by neetha Napew
United States. If holding prisoners— hostages—would help restrain them, Yeager was all for it.
Along with the rest of the Americans, he hurried forward at Sergeant Schneider's waved command to take charge of the alien POWs. Having surrendered, the Lizards seemed abjectly submissive, hurrying to obey the soldiers' gestures as best they could. Even to Invaders from Space, come along and f/7/s way were easy enough to put across.
Schneider seemed convinced the band he led — with everything from officers to weapons to organization in short supply, slapping a more formally military name than that on it was optimistic— had done something important. "We want to get these scaly sons of bitches out of here and back up to Ashton just as fast as we can, before more of 'em come along." He told off half a dozen men: "You, you, you, you, you, and you." Yeager was the fourth
"you," Mutt Daniels the fifth. "Get back to the bus that brought us here and take 'em away on it. The rest of us'll dig in and hope we see more men before the Lizards decide to push harder. Good Lord willing, you can drop 'em off and head down this way again inside a couple of hours. Now get your butts in gear"
Flanked by men with loaded, bayonet-tipped rifles, the Lizards picked their way through and over debris toward the yellow school bus that had been pressed into service as a troop hauler. Yeager would have preferred the dignity of a proper khaki Army truck, but up at Ashton, a school bus was what they had.
The key was still in the bus ignition. Otto Chase looked at it with a certain amount of apprehension. "Anybody here able to drive this big honking thing?" the onetime cement-plant worker asked.
"I reckon Sam and I just might be able to
handle it," Mutt Daniels said with a sidelong glance at Yeager. The ballplayer puffed up his cheeks like a chipmunk to hold in his laughter. Alter half a lifetime bouncing around in buses, helping to repair them by the side of the road, pushing them when they broke down, there wasn't a whole lot about them he didn't know.
Mutt, moreover, had been bouncing around in buses essentially ever since there were buses. If there was anything about them he didn't know, Yeager had no idea what it was. Daniels waited for the rest of the men to herd the Lizards to the wide rear seat, then started the engine, turned the bus around in a street most people would have thought too narrow for turning around a bus, and headed back to Ashton.
He stayed off Highway 52 and Highway 30, preferring the back-country roads less likely to draw attention from the air. Raising his voice to be heard over the noise of the motor, he
said, "Reminds me of the country just back of the front line in France in 1918, right where the Boches got farthest. Parts of it are all tore, up, but you go fifty yards on and you'd swear nobody ever heard o' war."
The description was apt, Yeager thought. Most of the farms that sprawled among belts of forest between Amboy and Ashton were untouched. Men wearing wide-brimmed hats and overalls worked in several fields; cows grazed here and there, black and white splotches vivid against the cheerful green of grass and growing crops. By the calm way life went on, the nearest Lizard might have been ten billion light-years off.
But every so often, the bus would rattle past a bomb or shell crater, an ugly brown scar on the land's smooth green skin. There were cattle by those craters, too, cattle on their sides bloating under the warm summer sun. And a couple of the neat frame farm buildings
were neither neat nor buildings any longer, but more like a giant's game of pick-up-sticks. Fat crows, startled by the bus' racket, flapped into the air, cawing resentment at having their feasting interrupted.
Still, as Mutt had said, the eye could mostly forget the war whose border the bus had just left behind. The nose had a harder time. Yeager wondered if the faint reek of smoke and corruption simply clung to him, the other Americans, and the Lizards; if it came in through the open windows of the bus from the lightly damaged countryside through which they were driving; or if the breeze, which was out of the west, swept it along the front line.
The four unwounded Lizards did what they could for the two who were hurt. It wasn't much; the humans had stripped them of the belts that along with their helmets were all they wore— no telling what deadly marvels they might have concealed inside.
Yeager had never thought about how Invaders from Space might feel if they were wounded and captured by humans who were as alien to them as they were to people. They didn't look all-powerful or supremely evil. They just looked worried. In their shoes (if they'd worn shoes), he would have been worried, too.
He picked up one of the belts, started opening pouches. Before long, he found what looked like a bandage, wrapped in some clear stuff smoother and more pliable than cellophane. If it concealed a deadly marvel, he decided, he'd eat his helmet He pushed past the rest of the Americans— who still had their rifles leveled at the Lizards— and held out the bandage pack.
"What the hell you doing?" Otto Chase growled. "Who cares whether them damn things live or die?"
"If they're prisoners of war, we're supposed to
treat 'em decent," Yeager answered. "Besides, they hold a lot more of our kind than we do of theirs. Tormenting 'em might not be what you call smart."
Chase grunted and subsided. The Lizards' eyes swiveled from Yeager's face to the bandage and back again. They reminded him of the chameleon he'd seen at the zoo in— was it Salt Lake? Maybe Spokane. Whichever, it was a long time ago now.
One of the Lizards took the bandage pack in its small hand. As it used its claws to tear open the wrapping, it hissed something at Yeager. It and all its companions, even the two injured ones, lowered their turreted eyes to the floor of the bus for a second or two. Then it deftly began to bandage a gash in a wounded Lizard's flank.
