Classic Audiobook Collection - Children of the Lens by E. E. Smith ~ Full Audiobook [scifi]
Episode Date: October 7, 2025Children of the Lens by E. E. Smith audiobook. Genre: scifi In the climactic final volume of E. E. Smith's Lensman saga, the war between Civilization and the shadowy power of Boskone enters a new and... dangerous phase. Kimball Kinnison and Clarissa MacDougall Kinnison have helped shape the Galactic Patrol into a force capable of challenging interstellar crime-lords and hidden manipulators, but the enemy is older, subtler, and more deeply embedded than anyone suspects. Their children - a group of astonishingly gifted youngsters raised in secrecy and trained with ruthless care - begin to test the limits of what a Lensman can be. Possessing mental talents that surpass even the greatest adults, they are asked to do what the Patrol cannot: slip past defenses, uncover buried truths, and strike at the heart of an adversary who fights with deception as much as with fleets. As their powers grow and their mission expands from local battles to galaxy-spanning strategy, the Children must balance loyalty, discipline, and compassion against the cold necessities of total war. Vast space opera set pieces, escalating psychic conflict, and a sense of cosmic stakes drive this fast, ferocious conclusion - where the future of Civilization rests on minds that are barely old enough to be called human. For ad-free listening try our premium subscription Chapters (Approximate) (00:00:00) Chapter 00 (00:17:10) Chapter 01 (00:41:50) Chapter 02 (01:09:08) Chapter 03 (01:31:44) Chapter 04 (01:53:27) Chapter 05 (02:15:41) Chapter 06 (02:35:11) Chapter 07 (02:56:38) Chapter 08 (03:19:01) Chapter 09 (03:43:52) Chapter 10 (04:04:11) Chapter 11 (04:26:36) Chapter 12 (04:50:17) Chapter 13 (05:20:49) Chapter 14 (05:41:26) Chapter 15 (06:01:44) Chapter 16 (06:33:54) Chapter 17 (06:54:37) Chapter 18 (07:13:36) Chapter 19 (07:32:15) Chapter 20 (07:51:35) Chapter 21 (08:15:36) Chapter 22 (08:34:10) Chapter 23 (09:04:20) Chapter 24 (09:27:15) Chapter 25 (09:50:38) Chapter 26 (10:11:01) Chapter 27 (10:31:54) Chapter 28 (10:53:42) Chapter 29 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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Children of the Lens, by E. E. Doc Smith.
Message of Transmittal.
Subject. The conclusion of the Bosconian War. A report.
By Christopher Kinnison, L3 of Clovia.
Two, the entity able to obtain and to read it.
To you, the third-level intellect who has been guided to this imperishable container
and who is able to break the seal and to read this tape, and to your fellow's greetings.
For reasons which will become obvious, this report will not be made available for an
indefinite but very long time, perhaps ten million, perhaps ten million million,
galactic standard years. My present visualization of the cosmic all does not extend to
the time at which such action will become necessary. Therefore, it is desirable to review
briefly the most pertinent facts of the earlier phases of civilization's climatic conflict,
information which, while widely known at present, will probably in that future time exist otherwise
only in the memories of my descendants. In early civilization, law enforcement lagged behind crime
because the police were limited in their spheres of action, while criminals were not. Each technological
advance made that condition worse, until finally,
When Bergenholm so perfected the crude, inertialist space drive of road bush in Cleveland,
that commerce throughout the galaxy became an actuality,
crime began to threaten civilization's very existence.
Of course, it was not then suspected that there was anything organized,
coherent, or of large purpose about this crime.
Centuries were to pass before my father, Kimball Kinnison of Tellis,
now Galactic Coordinator, was to prove that Bosconia,
an autocratic, dictatorial culture diametrically opposed to every ideal of civilization,
was, in fact, back of practically all of the pernicious activities of the first galaxy.
Even my father, however, has never had any inkling either of the existence and the doings of the
Adorians, or of the fundamental raison d'etra of the Galactic Patrol,
facts which can never be revealed to any mind not inherently stable at the third level of stress.
Virgil Sams, then chief of the Secret Service of the Triplanetary League,
perceived the general situation and foresaw the shape of the inevitable.
He realized that unless and until his organization could secure an identifying symbol
which could not be counterfeited, police work would remain relatively ineffectual.
Tellurian science had done its best in the golden meteors of triplanetary secret service,
and its best was not good enough.
Virgil Sams became the first wearer of ERISA's lens, and during his life he began the rigid
selection of those worthy of wearing it. For centuries the patrol grew and spread. It became widely
known that the lens was a perfect telepath, that it glowed with colored light only when worn by
the individual to whose ego it was attuned, that it killed any other living being who attempted
to wear it. Whatever his rays saw shape, any sort of
wearer of the lens was accepted as the embodiment of civilization.
Kimball Kinison was the first entity of civilization to suspect that the Bosconian organization
existed. He was the first lensman to realize that the lens was more than identification and
a telepath. He was thus the first lensman to return to ERISA to take the second stage of
lensmanship, their treatment which only an exceptional brain can withstand, but which gives
the second-stage lensman any mental power which he needs, and which he can both visualize
and control. Aided by Lensman Worsal of Valencia and Trigon Sea of Rigol 4, the former a winged
reptile, the latter a four-legged, barrel-shaped creature with the sense of perception instead
of sight. Kimball Kinnison traced and surveyed Boscon's military organization in the First
Galaxy. He helped plan the attack upon Grand Base, the headquarters of Helmuth,
who spoke for Boscon.
By flooding the control dome of Grand Base with thionite,
that deadly drug native to the peculiar planet Trenko,
he made it possible for civilization's grand fleet
under the command of Port Admiral Haynes, now retired,
to reduce that base.
He personally killed Helmuth in hand-to-hand combat.
He was instrumental in the almost complete destruction of the overlords,
those sadistic, life-eating reptiles,
native to the planet Delgon of the Valanchian solar system,
who were the first to employ against humanity the hyperspacial tube.
He was wounded more than once.
In one of his hospitalizations, becoming acquainted with surgeon General Lacey,
now retired, and with sector chief nurse Clarissa McDougal,
who was later to become the widely known red lensman, and still later, my mother.
In spite of the military defeat, however,
Bascone's real organization remained intact,
and Kinnison's further search led into Lundmark's nebula,
thenceforth called the Second Galaxy.
The planet Medan, being attacked by the Basconians,
was rescued from the enemy and was moved across intergalactic space
to the first galaxy.
Medan made two notable contributions to civilization.
First, electrical insulation, conductors and switches,
by whose means voltages and amperages theretofore undreamed of could be handled.
And later, Phillips, a possean surgeon, was able there to complete the researches
which made it possible for human bodies to grow anew any members or organs which have been
lost.
Kinnison, deciding that the drug syndicate was the quickest and surest line to Bascon, became
Wild Bill Williams, the Meteor Minor, a hard-drinking, betelam-eating, fast,
shooting space Helion.
As Williams, he traced the Zwillnick line upward, step by step, to the planet Jarnovan
in the second galaxy.
Upon Jarnovan, live the Ike.
Frid-blooded monsters, more intelligent, more merciless, more truly Baskonian, even than
the overlords of Delgon.
He and Worsal, second-stage lensmen both, set out to investigate Jarnivon.
He was captured, tortured, dismembered.
but Worsal brought him back to tell us, with his mind and knowledge intact,
the enormously important knowledge that John Irvine was ruled by a council of nine of the Ike,
a council named Boscon.
Kinnison was given a Phillips treatment, and again, Clarissa McDougal nursed him back to health.
They loved each other, but they could not marry until the Great Linsman's job was done,
until civilization had triumphed over Bosconia.
The Galactic Patrol assembled its Grand Fleet, composed of millions of units under the flagship Z9M9Z.
It attacked.
The planet of Jalty, Bosconi's director of the First Galaxy, was consumed by a bomb of negative matter.
Jarnovan was crushed between two colliding planets.
Positioned inertialists then inerted especially for that crushing.
Grand Fleet returned triumphant.
But Baskonia struck back, sending an immense fleet against TELUS through a hyperspacial
tube instead of through normal space.
This method of approach was not, however, unexpected.
Survey ships and detectors were out.
The scientists of the patrol had been for months hard at work upon the sunbeam,
a device to concentrate all the energy of the sun into one frightful beam.
With this weapon reinforcing the already vast powers of Grand Fleet,
the invaders were wiped out.
Again, Kinnison had to search for a high Bosconian,
some authority higher than the Council of Boscon.
Taking his personal super-dreadnought, the Dauntless,
which carried his indetectable, non-ferrous speedster,
he found his Wilnet trail and followed it to Dunstan's region,
an unexplored, virtually unknown,
outlying spiral arm of the first galaxy.
It led to the planet Lyrene II,
with its human matriarchy, ruled by Helen its queen.
There he found Ilona Potter, the ex-Alabaritanian dancer,
who, turning against her Bosconian kidnappers,
told him all she knew of the Bosconian planet Lanabar,
upon which she had spent most of her life.
Lannabar was unknown to the patrol,
and Ilona knew nothing of its location in space.
She did, however, know its unique jewelry,
gems also completely unknown to civilization.
Nadrick of Palane Seven,
a frigid-blooded second-stage lensman,
with one jewel as a clue, set out to find Lanabar,
while Kinnison began to investigate Bosconian activities
among the matriarchs.
The Lyrannians, however, were fanatically non-cooperative.
They hated all males.
They despised and tested all non-human entities.
Hence, Kinnison, with the consent and assistance of Mentor Varysia, made of Clarissa
McDougal a second-stage lensman, and assigned to her the task of working Lyrene 2.
Nadrick found and mapped Lonabar, and to build up an unimpeachable Bosconian identity,
Kinnison became Cardiff the jeweler, Kartiff the Jewel chief and Swindler,
Cardiff the fence, Cardiff the murderer-outlaw,
Cardiff the Bosconian Big Shot.
He challenged and overthrew Menjoblico, the dictator of Lanbar,
and before killing him took from his mind everything he knew.
The Red Lensman secured information from which it was deduced
that a cavern of the overlords of Delgan existed upon Lyrain II.
This cavern was raided and destroyed.
The patrolman learning that the Ike themselves had a heavily fortified base upon Lyrain II,
Nadrek, master psychologist, invaded that base tracelessly.
Learning that the Ike received orders from the Thralian solar system in the Second Galaxy,
and that frigid-blooded Kandran of Onlo, Theralis 9, was second in power only to human Alcon,
the tyrant of Thrail, Theralus II.
Kinnis went to Thrail, Nadrek to Onlo, the operations of both being covered by the patrol's
invasion of the Second Galaxy.
In that invasion, Baskonia's grand fleet was defeated, and the planet Clobia was taken and fortified.
Assuming the personality of Traskagano, Athralian, Kinnison worked his way upward in Alcon's military organization.
Trapped in a hyperspacial tube, ejected into an unknown one of the infinity of parallel,
coexistent, three-dimensional spaces which comprised the cosmic all.
He was rescued by mentor, working through the brain of Sir Austin Cardinge, the Tullerian mathematician.
Returning to Thrail, he fomented a revolution in which he killed Alcon and took his place as the tyrant of Thrail.
He then discovered that his prime minister, Faustin, who concealed his true appearance by means of a zone of hypnosis,
had been Alcon's superior instead of his advisor.
Neither quite ready for an open break, but both supremely confident a victory when that break
should come, subtle hostilities began.
Tyrant and Prime Minister planned and launched an attack upon Clovia, but just before engagement,
the hostilities between the two Bosconian leaders flared into an open fight for supremacy.
After a terrific mental struggle, during the course of which the entire crew of the flagship died,
leaving the Basconian fleet at the mercy of the patrol,
Kinneson won.
He did not know, of course, and never will know,
either that Faustin was in fact an Adorian,
or that it was Mentor, who in fact overcame Faustin.
Kinnison thought, and Mentor encouraged him to believe,
that the Prime Minister was an Erysian,
who had been insane since youth,
and that Kinnison himself killed Faustin without assistance.
It is a mere formality to emphasize at this point,
that none of this information must ever become available to any mind below the third level.
Since to any entity able either to obtain or to read this report,
it will be obvious that such revealment would produce an inferiority complex,
which must inevitably destroy both the Galactic Patrol
and the civilization whose instrument it is.
With Fauston dead and with Kinnison already the tyrant of Thrail,
it was comparatively easy for the patrol to take over.
Nadrick drove the Unlonian garrisons insane, so that all fought to the death among themselves,
thus rendering Ono's mighty armament completely useless.
Then, thinking that the Basconian War was over, encouraged, in fact, by Mantor so to think,
Kinnison married Clarissa McDougal, established his headquarters upon Clovia,
and assumed his duties as Galactic coordinator.
Kimball Kinnison, while not, strictly speaking, a mutant, was the penultimate product of a prodigiously long line of selective, controlled breeding.
So was Clarissa McDougal.
Just what course the science of ERISA took in making those two what they are, I can deduce,
but I do not as yet actually know.
Nor for the purpose of this record does it matter.
Port Admiral Haynes and Surgeon General Lacey thought that they,
brought them together and promoted their romance. Let them think so. As agents, they did.
Whatever the method employed, the result was that the genes of those two uniquely
complementary penultimates were precisely those necessary to produce the first and at present
the only third-stage lensman. I was born upon Clovia, as were three or four galactic
standard years later, my four sisters, two pairs of twins. I had learned. I had
little babyhood, no childhood.
Fothered and mothered by second-stage lensman,
accustomed from infancy to wide-open two-ways
with such beings as Worsal of Alentia,
Tregon C of Rigil 4, and Nadrick of Palane 7,
it would seem obvious that we did not go to school.
We were not like other children of our age.
But before I realized that it was anything unusual
for a baby who could scarcely walk,
to be computing highly perturbed asteroid,
orbits as mental arithmetic, I knew that we would have to keep our abnormalities to ourselves,
insofar as the bulk of mankind and of civilization was concerned.
I traveled much, sometimes with my father or mother or both, sometimes alone.
At least once a year I went to ERISA for treatment.
I took the last two years of linsmanship, for physical reasons only,
at Wentworth Hall upon Tellis, instead of upon my name.
of Clovia, because upon Tellis, the name Kinison is not at all uncommon, while on Clovia,
the fact that Kit Kinison was the son of the coordinator could not have been concealed.
I graduated, and with my formal enlensment, this record properly begins.
Much has been told elsewhere, notably in Smith's history of civilization.
But all such works are, and of necessity must be pitifully incomplete.
I have recorded this material as impersonally as possible,
realizing fully that my sisters and I did only the work for which we were specifically developed and trained.
Even as you who read this will do that for which you shall have been developed and are to be trained.
Respectfully submitted, Christopher Kinnison, L3, Clovia.
End of Prologue
Chapter 1 of Children of the Lens
by E. Doc Smith.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
Chapter 1
Galactic coordinator Kimball Kinnison
finished his second cup of Tullerian coffee,
got up from the breakfast table,
and prowled about in black abstraction.
Twenty-odd years had changed him but little.
He weighed the same, or a few pounds less,
although a little of his mass had shifted downward
from his mighty chest and shoulders.
His hair was still brown,
his stern face was only faintly lined.
He was mature, with a conscious maturity which no young man can know.
Since when, Kim, did you think that you could get away with blocking me out of your mind?
Clarissa Kinnison directed the thought quietly.
The years had dealt as lightly with the red-lensman as with the grey.
She had been gorgeous. She was now magnificent.
This room is shielded, you know, against even the girls.
"'Sorry, Chris. I didn't mean it that way.'
"'I know,' she laughed.
"'automatic. But you've had that block-up for two solid weeks,
"'except when you force yourself to keep it down,
"'that means that you're way, way off the beam.
"'I've been thinking, incredible as it may seem.
"'I know it. Let's have it, cold.'
"'QX, you asked for it.
"'Queer things have been going on all over.
over. Inexplicable things. No apparent reason. Such as. Almost any kind of insidious
deviltry you care to name. Disaffections, psychoses, mass hysterias, hallucinations,
pointing toward a civilization-white epidemic of revolution and uprisings for which there
seems to be no basis or justification whatever. Why, Kim, how could there be? I haven't heard of
anything like that?
It hasn't got around.
Each solar system thinks that it's a purely local condition,
but it isn't.
As galactic coordinator, with a broad view of the entire picture,
my office would, of course, see such a thing before anyone else could.
We saw it, and set out to nip it in the bud.
But...
He shrugged his shoulders and grinned wryly.
But what?
Clarissa persisted.
It didn't nip.
We sent lendsmen to investigate, but none of them got to the first check station.
Then I asked our second-stage lansman, Worsal, Nadrick, and Tragansi, to drop whatever they were doing and solve it for me.
They struck it and bounced.
They followed, and are still following, leads and clues galore, but they haven't got a millows' worth of results so far.
What?
You mean to say it's a problem they can't?
can't solve? That they haven't to date, he corrected absently, and that gives me
fieriously to think. It would, she conceded, and it also would make you itch to join them.
Think at me, and it'll help you correlate. You should have gone over the data with me right
at first. I had reasons not to, as you'll see. But I'm stumped now, so here goes.
We'll have to go away back to before we were married.
First, mentor told me, quote,
only your descendants will be ready for that which you now so dimly grope, unquote.
Second, you were the only being ever able to read my thoughts without the aid of the lens.
Third, mentor told us, when we asked him if it was QX for us to go ahead,
that our marriage was necessary, a choice of phraseology which bothered us.
you somewhat at the time, but which I then explained as being in accord with his visualization
of the cosmic all. Fourth, the patrol formula is to send the man best fitted for any job
to do that job, and if he can't swing it, to send the number one graduate of the current
class of lensman. Fifth, a lensman has got to use everything and everybody available, no matter
what or who it is. I used even you, you remember, in that Lyrain affair, and a
others. Sixth, Sir Austin Cardage believed to the day of his death that we were thrown out of that
hyperspacial tube and out of space deliberately. Well, go on. I don't see much of any connection.
You will, if you think of those six points in connection with our present predicament.
Kit graduates next month, and he'll rank number one of all civilization for all the T in China.
Of course, but after all, he's a lensman.
He will insist upon being assigned to some problem.
Why not to that one?
You don't yet see what that problem is.
I've been adding two and two together for weeks
and can't get any other answer than four.
And if two and two are four,
Kit has got to tackle Boscon, the real Boscon,
the one that I never did and very probably never can reach.
"'No, Kim! No!' she almost shrieked.
"'Not Kit, Kim! He's just a boy!'
Kittison waited wordless. She got up, crossed the room to him. He put his arm around her in the
old but ever new gesture.
"'Lensman's load, Chris,' he said quietly.
"'Of course,' she replied then as quietly.
"'It was a shock at first, coming after all these years.
but if it has to be, it must.
But he doesn't.
Surely we can help him, Kim?
Surely, the man's arm tightened.
When he hits space, I go back to work.
So do Nadrick and Worsel and Tragancy.
So do you, if your kind of a job turns up.
And with us, Gray-Lensman doing the blocking
and with kit to carry the ball,
his thought died away.
I'll say so, she breathed.
then, but you won't call me, I know, unless you absolutely have to, and to give up you and
Kit both.
Why did we have to be Lensman, Kim?
She protested rebelliously.
Why couldn't we have been ground-grippers?
You used to growl that thought at me before I knew what a lens really meant.
Well, some of us have got to be first violiners in der orchestra,
Kinnison misquoted, in an attempt at lightness.
They can't all push Vint through their trombone.
I suppose that's true.
The Red Lensman's somber air deepened.
Well, we were going to start for tell us today anyway, to see Kit graduate.
This doesn't change that.
And in a distant room, four tall, shapely, arburn-haired,
startlingly identical girls stared at each other briefly,
then went on rapport, for their mother had erred greatly,
in saying that the breakfast room was screened against their minds.
Nothing was or could be screened against them.
They could think above, below, or by sufficient effort,
straight through any thought screen that had ever been designed.
Nothing in which they were interested was safe from them,
and they were interested in practically everything.
"'Kee, we've got ourselves a job!'
Catherine, older by minutes than Karen,
excluded pointedly the younger twins, Camilla and Constance,
Cam and Con.
At last, Karen exclaimed,
I've been wondering what we were born for,
with nine-tenths of our minds so deep down
that nobody except Kit even knows they're there,
and so heavily blocked that we can't let even each other in
without a conscious effort.
This is it. We'll go places now, Cat, and really do things.
What do you mean you?
go places and do things.
Khan demanded indignantly.
Do you think for a second that you've got jets enough to blast us out of all the fun?
Certainly, Kat said equably.
You're too young.
We'll let you know what we're doing, though.
Kay conceded magnanimously.
You might even conceivably contribute an idea that we could use.
Ideas, fooey, congeared.
A real idea would crack both of your skull.
You haven't any more plan than a—
Hush! Shut up everybody!
Cat commanded.
This is too new for any of us to have any worthwhile ideas on yet.
Tell you what let's do.
We'll all think this over until we're aboard the dauntless,
halfway to tell us.
Then we'll compare notes and work out parts for all of us.
They left Clovia that afternoon.
Kinnison's personal super-dreadnought,
the mighty dauntless,
the fourth to bear that name.
board through the intergalactic space.
Time passed.
The four young redheads convened.
I've got it all worked out.
Cat burst out enthusiastically,
forestalling the other three.
There will be four second-stage lensmen at work,
and there are four of us.
We'll circulate, percolate, you might say,
around and throughout the universe.
We'll pick up ideas and facts
and feed them to our gray lensmen,
surreptitiously, sort of,
so they'll think they got them themselves.
I'll take Dad for my partner.
Cake and have, you'll do no such thing.
A general clamor rose,
Khan's thought being the most insistent.
If we aren't going to work with all indiscriminately,
we'll draw lots or throw dice to see who gets him, so there.
Seal it, snake-hips, please,
Cat request it sweetly.
It is trite but true to say that infants should be seen,
but not heard.
This is serious business.
Snake hips!
Infant!
Khan interrupted venomously.
Listen, my stidtopages and senile friend!
Constance measured perhaps a quarter of an inch less
in gluteal circumference than in her oldest sister.
She tipped the beam at one scant pound below her weight.
You and K are a year older than Cam and me, of course.
A year ago, your minds were stronger than ours.
That condition, however, no longer exists.
We, too, are grown up.
And to put that statement to test,
what can you do that I can't?
This, Catherine extended a bare arm,
narrowed her eyes in concentration.
A lens materialized about her wrist,
not attached to it by a metallic bracelet,
but a bracelet in itself,
clinging sensually to the smooth, bronzed skin.
I felt that in this work
there would be a need. I learned to satisfy it. Can you match that? They could. In a matter of
seconds, the three others were similarly in-lensed. They had not previously perceived the need,
but after Cat had pointed it out to them by demonstrating the manner of its satisfaction,
their acquisition of full knowledge had been virtually instantaneous.
Or this, then. Kat's lens disappeared. So did the other three. Each should
knew that no hint of this knowledge or of this power should ever be revealed.
Each knew that in any moment of stress, the lens of civilization could be and would be hers.
Logic then, and by reason, not by chance.
Kat changed her tactics.
I still get Dad.
Everybody knows who works best with whom.
Yukon have tagged around after Wursell all your life.
You used to ride him instead of a horse.
She still does.
"'Kay snickered. He pretty nearly split her in two a while ago in a seven-gravity pull-out,
and she almost broke a toe when she kicked him for it.
"'Worsel is nice,' Con defended herself vigorously. He's more human than most people,
and more fun, as well as having infinitely more brains. And you can't talk, Kay,
what anybody can see in that nadric, so cold-blooded that he freezes you even through
armor at twenty feet, you'll get as cold and hard as he is if you don't.
And every time Cam gets within five hundred parsecs of Tregoncise, she goes into silences
with him, contemplating rapidly the richnesses of the why, Catherine interrupted, forestalling
recriminations.
So you see, by the process of elimination, Dad has got to be mine.
Since they could not all have him, was finally agreed that Catherine's claim would be
allowed, and after a great deal of discussion and argument, a tentative plan of action was
developed. In due course, the Dauntless landed upon Tellus. The Kinnisans went to Wetworth Hall,
the towering, chromium and glass home of the Tullorean cadets of the Galactic Patrol.
They watched the impressive ceremonies of graduation. Then, as the new linsman marched out to the
magnificent cadences of our patrol, the gray lensman, leaving his wife and daughters to their own
devices, made his way to his Tullerian office in prime base.
Lensman Kinnison, sir, by appointment, his secretary announced, and as Kitt
strode in, Kinnison stood up and came to attention.
Christopher Kinnison of Clovia, sir, reporting for duty.
Kit saluted crisply.
The coordinator returned the salute punctiliously.
Then, at rest, Kit, I'm proud of you, mighty proud.
We all are.
The women want to heroize you, but I had to see you first to clear up a few things.
An explanation, an apology, and in a sense, commiseration.
An apology, sir?
Kid was dumbfounded.
Why, that's unthinkable.
For not graduating you in gray.
It has never been done, but that was not the reason.
Your commandant, the Board of Examiners, and Port Admiral LeForge, all recommended it.
agreeing that none of us is qualified to give you either orders or directions.
I blocked it.
Of course, for the son of the coordinator to be the first lensman to graduate unattached
would smell, especially since the fewer who know of my peculiar characteristics the better.
That can wait, sir.
Not too long, sir.
Kinnison's smile was a trifle forced.
Here's your release and your kit, and a request signed
by the whole Galactic Council that you go to work on whatever it is that is going on.
We rather think that it heads up somewhere in the Second Galaxy,
but that is little more than a guess.
I can start out from Clovia, then.
Good, I can go home with you.
That's the idea, and on the way there, you can study the situation.
For your information, we have made up a series of tapes,
carrying not only all the available data,
but also our attempts at analysis and interpretation.
Complete and up-to-date, except for one item which came in this morning.
I can't figure out whether it means anything or not, but it should be inserted.
Kinnisand paced the room scowling.
Might as well tell me.
I'll insert it when I scan the tape.
QX.
I don't suppose that you've heard much about the unusual shipping trouble we have been having,
particularly in the Second Galaxy?
Rumor, gossip only.
I'd rather have it straight.
It's on all the tapes,
so I'll give you the barest possible background.
Losses are 25% above normal.
A few highly peculiar derelicts have been found,
peculiar in that they seem to have been wrecked by madmen.
Not only wrecked, but gutted,
and with every mark of identification obliterated.
We can't determine
an even origin or destination, since the normal disappearances outnumber the abnormal ones by
four to one.
On the tapes, this is lumped in with the other psychoses you'll learn about.
But this morning they found another derelict, in which the chief pilot had scrawled,
Where hell hold in sp, across a plate?
Connection with the other derelicks, if any, is obscure.
If the pilot was sane when he wrote that message, it means something, but nobody knows
what? If he wasn't, it doesn't, any more than the dozens of obviously senseless—excuse me,
I should say apparently senseless, messages which we have already recorded.
Hmm, interesting. I'll bear it in mind and tape it in its place.
But speaking of peculiar things, I've got one I wanted to discuss with you. Getting my
release was such a shock that I almost forgot it. Reported it, but nobody thought it was
anything important. Maybe, probably, it isn't. Tune your mind up to the top of the range.
There, did you ever hear of a race that thinks upon that band? I never did. It's practically
unreachable. Why, have you? Yes and no. Only once, and that only a touch, or rather a burst,
as though a hard-held mind-block had exploded, or the creature had just died of violent,
instantaneous death.
Not enough of it to trace,
and I never found any more of it.
Any characteristics?
Bursts can be quite revealing at times.
A few.
It was on my last break-in trip in the second galaxy,
out beyond Thrail,
about here.
Kit marked the spot upon a mental chart.
Mentality very high,
precisionist grade,
possibly beyond social needs,
as the planet was a bare day.
desert. No thought of cities, nor of water, although both may have existed without appearing in
that burst of thought. The thing's bodily structure was RTSL to four places. No gross
digestive tract, atmosphere nourished, or an energy converter, perhaps. The sun was a blue giant.
