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Enkov: Splendid, yes, inspiring. Air Marshal, have you rated success by nationality?

Ulrich: We have, Director. Japanese pilots have scored twenty-eight percent of all known successes. Next are the Germans, at twenty-five percent. American and Israeli pilots each accounted for ten percent. A word of caution is in order, however. While the Field Marshal is correct at the heroics and ability of his former pilots, they were also his best rated. It would be a mistake to ship too many fighters into Japan until the beginning of Operation Togo.

Kitamura: I am sorry, but I cannot agree, Air Marshal.

Enkov: General Hawthorne, has a troop’s nationality shown any difference in terms of ground performance?

Hawthorne: Most definitely.

Enkov: Japanese troops do well?

Hawthorne: Very.

Enkov: Then perhaps the Highborn actions become clear.

Hawthorne: You detect a pattern, Director?

Enkov: The Highborn do not hew to your strategies, General, because they do not think like you. Land is not paramount. Men are. Consider. Why strike at Japan? Might it be because the Japanese make better soldiers than the neighboring peoples do?

Hawthorne: Perhaps. Yet a conquered Japan also aims a strategic arrow at Beijing. While I don’t see how invading Japan at this time fits into their overall strategy, it is by itself not an unbalanced move.

Enkov: I believe they’re more concerned with taking out our best recruiting grounds, then taking those captive peoples and retraining them as Highborn surrogates.

Kitamura: The Japanese will never serve the hated Highborn. We are dedicated Social Unitarians.

Enkov: So did the Australian generals assure the Directorate, as did those holding New Zealand, Tasmania and Antarctica before them. Yet now these nationalities flock to the Highborn standards. You’re so fond of history, General Hawthorne. Didn’t the Japanese lick the American’s boots easily enough after World War Two?

Hawthorne: As the Field Marshal indicated, Director, Social Unity cures many ills.

Enkov: How refreshingly bold of you, General. Are you actually assuring me the Japanese won’t join the Highborn?

Hawthorne: I don’t intend on letting Japan fall to find out.

Kitamura: We will never fall! On this, I stake my life and reputation.

Enkov: I accept your pledge, Field Marshal.

Kitamura: Thank you, Honored Director. You will see that Japan loves you and honors your socially approved leadership. Even now new armies of volunteers train in the cities’ depths. We will boil out and overwhelm them!

Enkov: That, gentlemen, is the kind of zeal we need. Now, General Hawthorne, how soon until this grand assault of yours occurs, this Operation Togo?

Hawthorne: Your timetable, Colonel-General?

Green: Nine weeks at the earliest.

Enkov: Too long, much too long! The Highborn run circles around us because they move. By the time we’re ready for them, our men are marching into their holding pens or being buried in the field. We have to match their speed, their ability to shift from one spot to the next. You have four weeks, and then you will commence Operation Togo with whatever’s ready.

O’Connor: I need those four weeks to slip my submarine squadrons into position. On the fifth week, we might be ready.

Enkov: Fight your way into position!

O’Connor: Without surprise—

Enkov: To insure success we will immediately submarine-launch nuclear strikes against their sea-lines.

Hawthorne: Director—

Enkov: My mind is made up on this. I have not struck first with nuclear weapons. But I refuse to sit idly by and allow them to bombard us with impunity.

Hawthorne: Very well, Director. But I cannot guarantee Operation Togo with only a four-week lead-time.

Enkov: Four weeks and I demand that you guarantee it for me, General.

Hawthorne: Perhaps if the Directorate rescinds its policy on the habitats.

Enkov: Negative. They must remain open habitats. Frankly, I find the Highborn agreement to this unbelievable. If they stopped all food shipments earthward, we would face half rations for everyone on the planet.

Hawthorne: They want Earth intact, Director. So unless we change policy I don’t believe they will change their open space-farm habitat policy. At least they won’t change it as long as they’re conquering— As long as they’re making advances.

Enkov: Then why ask for Directorate policy to be rescinded?

Hawthorne: Because I’m beginning to wonder if that isn’t the place to break them. If we can’t break their battle fleet maybe we can destroy one or two Doom Stars.

Enkov: You think that’s possible?

Hawthorne: With surprise… maybe. If our new proton beams prove—

Enkov: No! Maybe is not good enough. We will stick to saving Japan. Four weeks, gentlemen, to gather what forces you can and then strike against their invasion. And you must immediately disrupt their four thousand kilometer long supply-line, Admiral. Your submarines are to move now! They are to launch nuclear sea-strikes as close to the enemy as possible. If they own space, we can still use the oceans. I want you especially to target their transports. Until then, Field Marshal Kitamura, you most hold Tokyo. You must defend the Merculite missile battery, no matter what the cost. If that means frontal assaults with your newly trained levies then you must do it.

Kitamura: Agreed, Honored Director. But we will take massive casualties.

Enkov: That doesn’t matter. Engage the enemy. Make him bleed until we’re ready to drive him off Japan. Then everyone will see that the Highborn are not invincible.

Hawthorne: Shouldn’t our objectives be studied in greater detail, Director?

Enkov: You have just been given your objectives, General. Now I want them carried out. If, that is, you can guarantee me success.

Hawthorne: Director, I—

Enkov: Give me victory, General Hawthorne, or we will fall back onto Carthaginian strategies.

Green: Director?

Enkov: Take it up later with General Hawthorne, and consider yourself under the same terms, all of you. Gentleman, the emergency meeting is adjourned. Now, to your tasks!

2.

Convoy A22 left Sydney Harbor at three o’clock in the afternoon Sunday. The first day it sped over the waters at fifty kilometers an hour. Thirty hover transports carried the 20th FEC Division and the 101st Jump-Jet Battalion, which was composed of veteran Hawk Teams. They skimmed over the choppy waves in a diamond formation. Playing shepherd to the transports were four Gladius Class Hovers, small and deadly destroyer sized vessels. They bristled with guns and missiles launchers, and dropped probes as they hunted for enemy submarines. In and out of the diamond formation, they roamed on the prowl. On picket duty twenty to forty kilometers out roved ten V-Boats, hydrofoil ships badly tossed among the waves. Ocean duty left the crews exhausted. A journey all the way to Japan hammered them. In the middle of the transports hovered the VTOL Carrier. Sleek HK-Leopards—reconnaissance planes—and sleek attack choppers lifted from its flat top as they scoured the sea for enemy.

A quarter of the way through the journey, storm warnings forced the convoy off course to the west. The sea grew rougher, until the hovers shut down turbines, settled unto the gray waters and moved like ordinary sea vessels. Overhead, dark clouds threatened rain. On the former cushion of air, the trip had been relatively smooth. Now the men found themselves pitched to-and-fro. Many grew seasick, crawling to the head and spewing or limping into their bunks and trying to endure the endless motion. A few stubbornly continued their crap and card games.

Lieutenant Marten Kluge, his Top Sergeant Omi and Sergeants Stick and Turbo had squeezed themselves around a bolted down table in a little cubby in the rec-room. There they played five-card stud. Each wore the dusty brown uniform of FEC volunteers. Turbo and Stick wore their slouch hats. With a stylus and plex-pad, Omi kept track of the won or lost fortunes. The worn cards rested in a table holder specially made for sea duty. The discards they held with their elbows propped on the table. The room, as did everything aboard the sea-borne hover, pitched back and forth with exaggerated motion.