"Bet he wakes up looking like that," Marescu muttered.
"What is it, Major?" Neidermeyer asked.
"We need your assistance in the arsenal. We need two devices for shipboard installation."
Marescu's stomach went fluttery. The butterflies donned Alpine boots and started dancing. "Major... "
"Briefing in Final Process in fifteen minutes, gentlemen. Thank you."
Neidermeyer nodded. The Major descended the escalator.
"So," Marescu snapped. "They'll never use it, eh? You're a fool, Paul."
"Maybe they won't. You don't know... Maybe it's a field test of some kind."
"Don't lie to yourself. No more than you already are. The damned bomb doesn't need testing. I already tested it. They're going to blow up a sun, Paul!" Ion's mouth worked faster and faster. His voice rose toward a squeak. "Not some star, Paul. A sun. Somebody's sun. The goddamned murdering fascists are going to wipe out a whole solar system."
"Calm down, Ion."
"Calm down? I can't. I won't! How many lives, Paul? How many lives are going to be blasted away by those firecrackers we've given them? They've made bloody fools of us, haven't they? They suckered us. Smug little purblind fools that we are, we made ourselves believe that it would never go that far. But we were lying to ourselves. We knew. They always use the weapon, no matter how horrible it is."
Paul did not respond. Marescu was reacting without all the facts. And saying things everyone else thought but did not say.
For the research staff, service at Hel Station had been a deal with the devil. Each scientist had traded physical freedom and talent for unlimited funding and support for a pet line of research. The Station was ultra-secret, but the knowledge it produced was reshaping modern science. The place seethed with new discoveries.
All Navy had asked for its money was a weapon capable of making a sun go nova.
Navy had its weapon now. The scientists had scrounged around and found a few Hawking Holes left over from the Big Bang, had pulled a few mega-trillion quarks out of a linear accelerator which circumscribed Hel itself, had sorted them, had stacked them in orbital shells around the mini-singularities, and had installed these "cores" in a delivery system. The carrier missile would perish in the fires of a star, but the core itself would sink to the star's heart before the quark shells collapsed, mixing positives and negatives in a tremendous energy yield which would ignite a swift and savage helium fusion process.
Navy had its weapon. And now, apparently, a target for it.
"What have you done, Paul?"
"I don't know, Ion. God help me if you're right."
The passageways were a-crawl with Marines, Marescu swore. "I didn't realize there were so many of the bastards. They been breeding on us? Where's everybody else?" The usual back and forth of technical and scientific staffs had ceased. Civilians were scarce.
At Final Process they were told to report to the arsenal instead.
They found three civilians waiting outside the scarlet door. The Director, though, was an R & D admiral in civilian disguise.
"This's a farce," Marescu growled at her. "Two hundred comic opera soldiers... "
"Can it, Ion," Paul whispered.
The Director did not bat an eye. "They're watching you, Ion. They don't like your mouth."
Marescu was startled. Ordinarily, even the Eagle did not bite back.
"What's going on, Kathe?" Neidermeyer asked.
Marescu grinned. Kathe Adler. Kathe the Eagle. It was one of those nasty little jokes that drift around behind an unpopular superior's back. Admiral Adler had a thin wedge of a face, an all-time beak of a nose, and a receding hairline. Never had a birthname fit its bearer so well.
"They're taking delivery on the product, Paul. I want you to work with their science officers. Ion, you'll prepare a test program for their shipboard computers."
"They're going to use it, aren't they?" Marescu demanded.
"I hope not. We all hope not, Ion."
"Shit. I believe that like I believe in the Tooth Fairy." He glanced at Paul. Neidermeyer was trying to believe. He was like all the science staff. Keeping himself fed on lies.
"Ship's down, Major," a Marine Lieutenant announced.
"Very well," Feuchtmayer replied.
"We'd better get lined out," the Director said. "Paul, pick whomever you want to help. Ion, you'll have to visit the ship to see what you'll be working with. I want your preliminary brief as soon as you can write it. Josip, get with their Weapons officers and draw up the preparatory specs for carrying mounts and launch systems. Have the people in the shops drop everything else."
Josip asked, "We have to build it all here?"
"From scratch. Orders."
"But... "
"Gentlemen, they're in a hurry. I suggest you get started."
"They brought the whole ship down?" Paul asked. Ships seldom made planetary landings.
"That's right. They don't want to waste time working from orbit. That would take an extra month."
"But... " That was dangerous business. The ship's crew would stay crazy-busy balancing her gravity fields with the planet's. If they made one mistake the vessel would be torn apart.
"It shouldn't take more than twelve days this way," Admiral Adler speculated. "Assuming we hit no snags. Let's go." She pushed through the red door.
The completed weapons had a sharkish, deadly look, looking nothing like bombs. The four devices were spaced around the arsenal floor. Each was a lean needle of black a hundred meters long and ten in diameter. They were longer than the shuttle craft intended to lift them to orbit. Antennae and the snouts of nasty defensive weapons sprouted from their dark skins like scrub brush from an old, burned slope.
They were fully automated little warships. The essentials of the nova bomb occupied space that would have been given over to crew in manned vessels. They were fast and shielded heavily enough to punch through a powerful defense.
The weapon remained largely theoretical. But the men who had created it were confident it would function.
Neidemeyer whispered to Marescu as they donned working suits, trying to convince his friend, and himself, that they were just gearing up for a field test. "I'm sure the money people just want to see if they're getting any return on their investment," he insisted. "You can't blame them for wanting to try their new toy."
"Yeah. Our hero von Drachau is going to take potshots at a couple of insignificant stars. Right?"
"Right."
"You're a fool, Paul."
A band of strangers entered the arsenal. They stared at the four dark needles, clearly awed and a little frightened.
"That's von Drachau on the right," Paul whispered. "I recognize him from the holo. Only he looks a lot older."
"Looks a little grey around the gills, I'd say."
Von Drachau did look depressed. He spoke with the Major and Kathe Adler. Kathe led his party around one of the missiles. Von Drachau became more impressed.
There was something about the big, terrible ones that excited a resonance in the soul. It was almost a siren call. Marescu felt it himself each time he touched one of the monsters. He was ashamed of himself when he did.
"Little boys play with firecrackers, and big boys play with bombs," he muttered.
"Ease up. Kathe meant it when she said they're watching you. Feuchtmayer isn't one of your big fans, Ion."
"I'll stay out of his way."
The days whipped past. Technicians swarmed over the pair of weapons von Drachau selected. Marescu tested systems and supervised the installation of special shipping aids. Josip brought the missiles' computation systems into communion with the battle computers aboard von Drachau's ship. Technicians designed and installed adapters and links that would fit the securing rings and launch vanes going onto the belly of the warship.