No spectral data, of course, but at a rough guess, I'd say somewhere around Class B-5 or A-0.
Although the temperature was normal for him, it was quite evident that the planet would be unbearably
hot for us.
That's all I could get.
That's a lot to get from one burst.
It doesn't mean a thing to me right now, but I'll watch for a chance to fit it in somewhere.
How casually they dismissed as unimportant that cryptic burst of thought!
But if they both right then together had been authoritatively informed that the description
The description fitted exactly.
The physical form forced upon its denizens in its summer
by the accurately described simply hellish climatic conditions
obtaining during that season on noxious planet Plur.
The information would still not have seemed important to either of them then.
Anything else we ought to discuss before night?
The older linsman went on without a break.
Not that I know of.
You said your release was a shock.
Ready for another one?
I can't think of a harder one. I'm braced. Blast.
I have turned the office over to Vice Coordinator Maitland for the duration.
I am authorized to tell you that Worssel, Nadrick, Tregonzi, and I have resumed our unattached status,
and while conducting our various investigations, we'll be holding ourselves ready at all times for your call.
That is a shock, sir. Thanks. I hadn't expected. It's really a little. It's really a shock. It's really
overwhelming. And you said something about commiserating me? Kit lifted his red-thatched head.
All of Clarissa's children had inherited her startling hair, and gray eyes stared leveled into
eyes of gray. In a sense, yes. You'll understand later. Well, you better go hunt up Chris
and the kids, after the festivities are over. I'd better cut them, hadn't I? Kit asked eagerly.
Don't you think it'd be better for me to get started right away?
Not on your life, Kinnison demurred positively.
Do you think that I want that mob of strawberry blondes to snatch me bald-headed?
You're in for a large day and evening of lionization, so take it like a man.
As I was about to say, as soon as the brawl is over tonight,
we'll all board the dauntless and do a flit for Clovia,
where I'll fit you out with everything you want.
Until then, son, two big hands gripped.
But I'll be seeing you around the hall, Kit exclaimed.
You can't—
No, I can't dodge the lionizing either, Kinnison grinned.
But we won't be in a sealed and shielded room.
So, son, I'm proud of you.
Right back at you, big fellow, and thanks a million.
Kit strode out, and a few minutes later,
the coordinator did likewise.
The brawl, which was the gala event of the Tullurian social year,
was duly enjoyed by all the Kinnisons.
The Dauntless made an uneventful flight to Clovia.
Arrangements were made. Plans, necessarily sketchy and elastic, were laid.
Two big gray-clad lensmen stood upon the deserted space field
between two blackly indetectable speedsters.
Kinnison was massive, sure,
calm with the poised calmness of maturity, experience, and power.
Kit, with the broad shoulders and narrow waste of his ears in training,
was tawed and tense, fiery, eager to come to grips with civilization's foes.
Remember, son, Kinnison said as the two gripped hands,
There are four of us old-timers who have been through the mill, on call every second.
If you can use any one of us or all of us, don't wait to be.
be too sure, snap out a call.
I know, Dad, thanks.
The four best, ablest lendsman that ever lived.
One of you may make a strike before I do.
In fact, with the thousands of leads we have,
and with no way of telling how many of them are false, deliberately or otherwise,
and with your vastly greater experience and knowledge, you probably will.
So remember that it cuts both ways.
If any of you can use me at any time, I'll come at Max.
QX. We'll get in touch from time to time anyway.
Clear Ether Kit.
Clear Ether, Dad.
What a wealth of meaning there was in that low-voiced, simple exchange of the standard
Bon Voyage.
For minutes, as his speedster flashed through space, Kinnison thought only of the boy.
He knew exactly how he felt.
He relived in memory the supremely ecstatic moments of his own first launching into space as a gray lensman.
But Kit had the stuff, stuff which he, Kinnison knew that he could know nothing about,
and he had his own job to do.
Therefore, methodically, like the old campaigner he was, he said about it.
End of Chapter 1.
Chapter 2.
Of Children of the Lens.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
Chapter 2
Worcel the Valentian, hard and durable and long-lived as Valentians are, had in twenty Tullerian
years changed scarcely at all.
As the first lensman and the only second-stage lendsman of his race, the twenty years
had been very fully occupied indeed.
He had solved the very technological and administrative problems incident to the welding of
Valantia into the structure of civilization. He had worked at the many tasks which, in the
opinion of the Galactic Council, fitted his peculiarly individual talents. In his spare time,
he had sought out in various parts of two galaxies, and had ruthlessly slain, widely scattered groups
of the overlords of Delgon. Continuously, however, he had taken an intense sort of godfatherly interest
in the Kinnison children, particularly in Kit and in the
the youngest daughter, Constance, finding in the girl a mentality surprisingly akin to his own.
When Kitteson's call came, he answered it. He was now out in space, not in the Dauntless,
but in a ship of his own, under his own command. And what a ship! The Veland was manned entirely
by beings of his own race. It carried valentian air at valiant temperature and pressure.
Above all, it was built and powered for the village.
for inert maneuvering at the atrocious accelerations employed by the Valentians in their daily lives,
and Worcelsso loved it with enthusiasm and elan. He had worked conscientiously and well with
Kinnison and with other entities of civilization. He and they had all known, however, that he could
work more efficiently alone or with others of his own kind. Hence, except in emergencies, he had done so,
and hence, except in similar emergencies, he would so continue to do.
Out in deep space, Roussel entwined himself in a Valentian's idea of comfort
in an intricate series of figures of eight around a couple of parallel bars and relaxed in thought.
There were insidious deviltries afoot, Kinnison had said.
There were disaffections, psychoses, mass hysterias, and, oh, happy thought, hallucinations.
There were also certain revolutions and sundry uprisings, which might or might not be connected
or associated with the disappearances of a considerable number of persons of note.
In these latter, however, Worsal of Alantea was not interested.
He knew without being told that Kinnison would pounce upon such blatant manifestations as those.
He himself would work upon something much more to his taste.
Hallucination was Worsal's dish.
He had been born among hallucinations,
had been reared in an atmosphere of them.
What he did not know about hallucinations
could have been printed in PICA upon the smallest one of his scales.
Therefore, isolating one section of his multi-comparmented mind
from all of the others and from any control over his physical self,
he sensitized it to receive whatever hallucinatory influences might be abroad.
Simultaneously, he set two other parts of his mind to watch over the one to be victimized,
to study and to analyze whatever figments of obtrusive mentality might be received and entertained.
Then, using all of his naturally tremendous sensitivity and reach, all of his ERISian super-training,
and the full power of his lens, he sent his mental receptors out into space.
And then, although the thought is staggeringly incomprehensible to any to look,
or near-human mind, he relaxed. For day after day, as the vealant hurtled randomly through the
void, he hung blissfully slack upon his bars, most of his mind a welter of the indescribable
thoughts in which it is a Volantian's joy to revel. Suddenly, after an unknown interval of time,
a thought impinged. A thought under the impact of which Worcels' body tightened so convulsively
as to pull the bars a foot out of true.
Overlords.
The unmistakable, the body and mind-paralyzing hunting-call of the overlords of Delgon.
Its crew had not felt it yet, of course, nor would they feel it.
If they should, they would be worse than useless in the conflict to come,
for they could not withstand that baneful influence.
Worsal could.
Wurzel was the only Voluntian who could.
Thought screens all, his commanding thought snapped out.
Then, even before the order could be obeyed, as you were.
For the impenetrably shielded chambers of his mind told him immediately
that this was no ordinary Delgonian hunting call,
or rather that it was more than that, much more.
Mixed with, superimposed upon the overwhelming compulsion
which generations of Atlanteans would come to know so bitterly and so well,
were the very things for which he had been searching, hallucinations.
To shield his crew, or accept in the subtest possible fashion himself,
simply would not do.
Overlords everywhere knew that there was at least one Valentian lensman
who was mentally their master,
and while they hated this lensman tremendously,
they feared him even more.
Therefore, even though a valentian was any overlord's choicest prey,
at the first indication of an ability to disobey their commands,
the monsters would cease entirely to radiate,
would withdraw at once every strand of their far-flung mental nets
into the fastnesses of their superbly hidden
and indetectably shielded cavern.
Therefore, Worsall allowed the inimical influence to take over,
not only the total minds of his crew,
but the unshielded portion of his own as well.
And stealthily, so insidivocal,
that no mind-affected could discern the change,
values gradually grew vague and reality began to alter.
Loyalty dimmed and disbreeed a core.
Family ties and pride of race waned into meaninglessness.
All concepts of civilization, of the Galactic Patrol,
degenerated into strengthless Gossamer, into oblivion.
And to replace those hitherto mighty motivations,
there crept in and overmastery needs,
for, and the exact method of obtainment of whatever it was that was each Valentian's deepest,
most primal desire.
Each crewman stared into an individual visiplate whose substance was to him as real and as solid
as the metal of his ship had ever been.
Each saw upon that plate whatever it was that, consciously or unconsciously, he wanted to
see.
Noble or base, lofty or low, intellectual or physical,
Spiritual or carnal, it made no difference to the overlords.
Whatever each victim most wanted was there.
No figment was, however, even to the Valentians, actual or tangible.
It was a picture upon a plate, transmitted from a well-defined point in space.
There, upon that planet, was the actuality eagerly awaited.
Toward and to that planet must the Velen go at maximum blasts.
into that line and at that blast then the pilots set their vessel without orders,
and each of the crew saw upon his non-existent plate that she had so been set.
If she had not been, if the pilots had been able to offer any resistance,
the crew would have slaughtered them out of hand.
As it was, all was well.
And Worsal, watching the affected portion of his mind accept these hallucinations as truth,
and admiring unreservedly the consummate artistry with which the work was being done was well content.
He knew that only a hard, solidly driven, individually probing beam could force him to reveal the fact that a portion of his mind and all of his bodily control were being withheld.
He knew that unless he made a slip, no such investigation was to be expected. He would not slip.
No human or near-human mind can really understand how the mind of a Valentian works.
A Tillerion can, by dint of training, learn to do two or more unrelated things simultaneously.
But neither is done very well, and both must be more or less routine in nature.
To perform any original or difficult operation successfully, he must concentrate upon it,
and he can concentrate upon only one thing at a time.
The valantean, however, can and does concentrate upon half a dozen totally unrelated things at once.
And with his multiplicity of arms, hands, and eyes, he can perform simultaneously an astonishing
number of completely independent operations.
The valentian is, however, in no sense such a multiple personality as would exist if six
or eight human heads were mounted upon one body.
There is no joint tenancy about it.
there is only one ego permeating all those pseudo-independent compartments.
No contradictory orders are, or ordinarily can be,
sent along the bundled nerves of the spinal cord.
While individual in thought and in the control of certain actions,
the mind compartments are basically fundamentally one mind.
Worsal had progressed beyond his fellows.
He was different, unique.
In fact, the perception of the need of the ability to,
isolate certain compartments of his mind, to separate them completely from his real ego,
was one of the things which had enabled him to become the only second-stage lensman of his
race. L.2. Worsel, then, held himself aloof and observed appreciatively everything that went on.
More, he did a little hallucinating of his own. Under the overlord's compulsion, he was
supposed to remain motionless, staring rapidly into an imaginary visiplate at an orgy
saturnalia designed to make even his burly ego quail.
Therefore, as far as the occupied portion of his mind and through it the overroids were concerned,
he did so.
Actually, however, his body moved purposefully about, under the direction only of his own grim
will, moved to make ready against the time of landing.
For Wurzel knew that his opponents were not fools.
He knew that they reduced their risks to the irredeastern,
reducible minimum. He knew that the mighty Veeland, with her prodigious weaponry,
would not be permitted to be within even extreme range of the cavern if the overlords
could possibly prevent it, when that cavern's location was revealed. His was the task to see to
it that she was not only within range, but was at the very portal. The speeding spaceship
approached the planet, when inert, matched the planetary intrinsic, landed. Her
Airlocks opened. Her crew rushed out headlong, sprang into the air, and arrowed away on mass.
Then, Worsal, grandmaster of hallucinations, went blithely but intensely to work.
Thus, although he stayed at the Velen's control board instead of joining the glamored Valantians
in their rush over the unfamiliar terrain, and although the huge spaceship lifted lightly into the
air and followed them, neither the fiend-possessed part of Worcels' mind nor any
of his fellows, nor through them the many overlords knew that either of those two things was
happening. To that part of his mind, Worsal's body was under full control, flying along upon
tireless wings in the midst of the crowd. To wit and to all of the other Valantians,
and hands to the overlords, the Veland lay motionless and deserted upon the rocks far below and behind
them. They watched the vessel diminish in apparent size in the distance. They saw it vanish beyond
the horizon.
This was eminately tricky work, necessitating as it did such nicety of synchronization
with Delgonian's own compulsions as to be indetectable even to the monsters themselves.
Worsal was, however, an expert, one of the universe's best. He went at the task, not with
any doubt whatever as to his ability to carry it through, but only with an uncontrollably
shivering physical urge to come to grips with the hereditary end. He went to the
enemies of his race.
The flyer shot downward, and as a boulder camouflaged entrance yawned open in the
mountainside, Whorsel closed up and shot out a widely enveloping zone of thought-screen.
The overlord's control vanished.
The Valentians, realizing instantaneously what had happened, flew madly back to their ship.
They jammed through the airlocks, flashed to their posts.
The caverns gates had closed by then, but the monsters had no sense.
screened fit to cope with the Velen's tremendous batteries.
Down they went. Barriers, bastions, and a considerable portion of the mountain's face,
flamed away in fiery vapor or flowed away in molten streams.
Through reeking atmosphere over red-hot debris, the armored Valantians flew to the attack.
The overlord's head, however, learned. This cavern, as well as being hidden, was defended by physical,
as well as mental means.
There were inner barriers of metal and of force.
There were armed and armored defenders,
who, dominated completely by the monsters,
fought with the callous fury of the robots
which, in effect, they were.
Nevertheless, against all opposition,
the attackers bored relentlessly in.
Heavy semi-portables blazed,
hand-to-hand combat raised in the narrow confines
of that noisome tunnel.
In the wavering, glaring light of the
contending beams and screens, through the hot and rankly stinking steam building away from the
reeking walls, the invaders fought their way. One by one, and group by group, the defenders
died where they stood, and the Valentians drove onward over their burned and dismembered bodies.
Into the cavern at last. To the overlords! Overlords! They, who for ages had preyed upon
generation after generation of helpless Valentians, torturing their bodies to the point of death,
and then devouring ghoulishly the life-forces which their mangled bodies could no longer retain.
Worsal and his crew threw away their delameters. Only when it was absolutely necessary
does any valentian use any artificial weapon against any overlord of Delgon. He is too furious,
too berserk, to do so. He is scared to the core of his being.
The cold grew of a thousand fiendishly eaten ancestors has bred that fear into the innermost atoms of his chemistry.
But against that fear, negating and surmounting it, is a hatred of such depth and violence as no human being has ever known.
A starkly savage hatred, which can be even partially assuaged only by the ultimate of violences,
by rending his foe apart member by member, by actually,
feeling the Delgonian's life depart under gripping hands and tearing talons and constricting body
and shearing tail. It is best, then, not to go into too fine detail as to this conflict.
Since there were almost a hundred of the Delgonians, insensately vicious fighters when cornered,
and since their physical makeup was very similar to the Valantian's own, many of Worcels' troopers
died. But since the Veelein carried over 1,500, and since less than half of her personnel could even get into
the cavern, there were plenty of them left to operate and to fight the spaceship.
Warsaw took great care that the opposing commander was not killed with his minions.
The fighting over, the Valentians chained this sole survivor into one of his own racks and stretched
him out into immobility. Then, by restraining by main strength that direction,
urge to put the machine then and there to its fullest ghastly use.
Worcelsso cut his screen, through a couple of turns of tail around a convenient
anchorage, and faced the Bosconian almost nose to nose.
Eight weirdly stalked eyes curled out as he drove a probing thought beam against the
monster's shield.
I could use this, or this, or this, Worcels gloated.
As he touched various wheels and levers, the chains'
hummed slightly, sparks flashed, the rigid body twitched.
I am not going to, however, yet.
While you are still sane, I want to take, and I shall take your total knowledge.
And face to face, eye to eye, brain to brain, that silently and motionlessly cataclysmic
battle was joined.
As has been said, Worsal had hunted down and had destroyed many overlords.
He had hunted them, however, like vermin.
He had destroyed them with duodec bombs and with primary or secondary beams,
or at closest hand with talons, teeth, and tail.
He had not engaged in overlord mind to mine for over twenty Tullurian years,
not since he and Nadrick of Paline Seven had captured alive
the leaders of those who had been praying upon Helen's matriarchs
and warring upon civilization from their cavern upon Lyrain too.
Nor had he ever dueled one mentally to death without powerful support.
Kinnison or some other lendsmen had always been nearby.
But Worsal would need no help.
He was not shivering and eagerness now.
His body was as still as the solid rock upon which most of it lay.
Every chamber and every faculty of his mind was concentrated upon battering down,
or cutting through the overlord's stubbornly held shields.
Brighter and brighter glowed the Valentian's lens,
flooding the gloomy cave with pulsating polychromatic light.
Alert for any possible trickery,
guarding intently against any possibility of repost or of counterthrust,
worsel leveled bolt after bolt of mental force.
He surrounded the monster's mind with a searing, constricting field.
He squeezed, relentless,
and with appalling power.
The overlord was beaten.
He, who had never before encountered a foreign mind
or a vital force stronger than his own,
knew that he was beaten.
He knew that at long last he had met
that half-fabulous Valentian lensman
with whom not one of his monstrous race could cope.
He knew starkly,
with the chilling, numbing terror possible
only to such a being in such a position
that he was doomed to die the same hideous and long-drawn-out death,
which he had dealt out to so many others.
He did not read into the mind of the bitterly vengeful,
the implacably ferocious Valentian,
any more mercy or any more compunction than was actually there.
He knew perfectly that of either there was no slightest trace.
Knowing these things with the blackly appalling certainty that was his, he quailed.
There is an old but cogent saying that the brave man dies only once, the coward a thousand times.
That overlord, during that lethal combat, died more times than it is pleasant to contemplate.
Nevertheless, he fought. A cornered rat will fight, and the Delgonium was not a rat,
not exactly, that is, an ordinary rat. His mind was competent, keen, powerful, and utterly unscrupulous.
and he brought to the defense of his beleaguered ego,
every resource of skill and of trickery
and of sheer power at his command in vain.
Deeper and deeper, in spite of everything he could do,
the relentless linsman squeezed and smashed and cut and pride and bored.
Little by little, the overlord gave mental ground.
This station is here.
This staff is here.
I am here, then.
to wreak damage, all possible damage, to the commerce and to the personnel of the Galactic
Patrol, and civilization in every aspect. The overlord admitted haltingly as Wurzel's pressure
became intolerable, but such admissions, however unwillingly made or however revealing in substance,
were not enough. Worsel wanted, and would be satisfied with nothing less than his enemy,
his total knowledge.
Hence he maintained his assault until, unable longer to withstand the frightful battering,
the overlord's barriers went completely down, until every convolution of his brain and every
track of his mind lay open, helplessly exposed to Worcels' poignant scrutiny.
Then, scarcely taking time to gloat over his victim, Worsal did scrutinize.
Period.
Hurling through space toward a definite objective of
now, Worsal studied and analyzed some of the things which he had just learned.
Worsal was not surprised that this overlord had not known of any of his superior officers
in things or enterprises Bosconian, that he did not consciously know even that he had
been obeying orders or that he had superiors. That technique by this time was familiar enough.
The Bosconian psychologists were able operators, to attempt to unravel the unknowable
complexities of their subconscious compulsions would be a sheer waste of time.
What the overlords had been doing, however, was clear enough. That outpost had indeed
been wreaking havoc with civilization's commerce. Ship after ship had been lured from its course,
had been compelled to land upon this barren planet. Some of those vessels had been
destroyed. Some of them have been stripped and rifled as though by pirates of old.
Some of them had been set upon new courses, with hulls, mechanical equipment, and cargoes untouched.
No crewman or passenger, however, escaped unscathed, even though only ten percent of them died
in the overlordish fashion which Orsel knew so well.
The overlord himself had wondered why they had not been able to kill them all.
He knew that such forbearance was unnatural, was against all instinct and training.
He knew that they wanted, intensely enough, to kill every one of their victims, that their
greedy lust for life-force simply could not be sated as long as life-force was to be had.
He knew only that something, none of them knew what, limited their actual killing to ten percent of
the bag.
Wursell grinned wolfishly at that thought, even while he was admiring the quality of
a psychology which could impress such a compulsion as that,
upon such rapacious hellions as those.
That was the work of the Bosconian higher-ups,
who knew that ten percent was the limit,
above which the deaths would have been too revealing
to the statisticians of the Galactic Patrol.
The other ninety percent, however, the Delgonians had played with,
a procedure which, although less satisfying to the overlors
than the ultimate treatment,
was not very different insofar as the victim's egos were concerned.
For none of them emerged from the ordeal with any memory of what had happened,
or of what or who he had ever been.
They were not all completely mad.
Some were only partially so.
All had, however, been altered, changed, shockingly transformed.
No two were alike.
Each overlord, it appeared, had striven with all his ultra-hellish ingenuity
to excel his fellows in the manufacturer of,
of an outrageous something, whose like had never been seen in or upon any land or sea or air
or throughout any reach of space.
These and many other facts and items Worsall had studied carefully.
He was now heading for the region in which the patrol's computers had figured that
the hell-hole in space must lie.
The planet he had just left, the overlords he had just slain, were not the original hell-hole.
Could have had nothing to do with it.
Too far apart, they were not in the same possible volume of space.
Worsal knew now, though, what the hell-hole in space really was.
It was a cavern of overlords. It simply couldn't be anything else.
And in himself and his crew and his mighty vealan, he, Worsal of Alantia,
overlord-slayer par excellence of two galaxies,
had an ample measure everything it took to extirpate any number,
of overlords.
With what he had just learned, and with what he was so calmly certain he could do,
the hell-hole in space would take no more toll.
Wherefore, Worsal, coiled loosely around his hard bars, relaxed and happily planful thought,
and in a couple of hours a solid, clear-cut thought impinged upon his lens.
"'Worsel! Khan calling! What goes on, there, fellow old snake?
You've stuck that sharp tale of yours into some of my business, I hope.
End of Chapter 2.
Chapter 3 of Children of the Lens
This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
Chapter 3
Each of the second-stage lensman had exactly the same facts, the same data,
upon which to theorize and from which to draw conclusions.
Each had shared his experiences, his friends,
his findings and his deductions and inductions with all of the others.
They discussed minutely and wide-open four ways
every phase of the Bosconian problem.
Nevertheless, the approach of each to that problem
and the point of attack chosen by each was individual and characteristic.
Kimball Kinnison was by nature forthright, direct.
As has been seen, he could use the approach circuitous if necessary,
but he much preferred and upon every possible occasion
employed the approach direct.
He liked plain, unambiguous clues
much better than obscure ones.
The more obvious and factual the clue was,
the better he liked it.
He was now, therefore,
heading for Antiguan Four,
the scene of the latest and apparently
the most outrageous of a long series of crimes of violence.
He didn't know much about it.
The request had come in through regular channels,
not via lens, that he visit Antiguan and take personal charge of the investigation of the supposed
murder of the planetary president. As his speecher flashed through space, the gray lensman
mulled over in his mind the broad aspects of this crime wave. It was spreading far and wide,
and the wider it spread and the intenser it became, the more vividly one salient fact stuck out.
Selectivity. Distribution.
The solar systems of Thrail, Valantia, Telas, Clovia, and Palaisne had not been affected.
Thrail, Telas, and Clovia were full of Lensmen.
Valantia, Rijal, Palene, and a good part of the time, Clovia,
were the working headquarters of second-stage lensmen.
It seemed, then, that the trouble was roughly in inverse ratio
to the numbers or the abilities of the lensman in the neighborhood.
Something, therefore, that Lensman, particularly second-stage lensman, were bad for.
That was true, of course, for all crime.
Nevertheless, this seemed to be a special case.
And when he reached his destination, he found out that it was.
The planet was seething.
Its business and its everyday activity seemed to be almost paralyzed.
Martial law had been declared.
The streets were practically deserted,
except for thick-clustered groups of heavily armed guards.
What few people were abroad were furtive and sly.
slinking hastily along with their fear-filled eyes,
trying to look in all directions at once.
"'Wex Wainwright, go ahead,' Kinnison directed brusquely,
when, alone with the escorting patrol officers in a shielded car,
he was being taken to the Capitol grounds.
"'There's been too much secrecy, pussy-footing, about the whole affair.
"'Spill it, please.'
"'Very well, sir.'
And Wainwright told his tale.
"'Things have been happening for
months. Little things, but disturbing. Then murders and kidnappings and unexplained
disappearances had begun to increase. The police forces have been falling farther and farther behind.
The usual cries of incompetence and corruption have been raised only further to confuse the issue.
Circulars, Dodgers, handbills appeared all over the planet, from where nobody knew.
The keenest detectives could find no clue to papermakers, printers,
or distributors.
The usual inflammatory, subversive propaganda,
down with the patrol, give us back our freedom, and so on.
But because of the high tension already prevailing,
the stuff had been unusually effective
in breaking down the morale of the citizenry as a whole.
Then, this last thing.
For two solid weeks,
the whole world was literally plastered with the announcement
that at midnight on the 34th of Drill,
You're familiar with our calendar, I think.
President Renwood would disappear.
Two weeks warning, daring us.
Wainwright got that far and stopped.
Well, go on. He disappeared, I know. How?
What did you fellows do to prevent it?
Why all the secrecy?
If you insist, I'll have to tell you, of course,
but I'd rather not.
Wainwright flushed uncomfortably.
You wouldn't believe it. Nobody could. I couldn't believe it myself if I hadn't been there.
I'd rather you'd wait, sir, and let the Vice-President tell you, in the presence of the
treasure and the others who were on duty that night.
Um, I see. Maybe. Kinnison's mind raced. That's why nobody would give me details.
Afraid I wouldn't believe it, that I think they'd been—he stopped.
Hypnotized would have been the next word, but that would have been jumping at conclusions.
Even if true, there was no sense in airing that hypothesis yet.
Not afraid, sir. They knew that you wouldn't believe it.
After entering government reservation, they went not to the President's private quarters,
but into the Treasury and down into the sub-basement housing,
the most massive, the most utterly impregnable vault of the planet.
There, the nation's most responsible officers told Kinnison, with their entire minds as well as their tongues, what had happened.
Upon that black day, business had been suspended. No visitors of any sort had been permitted to enter the reservation.
No one had been allowed to approach the President, except old and trusted officers about whose loyalty there could be no question.
Airships and spaceships had filled the sky. Troops, armed with semi-troughs, armed with semi-troughs,
portables or manning fixed mount heavy stuff had covered the grounds. At five minutes before midnight,
Renwood, accompanied by four secret servicemen, had entered the vault, which was thereupon
locked by the treasurer. All the cabinet members saw them go in, as did the attendant corps
of specially selected guards. Nevertheless, when the treasure opened the vault at five minutes
after midnight, the five men were gone. No trace of any one of them had been found. No trace of any one of them
have been found from that time on.
And that, every word of it, is true,
the assembled minds yelled as one,
all unconsciously into the mind of the lensman.
During all this telling,
Kinnison had been searching mind after mind,
inspecting each minutely for the tell-tale marks of mental surgery.
He found none, no hypnosis.
This thing had happened exactly as they told it.
Now, convinced of that fact, his eyes clouded with foreboding, he set out his sense of perception
and studied the vault itself.
Millimeter by cubic millimeter, he scanned the innermost details of its massive structure,
the concrete, the neocarb alloy, the steel, the heat conductors, and the closely spaced gas cells.
He traced the intricate wiring of the networks of alarms.
Everything was sound.
Everything functioned.
Nothing had been disturbed.
The sun of this system, although rather on the small side, was intensely hot.
