A Matter Of Magnitude

: A Matter Of Magnitude

When you're commanding a spaceship over a mile

long, and armed to the teeth, you don't exactly

expect to be told to get the hell out ...





The ship, for reasons that had to do with the politics of

appropriations, was named Senator Joseph L. Holloway, but the press and

the public called her Big Joe. Her captain, six-star Admiral Heselton,

thought of her as Great Big Joe, and never fully got o
er being

awestruck at the size of his command.



"She's a mighty big ship, Rogers," he said proudly to the navigator,

ignoring the latter's rather vacant stare and fixed smile. "More than a

mile long, and wider than hell." He waved his hands expansively. "She's

never touched down on Earth, you know. Never will. Too big for that.

They built her on the moon. The cost? Well ..."



Swiveling his chair around, Heselton slowly surveyed the ship's control

room with a small, satisfied smile. The two pilots sitting far forward,

almost hidden by their banks of instruments, the radar operators idly

watching their scopes, the three flight engineers sitting intently at

their enormous control consoles, and, just behind, the radio shack--its

closed door undoubtedly hiding a game of cards. For weeks now, as Big

Joe moved across the galaxy's uncharted fringe, the radio bands had been

completely dead, except, of course, for the usual star static hissing

and burbling in the background.



Turning back again to his navigator, Heselton smiled modestly and noted

that Big Joe was undisputedly the largest, most powerful, most feared,

and most effective spaceship in the known universe.



As always, Rogers nodded agreement. The fact that he'd heard it a

hundred times didn't make it any less true. Big Joe, armed with every

weapon known to Terran technology, was literally the battleship to end

all battleships. Ending battleships--and battles--was, in fact, her job.

And she did it well. For the first time, the galaxy was at peace.



* * * * *



With a relaxed sigh, Heselton leaned back to gaze at the stars and

contemplate the vastness of the universe, compared to which even Big Joe

was an insignificant dot.



"Well," said Rogers, "time for another course check. I'll ..." He jumped

back, barely avoiding the worried lieutenant who exploded upon them from

the radio shack.



"A signal, sir! Damn close, on the VHF band, their transmission is

completely overriding the background noise." He waved excitedly to

someone in the radio shack and an overhead speaker came to life emitting

a distinct clacking-grunting sound. "It's audio of some sort, sir, but

there's lots more to the signal than that."



In one motion Heselton's chair snapped forward, his right fist hit the

red emergency alert button on his desk, and his left snapped on the

ship's intercom. Lights dimmed momentarily as powerful emergency drive

units snapped into action, and the ship echoed with the sound of two

thousand men running to battle stations.



"Bridge to radar! Report."



"Radar to bridge. All clear."



Heselton stared incredulously at the intercom. "What?"



"Radar to bridge, repeating. All clear. Admiral, we've got two men on

every scope, there's nothing anywhere."



A new voice cut in on the speaker. "Radio track to bridge."



Frowning, Heselton answered. "Bridge. Come in radio track. We're

listening."



"Sir," the crisp voice of the radio track section's commander had an

excited tinge. "Sir, Doppler calculations show that the source of those

signals is slowing down somewhere to our right. It's acting like a

spaceship, sir, that's coming to a halt."



The admiral locked eyes with Rogers for a second, then shrugged. "Slow

the ship, and circle right. Radio track, can you keep me posted on the

object's position?"



"No can do, sir. Doppler effect can't be used on a slow moving source.

It's still off to our right, but that's the best I can say."



"Sir," another voice chimed in, "this is fire control. We've got our

directional antennas on the thing. It's either directly right or

directly left of the ship, matching speed with us exactly."



"Either to our right or left?"



"That's the best we can do, sir, without radar help."



"Admiral, sir," the lieutenant who had first reported the signal came

running back. "Judging from the frequency and strength, we think it's

probably less than a hundred miles away."



"Less than a hundr ..."



"Of course, we can't be positive, sir."



Heselton whirled back to the intercom. "Radar! That thing is practically

on our necks. What the hell's the matter with that equipment...?"



The radar commander's voice showed distinct signs of strain. "Can't help

it, Admiral. The equipment is working perfectly. We've tried the

complete range of frequencies, twenty-five different sets are in

operation, we're going blind looking. There is absolutely nothing,

nothing at all."



For a moment the bridge was silent, except for the clacking-grunting

from the overhead speaker which, if anything, sounded louder than

before.



"It's tv, sir!" The radio lieutenant came running in again. "We've

unscrambled the image. Here!" The communications screen on Heselton's

desk glowed for a moment, then flashed into life.



* * * * *



The figure was clearly alien, though startlingly humanoid--at least from

the waist up, which was all that showed in the screen. A large mouth and

slightly bulging eyes gave it a somewhat jovial, frog-like demeanor.

Seated at a desk similar to Heselton's, wearing a gaudy uniform

profusely strewn with a variety of insignia, it was obviously Heselton's

counterpart, the commander of an alien vessel.



"Hmmm, looks like we've contacted a new race. Let's return the call,

Lieutenant." A tiny red light glowed beneath a miniature camera on

Heselton's desk and almost at once the alien's face registered obvious

satisfaction. It waved a six-fingered hand in an unorthodox, but

friendly, greeting.



Heselton waved back.



