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+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #68233 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/68233)
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-The Project Gutenberg eBook of The incredible invasion, by George O.
-Smith
-
-This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
-most other parts of the world 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. If you are not located in the United States, you
-will have to check the laws of the country where you are located before
-using this eBook.
-
-Title: The incredible invasion
-
-Author: George O. Smith
-
-Release Date: June 4, 2022 [eBook #68233]
-
-Language: English
-
-Produced by: Greg Weeks, Mary Meehan and the Online Distributed
- Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net.
-
-*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE INCREDIBLE INVASION ***
-
-
-
-
-
- THE INCREDIBLE INVASION
-
- BY GEORGE O. SMITH
-
- Illustrated by Ayers
-
- [Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
- Astounding Science-Fiction, March 1948.
- Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
- the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]
-
-
-Jim Franklen paused a moment before he opened the door of the office.
-He stopped to read the black lettering with a surface of pride--he was
-a part of it.
-
-The sign read:
-
- UNITED NATIONS
- WEAPON SECURITY
- COUNCIL
-
- Thomas Winter, President
-
-Then Franklen opened the door and went in, confidently. He greeted the
-man behind the desk, who looked up worriedly from a maze of paper work
-and bade Franklen to sit down.
-
-Winter said: "Trouble, Franklen. Bad trouble."
-
-Franklen nodded. "I know," he said. "I've been following it. I gather
-that the fools are getting worse?"
-
-Winter agreed with a slight nod of the head and replied: "I can't
-imagine what they're up to. Yet they continue to rattle the saber and
-make demands. The Central Power is not ignorant of the ramifications
-of their acts. Not after we've made point-blank statements. But they
-continue to get rougher and bolder, just as though they had the world
-in the palm of their hands."
-
-"They know that they can't win, don't they?" asked Franklen.
-
-"They should--they've been told, and they have been shown exactly what
-will happen, how, and why. The proof is irrevocable, undeniable. Still
-they continue."
-
-"I understand we've been watching them closely."
-
-Winter smiled bitterly. "I've got so many men watching their separation
-plants and their atomic stockpile that even the janitors must find UN
-Representatives looking up out of their coffee cups in the morning.
-There's no activity there that can be construed as dangerous, even
-admitting that we're leaning way over backwards and would be suspicious
-of a single gram of missing fissionable matter. Of course, they have
-the standard United Nations stockpile; the safety value that all
-nations hold against possible aggression. They're also aware that this
-quantity is also a fraction of what the rest hold all together."
-
-Franklen looked at the big flag on the back wall of the office.
-"The United Nations," he said bitterly. "With one member slightly
-disunited." He turned back to the president of the Weapon Council.
-"Have they, by any chance, made secret pacts with other nations?"
-
-"Not that we can tell," said Winter. "Now don't say that this is
-negative evidence and therefore inconclusive. It is admittedly
-negative evidence, but so definitely negative that it is conclusive.
-The Central Power has been told that if they make a move, they'll be
-counter-attacked within the hour."
-
-Franklen paused in his walking and said: "Look, sir, there's one thing
-about the atomic weapon that is seldom considered. I've been thinking
-about this for a long time. Frankly, the atomic weapon is a fine
-instrument for any country to use--providing it has no intention of
-invading for territorial aggrandization."
-
-"What do you mean?"
-
-"Cities are where they are because it is economically sound that they
-should be there. New York is the largest city in North America only
-because it is situated on the one spot where most goods funnel out of
-the country. It grew because of that fact--the fact did not follow the
-city's growth. In all the world, perhaps Washington, D. C., is the
-only city that is where it is because someone said 'we shall place
-our city here!' and Washington could function very well if it were
-lifted in toto and dropped on the center of Ohio, providing it landed
-on some big railroad junction. Boston is a second rate city despite
-all the efforts of the city planners only because its harbor is less
-efficient than New York's harbor and because Boston is not handily
-located geographically for the rest of the country. Even though Boston
-is closer to Europe than New York, it is cheaper to ship the goods a
-little farther by water, for they've got to be transshipped anyway,
-somewhere. For inland cities, both Detroit and Chicago are great
-because of their location; if their locations were not good, Chicago
-might still be a little tank town called Fort Dearborn, situated on the
-South Bank of the Chicago River--which would still be emptying into
-Lake Michigan."
-
-"Granted, but what are you getting at?" asked Winter.
-
-"Mankind has dropped two bombs in anger so far," said Franklen. "Both
-were dropped at the close of a war, to end it. Japan was not invaded
-for aggrandization. Therefore, no Americans were required to enter
-Hiroshima and try to rebuild it. We don't care too much whether
-Nagasaki ever gets rebuilt, though it will, eventually, because of the
-necessity of having a city right there."
-
-"Yes, go on."
-
- * * * * *
-
-"The next time we have atomic trouble," said Franklen, "it'll not be
-exploded high in the air. It's more likely to emerge right out of the
-walls of one of those buildings. That will mean radioactivity in the
-area that will render it dangerous to life for some time. In any case,
-a totally destroyed New York is not an economic asset."
-
-"Yes?"
-
-"And the Central Power knows that we will not use the atomic weapons
-until they are used in aggression."
-
-"No, you're wrong," said Winter. "We have promised them--and
-everybody--that at the first outbreak of hostility, the United Nations
-Weapon Council will see to it that one of their cities is reduced each
-day until the aggression ceases and reparations are made." He banged
-a hand into his fist. "It's a harsh promise, my boy, but it must be.
-For a border fist fight leads to knives, and knives lead to revolvers,
-and they lead to rifles, which lead to artillery. The next step in the
-scene is the works, complete and whole."
-
-Franklen shook his head. "The first step is words," he said positively.
-"Then come the fists. We should let 'em have a sample on the first
-angry words."
-
-"Can't. It's entirely possible that a party can be so nasty and quiet
-that steps are necessary on the part of the other. The truth must be
-investigated."
-
-"Is that what's been happening?" asked Jim Franklen.
-
-"At first it looked so," said Winter. "They started by upping tariffs
-and getting too rigorous with people coming in. They were told, and
-they replied that their country was at present overcrowded. Why, Jim,
-the entire pattern is familiar. They've been holding elections and all
-the trimmings for years, now, and every election they hold brings more
-territory into their hands."
-
-"That's something that can't be easily judged," admitted Franklen
-grudgingly.
-
-"No, it can't; you're right. In any election there are plenty of
-unsatisfied people. We assume that the Central Power is padding the
-elections, but we cannot be sure. Well, again they have overrun most
-of Europe and now they're looking outward. We've got to do something,
-Jim. But we've got to be absolutely right before we move. That's what
-makes being right so hard, sometimes. He who is wrong can move without
-conscience. Well, it's now being tossed into your hands. See what you
-can do, take a carte blanche and see what you can find out."
-
-Franklen nodded glumly. "I know what you mean," he said. "I'd hate to
-be the cause of fifty thousand killed, unless I was dead certain that
-my actions would save a million later."
-
-Winter shook the younger man's hand. "Well, you've been brought into
-it," he said, "and you're trained to handle hypothetical problems of
-this nature anyway. So, my boy, go out and stop that incipient war for
-me!"
-
- * * * * *
-
-Jim Franklen remembered that ringing order many times in the following
-days. "Go out and stop that war!" was his order, and he was hoping he
-could. There was little real saber-rattling, but only a slow spread of
-the Central Power's influence that was conducted in a quiet fashion.
-
-He read the previous reports several times, and analyzed them
-carefully. There was one more thing, a direct, personal, man-to-man
-warning that could be tried and must be tried before he moved. This act
-must also be publicized so that his following moves would be greeted
-with the proper attitude. The public must know that his course met with
-their approval.
-
-This brought him to the government of the Central Power, where he was
-first stopped by an undersecretary.
-
-"You may state your business," said the underling with all the
-authority of bureaucracy.
-
-"I'm special representative of the United Nations Weapon Council," said
-Franklen, "and request audience with your state head, the Commissario
-Hohmann."
-
-"You may state your business to me," said the underling.
-
-"I'll state it to Hohmann himself," snapped Franklen quickly. "And
-he'll right well see me, too!"
-
-"I'll inquire," said the undersecretary.
-
-"You'd better."
-
-"You understand that the Commissario speaks personally only with
-officials of his own rank."
-
-"That's rank enough," grunted Franklen. "And I can be just as rank as
-he is. Now stop caging and make that appointment for me--no later than
-tomorrow morning! Rank? Spinach! Where I come from, we elect our rulers
-and they'd better do as we want them to, or they don't stay rulers! And
-Hohmann can put you in his pipe and smoke it! Or," he added softly,
-"shall I order a cordon of United Nations marines out to see that I am
-properly escorted into his presence?"
