What could have brought about such a change in policy? Curiously he studied the face. It was striking: a strong, clear face with much character, fair-skinned, blue-eyed, flaxen-haired – it was such a perfect example of the Titan ideal that its owner just
“Sit down, Oblomot,” the Chairman said, his voice heavy with strain.
“Incredible!” was Sobrie’s reaction. “It’s just unbelievable.”
“Unbelievable but true.”
“Can we be sure? Suppose it’s just another Titan story? An invention?”
“It’s true enough,” the once-anonymous member said. “It comes from two sources. The Titans have intentionally passed the information to the League, through contacts they have. But I’m able to confirm it independently, through my position in the Legions. The consternation among ourselves is nothing compared with what’s going on there, I assure you.”
Without the voice modifier the Titan’s voice was strong and resonant, mature but somehow still youthful. “I don’t really understand all that scientific stuff you just read out,” Sobrie said to the Chairman. “But is that literally true – that we’ll all be annihilated? By an alien … time-wave … from the future?”
“Not only us, but all life on Earth. Unless we can find a way to stop it.”
“And where does that leave us – the League?”
“That’s what we were discussing before you came in,” the Chairman told him after a heavy pause. “It’s no good denying that what we thought was Titan paranoia has, in the event, been vindicated. We
“The League must disband itself voluntarily and go over to the Titans,” a voice said. “That will happen anyway, among the greater part of our membership.”
“Those of us who failed to attend this meeting doubtless have already taken that step,” the Chairman added.
Sobrie was shocked by this talk. To talk of joining forces with the hated Titans! To abandon the age-old goal of racial equality!
“But we
The Titan spoke. “As I see it, there is very little choice. It’s not a matter of saving threatened subspecies any more. It’s a matter of the survival of mankind. I, who have lived with the Titans all my life, and have always hated them, now see that only they can save us. They’re the only hope for humanity: from now on I’ll be a loyal Titan officer.”
Sobrie’s wasn’t the only voice to express dismay at the way things were going. Two others broke in together, making angry denunciations of this betrayal of their ideals.
Sobrie added his own accusations. “And what of the dev subspecies?” he flared. “The Amhraks, the Urukuri and the others? Are they to be abandoned?”
“Regrettably, they must go by the board,” the unmasked Titan said evenly. “They’re too trivial to deserve our attention in a crisis of such proportions as this. It’s humanity, not any particular subspecies, that’s at stake.”
Voices rose in violent argument. And faces that had long grown hard in a life of continuous plotting began to show their determination, one way or the other.
Sobrie was not sure how, or when, shooting broke out. Guns seemed to appear in several hands at once. A bullet caught the Titan in the chest and he went down, slumping against the table, his handsome, clean-cut face sagging in extreme nervous shock. Shots exploded deafeningly. The Chairman, even as he squeezed the trigger, was hit in the shoulder and spun around with a snarl of pain.
Somewhat belatedly Sobrie produced his own gun, ducking below the level of the table, only to see that all the voices that had been added to his side of the argument had been silenced, their owners dead.
He ripped open his shirt, plunged his hand inside, and slowly rose.
Guns were trained on him. He took his hand from his shirt and held up the s-grenade he had taken from his body-pouch.
“Don’t move, anyone,” he said in a strained voice, “or we all get it.”
Step by step he backed to the door, their eyes watching him blankly. In seconds he had reached it, flung it open and then was racing through the cavernous cellars.
White faces, shocked by the sound of gunfire, stared at him, their mouths black holes. He waved the gun and shoved people aside, strangely aware that no pursuit was, as yet, being organised. No more than twenty seconds passed before he had reached the nearest exit. He plunged into it, up the dank tunnel, pounding along it for yard after yard.