[A Honeymoon in Space by George Griffith]@TWC D-Link book
A Honeymoon in Space

CHAPTER X
11/16

We shouldn't have got out cannons and shot at him before we'd even made his acquaintance.
"Now, if he, or they, had dropped in America as we were going down there, we should have received them with deputations, given them banquets, which they might not have been able to eat, and speeches, which they would not understand, and photographed them, and filled the newspapers with everything that we could imagine about them, and then put them in a palace car and hustled them round the country for everybody to look at." "And meanwhile," laughed Redgrave, "some of your smart engineers, I suppose, would have gone over the vessel they had come in, found out how she was worked, and taken out a dozen patents for her machinery." "Very likely," replied Zaidie, with a saucy little toss of her chin; "and why not?
We like to learn things down there--and anyhow that would be much more really civilised than shooting at them." While this little conversation was going on, the _Astronef_ was dropping rapidly into the midst of the Martian fleet, which had again arranged itself in a circle.

Zaidie soon made out through her glasses that the guns were pointed upwards.
"Oh, that's your little game, is it!" said Redgrave, when she had told him of this.

"Well, if you want a fight, you can have it." As he said this, his jaws came together, and Zaidie saw a look in his eyes that she had never seen there before.

He signalled rapidly two or three times to Murgatroyd.

The propellers began to whirl at their utmost speed, and the _Astronef_, making a spiral downward course, swooped down on to the Martian fleet with terrific velocity.


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