-
-"That would create an international incident," replied the
-undersecretary.
-
-"Uh-huh," snorted Franklen. "It sure would, wouldn't it?"
-
-Both he and the underling knew at that point just who would be deemed
-responsible for the international incident, and so there was no point
-in further argument. The phone was used three times, and ultimately it
-was reported that James Franklen would be most welcome in the morning
-at eight-thirty--and would he partake of breakfast with Commissario
-Hohmann?
-
-He nodded. After all, Hohmann might not spoil his digestion--Franklen
-had a stomach installed by a copper company and felt safe.
-
- * * * * *
-
-There was pomp and ceremony as Franklen entered the swanky apartments
-of the Commissario Hohmann. He was escorted in by an honor-guard, and
-once in the ornate dining room, Franklen came face to face with the
-commissario himself.
-
-Hohmann bowed genially and Franklen returned the pleasantry. He was
-seated across a small table from the dictator of the Central Power, and
-as he settled in the chair, silver service with a half grapefruit came
-from a servitor for each man simultaneously. Hohmann tasted his, smiled
-and nodded at it. "Excellent," he said to Franklen. Jim tried his and
-was forced to agree.
-
-"Now," said Hohmann easily, "I've been told that the United Nations do
-not approve of certain happenings?"
-
-"We do not," said Franklen. "We do not intend to interfere with the
-usual run of events, but we dislike to see the same pattern coming up
-again."
-
-"Pattern?" asked Hohmann in surprise. His spoon paused in mid-flight as
-surprise caught him unawares, but then it continued on, upwards.
-
-Franklen nodded, and then swallowed. "The pattern should be familiar,"
-he said. "Small districts lying between larger countries suddenly vote
-alliance with your Central Power. A couple of years pass, and another
-district still farther out allies itself with you. Commissario Hohmann,
-your Central Power has increased its geographic size by a factor of two
-to one during the past five years."
-
-"That I know--and I am also gratified to know that my government has
-something to offer these outlying districts."
-
-"The trouble is," said Franklen pointedly, "that all of these districts
-have--or had--a system of voting that lends itself very well to a
-long-term carpetbagging system. The residence required before voting in
-the maximum case is one year."
-
-"You accuse me of padding ballot boxes?" demanded Hohmann angrily.
-
-"Not at all," said Franklen. "Padding a ballot box is illegal, which
-you would not condone. No, Commissario Hohmann, you are proceeding
-quite legally, but you are, nevertheless, twisting the law to suit your
-needs."
-
-"Nonsense!"
-
-"We know differently. There was the Phalz District that voted into your
-Power two years ago. Its voting population rose markedly for two years
-before the election, and dropped shortly afterwards. Strangely, its
-drop coincided with the rise of voting population in the Rhehl District
-a year later."
-
-"You approach me with the accusation that people of mine are traveling
-from district to district and voting them into my government for
-them--and against their wishes?" demanded Hohmann.
-
-"I wouldn't state whether it was the same people that moved," said
-Franklen, "but there is definitely some exchange."
-
-"My dear young fellow," said Hohmann consolingly, "please do not be
-alarmed by some of the problems of the floating population of Central
-Europe. That is what happens when cities are decentralized, you know.
-And may I remind you that the United Nations were instrumental in
-decentralizing the cities of my country some twenty years ago?"
-
-"You have all the rationalization of the last ruler of Central Europe.
-He proceeded legally at first."
-
-"He proceeded legally until he was forced to move illegally. He was
-attacked first, you know."
-
- * * * * *
-
-"Look, Hohmann, he who eludes the legal statement by twisting the law
-to suit his own illegal end is illegal."
-
-"That's sophistry."
-
-"No, it is not. It is a statement of the fact that you are legally
-right and morally wrong and you know it. Frankly, you are expanding at
-a rate that will bring on a state of war and you know it. Regardless
-of your spoken intent, you are expanding illegally and it must cease!"
-
-"And I assure you that if people decide to join my government, I can
-but be gratified and accept them."
-
-"Even though the populace disagrees?"
-
-"They voted, didn't they?" asked Hohmann. And seeing Jim Franklen's
-answer, even though skeptical, Hohmann added: "And if they want to,
-they can as easily vote out again."
-
-"Oh certainly," snorted Franklen angrily. "The district of one quarter
-of a million people vote in all by themselves, but in voting out again
-they must submit to a national election. One quarter million versus
-some seventy million."
-
-"Well, the welfare of my country is a national problem, and the welfare
-of any part of it is equally a national concern. To secede, any part,
-therefore, should convince the entire nation that this course is best.
-That is, naturally, very difficult."
-
-"Impossible," snapped Franklen.
-
-"Almost impossible," agreed Hohmann, nodding his head slowly in
-complete agreement. "Yet for all your distrust of my government and its
-supposed aggressive attitude, I assure you that we are humanitarian
-to the core, and will go to any lengths to make our people happy.
-Unlike the former ruler, who insisted that the individual is second to
-the State, I know that the State is the property of the individual.
-Unfortunately--or fortunately--there are always differences of opinion.
-That makes it difficult to please everybody with any single act. We
-try, however, to make the bulk of the people satisfied. I--"
-
-He was interrupted by the arrival of an aide, who brought him a sheet
-of teletyped copy. "Commissario Hohmann," said the aide, "I am sorry to
-disturb your breakfast, but this is an important message."
-
-"Quite all right, Jenks," smiled Hohmann. "Pardon me?" he asked of
-Franklen. Then he read, first quietly and then aloud:
-
-"International News Service representatives in Paris, France, today
-told of a serious pandemic sweeping the country. This illness seems to
-be some strange combination of mild dysentery complicated with very
-mild influenza. It is quite contagious; isolated cases were first noted
-three days ago, but the epidemic has been spreading into dangerous
-proportions. It is believed that if this pandemic gets worse, the
-government may close all places of business and public works."
-
-When he finished, Hohmann looked up across the table at Jim Franklen.
-"Unfortunate," he said sincerely. "Yet one man's meat is another man's
-poison. This distressing affair may give me a chance to prove to you
-that the Central Power is still a member of the United Nations, and
-concerned about the common lot of all mankind."
-
-"Meaning?" asked Franklen.
-
-"Meaning that I must leave you for a bit. I intend to muster all forces
-that the Central Power owns that can, in any way, be used to combat the
-common enemy that is striking at France. I invite you officially to
-join and observe."
-
-"I may take that invitation," said Jim.
-
-"The Central Power will enter that plague area to take relief and
-aid--even though we may ourselves suffer greatly. It is things like
-this, James Franklen, that endears us to our immediate neighbors. You
-may watch one half of the population of my country turn from their
-own problems, and bravely enter France to aid the stricken. Jenks! A
-message to Le Presidente Jacques La Croix. 'We stand ready to aid in
-every way if your need increases. You have but to request, and we will
-answer in the name of humanity! Signed Edvard Hohmann, Commissario of
-the Central Power.'"
-
- * * * * *
-
-Jim Franklen faced Winter wearily in the latter's office. It was two
-weeks later, and Jim was glad to be back, even though his mission was
-but half accomplished.
-
-"I don't know how to stop him," he told the president of the Weapon
-Council. "He's like a stock market operator that doles out quarters
-to the beggar on the corner and then enters the Curb to squeeze some
-small operator out of his life savings. It is admitted--almost--that he
-is running a carpetbagging program over there. Then comes this plague
-in France. Like a first-class humanitarian, he musters his forces and
-they go into that area and take control for two solid weeks while
-practically every person in France is flat on his back with this
-devil's disease. It would have been easy for him to take over, Winter.
-But he sent in doctors and aides, and the like, and the only armed men
-he sent were merely small-arm troops. He sent just barely enough of
-them to maintain order, which they did and no more. I doubt if there
-was a store-window broken or a bottle of milk stolen over and above any
-normal interval. Then as the people of France recovered, he gracefully
-turned everything back, gave them a written report on his actions,
-apologized for whatever minor expenses his aid might have cost--his men
-did live off of the country, and that costs, you know--and then marched
-out with the bands playing and the people cheering.
-
-"It gives me to wonder," continued Franklen. "Remember the 'Union--Now'
-cries between the United States and Great Britain during the last
-fracas? Well, solidarity between France and the Central Power was
-never so great before. Hohmann could ask them for the moon, and they'd
-present him with a gold tablet, suitably engraved, giving him clear and
-unrestricted title. Watch for a first-class alliance, Winter."
-
-Winter nodded. "I've been watching," he said. "Regardless of how he
-does it, and he is a supreme opportunist, it is oppression."
-
-Franklen grunted. "Even anarchy is oppression for some classes of
-people."
