook his head. He took a deep breath. "I want you to listen,
+Coburn. I know about the atom bomb planted somewhere around, and I know
+I'm talking for my life. You know we aren't natives of Earth. You've
+guessed that we come from a long way off. We do. Now--we found out the
+trick of space travel some time ago. You're quite welcome to it. We
+found it, and we started exploring. We've been in space, you might say,
+just about two of your centuries. You're the only other civilized race
+we've found. That's point one."
+
+Coburn fumbled in his pocket. He found a cigarette. Dillon held a match.
+Coburn started, and then accepted it.
+
+"Go on." He added, "There's a television camera relaying this, by the
+way. Did you know?"
+
+"Yes, I know," said Dillon. "Now, having about two centuries the start
+of you, we have a few tricks you haven't found out yet. For one thing,
+we understand ourselves, and you, better than you do. We've some
+technical gadgets you haven't happened on yet. However, it's entirely
+possible for you to easily kill the four of us here tonight. If you
+do--you do. But there are others of our race here. That's point two."
+
+"Now come the threats and demands," said Coburn.
+
+"Perhaps." But Dillon seemed to hesitate. "Dammit, Coburn, you're a
+reasonable man. Try to think like us a moment. What would you do if
+you'd started to explore space and came upon a civilized race, as we
+have?"
+
+Coburn said formidably, "We'd study them and try to make friends."
+
+"In that order," said Dillon instantly. "That's what we've tried to do.
+We disguised ourselves as you because we wanted to learn how to make
+friends before we tried. But what did we find, Coburn? What's your
+guess?"
+
+"You name it!" said Coburn.
+
+"You Earth people," said Dillon, "are at a turning-point in your
+history. Either you solve your problems and keep on climbing, or you'll
+blast your civilization down to somewhere near a caveman level and have
+to start all over again. You know what I mean. Our two more spectacular
+interferences dealt with it."
+
+"The Iron Curtain," said Coburn. "Yes. But what's that got to do with
+you? It's none of your business. That's ours."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"But it _is_ ours," said Dillon urgently. "Don't you see, Coburn?
+You've a civilization nearly as advanced as ours. If we can make
+friends, we can do each other an infinite lot of good. We can complement
+each other. We can have a most valuable trade, not only in goods, but in
+what you call human values and we call something else. We'd like to
+start that trade.
+
+"But you're desperately close to smashing things. So we've had to rush
+things. We did stop that Bulgarian raid. When you proved too sharp to be
+fooled, we grew hopeful. Here might be our entering wedge. We hammered
+at you. We managed to make your people suspicious that there might be
+something in what you said. We proved it. It was rugged for you, but we
+had to let you people force us into the open. If we'd marched out shyly
+with roses in our hair--what would you have thought?"
+
+Coburn said doggedly: "I'm still waiting for the terms. What do you
+want?"
+
+The General said something plaintive from his chair. It was to the
+effect that Coburn still believed that Earth was in danger of conquest
+from space.
+
+"Look!" said Dillon irritably. "If you people had found the trick of
+space travel first, and you'd found us, would you have tried to conquer
+us? Considering that we're civilized?"
+
+Coburn said coldly, "No. Not my particular people. We know you can't
+conquer a civilized race. You can exterminate them, or you can break
+them down to savagery, but you can't conquer them. You can't conquer
+us!"
+
+Then Dillon said very painstakingly: "But we don't want to conquer you.
+Even your friends inside the Iron Curtain know that the only way to
+conquer a country is to smash it down to savagery. They've done that
+over and over for conquest. But what the devil good would savages be to
+us? We want someone to trade with. We can't trade with savages. We want
+someone to gain something from. What have savages to offer us? A planet?
+Good Heavens, man! We've already found sixty planets for colonies, much
+better for us than Earth. Your gravity here is ... well, it's
+sickeningly low."
+
+"What _do_ you want then?"
+
+"We want to be friends," said Dillon. "We'll gain by it exactly what you
+Earth people gained when you traded freely among yourselves, before
+blocked currencies and quotas and such nonsense strangled trade. We'll
+gain what you gained when you'd stopped having every city a fort and
+every village guarded by the castle of its lord. Look, Coburn: we've got
+people inside the Iron Curtain. We'll keep them there. You won't be able
+to disband your armies, but we can promise you won't have to use
+them--because we certainly won't help you chaps fight among yourselves.
+We'll give you one of our ships to study and work on. But we won't give
+you our arms. You'll have your moon in a year and your whole solar
+system in a decade. You'll trade with us from the time you choose, and
+you'll be roaming space when you can grasp the trick of it. Man, you
+can't refuse. You're too near to certain smashing of your civilization,
+and we can help you to avoid it. Think what we're offering."
+
+Then Coburn said grimly: "And if we don't like the bargain? What if we
+refuse?"
+
+Dillon carefully put the ash from his cigarette into an ashtray. "If you
+won't be our friends," he said with some distaste, "we can't gain
+anything useful from you. We don't want you as slaves. You'd be no good
+to us. For that reason we can't get anything we want from the Iron
+Curtain people. They've nothing to offer that we can use. So our
+ultimatum is--make friends or we go away and leave you alone. Take it or
+leave it!"
+
+There was a dead, absolute silence. After a long time Coburn said:
+"Altruism?"
+
+Dillon grinned. "Enlightened self-interest. Common sense!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There was a clicking in the ceiling. A metallic voice said: "Mr.
+Coburn, the conversation just overheard and recorded has to be
+discussed in detail on high diplomatic levels. It will take time for
+conferences--decisions--arrangements. Assuming that your guests are
+acting in good faith, they have safe conduct from the villa. Their offer
+is very attractive, but it will have to be passed on at high
+policy-making levels."
+
+Dillon said pleasantly, to the ceiling: "Yes. And you've got to keep it
+from being public, of course, until your space ships can discover us
+somewhere. It will have to be handled diplomatically, so your people are
+back of a grand offer to make friends when it happens." He added wryly,
+"We're very much alike, really. Coburn's very much like us. That's
+why--if it's all right with you--you can arrange for him to be our point
+of confidential contact. We'll keep in touch with him."
+
+The ceiling did not reply. Dillon waited, then shrugged. The Greek
+general spoke. He said that since they had come so far out from
+Salonika, it was too early to leave again. It might be a good idea to
+have a party. Some music would be an excellent thing. He said he liked
+Earth music very much.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A long time later Janice and Coburn were alone in the one room of the
+house which was not wired for sound. There were no microphones here.
+
+Coburn said reluctantly in the darkness: "It sounds sensible all right.
+Maybe it's true. But it feels queer to think of it...."
+
+Janice pressed closer to him and whispered in his ear: "I made friends
+with that girl who passed for Helena. I like her. She says we'll be
+invited to make a trip to their planet. They can do something about the
+gravity. And she says she's really going to be married to the ... person
+who was with her...." She hesitated. "She showed me what they really
+look like when they're not disguised as us."
+
+Coburn put his arm around her and smiled gently. "Well? Want to tell
+me?"
+
+Janice caught her breath. "I--I could have cried.... The poor thing--to
+look like that. I'm glad I look like I do. For you, darling. For you."
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber's Note:
+
+ This etext was produced from _Amazing Stories_ April-May 1953.
+ 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 Project Gutenberg's The Invaders, by William Fitzgerald Jenkins
+
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