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Johnny had followed a blind urge not to let the bombs his bombs! be used for demonstrations on unimportant towns. But what to do next? Well, Towers couldn't get through the lock. Johnny would sit tight until hell froze over.

Don't kid yourself, John Ezra! Towers could get in. Some high explosive against the outer door then the air would whoosh out, our boy Johnny would drown in blood from his burst lungs and the bombs would be sitting there, unhurt. They were built to stand the jump from Moon to Earth; vacuum would not hurt them at all.

He decided to stay in his space suit; explosive decompression didn't appeal to him. Come to think about it, death from old age was his choice.

Or they could drill a hole, let out the air, and open the door without wrecking the lock. Or Towers might even have a new airlock built outside the old. Not likely, Johnny thought; a coup d'etat depended on speed. Towers was almost sure to take the quickest way blasting. And Lopez was probably calling the Base right now. Fifteen minutes for Towers to suit up and get here, maybe a short dicker then whoosh ! the party is over.

Fifteen minutes

In fifteen minutes the bombs might fall back into the hands of the conspirators; in fifteen minutes he must make the bombs unusable.

An atom bomb is just two or more pieces of fissionable metal, such as plutonium. Separated, they are no more explosive than a pound of butter; slapped together, they explode. The complications lie in the gadgets and circuits and gun used to slap them together in the exact way and at the exact time and place required.

These circuits, the bomb's brain, are easily destroyed but the bomb itself is hard to destroy because of its very simplicity. Johnny decided to smash the brains and quickly!

The only tools at hand were simple ones used in handling the bombs. Aside from a Geiger counter, the speaker on the walkie-talkie circuit, a television rig to the base, and the bombs themselves, the room was bare. A bomb to be worked on was taken elsewhere not through fear of explosion, but to reduce radiation exposure for personnel. The radioactive material in a bomb is buried in a tamper in these bombs, gold. Gold stops alpha, beta, and much of the deadly gamma radiation but not neutrons.

The slippery, poisonous neutrons which plutonium gives off had to escape, or a chain reaction explosion! would result. The room was bathed in an invisible, almost undetectable rain of neutrons. The place was unhealthy; regulations called for staying in it as short a time as possible.

The Geiger counter clicked off the background radiation, cosmic rays, the trace of radioactivity in the Moon's crust, and secondary radioactivity set up all through the room by neutrons. Free neutrons have the nasty trait of infecting what they strike, making it radioactive, whether it be concrete wall or human body. In time the room would have to be abandoned.

Dahlquist twisted a knob on the Geiger counter; the instrument stopped clicking. He had used a suppressor circuit to cut out noise of background radiation at the level then present. It reminded him uncomfortably of the danger of staying here. He took out the radiation exposure film all radiation personnel carry; it was a direct-response type and had been fresh when he arrived. The most sensitive end was faintly darkened already. Half way down the film a red line crossed it. Theoretically, if the wearer was exposed to enough radioactivity in a week to darken the film to that line, he was, as Johnny reminded himself, a dead duck.

Off came the cumbersome space suit; what he needed was speed. Do the job and surrender better to be a prisoner than to linger in a place as hot as this.

He grabbed a ball hammer from the tool rack and got busy, pausing only to switch off the television pick-up. The first bomb bothered him. He started to smash the cover plate of the brain, then stopped, filled with reluctance. All his life he had prized fine apparatus.

He nerved himself and swung; glass tinkled, metal creaked. His mood changed; he began to feel a shameful pleasure in destruction. He pushed on with enthusiasm, swinging, smashing, destroying!

So intent was he that he did not at first hear his name called. Dahlquist! Answer me! Are you there?

He wiped sweat and looked at the TV screen. Towers' perturbed features stared out.

Johnny was shocked to find that he had wrecked only six bombs. Was he going to be caught before he could finish? Oh, no! He had to finish. Stall, son, stall! Yes, Colonel? You called me?

I certainly did! What's the meaning of this?

I'm sorry, Colonel.

Towers' expression relaxed a little. Turn on your pick-up, Johnny, I can't see you. What was that noise?

The pick-up is on, Johnny lied. It must be out of order. That noise uh, to tell the truth, Colonel, I was fixing things so that nobody could get in here.

Towers hesitated, then said firmly, I'm going to assume that you are sick and send you to the Medical Officer. But I want you to come out of there, right away. That's an order, Johnny.

Johnny answered slowly. I can't just yet, Colonel. I came here to make up my mind and I haven't quite made it up. You said to see you after lunch.

I meant you to stay in your quarters.

Yes, sir. But I thought I ought to stand watch on the bombs, in case I decided you were wrong.

It's not for you to decide, Johnny. I'm your superior officer. You are sworn to obey me.

Yes, sir. This was wasting time; the old fox might have a squad on the way now. But I swore to keep the peace, too. Could you come out here and talk it over with me? I don't want to do the wrong thing.

Towers smiled. A good idea, Johnny. You wait there. I'm sure you'll see the light. He switched off.

There, said Johnny. I hope you're convinced that I'm a half-wit you slimy mistake! He picked up the hammer, ready to use the minutes gained.

He stopped almost at once; it dawned on him that wrecking the brains was not enough. There were no spare brains, but there was a well-stocked electronics shop. Morgan could jury-rig control circuits for bombs. Why, he could himself not a neat job, but one that would work. Damnation! He would have to wreck the bombs themselves and in the next ten minutes.

But a bomb was solid chunks of metal, encased in a heavy tamper, all tied in with a big steel gun. It couldn't be done not in ten minutes. Damn!

Of course, there was one way. He knew the control circuits; he also knew how to beat them. Take this bomb: if he took out the safety bar, unhooked the proximity circuit, shorted the delay circuit, and cut in the arming circuit by hand then unscrewed that and reached in there, he could, with just a long stiff wire, set the bomb off. Blowing the other bombs and the valley itself to Kingdom come. Also Johnny Dahlquist. That was the rub. All this time he was doing what he had thought out, up to the step of actually setting off the bomb. Ready to go, the bomb seemed to threaten, as if crouching to spring. He stood up, sweating.

He wondered if he had the courage. He did not want to funk and hoped that he would. He dug into his jacket and took out a picture of Edith and the baby. Honeychile, he said, if I get out of this, I'll never even try to beat a red light. He kissed the picture and put it back. There was nothing to do but wait.

What was keeping Towers? Johnny wanted to make sure that Towers was in blast range. What a joke on the jerk! Me sitting here, ready to throw the switch on him. The idea tickled him; it led to a better: why blow himself up alive?

There was another way to rig it a dead man control. Jigger up some way so that the last step, the one that set off the bomb, would not happen as long as he kept his hand on a switch or a lever or something. Then, if they blew open the door, or shot him, or anything up goes the balloon!

Better still, if he could hold them off with the threat of it, sooner or later help would come Johnny was sure that most of the Patrol was not in this stinking conspiracy and then: Johnny comes marching home! What a reunion! He'd resign and get a teaching job; he'd stood his watch.