-
-"But you and I both know that he rode into his office initially
-on a program of oppressing the minority groups. He's made no great
-mass-murder of them as his predecessor did, nor has he collected them
-in concentration camps. Yet they are oppressed, for they have little
-free life. They are permitted to work only as their superiors dictate,
-and for a subsistence wage. They do the rough jobs; they work in
-Hohmann's separation plants, do the mining, and the dirty work. Each
-is given a card entitling him to secure employment in certain lines.
-All of these lines are poorly paid and quite dangerous or dirty.
-The wage is so low that the children are forced to forgo schooling
-in order to help pay for the family. Regardless of his outward act
-of humanitarianism, Hohmann is none the less a tyrant with ideas of
-aggrandization. That he is able to take a catastrophe and turn it into
-a blessing for himself is deplorable, but it seems to be one of those
-unfair tricks of fate to favor the ill-minded, for some unknown reason.
-I never knew a stinker that didn't get everything his own way for far
-too long for the other's comfort. Eventually, of course, the deal evens
-out, but the waiting is often maddeningly long."
-
-"And we sit here helpless," growled Franklen, "all clutching our atomic
-weapons that could wipe out Hohmann and most of his country. And as we
-hang on to them, and rub their rounded noses angrily, we watch Hohmann
-walk in and take over--we are unsure of our grounds. Bah! Why not
-claim it for what it is--aggressive acquisition of territory? Then
-let's bomb him and let the world judge for itself."
-
-Winter shook his head slowly. "And if we do, La Belle Francaise will
-rise up and scream 'Oppression'! For France is probably an operating
-country today because of Edvard Hohmann. There was once a first-class
-criminal, Public Enemy Number One, who, during a period of economic
-depression, used some of his ill-gotten gains to set up soup kitchens
-for the underfed. You'd hardly convince any one of them that he was
-entirely worthy of the electric chair and not much better. That was
-when his crimes were known to all. And people said: 'O.K., so he's
-killed a bunch of people. They were all criminals, too, and so he saved
-the country some expense. And besides, he set up soup kitchens, and so
-he's not a bad sort of fellow!' No, Jim, we've got to get evidence of
-definite acts of belligerency."
-
-"Sort of like trying to get evidence against a confidence-man who sells
-his victims something that they believe valuable."
-
-Winter nodded at the simile.
-
-"More like a druggist who sells opiates indiscriminately. The people
-who buy them do so because they find them useful even though they are
-dangerous in the long run. But you keep on trying, Jim. The rest of us
-will see to it that Hohmann isn't running himself up a stockpile of
-atomics all the time that his underground warfare is going on."
-
- * * * * *
-
-Jim Franklen left the office and wandered down the hall to the Chief
-Physician's office. Shield greeted Franklen cheerfully and asked what
-was on the younger man's mind.
-
-"Nothing much," said Jim. "I was just wondering if you'd isolated the
-bug or whatever it was that hit France."
-
-"We believe so," said Dr. Shield. "We'll know in another couple of
-weeks. It seems to be some sort of filterable virus, air-borne for
-contagion, and very rugged. Intelligent, too. It apparently knows
-enough not to touch diparasulfathiazole."
-
-"How do these rare illnesses get going?" questioned Jim.
-
-"In several ways. The Law of Simple Reactions also applies, you
-know." And seeing the blank look on Franklen's face, he added: "When
-a number of reactions are possible, the one that requires the least
-energy will happen first. That's saying that the most likely will
-happen first. A few hundred years ago, so many people died of typhoid,
-yellow fever, and smallpox that a more complex disease like meningitis
-or polio seldom got beyond the normal case frequency. When the more
-prevalent--the more likely diseases--were stopped, we could have polio
-plagues. It's probably been here for a long time, killing its quota
-every year, but never noticed because of other, more devastating
-affairs."
-
-"I think I understand."
-
-"Why did you ask?" asked the doctor.
-
-"Well, I was there, you know. It was rather devastating, though it
-didn't kill off very many."
-
-"It isn't that type," said Shield. "Which is another factor in its
-not being noticed. The early symptoms are dysentery, not violent, but
-definitely weakening. The secondary symptoms are similar to influenza
-in a mild form. The whole thing just takes all the energy out of the
-system and leaves you weaker than a kitten for about twenty days. After
-which you can get up and go again, though somewhat rockily. It's a
-one-shot affair, luckily. The body builds up an immunity to the bug,
-and once you go through with it, you're safe from then on--though upon
-re-exposure, you can act as a carrier."
-
-"O.K., doctor. I was just wondering because I was rather close to it."
-
-"You didn't catch it?"
-
-"Nope. Not yet, anyway."
-
-"And you were in the plague area?" demanded Dr. Shield.
-
-"For several days with Commissario Hohmann."
-
-"Then I'd like a sample of your blood," said the doctor, reaching for
-his sterile cabinet. "Maybe you are carrying the normal antibody in
-quantity already. I'd like to check it."
-
-Franklen bared his arm and the doctor extracted thirty or forty CC of
-Jim's venous blood. "Thanks," said Dr. Shield. "We'll also see if you
-have any other bugs running around loose in here," he smiled, holding
-up the vial.
-
-"O.K., doctor," returned Franklen. "And if you do, just drop 'em a shot
-or something to pacify 'em until I get back and can take care of 'em
-again."
-
-They parted on a laugh. And once outside of the doctor's door, Jim
-Franklen was met by an official messenger.
-
- * * * * *
-
-It was a personally written note from Edvard Hohmann:
-
- Dear Mr. Franklen:
-
- This is informal, because I believe that formality between friends
- is both stuffy and unreal. Also I count you among my friends
- despite the fact that our political beliefs differ.
-
- However, in an effort to convince you of my sincerity, I am inviting
- you to be present as a guest of my party when the Central Power
- meets the French Chamber of Deputies. This will occur on August 8th,
- which is but a week hence.
-
- It is to be an auspicious occasion, this meeting. Plans and forms
- have been drawn up, a compromise between the democratic government
- of France and the autocratic Central Power. We shall show the world
- and humanity that a meeting of minds is always possible between men
- of high purpose. True, both France and the Central Power must part
- with certain factors, but we both believe that departing slightly
- from our previous course by will and agreement is far better than
- going on as we have, and ultimately arriving at antipodal types of
- rule.
-
- Will you attend? Will you come, even to scoff? For you will remain
- to wonder, and the approval of your Council will mean much to all
- of us. Be a witness to History in the Making!
-
- Sincerely,
- Edvard Hohmann,
- Your friend and Commissario
- of the Central Power.
-
-He stared at the letter, wondering. Hohmann's actions seemed logical
-enough; doubtless if he, Jim Franklen, were in Hohmann's shoes,
-he'd accept whatever the fates offered and reject whatever trouble
-he could. Hohmann's ambitions were normal for any ruler of Central
-Europe, and he was not, at least, killing millions. Yet--
-
-Franklen smacked his fist into the palm of his hand. He turned into
-Winter's office again and said: "I've got it!"
-
-Winter looked up, wondering.
-
-"Hohmann is using biological warfare," said Franklen. "It's logical,
-it's sensible, and it gets him what he wants, intact. He's soon to be
-running France, and not a shot has been fired nor a building damaged.
-Were he to strike an unfriendly country--or when he makes his final
-break, Hohmann can take over without resistance. No soldier can serve
-a weapon when he's prostrate with that combination of dysentery and
-influenza."
-
-"But biological warfare is not considered practical."
-
-"No?" snorted Franklen. "Well, if used properly, it can be better than
-atomics. Why blast a city you hope to add to your list? Why bother?
-You have to rebuild it. But if you just move in, you're in and you can
-use the same paper and pencils and desks and even the same clerks."
-
-"May I point out the difficulty of proving such a thing?" asked Winter.
-
-"In the first place, Dr. Shield told me that the ailment was a
-single-time illness. Your own troops can have it in a mild form before
-the invasion. Thereafter they are immune. But they are also vicious
-carriers, and while they're working among the stricken people, they're
-spreading it among those few who haven't caught it yet."
-
-Winter sighed deeply. "Yes, and even better for Hohmann is the fact
-that we can prove nothing. You can make enough germ culture in an
-apartment house to innoculate a city--contrasting, the separation
-plants of the atomic era. And, Franklen, can you or anybody else make
-Hohmann admit that his latest acquisitions happened by any other means
-than an Act of God? A pandemic is considered such."
-
-"I'll get the proof," said Franklen.
-
-"Just stop Hohmann," said Winter. "Then we can all rest!"
-
- * * * * *
-
-Franklen never went to Hohmann's great historic meeting. Three days
-before it opened, the same plague struck Mexico, and the United
-States sent its doctors and its nurses and its aids to the stricken
-neighbor. A good many of them came down with it themselves, but just
-as it had run in France, it ran itself out in three long, hot, Mexican
-weeks. American wealth was poured in, and American effort and American
-efficiency, and Mexico rallied and was grateful. Franklen was a busy
-man, during those days, and he spent another week in the area after
-the plague was stopped and the populace well on the road to recovery.