"Paw through those belts," Yeager said over his shoulder. "See if you can find some more
bandages." He was afraid the others would argue more, but they didn't. He heard their feet shift. Somebody— he didn't look back to see who— handed him another pack and then another. He passed them on to the Lizards.
By the time the bus pulled up in front of the Mills and Petrie Memorial Center in Ashton, the injured Lizards were swathed in enough gauze to make them look like something halfway between real wounded soldiers and Boris Karloff as the Mummy. Men in Army khaki, civilian denim and plaid flannel, and every possible combination thereof milled around in front of the stone and yellow brick building.
Through the open driver's window, Mutt Daniels yelled, "We got Lizard prisoners in here. What the devil we supposed to do with 'em?"
That drew all the attention he wanted and
then some. People converged on the school bus at a dead run. Some pushing and elbowing followed, as men of higher rank made those below them give way. The first officer who actually got into the bus was a full colonel, the highest-ranking fellow Yeager had seen in Ashton (when he'd joined up a couple of weeks before, Sergeant Schneider had been the highest-ranking soldier in Ashton).
"Tell me how you took them, soldier," he said in a drawl almost as thick as Mutt's. "They're some of the very first Lizard captives we've managed to get our hands on."
"Yes, sir, Colonel Collins," Daniels answered, reading the name badge on the officer's right breast pocket. He ended up telling only part of the story, though, for the rest of the men, Yeager among them, kept interrupting with details of their own. Sam knew that wasn't showing proper military discipline, but he
didn't care. If this Colonel Collins, whoever he was, didn't want to listen to Americans speaking their minds, to hell with him.
Collins listened without complaint. When the story was done, he said, "You boys had the luck of the devil— I hope you know that. Hadn't been for those Warhawks takin' out the enemy helicopters" (So that's the right name for them, Yeager thought), "you could've had a mighty thin time of it."
The colonel strode down the center aisle of the bus to get a closer look at the Lizards; like almost everyone else in the still free part of the United States, he hadn't yet really seen
any of them. He brushed past Yeager, studied the prisoners for a couple of minutes, then turned back to their captors. "Don't look like so much, do they?"
"No, sir," Yeager said, in chorus with the other Americans. Collins, he thought, looked like
quite a lot The colonel was about Mutt's age, but with that and their accents the resemblance between them ceased. Collins was tall, still slim, handsome, with a full head of silver hair. He didn't keep a chaw in his cheek. Without the uniform, Yeager would have guessed him a politician, say, the mayor of a medium-sized and prosperous city.
He said, "You boys did somethin' special here; I'll see you're all promoted for it."
All the men grinned. Mutt said, "Sergeant Schneider, back there in Amboy, he deserves a big part o' the credit, sir." Yeager nodded vigorously.
"I'll see that he gets it, then," Collins promised. "Any time privates speak well of a sergeant when he's not around to hear it, I reckon he's some sort of special man." As the soldiers chuckled, Collins went on, "Now the thing we have to do is get these Lizards
someplace where they can be studied by people who have a chance of figuring out what they're all about and what they're up to."
Yeager spoke up. "I'll help get 'em there, sir."
Colonel Collins fixed him with a cold gray stare. "You so eager to get out of the front line, eh, soldier?"
"No, sir, that doesn't have a thing to do with it," Yeager said, first flustered and then angry. He wondered if Collins had ever been in the front line. Maybe during the First World War, he admitted to himself. He didn't know how to read the fruit salad of service ribbons on the colonel's left breast.
"Why should I pick you in particular, then?" Collins demanded.
"Best reason I can think of, sir, is that I've been reading science fiction for a long time.
I've been thinking about men from Mars and invaders from space a lot longer and harder than anybody else you're likely to find, sir."
Collins was still staring at him, but not in the same way. "Damned if I know what kind of answer I expected, but that's not it. You're saying you're more likely to be mentally flexible around these— things— than someone chosen at random, are you?"
"Yes, sir." Yeager hadn't been in the Army long, but he'd learned in a hurry not to promise too much, so he hedged: "I hope so, sir, anyhow."
Like managers, officers earn their pay by making up their minds in a hurry and then following through. After what couldn't have been more than a ten-second pause, Collins said, "Okay, soldier, you want it so bad, you've got it. Your name is—?"
"Samuel Yeager, sir," Yeager said, saluting. He could hardly keep the grin off his face as he spelled Yeager.
The colonel pulled out a little notebook and a gold-plated mechanical pencil. He was, Yeager saw, a southpaw. He put the notebook away as soon as he'd jotted down Sam's name. "All right, Private. Yeager—"
Mutt Daniels spoke up: "Ought to be Co'poral Yeager, sir, or at least RFC." When Collins turned to frown at him, he went on blandly, "You did say you were promotin' us."
Yeager wished Mutt had kept his mouth shut, and waited for Colonel Collins to get angry. Instead, the colonel burst out laughing. "I know an old soldier when I hear one. Tell me you weren't in France and I'll call you a liar."
"Can't do it, sir," Mutt said with a wide, ingratiating smile that kept a lot of umpires
from throwing him out of the game no matter how outrageously he carried on.
