No more bulletins showed up; Don backed out, intending to go to the I.T.&T. Building, not with the expectation of finding Isobel there at that hour but in hopes of picking up more news. He had not quite reached the building when he ran into a squad of M. P.’s, clearing the streets. They turned him back and dispersed the crowd at the newspaper office. As Don left the only person there was a dragon with his eyestalks pointed in several directions; he appeared to be reading all the bulletins at once. Don wanted to stop and ask him if be knew “Sir Isaac” and, if so, where his friend might be found, but an M. P. hustled him along. The squad made no attempt to send the dragon about his business; he was left in undisputed possession of the street.
Old Charlie was still up, seated at a table and smoking. His cleaver lay in front of him. Don told him what he had found out. “Charlie, do you think they will land?”
Charlie got up, went to a drawer and got out a whetstone, came back and commenced gently stroking the blade of his cleaver. “Can happen.”
“What do you think we ought to do?”
“Go to bed.”
“I’m not sleepy. What are you sharpening that thing for?”
“This is my restaurant.” He held up the tool, balanced it. “And this is my country.” He threw the blade; it turned over twice and chunked into a wood post across the room.
“Be careful with that! You might hurt somebody.”
“You go to bed.”
“But… ”
“Get some sleep. Tomorrow you wish you had.” He turned away and Don could get no more out of him. He gave up and went to his own cubbyhole, not intending to sleep but simply to think things over. For a long time after he lay down he could hear the soft swishing of stone on steel.
The sirens awoke him again; it was already light. He went out into the front room; Charlie was still there, standing over the range. “What’s going on?”
“Breakfast.” With one hand Charlie scooped a fried egg out of a pan, placed it on a slice of bread, while with the other hand he broke another egg into the grease. He slapped a second slice of bread over the egg and handed the sandwich to Don.
Don accepted it and took a large bite before replying, “Thanks. But what are they running the sirens for?”
“Fighting. Listen.”
From somewhere in the distance came the muted WhaHoom! of an explosion; cutting through the end of it and much nearer was the dry sibilance of a needle beam. Mixed with the fog drifting in the window was a sharp smell of wood burning. “Say!” Don exclaimed, his voice high, “they really did it.” Automatically, his mind no longer on food, his jaws clamped down on the sandwich.
Charlie grunted. Don went on, “We ought to get out of here.”
“And go where?”
Don had no answer for that. He finished the sandwich while still watching out the window. The smell of smoke grew stronger. A half squad of men showed up at the end of the alley, moving at a dog trot. “Look! Those aren’t our uniforms!”
“Of course not.”
The group paused at the foot of the street, then three men detached themselves and came down the alley, stopping at each door to pound on it. “Outside! Wake up in there—outside, everybody!” Two of them reached the Two Worlds Dining Room; one of them kicked on the door. It came open. “Outside! We’re going to set fire to the place.”
The man who had spoken was wearing a mottled green uniform with two chevrons; in his hands was a Reynolds one-man gun and on his back the power pack that served it. He looked around. “Say, this is a break!” He turned to the other. “Joe, keep an eye out for the lieutenant.” He looked back at Old Charlie. “You, Jack—scramble up about a dozen eggs. Make it snappy—we got to burn this place right away.”
Don was caught flat-footed, could think of nothing to do or say. A Reynolds gun brooks no argument. Charlie appeared to feel the same way for he turned back to the range as if to comply.