-
-Then he returned to his office, to see Thomas Winter.
-
-"Warfare--or happenstance?" asked Winter.
-
-"I'll never know," said Franklen wearily. "Why would they--Winter! You
-know something!"
-
-Winter nodded slowly. He handed Franklen a teletyped page, which
-Franklen read aloud:
-
-"The State of Sonora, Mexico, today voted to secede from Mexico in
-favor of joining the United States by a vote of almost three to one.
-If this is accepted, Sonora would become the fifty-first State of the
-Union. There is some doubt--"
-
-"Winter--what is this?"
-
-"A fragment of the International News Service report," replied Winter.
-"And here is a text of President Halstead's reply:
-
-"The United States of America feels gratified that she is deemed so
-high by the residents of Sonora, Mexico. An act of this sort, however,
-must be made with the full consent of the Mexican Government."
-
-"So we've got ourselves a Border Incident?" muttered Franklen.
-
-Winter shook his head. "Worse than that. Here's the topper-offer," and
-he handed Franklen a sheet of paper. Franklen read it silently and
-then whistled explosively.
-
-"So the Government of Mexico offers complete annexation of all the
-states of Mexico to the United States of America in exchange for
-certain provisos and considerations in the way of civil government of
-the new territory?"
-
-Winter nodded. "And from what they tell me of the Mexican demands, the
-United States would be imbecilic not to accede to their request."
-
-Franklen shook his head widely and slowly. "Madness!" he said quietly.
-"If we do, we're legally guilty of the same offense as Hohmann. If we
-do not, we're fools. How can the pot call the kettle black and still
-retain a moral sense of values?"
-
-"Can't," grumbled Winter. "And we've got ourselves another twenty
-million citizens, three quarters of a million square miles, and
-something like a total of eighty United States of America!"
-
-Winter stood up, his face bitter. "United Nations Weapon Council," he
-growled. "Preserve the future peace. Stop aggression and territorial
-expansion. Hell!"
-
-He picked up a brass inkwell and hurled it through the door glass. His
-secretary peered in, wondering.
-
- * * * * *
-
-That was only the beginning. Just the start of a long series of
-similar events that came crowding in on one another so fast that it
-made one's head spin. Five years passed in this same mad whirl. Five
-years of the same crazy pattern.
-
-And then the Central Power, which was now calling itself the European
-Power, faced the United States of The Americas across the Atlantic
-Ocean. From Ellsmere Island to Cape Horn lay the United States of
-The Americas, and from Spitzbergen to the Cape of Good Hope lay the
-European Power, all and both combined.
-
-And as before, Jim Franklen, now an older but still struggling
-Franklen, was still working on the same question; and Thomas Winter,
-also older and more resigned, urged Franklen on.
-
-"Hindsight," said Franklen sourly, "is infinitely superior to
-foresight, or at least it is better accomplished."
-
-Winter nodded. "This is what we might have expected," he said. "Years
-and years ago when Hohmann started this last war. Now we're all in
-a position where strife might well break out at any moment. And the
-question is whether to break out in open strife at once, or wait it
-out and hope for the best. We can no longer move leisurely. Hohmann
-has seen to it that for every advance he has made, we've made a
-greater one. But now he is fresh out of available land to spread out
-across, and he's looking at us. We've been dragged and dragged by
-his indirectness into this situation, where the United States as it
-was is no longer just we folks, but encompasses a myriad of peoples,
-types, and governmental ideas. True, Washington is still the seat of
-government, but that makes it seem as though we were to blame for our
-own expansion."
-
-"I may be able to help," said Franklen at last. "I think I've got the
-answer, finally."
-
- * * * * *
-
-He said no more about it, but he was gone, somewhere for three months,
-after which he returned long enough to pick up Dr. Shield and fly with
-him to Europe. He gained audience with Edvard Hohmann within a few
-hours.
-
-"My American friend," exclaimed Hohmann, taking Franklen's hand. "And
-this?"
-
-"This is Dr. Shield," said Jim. "He's been instrumental in tracking
-down some of the many plagues that have hit the world."
-
-"Perhaps he can tell us where so many different illnesses come from,"
-said Hohmann, interestedly. "A kind Providence, that offers both
-myself and your government the chance, to become great--it is kind,
-and I say right that we have prospered--seldom seems in existence at
-the proper time."
-
-"Sometimes illnesses emerge from the common welter of human frailties
-only because they have been eclipsed by more common ailments," said
-Shield. "There is one other way in which an illness can suddenly
-break out. Mutations. If you recall, the photographic industry nearly
-went out of business when atomic power came in, because there were
-radioactive atoms everywhere--even in the emulsions and the films
-themselves. That has been largely abated, but only by special methods.
-The world, right now, is bathed in many many more kinds of radiation
-than ever before. Where once only alpha particles were, now are
-protons and neutrons and both positive and negative electrons, and
-gamma from here to there in wave length. Illness comes from bugs,
-Commissario Hohmann, and bugs as well as humans can evolve. The
-possibilities are limitless, it requires only a diligent search--"
-
-"Diligent search?" asked Hohmann. "You sound as though you believed
-that someone might have been seeking such illnesses."
-
-"Only academically, perhaps, just as we are," replied Shield. "Just
-to know what possible mutations might take place, and perhaps give
-us a bit of warning, we have been operating a radiation-biological
-laboratory."
-
-"Indeed?" said Hohmann.
-
-"Oh yes. And we've come up with some of the most peculiar cultures.
-Pure laws of chance, because most mutants die. We've got a violent
-one that affects the calcium exchange in the body--your bones, you
-know, are in a constant state of equilibrium, the matter changes, new
-comes in to replace old going out--so that only the outgoing side is
-working. The bones jellify. We've licked that one by antibodies and
-partial immunities. But the more recent ones have rather peculiar
-effects. One of them strikes the nerves in the semicircular canals of
-the ear. During the two months of its run, the patient cannot stand,
-or cannot retain any balance at all. He cannot even lift his hands as
-he desires, because he ... well, he might think he was standing on his
-head, but he can't even accept a delusion as to his position, for all
-position-sense is gone, completely. After two months, the average body
-recovers, and the patient is well again. We've feared that, and we've
-learned how to prevent it. That's a good thing, too, for it strikes
-within a few minutes after exposure to any carrier."
-
-"A rather terrible possibility," smiled Hohmann. "I've always been
-proud of my sense of balance." He laughed nervously and stood upon one
-foot for a few seconds.
-
-"We were thinking that it might be well to combine our laboratories,"
-said Franklen. "We can pool our findings and collectively advance so
-that this wave of mutated bugs can be prevented."
-
-"That is an excellent idea," said Hohmann--
-
-At which point he fell flat on his face!
-
- * * * * *
-
-The world's stockpiles of atomic weapons is rusting and unused--as
-such. Gradually, they are being broken down and the high-grade
-fissionables are being taken and used to light the fires of humanity.
-Jim Franklen is an old man, no longer an agent of the United Nations,
-but just a citizen of United Terra.
-
-And the rattle of the saber is gone, and the storm of atomic bombs is
-no longer expected.
-
-For the last Global War was fought with weapons that seldom killed,
-never maimed, and always left the cities of the world intact for the
-next generation.
-
-
- THE END.
-
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-<p style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of The incredible invasion, by George O. Smith</p>
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-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: The incredible invasion</p>
-<p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: George O. Smith</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Release Date: June 4, 2022 [eBook #68233]</p>
-<p style='display:block; text-indent:0; margin:1em 0'>Language: English</p>
- <p style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:0; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em; text-align:left'>Produced by: Greg Weeks, Mary Meehan and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at http://www.pgdp.net.</p>
-<div style='margin-top:2em; margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE INCREDIBLE INVASION ***</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/illus1.jpg" alt=""/>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="titlepage">
-
-<h1>THE INCREDIBLE INVASION</h1>
-
-<h2>BY GEORGE O. SMITH</h2>
-
-<p>Illustrated by Ayers</p>
-
-<p>[Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from<br />
-Astounding Science-Fiction, March 1948.<br />
-Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that<br />
-the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p>Jim Franklen paused a moment before he opened the door of the office.
