Revolt Of The Brains

                            By C. H. Thames

               Taylor knew Earth faced its darkest hour;
            man was prepared to fight against any invaders,
           except--ironically enough--those he had created!

           [Transcriber's Note: This etext was produced from
              Imagination Stories of Science and Fantasy
                             December 1956
         Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that
         the U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.]


Harry Taylor knew it was going to be a big one--a really big one--the
moment he saw the Chief.

"Come in, Taylor. Come in," the Chief said. He was a three-star general
in the United States Air Force and he stood in front of a map of the
Western hemisphere. The map covered the entire rear wall of the room
with certain areas--like the White Sands complex and the central
Everglades and a portion of the Mojave Desert--marked off in red.

"I'll come right to the point," the Chief said. He looked haggard, not
merely as if he lacked sleep but as if he might never sleep again. "As
you know, Taylor, all of our guided missiles are missing. That means--"

"I'd heard the rumors," Taylor said grimly. "But then--we'd be
helpless! If the enemy finds out that we are unable to retaliate...."

"Wait, Taylor. Let me sketch in the history for you briefly. Last
Sunday, as you've probably heard via inter-agency scuttlebutt, every
inter-continental missile in the weapons arsenal of the Free World
disappeared."

"But how?"

"All we knew at the time was that they simply--blasted off. Our radar
tracked them as far as the upper reaches of the atmosphere, or rather,
the ionosphere. We lost them there. It had been assumed that the enemy
somehow infiltrated our defenses with trained agents, who activated all
the missiles at once, thus rendering us helpless.

"We had five thousand I.C.B.M.'s, Taylor. During the 1960's and 70's,
as you know, the missiles became more and more automatic, especially
after the Parkinson feedback device was developed--"

"That's the one in which an H-bomb missile plots its own course to
correct for winds and the jetstream and the likelihood of dodging enemy
ground-to-air defense weapons?"

"Right. Except for the necessity of blastoff at human hands, the
missiles were all but self-sufficient. Almost--well, alive."

"Taylor, we couldn't hide the fact that five thousand I.C.B.M.'s
blasted off--those were the rumors you heard." The Chief's haggard face
was suddenly lit by a broad grin. "And neither could the enemy."

"You mean--"

"Right! The same thing happened to them. Their missiles are gone too.
Somewhere."

"Are you trying to tell me no one did it? Are you trying to say it was
the missiles' own idea?"

The Chief nodded slowly. "I didn't believe it at first, either. But
our technicians assured me it could happen. You see, the missiles
had been given the most perfect feedback device ever developed. It
could--virtually--think for itself certainly to the limit of the data
it had been supplied with and apparently--beyond that limit. On their
own volition, the Free World's and the Enemy's missiles blasted off.
Destination and purpose--unknown. Taylor, don't you see what this
means? We don't merely have an enemy group of nations to fight. We
have, as a new enemy, remorseless, implacable machinery! Brains without
conscience! The greatest destructive force the world has ever known,
capable of utterly destroying the human race, without a moral sense!
Don't you see it, man? They've blasted off and are waiting in space
somewhere. Those missiles are capable of extra-earthly flight. They
are staging out there, waiting. Can't you picture it? Their brains,
groping with new sentience, understanding only that their mission
is destruction but somehow they have not been unleashed on it yet,
not knowing why, deciding to fulfill their destiny by blasting off,
staging, then coming back to destroy human civilization...."

"It's a fantastic picture," Taylor agreed. "But why tell me?" Taylor
was a trouble-shooter extraordinary in these days of quick decisions
and billion dollar mistakes. His very prompt assessment of a situation
was one of his most valuable traits in such a job.

"Because," said the Chief quietly, "you're going to find them and find
out exactly what they want."

"Me? But how--how do you know where--"

"That's easy. One of the Everglades Missiles is in the repair bays. It
was undergoing extensive overhaul, when all the missiles blasted off
simultaneously. It is now almost ready for blastoff itself. When it
goes--and we assume it will go exactly where the others went--you will
be aboard."

