A massive object appears overnight at the edge of a rural woodlot, and the Army moves quickly to secure the site. Brigadier General Straut takes command with the confidence of a decorated officer who has spent his career making fast decisions under pressure. The thing is silent, sealed, and unlike anything anyone has seen before. When strange sounds begin coming from inside, tension spreads through the field crews working around it. Something is alive in there.
As hours pass with no answers, Straut grows impatient. A small metal cube discovered near the craft appears to be broadcasting a message, but the code teams in Washington are still trying to decipher it. Scientists urge caution while soldiers tighten their perimeter. Then the craft suddenly opens, revealing a glimpse of something enormous moving inside. Casualties follow, nerves snap, and Straut must decide whether to wait for understanding or destroy the unknown threat before it escapes.
Keith Laumer delivers a tight, escalating encounter that places human judgment under a microscope. The story unfolds through sharp dialogue, rising urgency, and the uneasy balance between caution and command authority. Each step toward action pushes the situation closer to a point where one irreversible choice will define everything that follows.
Keith Laumer (1925-1993) was an American science fiction writer and former U.S. Air Force officer whose fiction frequently drew on military experience and diplomatic service. His best-known works include the long-running Retief stories about an irreverent interstellar diplomat, along with novels such as Bolo and A Plague of Demons. Laumer's shorter fiction appeared widely in magazines including Galaxy Science Fiction, If, and Analog, where he became known for combining sharp wit with fast-moving speculative scenarios.