-He stopped to read the black lettering with a surface of pride&mdash;he was
-a part of it.</p>
-
-<p>The sign read:</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">UNITED NATIONS<br />
-WEAPON SECURITY<br />
-COUNCIL</p>
-
-<p class="ph2">Thomas Winter, President</p>
-
-<p>Then Franklen opened the door and went in, confidently. He greeted the
-man behind the desk, who looked up worriedly from a maze of paper work
-and bade Franklen to sit down.</p>
-
-<p>Winter said: "Trouble, Franklen. Bad trouble."</p>
-
-<p>Franklen nodded. "I know," he said. "I've been following it. I gather
-that the fools are getting worse?"</p>
-
-<p>Winter agreed with a slight nod of the head and replied: "I can't
-imagine what they're up to. Yet they continue to rattle the saber and
-make demands. The Central Power is not ignorant of the ramifications
-of their acts. Not after we've made point-blank statements. But they
-continue to get rougher and bolder, just as though they had the world
-in the palm of their hands."</p>
-
-<p>"They know that they can't win, don't they?" asked Franklen.</p>
-
-<p>"They should&mdash;they've been told, and they have been shown exactly what
-will happen, how, and why. The proof is irrevocable, undeniable. Still
-they continue."</p>
-
-<p>"I understand we've been watching them closely."</p>
-
-<p>Winter smiled bitterly. "I've got so many men watching their separation
-plants and their atomic stockpile that even the janitors must find UN
-Representatives looking up out of their coffee cups in the morning.
-There's no activity there that can be construed as dangerous, even
-admitting that we're leaning way over backwards and would be suspicious
-of a single gram of missing fissionable matter. Of course, they have
-the standard United Nations stockpile; the safety value that all
-nations hold against possible aggression. They're also aware that this
-quantity is also a fraction of what the rest hold all together."</p>
-
-<p>Franklen looked at the big flag on the back wall of the office.
-"The United Nations," he said bitterly. "With one member slightly
-disunited." He turned back to the president of the Weapon Council.
-"Have they, by any chance, made secret pacts with other nations?"</p>
-
-<p>"Not that we can tell," said Winter. "Now don't say that this is
-negative evidence and therefore inconclusive. It is admittedly
-negative evidence, but so definitely negative that it is conclusive.
-The Central Power has been told that if they make a move, they'll be
-counter-attacked within the hour."</p>
-
-<p>Franklen paused in his walking and said: "Look, sir, there's one thing
-about the atomic weapon that is seldom considered. I've been thinking
-about this for a long time. Frankly, the atomic weapon is a fine
-instrument for any country to use&mdash;providing it has no intention of
-invading for territorial aggrandization."</p>
-
-<p>"What do you mean?"</p>
-
-<p>"Cities are where they are because it is economically sound that they
-should be there. New York is the largest city in North America only
-because it is situated on the one spot where most goods funnel out of
-the country. It grew because of that fact&mdash;the fact did not follow the
-city's growth. In all the world, perhaps Washington, D. C., is the
-only city that is where it is because someone said 'we shall place
-our city here!' and Washington could function very well if it were
-lifted in toto and dropped on the center of Ohio, providing it landed
-on some big railroad junction. Boston is a second rate city despite
-all the efforts of the city planners only because its harbor is less
-efficient than New York's harbor and because Boston is not handily
-located geographically for the rest of the country. Even though Boston
-is closer to Europe than New York, it is cheaper to ship the goods a
-little farther by water, for they've got to be transshipped anyway,
-somewhere. For inland cities, both Detroit and Chicago are great
-because of their location; if their locations were not good, Chicago
-might still be a little tank town called Fort Dearborn, situated on the
-South Bank of the Chicago River&mdash;which would still be emptying into
-Lake Michigan."</p>
-
-<p>"Granted, but what are you getting at?" asked Winter.</p>
-
-<p>"Mankind has dropped two bombs in anger so far," said Franklen. "Both
-were dropped at the close of a war, to end it. Japan was not invaded
-for aggrandization. Therefore, no Americans were required to enter
-Hiroshima and try to rebuild it. We don't care too much whether
-Nagasaki ever gets rebuilt, though it will, eventually, because of the
-necessity of having a city right there."</p>
-
-<p>"Yes, go on."</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>"The next time we have atomic trouble," said Franklen, "it'll not be
-exploded high in the air. It's more likely to emerge right out of the
-walls of one of those buildings. That will mean radioactivity in the
-area that will render it dangerous to life for some time. In any case,
-a totally destroyed New York is not an economic asset."</p>
-
-<p>"Yes?"</p>
-
-<p>"And the Central Power knows that we will not use the atomic weapons
-until they are used in aggression."</p>
-
-<p>"No, you're wrong," said Winter. "We have promised them&mdash;and
-everybody&mdash;that at the first outbreak of hostility, the United Nations
-Weapon Council will see to it that one of their cities is reduced each
-day until the aggression ceases and reparations are made." He banged
-a hand into his fist. "It's a harsh promise, my boy, but it must be.
-For a border fist fight leads to knives, and knives lead to revolvers,
-and they lead to rifles, which lead to artillery. The next step in the
-scene is the works, complete and whole."</p>
-
-<p>Franklen shook his head. "The first step is words," he said positively.
-"Then come the fists. We should let 'em have a sample on the first
-angry words."</p>
-
-<p>"Can't. It's entirely possible that a party can be so nasty and quiet
-that steps are necessary on the part of the other. The truth must be
-investigated."</p>
-
-<p>"Is that what's been happening?" asked Jim Franklen.</p>
-
-<p>"At first it looked so," said Winter. "They started by upping tariffs
-and getting too rigorous with people coming in. They were told, and
-they replied that their country was at present overcrowded. Why, Jim,
-the entire pattern is familiar. They've been holding elections and all
-the trimmings for years, now, and every election they hold brings more
-territory into their hands."</p>
-
-<p>"That's something that can't be easily judged," admitted Franklen
-grudgingly.</p>
-
-<p>"No, it can't; you're right. In any election there are plenty of
-unsatisfied people. We assume that the Central Power is padding the
-elections, but we cannot be sure. Well, again they have overrun most
-of Europe and now they're looking outward. We've got to do something,
-Jim. But we've got to be absolutely right before we move. That's what
-makes being right so hard, sometimes. He who is wrong can move without
-conscience. Well, it's now being tossed into your hands. See what you
-can do, take a carte blanche and see what you can find out."</p>
-
-<p>Franklen nodded glumly. "I know what you mean," he said. "I'd hate to
-be the cause of fifty thousand killed, unless I was dead certain that
-my actions would save a million later."</p>
-
-<p>Winter shook the younger man's hand. "Well, you've been brought into
-it," he said, "and you're trained to handle hypothetical problems of
-this nature anyway. So, my boy, go out and stop that incipient war for
-me!"</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Jim Franklen remembered that ringing order many times in the following
-days. "Go out and stop that war!" was his order, and he was hoping he
-could. There was little real saber-rattling, but only a slow spread of
-the Central Power's influence that was conducted in a quiet fashion.</p>
-
-<p>He read the previous reports several times, and analyzed them
-carefully. There was one more thing, a direct, personal, man-to-man
-warning that could be tried and must be tried before he moved. This act
-must also be publicized so that his following moves would be greeted
-with the proper attitude. The public must know that his course met with
-their approval.</p>
-
-<p>This brought him to the government of the Central Power, where he was
-first stopped by an undersecretary.</p>
-
-<p>"You may state your business," said the underling with all the
-authority of bureaucracy.</p>
-
-<p>"I'm special representative of the United Nations Weapon Council," said
-Franklen, "and request audience with your state head, the Commissario
-Hohmann."</p>
-
-<p>"You may state your business to me," said the underling.</p>
-
-<p>"I'll state it to Hohmann himself," snapped Franklen quickly. "And
-he'll right well see me, too!"</p>
-
-<p>"I'll inquire," said the undersecretary.</p>
-
-<p>"You'd better."</p>
-
-<p>"You understand that the Commissario speaks personally only with
-officials of his own rank."</p>
-
-<p>"That's rank enough," grunted Franklen. "And I can be just as rank as
-he is. Now stop caging and make that appointment for me&mdash;no later than
-tomorrow morning! Rank? Spinach! Where I come from, we elect our rulers
-and they'd better do as we want them to, or they don't stay rulers! And
-Hohmann can put you in his pipe and smoke it! Or," he added softly,
-"shall I order a cordon of United Nations marines out to see that I am
-properly escorted into his presence?"</p>
-
-<p>"That would create an international incident," replied the
-undersecretary.</p>
-
-<p>"Uh-huh," snorted Franklen. "It sure would, wouldn't it?"</p>
-
-<p>Both he and the underling knew at that point just who would be deemed
-responsible for the international incident, and so there was no point
-in further argument. The phone was used three times, and ultimately it
-was reported that James Franklen would be most welcome in the morning
-at eight-thirty&mdash;and would he partake of breakfast with Commissario
-Hohmann?</p>
-
-<p>He nodded. After all, Hohmann might not spoil his digestion&mdash;Franklen
-had a stomach installed by a copper company and felt safe.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>There was pomp and ceremony as Franklen entered the swanky apartments