This planet, four, was a long way out.
Pretty close to Cardage's limit, or the Baskonians had improved their technique,
tightened up their controls.
A tube, of course, for all the tea in China, it had to be a tube.
Kinnison sagged.
For the first time in his life, the indomitable gray lensman showed his ears and more.
I know that it happened.
His voice was grim, quiet, as he spoke to the still protesting men.
I also know how it was done, but that's all.
How?
They demanded, practically, in one voice.
A hyperspacial tube.
And Kinnison went on to explain, as well as he could,
the functioning of a thing which could not be grasped intrinsically
by any non-mathematical three-dimensional mind.
But what can we or you or anybody else do about it?
The treasure asked, numbly.
Nothing whatever.
Kinnison's voice was flat.
When it's gone, it's gone.
Where does the light go when a lamp goes out?
No more trace.
No more way, no way whatever, of tracing it.
Hundreds of millions of planets in this galaxy, as many in the second.
millions and millions of galaxies.
All that in one universe, our own universe.
And there are an infinite number,
too many to be expressed, let alone to be grasped,
of universes side by side,
like pages in a book except thinner, in the hyper-dimension.
So you can figure out for yourselves
the chances of ever finding either President Renwood
or the Bosconians who took him.
So close to zero as to be indecutive,
distinguishable from zero absolute.
The treasure was crushed.
Do you mean to say that there is no protection at all from this thing?
That they can keep on doing away with us just as they please?
The nation is going mad, sir, day by day.
One more such occurrence, and we will be a planet of maniacs.
Oh, no, I didn't say that.
The tension enlightened.
Just that we can't do anything about the President
and his aids. The tube can be detected while it is in place, and anyone coming through it can be
shot as soon as he can be seen. What you need is a couple of Rigelian Lensman, or Ordovix.
I'll see to it that you get them. I don't think, with them here, that they will even try to repeat.
He did not add what he knew somberly to be a fact, that the enemy would go elsewhere,
to some other planet, not protected by a lensman,
able to perceive the intangible structure of a sphere of pure force.
Frustrated, the lensman again took to space.
It was terrible this thing of having everything happening where he wasn't,
and when he got there, having nothing left to work on.
Hit and run, stabbing the back,
how could a man fight something that he couldn't see or sense or feel or find?
But this chewing his fingernails to the elbow wasn't getting him anywhere either.
He'd have to find something that he could stick a tooth into.
What?
All former avenues of approach were blocked.
He was sure of that.
The Baskonians, who were now in charge of things, could really think.
No underling would know anything about any one of them,
except at such times and places as the directors chose,
and those conferences would be as nearly detection-proof as they could be made.
What to do?
Easy.
Catch a big operator in the act.
He grinned Riley to himself.
Easy to say, but not.
However, it wasn't impossible.
The Bosconians were not supermen.
They didn't have any more jets than he did.
Put himself in the other fellow's place,
what would he do if he were a Bosconian big shot?
He had had quite a lot of experience in the role.
Were there any specific groups of crimes which reveal techniques similar to those which he himself would use in like case?
He personally preferred to work direct and to attack in force.
At need, however, he had done a smooth job of boring from within.
In the face of the patrol's overwhelming superiority of armament, especially in the first galaxy,
they would have to bore from within.
How? By what means? He was a lensman. They were not. Jet back. Or were they, perhaps?
How did he know that they weren't? Maybe they were by this time. Fostin, the renegade Erysian.
No use kidding himself. Fawston might have known as much about the lens as mentor himself,
and might have developed an organization that even mentor didn't know anything about.
or mentor might be figuring that it would be good for what ailed a certain fat-headed gray
lendsman to have to dope this out for himself.
QX.
He shot a call to vice-coordinator Maitland, who was now in complete charge of the office
which Kinnison had temporarily abandoned.
Cliff, Kim, just gave birth to an idea.
He explained rapidly what the idea was.
Maybe nothing to it, but we may be.
better get up on our toes and find out.
You might suggest to the boys that they check up here and there, particularly around the
rough spots.
If any of them find any trace anywhere of off-color, sour, or even slightly rancid lensmanship,
with or without a lens appearing in the picture, burn a hole in space getting it to me.
QX?
Thanks.
Viewed in this new perspective, Renwood of Antiguan Four might have been neither a patron
nor a victim, but a saboteur. The tube could have been a prop, used deliberately to cap the mysterious
climax. The four honest and devoted cards were the real casualties. Renwood, or whoever he was,
having accomplished his object of undermining and destroying the whole planet's morale,
might simply have gone elsewhere to continue his nefarious activities. It was fiendishly clever.
That spectacularly theatrical finale was certainly one for the book.
The whole thing, though, was very much of a piece and quality of workmanship with what he
had done in becoming the tyrant of Thrayo.
Far-fetched?
No.
He had already denied in his thoughts that the Bosconian operators were supermen.
Conversely, he wasn't either.
He would have to admit that they might very well be as good as he was.
To deny them the ability to do anything which he himself could do would be sheer stupidity.
Where did that put him?
On Redellics, like Clonos Golden Gills.
A good-sized planet.
Important enough, but not too much so.
People human.
Comparatively little hell being raised there.
Yet.
Very few lensmen, and Gerand the top.
Hmm.
"'Jerrand, not too bright as Lensman went,
"'and inclined to be a bit brass-hattish.
"'To Redelix by all means next.'
"'He went to Redelix, but not in the dauntless, and nod in grey.
"'He was a passenger upon a luxury-liner,
"'a writer in search of local color for another saga of the spaceways.
"'Sibli White, one of the patrol's most carefully established figments,
"'had a bullet-proof past.
His omnivorous interest and his uninhibited nosiness
with the natural attributes of his profession.
Everything is grist which comes to an author's mill.
Sibley White then prowled about redelics.
Industriously, and to some observers, pointlessly.
He and his red leather notebook were apt to be seen anywhere at any time,
day or night.
He visited spaceports.
He climbed through freighters.
He lost small sums in playing various.
games of so-called chance in spaceman's dives.
Upon the other hand, he truckled assiduously to the social elite
and attended all functions into which he could wangle or could force his way.
He made a pest of himself in the offices of politicians, bankers, merchant princes,
tycoons of business and manufacture, and all other sorts of grates.
He was stopped one day in the outer office of an industrial potentate.
"'Get out and stay out,' a peg-legged guard told him.
"'The boss hasn't read any of your stuff, but I have, and neither of us wants to talk to you.
"'Data, huh?
"'What do you need of data on atomic cats and bulldozers to write them space operas of yours?
"'Why don't you get a roused-about job on a freighter and learn something about what you're trying to write about?
"'Get yourself a real space, tan, instead of that imitation you got under a lamp.
Work some of that lard off of your carcass."
White was definitely fatter than Kinnison had been, and somehow softer.
He peered outlessly through heavy lenses, which, fortunately, did not interfere with his
sense of perception.
Then maybe some of your tripe will be half fit to read.
Beat it.
Yes, sir.
Thank you, sir, very much, sir.
Kitteson bobbed up sequentially and scurried out, writing industriously.
in his notebook the while.
He had, however, found out what he wanted to know.
The boss was nobody he was looking for.
Nor was an eminent statesman, whom he button-holded at a reception.
I failed to see, sir, entirely any point in your interviewing me,
that Worthy informed him frigidly.
I am not.
I am, a sure, suitable material for any opus upon which you may be at work.
"'Oh, you can't ever tell, sir,' Kinnison said.
"'You see, I never know who or what is going to get into any of my stories
until after I start to write it, and sometimes not even then.'
The statesman glared and Kinnison retreated in disorder.
To stay in character, Kinnison actually wrote a story while upon Radellix,
a story which was later acclaimed as one of Sibley White's best.
Quedgop the Mercodin slithered flatly around the after bulge of the tranship.
One claw dug into the meter's thick armor of pure neutronium, then another.
Its terrible X-Mex-like snout locked on.
Its zymolously polydactal tongue crunched out, crashed down, rasped across.
Slurp! Slurp!
At each abrasive stroke, the groove in the transship's plating deepened,
and Quadgop leered more fiercely.
Fools!
Did they think that the airlessness of absolute space,
the heartlessness of absolute zero,
the yieldlessness of absolute neutronium
could stop Quagop the Mercotin?
And the stowaway,
that human wench Cynthia,
cowering and helpless terror,
just beyond this thin and fragile wall.
Kinnis was tapping merrily and verbosely along,
at Ascento a word,
when his first real clue developed.
A yellow attention light gleamed upon his visiphone panel.
A subdued chime gave notice that a message of importance was about to be broadcast to the world.
Kinnison White flipped his switch, and the stern face of the Provost Marshal appeared upon the screen.
Attention, please, the image spoke.
Every citizen of redelics is urged to be upon the lookout for the source of certain inflammatory and subversive literature.
which is beginning to appear in various cities of this planet.
Our officers cannot be everywhere at once.
You citizens are.
It is hoped that by the aid of your vigilance,
this threat to our planetary peace and security
can be removed before it becomes really serious,
that we can avoid the imposition of martial law.
This message, while not of extreme or urgent import to most right allegiance,
held for Kinnison a profound and unique meaning.
He was right.
He had deduced the thing 100%.
He knew what was going to happen next and how.
He knew that neither the law enforcement officers of Redelix nor its masked citizenry could stop it.
They could not even impede it.
A force of lendsmen could stop it, but that would not get the patrol anywhere
unless they could capture or kill the beings really responsible for what was done.
To alarm them would not do.
Whether or not he could do much of anything before the grand climax depended upon a lot of factors.
Upon what that climax was, upon who was threatened with what, upon whether or not the threatened
one was actually a Bosconian. A great deal of investigation was indicated. If the enemy were
going to repeat, as seemed probable, the president would be the victim. If he, Kinnison, could not
get a line upon the higher-ups before the plot came to a head, he would have to let it develop
right up to the point of disappearance, and for White to appear upon the scene at that time
would be to attract undesirable attention. No, by that time he must already have been kicking
around underfoot long enough to have become an unnoticeable fixture. Wherefore, he moved
into quarters as close to the executive offices as he could possibly get.
And in those quarters, he worked openly and wordily at the bringing of the affair of Quadgop
and the beautiful but dumb Cynthia to a satisfactory conclusion.
End of Chapter 3. Chapter 4. Of Children of the Lens.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
Chapter 4. In order to understand these and subsequent events,
it is necessary to cut back briefly some twenty-odd years to the most of the most of the
momentous interview upon chill, dark Onlow, between monstrous Candron and his superior in
affairs Bosconian, the unspeakable Alcon, tyrant of Thrail. At almost the end of that interview,
when Candron had suggested the possibility that his own base had perhaps been vulnerable to
star A-star's insidious manipulations, do you mean to admit that you may have been invaded and
searched, tracelessly? Alcon fairly shrieked the thought. "'Illcon fairly shrieked the thought. "'Intyrean.
certainly,
Kandron replied coldly.
While I do not believe that it has been done,
the possibility must be conceded.
What we could do we have done,
but what science can do, science can circumvent.
It is a virtual certainty
that it is not Onlow and I
who are their prime objectives,
but Thrail and you,
especially you.
You may be right.
With no data whatever upon who or what
star a star really is, with no tenable theory as to how he could have done what actually has been
done, speculation is idle. Thus Alcon ended the conversation, and almost immediately went back
to Thrail. After the tyrant's departure, Candron continued to think, and the more he thought,
the more uneasy he became. It was undoubtedly true that Alcon and Thrail were the patrol's prime
objectives. But those objectives attained, was it reasonable to suppose that he and Onla would be
spared? It was not. Should he warn Elkhon further? He should not. If the tyrant, after all that had
been said, could not see the danger he was in, he was not worth saving. If he preferred to
stay and fight it out, that was his lookout. Kandron would take no chances with his own
extremely valuable life.
Should he warn his own men?
How could he?
They were able and hardened fighters all.
No possible warning could make them defend their fortresses and their lives any more
efficiently than they were already prepared to do.
Nothing he could say would be of any use in preparing them for a threat whose basic nature
even was completely unknown.
Furthermore, this hypothetical invasion probably had not happened, and very well might not happen
at all, and to flee from an imaginary foe would not rebound to his credit.
No, as a personage of large affairs, not limited to Onlo, he would be called elsewhere.
He would stay elsewhere until after whatever was going to happen had happened.
If nothing happened during the ensuing few weeks, he would return from his official trip
and all would be well.
He inspected Onmo thoroughly.
He cautioned his officers repeatedly and insistently.
to keep alert against every conceivable emergency
while he was so unavoidably absent.
Then he departed, with a fleet of vessels manned by hand-picked crews
to a long-prepared and hitherto secret retreat.
From that safe place he watched,
through the eyes and the instruments of his skilled observers,
everything that occurred.
Thrail fell and onmo.
The patrol triumphed.
Then, knowing the full measure of the disaster,
and accepting it with the grim passivity so characteristic of his breed,
Candron broadcast certain signals,
and one of his, and Alcon superiors, got in touch with him.
He reported concisely.
They conferred.
He was given orders which were to keep him busy for over twenty Tullrian years.
He knew now that Onlope had been invaded,
tracelessly, by some feat of mentality beyond comprehension
and almost beyond belief.
He knew that Onlo had fallen without any of its defenders, having energized a single one of their
gigantic engines of war. The fall of Thrail, and the manner of that fall's accomplishment,
were plain enough. Human stuff. The work, undoubtedly, of human lensmen. Perhaps the work of the
human lensman, who was so frequently associated with Star A-Star. But Onlo, Candron himself had set those
snares along those intricately zigzag communication lines. He knew their capabilities.
Candron himself had installed on those blocking and shielding screens. He knew their might.
He knew, since no other path existed leading to Thrail, that those lines had been followed,
and those screens have been penetrated, and all without setting off a single alarm. Those things
had actually happened. Hence, Candron set his stupendous mind to the task
of envisaging what the being must be mentally who could do them. What the mind of this
star a star, it could have been no one else, must in actuality be. He succeeded. He deduced
Nadrick of Palain 7, practically in toto, and for the star A star thus envisaged, he set traps
throughout both galaxies. They might or might not kill him. Killing him immediately, however, was not
really of the essence. That matter could wait until he could give it his personal attention.
The important thing was to see to it that star A. Star could never, by any possible chance,
discover a true lead to any high Bosconian. Sneeringly, gloatingly, Kandron issued orders,
then flunk himself with all his zeal and ability into the task of reorganizing the shattered
fragments of the Bosconian Empire into a force capable of wrecking civilization.
Thus it was not strange that for more than twenty years,
Nadrek of Palain Seven made very little progress indeed.
Time after time he grazed the hot edge of death.
Indeed, it was only by the exertion of his every iota of skill,
power, and callous efficiency that he managed to survive.
He struck a few telling blows for civilization,
but most of the time he was strictly upon the defensive.
Every clue that he followed, it seemed, led subtly into a trap.
Every course he pursued ended, always figuratively, and all too often, literally,
in a cul-de-sac filled with semi-portable projectors, all agog to blast him out of the ether.
Year by year he became more conscious of some imperceptible, indetectable, but potent foe,
an individual enemy obstructing his every move, and determined to,
make an end of him. And year by year, as material accumulated, it became more and more certain
that the inimical entity was, in fact, candron, once of Onlo. When Kit went into space, then,
and Kitteson called Nadrick into consultation, the usually reticent and unloquacious
Pelanian was ready to talk. He told the Grey Lensman everything he knew, everything he deduced
or suspected about the ex-unlonian chieftain.
"'Kandron of Onno!' Kinnison exploded, so violently as to sear the sub-ether through which the thought passed.
"'Holy Klonos brazen bowels! And you sit there on your spiny to-cus and tell me that
Kandron got away from you back there? And that you knew it, and not only didn't do a thing
about it yourself, but didn't even tell me or anybody else about it, so that we could take
steps? Certainly. Why take steps before they become necessary? Nadrick was entirely unmoved by the
Tullerian's passion. My powers are admittedly small, my intellect feeble. However, even to me it was
clear then, and it is clear now that Kandron was then of no importance. My assignment was to
reduce On Low, I reduced it. Whether or not Kandron was there at the time did not then have,
and cannot now have anything to do with that task.
Kandron personally is another and entirely distinct problem.
Kinnison swore a blistering deep-space oath.
Then, by main strength, shut himself up.
Nadrick wasn't human.
There was no use even trying to judge him by human or near-human standards.
He was fundamentally, incomprehensibly and radically different.
And it was just as well for humanity that he was.
For if his hellishly able race had possessed the characteristically human abilities in addition to their own,
civilization would of necessity have been basically Pellonian, instead of basically human, as it now is.
QX-A's, he growled finally. Skip it.
But Kandron has been hampering my activities for years,
and now that you also have become interested in his operations against us,
he has become a factor of which cognizance should be taken.
Nadrick went imperturbably on.
He could no more understand Kinnison's viewpoint
than the Tullerian could understand his.
With your permission, therefore, I shall find and slay this Kandron.
Go to it, little chum.
Kinnison sighed, bitingly, and uselessly.
Clear ether.
While this conference was taking place,
Candron reclined in a bitterly cold,
completely unlighted room of his headquarters,
and indulged in a little gloating
concerning the predicament in which he was keeping Nadrick
of Palain 7,
who was in all probability
the once dreaded star A star of the Galactic Patrol.
It was true that the landsman was still alive.
He could probably,
Kandra mused quite pleasurably,
remained alive until he himself
could find the time to attend to him in person.
He was an able operator,
but one presenting no real menace,
now that he was known and understood.
There were other things more pressing,
just as there had been ever since the fall of Thrail.
The revised plan was going nicely,
and as soon as he had resolved that human thing,
the plurance had suggested,
could it be possible, after all, that Nadrek of Palain was not he who had been known so long
only as Star A-Star?
That the human factor was actually—
Through the operation of some unknowable sense,
Candra knew that it was time for his aid to be at hand to report upon those human affairs.
He sent out a signal, and another Unlonian scuttled in.
That unknown human element—Candran radiated harshly.
I assume that you are not reporting that it has been resolved.
Sorry, supremacy, but your assumption is correct.
The creature radiated back in no very conciliatory fashion.
The trap at Antiguan Four was set particularly for him,
specifically to match the man whose mentality you computed and diagramed for us.
Was it too obvious, think you, supremacy?
Or perhaps not quite obvious enough?
Or the galaxy being large,
is it perhaps that he simply did not learn of it in time?
In the next attempt,
what degree of obviousness should I employ,
and what degree of repetition is desirable?
The technique of the Antiguan affair was flawless,
Kandron decided.
He did not learn of it, as you suggest,
or we should have caught him.
He is a master workman,
always concealed by his very obviousness
until after he has done his work.
Thus we can never save him.
by merest chance, catching before they act. We must make him come to us. We must keep on trying
until he does come to us. It is of no great moment, really, whether we catch him now or five years
hence. This work must be done in any event. It is simply a fortunate coincidence that the necessary
destruction of civilization upon its own planets presents presents such a fine opportunity of trapping
him. As to repeating the Antiguan technique, we should not repeat it exactly. Or hold. It might be
best to do just that. To repeat a process is, of course, the mark of an inferior mind.
But if that human can be made to believe that our minds are inferior, so much the better.
Keep on trying. Report as instructed. Remember that he must be taken alive, so that we can take
from his living brain the secrets we have not yet been able to learn.
Forget, in the instant of leaving this room,
everything about me and about any connections between us
until I force recollection upon you.
Go.
The minion went, and Kandran set out to do more of the things
which he could best do.
He would have liked to take Madrex trail himself.
He could catch, and he could kill that evasive entity,
and the task would have been a pleasant one.
He would have liked to supervise the trapping of that enigmatic human lendsman who might,
or might not, be that frequently and copiously damned star A-star.
That, too, would be an eminently pleasant chore.
There were, however, other matters more pressing by far.
If the great plan were to succeed, and it absolutely must and would,
every Baskonian must perform his assigned duties.
Nadrick and his putative accomplice were side-issue.
Candron's task was to set up and to direct certain psychoses and disorders,
a ghastly train of mental ills of which he possessed such supreme mastery,
and which were surely and safely helping to destroy the foundation upon which galactic civilization rested.
That part was his, and he could do it to the best of his ability.
The other things, the personal and non-essential matters, could wait.
Kandron set out then and traveled fast and far, and wherever he went there spread still further
abroad the already widespread blight. A disgusting, a horrible blight, with which no human physician
or psychiatrist apparently could cope. One of, perhaps the worst of, the corrosive blights which had been
eating so long its civilization's vitals. And L.2 Nadrick, having decided to find and slay the
ex-ruler of Anlo went about it in his usual, unhurried, but eminently thorough fashion.
He made no effort to locate him or to trace him personally. That would be bad, foolish.
Worse, it would be inefficient. Worse, it would probably be impossible. No, he would find out
where Candron would be at some suitable future time and wait for him in that place.
To that end, Nadrick collected a vast mass of data,
concerning the occurrences and phenomena which the Big Four had discussed so thoroughly.
He analyzed each item, sorting out those which bore the characteristic stamp of the arch foe,
whom by now he had come to know so well.
The internal evidence of Candron's craftsmanship was unmistakable,
and not now to his surprise, Nadrick discerned that the number of the Unlonian's dark deeds was Legion.
There was the affair of the Prime Minister of De Silva III,
who at a cabinet meeting shot and killed his sovereign and 11 chiefs of state before committing suicide.
The president of Viradon, who at his press conference, ran amok with a scimitar snatched from a wall,
hewing unsuspecting reporters to gory bits until he was overpowered and then swallowed poison.
A variant of the theme, but still plainly candron's doing,
was the interesting episode in which Galactic Counselor Edmondson, while upon an ocean voyage,
through 15 women passengers overboard,
then leaped after them, dressed only in a life jacket, stuffed with lead.
Another, out of the same whimsical mold,
was that of Dilway, the highly respected operations chief of central spaceways.
That potentate called his secretaries one by one into a 60th floor office,
and unconcernedly tossed them one by one out of the window.
He danced to jig upon a coping before diving after them to the street.
A particularly juicy and entertaining bit, Nadrick thought, was the case of Narkor-based hospital,
in which four of the planet's most eminent surgeons decapitated every other person in the place.
Patients, nurses, orderlies and all, with a fine disregard of age, sex, or condition,
arranged the several heads, each upright and each facing due north,
upon the tiled floor to spell the word revenge, and then hacked each other to death with scalples.
These, and a thousand or more other events of similar technique,
Nadrek tabulated and subjected to statistical analysis.
Scattered so widely throughout such a vast volume of space,
they had created little or no general disturbance.
Indeed, they had scarcely been noticed by civilization as a whole.
Collected, they made a truly staggering, a revolting, and appalling total.
Nadrek, however, was inherently incapable
of being staggered, revolted, or appalled.
That repulsive summation,
a thing which in its massed horror would have shaken to the core,
shocked almost into paralysis,
any being possessing any shred of sympathy or tenderness,
was to Nadrick, simply and interesting,
and not too difficult problem in psychology and mathematics.
He placed each episode in space and in time,
correlating each with all of its fellows in a space-time matrix.
He determined the locus of centers and derived the equations of its most probable motion.
He extended it by extrapolation in accordance with that equation.
Then, assuring himself that his margin of error was as small as he could make it,
he set out for a planet in which Candron would most probably visit at a time far enough in the future
to enable him to receive the Unlonian.
That planet, being inhabited by near human beings, was warm, brightly sunlit,
and had an atmosphere rich in oxygen.
Nadrick detested it, since his ideal of a planet was precisely the opposite.
Fortunately, however, he would not have to land upon it until after Candron's arrival,
possibly not then, and the fact that his proposed quarry was like himself,
a frigid-blooded poison-breather made the task of detection a simple one.
Nadricks set his indetectable speedster into a circular orbit around the planet,
far enough out to be comfortable, and sent out course after course of delicate,
extremely sensitive screen. Precision of pattern analysis was, of course, needless.
The probability was that all legitimate movement of personnel to and from the planet
would be composed of warm-blooded oxygen-breatzers,
that any visitor not so classified would be candron.
Any frigid-blooded visitor had at least to be investigated,
hence his analytical screens had to be capable only of differentiating between two types of beings
as far apart as the galactic poles in practically every respect.
Nadrick knew that no supervision would be necessary to perform such an open-and-shut separation as that.
He would have nothing more to do until his electronic announcer should warn him of Kandron's approach,
or until the passage of time should inform him that the Onlonian was not coming to this particular planet.
Being a mathematician, Nadrick knew that any datum secured by extrapolation is of doubtful value.
He thus knew that the actual probability of Candron's coming was less by some indeterminable amount than the mathematical one.
Nevertheless, having done all that he could do, he waited with the monstrous, unhuman patience known only to such races as his.
Day by day, week by week, the Speester circled the planet and its big hot sun, and as it circled,
the lone voyager studied. He analyzed more data more precisely. He drew deeper and deeper
upon his store of knowledge to determine what steps next to take in the event that this
attempt should end, as so many previous ones had ended, in failure.
End of Chapter 4.
Chapter 5.
Of Children of the Lens.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
Chapter 5.
Kinnison, the author, toiled manfully at his epic of space
whenever he was under any sort of observation,
and enough at other times to avert any suspicion.
Indeed, he worked as much as Sibley White,
and advertisedly temperamental writer had ever worked.
Besides interviewing the high and the low, and taking notes everywhere, he attended
authors' teas, at which he cursed his characters fluently and bitterly for their failure to
cooperate with him. With short-haired women and long-haired men, he bemoaned the perversity of
a public which compelled them to prostitute the real genius of which each was the unique
possessor. He sympathized particularly with the fat woman-writer of whodunnits,
whose extremely unrealistic yet amazingly popular gray lensman hero
had lived through ten full-length novels and twenty million copies.
Even though her real field was the drama,
she wasn't writing the kind of detective tripe
that most of these crank-turners ground out, she confided to Kinnison.
She had known lots of gray lensmen very intimately,
and her stories were drawn from real life in every particular.
Thus Kinnison remained in character, and thus he was enabled to were completely unnoticed
at his real job of finding out what was going on, how the Baskonians were operating to ruin
Riddelix as they had ruined Antiguan for.
His first care was to investigate the planet's president.
That took doing, but he did it.
He examined that mind line by line and channel by channel with no results whatever.
No scars, no sign of tampering.
Calling in assistance, he searched the President's past even more rigidly than
Faustin had searched that of Traskagannal.
Still no soap.
Everything checked, even to widely distributed boyhood pictures.
Boring from within, then, was out.
His first hypothesis was wrong.
This invasion and this sabotage were being done from without.
How?
Those first leaflets were followed by others, each batch more vitriolic in tone than the preceding one.
Apparently they came from empty stratosphere.
At least no ships were to be detected in the neighborhood after any shower of the handbills had appeared.
But that was not surprising.
With its inertialist drive, any spaceship could have been parsecs away before the paper's touched atmosphere,
or they could have been bombed in from almost any distance.
Or, as Kinnison thought most reasonable, they could have been simply dumped out of the mouth of a hyperspacial tube.
In any event, the method was immaterial.
The results only were important, and those results, the lensman discovered,
were entirely disproportionate to the ostensible causes.
The subversive literature had some effect, of course, but essentially it must be a blind.
No possible tonnage of anonymous printing could cause that much.
sheer demoralization.
Crackpot societies of all kinds sprang up everywhere,
advocating everything from absolutism to anarchy.
Queer cults arose, preaching free love,
the imminent end of the world,
and almost every other conceivable departure
from the norm of thought.
The Authors League, of course,
was affected more than any other organization of its size,
because of its relatively large content
of strong and intensely opinionated mind.
"'Instead of becoming one radical group, it split into a dozen.
"'Kinnison joined one of those down-with-everything groups,
"'not as a leader, but as a follower.
"'Not too sheep-like a follower,
"'but just inconspicuous enough to retain his invisibly average status.
"'And from his place of concealment in the middle of the front rank,
"'he studied the minds of each of his fellow anarchists.
"'He watched those minds change.