The alien then pointed to his mouth, made several clacking-grunting

sounds, and moved a hand on his desk. The scene switched to another

alien standing in front of what looked like a blackboard, with a piece

of chalk in his hand. The meaning was clear.



"Lieutenant, have this transmission switched to the linguistics section.

Maybe those guys can work some sort of language." The screen blanked

out. Heselton leaned back, tense, obviously worried. Hesitantly, he

reached out and touched a button on the intercom.



"Astronomy."



"Professor, there's a ship right next door somewhere that should stand

out like King Kong in a kindergarten."



"I know, Admiral. I've been listening to the intercom. Our optical

equipment isn't designed for close range work, but we've been doing the

best we can, tried everything from infra-red through ultra-violet. If

there is a ship out there I'm afraid it's invisible."



Beads of sweat sprinkled Heselton's forehead. "This is bad, Rogers.

Mighty bad." Nervously, he walked across to the right of the bridge and

stood, hands clasped behind his back, staring blankly out at blackness

and the scattered stars. "I know there is a ship out there, and I know

that a ship simply can't be invisible, not to radar and optics."



"What makes you sure there is only one, sir?"



Heselton cracked his fists together. "My God, Rogers, you're right!

There might be ..."



The intercom clacked. "This is fire control again, sir. I think we've

got something on the radiation detectors."



"Good work, what did you find?"



"Slight radioactivity, typical of interstellar drive mechanisms,

somewhere off to our right. Can't tell exactly where, though."



"How far away is it?"



"I don't know, sir."



Heselton's hands dropped to his sides. "Thanks," he said, "for the

help."



His desk tv flashed into life with a picture of the smiling alien

commander. "This is the linguistics section, Admiral. The aliens

understand a fairly common galactic symbology, I believe we can

translate simple messages for you now."



"Ask him where the hell he is," Heselton snapped without thinking, then

instantly regretted it as the alien's face showed unmistakable surprise.



The alien's smile grew into an almost unbelievable grin. He turned

sideways to speak to someone out of sight of the camera and suddenly

burst into a series of roaring cackles. "He's laughing, sir." The

translator commented unnecessarily.



The joke was strictly with the aliens. Heselton's face whitened in quick

realization. "Rogers! They didn't know that we can't see them!"



"Look, sir." The navigator pointed to the tv screen and a brilliantly

clear image of Big Joe shimmering against the galaxy, lit by millions of

stars. Every missile port, even the military numerals along her nose

were clearly visible.



"They're rubbing it in, Rogers. Showing us what we look like to them."

Heselton's face was chalk. "They could blast Big Joe apart, piece by

piece--the most powerful ship in the galaxy."



"Maybe," said Rogers, "the second most powerful."



Without answering, Heselton turned and looked out again at empty space

and millions of steady, unwinking stars. His mind formed an image of a

huge, ethereal spaceship, missile ports open, weapons aimed directly at

Big Joe.



The speaker interrupted his nightmare. "This is fire control, Admiral.

With your permission I'll scatter a few C-bombs ..."



Heselton leaped for the microphone. "Are you out of your mind? We

haven't the slightest idea of the forces that guy has. We might be in

the center of a whole blooming fleet. Ever think of that?"



The alien's face, still smirking, appeared again on the screen. "He

says," said the interpreter, "that he finds the presence of our armed

ship very annoying."



Heselton knew what he had to do. "Tell him," he said, swallowing hard,

"that we apologize. This part of the galaxy is strange to us."



"He says he is contemplating blasting us out of the sky."



Heselton said nothing, but he longed to reach out and throttle the

grinning, alien face.



"However," the interpreter continued, "he will let us go safely if we

leave immediately. He says to send an unarmed, diplomatic vessel next

time and maybe his people will talk to us."



"Thank him for his kindness." Heselton's jaws clenched so tightly they

ached.



"He says," said the interpreter, "to get the hell out."



The grinning face snapped off the screen, but the cackling laughter

continued to reverberate in the control room until the radio shack

finally turned off the receiver.



"Reverse course," the admiral ordered quietly. "Maximum drive."



A thousand missile launchers, designed to disintegrate solar systems,

were deactivated, hundreds of gyros swung the mile-long ship end for end

and stabilized her on a reverse course, drive units big enough to power

several major cities whined into operation, anti-grav generators with

the strength to shift small planets counterbalanced the external

acceleration, and the ship moved, away, with a speed approaching that of

light.



"Well," muttered Heselton, "that's the very first time Big Joe has ever

had to retreat." As if it were his own personal failure, he walked

slowly across the control room and down the corridor towards his cabin.



"Admiral!" Lost in thought, Heselton barely heard the call.



"Admiral, look!" Pausing at the door to his cabin, Heselton turned to

face the ship's chief astronomer running up waving two large

photographs.



"Look, sir," the professor gasped for breath. "We thought this was a

spot on the negative, but one of the men got curious and enlarged it

about a hundred times." He held up one of the photos. It showed a small,

fuzzy, but unmistakable spaceship. "No wonder we couldn't spot it with

our instruments."



Heselton snatched it out of his hand. "I see what you mean. This ship

must have been thousands of miles ..."



The professor shook his head. "No, sir. As a matter of fact, it was

quite close by."



"But ..."



"We figure that the total length of the alien ship was roughly an inch

and a half."



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