-of the Commissario Hohmann. He was escorted in by an honor-guard, and
-once in the ornate dining room, Franklen came face to face with the
-commissario himself.</p>
-
-<p>Hohmann bowed genially and Franklen returned the pleasantry. He was
-seated across a small table from the dictator of the Central Power, and
-as he settled in the chair, silver service with a half grapefruit came
-from a servitor for each man simultaneously. Hohmann tasted his, smiled
-and nodded at it. "Excellent," he said to Franklen. Jim tried his and
-was forced to agree.</p>
-
-<p>"Now," said Hohmann easily, "I've been told that the United Nations do
-not approve of certain happenings?"</p>
-
-<p>"We do not," said Franklen. "We do not intend to interfere with the
-usual run of events, but we dislike to see the same pattern coming up
-again."</p>
-
-<p>"Pattern?" asked Hohmann in surprise. His spoon paused in mid-flight as
-surprise caught him unawares, but then it continued on, upwards.</p>
-
-<p>Franklen nodded, and then swallowed. "The pattern should be familiar,"
-he said. "Small districts lying between larger countries suddenly vote
-alliance with your Central Power. A couple of years pass, and another
-district still farther out allies itself with you. Commissario Hohmann,
-your Central Power has increased its geographic size by a factor of two
-to one during the past five years."</p>
-
-<p>"That I know&mdash;and I am also gratified to know that my government has
-something to offer these outlying districts."</p>
-
-<p>"The trouble is," said Franklen pointedly, "that all of these districts
-have&mdash;or had&mdash;a system of voting that lends itself very well to a
-long-term carpetbagging system. The residence required before voting in
-the maximum case is one year."</p>
-
-<p>"You accuse me of padding ballot boxes?" demanded Hohmann angrily.</p>
-
-<p>"Not at all," said Franklen. "Padding a ballot box is illegal, which
-you would not condone. No, Commissario Hohmann, you are proceeding
-quite legally, but you are, nevertheless, twisting the law to suit your
-needs."</p>
-
-<p>"Nonsense!"</p>
-
-<p>"We know differently. There was the Phalz District that voted into your
-Power two years ago. Its voting population rose markedly for two years
-before the election, and dropped shortly afterwards. Strangely, its
-drop coincided with the rise of voting population in the Rhehl District
-a year later."</p>
-
-<p>"You approach me with the accusation that people of mine are traveling
-from district to district and voting them into my government for
-them&mdash;and against their wishes?" demanded Hohmann.</p>
-
-<p>"I wouldn't state whether it was the same people that moved," said
-Franklen, "but there is definitely some exchange."</p>
-
-<p>"My dear young fellow," said Hohmann consolingly, "please do not be
-alarmed by some of the problems of the floating population of Central
-Europe. That is what happens when cities are decentralized, you know.
-And may I remind you that the United Nations were instrumental in
-decentralizing the cities of my country some twenty years ago?"</p>
-
-<p>"You have all the rationalization of the last ruler of Central Europe.
-He proceeded legally at first."</p>
-
-<p>"He proceeded legally until he was forced to move illegally. He was
-attacked first, you know."</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>"Look, Hohmann, he who eludes the legal statement by twisting the law
-to suit his own illegal end is illegal."</p>
-
-<p>"That's sophistry."</p>
-
-<p>"No, it is not. It is a statement of the fact that you are legally
-right and morally wrong and you know it. Frankly, you are expanding at
-a rate that will bring on a state of war and you know it. Regardless
-of your spoken intent, you are expanding illegally and it must cease!"</p>
-
-<p>"And I assure you that if people decide to join my government, I can
-but be gratified and accept them."</p>
-
-<p>"Even though the populace disagrees?"</p>
-
-<p>"They voted, didn't they?" asked Hohmann. And seeing Jim Franklen's
-answer, even though skeptical, Hohmann added: "And if they want to,
-they can as easily vote out again."</p>
-
-<p>"Oh certainly," snorted Franklen angrily. "The district of one quarter
-of a million people vote in all by themselves, but in voting out again
-they must submit to a national election. One quarter million versus
-some seventy million."</p>
-
-<p>"Well, the welfare of my country is a national problem, and the welfare
-of any part of it is equally a national concern. To secede, any part,
-therefore, should convince the entire nation that this course is best.
-That is, naturally, very difficult."</p>
-
-<p>"Impossible," snapped Franklen.</p>
-
-<p>"Almost impossible," agreed Hohmann, nodding his head slowly in
-complete agreement. "Yet for all your distrust of my government and its
-supposed aggressive attitude, I assure you that we are humanitarian
-to the core, and will go to any lengths to make our people happy.
-Unlike the former ruler, who insisted that the individual is second to
-the State, I know that the State is the property of the individual.
-Unfortunately&mdash;or fortunately&mdash;there are always differences of opinion.
-That makes it difficult to please everybody with any single act. We
-try, however, to make the bulk of the people satisfied. I&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>He was interrupted by the arrival of an aide, who brought him a sheet
-of teletyped copy. "Commissario Hohmann," said the aide, "I am sorry to
-disturb your breakfast, but this is an important message."</p>
-
-<p>"Quite all right, Jenks," smiled Hohmann. "Pardon me?" he asked of
-Franklen. Then he read, first quietly and then aloud:</p>
-
-<p>"International News Service representatives in Paris, France, today
-told of a serious pandemic sweeping the country. This illness seems to
-be some strange combination of mild dysentery complicated with very
-mild influenza. It is quite contagious; isolated cases were first noted
-three days ago, but the epidemic has been spreading into dangerous
-proportions. It is believed that if this pandemic gets worse, the
-government may close all places of business and public works."</p>
-
-<p>When he finished, Hohmann looked up across the table at Jim Franklen.
-"Unfortunate," he said sincerely. "Yet one man's meat is another man's
-poison. This distressing affair may give me a chance to prove to you
-that the Central Power is still a member of the United Nations, and
-concerned about the common lot of all mankind."</p>
-
-<p>"Meaning?" asked Franklen.</p>
-
-<p>"Meaning that I must leave you for a bit. I intend to muster all forces
-that the Central Power owns that can, in any way, be used to combat the
-common enemy that is striking at France. I invite you officially to
-join and observe."</p>
-
-<p>"I may take that invitation," said Jim.</p>
-
-<p>"The Central Power will enter that plague area to take relief and
-aid&mdash;even though we may ourselves suffer greatly. It is things like
-this, James Franklen, that endears us to our immediate neighbors. You
-may watch one half of the population of my country turn from their
-own problems, and bravely enter France to aid the stricken. Jenks! A
-message to Le Presidente Jacques La Croix. 'We stand ready to aid in
-every way if your need increases. You have but to request, and we will
-answer in the name of humanity! Signed Edvard Hohmann, Commissario of
-the Central Power.'"</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Jim Franklen faced Winter wearily in the latter's office. It was two
-weeks later, and Jim was glad to be back, even though his mission was
-but half accomplished.</p>
-
-<p>"I don't know how to stop him," he told the president of the Weapon
-Council. "He's like a stock market operator that doles out quarters
-to the beggar on the corner and then enters the Curb to squeeze some
-small operator out of his life savings. It is admitted&mdash;almost&mdash;that he
-is running a carpetbagging program over there. Then comes this plague
-in France. Like a first-class humanitarian, he musters his forces and
-they go into that area and take control for two solid weeks while
-practically every person in France is flat on his back with this
-devil's disease. It would have been easy for him to take over, Winter.
-But he sent in doctors and aides, and the like, and the only armed men
-he sent were merely small-arm troops. He sent just barely enough of
-them to maintain order, which they did and no more. I doubt if there
-was a store-window broken or a bottle of milk stolen over and above any
-normal interval. Then as the people of France recovered, he gracefully
-turned everything back, gave them a written report on his actions,
-apologized for whatever minor expenses his aid might have cost&mdash;his men
-did live off of the country, and that costs, you know&mdash;and then marched
-out with the bands playing and the people cheering.</p>
-
-<p>"It gives me to wonder," continued Franklen. "Remember the 'Union&mdash;Now'
-cries between the United States and Great Britain during the last
-fracas? Well, solidarity between France and the Central Power was
-never so great before. Hohmann could ask them for the moon, and they'd
-present him with a gold tablet, suitably engraved, giving him clear and
-unrestricted title. Watch for a first-class alliance, Winter."</p>
-
-<p>Winter nodded. "I've been watching," he said. "Regardless of how he
-does it, and he is a supreme opportunist, it is oppression."</p>
-
-<p>Franklen grunted. "Even anarchy is oppression for some classes of
-people."</p>
-
-<p>"But you and I both know that he rode into his office initially
-on a program of oppressing the minority groups. He's made no great
-mass-murder of them as his predecessor did, nor has he collected them
-in concentration camps. Yet they are oppressed, for they have little
-free life. They are permitted to work only as their superiors dictate,
-and for a subsistence wage. They do the rough jobs; they work in
-Hohmann's separation plants, do the mining, and the dirty work. Each
-is given a card entitling him to secure employment in certain lines.