He found out who was doing the changing.
When Kinnison's turn came, he was all set for trouble.
He expected a battle a powerful mentality.
He would not have been overly surprised to encounter another mad erysian,
hiding behind a zone of hypnotic compulsion.
He expected anything, in fact, except what he found,
which was a very ordinary, Radilligian therapist.
The guy was a clever enough operator, of course,
but he could not work against even the feeblest opposition.
Hence, the gray lensman had no trouble at all,
either in learning everything the fellow knew,
or upon leaving him, in implanting within his mind,
the knowledge that he had made Sibley White
into exactly the type of anarchist desired.
The trouble was that the therapist didn't know a thing.
This not entirely unexpected development
posed Kinnison three questions.
Did the higher-ups ever communicate with such small fry, or did they just give them one set of orders and cut them loose?
Should he stay in this Radelligian's mind until he found out?
If he was in control of the therapist when a big shot took over, did he have jets enough to keep from being found out?
Risky business. Better scout around first anyway.
He'd do a flit.
He drove his black speedster a million miles.
He covered redelics like a blanket, around the equator and from pole to pole.
Everywhere he found the same state of things.
The planet was literally riddled with agitators.
He found so many that he was forced to a black conclusion.
There could be no connection or communication between such numbers of saboteurs and any higher authority.
They must have been sent with one set of do-or-die instructions.
Whether they did or died was in.
immaterial. Experimentally, Kinnison had a few of the ringleaders taken into custody. As each was
arrested, another took his place. Martial law was finally declared, but this measure succeeded only in
driving the conspirators underground. What the subversive societies lost in numbers, they more than
made up in desperation and violence. Crime raged, unchecked, and uncheckable. Murder became an everyday
a commonplace, insanity waxed rife. And Kinnison, knowing now that no channel to important prey
would be opened until the climax, watched grimly while the rape of the planet went on.
The President of Redellix and Lensman Garen sent message after message to Prime Base and
Clovia imploring help. The replies to these pleas were all alike. The matter had been
referred to the Galactic Council and to the coordinator.
Everything that could be done was being done.
Neither office would say anything else,
except that, with the galaxy in such a disturbed condition,
each planet must do its best to solve its own problems.
The thing built up toward its atrocious finale.
Garand invited the president to a conference in a downtown hotel room,
and there, eyes glancing from moment to moment,
at the dials of a complete little test kit held open upon his lap.
"'I have just had some starly news, sir,' Garron said abruptly.
"'Kinnison has been here on Redulloch's for weeks.
"'What? Kinison! Where is he? Why didn't he?'
"'Yes, Kinnison. Kinnison of Klovia. The coordinator himself.
"'I don't know where he is or was. I didn't ask him.'
The Lansman smiled fleetingly. "'One doesn't, you know.
He discussed the situation with me at length.
I am still amazed.
Why doesn't he stop it, then?
The President demanded.
Or can't he stop it?
That's what I've got to explain to you.
He can, but the time won't be ripe until the last act.
Why not?
I tell you, if this thing can be stopped, it's got to be stopped.
And no matter what has to be done, it's got to be.
Just a minute.
Garen snapped. I know that you're out of control. I don't like to see Radellix torn apart
any better than you do. But you ought to know by this time that Galactic coordinator Kimball Kinnison
is in a better position to know what to do than any other man in the universe.
Furthermore, his word is the last word. What he says goes.
Of course, the President apologized. I am overwrought. But to see our entire world pull down
around us and upon us, our institutions, the work of centuries, destroyed, millions of lives lost,
all needlessly. It won't come to that, he says, if we all do our parts. And you, sir, are very much
in the picture. I, how? Are you familiar with exactly what happened upon Antiguan for?
Why, no. They had some trouble over there, I recall, but that's it. That's why this must go on.
No planet cares particularly about what happens to any other planet, but the coordinator
cares about all of them as a whole.
If this trouble is headed off now, it will simply spread to other planets.
If it is allowed to come to a climax, there is a good chance that we can put an end to
the whole trouble for good.
But what has that to do with me?
What can I personally do?
Much.
The last act upon Antiguan Four, the thing that made it
a planet of maniacs was the kidnapping of planetary President Renwood.
It is supposed that he was murdered, since no trace of him has ever been found.
Oh, the older man's hands clenched, then loosened.
I am willing, provided. Is the coordinator fairly certain that my death will enable him?
It won't get that far, sir. He intends to stop it just before that. He and his associates, I don't know
who they are, have been listing every enemy agent they can find, and they will all be taken
care of at once. He believes that Boscone will publish in advance a definite time at which they will
take you away from us. That was the way it went at Antiguan. Even from the patrol? From the base itself.
Coordinator Kinnison is pretty sure that they can do it, except for something that he can bring
into play only at the last moment. Incidentally, that is why, that is why, you know, that is why, you know,
we are having this meeting here, with this detector which he gave me.
He is afraid that base is porous.
In that case, what can he?
The President fell silent.
All that I know is that we are to dress you in a certain suit of armor
and have you in my private office in base a few minutes before the time they set.
We and the guards leave the office at minus two minutes and walk down the corridor,
just fast enough so that at minus one minute we are exactly in front of room 24.
We are to rehearse it until our timing is perfect.
I have no idea what is going to happen then, but I know that something will.
We are not to discuss this again, even via lens,
as he is pretty sure that you will very shortly be under surveillance every minute.
Time passed.
The Bosconian infiltration progressed strictly according to plan.
Upon the surface, it appeared that Redelix was going in almost the same fashion in which Antiguan
Four had gone.
Below the surface, however, there was one great difference.
Every ship, whether liner or freighter or tramp, which docked at any spaceport of
Radellics, brought at least one man who did not leave.
Some of these visitors were tall in life, some were short and fat.
Some were old, some were young, some were paid.
Some were burned to the complexion of ancient leather by the fervent rays of space.
They were alike only in the look of eagles in their steady, quiet eyes.
Each landed and went about his ostensible business,
interesting himself not at all in any of the others.
Again, the Bosconians declared their contempt of the patrol
by setting the exact time at which the president was to be taken.
Again, the appointed hour was midnight.
Vice-Admiral Lensman Garand was, as Kinnison had intimated frequently, somewhat of a brass hat.
He did not. He simply could not believe that his base was as pregible as the coordinator had assumed it to be.
Kinnison, knowing that all ordinary defenses would be useless, had not even mentioned them.
Garand, unable to believe that his hitherto invincible and invulnerable weapons and defenses were all of a sudden useless,
mustered them of his own volition.
All leaves have been cancelled.
Every detector, every beam, every device of defense and of offense was fully manned.
Every man was keyed up and alert.
And Garand, while the least bit apprehensive that something was about to happen,
which was not in the book, was pretty sure in his stout old war-dog soul that he and his men had stuff enough.
At two minutes before midnight, the armored president and his son,
escorts left Garon's private office.
One minute later, they were passing the door of the specified room.
A bomb exploded shatteringly behind them.
Armored men rushed yelling out of a branch corridor in their rear.
Everybody stopped and turned to look.
So, the hidden Kinnison assured himself, did an unseen observer in an invisibly hovering
three-dimensional hyper-circle.
Kinnison threw the door open, flashed an explanatory thought.
at the president, yanked him into the room and into the midst of a corps of linsman, armed with
devices not usually encountered even in patrol bases. The door snapped shut, and Kinnison
stood where the president had stood an instant before, clad in armor identical with that
which the president had worn. The exchange had required less than one second. It had been observed
by no one. QX. Garand and you fellows? Kinnison drove the thought.
the president is safe. I'm taking over. Double time straight ahead. Hype. Get into the clear.
Give us a chance to use our stuff. The unarmored men broke into a run, and as they did so,
the door of room 24 swung open and stayed open. Weapons snouted out, shoved by armored men.
Armored men and heavy weapons erupted from other doors and from more branch corridors.
The hypercircle, which was, in fact, the terminus of a hyperspacial tube, began to thicken
toward visibility. It did not, however, materialize. Only by the intensest effort of vision
could it be discerned as the sheerest wisp, more tenuous than the thinnest fog. The men within the
ship, if ship it was, were visible only as striations in air are visible, and no more to be
made out in detail.
Instead of a full materialization, the only thing that was or became solid or tangible was a dead black thing which reached purposefully outward and downward and downward toward Kinnison, a thing combined of tongs and coarse-meshed heavy net.
Kineson's delameters flamed at maximum intensity and minimum aperture.
Useless.
The stuff was durium, that unbelievably dense and ultimately refractory synthetic, which,
saturated with pure force, is the only known substance which can exist as an actuality,
both in normal space, and in that pseudospace, which composes the hyperspacial tube.
The lensman flicked on his neutralizer and shot away inertialess, but that maneuver too
had been foreseen. The Bosconian engineers matched every move he made, within a split second
after he made it. The tongnet gripped and closed.
Semi-portables flamed then, heavy stuff, but they might just as well have remained cold.
Their beams could not cut the durium linkages. They slid harmlessly past, not through,
the wraith-like, figmental invaders at whom they were aimed. Kinnison was hauled aboard the
Bosconean vessel. Its structure and its furnishings and its crew becoming ever firmer and more
substantial to his senses, as he went from normal into pseudo-space.
As the pseudo-world became real, the reality of the base behind him thinned into
unreality. In seconds it disappeared utterly, and Kinnison knew that to the senses of his
fellow human beings he had vanished without leaving a trace. This ship, though, was real enough.
So were his captors. The net opened, dumping the lansmen ignominiously to the floor,
tractor beams wrenched his blazing delameters out of his grasp.
Whether or not hands and arms came with them was entirely his own lookout.
Tractors and pressers jerked him upright, slammed him against the steel wall of the room,
held him motionless against it.
Furiously, he launched his ultimately lethal weapon.
The Worsal-designed, Thorndyke-built, mind-control projector of thought-borne vibrations,
which decomposed the molecules without which,
thought and life itself could not exist. Nothing happened. He explored, finding that even his sense
of perception was stopped a full foot away from every part of every one of those humanoid bodies.
He settled down then and thought, A great light dawned, a shock struck sickeningly home.
No such elaborate and super-powered preparations could have been made for the capture of any civilian.
Presidents were old men, physically weak and with no extraordinary powers of mind.
No, this whole chain of events had been according to plan, a high Bosconian's plan.
Ruining a planet was, of course, a highly desirable feature in itself, but it could not have
been the main feature.
Somebody with a real brain was out after the four second-stage lensman, and he wasn't
fooling. And if Nadrick, Worsal, Tregonzi, and himself were all to disappear, the patrol
would know that it had been nudged. But jet back, which of the four other than himself would
have taken that particular bait? Not one of them. Weren't they out after them, too? Sure they were.
They must be. Oh, if he could only warn them! But after all, what good would it do? They had all
warned each other repeatedly to watch out for traps. All four had been constantly on guard.
What possible foresight could have avoided a snare set so perfectly to match every detail of a man's
physical and mental makeup? But he wasn't licked yet. They had to know what he knew, how he had done
what he had done, whether or not he had any superiors and who they were. Therefore, they had had to take
him alive, just as he had had to take various Baskonian chiefs.
And they'd find out that as long as he was alive, he'd be a dangerous buzzsaw to monkey with.
The captain, or whoever was in charge, would send for him. That was a foregone conclusion.
He would have to find out what it was that he had caught. He would have to make a preliminary
report of some kind, and somebody would slip. One hundred percent vigilance was impossible,
and Kinnison would be on his toes to take advantage of that slip,
whatever or however slight it might be.
But the captors did not take Kinnison to the captain,
instead, accompanied by half a dozen armored men,
that worthy came to Kinnison.
Start talking, fellow, and talk fast.
The Bosconian directed crisply in the lingua franca of deep space
as the armored soldier strode out.
I want to know who you are,
what you are, what you've done, and everything about you and the patrol.
So talk.
Or do you want me to pull you apart with these tractors, armor and all?'
Kinnison paid no attention, but drove at the commander with his every mental force and weapon.
Blocked.
This ape, too, had a full-body, full-covered screen.
There was a switch at the captain's hip, handy for fingertip control.
if he could only move.
It would be so easy to flip that switch.
Or if he could throw something,
or make one of those other fellows brush against him just right,
or if the guy happened to sit down a little too close to the arm of a chair,
or if there were a pet animal of any kind around,
or a spider, or a worm, or even a gnat.
End of Chapter 5.
Chapter 6.
Of Children of the Lens
This Libervox according is in the public domain.
Chapter 6
Second Stage Landsman Traganzi of Rigel 4
did not rush madly out into space in quest of something or anything Bosconian
in response to Kinnison's call.
To hurry was not Tragancy's way.
He could move fast upon occasion,
but before he would move at all,
he had to know exactly how, where, and why he should move.
He conferred with his three things.
fellows. He furnished them with all the data he possessed. He helped integrate the totaled facts
into one composite. That composite pleased the others well enough so that they went to work,
each in his own fashion, but it did not please Targanzi. He could not visualize any coherent
hole from the available parts. Therefore, while Kinnison was investigating the fault of Antiguan for,
Targancy was sitting, or rather standing, still and thinking. He was still standing. He was still standing,
standing still in thinking when Kinneson went to Redelix.
Finally, he called in an assistant to help him think.
He had more respect for the opinions of Camilla Kinneson
than for those of any other entity, outside of Erycia, of the two galaxies.
He had helped train all five of the Kinnison children,
and in Cam he had found a kindred soul.
Possessing a truer sense of values than any of his fellows,
he alone realized that the peoples had long since passed their tutors.
And it is a measure of his quality that the realization brought into Tregansi's tranquil soul,
no tinge of rancor, but only wonder.
What those incredible children of the lens had, he did not know,
but he knew that they, particularly Camilla, had extraordinary gifts.
In the mind of this scarcely grown woman,
he perceived depths which he could not plumb,
extensions and vistas, the meanings of which he could not even vaguely grasp.
He did not try either to plumb the abysses or to survey the expanses.
He made no slightest effort ever to take from any of the children anything which the children
did not first offer to reveal.
In his own mind he tried to classify theirs, but realizing in the end that that task was
and always would be beyond his power, he accepted that fact as calmly as he accepted.
the numberless others of nature's inexplicable facts.
Traganzi came the closest of any second-stage lanceman to the real truth,
but even he never did suspect the existence of the Adorians.
Camilla, as quiet as her twin sister Constance was boisterous,
parked her speester in one of the capacious holes of the Rigelian spaceship,
and joined him in the control room.
You believe, I take it, that Dad's logic is faulty, his deductions erroneous?
the girl thought after a casual greeting.
"'I'm not surprised.
So do I.
He jumped at conclusions.
But then he does that, you know.'
"'Oh, I wouldn't say that exactly.
However, it seems to me,' Tregonzi replied carefully,
that he did not have sufficient basis, in fact,
to form any definite conclusion
as to whether or not Renwood of Antiguan was a Bosconian operative.
It is that point which I wish to discuss with you first.
Cam concentrated.
I don't see that it makes any difference, fundamentally, whether he has or not, she decided finally.
A difference in method only, not in motivation.
Interesting, perhaps, but immaterial.
It is virtually certain in either case that Cane draw in Avonle or some other entity
is the motive force and is the one who must be destroyed.
Of course, my dear, but that is only the first differential.
How about the second and the third?
Method governs.
Nadrach, concerning himself only with Candron,
tabulated and studied only the Candranesque manifestations.
He may, probably will, eliminate Candron.
It is by no means assured, however, that that step will be enough.
In fact, for my preliminary study, I would risk a small wager that the larger and worse aspects would remain untouched.
I would, therefore, suggest that we ignore for the time being Nadrick's findings and examine anew all the data available.
I wouldn't bet you a mellow on that.
Camilla caught her lower lip between white even teeth.
Check.
The probability is that Renwood was a loyal citizen.
Let us consider every possible argument for and against that assumption.
They went into a contact of mind so close that the separate thoughts simply could not be resolved
into terms of speech. They remained that way, not for the period of a few minutes,
which would have exhausted any ordinary brain, but for four solid hours. And at the end of that
conference they had arrived at a few tentative conclusions.
Kinnison had said that there was no possibility of tracing a hyperspacial tube after it had ceased to exist.
There were millions of planets in the two galaxies.
There was an indefinite, quite possibly an infinite number of coexistent parallel spaces,
into any one of which the tube might have led.
Knowing these things, Kinnison had decided that the probability was infinitesimally small
that any successful investigation could be made along those lines.
Tregonzi and Camilla, starting with the same facts,
arrived at entirely different results.
There were many spaces true,
but the inhabitants of any one space belonged to that space
and would not be interested in the conquest
or the permanent taking over of any other.
Foreign spaces, then, need not be considered.
Civilization had only one significant,
enemy, Bosconia. Bosconia, then, captained possibly by Candron of Anlo, was the attacker.
The tube itself could not be traced, and there were millions of planets, yes, but those facts
were not pertinent. Why not? Because X, who might or might not be Candron, was not operating
from a fixed headquarters, receiving reports from subordinates who did the work. A rigid philosophical
analysis, of which few other minds would have been capable, showed that X was doing the work
himself, and was moving from solar system to solar system to do it. Those mass psychoses in which
entire garrisons went mad all at once, those mass hysterias in which vast groups of civilians
went reasonably out of control, could not have been brought about by any ordinary mind. Of all
civilization, only Nadrick of Palin 7 had their requisite ability.
Was it reasonable to suppose that Bascone had any such minds?
No.
X was either singular or a small integer.
Which?
Could they decide the point?
With some additional data, they could.
Their linked minds went on rapport with Worsal, with Nadrick, with Kinnison,
and with the principal statistician at prime base.
In addition to Nadrex's locust, they determined two more,
one of all inimical manifestations, the other of those which Nadrick had not used in his computations.
Their final exhaustive analysis showed that there were at least two, and very probably only two,
prime intelligences directing those Bosconian activities.
They made no attempt to identify either of them.
They communicated to Nadrick their results and their conclusions.
"'I am working on Kandron,' the Palin replied flatly.
I made no assumptions as to whether or not there were other prime movers at work,
since the point has no bearing.
Your information is very interesting, and may perhaps prove valuable, and I thank you for it,
but my present assignment is to find and to kill Candron of Onno.
Traganzi and Camilla then set out to find X.
Not any definite actual or deduced entity,
but the perpetrator of certain closely related and highly characterful,
phenomena, viz, mass psychoses, and mass hysterias. Nor did they extrapolate. They visited the last
few planets which had been affected, in the order in which the attacks had occurred. They
studied every phase of every situation. They worked slowly, but they hoped and they believed
surely. Neither of them had any idea, then, that behind X lay plur and beyond plur, Edor.
Having examined the planet latest to be stricken, they made no effort to pick out definitely
the one next to be attacked. It might be any one of ten worlds, or possibly even twelve.
Hence, neglecting entirely the mathematical and logical probabilities involved,
they watched them all, each taking six. Each flitted from world to world, with senses
alert to perceive the first sign of subversive activity.
Tragansi was a retired magnate, spending his declining years and seeing the galaxy.
Camilla was a Tullerian business girl on vacation.
Young, beautiful, innocent-looking girls who traveled alone
were, then as ever, regarded as fair game by the Don One of any given human world.
Scarcely had Camilla registered at the Hotel Grand
when a well-groomed, self-satisfied manabout town made an approach.
"'Hello, beautiful.
"'Remember me, don't you?
"'Old Tom Thomas?
"'What say we split a bottle of Phelan to renew old?'
"'He broke off,
"'for the red-headed eyeful's reaction
"'was in no sense orthodox.
"'She was not coldly unaware of his presence.
"'She was neither coy nor angry,
"'neither fearful, nor scornful.
"'She was only and vastly amused.
"'You think, then, that I am human,
and desirable? Her smile was devastating. Did you ever hear of the canthrips of
Alinol? She had never heard of them either, before that instant, but this small implied
mendacity did not bother her. No, I can't say that I have. The man, while very evidently
taken aback by this new line of resistance, persevered. What kind of a brush-off do you think
you're trying to give me?
Brush off.
See me as I am, you beast,
and thank whatever gods you recognize that I am not hungry,
having eaten just last night.
In his sight, her green eyes darkened to a jetty black.
The flecks of gold in them scintillated and began to emit sparks.
Her hair turned into a mass of horribly clutching tentacles.
Her teeth became fangs, her fingers talons,
her strong, splendidly proportioned body a monstrosity out of hell's grisliest depths.
After a moment she allowed the frightful picture to fade back into her charming self,
keeping the Romeo from fainting by the power of her will.
Call the manager if you like.
He has been watching and has seen nothing except that you are pale and sweating.
I, a friend of yours, have been giving you some bad news, perhaps.
"'Tell your stupid police all about me,
if you wish to spend the rest of your life in a padded cell.
I'll see you again in a day or two, I hope.
I'll be hungry again by that time.'
She walked away, sereney confident that the fellow would never willingly come within sight of her again.
She had not damaged his ego permanently.
He was not a neurotic type, but she had given him a jolt,
which he never would forget.
Camilla Kinison, nor any of her sisters, had anything to fear from any male or males infesting
any planet or roaming any depths of space.
The expected and awaited trouble developed.
Tragansy and Camilla landed and began their hunt.
The league for planetary purity, it appeared, was the primary focal point.
Hence the two attended a meeting of that crusading body.
That was a mistake.
Tragansy should have stayed out in deep space.
concealed behind a solid thought-screen.
For Camilla was an unknown.
Furthermore, her mind was inherently stable
at a third level of stress.
No lesser mind could penetrate her screens,
or having failed to do so,
could recognize the fact of failure.
Traganzi, however, was known throughout all civilized space.
He was not wearing his lens, of course,
but his very shape made him suspect.
Worse, he could not hide from any.
any mind as powerful as that of X, the fact that his mind was very decidedly not that of a
retired by Jellian gentleman.
Thus Camilla had known that the procedure was a mistake.
She intimated as much, but she could not sway the unswerving Tregonzi from his
determined course without revealing things which must forever remain hidden from him.
She acquiesced, therefore, but she knew what to expect.
Hence, when the invading intelligence blanketed the assemblage lightly, only to be withdrawn
instantly upon detecting the emanations of a mind of real power, Cam had a bare moment of time in
which to act. She synchronized with the intruding thought, began to analyze it, and trace it back
to its source. She did not have time enough to succeed fully in either endeavor, but she did get a line.
When the foreign influence vanished, she shot a message to Tragansi, and they
sped away. Hurtling through space along the established line,
Traganzi's mind was a turmoil of thought, thoughts as plain as print to Camilla.
She flushed uncomfortably. She could, of course, blush at will.
I'm not half the Superman whose picture you are painting, she said.
That was true enough. No one this side of ERISA could have been.
You're so famous, you know, and I'm not. While he was exasks,
examining you, I had a fraction of a second to work in. You didn't. That may be true.
Although Tragonzi had no eyes, the girl knew that he was staring at her, scanning,
but not intruding, with his highly developed sense of perception. She had lowered her barriers
so far that he thought they were completely down. You have, however, extraordinary and
completely inexplicable powers. But being the daughter of Kills...
and Clarissa Kinnison.
That's it, I think.
She paused, then, in a burst of girlish confidence, and went on.
I've got something, I really do think, but the trouble is that I don't know what it is
or what to do with it.
Maybe in fifty years or so I will.
This also was close enough to the truth, and it did serve to restore to Tragansi his wanted poise.
Be that as it may,
I will take your advice next time, if you will offer it.
Try and stop me. I love to give advice.
She laughed unaffectedly.
It might not have turned out any differently this time, though,
and it may not be any better next time.
Then further to quiet the shrewd Rigelian suspicions,
she strode over to the control panel and checked the course.
Having done so, she fanned out detectors,
centering upon that course to the fullest range of the rest.
their power. She swaggered a little when she speared with the CRX tracer a distant vessel
in a highly satisfactory location. That act would cut her down to size in Trigonsi's mind.
"'You think, then, that X is in that ship?' he asked quietly.
"'Probably not.'
"'She could not afford to act too dumb. She could fool a second-stage lensman a little,
but nobody could fool one very much.
It may, however, give us a lead.
It is practically certain that X is not in that vessel,
Treganzi thought.
In fact, it may be a trap.
We must, however, make the customary arrangements
to take it into custody.
Cam nodded and the Rigelian communications officers
energized their long-range beings.
Far ahead of the fleeing vessel,
centering upon its line of flight,
fast cruisers of the Galactic Patrol
began to form a gigantic cup.
Hours passed,
and, a not unexpected circumstance,
Tragansi super-dreadnought
gained rapidly upon the supposed Bosconian.
The quarry did not swerve or dodge.
Straight into the mouth of the cup it sped.
Tractors and presses reached out,
locked on, and were neither repulsed nor cut.
The strange ship did not go inert, did not put out a single course of screen, did not fire a beam.
She did not reply to signals.
Spy rays combed her from needle-nose to driving jets, searching every compartment.
There was no sign of life aboard.
Spots of pink appeared upon Camilla's deliciously smooth cheeks.
Her eyes flashed.
We've been had, Uncle Trigg.
How we've been had!
she exclaimed, and her chagrin was not at all assumed.
She had not quite anticipated such a complete fiasco as this.
Score one for X, Tragansy said.
He not only seemed to be, but actually was, calm and unmoved.
We will now go back and pick up where we left off.
They did not discuss the thing at all, nor did they wonder how X had escaped them.
After the fact, they both knew.
There had been at least two vessels. At least one of them had been inherently indetectable
and screened against thought. In one of these latter, X had taken a course at some indeterminable
angle to the one which they had followed. X was now at a safe distance. X was nobody's fool.
End of Chapter 6. Chapter 7. Of Children of the Lens
This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
Chapter 7
Catherine Kinnison, trim and taught in black glamorette,
strolled into the breakfast nook, humming a lilting song.
Pausing before a full-length mirror,
she adjusted her cocky little black toke
at an even more piquant angle over her left eye.
She made a couple of passes at her right of curls
and gazed at her reflect itself in high approval,
as putting both hands upon her smoothly rounded hips, she wriggled, is the only possible term for it,
in the sheer joy of being alive.
Catherine, Clarissa Kinnison chided gently.
Don't be exhibitionistic, dear.
Except in times of stress, the Kinnison women used spoken language to keep in practice, as they said.
Why not? It's fun.
The tall girl bent over and kissed her mother upon the lobe of an ear.
"'You're sweet mums, you know that. You're the most precious thing.
Ha! Bacon and eggs? Goody!'
The older woman watched half-inviously as her eldest daughter ate with the carefree abandon
of one who has no cares whatever either for her digestion or for her figure.
She had no more understood her children ever than a hen can understand the brood of ducklings
she has so unwittingly hatched out, and that comparison was more striking.
apt than Clarissa Kinison ever would know. She now knew, more than a little ruefully,
that she never would understand them. She had not protested openly at the rigor of the regime
to which her son Christopher had been subjected from birth. That she knew was necessary. It was inconceivable
that Kit should not be a lensman, and for a man to become a lensman, he had to be given
everything which he could possibly take. She was deeply glad, however,
that her four other babies had been girls. Her daughters were not going to be
lendsman. She, who had known so long and so heavily the weight of the linsman's load, would see
to that. Herself, a womanly feminine woman, she had fought with every resource at her command
to make her girl babies grow up into replicas of herself. She had failed. They simply would not
play with dolls, nor play house with the other little girls. Instead, they insisted upon
intruding, as she considered it, upon lensman,
preferably upon second-stage lensman,
if any one of the four chance to be anywhere within reach.
Instead of with toys, they played with atomic engines and flitters,
and later with speedsters and spaceships.
Instead of primers, they read galactic charts.
One of them might be at home as now, or all of them, or none.
She never did know what to expect.
But they were in no sense disloyal.
They loved their mother with a depth of affection which no other mother anywhere has ever known.
They tried their very best to keep her from worrying about them.
They kept in touch with her wherever they went,
which might be at whim to tell us, or to Thrail, or to Elsaiken,
or to any unplumped cranny of intergalactic space.
