“Environmental influences, Major Fielding.” Hynds put in, his expression dead-pan. “It comes from too much swinging about in trees.”
“That’s enough!” said Warren sharply, as Kelso and Sloan opened their mouths for a return blast. He went on, “We all deplore these incidents, naturally, but at the present time I can understand the feelings of Sloan and Kelso. All the officers know that they are expendable and that the greater number of them will be expended, so that the increasing strain they are under calls for our sympathy rather than disciplinary action. We must try to retain our sense of proportion about this, weighing the relatively minor sufferings against the major achievement we hope to gain.”
“I have devoted much thought to the final choosing of these assault groups,” Warren continued, trying to inject a lighter note into the proceedings, “and it is unfortunate that a certain lack of charm is a concomitant of the other qualities I sought—but then who ever heard of a polite commando? We might all feel better if we remember that we’re fighting a war, and think of all the people we’ve been discussing as casualties…”
As his eyes moved from face to face, Warren was becoming aware that his Staff was split down the middle, with Kelso, Sloan and himself ranged against Fielding, Hutton and Hynds. He knew that with each successive meeting the rift would widen and that in time he would have an open mutiny of his hands. The question was, how much time?
Could he hold them all together, and retain their loyalty and active support, for another three weeks?
Chapter 16
Implacably, E-Day moved from the minus twenties into the low teens. Two practice trips with Battler-wagons and ships had been completed with their time schedules and without incident, the wild Battlers who would be most likely to cause the incidents having been rendered virtually extinct by Sloan’s hunters. The sections of the dummy were ready to go, the ambush tunnels were a few days off completion and the areas for destruction by fire and explosive were being marked out.
The many accidents and setbacks which occurred were of a minor nature and were directly ascribable to nerves in one form or another. There had been no further acts of sabotage.
On Minus Twelve Warren was working with Fielding on the evacuation of injured from the Escape area when she said suddenly, “I don’t like what the Escape has done to some of the people here, sir. I especially don’t like what it has done to you. In my opinion you should slap an indefinite Hold on it—with a series of small delays to begin with, of course, so as to allow the Committee time to unwind—and start work on an alternative solution. It would be much better, sir, to found a dynasty…”
If there had been anyone else present Warren would have silenced such seditious talk at once, but they had known each other and served together so long that all he could do was grunt disapprovingly.
“On Victorious I was the only unmarried female officer,” she went on seriously, apparently changing the subject. “As an unattached female I kept the other girls from taking their men too much for granted—potentially I was the Other Woman for the whole ship—and as the doctor-psychologist, again female, I served many of the functions of a mother as well. You, sir, with your absolute authority combined with the ease with which you could be approached, not to mention the concern you displayed for the safety of the officers serving under you, were the great-granddaddy of all father-figures.”
“Even in these decadent times,” she went on, holding his eyes steadily but with her face growing redder by the second, “mothers and fathers are not infrequently married. To each other, I mean…”
Warren gaped at her, unable to speak.
“This, sir,” she said, lowering her eyes, “is not a rhetorical proposal.”
A part of Warren’s mind seemed to be chasing itself into a tight circle of confusion while another and less chaotic segment remembered a sunlit observation platform in their first Post. On that occasion Warren had considered long and deeply this alternative solution, and rejected it as being too uncertain. One of the reasons then for its rejection had been his own advanced age, but this particular reason no longer seemed quite so valid after three years of healthy, open-air and virtually primitive living conditions. Those some conditions had done a lot for Ruth Fielding, too, Warren told himself as he tried not to look directly at her tight bolero jacket and even tighter pants, although in her case it was an improvement on near perfection.
He had to remind himself forcibly that the no longer valid reason had been a minor one in any case, and that all the other reasons still stood.
“I’m pretty sure the Escape will succeed, sir,” she went on suddenly, “but I wonder sometimes if our people back home are really capable of mounting the rescue operation. I realize that you are more aware of the overall tactical situation than any of us here, but your information is three years old and—”
“We have to escape!” said Warren harshly.
Until she had begun to talk again Warren’s mind had been very far away indeed from the Escape. He had been thinking that aboard Victorious some things had been neither possible nor desirable. A female ship’s doctor-psychologist was normally kept too busy seeing that every one else was happy to have any time to feel unhappy herself—if the officer was as dedicated as Fielding, at least. And while ship marriage was the norm on active service, it was not supposed to be entered into between such widely disparate ranks as a Major and a Sector Mashal! In order to attain such eminence an officer had to devote all his mental and physical energy to his career, and it was assumed that sheer force of habit would see to it that he continued this devotion to duty when the pinnacle of power had been reached. A Sector Marshal might very well be approachable and democratic and go through all the motions of being just one of the boys, but a girl might just as soon think of marrying God.
On the prison planet, however, the situation was not the same as aboard ship.
It was the sudden and surprising violence of the temptation, as if her words and her warm, vital presence had triggered off an emotional time-bomb within him, which had shaken Warren so badly and roughened his voice. That and a terrible, growing suspicion.
Still looking at the table-top, she went on quietly, “A female psychologist indulging in self-analysis on the subject of love is probably more than you could bear, sir. So let’s just say that I’ve taken so many men apart mentally that my need is for one with very special qualities and attributes, one that I can truly look up to. One of these attributes need not necessarily be youth.”
“Major Fielding … Ruth…!” began Warren, and stopped. When he went on a few seconds later he tried to adopt an avuncular manner, but his voice was so strained that he hardly recognized it. He said, “I think that I’ve just been handed the nicest compliment of my whole life, Ruth. But what you’re suggesting isn’t possible. You’d be much better advised using your feminine wiles on Hutton, who spends more time looking at you during Staff meetings these days than anything or anyone else…”
When Major Fielding left a few minutes later her face was stiff and unreadable. The thought came to him that perhaps she had been telling the truth about her feelings toward him, but he suppressed it with a violence which was close to panic. It was much better to think the other way, that he had just foiled the third and potentially the most damaging act of sabotage yet attempted.
On Minus Ten he had to read the riot act to Major Hynds, who had been complaining bitterly that his job was strictly third leg, and tell him in no uncertain terms that it was vital that the prisoners were not allowed to forget any of their technical know-how—or anything at all, for that matter. He sent Hynds on a five-day trip to the other continent to check on the re-education program on the same day that he sent Hutton off to check on practically everything else. If either officer suspected that he was pulling the old divide and rule gambit on them—splitting them up so that they would have no chance to unite in opposition to Kelso, Sloan and himself—there was nothing they could do about it. Major Fielding was angrily cooperative, and Warren could not be sure whether it was the anger of a woman scorned or a conspirator foiled. On Minus Eight he made it known for the first time that Majors Hutton, Hynds and Fielding would take no actual part in the assault, citing as his reason the necessity of leaving behind a nucleus of technical brains for a second attempt should this one fail. In his best dour old warrior’s voice he said that he was banking on this one succeeding, and if it didn’t he could not bear the thought of having to do it all again.