From eight in the morning until four in the afternoon, General Alastair French holds the most dangerous job on Earth. Sealed in a hidden command center, surrounded by clocks, telephones, and a single red button, he carries the authority to unleash total nuclear retaliation. The system depends on him being calm, detached, and certain. But certainty disappears the moment a blazing object tears across the sky and obliterates Washington in a flash that leaves nothing standing.
The phones erupt. Military commanders demand action. Civilian broadcasts collapse into panic. The President orders immediate retaliation. Every voice insists that the strike must have come from Russia. Yet something feels wrong. The attack is too fast. The evidence is incomplete. And if General French presses the button without proof, he will not just answer one catastrophe—he will ignite a war that no one can survive. As the minutes crawl toward the end of his shift, he stands alone between fear and annihilation, knowing that hesitation could cost his career—but haste could cost the planet.
"Triggerman" is a razor-tight Cold War thriller that traps the reader inside a single room where history hangs on restraint. The story captures the suffocating isolation of command and the unbearable weight of irreversible choice. Instead of battlefield heroics, it gives us something far more terrifying: a quiet man forced to decide whether to trust his judgment while the world screams for blood.
J. F. Bone was a regular contributor to Astounding Science Fiction during the late 1950s and early 1960s, publishing a series of sharp, tension-driven stories that often placed ordinary professionals under extraordinary technological pressure. His fiction appeared repeatedly in Astounding under editor John W. Campbell, and he developed a reputation for tightly structured narratives built around technical plausibility and human fallibility.