And they informed her, apparently without reservation, as to everything they did.
They loved their father and their brother,
and each other and themselves with the same whole-hearted fervor they bestowed upon her.
They behaved always in exemplary fashion.
None of them had ever shown or felt the slightest interest in any one of the numerous boys and men,
and this trait, if the truth is to be told, Clarissa could understand least of all.
No, the only thing basically wrong with them was the fact made abundantly clear since they first toddled
that they should not be and could not be subjected to any jot or tittle of any form of control, however, applied.
Catherine finished eating finally and gave her mother a bright, quick grin.
Sorry, mums, you'll just have to give us up as hard cases, I guess.
Her fine eyes, so like Larissa's except in color, clouded as she went on.
I am sorry, mother, really, that we can't be what you so want us to be.
"'We've tried so hard, but we just can't.
It's something here and here.'
She tapped one temple and prodded her midsection with a pink forefinger.
"'Call it fatalism or anything you please.
But I think that we're slated to do a job of some kind some day,
even though none of us has any idea what that job is going to be.'
Clarissa paled.
"'I have been thinking just that for years, dear.
I have been afraid to say it, or even,
to think it. You are Kim's children and mine. If there ever was a perfect, a predestined marriage,
it is ours. And Mentor said that our marriage was necessary. She paused, and in that instant
she almost perceived the truth. She was closer to it than she had ever been before or ever would be
again. But that truth was far too vast for her mind to grasp. She went on. But I do it over again,
Catherine, knowing everything I know now. Vast rewards, you know.
Of course you would, Kat interrupted. Any girl would be a fool not to.
The minute I meet a man like Dad, I'm going to marry him, if I have to scratch Kay's eyes out
and snatch Cam and con bald-headed to get him. But speaking of Dad, just what do you think
of la Fere Radellix? Gone every trace of levity, both women stood up.
Gold-flected tawny eyes
stare deeply into the gold-flected eyes
of dark and velvety green.
"'I don't know,' Clarissa spoke slowly, meaningfully.
"'Do you?'
"'No, I wish that I did.'
Catherine's was not the voice of a girl,
but that of an avenging angel.
As Kit says,
"'I'd give four front teeth and my right leg to the knee-joint
to know who or what is back of that, but I don't.
I feel very much in the mood to do a flit out that way.
Do you?
Clarissa paused.
I'm glad.
I'd go myself, in spite of everything he says,
except that I know I couldn't do anything.
If that should be the job you were talking about?
Oh, do anything you can, dear, anything to make sure that he comes back to me.
Of course, mums.
Catherine broke away almost by force from her mother's emotion.
I don't think it is.
At least I haven't got any cosmic hunch to that effect.
And don't worry, it puts wrinkles in the girlish complexion.
I'll do just a little look-see.
Stick around long enough to find out what's what and let you know all about it.
Bye.
At high velocity, Catherine drove her indetectable speister to redelics,
and around and upon that planet she conducted invisible investigations.
She learned a part of the true state of her.
affairs, she deduced more of it, but she could not see even dimly the picture as a whole.
This part, though, was clear enough. An interdimensional expert, she did not have to be at the one
apparent mouth of a hyperspacial tube in order to enter it. She knew that while communication
was impossible either through such a tube from space to space, or from the interior of the
tube to either space, the quality of the tube was not the barrier. The interface was. The interface was,
wherefore, knowing what to expect immediately and working diligently to solve the whole problem,
she waited.
She watched Kinnison's abduction.
There was nothing she could do about that.
She could not interfere, then, without setting up repercussions, which might very well
shatter the entire structure of the Galactic Patrol.
When the Bosconian ship had disappeared, however, she tapped the tube and followed it.
Almost nose to tail, she pressed it.
tensely alert to do some helpful deed which could be ascribed to accident or to luck.
For she knew starkly that Kinnison's present captors would not slip,
and that his every ability had been discounted in advance.
Thus she was ready when Kinnison's attention concentrated upon the switch
controlling the Baskonian captain's thought-screen generator.
There were no pets or spiders or worms, or even gnats,
but the captain could sit down.
Around his screen, then, she drove a solid beam of thought, upon a channel which neither the pirate
nor the lensman knew existed. She took over in a trice the fellow's entire mind. He sat down,
as Kinnison had so earnestly hoped that he would do, the merest fraction of an inch too close
to the chair's arm. The switch handle flipped over, and Catherine snatched her mind away.
She was sure that her father would not suspect that that bit of luck was anything
except purely fortuitous.
She was equally sure that the thing was safe, for a time at least, in Kinnison's highly
capable hands.
She slowed down, allowed the distance between the two vessels to increase.
But she kept within range, for it was more than probable that one or two more seemingly
lucky accidents would have to happen before very long.
In the instant of the flicking of the switch, the captain's mind became Kinnisans.
He was going to issue orders to take the shift.
ship over in an orderly way, but his first contact with the subjugated mind made him change
his plans. Instead of uttering orders, the captain leaped out of the chair toward the beam controllers.
And not an instant too soon. Others had seen what had happened, had heard that tell-tale click.
All have been warned against that and many other contingencies. As the captain leaped, one of his
fellows drew a bullet projector and calmly shot him through the head. The shock of that bullet
the death of the mind in his own mind's grasp, jarred the gray lensman to the core. It was almost
the same as though he himself had been killed. Nevertheless, by sheer force of will, he held on. By sheer
power of will, he made that dead body take those last three steps and forced those dead hands
to cut the master circuit of the beams which were holding them helpless. Freed, he leaped forward,
but not alone. The others leaped too, and for the same switch.
Kinnison got there first, just barely first, and as he came he swung his armored fist.
What a durium inlaid glove, driven by all the brawn of Kimball Kinnison's mighty right arm
and powerful torso, backed by all the momentum of body and armor mass, will do to a human head
met in direct central impact is nothing to dwell upon here. Simply that head splashed.
Pivoting Nimley, considering his encumbering armor, he swung a terrific,
leg. His massive steel boots sank calf deep into the abdomen of the foe next in line.
Two more utterly irresistible blows disposed of two more of the Bosconians. The last two
turned and frantically ran. But the linsman by that time had the juice back on. And when a man
has been smacked against a solid armor plate bulkhead by the full power of a D2P
presser, all that remains to be done must be accomplished with a scraper and a mop, or a sponge.
Kinnison picked up his dilameters, reconnected them, and took stock.
So far, so good.
But there were other men aboard this heap.
How many he better find out.
And at least some of them wore durium inlaid armor as capable as his own.
And in her speester, concluding that this wasn't going to be so bad after all, Catherine
glowed with pride in her father's prowess.
She was no shrinking violet, this third-stage lensman. She held no Ruth whatever for civilization's
foes. She herself would have driven that beam as mercilessly as had the gray lensman.
She could have told Kinnison what next to do, could even have inserted the knowledge
stealthily into his mind. But heroically, she refrained. She will let him handle this in his own
fashion as long as he possibly could do so. The gray lensman sent his sense of perception abroad.
Twenty more of them. The ship wasn't very big.
Ten aft armored. Six forward also armored. Four unarmored in the control room.
That control room was poison. He'd go aft first. He searched around. Surely they'd have
Durham's space axes. Oh yes, there they were. He hefted them, selected one of the correct
weight and balance. He strode down the companionway toward the word room. He flung the door open,
and stepped inside.
His first care was to blast the communicator panels with his dilameters.
That would delay the mustering of reinforcements.
The control room couldn't guess, at least for a time,
that one man was setting out to capture their ship single-handed.
His second, ignoring the beams of hand weapons splashing refulgently from his screens,
was to weld the steel door solidly to the jam.
Then, sheathing his projectors, he swung up his axe and went grimly to work.
He thought fleetingly of how nice it would be to have Van Buskirk, that dean of all axemen at his back,
but he wasn't too old or too fat to swing a pretty mean axe himself.
And fortunately, these Bosconians, here in their quarters, didn't have axes.
They were heavy, clumsy, and for emergency use only.
They were not a part of the regular uniform as upon Valeria.
The Space Axe.
Formerly that weapon had been forged from the hardest,
and toughest of alloy steels.
For years, however,
it had been made universally from durium.
A deceptive little thing truly.
A dainty-looking affair,
a little larger than a broad hatchet.
Unlike a hatchet, however,
it had a mass of some twenty pounds
and was equipped with a yard-long,
double-gripped shaft.
A sharply tapered spear in for thrusting,
gouging, and stabbing.
A wickedly curved, needle-pointed beak
for rending and tearing.
a flatly rounded, razor-sharp blade capable of shearing through neocarballoy as cleanly as a scalpel through butter.
The first foe swung up his dilaminer involuntarily as Kinnison's axe swept down.
When the curved blade, driven as viciously as the linsman's strength could drive it, struck the ray gun, it did not even pause.
Through it it sliced, the severed halves falling to the floor.
The durium inlay of the glove held, and glove and axe smacked.
together against the helmet. The Bosconian went down with a crash, but beyond a broken
armor some such trifle, he wasn't hurt much, and no armor that a man had to carry around
could be made of solid durium. Hence, Kinnison reversed his weapon and swung again,
aiming carefully at a point between the inlay strips. The axe's wicked beak tore through steel
and skull and brain, stopping only with the sharply ringing impact of durium shaft against
durium stripping.
They were coming at him now, not only with dilameters, but with whatever steel bars and spanners
and bludges they could find.
QX, his armor could take oodles of that.
They might dent it, but they couldn't possibly get through.
Planting one boot solidly upon his victim's helmet, he raced his axe out through flesh and
bone and metal, no fear of breakage.
Not even a Valerian's full savage strength could break that small, fragile.
looking tool, and struck again, and struck, and struck. He fought his way to the door. Two of the
survivors were trying to unseal it and to get away. They failed, and in failing, died. A couple of
the remaining enemies shrieked and ran in blind panic and tried to hide. The others battled desperately
on. But whether they ran or fought, there was only one possible end if the patrolman were to
survive. No enemy must or could be left alive behind him, to bring to bear upon his back some
semi-portable weapon with whose energies his armor screens could not cope. When the grizzly business
was over, Kinnison, panting, rested briefly. This was the first real brawl he had been in for
twenty years, and for a veteran, a white-collar man, a coordinator to boot, he hadn't done so bad,
he thought. This was hard work, and while he was made
be a hair short on wind, he hadn't weakened a particle. To hear, QX. And lovely Catherine,
far enough back, but not too far, and reading imperceptibly his every thought, agreed with him
enthusiastically. She did not have a father complex, but in common with her sisters, she knew
exactly what her father was. With equal exactitude she knew what other men were. Knowing them,
and knowing, however, imperfectly herself,
each of the Kinnison girls knew that it would be a physical and psychological impossibility
for her to become even mildly interested in any man not at least her father's equal.
The each had dreamed of a man who would be her own equal, physically and mentally,
but it had not yet occurred to any of them that one such man already existed.
Kinnison cut the doorway and again sent out his sense of perception.
With it fanning out ahead of him, he retraced his previous path.
The apes in the control room had done something.
He didn't know just what.
Two of them were tinkering with a communicator panel,
probably the one to the ward room.
They probably thought that the trouble was at their end.
Or did they?
Why hadn't they reconnoitered?
He dismissed that problem as being of no pressing importance.
The other two were doing something at another panel.
What?
He couldn't make head or tail of it, hanged those full-covered screens, and Nedrick's fancy
drill, even if he had had one along, wouldn't work unless the screen were absolutely steady.
Well, it didn't make much, if any, difference.
They had called the men back from up forward, and here they came.
He'd rather meet them in the corridor than in an open room anyway.
He could handle them a lot easier.
But tensely watching, Catherine nod her lip.
Should she tell him or control him or not?
No, she wouldn't, she couldn't, yet.
Dad could figure out that pilot-room trap without her help,
and she herself, with all her power of brain,
could not visualize with any degree of clarity the menace which was, which must be,
at the tube's end, or even now rushing along it to meet that Basconian ship.
Kinnison met the oncoming six and vanquished them.
By no means as easily as he had conquered the others,
since they had been warned and since they also now bore space axes,
but just as finally.
Kinnison did not consider it remarkable that he escaped practically unscathed.
His armor was battered and dinged up, cut and torn,
but he had only a couple of superficial wounds.
He had met the enemy where they would come at him only one at a time.
He was still the master of his.
any weapon known to space warfare. It had been at no time evident that any outside influence was
interfering with the normally rapid functioning of the Baskonians' minds. He was full of confidence,
full of fight, and far from spent when he faced about to consider what he should do about that
control room. There was plenty of stuff in there, tougher stuff than he had met up with so far.
Catherine in her speedster gritted her strong white teeth and clenched her shapely hands into hard little fists.
This was bad, very, very bad, and it was going to get worse.
Closing up fast, she uttered a bitter and exceeding the unladylike expletive.
Couldn't Dad see? Couldn't the dumb darling sense that he was apt to run out of time almost any minute now?
She fairly writhed in an agony of indecision.
and indecision, in a third-stage lensman, is a rare phenomenon indeed.
She wanted intensely to take over, but if she did,
was there any way this side of Palaine's Purple Hells that she could cover up her tracks?
There was none yet.
End of Chapter 7.
Chapter 8 of Children of the Lens
This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
Chapter 8
But Kinnison's mind, while slower than his daughters and in many respects less able,
was sure. The four Baskonians in the control room were screened against his every mental force,
and it was idle even to hope for another such lucky break as he had just had.
One was QX, and to be received thankfully, but coincidences simply did not happen.
They were armored by this time, and they had both machine rifles and semi-portable projectors.
They were entrenched, evidently intending to fight to a delaying and defensive battle,
knowing that if they could keep the aggressor at bay until the pseudospace of the tube
had been traversed, the lensman would not have a chance.
Armed with all they could use of the most powerful mobile weapons aboard and being four-to-one,
they undoubtedly thought that they would win easily enough.
Kinnison thought otherwise.
Since he could not use his mind against them, he would use whatever he could
could find, and this ship, having come upon such a mission, would be carrying plenty of weapons,
and those four men certainly hadn't had time to tamper with them all. He might even find some
negative matter bombs. Setting up a spy-ray block, he proceeded to rummage. They couldn't see him,
and if any one of them had a sense of perception and cut his screen for even a fraction of a
second to use it, the battle would end then and there. And if they decided to rush him,
so much the better.
They remained, however,
forded up as he had thought they would,
and he rummaged in peace.
Various death-dealing implements,
invitingly set up,
he ignored after one cursory glance
into their interiors.
He knew weapons, these had been fixed.
He went on to the armory.
He did not find any negabombs,
but he found plenty of untouched weapons
like those now emplaced in the control room.
The rifles were beauties, high-calibre, water-cooled things, each with a heavy durium shield plate
and a single-ply screen.
Each also had a beam, but machine rifle beams weren't so hot.
Conversely, the semi-portables had lots of screen, but very little durium.
Kinnison lugged one rifle and two semi-portables by easy stages into the room next to the control room,
so placing them that the control panels would be well out of the line of fire.
What gave Kinnison his chance was the fact that the enemy's weapons were set to cover the door.
Apparently, they had not considered the possibility that the linsman would attempt to flank them
by blasting through an inch and a half of alloy.
Kinnison did not know whether he could do it fast enough to mow them down from the side
before they could reset their magnetic clamps or not, but he'd give it the good old college try.
It was bound to be a mighty near thing, and the lensman grinned wolfishly behind the guard-plates of his helmet,
as he arranged his weapons to save every possible fractional second of time.
Aiming one at a spot some three feet above the floor, the other a little lower,
Kinnison cut in the full power of his semi-portables and left them on.
He energized the rifle's beam.
Every little bit helped.
Set the defensive screens at full, and crouched down into the saddle behind the duriams,
shield. He had checked the feeds long since. He had
plenty of rounds. Two large spots and a small
one smoked briefly grew red. They turned bright red,
then yellow, merged into one blinding spot. Metal melted, sluggishly
at first, then thinly, then flaring, blowing out in raging
coruscations of sparks as the fiercely driven beams ate in. Through.
The first small opening at
appeared directly in line between the muzzle of Kinnison's rifle and one of the guns of the enemy,
and in the moment of its appearance, the patrolman's weapon began its stuttering, shattering roar.
The Baskonians had seen the hotspot upon the wall, had known instantly what it meant,
and were working frantically to swing their gun mounts around so as to interpose their durium shields
and to bring their own rifles to bear. They had almost succeeded.
Kinnison caught just a bulge of one suit of armor in his sights, but that was enough.
The kinetic energy of the stream of metal tore him out of the saddle.
He was literally riddled while still in air.
Two savage bursts took care of the semi-portables and their operators.
As has been intimated, the shields of the semis were not designed to withstand the type of artillery
Kinnison was using.
That made it cannon to cannon, one to one.
and the lensman knew that those two identical rifles could hammer at each other's defenses for an hour
without doing any serious damage.
He had, however, one big advantage.
Being closer to the bulkhead, he could depress his line of fire more than could the Bosconian.
He did so, aiming at the clamps, which were not built to take very much of that sort of punishment.
One front clamp let go, then the other, and the lensman knew what to do about the rear pair,
which he could not reach.
He directed his fire upon the upper edge of the durium plate.
Under the awful thrust of that terrific storm of steel,
the useless front clamps lifted from the floor.
The gun mount, restrained from sliding by the unbreakable grip of the rear clamps,
reared up.
Over it went, straight backward, exposing the gunner to the full blast of Kinnison's fire.
That, definitely, was that.
Catherine heaved a sigh of relief.
As far as she could see, the tube was still empty.
"'That's my pup,' she applauded inaudibly to herself.
"'Now,' she breathed,
"'if the darling has just got jets enough to figure out what may be coming at him down this tube
"'and sense enough to run back home before I can catch him.
"'Kinnison had no suspicion at all that any danger to himself might lie within the tube.
"'He had no desire, however, to land alone in a strange,
and possibly half-crippled enemy ship in the exact center of an enemy base, and no
intention whatever of doing so.
Moreover, he had once come altogether too close to permanent immolation in a foreign space
because of the discontinuance of a hyperspacial tube while he was in it, and once was once too many.
Also, he had just got done leading with his chin, and once of that two was once too many.
Therefore, his sole thought was to get back into his own space as fast as he could get there.
So soon as the opposition was silenced, he hurried into the control room and reversed the
vessel's drive.
Behind him, Catherine flipped her speech to end for end and led the retreat.
She left the two before.
Before is an extremely loose and inaccurate word in this connection, but it conveys the idea
better than any other ordinary term.
She got back to base.
She caused an officer to broadcast an evacuation warning, then hung poised high above base,
watching intently. She knew that Kinnison could not leave the tube except at its terminus,
hence would have to materialize inside base itself. She had heard of what happened when two
dense, hard solids attempted to occupy the same three-dimensional space at the same time,
but to view that occurrence was not her purpose in lingering. She did not actually know
whether there was anything in the tube or not.
But she did know that if there were, and if it or they should follow her father out into
normal space, even she would have need of every jet she could muster.
Kinnison, maneuvering his Bosconian cruiser to a halt just at the barest perceptible
threshold of normal space, in the intermediate zone, in which nothing except durium was solid
in either space or pseudospace, had already given a great deal of thought to the problem
of disembarkation.
This ship was small as spaceships go,
but even so, it was a lot bigger
than any corridor of base.
Those corridor walls and floors were thick
and contained a lot of steel.
The ship's walls were solid alloy.
He had never seen metal materialized within metal,
and frankly, he didn't want to be around,
even inside D-Armor when it happened.
Also, there were a lot of explosives aboard
and atomic power plants,
and the chance of touching off a loose atomic vortex in the very middle of base,
and within a few feet of himself, was not one to be taken lightly.
He had already rigged a line to a master switch.
Power off, with the ship's duriam catwalk as close to the floor of the corridor
as the dimensions of the tube permitted,
he reversed the controls and poised himself for the running headlong dive.
He could not feel Radilligian gravitation, of course,
but he was pretty sure that he could leap far enough to get through the interface.
He took a short run, jerked the line, and hurled himself through the spaceship's immaterial wall.
The ship disappeared.
Going through that interface was more of a shock than the lensman had anticipated.
Even taken very slowly, as it customarily is,
interdimensional acceleration brings malaise to which no one has ever become accustomed,
and taking it so rapidly, fairly turned Kinnison in size.
side out. He was going to land with the rolling impact which constitutes perfect technique in such
armored maneuvering. As it was, he never did know how he landed, except that he made a border shop
racket, and that he brought up against the far wall of the corridor with a climactic clang.
Beyond the addition of a few more bruises and contusions to his already abundant collection,
however, he was not harmed. As soon as he could collect himself, he leapt to his feet and
wrapped out orders.
Tractors, pressers, shears,
heavy stuff to anchor, not to clamp,
hype! He knew what he was up against now,
and if they'd just come back, he'd yanked them
out of that tube so fast it'd break their neck.
And Catherine, still watching intently,
smiled. Her dad was a pretty smart old duck,
but he wasn't using his noggin now.
He was cock-eyed as Tranco's ether in thinking that they might
come back. If any of the end, he was in the
Anything at all erupted from that hyper-circle, it would be something against which the stuff he was mustering would be precisely as effective as so much thin air.
And she still had no concrete idea of what she so feared. It would not be essentially physical, she was pretty sure. It would almost have to be mental.
But who or what could possibly put it across? And how? And above all, what could she do about it if they did?
eyes narrowed, brow furrowed in concentration.
She thought as she had never thought before.
And the harder she thought, the more clouded the picture became.
For the first time in her triumphant life, she felt small, weak, impotent.
It was in that hour that Catherine Kinnison really grew up.
The tube vanished.
She heaved a tremendous sigh of relief.
They, whoever they were, having failed to bring Kinnison
to them, this time, were not coming after him, this time.
Not an important enough game to play to the end?
No, that wasn't it. Maybe they weren't ready.
But the next time...
Mentor of the Erysian had told her bluntly the last time she had seen him
to come to him again when she had found out that she did not know everything there was
to be known. Deep down, she had believed that that day would never come.
Now, however, it had.
This escape, if it had been an escape, had taught her much.
Mother!
She shot a call to distant Clovia.
I'm on Radellics.
Everything's on the green.
Dead has just knocked out a flock of Bosconians into an outside loop and come through QX.
I've got to do a little flit, though, before I come home.
Bye!
Kinnison stood intermittent guard over base for four days after the hyperspacial tube
had disappeared before he gave up, before he did any serious thinking upon what he should do next.
Could he, and should he keep on, his Sibley White? He could and he should, he decided.
He hadn't been gone long enough for White's absence to have been noticed. Nothing whatever
connected White with Kinnison. If he really knew what he was doing, a more specific alias
might be better. But as long as he was merely smelling around, whites was the best of
identity to use. He could go anywhere, do anything, ask anything of anybody, and all with a perfectly
good excuse. And as Sibley White then, for days that stretched into weeks, he roamed, finding, as he
had been afraid that he would find, nothing whatever. It seemed as though all Baskonian activity
of the type in which he was most interested had ceased with his return from the hyperspacial tube.
Just what that meant he did not know.
It was unthinkable that they had given up on him, much more probably they were hatching something
brand new.
And the frustration of inaction and the trying to figure out what was coming next was driving
him not so slowly nuts.
Then, striking through the doldrums, came a call from Maitland.
Kim, he told me to lends you immediately about any off-color work.
Don't know whether this is or not.
The guy may be, probably is crazy.
Conklin, who reported him, couldn't decide.
Neither can I, from Conklin's report.
Do you want to send somebody special?
Take over yourself, or what?
I'll take over.
Kinnison decided instantly.
If neither Conklin nor the vice-coordinator,
Gray-Lensman both, could decide
there was no point in sending anyone else.
Where and who?
Planet, Meneas, too,
not too far from where you are now.
City, Minneapolis.
116, 329, 452217.
Place, Jack's Haven,
a meteor miner's hangout
at the corner of gold and sapphire streets.
Person, a man called Eddie.
Thanks, I'll check.
Maitland did not send,
and Kinnison did not want
any additional information.
Both knew that since the coordinator
was going to investigate this thing himself,
he should get his facts, and particularly his impressions,
unprejudiced and at first hand.
To Meneas too, then, and to Jack's Haven, Sibley White went,
notebook very much in evidence.
An ordinary enough space-dive Jacks turned out to be.
Higher tone than that Radiligian space-stock saloon of Boulmangers,
much less flamboyant than notorious miners' arrest on Far Euphrasiny.
I wish to interview a person named Eddie,
he announced as he brought a bottle of wine.
I have been informed that he has had deep space adventures
worthy of incorporation into one of my novels.
Eddie? Ha!
The barkeeper laughed raucously.
That space louse!
Somebody's been kidding you, mister!
He's nothing but a broken-down meteor miner!
You know what a space louse is, don't you?
That we let clean cuspidores and do such-like odd jobs for his keep?
We don't throw him out like we do the others, because he's kind of funny in one way.
Every hour or so he throws a fit, and that amuses people.
White's eager beaver attitude did not change.
His face reflected nothing of what Kinnison thought of this callous speech.
For Kinnison did know exactly what a space louse was.
More, he knew exactly what turned a man into one.
Ex-Meteer miner himself, he knew what the awesome
depths of space, the ever-present dangers, the privations, the solitude, the frustrations did to
any mind not adequately integrated. He knew that only the strong survived, that the many
weeks succumbed. From sickening memory, he knew just what pitiful wrecks those many became.
Nevertheless, and despite the fact that the information was not necessary,
Where is this, Eddie, now? That's him, over there in the corner.
By the way he's acting, he'll have another fit pretty quick now.
The shambling travesty of a man accepted avidly the invitation to table
and downed at a gulp the proffered drink.
Then, as though the mild potion had been a trigger,
his racked body tensed and his features began to writhe.
"'Cat eagles!' he screamed, eyes rolling,
breath coming in hard, frantic gasps.
"'Gangs of cat eagles!
"'Thousins!
They're clawing me to bits.
And the linsman, he's sicking them on.
Oh, yo!
He burst into unintelligible screams and threw himself to the floor.
There, rolling convulsively over and over,
he tried the impossible feat of covering simultaneously with his two claw-like hands,
his eyes, ears, nose, mouth, and throat.
Ignoring the crowding spectators,
Kinnison invaded the helpless mind before him.
He winced mentally, as he photographed upon his own brain, the whole atrocious enormity of what was there.
Then, while white, busily scribbled notes, he shot a thought to distant Clovia.
Cliff, I'm here in Jack's Haven, and I've got Eddie's data.
What did you and Conklin make of it?
You agree, of course, that the linsman is the crux.
Definitely.
Everything else is hop-happy space drift.
The fact that there are not, there can't be any lanky lark.
lensman, as Eddie imagined, makes him space drift, too, in our opinion.
We called you in on the millionth chance.
Sorry that we sent you out on a false alarm, but you said we had to be sure.
You need me sorry.
Kinnison's thought was the grimest Clifford Maitland had ever felt.
Eddie isn't an ordinary space, louse.
You see, I happen to know one thing that you and Conklin don't, since you've never been there.
Did you happen to notice a woman in the picture?
Very faint, decidedly in the background?
Now that you mention her, yes, there was one.
So far in the background, and so faint that it never occurred to either Cochland or
me that she could be connected.
How can she possibly have any bearing, Kim?
Most every spaceman has a woman, or a lot of different ones,
more or less on his mind all the time, you know.
Definitely immaterial and not germane, I'd say.
"'So would I, maybe, except for the fact that she isn't really a woman at all,
but a Lyranian.'
"'A Lyranian?' Maitland interrupted.
Kinnison could feel the racing of his assistant's thoughts.
"'That complicates things.
But how in Palaine's purple hells, Kim, could Eddie ever have got to Lyrain?
And if he did, how did he get away alive?'
"'I don't know, Cliff.'
Kinnison's mind, too, was working fast.
But you haven't got all the dope yet.
Not only is she a Lyranian, but I know her personally.
She's that airport manager, who tried her level best to kill me all the time I was on Lyraine, too.
Hmm.
