The city crouched grimly about them. Even though they had neither seen nor heard any life in these streets save a few small animals who had fled their coming, they gripped their projectors at the ready.
Almost every structure had been damaged. Many were mere twisted heaps of debris, timbers and girders thrusting insanely at a sky that today was blue and benign. The taller, sturdier buildings still stood, but their walls were cracked and their windows gaping hollow eyes in the blank faces. Rubble clogged the streets, and grass had split the pavements. Here and there among the ruins a sapling stood bravely, its roots grasping in the shattered masonry.
In the streets, rusting and ancient, were objects which they surmised must have been vehicles. In some of them they found fragments of bone and shreds of clothing. They had seen other bones; in doorways, on the ground floors of the few buildings they had penetrated.
"Whatever it was," the second-in-command said, "it struck them swiftly."
"Some sickness, a virus, perhaps?" the astrogator suggested.
The commander shook his head. "War," he said. "Only war could do this to a city."
The lieutenant said admiringly, "Whoever they were, they certainly developed some pretty terrific weapons."
The commander had smiled, and patted his projector. "No more terrific than these," he said. "Our own people developed weapons, too. Thank the stars that we have learned not to use them on each other."
The scholar looked up from the inscription he had found on the side of a building.
"And thank the stars," he said, "that we learned in time. The people of this world apparently did not."