-All of these lines are poorly paid and quite dangerous or dirty.
-The wage is so low that the children are forced to forgo schooling
-in order to help pay for the family. Regardless of his outward act
-of humanitarianism, Hohmann is none the less a tyrant with ideas of
-aggrandization. That he is able to take a catastrophe and turn it into
-a blessing for himself is deplorable, but it seems to be one of those
-unfair tricks of fate to favor the ill-minded, for some unknown reason.
-I never knew a stinker that didn't get everything his own way for far
-too long for the other's comfort. Eventually, of course, the deal evens
-out, but the waiting is often maddeningly long."</p>
-
-<p>"And we sit here helpless," growled Franklen, "all clutching our atomic
-weapons that could wipe out Hohmann and most of his country. And as we
-hang on to them, and rub their rounded noses angrily, we watch Hohmann
-walk in and take over&mdash;we are unsure of our grounds. Bah! Why not
-claim it for what it is&mdash;aggressive acquisition of territory? Then
-let's bomb him and let the world judge for itself."</p>
-
-<p>Winter shook his head slowly. "And if we do, La Belle Francaise will
-rise up and scream 'Oppression'! For France is probably an operating
-country today because of Edvard Hohmann. There was once a first-class
-criminal, Public Enemy Number One, who, during a period of economic
-depression, used some of his ill-gotten gains to set up soup kitchens
-for the underfed. You'd hardly convince any one of them that he was
-entirely worthy of the electric chair and not much better. That was
-when his crimes were known to all. And people said: 'O.K., so he's
-killed a bunch of people. They were all criminals, too, and so he saved
-the country some expense. And besides, he set up soup kitchens, and so
-he's not a bad sort of fellow!' No, Jim, we've got to get evidence of
-definite acts of belligerency."</p>
-
-<p>"Sort of like trying to get evidence against a confidence-man who sells
-his victims something that they believe valuable."</p>
-
-<p>Winter nodded at the simile.</p>
-
-<p>"More like a druggist who sells opiates indiscriminately. The people
-who buy them do so because they find them useful even though they are
-dangerous in the long run. But you keep on trying, Jim. The rest of us
-will see to it that Hohmann isn't running himself up a stockpile of
-atomics all the time that his underground warfare is going on."</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Jim Franklen left the office and wandered down the hall to the Chief
-Physician's office. Shield greeted Franklen cheerfully and asked what
-was on the younger man's mind.</p>
-
-<p>"Nothing much," said Jim. "I was just wondering if you'd isolated the
-bug or whatever it was that hit France."</p>
-
-<p>"We believe so," said Dr. Shield. "We'll know in another couple of
-weeks. It seems to be some sort of filterable virus, air-borne for
-contagion, and very rugged. Intelligent, too. It apparently knows
-enough not to touch diparasulfathiazole."</p>
-
-<p>"How do these rare illnesses get going?" questioned Jim.</p>
-
-<p>"In several ways. The Law of Simple Reactions also applies, you
-know." And seeing the blank look on Franklen's face, he added: "When
-a number of reactions are possible, the one that requires the least
-energy will happen first. That's saying that the most likely will
-happen first. A few hundred years ago, so many people died of typhoid,
-yellow fever, and smallpox that a more complex disease like meningitis
-or polio seldom got beyond the normal case frequency. When the more
-prevalent&mdash;the more likely diseases&mdash;were stopped, we could have polio
-plagues. It's probably been here for a long time, killing its quota
-every year, but never noticed because of other, more devastating
-affairs."</p>
-
-<p>"I think I understand."</p>
-
-<p>"Why did you ask?" asked the doctor.</p>
-
-<p>"Well, I was there, you know. It was rather devastating, though it
-didn't kill off very many."</p>
-
-<p>"It isn't that type," said Shield. "Which is another factor in its
-not being noticed. The early symptoms are dysentery, not violent, but
-definitely weakening. The secondary symptoms are similar to influenza
-in a mild form. The whole thing just takes all the energy out of the
-system and leaves you weaker than a kitten for about twenty days. After
-which you can get up and go again, though somewhat rockily. It's a
-one-shot affair, luckily. The body builds up an immunity to the bug,
-and once you go through with it, you're safe from then on&mdash;though upon
-re-exposure, you can act as a carrier."</p>
-
-<p>"O.K., doctor. I was just wondering because I was rather close to it."</p>
-
-<p>"You didn't catch it?"</p>
-
-<p>"Nope. Not yet, anyway."</p>
-
-<p>"And you were in the plague area?" demanded Dr. Shield.</p>
-
-<p>"For several days with Commissario Hohmann."</p>
-
-<p>"Then I'd like a sample of your blood," said the doctor, reaching for
-his sterile cabinet. "Maybe you are carrying the normal antibody in
-quantity already. I'd like to check it."</p>
-
-<p>Franklen bared his arm and the doctor extracted thirty or forty CC of
-Jim's venous blood. "Thanks," said Dr. Shield. "We'll also see if you
-have any other bugs running around loose in here," he smiled, holding
-up the vial.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/illus2.jpg" alt=""/>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p>"O.K., doctor," returned Franklen. "And if you do, just drop 'em a shot
-or something to pacify 'em until I get back and can take care of 'em
-again."</p>
-
-<p>They parted on a laugh. And once outside of the doctor's door, Jim
-Franklen was met by an official messenger.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>It was a personally written note from Edvard Hohmann:</p>
-
-<div class="blockquot">
-<p>Dear Mr. Franklen:</p>
-
-<p>This is informal, because I believe that formality between friends is
-both stuffy and unreal. Also I count you among my friends despite the
-fact that our political beliefs differ.</p>
-
-<p>However, in an effort to convince you of my sincerity, I am inviting
-you to be present as a guest of my party when the Central Power meets
-the French Chamber of Deputies. This will occur on August 8th, which
-is but a week hence.</p>
-
-<p>It is to be an auspicious occasion, this meeting. Plans and forms
-have been drawn up, a compromise between the democratic government of
-France and the autocratic Central Power. We shall show the world and
-humanity that a meeting of minds is always possible between men of
-high purpose. True, both France and the Central Power must part with
-certain factors, but we both believe that departing slightly from our
-previous course by will and agreement is far better than going on as
-we have, and ultimately arriving at antipodal types of rule.</p>
-
-<p>Will you attend? Will you come, even to scoff? For you will remain to
-wonder, and the approval of your Council will mean much to all of us.
-Be a witness to History in the Making!</p>
-
-
-<p class="ph1">Sincerely,<br />
-Edvard Hohmann,<br />
-Your friend and Commissario<br />
-of the Central Power.</p>
-</div>
-
-<p>He stared at the letter, wondering. Hohmann's actions seemed logical
-enough; doubtless if he, Jim Franklen, were in Hohmann's shoes,
-he'd accept whatever the fates offered and reject whatever trouble
-he could. Hohmann's ambitions were normal for any ruler of Central
-Europe, and he was not, at least, killing millions. Yet&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>Franklen smacked his fist into the palm of his hand. He turned into
-Winter's office again and said: "I've got it!"</p>
-
-<p>Winter looked up, wondering.</p>
-
-<p>"Hohmann is using biological warfare," said Franklen. "It's logical,
-it's sensible, and it gets him what he wants, intact. He's soon to be
-running France, and not a shot has been fired nor a building damaged.
-Were he to strike an unfriendly country&mdash;or when he makes his final
-break, Hohmann can take over without resistance. No soldier can serve
-a weapon when he's prostrate with that combination of dysentery and
-influenza."</p>
-
-<p>"But biological warfare is not considered practical."</p>
-
-<p>"No?" snorted Franklen. "Well, if used properly, it can be better than
-atomics. Why blast a city you hope to add to your list? Why bother?