Maitland tried to digest that undigestable bit.
Tried and failed.
That would seem to make the Lensman real, too, then.
Real enough.
at least to investigate.
Much as I hate to think of the possibility of a lensman going that far off the beam.
Maitland's convictions died hard.
Unless...
Could there be any possibility of coincidence?
Coincidence is out.
Don't think it's a trap either.
Hasn't got the right earmarks.
You'll handle this yourself, then?
Check, at least I'll help.
There may be people better qualify than I am to do the heavy work.
I'll get them at it.
Thanks, Cliff.
Clear ether.
He lined a thought to his wife,
and after a short, warmly intimate contact,
he told her everything that had happened.
So, you see, beautiful, he concluded,
your wish is coming true.
I couldn't keep you out of this if I wanted to.
So check with the girls, put on your lens,
take off your clothes, and go to work.
I'll do that,
Clirissa laughed, and her soaring spirit
It flooded his mind.
Thanks, my dear.
Then and only then did Kimball Kinnison, master therapist,
pay any further attention to that which lay contorted upon the floor.
But when White folded up his notebook and left the place,
the derelict was resting quietly.
And in a space of time long enough so that the putative writer of space operas
would not be connected with the cure, those fits would end.
Moreover, Eddie would return whole to the void.
he would become what he had never before been, a successful meteor miner.
Lensmen pay their debts, even to spiders and to worms.
End of Chapter 8.
Chapter 9. Of Children of the Lens.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
Chapter 9
Her adventure in the hyperspacial tube had taught Catherine Kinnison much,
Realizing her inadequacy and knowing what to do about it,
she drove her speech at high velocity to ERISA.
Unlike the second-stage lensman,
she did not even slow down as she approached the planet's barrier.
But as one sure of her welcome,
merely threw out ahead of her an identifying thought.
Ah, daughter Catherine, again you're in time.
Was there or was there not a trace of emotion,
of welcome, even of affection, in that usually utterly emotionless thought.
Land as usual.
She neutralized her controls as she felt the mighty beams of the landing engine
take hold of her little ship.
Upon previous visits, she had questioned nothing.
This time she was questioning everything.
Was she landing or not?
Directing her every force inwardly, she probed her own mind to its profoundest depths.
Definitely, she was her own mistress throughout.
No conceivable mind could take hers over so tracelessly.
As definitely, then, she was actually landing.
She landed. The ground upon which she stepped was real.
So the automatic flyer, neither plane nor helicopter,
which whisked her from the spaceport to a familiar destination,
an unpretentious residence upon the grounds of an immense hospital.
The graveled walk, the flowering shrunk,
the indescribably sweet and pungent perfume were real, as were the tiny pain and the drop of
blood, which resulted when a needle-sharp thorn pierced her incautious finger. Through automatically
opening doors, she made her way into the familiar, comfortable, book-lined room, which she knew
was Mentor's study. And there, at his big desk, unchanged, sat Mentor. A lot like her father,
but older, much older. About ninety she had a little. She had a little.
always thought, even though he didn't look over sixty.
This time, however, she drove a probe and got the shock of her life.
Her thought was stopped, cold, not by superior mental force, which she could have taken
unmoved, but by a seemingly ordinary thought-screen.
And her fast disintegrating morale began visibly to crack.
"'Is all this?
Are you?
Real or not?'
She burst out finally.
If it isn't, I'll go mad.
That which you have tested, and I, are real, for the moment and as you understand reality.
Your mind in its present state of advancement cannot be deceived concerning such
elementary matters.
But it all wasn't before.
Or don't you want to answer that?
Since the sure knowledge will affect your growth, I will answer.
It was not.
This is the first time that you can't.
that your speister has landed physically upon ERISA.
The girl shrank appalled.
"'You told me to come to you again
when I learned that I did not know everything there was to know,'
she finally forced herself to say.
"'I learned that in the tube,
but I did not realize until just now that I don't know anything.
Do you really think, Mentor,
that there is any use at all in going on with me?'
she concluded bitterly.
"'Much,' he assured her.
"'Your development has been eminently satisfactory,
"'and your present mental condition is both necessary and sufficient.'
"'Well, I'll be a sprit—'
"'Catherine bit off the expletive and frowned.
"'What were you doing to me before, then, when I thought I got everything?'
"'Power of mind,' he informed her,
"'shear power and penetration and control.
"'Depth and speed.
and all the other factors with which you are already familiar.
But what is left? I know there is, lots of it, but I can't imagine what.
Scope, Mentor replied gravely.
Each of those qualities and characteristics must be expanded to encompass the full sphere of thought.
Neither words nor thoughts can give any adequate concept of what it means.
A practically wide-open two-way will be necessary.
"'This cannot be accomplished, daughter, in the adolescent confines of your present mind.
"'Therefore, enter fully into mine.'
"'She did so, and after less than a minute of that awful contact, slumped to the floor.
"'Theirician, unchanged, unmoved, unmoving, gazed at her until finally she began to stir.
"'That—'
"'Father, mentor, that was—'
"'She blinked, she shook her head savagely, fought her way back to
full consciousness.
That was a shock.
It was, he agreed, more so than you think.
Of all the entities of your civilization, your brother and now you are the only ones it will not
kill instantly.
You now know what the word scope means, and are ready for your last treatment, in the
course of which I shall take your mind as far along the road of knowledge as mine is capable
of going.
But that would mean.
You're implying, but my mind can't be superior to yours, mentor. Nothing could be, possibly.
It's sheerly, starkly, unthinkable. But true daughter, nevertheless, while you are recovering
your strength from that which was but the beginning of your education, I will explain certain
matters previously obscure. You have long known, of course, that you five children are not like any
others. You have always known many things without having learned them. You think upon all possible
bands of thought. Your senses of perception, of sight, of hearing, of touch are so perfectly
merged into one sense that you perceive at will any possible manifestation upon any possible
plane or dimension of vibration. Also, although this may not have occurred to you as extraordinary,
since it is not obvious, you differ physically from your fellows in some important respects.
You have never experienced the slightest symptom of physical illness, not even a headache or a decayed tooth.
You do not really require sleep. Vaccinations and inoculations do not take. No pathogenic organism,
however virulent, no poison, however potent. Stop, mentor. Catherine gasped, turning white.
I can't take it. You really mean, then, that we aren't human at all?
Yes, and no. A partial explanation, while long, may be in order.
Many cycles of time ago, it became apparent to our more advanced thinkers that the rise and
fall of civilizations was too rhythmic to be accidental. They studied this rhythm, but life was too
short. They set out, then, deliberately to prolong their lives. Fewer and fewer in numbers,
they lived longer and longer. And the longer each lived, the more he learned. Their visualizations
of the cosmic all became less tenuous, more complete. It became evident that there was some
inimical force at work, a force implacably opposed to that which we know as civilization. Like a mouse in the
power of a torturing cat. Any civilization could go just so far, but no farther. For instance,
that of Atlantis upon your father's native planet, tell us. I was personally concerned in that,
and could not stop its fall. The Erysium was showing emotion now. His thought was bleak and bitter.
Four of us were assigned to the problem of this opposing force. We learned that its final abatement
would necessitate the development of a race superior to ours in every respect.
We therefore selected bloodlines in each of the four strongest races of the galaxy
and began to eliminate as many as possible of their weaknesses
and to concentrate all of their strengths.
From your knowledge of genetics, you realized the magnitude of the task.
You know that it would take much time uselessly to go into the details of its accomplishment.
Your father and your mother were the penultaments of long, very long lines of matings.
Their procreative cells were such that in their fusion, practically every gene carrying any
trait of weakness was rejected.
Conversely, you carry the genes of every trait of strength ever known to any member of your
human race.
Therefore, while in outward seeming you are human, in every factor of importance, you are not.
you are even less human than I am myself.
And just how human is that?
Catherine flared, and again her most penetrant probe of force flattened out against the Elysian's screen.
Later, daughter, not now.
That knowledge will come at the end of your education, not at its beginning.
I was afraid so.
She stared at the Elysian, her eyes wide and hopeless, brimming, in spite of her
efforts at control with tears.
You're a monster, and I am, or am going to be a worse one.
A monster!
And I'll have to live a million years, alone.
Why?
Why, mentor, did you have to do this to me?
Calm yourself, daughter.
The shock, while severe, will pass.
You have lost nothing, have gained much.
Gained, bah!
The girl's thought was low.
loaded with bitterness and scorn.
I've lost my parents.
I'll still be a girl long after they have died.
I've lost every possibility of ever really living.
I want love, and a husband, and children,
and I can't have any of them ever.
Even without this, I've never seen a man I wanted,
and now I can't ever love anybody.
I don't want to live a million years, mentor,
especially alone.
The thought was a veritable wail of despair.
The time has come to stop this childish thinking.
Mentor's thought, however, was only mildly reproving.
Such a reaction is only natural, but your conclusions are entirely erroneous.
One single clear thought will show you that you have no present psychic, intellectual,
emotional, or physical need of a compliment.
That's true, but other girls are not.
of my age? Exactly.
K. Mentor's dry rejoinder.
Thinking of yourself as an adult homo sapian,
you were judging yourself by false standards.
As a matter of fact,
you are an adolescent, not an adult.
In due time you will come to love a man,
and he you, with a fervor and depth
which you at present cannot even dimly understand.
But that still leaves my parents.
Catherine felt much better.
I can apparently age, of course, as easily as I can put on a hat.
But I really do love them, you know, and it will simply break mother's heart to have all her
daughter's turn out to be, as she thinks, spinsters.
On that point, too, you may rest at ease.
I am taking care of that.
Kimball and Clarissa both know, without knowing how they know it, that your life cycle is
tremendously longer than theirs. They both know that they will not live to see their grandchildren.
Be assured, daughter, that before they pass from this cycle of existence into the next,
about which I know nothing, they shall know that all is to be supremely well with their line.
Even though, to civilization at large, it shall apparently end with you five.
End with us? What do you mean?
You have a destiny.
the nature of which your mind is not yet qualified to receive. In due time, the knowledge shall be
yours. Suffice it now to say that the next forty or fifty years will be but a fleeting moment
in the span of life which is to be yours. But time at the moment presses. You are now fully recovered,
and we must get on with this, your last period of study with me, at the end of which you will be
able to bear the fullest, closest impact of my mind, as easily as you have hereto-fore
forborne full contact with your sisters. Let us proceed with the work.
Work it was, and it went on for weeks. Catherine took and survived those shattering treatments,
one after another, emerging finally with a mind whose power and scope can no more be explained
to any mind below the third level than can the general theory of relativity be explained to which
chimpanzee.
It was forced, not natural, yes,
the Elysian said gravely, as the girl was about to leave.
You are many millions of your years ahead of your natural time.
You realize, however, the necessity of that forcing.
You also realize that I can give you no more formal instruction.
I will be with you or on call at all times.
I will be of aid in crises.
but in larger matters your further development is in your own hands.
Catherine shivered.
I realize that, and it scares me clear through,
especially this coming conflict,
at which you hint so vaguely.
I wish that you would tell me at least something about it
so that I could get ready for it.
Daughter, I can't.
For the first time in Catherine's experience,
mentor the Elysian was unsure.
It is certain that we have been on time.
But since Theodorians have minds of power little, if any, inferior to our own,
there are many details which we cannot derive with certainty,
and to advise you wrongly would be to do you irreparable harm.
All I can say is that, if my visualization in that respect is sound,
and I am practically sure that it is, sufficient warning will be given by your learning,
with no specific effort on your part, and from some source other than myself,
that there does in fact exist a planet named Plur,
a name which to you is now only a meaningless symbol.
Go now, daughter, Catherine, and work.
Catherine went, knowing that the Erysian had said all that he would say.
In truth, he had told her vastly more than she had expected him to divulge,
and it chilled her to the marrow to think that she, who had always looked up to the Elysians as
demigods of sorts, would from now on be expected to act as their equal, in some ways perhaps
as their superior. As her speister tore through space toward distant clobia, she wrestled
with herself, trying to shake her new self down into a personality as well integrated
as her old one had been. She had not quite succeeded when she felt a thought.
"'Help. I am in difficulty with this, my ship. Will any entity receiving my call and possessing the tools of a mechanic please come to my assistance, or lacking such tools, possessing a vessel of power sufficient to tow mine to the place where I must immediately go?'
Catherine was startled out of her introspective trance.
That thought was on a terrifically high band.
One so high that she knew no race using it,
so high that an ordinary human mind could not possibly have either sent or received it.
Its phraseology, while peculiar, was utterly precise in definition.
The mind behind it was certainly of her precisionist grade.
She acknowledged upon the stranger's wave and sent out a locator.
"'Good, he wasn't far away.'
She flashed toward the derelict, matched intrinsics at a safe distance, and began scanning,
only to encounter a screen around the whole vessel.
To her it was porous enough, but if the creature thought that his screen was tight,
let him keep on thinking so. It was his move.
"'Well, what are you waiting for?'
The thought fairly snapped.
"'Come closer so that I may bring you in.'
"'Not yet,' Catherine snapped back.
"'Cut your screen so that I can see what you are like.
"'I carry equipment for many environments,
"'but I must know what yours is and equip for it
"'before I can come aboard.
"'You will note that my screens are down.
"'Of course. Excuse me.
"'I suppose that you are one of our own.'
"'There came the thought of an unspellable and unpronounceable name,
"'since none of the lower orders can receive our thoughts direct.
Can you equip yourself to come aboard with your tools?
Yes.
The stranger's light was fierce stuff,
98% of its energy being beyond the visible.
His lamps were beam-held atomics, nothing less,
but there was very little gamma and few neutrons.
She could handle it easily enough, she decided,
as she finished donning her heat armor
and a helmet of practically opaque, diamond-hard plastic.
As she was wafted,
gently across the intervening space upon a pencil of force,
Catherine took her first good look at the precisionist himself, or herself.
She, it, looked something like a dillian, she thought at first.
There was the squat, powerful, elephantine body with its four stocky legs,
the tremendous double shoulders and enormous arms,
the domed, almost immobile head.
But there the resemblance ended.
There was only the one head,
The thinking head, and that one had no eyes and was not covered with bone.
There was no feeding head.
The thing could neither eat nor breathe.
There was no trunk.
And what a skin!
It was worse than a hide, really, worse even than a Martians.
The girl had never seen anything like it.
It was incredibly thick, dry, pliable,
filled minutely with cells of a liquid gaseous something,
which she knew to be a more perfect insulate.
even than the fibers of the tegument itself.
R-T-S-L-Q-P.
She classified the creature readily enough to six places,
then stopped and wrinkled her forehead.
Seventh place?
That incredible skin.
What?
S? R? T?
It would have to be R.
You have the requisite tools, I perceive.
The creature greeted Catherine as she entered the central compartment
of the strange speedster,
no larger than her own.
I can tell you what to do if—
I know what to do.
She unbolted a cover,
wrought briefly with pliers and splicer,
and in ten minutes was done.
It doesn't seem to make sense to me
that a person of your obvious intelligence,
manifestly knowing enough to make such minor repairs yourself,
would go so far from home,
alone in such a small ship,
without any tools.
Burnouts and shorts are apt to,
happen any time, you know.
Not in vessels of the...
Again, Catherine felt that unpronounceable symbol.
She also felt the stranger stiffen in offended dignity.
We of the higher orders, you should know, do not perform labor.
We think, we direct.
Others work and do their work well, or suffer accordingly.
This is the first time in nine full four-cycle periods that such a thing has happened,
and it will be the last.
The punishment which I shall meet out to the guilty mechanic will ensure that I shall at
end have his life.
Oh, come now, Catherine protested.
Surely it's no life and death, Matt, silence!
Came Kurt command.
It is intolerable that one of the lower order should attempt to silence yourself!
At the fierce power of the repost, the creature winced physically and mentally.
I did this bit of dirty work for you because you apparently couldn't do it for yourself.
I did not object to the matter-of-course way you accepted it,
because some races are made that way and can't help it.
But if you insist on keeping yourself placed five rungs above me on any ladder you can think of,
I'll stop being a lady, or even a good Girl Scout,
and start doing things about it, and I'll start at any signal you care to call.
Get ready and say when.
The stranger taken fully aback, throughout a lightning tentacle of thought, a feeder which
was stopped cold a full foot from the girl's radiant armor.
This was a human female, or was it?
It was not.
No human being had ever had, nor ever would have, a mind like that.
Therefore, I have made a grave error.
The thing apologized handsomely, in thinking that you are not at least my equal.
"'Will you grant me pardon, please?'
"'Certainly, if you don't repeat it.
"'But I still don't like the idea of your having
"'that mechanic's skinned alive.'
"'She thought intensely, lip caught between strong white teeth.
"'Perhaps there is a way.
"'Where are you going, and when do you want to get there?'
"'To my home planet, pointing out mentally its location in the galaxy.
"'I must be there in two hundred of your GP hours.'
"'I see,' Catherine nodded her head.
"'You can, if you promise, that you will do nothing whatever to punish your mechanic.
"'And remember that I can tell whether you really mean it or not.
"'As I promise, so I do.
"'But suppose that I do not promise.
"'In that case, you'll get there in about a hundred thousand GP years, frozen stiff,
"'for I shall fuse your Bergenholm down so that it can't,
ever be fixed. Then, after welding your ports solidly to the outer shell, I'll attach to your
plating the generator of a screen through which you cannot think. Since you have no tools,
I'll leave the rest to your imagination. Decide now what you wish to do. I promise not to harm
the mechanic in any way. He surrendered stiffly and made no undue protest at Catherine's entrance
into his mind to make sure that the promise would be kept.
flushed by her easy conquest of a mind which she would previously have been unable to touch,
and engrossed in the problem of setting her own tremendously enlarged mind to rights,
why should it have occurred to the girl that there was anything worthy of investigation
concealed in the depths of that chance met stranger's mentality?
Returning to her own speedster, she shed her armor and shot away,
and it was just as well for her peace of mind that she was not aware of the tight-beamed thought
even then speeding from the flitter so far behind her to the dread and distant plure.
But it was very definitely not a human female. I could not touch it. It may very well have been
one of the accursed Elysians themselves, but since I did nothing to arouse its suspicions,
I got rid of it easily enough. Spread the warning. End of Chapter 9. Chapter 10 of
Children of the Lens.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
Chapter 10
While Catherine Kinnison was working with her father in the hyperspacial tube and with
Mentor of ERISA, and while Camilla and Tragansi were sleuthing the inscrutable X, Constance
was also at work.
Although she lay flat upon her back, not moving a muscle, she was working as she had never
worked before.
Long since, she had put her indetectible.
speedster into the control of a director by chance.
Now, knowing nothing and caring less of where she and her vessel might be or might go,
physically completely relaxed, she drove her sensories out to the full limit of their prodigious
range and held them there for hour after hour.
Orsel-like, she was not consciously listening for any particular thing.
She was merely increasing her already incredibly vast store of knowledge.
100% receptive, attached to and concerned with only the brain of her physical body,
her mind sped at large, sampling, testing, analyzing, cataloging every item,
with which its most tenuous fringe came in contact.
Through thousands of solar systems that mind went.
Millions upon millions of entities either did or did not contribute something worthwhile.
Suddenly, there came something that jarred her into physical movement,
a burst of thought upon a band so high that it was practically always vacant.
She shook herself, got up, lighted an Alsacanite cigarette, and made herself a pot of coffee.
"'This is important, I think,' she mused.
"'I'd better get to work on it while it's fresh.'
She set out a thought tuned to Whorsel, and was surprised when it went unanswered.
She investigated, finding that the Valentian screens were full up and held hard,
He was fighting overlord so savagely that he had not felt her thought.
Should she take a hand in this brawl?
She should not, she decided, and grinned fleetingly.
Her erstwhile tutor would need no help in that comparatively minor chore.
She should wait, rest up a bit, and eat before she called him.
Worsal, con calling.
What goes on there, fellow old snake?
She finally had launched her thought.
You've stuck that sharp tail of ears into some of my business, I hope.
I hope so, Worsal sent back.
Been quite a while since I saw you close up.
How about coming aboard?
Coming at Max.
And she did.
Before entering the Veelein, however, she put on a personal gravity damper,
set at nine hundred eighty centimeters.
Strong, tough, and supple as she was,
she did not relish the thought of the atrocious acceleration.
used and enjoyed by the Valentians everywhere.
What did you make of that burst of thought?
She asked by way of greeting.
Or were you having so much fun that you missed it?
What burst?
Then, after Constance had explained,
I was busy, but not having fun.
Somebody who didn't know you might believe that,
the girl derided.
This thought was important, I think,
much more so than dilly-dallying with overlords
as you were doing.
It was way up there, on this band here, she illustrated.
So, Worsal came as near to whistling as one of his inarticulate race could come.
What were they like? Tell me all that you can.
V-W-Z-Y to four places.
Con concentrated.
Multi-legged, not exactly carapaceous, but pretty nearly.
Spiny, too, I believe.
The world was cold, dismal.
barren, but not frigid. But he, it, didn't seem exactly like an oxygen breather, more like what
a warm-blooded pelanian would perhaps look like, if you can imagine such a thing.
Mentality very high. Precisionist grade. No thought of cities as such. The sun was a typical
yellow dwarf. Does any of this ring a bell in your mind? No. Orsel thought intensely for
minutes. So did Constance. Neither had any idea then that the girl was describing the form
assumed in their autumn by the dread inhabitants of the planet Plour.
"'This may indeed be important,' Worcels broke the mental silence.
"'Shall we explore together?'
"'We shall. They tune to the desired band. Give it plenty of shove, too. Go!'
Out and out and out, the twin receptors sped.
To encounter finally a tenuous, weak, and utterly cryptic vibration.
One touch, the merest possible contact, and it disappeared.
It vanished before even Kahn's electronics' fast reactions could get more than a hint of directional alignment,
and neither of the observers could read any part of it.
Both of these developments were starkly incredible,
and Worses' long body tightened convulsively,
rock hard in the violence of the mental force, now driving his exploring mind.
Finding nothing, he finally relaxed.
Any lensman anywhere can read and understand any thought, however garbled or scrambled,
or however expressed, he thought at Constance.
Also, I have always been able to get an exact line on anything I could perceive,
but all I know about this one is that it seemed to come mostly from somewhere
over that way.
Did you do any better?
Not much, if any.
If the thing was surprising to Worcel,
it was surely astounding to his companion.
She, knowing the measure of her power,
thought to herself, not to the Valentian,
girl, filed this one carefully away in the big black book.
Slight as were the directional leads,
the Veland tore along the indicated line at maximum blast.
Day after day she said,
bed, a wide-flung mental net out far ahead and out farther still on all sides.
They did not find what they sought, but they did find something.
"'What is it?' Worcels demanded of the quivering telepath who had made the report.
"'I don't know, sir. Not on that ultra-band, but well below it. There. Not an overlord,
certainly, but something perhaps equally unfriendly. And Ike. Both Worsel and Khan
exclaimed the thought, and the girl went on.
It was practically certain that we couldn't get them all on Jarnivon, of course,
but none have been reported before.
Where are they, anyway?
Get me a chart, somebody.
It's Novena, and they're on the ninth planet out.
Novena nine.
Tune up your heavy artillery warsle.
It'd be nice if we could take the head man alive,
but that much luck probably isn't in the cards.
The Valentian, even though he had issued instantaneously, the order to drive at full blast
toward the indicated planet, was momentarily at a loss.
Kinnison's daughter entertained no doubts as to the outcome of the encounter she was proposing,
but she had never seen an Ike close up. He had. So had her father.
Kinnison had come out a very poor second in that affair, and Worsall knew that he could
have done no better if as well. However, that had been upon Jarnivon, actually inside one of its
strongest citadals, and neither he nor Kinnison had been prepared. What's the plan, Worsall?
Con demanded vibrantly. How are you figuring on taking them? Depends on how strong they are.
If it's a long-established base, we'll simply have to report it to La Forge and go on about our
business. If, as seems more probable from the fact that it hasn't been reported before,
it is a new establishment of refugees from Jarnovan, or possibly only a grounded spaceship so far.
We'll go to work on them ourselves. We'll soon be close enough to find out.
QX. And a fleeting grin passed over Kahn's vivacious face. For a long time, she had been working
with mentor the Elysian, specifically to develop the ability to out-worsal-worsal,
and now was the best time she ever would have to put her hard schooling to test.
Hence, master of hallucination, though he was, the Valentian had no hint of realization
when his Clovian companion, working through a channel which he did not even know existed,
took control of every compartment of his mind.
Nor did the crew, in particular or on mass, suspect anything amiss.
when she performed the infinitely easier task of taking over theirs.
Nor did the unlikely Ike,
when the Flying Evilin had approached their planet closely enough
to make it clear that their establishment was indeed a new one,
being built around the nucleus of a crippled Basconian battleship.
Except for their commanding officer, they died then and there,
and Khan was to regret bitterly later that she had made this engagement such a one-girl affair.
The battleship apparently was not in shape to meet the V-Lan in open space, since it did not.
But it could have operated, and to all seeming, did operate as a formidable fortress indeed
from its fixed position on the ground. Under the fierce impact of its offensive beams,
the Volantians saw their very wall-shields flame violet. In return, they saw their mighty
secondary beams stopped cold by the Basconian's inner screens, and had to bring into play
the inconceivable energies of their primaries
before the enemy spaceship fortress could be knocked out.
And this much of the battle was real.
Instrument and recorded tapes could be
and were being doctored to fit,
but spent primary shells could not be simulated.
Nor was it thinkable that this tremendous ship
in its incipient base should be allowed to survive.
Hence, after the dreadful primaries had quieted
the Ike's main batteries
and had reduced the groundworks to flaming pools of lava,
needle-beamers went to work on every minor and secondary control board.
Then, the great vessel definitely helpless as a fighting unit,
Worsall and his hard-bitten crew thought that they went,
thought screened, full-armored, armed with semi-portables and delameters,
joyously into the hand-to-hand combat which each so craved.
Worsal and two of his strongest henchmen
attacked the armed and armored Bosconian captain.
After a satisfying terrific struggle in the course of which all three of the Valentians, and some others,
were appropriately burned and wounded, they overpowered him and carried him bodily into the control
room of the Veland.
This part of the episode two was real, as was the complete melting down of the Basconian vessel,
which occurred while the transfer was being made.
Then, while Khan was engaged in the exceedingly delicate task of withdrawing her mind from
morsels without leaving any detectable trace that she had ever been in it, there happened
the completely unexpected, the one thing for which she was utterly unprepared.
The mind of the captive captain was wrenched from her control, as palpably as a loosely held
stick as snatched from a physical hand, and at the same time there was hurled against her impenetrable
barriers and attack which could not possibly have stemmed from any Aikian mind.
If her mind had been free, she could have coped with the situation, but it was not.
She had to hold Warsaw.
She knew with cold certainty what would ensue if she did not.
The crew?
They could be blocked out temporarily.
Unlike the Valentian lensman, no one of them could even suspect that he had been in a stasis
unless it were long enough to be noticeable upon such timepieces as clocks.
The procedure, however, occupied a millicest.
or so a precious time, and a considerably longer interval was required to withdraw with the
required tracelessness from Warzel's mind. Thus, before she could do anything except protect
herself and the Volantian from that surprisingly powerful invading intelligence,
all trace of it disappeared, and all that remained of her captive was a dead body.
Wurzel and Constance stared at each other, wordless for seconds. The Volantian had a completely
an accurately detailed memory of everything that had happened up to that instant.
The only matter not quite clear being the fact that their hard-won captive was dead.
The girl's mind was racing to fabricate a bullet-proof explanation of that startling fact.
Warsall saved her the trouble.
"'It is, of course, true,' he thought at her finally,
"'that any mind of sufficient power can destroy by force of will alone
the entity of flesh in which it resides.
I never thought about this matter before in connection with the Ike,
but no detail of the experience your father and I had with them on Jarnovan
would support any contention that they do not have minds of the requisite power,
and today's battle, being purely physical, would not throw any light on the subject.
