Morale | Page 2

Murray Leinster
beach. The Diesel tramp edged closer inshore still. It was all
very peaceful and placid. There are few softer jobs on earth than being
a member of a "force in being" for the sake of civilian morale.
* * * * *
But at 2:32 P. M. the softness of that job departed, as far as Sergeant
Walpole was concerned. At that moment he heard a thin wailing sound
high aloft. It was well enough known nearer the front, but the Eastern
Coast Observation Force had had no need to become unduly familiar
with it. With incredible swiftness the wailing rose to the shrillest of
shrieks, descending as lightning might be imagined to descend. Then
there was a shattering concussion. It was monstrous. It was ear-splitting.
Windows crashed in the cottage and tinkled to the sandy earth outside.
There was a pause of seconds' duration only, during which Sergeant
Walpole stared blankly and gasped, "What the hell?" Then there was a
second thin wailing which rose to a scream....
Sergeant Walpole was in motion before the second explosion came. He
was diving off the veranda of Post Number Fourteen. He saw someone
else coming through a window. He had a photographic glimpse of one
of his men emerging through a doorway. Then he struck earth and
began to run. Like everybody else in America, he knew what the
explosions and the screamings meant.

But he had covered no more than fifty yards when the third bomb fell
from that plane so far aloft that it was not even a mote in the sky. Up
there the sky was not even blue, but a dull leaden gray because of the
thinness of the atmosphere yet above it. The men in that high-flight
bomber could see the ground only as a mass of vaguely blending colors.
They were aiming their bombs by filtered light, through telescopes
which used infra-red rays only, as aerial cameras did back in the 1920's.
And they were sighting their eggs with beautifully exact knowledge of
their velocity and height. By the time the bombs had dropped eight
miles they were traveling faster than the sound of their coming. The
first two had wiped out Posts Thirteen and Fifteen. The third made no
sound before it landed, except to an observer at a distance. Sergeant
Walpole heard neither the scream of fall nor the sound of its explosion.
* * * * *
He was running madly, and suddenly the earth bucked violently
beneath his feet, and he had a momentary sensation of things flying
madly by over his head, and then he knew nothing at all for a very long
time. Then his head ached horribly and someone was popping at
something valorously with a rifle, and he heard the nasty sharp
explosions of the hexynitrate bullets which have remodeled older ideas
of warfare, and Sergeant Walpole was aware of an urgent necessity to
do something, but he could not at all imagine what it was. Then a shell
went off, the earth-concussion banged his nose against the sand, and the
rifle-fire stopped.
"For Gawd's sake!" said Sergeant Walpole dizzily.
He staggered to his feet and looked behind him. Where the cottage had
been there was a hole. Quite a large hole. It was probably a hundred
yards across and all of twenty deep, but sea-water was seeping in to fill
it through the sand. Its edge was forty or fifty feet from where he stood.
He had been knocked down by the heaving earth, and the sand and mud
blown out of the crater had gone clean over him. Twenty feet back, the
top part of his body would have been cut neatly off by the blast. As it
was....

* * * * *
He found his nose bleeding and plugged it with his handkerchief. He
was still rather dazed, and he still had the feeling that there was
something extremely important that he must do. He stood rocking on
his feet, trying to clear his head, when two men came along the
sand-dunes behind the beach. One of them carried two automatic rifles.
The other was trying to bandage a limp and flapping arm as he ran.
They saw the Sergeant and ran to him.
"Hell, Sarge, I thought y'were blown to little egg-shells."
"I ain't," said Sergeant Walpole. He looked again at the hole in the
ground and swore painedly.
"Look at that," said the man with the flapping arm. "Hell's goin' to pop
around here, Sarge."
The sergeant swung around. Then his mouth dropped open. Just half a
mile away and hardly more than two hundred yards from the shore-line,
the Diesel tramp was ramming the beach. A wake still foamed behind it.
A monstrous bow-wave spread out on either hand, over-topping even
the
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