"You better not try." Collins gave his attention back to Sam. "All right, RFC Yeager, you will serve as liaison to these Lizard prisoners until they are delivered to competent authorities in Chicago." He took out his notebook again, wrote rapidly. As he tore out a couple of sheets, he added, "These orders give discretion to your superiors in Chicago. They may send you back here, or they may let you stay on with the Lizards if you show you're more valuable in that role."
"Thank you, sir," Yeager exclaimed, pocketing the orders Collins gave him. They reminded him of Bobby Fiore's brief tryout with Albany— if he didn't perform right away, they'd ship him out and never give him another chance to show he could do the job. But he wouldn't even get as long as Bobby'd had; they'd likely be in Chicago tonight, though God only knew
who competent authorities were or how long it would take to find them. Still, he had to get on the Lizards' good side in a hurry. One way to do that seemed obvious: "Sir, if there's a doctor or medic out there, to see to the wounds on these two..."
Collins nodded crisply. He strode back to the door of the bus. As if that were a signal, all the lower-ranking officers waiting outside swarmed toward it Collins' upraised hand did what King Canute only dreamed of: it held back the tide. The colonel stuck his head out of the bus and shouted, "Finkelstein!"
"Sir!" A skinny fellow with glasses and a thick head of uncombed curly black hair pushed his way through the crowd.
"He's a Jew," Collins remarked, "but he's a damned fine doctor."
Yeager would not have cared— much— if
Finkelstein were a Negro. It didn't matter one way or the other to the Lizards, that was for sure. Black bag in hand, the doctor scrambled up into the bus. "Who's hurt?" he asked in a thick New York accent. Then his eyes went wide. "Oh."
"Come on," Yeager said; if he was going to be Lizard liaison, he had to get on with the job. He led Finkelstein back to the Lizards, who had sat quietly through the colloquy with Collins. He hoped the creatures from another planet recognized him as the man who had let them have the bandages to bind up their wounds. Maybe they did; they showed no agitation when he brought the doctor right up to them.
But when Finkelstein made as if to tug at one of those bandages, the unhurt Lizards let out a volley of evil-sounding hisses. One of them stood up from his seat, clawed hands outstretched. "How can you let them know I'm
not going to do anything bad to them?"
Sam thought, How the devil do I know? But if he couldn't invent an answer, somebody else would end up trying. He hoped for inspiration, and for once it came. He handed his rifle to Otto Chase, rolled up a sleeve. "Make like you're putting a bandage on my arm, then take it off again. Maybe they'll get the idea that that's what you're supposed to do."
"Yeah, that might work," Finkelstein said enthusiastically. He opened his medical bag, took out a paper-wrapped bandage. "Hate to waste anything sterile," he muttered as he opened it. He wrapped it around Yeager's arm. His hands were deft and quick and gentle. The Lizards watched him intently.
Yeager sighed and did his best to pantomime relief. He had no idea whether he got the idea across to the Lizards. Finkelstein undid the bandage. Then he tried moving toward one of
the wounded prisoners again. This time, their uninjured companions, though they hissed among themselves, made no move to stop him.
The edge of a bandage came up easily. "It's not tape," the doctor said, as much to himself as to Yeager. "I wonder how it stays on." He peeled it back farther, looked at the wound in the Lizard's side. He let out a hiss of his own. "Shell fragment, I'd guess. Give me my bag, soldier." He grabbed a probe. "Warn him this may hurt."
Who, me? But this was what Yeager had asked for. He got the Lizards' attention, pinched himself, did his best to imitate the noises the wounded captives had made. Then he pointed to Finkelstein, the probe, and the injury. He looked at that as briefly as he could; he found torn flesh to be torn flesh, whether it belonged to man or Lizard.
Finkelstein slowly inserted the probe. The wounded Lizard sat very still, then hissed and quivered at the same moment as the doctor exclaimed, "Found it! Not too big and not too deep." He withdrew the probe, took out a pair of long, thin grasping tongs. "Almost there, almost there... got it!" His hands drew back; the tongs came out of the wound clenched on a half-inch sliver of metal. A drop of the Lizard's blood fell from it to the floor of the bus.
All the alien prisoners, even the wounded one, spoke excitedly in their own language. The one who had threatened the doctor with claws lowered his weird eyes
toward the ground and stood very still. Yeager had seen the captives do that before. It had to be a kind of salute, he thought.
The doctor started to replace the bandage, then paused and glanced toward Yeager. "Think I ought to dust the wound with sulfa? Can Earth germs live on a thing from God
knows where? Or would I be running a bigger risk of poisoning the Lizard?"
Again, Yeager's first thought was, How should I know? Why was a doctor asking medical questions of a minor league outfielder without a high school diploma? Then he realized that when it came to Lizards, he might not know a whole lot less than Finkelstein. After a few seconds' thought, he answered, "Seems to me they must come from a planet that isn't too different than ours, or they wouldn't want Earth in the first place. So maybe our germs would like them."
"Yeah, that makes sense. Okay, I'll do it." The doctor poured the yellow powder into the wound, patted the bandage down. It clung as well as it had before.