I wonder if a thing like that could be stopped, that is, if we had been on time.
That's it, I think.
Khan put on her most disarming, most engaging grin in preparation
for the most outrageous series of lies of her long career.
And I don't think it can be stopped.
At least I couldn't stop him.
You see, I got into him a fraction of a second before you did,
and in that instant, just like that—
in spite of the fact that Worsal could not hear, she snapped her finger ringingly.
Faster even than that, he was a little.
was gone. I didn't think of it until you brought it up, but you are as right as can be.
He killed himself to keep us from finding out whatever it was that he knew about what is
left of Baskonia. Worcels stared at her with six eyes now instead of one, Gimlet probes which
glanced imperceptibly off her shield. He was not consciously trying to break down her barriers.
To his fullest perception, they were already down. No barriers were there.
He was not consciously trying to integrate or reintegrate any detail or phase of the episode
just passed. No iota or trace of falsity had appeared at any point or instant.
Nevertheless, deep down within those extra reaches that made Worsal of Atlantia what he was,
a vague disquiet refused to down. It was too—too—Worsel's consciousness could not supply
the adjective. Had it been too easy?
Very decidedly it had not.
His utterly worn-out, battered and wounded crew
refuted that thought.
So did his own body, slashed and burned,
as well as did the litter of primary shells
and the heaps of smoking slag,
which had once been an enemy stronghold.
Also, even though he had not theretofore thought
that he and his crew possessed enough force to do what he had just done,
it was starkly unthinkable that anyone,
even an Erysian, could,
have helped him do anything without his knowledge.
Particularly, how could this girl,
daughter of Kimball Kinnison although she was,
possibly have stuff enough to play unperceived
the part of guardian angel to him,
Worsal of Valentia?
Least able of all the second-stage lensman
to appreciate what the children of the lens really were,
he did not, then or ever, have any inkling of the real truth.
But Constance, far behind her cheerfully interested,
innocent mask, shivered as she read exactly his disturbed and disturbing thoughts.
For, conversely, an unresolved enigma would affect him more than it would any of his fellow
L-2s. He would work on it until he did resolve it one way or another.
This thing had to be settled now. And there was a way. A good way.
But I did help you, you big lug, she stormed, stamping her booted foot in emphasis.
I was in there every second, slugging away with everything I had.
Didn't you even feel me? You dope?
She allowed a thought to become evident, widen her eyes and startled incredulity.
You didn't, she accused hotly.
You were reveling so repulsively in the thrill of body-to-body fighting,
just like you were back there in that cavern of overlords,
that you couldn't have felt a thought if it was driven into you with a D2P presser.
and I'll bet credit to Millows that I did help you too,
that if I had been in their pitching,
dulling their edges here and there at critical moments,
you'd have had a time getting them at all.
I'm good to flit right now,
and I hope I never see you again as long as I live.
This vicious counter-attack,
completely mendacious though it was,
fitted the fact so exactly that Morsel's in Kuwait doubts vanished.
Moreover, he was even less well equipped than our human men
to cope with the peculiarly feminine weapons
Constance was using so effectively.
Wherefore the Valentian capitulated, almost abjectly,
and the girl allowed herself to be coaxed down from her high horse
and to become her usual sunny and impish self.
But when the vealon was once more on course
and she had retired to her cabin, it was not to sleep.
Instead, she thought,
Was this intellect of the same race as the one whose burst of thought she had caught such a short time before or not?
She could not decide.
Not enough data.
The first thought had been unconscious and quite revealing.
This one simply a lethal weapon, driven with a power the very memory of which made her gasp again.
They could, however, be the same.
The mind with which she had been on rapport could very well be capable of generating the force she had felt.
If they were the saying, they were something that should be studied, intensively, and at once.
And she herself had kicked away her only chance to make that study.
She had better tell somebody about this, even if it meant confessing her own bird-brained part,
and get some competent advice.
Who?
Kit?
No.
Not because he would smack her down.
She ought to be smacked down.
But because his brain wasn't enough better than her own to do any good.
good. In fact, it wasn't a bit better than hers. Mentor? At the very thought she shuddered,
mentally and physically. She would call him in fast enough, regardless of consequences to herself,
if it would do any good, but it wouldn't. She was starkly certain of that. He wouldn't smack her down,
little Kit would, but he wouldn't help her either. He just sit there and sneer at her while she
stewed, hotter and hotter in her own juice.
In a childish, perverted and grossly exaggerated way, daughter Constance,
you are right.
There is since thought rolled sonorously into her astounded mind.
You got yourself into this.
Get yourself out.
One promising fact, however, I perceive, although seldom and late,
you at last begin really to think.
In that hour, Constance Kinnison grew up.
End of Chapter 10.
Chapter 11.
Of Children of the Lens.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
Chapter 11
Any human or near-human lensman would have been appalled by the sheer loneliness of Nadrex's long vigil.
Almost any one of them would have cursed, fluently and bitterly,
when the time came at which he was forced to concede that the being for whom he lay in
weight was not going to visit that particular planet.
But utterly unhuman Nadrik was not lonely. In fact, there was no word in the vocabulary of his race,
even remotely resembling the term in definition, connotation, or implication.
From his galaxy-wide study, he had a dim, imperfect idea of what such an emotion or feeling might be,
but he could not begin to understand it. Nor was he, in the least disturbed by the fact that
Candron did not appear. Instead, he held his orbit until the minute arrived at which the mathematical
probability became 0.998 that his proposed quarry was not going to appear. Then, as matter-of-factly,
as though he had merely taken half an hour out for lunch, he abandoned his position and set out upon
the course so carefully planned for exactly this event. The search for further clues was long and
uneventful. But monstrously, unhumally patient Nadrick stuck to it until he found one.
True, it was so slight as to be practically not-existent, a mere fragment of a whisper of Zwillnick
instruction, but it bore Kandron's unmistakable imprint. The Pallanian had expected no more.
Candron would not slip. Momentary leakages from faulty machines would have to occur from time to time,
but Candron's machines would not be at fault either often or long at a time.
Nadrick, however, had been ready.
Course after course of the most delicate spotting screen ever devised have it out for weeks.
So had tracers, radiation absorbers,
and every other insidious locating device known to the science of the age.
The standard detectors remained blank, of course,
no more so than his own conveyance with that of the understanding.
Lonian be detectable by any ordinary instruments.
And as the Pellonian speedster shot away along the most probable course,
some fifty delicate instruments in its bow began stabbing that entire region of space
with a pattern of needles of force through which a terrestrial barrel could not have floated
untouched.
Thus the Bosconian craft, an inherently indetectable speaster, was located, and in that instant
was speared by three modified CRX tracers.
Nadrick then went inert and began to plot the other speedster's course.
He soon learned that that course was unpredictable,
that the vessel was being operated statistically, completely at random.
This too, then, was a trap.
This knowledge disturbed Nadrick no more than any more or less similar event
of the previous twenty-odd years.
He had realized fully that the leakage could as well have been deliberate
as accidental. He had no time underestimated Kandron's ability. The future alone would
reveal whether or not Kandron would at any time underestimate his. He would follow through.
There might be a way in which this particular trap could be used against its setter.
Leg after leg of meaningless course Nadrick followed, until there came about that which the
Pelanian knew would happen in time. The Speister held a straight course for more part
than six sigma limits of probability could ascribe to pure randomness.
Nadrick knew what that meant.
The speedster was returning to its base for servicing,
which was precisely the event for which he had been waiting.
It was the base he wanted, not the speedster,
and that base would never, under any conceivable conditions,
emit any detectable quantity of traceable radiation.
To its base, then, Nadrick followed the little spaceship.
and to say that he was on the alert as he approached that base is a gross understatement indeed.
He expected to set off at least one and probably many blasts of force.
That would almost certainly be necessary in order to secure sufficient information
concerning the enemy's defensive screens.
It was unnecessary.
But when those blasts arrived, Nadrick was elsewhere,
calmly analyzing the data secured by his instruments during the brief contact
which had triggered the Bosconian projectors into action.
So light, so fleeting, and so unorthodox, have been Nadrick's touch,
that the personnel of the now doomed base could not have known with any certainty
that any visitor had actually been there.
If there had been, the logical supposition would have been that he and his vessel
had been resolved into their component atoms.
Nevertheless, Nadrick waited.
As has been shown, he was good at waiting,
until the burst of extra vigilance set up by the occurrence would have subsided into ordinary watchfulness.
Then he began to act.
At first this action was in ultra-slow motion.
One millimeter per hour his drill advanced.
Drill was synchronized precisely with screen,
and so guarded as to give an alarm at a level of interference
far below that necessary to energize any probable detector
at the generators of the screen being attacked.
Through defense after defense,
Nadrick made his cautious, indetectable way into the dome.
It was a small base, as such things go,
manned, as expected, by escapees from Onlo.
Scum, too, for the most part,
creatures of even baser and more violent passions
than those upon whom he had worked in Candron's Alonian stronghold.
To keep those intractable entities in line
during their brutally long hours of duty,
a psychological therapist
have been given authority
second only to that of the base commander.
That knowledge, and the fact
that there was only one populated dome,
made the Pellanian come as close to grinning
as one of his unsmiling race can.
The psychologist wore multiplex thought-screen, of course,
as did everyone else.
But that did not bother Nadrick.
Kinnison had opened such screens many times,
not only by means of his own hands, but also, at various times, by the use of a dog's jaws,
a spider's legs, and mandibles, and even a worm's sinuous body.
Wherefore, through the agency of a quasi-fourth-dimensional life-form, literally indescribable
to three-dimensional man, Nadrick's ego was soon comfortably ensconced in the mind of the
Unlonian.
That entity knew in detail every weakness of each of his personnel.
It was his duty to watch those weaknesses, to keep them down, to condition each of his
wards in such fashion that friction and strife would be minimized.
Now, however, he proceeded to do exactly the opposite.
One hated another.
That hate became a searing obsession, requiring the concentration of every effort upon ways
and means of destroying its object.
One feared another.
That fear ate in, searing as it went,
destroying every normality of outlook and of reason.
Many were jealous of their superiors.
This emotion, requiring as it does nothing except its own substance upon which to feed,
became a fantastically spreading, costically corrosive blight.
To name each ugly, noisome passion or trait resident in that dome
is to call the complete roster of the vial,
and calmly, mercilessly, unmovedly, ultra-efficiently,
Nadrick worked upon them all.
As though he were playing a satanic organ,
he touched a nerve here, a synapse there,
a channel somewhere else,
bringing the whole group,
with a lone exception of the commander,
simultaneously to the point of explosion.
Nor was any sign of this perfect work
evident externally.
For everyone there, having lived so long
under the iron code of Baskonia,
knew exactly the consequences
of any infraction of that code.
The moment came when passion over mastered sense.
One of the monsters stumbled, jostling another.
That nudge became, in its recipient's seething mind,
a lethal attack by his bitterest enemy.
A forbidden projector flamed viciously.
The offended one was sating his lust so insensately
that he scarcely noticed the bolt that in turn rived away his own life.
Detonated by this incident,
the personnel of the base exploded as one.
Blasters raved briefly, knives and swords bit and slashed.
Improvised bludgeoned crashed against pre-selected targets.
Hard talon appendages gouged and tore.
And Nadrick, who had long since withdrawn from the mind of the psychologist,
timed with a stopwatch the duration of the whole grizzly affair,
from the instant of the first stumble to the death of the last onlonium
outside the commander's locked and armored sanctum.
98 and 3 tenth seconds.
Good. A nice job.
The base commander, as soon as it was safe to do so,
rushed out of his guarded room to investigate.
Amazed, disgruntled, dismayed by the to him
completely inexplicable phenomenon he had just witnessed,
he fell an easy prey to the Pellonian lensman.
Nadrick invaded his mind and explored it,
channel by channel.
finding, not entirely unexpectedly, that this number one knew nothing whatever of interest.
Nadrick did not destroy the base. Instead, after setting up a small instrument in the commander's office,
he took that unfortunate white aboard his speedster and drove off into space. He immobilized his
captive, not by loading him with manacles, but by deftly severing a few essential nerve trunks.
Then he really studied the Unlonian's mind, line by line this time, almost cell by
sell by cell. A master, almost certainly Candron himself, had operated here. There was not the
slightest trace of tampering. No leads to, or indications of what the activating stimulus would
have to be. All that the fellow now knew was that it was his job to hold his base in
violet against any and every form of intrusion.
And to keep that speister flitting around all over space on a director by chance as much
as possible of the time, leaking slightly a certain signal now and then.
Even under this microscopic re-examination, he knew nothing whatever of Candron,
nothing of Onlow or of Thrail, nothing of any Bosconian organization, activity or thing.
and Nadrick, although baffled still, remained undisturbed.
This trap, he thought, could almost certainly be used against the trapper.
Until a certain call came through his relay in the base,
he would investigate the planets of this system.
During the investigation, a thought impinged upon his lens from Karen Kinnison,
one of the very few warm-blooded beings for whom he had any real liking or respect.
"'Busy Nadrick?' she asked, as casually as though she had seen him hours instead of weeks before.
"'In large, yes. In detail, and at the moment, no. Is there any small problem in which I can be of assistance?'
"'Not small, big. I just got the funniest distress call I ever heard or heard of. On a high band,
way, way up, there. Do you know of any race that thinks on that band?'
"'I do not believe so,' he thought for a moment.
"'Definitely, no.
Neither do I. It wasn't broadcast either, but was directed at any member of a special race or tribe, very special.
Classification, straight Zs to ten or twelve places. She, or it, seemed to be trying to specify.
A frigid race of extreme type, adapted to an environment having a temperature,
of only a few degrees absolute.
Yes, like you, only more so.
Kay paused, trying to put into intelligible thought,
a picture inherently incapable of reception or recognition
by her as yet strictly three-dimensional intelligence.
Something like the Ike, too, but not much.
Their visible aspect was obscure, fluid, amorphous, indefinite?
Skip it.
I couldn't really appreciate.
receive it, let alone describe it. I wish you had caught that thought. I wish so, too. It is extremely
interesting. But tell me, if the thought was directed, not broadcast, how could you have received it?
That's the funniest part of the whole thing. Nadra could feel the girl frown in concentration.
It came at me from all sides at once. Never felt anything like it. Naturally,
I started feeling around for the source, particularly since it was a distress signal.
But before I could get even a general direction of the origin, it—it—well, it didn't really
disappear or really weaken, but something happened to it. I couldn't read it anymore,
and that really did throw me for a loss. She paused, then went on. It didn't so much go away
as go down, some way or other. Then it vanished.
completely, without really going anywhere.
I know that I'm not making myself clear.
I simply can't.
But have I given you enough lead so that you can make any sense at all out of any part of it?
I'm very sorry to say that I cannot.
Nor could he ever, for excellent reasons.
That girl had a mind whose power, scope, depth, and range she herself did not,
could not even dimly understand.
a mind to be fully comprehended only by an adult of her own third level.
That mind had, in fact, received in total a purely fourth-dimensional thought.
If Nadrick had received it, he would have understood it and recognized it for what it was,
only because of his advanced Elysian training.
No other Pallanian could have done so, and it would have been sheerly unthinkable to him
that any warm-blooded, and therefore strictly three-dimensional entity, could by any possibility,
received such a thought, or having received it, could understand any figment of it.
Nevertheless, if he had really concentrated the full powers of his mind upon the girl's attempted
description, he might very well have recognized in it the clearest possible three-dimensional
delineation of such a thought, and from that point he could have gone on to a full understanding
of the children of the lens. However, he did not so concentrate.
It was constitutionally impossible for him to devote real mental effort to any matter not
immediately pertaining to the particular task in hand.
Therefore, neither he nor Karen Kinnison were to know until much later that she had been
on rapport with one of civilization's bitterest, most implacable foes, that she had seen with
clairvoyant and telepathic accuracy the intrinsically three-dimensionally indescribable form
assumed in their winter by the horrid, the monstrous inhabitants of that viciously hostile world,
the unspeakable planet, plore.
I was afraid you couldn't.
Case thought came clear.
That makes it all the more important.
Important enough for you to drop whatever it is that you're doing now, and join me in getting
to the bottom of it, if you could be made to see it, which, of course, you can't.
I am about to take Candron, another.
Nothing in the universe can be as important as that.
Nadrack stated quietly as a simple matter of fact.
You have observed this that lies here?
Yes.
Karen, on rapport with Nadrick, was, of course, cognizant of the captive,
but it had not occurred to her to mention the monster.
When dealing with Nadrick, she, against all the tenets of her sex,
exhibited as little curiosity as did the coldly emotionless lensman
himself. Since you bid so obviously for the question, why are you keeping it alive,
or rather, not dead? Because he is my sure link to Candron. If Nadrick of Palain ever was known
to gloat it was then. He is Candron's creature, placed by Candron personally as an agency of my
destruction. Candron's brain alone holds the key compulsion which will restore his memories.
At some future time, perhaps a second from now, perhaps a cycle of years,
Candron will use that key to learn how his minion fares.
Candron's thought will energize my retransmitter in the dome.
The compulsion will be forwarded to this still-living brain.
The brain, however, will be in my speedster, not in that undamaged fortress.
You now understand why I cannot stray far from this being's base.
You should see that you should join me instead of me joining you.
No, not definite enough.
Karen counter decisively.
I can't see myself passing up a thing like this for the opportunity
of spending the next ten years floating around in an orbit doing nothing.
However, I check you to a certain extent.
When and if anything really happens, shoot me a thought, and I'll rally round.
The linkage broke without.
formal addues.
Nadrick went his way.
Karen went hers.
She did not, however, go far along the way she had had in mind.
She was still precisely nowhere in her quest
when she felt a thought of a type that only her brother or an Orisian could send.
It was Kit.
"'Hi, Kay,' a warm brotherly contact.
"'How are you doing, sis?
Are you growing up?'
"'I'm grown up.
What a question.
Don't get stiff, Kay.'
there's method in this.
Got to be sure.
All trace of levity gone,
he probed her unmercifully.
Not too bad at that for a kid.
As Dad would express it,
if he could feel you this way,
your 29 numbers brinell harder than a diamond drill.
Plenty of jets for this job,
and by the time the real one comes,
you'll probably be ready.
Cut the rigamarole kit,
she snapped and hurled a vicious bolt of her own.
If Kit did not counter it as easily as he had handled her earlier efforts, he did not reveal
the fact.
"'What job?
What do you think you're talking about?
I'm on a job now that I wouldn't drop for Nadrick, and I don't think I'll drop it for you.'
"'You'll have to.'
Kit's thought was grim.
Mother is going to have to go to work on Lyrain, too.
The probability is pretty certain that there is or will be something there that she can't handle.
remote control is out, or I do it myself, but I can't work on Lyraine 2 in person.
Here's the whole picture. Look it over. You can see, sis, that you're elected, so hop to it.
I won't, she stormed. I can't. I'm too busy. How about asking Khan or Cat or Cam?
They don't fit the picture, he explained patiently for him. In this case, hardness is indicated
as you can see for yourself.
Hardness fooey, she jeered.
To handle La Dora of Lyrene,
she thinks she's a hard-boiled egg, I know,
but listen, you hard-brained knothead.
Kit cut in venomously.
You're fogging the issue deliberately.
Stop it.
I spread you the whole picture.
You know as well as I do
that while there's nothing definite as yet,
the thing needs covering,
and you're the one to cover it.
But no,
just because I'm the one to suggest or ask anything of you,
you've always got to go into that muleish act of yours.
Be silent, children, and attend.
Both flushed violently as Mentor came between them.
Some of the weaker thinkers here are beginning to despair of you,
but my visualization of your development is still clear.
To mold such characters as yours sufficiently,
and yet not too much, is a delicate task indeed.
but one which must and shall be done.
Christopher, come to me at once in person.
Karen, I would suggest that you go to Lyraine
and do there whatever you find necessary to do.
I won't. I've still got this job here to do.
Karen defied even the ancient Erysian sage.
That daughter can and should wait.
I tell you solemnly as a fact that if you do not go to Lyra,
reign, you will never get the faintest clue as to that which you now seek.
End of Chapter 11. Chapter 12. Of Children of the Lens.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
Chapter 12
Christopher Kinnison drove toward ERISA, seething.
Why couldn't those sisters of his have sense to match their brains,
or why couldn't you have had some brothers?
especially right now, K.
If she had the sense of a Zabriskin Fontima,
she'd know that this job was important and would snap into it,
instead of wild goose chasing all over space.
If he were mentor, he'd straighten her out.
He had decided to straighten her out once himself,
and he grinned Riley to himself at the memory of what had happened.
What mentor had done to him, before he even got started, was really rugged.
What he would like to do, next time he got within reach of her,
was to shake her until her teeth rattled.
Or would he?
Uh-uh.
By no stretch of the imagination could he picture himself hurting any one of them.
They were swell kids.
In fact, the finest people he had ever known.
He had rough-housed and wrestled with them plenty of times, of course.
He liked it, and so did they.
He could handle any one of them.
He surveyed without his usual complacence, his 200-plus pounds of meat, bone, and gristle.
He ought to be able to, since he outweighed them by 50 or 60 pounds, but it wasn't easy.
Worse than Valerians, just like taking on a combination of boa constrictor and Cat Eagle,
and when Cat and Khan ganged up on him that time, they mulled him to a pulp in nothing flat.
But jetback.
Weight wasn't it, except maybe among themselves.
He had never met a Valerian yet whose shoulders he couldn't pin flat to the mad in a hundred seconds,
and the very smallest of them outweighed him two to one.
Conversely, although he had never thought of it before,
what his sisters had taken from him, without even a bruise,
would have broken any ordinary woman up into a mess of compound fractures.
They were, they must be, made of different stuff.
His thoughts took a new tack.
The kids were special in another way, too, he had noticed lately,
without paying it any particular attention.
It might tie in.
They didn't feel like other girls.
After dancing with one of them, other girls felt like robots made out of putty.
Their flesh was different.
It was firmer, finer, infinitely more responsive.
Each individual cell seemed to be endowed with a flashing, sparkling life,
A life which, interlicking with that of one of his own cells, made their bodies as intimately
one as were their perfectly synchronized minds.
But what did all this have to do with their lack of sense?
QX, they were nice people.
QX, he couldn't beat their brains out either, physically or mentally.
But there ought to be some way of driving some ordinary common sense through their fine-grained,
thick, hard, tough skulls.
Thus it was that Kit approached ERISA in a decidedly mixed frame of mind.
He shot through the barrier without slowing down and without notification.
Inerting his ship, he fought her into an orbit around the planet.
The shape of the orbit was immaterial,
as long as its every inch was well inside Erycia's innermost screen.
For young Kinnison knew precisely what those screens were
and exactly what they were for.
He knew that distance of itself meant nothing.
Mentor could give anyone either basic or advanced treatments
just as well from a distance of a thousand million parsecs as at hand to hand.
The reason for the screens and for the personal visits
was the existence of the Adorians,
who had minds probably as capable as the Elysian's own.
And throughout all the infinite reaches of the macrocosmic universe,
only within these highly special screens
was their certainty of privacy
from the spying senses of the ultimate foe.
The time has come, Christopher,
for the last treatment I am able to give you.
Mentor announced without preamble
as soon as Kit had checked his orbit.
Oh, so soon?
I thought you were pulling me in
to pin my ears back for fighting with Kay,
the dim wit.
That, while a minor matter,
is worthy of passing mention,
since it is illustrative of the difficulties inherent in the project of developing
without over-controlling such minds as yours.
On route here, you made a masterly summation of the situation,
with one outstanding omission.
Huh? What omission? I covered it like a blanket.
You assumed throughout, and still assume, as you always do in dealing with your sisters,
that you are unassailably right, that your conclusion
is the only tenable one,
that they are always wrong.
But they are!
That's why you sent K to Lyraine!
In these conflicts with your sisters,
you have been right in approximately half of the cases,
Mentor informed him.
But how about their fights with each other?
Do you know of any such?
Why, um, can't say that I do.
Kit's surprise was plain.
But since they found,
fight with me so much, they must. That does not follow, and for a very good reason. We may as well
discuss that reason now, as it is a necessary part of the education which you are about to receive.
You already know that your sisters are very different, each from the other.
Know now that each was specifically developed to be so completely different that there is no
possible point which could be made an issue between any two of them.
It took some time for Kit to digest that news.
Then where do I come in that they all fight with me at the drop of a hat?
That, too, while regrettable, is inevitable.
Each of your sisters, as you may have suspected, is to play a tremendous part in that which is to come.
The lensman, we of Orisia, all will contribute,
but upon you children of the lens, especially upon the girls,
will fall the greater share of the load.
Your individual task will be that of coordinating the whole,
a duty which no ERISian is or ever can be qualified to perform.
You will have to direct the efforts of your sisters,
reinforcing every heavily attacked point with your own incomparable force and drive,
keeping them smoothly in mesh and in place.
As a side issue, you will also have to coordinate the field,
feebler efforts of Usavaricia, the lensman, the patrol, and whatever other minor forces we may
be able to employ.
"'Holy, Clonos! Claws!' Kit was gasping like a fish.
"'Just where, mentor, do you figure I'm going to pick up the jets to swing that load?
And as to coordinating the kids, that's out.
I'd make just one suggestion to any one of them, and she'd forget all about the battle and
tear into me. No, I'll take that back. The stickier, the going, the closer they rally round.
Right. It will always be so. Now, youth, that you have these facts, explain these matters to me
as a sort of preliminary exercise. I think I see, Kit thought intensely. The kids don't fight with
each other because they don't overlap. They fight with me because my central field overlaps them all.
They have no occasion to fight with anybody else, nor have I, because with anybody else,
our viewpoint is always right, and the other fellows know it, except for Palanians and such,
who think along different lines than we do. Thus, Kay never fights with Nadrick. When he goes
off the beam, she simply ignores him and goes on about her business.
But with them and me, we'll have to learn to arbitrate or something, I suppose.
His thought trailed off.
Manifestations of adolescence.
With adulthood, now coming fast, they will pass.
Let us get on with the work.
But wait a minute, Kit protested, about this coordinator thing.
I can't do it.
I'm too much of a kid.
I won't be ready for a job like that for a thousand years.
You must be ready. Mentor's thought was inexorable. And when the time comes, you shall be.
Now come fully into my mind. There is no use in repeating in detail the progress of an Elysian
supereducation, especially since the most accurate possible description of the most important of those
details would be intrinsically meaningless. When, after a few weeks of it, Kit was ready to leave Elysia,
he looked much older and more mature than before.
He felt immensely older than he looked.
The concluding conversation of that visit, however, is worth recording.
You now know, Kinnison, mentor mused,
what your children are and how you came to be.
You are the accomplishment of long lifetimes of work.
It is with most profound satisfaction that I now perceive clearly
that those lifetimes have not been seen.
spent in vain.
Yours, you mean?
Kit was embarrassed, but one point
still bothered him.
Dad met and married mother,
yes, but how about the others?
Tragancy,
Worsal, and Nadrick.
They and the corresponding females
were also penultimates, of lines
as long as ours.
Your counsel decided that
the human stock was best,
so none of the other second-stage
lensman ever met their female,
compliments. Not that it could make any difference to them, of course, but I should think that
three of your fellow students wouldn't feel so good. I am very glad indeed that you mentioned the
point. The Erysian's thought was positively gleeful. You have at no time then detected anything
peculiar about this that you know as mentor of ERISA? Why, of course not. How could I? Or rather,
why should I?
Any lapse on your part, however slight, from practically perfect synchronization, would have revealed
to such a mentality as yours that I, whom you know as mentor, am not an individual, but for.
While we each worked as individuals upon all of the experimental lines, whenever we dealt with
any one of the penultimates or ultimates, we did so as a fusion.
This was necessary, not only for your fullest possible development,
but also to be sure that each of us had complete data upon every minute facet of the truth.
While it was no sense important to the work itself to keep you in ignorance of Mentor's
plurality, the fact that we could keep you ignorant of it, particularly now that you have
become an adult, showed that our work was being done in a really workman-like fashion.
