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bbled onto the wooden veranda and stared with the others. "An airplane," he croaked. "Haer's gone too far this time. Too far, too far. This will strip him. Strip him, understand." Then he added, "Why doesn't it make any noise?" Lieutenant Colonel Paul Warren stood next to his commanding officer. "It looks like a glider, sir." Cogswell glowered at him. "A what?" "A glider, sir. It's a sport not particularly popular these days." "What keeps it up, confound it?" Paul Warren looked at him. "The same thing that keeps a hawk up, an albatross, a gull--" "A vulture, you mean," Cogswell snarled. He watched it for another long moment, his face working. He whirled on his chief of artillery. "Jed, can you bring that thing down?" The other had been viewing the craft through field binoculars, his face as shocked as the rest of them. Now he faced his chief, and lowered the glasses, shaking his head. "Not with the artillery of pre-1900. No, sir." "What can you do?" Cogswell barked. The artillery man was shaking his head. "We could mount some Maxim guns on wagon wheels, or something. Keep him from coming low." "He doesn't have to come low," Cogswell growled unhappily. He spun on Lieutenant Colonel Warren again. "When were they invented?" He jerked his thumb upward. "Those things." Warren was twisting his face in memory. "Some time about the turn of the century." "How long can the things stay up?" Warren took in the surrounding mountainous countryside. "Indefinitely, sir. A single pilot, as long as he is physically able to operate. If there are two pilots up there to relieve each other, they could stay until food and water ran out." "How much weight do they carry?" "I'm not sure. One that size, certainly enough for two men and any equipment they'd need. Say, five hundred pounds." Cogswell had his telescope glued to his eyes again, he muttered under his breath, "Five hundred pounds! They could even unload dynamite over our horses. Stampede them all over the reservation." "What's going on?" Baron Zwerdling shrilled. "What's going on Marshal Cogswell?" Cogswell ignored him. He watched the circling, circling craft for a full five minutes, breathing deeply. Then he lowered his glass and swept the assembled officers of his staff with an indignant glare. "Ten Eyck!" he grunted. An infantry colonel came to attention. "Yes, sir." Cogswell said heavily, deliberately. "Under a white flag. A dispatch to
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