-You have to rebuild it. But if you just move in, you're in and you can
-use the same paper and pencils and desks and even the same clerks."</p>
-
-<p>"May I point out the difficulty of proving such a thing?" asked Winter.</p>
-
-<p>"In the first place, Dr. Shield told me that the ailment was a
-single-time illness. Your own troops can have it in a mild form before
-the invasion. Thereafter they are immune. But they are also vicious
-carriers, and while they're working among the stricken people, they're
-spreading it among those few who haven't caught it yet."</p>
-
-<p>Winter sighed deeply. "Yes, and even better for Hohmann is the fact
-that we can prove nothing. You can make enough germ culture in an
-apartment house to innoculate a city&mdash;contrasting, the separation
-plants of the atomic era. And, Franklen, can you or anybody else make
-Hohmann admit that his latest acquisitions happened by any other means
-than an Act of God? A pandemic is considered such."</p>
-
-<p>"I'll get the proof," said Franklen.</p>
-
-<p>"Just stop Hohmann," said Winter. "Then we can all rest!"</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>Franklen never went to Hohmann's great historic meeting. Three days
-before it opened, the same plague struck Mexico, and the United
-States sent its doctors and its nurses and its aids to the stricken
-neighbor. A good many of them came down with it themselves, but just
-as it had run in France, it ran itself out in three long, hot, Mexican
-weeks. American wealth was poured in, and American effort and American
-efficiency, and Mexico rallied and was grateful. Franklen was a busy
-man, during those days, and he spent another week in the area after
-the plague was stopped and the populace well on the road to recovery.</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="figcenter">
- <img src="images/illus3.jpg" alt=""/>
-</div>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p>Then he returned to his office, to see Thomas Winter.</p>
-
-<p>"Warfare&mdash;or happenstance?" asked Winter.</p>
-
-<p>"I'll never know," said Franklen wearily. "Why would they&mdash;Winter! You
-know something!"</p>
-
-<p>Winter nodded slowly. He handed Franklen a teletyped page, which
-Franklen read aloud:</p>
-
-<p>"The State of Sonora, Mexico, today voted to secede from Mexico in
-favor of joining the United States by a vote of almost three to one.
-If this is accepted, Sonora would become the fifty-first State of the
-Union. There is some doubt&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"Winter&mdash;what is this?"</p>
-
-<p>"A fragment of the International News Service report," replied Winter.
-"And here is a text of President Halstead's reply:</p>
-
-<p>"The United States of America feels gratified that she is deemed so
-high by the residents of Sonora, Mexico. An act of this sort, however,
-must be made with the full consent of the Mexican Government."</p>
-
-<p>"So we've got ourselves a Border Incident?" muttered Franklen.</p>
-
-<p>Winter shook his head. "Worse than that. Here's the topper-offer," and
-he handed Franklen a sheet of paper. Franklen read it silently and
-then whistled explosively.</p>
-
-<p>"So the Government of Mexico offers complete annexation of all the
-states of Mexico to the United States of America in exchange for
-certain provisos and considerations in the way of civil government of
-the new territory?"</p>
-
-<p>Winter nodded. "And from what they tell me of the Mexican demands, the
-United States would be imbecilic not to accede to their request."</p>
-
-<p>Franklen shook his head widely and slowly. "Madness!" he said quietly.
-"If we do, we're legally guilty of the same offense as Hohmann. If we
-do not, we're fools. How can the pot call the kettle black and still
-retain a moral sense of values?"</p>
-
-<p>"Can't," grumbled Winter. "And we've got ourselves another twenty
-million citizens, three quarters of a million square miles, and
-something like a total of eighty United States of America!"</p>
-
-<p>Winter stood up, his face bitter. "United Nations Weapon Council," he
-growled. "Preserve the future peace. Stop aggression and territorial
-expansion. Hell!"</p>
-
-<p>He picked up a brass inkwell and hurled it through the door glass. His
-secretary peered in, wondering.</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>That was only the beginning. Just the start of a long series of
-similar events that came crowding in on one another so fast that it
-made one's head spin. Five years passed in this same mad whirl. Five
-years of the same crazy pattern.</p>
-
-<p>And then the Central Power, which was now calling itself the European
-Power, faced the United States of The Americas across the Atlantic
-Ocean. From Ellsmere Island to Cape Horn lay the United States of
-The Americas, and from Spitzbergen to the Cape of Good Hope lay the
-European Power, all and both combined.</p>
-
-<p>And as before, Jim Franklen, now an older but still struggling
-Franklen, was still working on the same question; and Thomas Winter,
-also older and more resigned, urged Franklen on.</p>
-
-<p>"Hindsight," said Franklen sourly, "is infinitely superior to
-foresight, or at least it is better accomplished."</p>
-
-<p>Winter nodded. "This is what we might have expected," he said. "Years
-and years ago when Hohmann started this last war. Now we're all in
-a position where strife might well break out at any moment. And the
-question is whether to break out in open strife at once, or wait it
-out and hope for the best. We can no longer move leisurely. Hohmann
-has seen to it that for every advance he has made, we've made a
-greater one. But now he is fresh out of available land to spread out
-across, and he's looking at us. We've been dragged and dragged by
-his indirectness into this situation, where the United States as it
-was is no longer just we folks, but encompasses a myriad of peoples,
-types, and governmental ideas. True, Washington is still the seat of
-government, but that makes it seem as though we were to blame for our
-own expansion."</p>
-
-<p>"I may be able to help," said Franklen at last. "I think I've got the
-answer, finally."</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>He said no more about it, but he was gone, somewhere for three months,
-after which he returned long enough to pick up Dr. Shield and fly with
-him to Europe. He gained audience with Edvard Hohmann within a few
-hours.</p>
-
-<p>"My American friend," exclaimed Hohmann, taking Franklen's hand. "And
-this?"</p>
-
-<p>"This is Dr. Shield," said Jim. "He's been instrumental in tracking
-down some of the many plagues that have hit the world."</p>
-
-<p>"Perhaps he can tell us where so many different illnesses come from,"
-said Hohmann, interestedly. "A kind Providence, that offers both
-myself and your government the chance, to become great&mdash;it is kind,
-and I say right that we have prospered&mdash;seldom seems in existence at
-the proper time."</p>
-
-<p>"Sometimes illnesses emerge from the common welter of human frailties
-only because they have been eclipsed by more common ailments," said
-Shield. "There is one other way in which an illness can suddenly
-break out. Mutations. If you recall, the photographic industry nearly
-went out of business when atomic power came in, because there were
-radioactive atoms everywhere&mdash;even in the emulsions and the films
-themselves. That has been largely abated, but only by special methods.
-The world, right now, is bathed in many many more kinds of radiation
-than ever before. Where once only alpha particles were, now are
-protons and neutrons and both positive and negative electrons, and
-gamma from here to there in wave length. Illness comes from bugs,
-Commissario Hohmann, and bugs as well as humans can evolve. The
-possibilities are limitless, it requires only a diligent search&mdash;"</p>
-
-<p>"Diligent search?" asked Hohmann. "You sound as though you believed
-that someone might have been seeking such illnesses."</p>
-
-<p>"Only academically, perhaps, just as we are," replied Shield. "Just
-to know what possible mutations might take place, and perhaps give
-us a bit of warning, we have been operating a radiation-biological
-laboratory."</p>
-
-<p>"Indeed?" said Hohmann.</p>
-
-<p>"Oh yes. And we've come up with some of the most peculiar cultures.
-Pure laws of chance, because most mutants die. We've got a violent
-one that affects the calcium exchange in the body&mdash;your bones, you
-know, are in a constant state of equilibrium, the matter changes, new
-comes in to replace old going out&mdash;so that only the outgoing side is
-working. The bones jellify. We've licked that one by antibodies and
-partial immunities. But the more recent ones have rather peculiar
-effects. One of them strikes the nerves in the semicircular canals of
-the ear. During the two months of its run, the patient cannot stand,
-or cannot retain any balance at all. He cannot even lift his hands as
-he desires, because he ... well, he might think he was standing on his
-head, but he can't even accept a delusion as to his position, for all
-position-sense is gone, completely. After two months, the average body
-recovers, and the patient is well again. We've feared that, and we've
-learned how to prevent it. That's a good thing, too, for it strikes
-within a few minutes after exposure to any carrier."</p>
-
-<p>"A rather terrible possibility," smiled Hohmann. "I've always been
-proud of my sense of balance." He laughed nervously and stood upon one
-foot for a few seconds.</p>
-
-<p>"We were thinking that it might be well to combine our laboratories,"
-said Franklen. "We can pool our findings and collectively advance so
-that this wave of mutated bugs can be prevented."</p>
-
-<p>"That is an excellent idea," said Hohmann&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>At which point he fell flat on his face!</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<p>The world's stockpiles of atomic weapons is rusting and unused&mdash;as
-such. Gradually, they are being broken down and the high-grade
-fissionables are being taken and used to light the fires of humanity.
-Jim Franklen is an old man, no longer an agent of the United Nations,
-but just a citizen of United Terra.</p>
-
-<p>And the rattle of the saber is gone, and the storm of atomic bombs is
-no longer expected.</p>
-
-<p>For the last Global War was fought with weapons that seldom killed,
-never maimed, and always left the cities of the world intact for the
-next generation.</p>
-
-
-<p class="ph2">THE END.</p>
-
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