A diplomatic visit to Venus is supposed to end quietly, with formal handshakes and a routine departure. Instead, unseen listeners hear something they were never meant to hear, and a private decision hardens into a plan that allows no retreat. What follows is not a race against time, but a tightening trap where loyalty is tested in silence and hesitation becomes as dangerous as action.
As the Earth-ship prepares to lift, a small group convinces itself that delay equals extinction. Their solution is precise, technical, and merciless—but it requires one of them to step forward alone. When no one does, the plan begins to rot from the inside. Suspicion replaces trust, resolve turns brittle, and a single choice quietly reshapes who will pay the final cost.
Double-Cross is a tense, compact story that strips sabotage down to its most human elements: fear of replacement, the urge to control outcomes, and the terror of being the only one willing to act. Pohl refuses to soften the moment where intention meets consequence, letting the pressure build until a decision is made that cannot be undone.
Frederik Pohl was already an active presence in professional science fiction when Double-Cross appeared, publishing frequently in magazines such as Astounding Science Fiction and Galaxy. He would later become one of the field’s most influential editors and novelists, but this early story shows his sharp instinct for moral pressure and social fracture. Even at short length, Pohl demonstrates how quickly a justified cause can collapse once fear dictates the rules.
























