Luke was the last to arrive, a stick supporting him on one side and his wife on the other. If one had seen him near his worst, one no longer thought of him as ill, though the improvement made him look grotesque, for his hair had begun to grow again in tufts, shades fairer than the wings over his ears. With an attempt at jauntiness, he raised his stick before he sat down, while men asked him if he had heard details of the New Mexico explosion.
Luke shook his head.
‘All I know is that the bloody balloon went up all right.’
Someone said, with more personal sympathy than the rest: ‘It’s a pity it wasn’t yours.’
‘Ours ought to go a bit higher when it does go,’ replied Luke.
Francis Getliffe sat on a desk, looked down the small room, began to talk about reports from America — the argument was still going on, the scientists there were pressing the case against using the bomb, the military for; and all the statements for and against most of us knew by heart.
Then there was an interruption.
Mounteney leaned back, protruded his lean prow of a chin, and said, with unexpected formality: ‘Before we go on, I should like to know who invited L S Eliot to this meeting.’
‘I did,’ said Francis Getliffe. ‘I take it no one objects.’
‘I do,’ said Mounteney.
For a second, I thought it was a scientist’s joke, but Mounteney was continuing: ‘I understood that this was a meeting of scientists to find ways of stopping a misuse of science. We’ve got to stop the people who don’t understand science from making nonsense of everything we’ve said, and performing the greatest perversion of science that we’ve ever been threatened with. It’s the general class of people like Eliot who are trying to use the subject for a purpose none of us can tolerate, and I don’t see the point in having one of them join in this discussion. Not that I mean anything against L S Eliot, of course. I don’t suppose he personally would actually authorize using the fission bomb.’
It was only later that I remembered that he liked me, and that this was a triumph of impersonality.
Getliffe raised his voice. ‘We all know that Eliot thinks as we do. He also knows a great deal more than any of us about the government machines. That’s why he can be useful this afternoon.’
‘I don’t want anyone who knows anything about government machines,’ said Mounteney. ‘People who know about government machines all end up by doing what the machine wants, and that is the trouble we have got ourselves in today.’
Luke and Martin were exchanging glances, and Luke spoke.
‘We want Lewis Eliot in on this,’ he said.
‘Why?’ asked Mounteney.
‘Because you’re a wild man, Arthur, and he’s a cunning old dog.’
‘If you really do want him,’ said Mounteney, ‘I suppose I’m prepared to stay.’
‘I should think you are.’
‘But I still object in principle.’
Later, a good many scientists, not so wild as Mounteney, would have considered that in principle he was right.
Getliffe returned to the arguments in America. For weeks everyone in that room had thrashed them out.
Some of them gave an absolute no to the use of the bomb for reasons which were too instinctive to express. For any cause on earth, they could not bear to destroy hundreds of thousands of people at a go.
Many of them gave something near to an absolute no for reasons which, at root, were much the same; the fission bomb was the final product of scientific civilization; if it were used at once to destroy, neither science nor the civilization of which science was bone and fibre, would be free from guilt again.
Many, probably the majority, gave a conditional no with much the same feeling behind it: but if there were no other way of saving the war against Hitler, they would be prepared to drop the bomb. I believed that that was the position of Francis Getliffe; it was certainly Luke’s.
None of those attitudes were stated at this meeting. They had been agreed on long before, and they gave us much common ground. But those who answered with a conditional no could not dismiss the military counter argument out of hand. In America, so Getliffe said, those in favour of the bomb were saying: Our troops have got to invade Japan. This bomb will save our men’s lives; a soldier must do anything, however atrocious, if by doing so he could save one single life under his command.
As Getliffe said, that was a case which one had to respect. And it was the only case one could respect. Using the bomb to forestall the Russians or for any kind of diplomatic motive — that was beneath the human level.
Yet, if the dropping of a bomb could make the Japanese surrender, the knowledge that we possessed it might do the same?
‘Several of us,’ said Francis Getliffe, ‘had made a scheme, in case we had it before the end of the German war. Step one. Inform the enemy that the bomb was made, and give them enough proof. Step two. Drop one bomb where it will not kill people. Step three. If the enemy government will not budge, then’ — Getliffe had faced his own thoughts — ‘drop the next on a town.’
By this time, the meeting was in a state of deep emotion. If there is any sense or feeling left,’ said Francis Getliffe (it was only afterwards that I recalled that ‘sense and feeling’ was the one emotional phrase in his speech), ‘don’t begin by using this bomb on human beings.’
That was the case which scientists were putting up in Washington.
‘How are they taking it?’ asked a refugee.
‘Some are listening,’ said Francis.
‘Is that going to be good enough?’ said someone.
‘No one knows yet,’ said Francis, He added: ‘We’ve had one optimistic message.’
‘Who from?’
Getliffe gave the name.
Luke shook his head.
‘He’d believe anything that a blooming general told him. I must say, it doesn’t sound safe enough to leave.’
‘I agree,’ said Francis Getliffe.
‘What more can we do?’ came a voice.
‘There’s plenty we can do,’ said Luke,
‘There’s plenty we can do,’ said Mounteney, speaking into space, but there’s only one way we can make it impossible for them.’
‘What’s that?’ said Francis.
‘Issue a statement saying what has happened about the bomb and what is proposed. That will settle it in one.’
‘Who is to issue the statement?’ said Nora Luke.
‘We are.’
‘Breaking the law?’ said Francis.
‘I know that,’ said Mounteney.
‘Breaking our oaths?’ said Francis.
Mounteney hesitated for some moments, ‘I don’t like that. But there’s no other way.’
‘We’re still at war,’ said Luke. ‘We shall never get the statement out.’
‘I think we should,’ said Mounreney.
‘It’d all be hushed up. A few of us would be in jug, and the whole bloody game would be discredited,’
‘We might be unlucky,’ said Mounteney. ‘In that case a few scientists would be discredited. If we do nothing, then all scientists will be discredited. I can understand some of you fighting shy of signing the statement. I shan’t mind putting it out by myself.’
That was a false note. He was a daring man, but so were others there. He was a man of absolute integrity, but most of them did not trust his judgement. Just at that turning point, they were undecided.
Francis Getliffe had expected some such suggestion all along; for himself, he was too disciplined to act on it. So was Luke. But it was Martin who spoke.