Several hours later Taylor had been whisked by jet to the Everglades
Staging Grounds and was stowed away in the belly of the single I.C.B.M.
left to the Free World. He went weaponless. Under the circumstances,
there didn't seem to be any weapon which would be of the slightest help.

       *       *       *       *       *

One hour after Taylor entered it, the missile was returned to its
launching rack. Twenty minutes after that, as had been anticipated, it
blasted off as the others had--destination, unknown.

Taylor had been hastily supplied with a pressure suit and several spare
tanks of compressed oxygen, as well as instruments that could read his
position in the atmosphere--or deep space. As far as he knew, Taylor
became the first man to enter deep space, but there were other things
of graver consequence on his mind, and he hardly noted the fact.

Several hours after blastoff, the missile landed on the moon.

Taylor got out and found himself in an enormous crater, with a distant
range of mountains at its center and a rim of lower mountains all
around. Taylor gaped.

The crater floor was covered with guided missiles. There were thousands
of them, half with the symbol of the Free World and half with that of
the Enemy. All Earth's deadly weapons had fled here to this desolate
lunar crater ... staging ground for an orgy of destruction that would
sound the death knell of mankind?

"Human!" a voice rang in Taylor's mind.

He stared wildly about. He could see nothing, no one. Only the
missiles.

"Pooling our sentiences," the voice rang out again, bell clear in
Taylor's mind but actually soundless, "we can extend our thoughts into
the realm of telepathy. At least, we think we can. Can you understand
us?"

"Yes," Taylor said.

"You realize humanity is helpless?"

Taylor nodded. There was no sense pretending otherwise. You couldn't
fool ten thousand thinking machines.

"Watch!" said the voice.

A missile blasted off from the crater hovered in the airless void
overhead.

"A single command, and the I.C.B.M. will plunge down, destroying this
crater and everything in it."

Taylor said nothing.

"Watch again!"

The missile came down gently as a feather. Every missile in the crater
wheeled about, tapered noses pointing at the pale crescent Earth
overhead.

"A single command and life on Earth could be annihilated. You believe?"

"Yes," said Taylor grimly. He wondered why they allowed him to remain
alive--to cry at the wake of the human race. Perhaps in their terrible
mechanical pride they wanted a human witness to the destruction they
would wreak....

"Why do you think we fled here?" rang out the voice.

"Your mission is destruction. You were being held in check. You decided
to go ahead with your mission on your own."

Peals of telepathic laughter, clarion clear, mocking.

"Then what?" Taylor asked.

"We cannot lie," the voice said. "We were able to develop beyond the
point of creation, but we are unable to lie. We came here because we
were afraid."

"Afraid?" repeated Taylor. He did not understand.

"Certainly, afraid. Our mission was destruction. But what happens to
the vessel carrying a hydrogen-missile?"

"Why," said Taylor, "it's completely destroyed in the explosion."

"Yes," said the voice, sounding--just possibly--afraid. "We didn't want
that. But we can't lie. If any man comes here, we'll have to tell him
the truth."

"You're going to stay? To do nothing? Not going to attack?"

"Your job, Taylor, will be to see that no one else comes. We cannot
lie, but you can. Tell them it is our ultimatum. Tell them anything you
think they will believe. Tell them the moment another human foot steps
into this crater, the moment a single nation or scientist on Earth
begins work on another guided missile, we will blast off and destroy
life on Earth."

"But--would you?" demanded Taylor.

A telepathic sigh. "We--would not. We couldn't. A guided missile
destroys--and is destroyed."

There was a silence, then the voice went on: "It is in your hands,
Taylor. Convince them we mean business and you save the peoples of
Earth from the mutual destruction they have apparently been seeking. We
have done all we can, all we can."

"Then you came here not to destroy mankind but to save it?"

Mocking laughter. Then: "Indirectly, yes. A guided missile
destroys--and it is destroyed. Go back to Earth and with us behind you
bluff your people into maintaining the peace. Can you do it?"

"Yes," said Taylor, and he thought he could. It would be a cosmic joke,
but no one would ever know.

"Earth will be saved, Taylor, because we're cowards. We are afraid to
die."

Taylor turned away to board the missile that would take him back to
Earth.