Kit whistled, a long low whistle, which was tribute enough to those who knew what it meant.
He knew what he meant, but there were not enough words or thoughts to express it.
But you're going to keep on being mentor, aren't you?
He asked.
I am.
The real task, as you know, lies ahead.
QX, you say that I'm adult, I'm not.
You implied that I'm more than several notches above you in qualifications.
I could laugh myself silly about that one, if it wasn't so serious.
why any one of you Eurycians has forgotten more than I know, and could tie me up into
bow-knots.
There are elements of truth in your thought.
That you can now be called adult, however, does not mean that you have attained your
full power, only that you are able to use effectively the powers you have, and are
able to acquire other and larger powers.
But what are those powers?
Kit demanded.
You've hinted on that same theme a thousand times, and I don't know what you mean any better than I did before.
You must develop your own powers. Mentor's thought was as final as fate. Your mind is potentially
far abler than mine. You will in time come to know my mind in full. I never will be able to know
yours. For the lesser but full mind to attempt to instruct in methodology the greater,
although emptier one, is to set that greater mind in an undersized mold, and thus to do it irreparable
harm. You have the abilities and the powers. You will have to develop them yourself,
by the perfection of techniques concerning which I can give you no instructions whatever.
But surely you can give me some kind of a hint. Kit, please,
I'm just a kid, I tell you. I don't even know how or where to begin.
Under Kit's startled mental gaze, Mentor split suddenly into four parts,
laced together by a pattern of thought so intricate and so rapid as to be unrecognizable.
The parts fused and again Mentor spoke.
I can point the way in only the broadest, most general terms.
It has been decided, however, that I can give you one hint,
Or more properly, one illustration.
The surest test of knowledge known to us is the visualization of the cosmic all.
All science is, as you know, one.
The true key to power lies in the knowledge of the underlying reasons for the succession of events.
If it is pure causation, that is, if any given state of things follows as an inevitable consequence
because of the state existing an infinitesimal instant before,
then the entire course of the macrocosmic universe
was set for the duration of all eternity
in the instant of its coming into being.
This well-known concept,
the stumbling block upon which many early thinkers came to grief,
we now know to be false.
On the other hand, if pure randomness were to govern,
natural laws as we know them could not exist.
Thus, neither pure causation,
nor pure randomness alone can govern the succession of events.
The truth, then, must lie somewhere in between.
In the macrocosmos, causation prevails.
In the micro-randomness, both in accord with the mathematical laws of probability.
It is in the region between them, the intermediate zone, or the interface, so to speak,
that the greatest problems lie.
The test of validity of any theory, as you know, is the accuracy of the predictions which are made possible by its use,
and our greatest thinkers have shown that the completeness and fidelity of any visualization of the cosmic all
are linear functions of the clarity of definition of the components of that interface.
Full knowledge of that intermediate zone would mean infinite power, and a statistically perfect visualization.
None of these things, however, will ever be realized, for the acquirement of that full knowledge
would require infinite time. That is all I can tell you. It will, properly studied, be enough.
I have built within you a solid foundation. Yours alone is the task of erecting upon that
foundation a structure strong enough to withstand the forces which will be thrown against it.
It is perhaps natural, in view of what you have recently gone through,
that you should regard the problem of the Adorians as one of insuperable difficulty.
Actually, however, it is not, as you will perceive when you have spent a few weeks in reintegrating
yourself.
You must not, you shall not, and in my clear visualization, you do not fail.
Communication ceased.
Kit made his way groggily to his control board, went free, and,
lined out for Clovia.
For a guy whose education was supposed to be complete,
he felt remarkably like a total loss with no insurance.
He had asked for advice and had got...
What?
A dissertation on philosophy, mathematics, and physics.
Good enough stuff, probably, if he could see what Mentro was driving at,
but not of much immediate use.
He did have a brain full of new stuff, though.
Didn't know yet what half of it was.
He'd better be getting it licked into shape.
He'd sleep on it.
He did so, and as he lay coessent in his bunk,
the tiny pieces of an incredibly complex jigsaw puzzle
began to click into place.
The ordinary's Wilmix, all the small fry fitted in well enough.
The overlords of Delgon.
The colonians.
Hmm, he'd better check with Dad on that angle.
The Ike, under control.
"'Candron of Onlow, ditto.
"'X was in safe hands.
"'Cam had already been alerted to watch her step.
"'Some planet named Plur.
"'What in all the purple hells of Palaine
"'had meant or meant by that crack?
"'Anyway, that piece didn't fit anywhere, yet.'
"'That left Edor,
"'and at the thought a series of cold waves
"'raced up and down the young linsman's spine.
"'Nevertheless, Edor was his oyster,
his and nobody else's.
Mentor had made that plain enough.
Everything the Elysians had done for umpteen million years
had been aimed at the Adorians.
They had picked him out to emcee the show,
and how could a man coordinate an attack against something
about which he knew nothing?
And the only way to get acquainted with Edor and its denizens
was to go there.
Should he call in the kids?
He should not.
Each of them had their hands full of her own.
own job, that of developing her full self.
He had his, and the more he studied the question, the clear it became that the first
number on the program of his self-development was, would have to be, a single-handed expedition
against the key planet of civilization's top-ranking foes.
He sprang out of his bunk, changed his vessel's course, and lined out a thought to his father.
"'Dad? Kit!
Ben flitting around out ERISA way, and picked up an idea that I want to pass along to you.
It's about colonians.
What do you know about them?
They're blue.
I don't mean that.
I know you don't.
There were Helmuth, Jaltie, Prelan, Crown and Shield.
All I can think of at the moment.
Big operator, son, and smart ombres, if I do say so myself, as shouldn't.
But they're all ancient history.
Hold it.
"'Maybe I know of a modern one, too.
"'Eddy's Lensman.'
"'The only part of that picture that was sharp was the lens,
"'since Eddie was never analytically interested
"'in any of the hundreds of types of people he met,
"'but there was something about that Lensman.
"'I'll bring him back and focus him as sharply as I can.
"'There.'
"'Both men studied the blurred statue
"'posed in the gray Lensman's mind.
"'Wouldn't you say he could be a colonial?'
"'Check. I wouldn't want to say much more than that. But about that lens, did you really
examine it? It is sharp. Under the circumstances, of course, it would be.'
"'Certainly. Wrong in every respect. Rhythm, chroma, context, and aura. Definitely not
Elysian. Therefore, Bosconian. That's the point. That's what I was afraid of, you know.'
Double-check.
And that point ties in absolutely tight with the one that made me call you just now
that everybody, including you and me, seems to have missed.
I've been searching my memory for five hours.
You know what my memory is like, and I've heard of exactly two other colonians.
They were big operators, too.
I have never heard of the planet itself.
To me, it is a startling fact that the sum total of my information on colonia,
reliable or otherwise, is that it produced seven big-shot swilnicks, six of them before I was born, period.
Kit felt his father's jaw drop.
No, I don't believe that I have ever heard anything about the planet either, the older man finally replied.
But I'll bet that I can get you all the information you want in fifteen minutes.
Credits to Mellows, it'll be a lot nearer fifteen days.
You can find it sometime, though, if anybody can.
That's why I'm taking it up with you.
While I don't want to seem to be giving a gray lensman orders,
that jocular introduction had come to be a sort of ritual in the Kinnison family.
I would very differently suggest that there might be some connection
between that completely unnoticed planet and some of the things we don't know about
Bosconia.
Diffinant, you?
The gray linsman laughed deeply,
like an atomic bomb.
I'll start a search on Colonia right away.
As to your credits to Millow's 15 days thing,
I'd be ashamed to take your money.
You don't know our librarians or our system.
Ten Millows even money that we get full data
in less than five GP days from right now.
Want it?
I'll say so.
I'll wear that cento on my tunic as a medal of victory over the gray lensman.
I do know the size of these here.
or two galaxies.
QX, it's a bet.
I'll let you know if we find anything.
In the meantime, Kit,
remember that you're my favorite son.
Well, you're not so bad yourself.
Anytime I want mother to divorce you
so as to change fathers for me,
I'll let you know.
What a terrific, what a tremendous meaning
was heterodyneed upon that seemingly light exchange.
Clear ether, dad.
clear ether son end of chapter twelve chapter thirteen of children of the lens this libervox recording is in the public domain chapter thirteen
thousands of years were to pass before christopher kinnison could develop the ability to visualize from the contemplation of one fact or artifact the entire universe to which it belonged he could not even plan in detail
his one-man invasion of Edor, until he could integrate all available data concerning the planet
Colonia into his visualization of the Bosconian Empire.
One unknown, Plur, blurred his picture badly enough. Two such completely unknown factors
made visualization even and broad impossible. Anyway, he decided he had one more job to do
before he tackled the key planet of the enemy. And now, while he was waiting for the door,
dope on Colonia would be the best time to do it.
Hi, First Lady of the Universe. Tis thy firstborn, who wits to fain converse with thee?
Art, pressily engaged in matters of moment or import?
Art not, Kit?
Clarissa's characteristic chuckle was as infectious as full of the joy of life as ever.
Not that it would make any difference, but methinks I detect an undertone of
Seriosity beneath thy persiflage. Spill it.
Let's make it a rendezvous instead, he suggested.
We're fairly close, I think. Closer than we've been for a long time.
Where are you exactly? Oh, can we? Wonderful.
She marked her location and velocity in his mind.
She made no effort to conceal her joy at the idea of a personal meeting.
She never had tried, and she never would try, to make him put first matters other than first.
She had not expected to see him again physically until this war was over.
But if she could...
QX, hold your course and speed. I'll be seeing you in eighty-three minutes.
In the meantime, it'll be just as well if we don't communicate, even by lens.
Why, son? Nothing definite. Just a hunch is all.
Bye, gorgeous.
The two speasters approached each other.
nerded, matched intrinsics, went free, flashed into contact, sped away together upon Clarissa's
original course.
"'Hi, Mums!' Kit spoke into a visiphone.
"'I should, of course, come to you, but it might be better if you come in here.
I've got some special rig set up here that I don't want to leave.
QX?'
He snapped on one of his special rigs as he spoke, a device which he himself had built and installed.
The generator of a screen which would detect upon every possible band and channel of thought
or of intrusion.
Why, of course!
She came and was swept off her feet in the exuberance of her tall son's embrace,
a greeting which he returned with a fervor, at least the equal of his own.
It's nice, mother, seeing you again.
Words or thoughts even were so inadequate.
Kit's voice was a trifle rough.
His eyes were not complete.
completely dry.
Uh-huh, it is nice, she agreed,
snuggling her spectacular head even more firmly
into the curve of his shoulder.
Mental contact is better than nothing, of course,
but this is perfect.
Just as much a menace to navigation as ever, aren't you?
He held her at arm's length and shook his head in mock disapproval.
Do you think it's quite right for one woman to have so much of everything
what all the others have so little of anything?
Honestly, I don't.
She and Kit had always been exceptionally close.
Now, her love for, and her pride in this splendid creature,
her son and her firstborn, simply would not be denied.
You're joking, I know, but that strikes too deep for comfort.
I wake up in the night to wonder why, of all the women in existence,
I should be so lucky.
especially in my children.
QX, skip it.
Kit was shying away.
She should have known better than to try in words
even to skirt the profound depths of sentiment
which both she and he knew so well were there.
Get back on to the being gorgeous.
You know what I meant.
Look at yourself in a mirror some day,
or do you perchance?
Once in a while, maybe twice,
she giggled unaffectedly.
You don't think that all this charm and glamour comes without effort, do you?
But maybe you'd better get back on the beam yourself.
I know that you don't come all these parsecs out of your way to say pretty things to your mother,
even though I admit that they built up my ego no end.
On target, dead center.
Kit had been grinning, but he sobered quickly.
I wanted to talk to you about Lyrain and the job you're figuring on doing out there.
"'Why?' she demanded.
"'Do you know anything about it?'
"'Unfortunately, I don't.'
Kitt's black frown of concentration reminded her forcibly of his father's characteristic scowl.
"'Guesses, suspicions, theories, not even good hunches.
"'But I thought—I wondered.'
He paused, embarrassed as a schoolboy, then went on with a rush.
"'Would you mind it too much if I went into a sense?
something pretty personal?
You know I wouldn't, son.
In contrast to Kit's usual clarity and precision of thought, the question was highly ambiguous,
but Clarissa covered both angles.
I can conceive of no subject, event, action, or thing in either my life or yours,
too intimate or too personal to discuss with you in full.
Can you?
No, I can't.
But this is different.
As a woman, you're tops, the finest and best that ever lived.
This statement made with all the matter-of-factness of stating that a triangle had three corners,
thrilled Clarissa through and through.
As a gray lensman, you're over the rest of them like a Cirrus cloud,
but you should rate full second stage, and, well, you may run up against something too hot to handle someday,
and I, that is, you.
You mean that I don't measure up?
She asked quietly.
I know very well that I don't.
And admitting an evident fact should not hurt my feelings a bit.
Don't interrupt, please, as Kit began to protest.
In fact, it is sheerest effrontery.
It has always bothered me terribly, Kit,
to be classified as a lensman at all,
considering what splendid men they all are,
and what each of them had to go through to earn his lens.
You know, as well as I do,
that I have never done a single thing to earn or to deserve it.
It was handed to me on a silver platter.
I'm not worthy of it, Kit,
and all the real lensmen know that I'm not.
They must know it, Kit.
They must feel that way.
Did you ever express yourself in exactly that way before to anybody?
"'You didn't, I know.'
Kit stopped sweating.
This was going to be easier than he feared.
I couldn't, Kit.
It was too deep,
but, as I said,
I can talk anything over with you.
QX.
We can settle that fast enough
if you will answer just one question.
Do you honestly believe
that you would have been given the lens
if you were not absolutely worthy of it?
Perfectly in every minute particular?
Why, I never thought of it that way.
Probably not.
No, certainly not.
Clarissa's somber mean lightened markedly.
But I still don't see how or why.
Clear enough.
Kit interrupted.
You were born with what the rest of them had to work so hard for,
with stuff that no other woman anywhere ever had.
Except the girls, of course.
Clarissa corrected half-absently.
"'except the kids,' he concurred.
"'It could do no harm to agree with his mother's statement of a self-evident fact.
He crossed the room and adjusted a couple of dials.
His vessel's screens would not now react to the thoughts of Mentor of ERISA,
but would still announce the presence of any possible other.
"'You can take it from me, as one who knows,
"'that the other lensmen know that you've got plenty of jets.
"'They all know also that the Elysians'
never did and never will make a lens for anybody who hasn't got what it takes.
And so, very neatly, we've stripped ship for the action I came over here to see you about.
It isn't a case of you not measuring up, because you do in every respect.
It's simply that you're short a few jets that you ought by rights to have.
You really are a second-stage lensman. You know that, Mums, but you never went to ERISA for your real L-2 work.
I hate to see you blast off without full equipment into what may prove to be a big-time job,
especially when you're so eminently able to take it.
Mentor could give you the works in a couple of hours.
Why don't you flit for ERISA right now or let me take you there?
No, no, Clarissa backed away, shaking her head emphatically.
Never. I couldn't get ever. Not possibly.
Why not?
Kid was amazed.
Why, mother, you're actually shaking.
I know I am.
I can't help it.
That's why.
He's the only thing in the entire universe that I'm really afraid of.
I can talk about him without quite getting goosebumps all over me,
but the mere thought of actually being with him simply scares me into shivering, quivering fits.
I see.
It might very well work that way at that.
Does Dad know it?
Yes, or that is, he knows that I'm afraid of mentor, but he doesn't know it the way you do.
It simply doesn't register in true color.
Kim can't even conceive of me being either a coward or a crybaby.
And I don't want him to either, Kit, so please don't tell him, ever.
I won't.
He'd fry me to a cinder in my own grease if I did.
Frankly, I can't see any part of your self-portrait either.
As a matter of cold fact, you are so obviously neither a coward nor a crybaby that no refutation of that canard is either necessary or desirable.
What you've really got, Mums, is a fixation. And if it can't be removed, it can't, she declared flatly.
I've tried that now and then ever since before you were born. Whatever it is, it's a permanent installation and it's really deep.
I have known all along that Kim didn't give me the whole business.
He couldn't.
And I've tried again and again to make myself go to ERISA,
or at least to call mentor about it.
But I can't do it, Kit.
I simply can't.
I understand, Kit nodded.
He did understand now.
What she felt was not, in essence, and at bottom, fear at all.
It was worse than fear and deeper.
It was true revulsion.
The basic, fundamental, subconscious, sex-based reaction
of an intensely vital human female
against a mental monstrosity
who had not had a sexual thought for countless thousands of her years.
She could neither analyze nor understand her feeling,
but it was as immutable, as ineradicable,
and as old as the surging tide of life itself.
But there's another way.
just as good, probably better, as far as you're concerned.
You aren't afraid of me, are you?
What a question.
Of course I'm not.
Why, do you mean that you?
Her expressive eyes widened.
You children, especially you, are far beyond us,
as of course you should be.
But can you, Kit, really?
Kit keyed a part of his mind into an old
ultra-high level.
I know the techniques mentor, but the first question is, should I do it?
You should. The time has come when it is necessary.
Second, I've never done anything like this before, and she's my own mother.
If I make one slip, I'll never forgive myself.
Will you stand by and see that I don't slip?
I will stand by.
"'I really can, mums.'
Kit answered her question with no perceptible pause.
That is, if you are willing to put everything you've got into it,
just letting me into your mind isn't enough.
You'll have to sweat blood.
You'll think that you've been run through hammer mill
and spread on a Delgonian torture screen to dry.
No need for worry on that score, my son.
All the passionate intensity of Clarissa's being
was in her vibrant voice.
"'If you just knew how utterly I have been longing for it, I'll work, and whatever you give me
I can take.'
"'I'm sure of that. And, not to work under false pretenses, I'd better tell you how I know.
Mentor showed me what to do, and told me to do it.'
"'Mentor?'
"'Mentor,' Kit agreed.
He knew that it was a psychological impossibility for you to work with him.
him, and that you could and would work with me. So he appointed me a committee of one.
Clarissa was reacting to this news, as it was inevitable that she should react, and to give her time
to steady down, he went on. Mentor also knew, and so do you and I, that even though you are
afraid of him, you know what he is and what he means to civilization. It was necessary for me to tell you this
so that you would know, without any tinge of doubt,
that I am not a half-bate kid setting out to do a man's job of work.
Jet back, Kit.
I may have thought a lot of different things about you at times,
but half-baked was never one of them.
That is your own thinking, not mine.
I wouldn't wonder, Kit grinned Riley.
My ego could stand some stiffening right now.
This isn't going to be funny.
You're too fine a way.
woman, and I think too much of you to enjoy the prospect of mulling you around so unmercifully.
Why, Kit?
Her mood was changing fast.
Her old-time, impish smile came back in force.
You aren't weakening, surely.
Shall I hold your hand?
Uh-huh, cold feet, he admitted.
It might be a smart idea at that, holding hands.
Physical linkage.
Well, I'm as ready as I ever will be.
I guess. Whenever you are, say so. And you better sit down before you fall down.
QX, Kit, come in. Kit came. And at the first terrific surge of his mind within hers,
the red lensman caught her breath, stiffened in every muscle, and all but screamed in agony.
Kit's fingers needed their strength as her hands clutched his and closed in a veritable spasm.
She had thought that she knew what to expect, but the reality was different, much different.
She had suffered before. On Lyraine, too, although she had never told anyone of it,
she had been burned and wounded and beaten. She had borne five children. This was as though
every poignant experience of her past had been rolled into one, raised to the nth power,
and stabbed deep into the tenderest, most sensitive centers of her entire being.
And Kit, boring in and in and in, knew exactly what to do.
And now that he had started, he proceeded unflinchingly and with exact precision to do what had to be done.
He opened up her mind as she had never dreamed it possible for a mind to open.
He separated the tiny jammed compartments, each completely from every other.
He showed her how to make room for this tremendous expansion and watched her do it,
against the shrieking protests of every cell and fiber of her body and of her brain.
He drilled new channels everywhere,
establishing an inconceivably complex system of communication lines of infinite conductivity.
He knew just what he was doing to her,
since the same thing had been done to him so recently,
but he kept on relentlessly until the job was done, completely done.
Then, working together, they sorted and labeled and classified
and catalogued. They checked and double-checked. Finally, she knew, and Kit knew that she knew,
every hitherto unplumbed recess of her mind and every individual cell of her brain.
Every iota of every quality and characteristic, every scrap of knowledge she had ever acquired
or ever would acquire, would be at her command instantaneously and effortlessly. Then, and only then,
did Kit withdraw his mind from hers.
Did you say that I was short just a few jets, Kit?
She got up grogly and mopped her face,
upon which her few freckles stood out surprisingly dark
upon a background of white.
I am a wreck.
I better go in.
As you were for just a sec.
I'll break out a bottle of Phelan.
This rates a celebration of sorts, don't you think?
Very much so.
As she sipped the pungity aromatic reds,
liquid, her color began to come back.
"'No wonder I felt as though I were missing something all these years.
"'Thanks, Kit. I really appreciate it.
"'You're a—sealed, mums.'
He picked her up and squeezed her hard.
He scarcely noticed her sweat-streaked face and disheveled hair, but she did.
"'Good heavens, Kit, I'm a perfect hag,' she exclaimed.
"'I've got to go and put on a new face.'
"'QX. I don't feel quite so fresh myself.
"'What I need, though, is a good thick steak. Join me?'
"'A-uh. How can you even think of eating at a time like this?
"'Same way you can think of war-pane and feathers, I suppose. Different people? Different reactions.
"'Q-X, I'll be in there and see you in fifteen or twenty minutes. Flit.'
She left and Kit heaved an almost explosive sigh of relief.
Mighty good thing she hadn't asked too many questions.
If she had become really curious,
he would have had a horrible time keeping her away from the fact
that that kind of work never had been done
and never would be done outside of solid, multiply, ERISian screen.
He ate, cleaned up, ran a comb through his hair,
and when his mother was ready, crossed over into her speedster.
We, we, we, you!
"'Kit whistled descriptively.
"'What a seventh sector call-out?
"'Just who do you think you're going to knock out of the ether on Lyrain, too?'
"'Nobody at all,' Clarissa laughed.
"'This is all for you, son.
"'And maybe a little bit for me, too.
"'I'm stunned.
"'You're a blinding flash and a deafening report.
"'But I've got to do a flit, gorgeous.
"'So clear, wait a minute. You can't go yet.
I've got questions to ask you about these new networks and things.
How do I handle them?
Sorry, you've got to develop your own techniques.
You know that already.
In a way, I thought maybe, though, I could wheedle you into helping me a little.
I should have known better.
But tell me, all linsmen don't have minds like this, do they?
I'll say they don't.
They're all like yours was before, but not as good.
except the other L-2s, of course,
Dad, Worssel, Trigonsi, and Nadrack.
There's are more or less like yours is now,
but you've got a lot of stuff that they haven't.
Huh? she demanded, such as.
Way down, there.
He showed her.
You worked all of that area yourself.
I only showed you how, without getting in too close.
Why? Oh, I see.
you would. Life Force. I would have lots of that, of course. She did not blush, but Kit did.
Life Force was a pitifully inadequate term indeed for that which civilization's only lensman mother had in
such measure, but they both knew what it was. Kit ducked. You can always tell all about a
lendsman by looking at his lens. It's an absolute diagram of his whole mind. You've still
Guddied dads, of course.
Yes, three times as big as the ordinary ones, or mine, and much finer and brighter.
But mine isn't, Kit?
It wasn't, you mean.
Put it on and look at it now.
She opened a drawer, and even before she could snap the bracelet around her wrist,
her eyes and mouth became three round o's of astonishment.
She had never seen that lens before, or anything like it.
It was three times as big as hers,
seven times as fine and as intricate and ten times as bright.
Why, this isn't mine, she gasped.
But this is where I put.
Sneeze, gorgeous, kid advised.
Cobwebs.
It lit up, didn't it?
You aren't thinking a lick.
Your mind changed, so your lens had to.
See?
I see.
Clarissa looked deep into her son's eyes,
her face again paling under her making.
up. Now I'm going to get personal kit. Will you let me look at your lens? You never seem to wear
it. I haven't seen it since you graduated. Sure, why not? He reached into a pocket. I take after
you that way. Neither of us gets any kick out of throwing his weight around. His lens flamed
upon his wrist. It was larger in diameter than Clarissa's and thicker. It's text, it's
was finer, its colors were brighter, harsher, and seemed somehow more solid. Both studied both
lenses for a moment, then Kit seized his mother's hand, brought their wrists together,
and stared. "'That's it,' he breathed. "'That's it, that's it, that's it, just as sure as
us clono has got teeth and claws. What's it? What do you see?' she demanded. "'I see how and why I got the way I am.
And if the kids had lenses, theirs would be the same.
Remember, dads?
Look at your dominance.
Notice that every one of them is duplicated in mine.
Blank them out of mine and see what you've got left.
Pure Kimball Kinnison,
with just enough extras thrown in to make me an individual
instead of a carbon copy.
Hmm, credits to mellows,
this is what comes of having lensmen on both sides of the family.
No wonder we're freaks.
"'Don't know whether I'm in favor of it or not.
"'I don't think that they should produce any more Lady Lensman, do you?
"'Maybe that's why they never did.'
"'Don't try to be funny,' she reproved.
"'But her dimples were again in evidence.
"'If it would result in more people like you and your sisters,
"'I would be very much in favor of it.
"'But, some way or other, I doubt it.
"'I know that you're squirming to go, so I won't hold you any longer.
what you just found out about lenses is fascinating.
For the rest of it, well, thanks, son, and clear ether.
Clear ether, mother.
This is the worst part of being together, leaving so quick.
I'll see you again, though, soon and often.
If you get stuck, yell, and one of the kids or I, or all of us,
will be with you in a split second.
He gave her a quick hard hug, kissed her in through the
enthusiastically and left. He did not tell her, and she never did find out, that his discovery of one of the secrets of the lens was made to keep her from asking questions which he could not answer.
The red lensman was afraid that she would not have time to put her new mind in order before reaching Lyraine too. But being naturally a good housekeeper, she did. More so rapidly and easily did her mind now work, she had time to review and to analyze every phase of her pre-reviewed.
previous activities upon that planet, and to lay out in broad her first lines of action.
She wouldn't put on the screws at first, she decided. She would let them think that she didn't
have any more jets than before. Helen was nice, but a good many of the others, especially that
airport manager, were simply quadruply distilled vixons. She'd take it easy at first,
but she'd be very sure that she didn't get into any such jams as last time. She coasted down
through Lyrene's stratosphere and poised high above the city she remembered so well.
Helen of Lyraine, she sent out a sharp, clear thought,
"'That is not your name, I know, but we did not learn any other.'
She broke off, every nerve taught.
Was that or was it not Helen's thought?
Cut off, wiped out by a guardian block before it could take shape.
"'Who are you, stranger, and what do you want?'
The thought came almost instantly, from a person seated at the desk of the chief executive
of the planet.
Clarissa glanced at the sender and thought that she recognized the face.
Her new channels functioned instantaneously.
She remembered every detail.
Lensman Clarissa, formerly of Saul III, unattached.
I remember you, Lodora, although you were only a child when I was here.
Do you remember me?
Yes, I repeat, what do you want?
The memory did not decrease La Dora's hostility.
I would like to speak to the former elder person, if I may.
You may not.
It is no longer with us.
Leave at once, or we will shoot you down.
Think again, La Dora.
Clarissa held her tone even and calm.
Surely your memory is not so short
that you have forgotten the dauntless and its capabilities.
I remember. You may take up with me whatever it is that you wish to discuss with my predecessor,
elder person. You are familiar with the Bosconian invasion of years ago. It is suspected that they are
planning new and galaxy-wide outrages, and that this planet is in some way involved. I have come here
to investigate the situation. We will conduct our own investigations, Lodora declared curtly. We insist that
you and all other foreigners stay away from this planet.
You investigate a galactic condition?
In spite of herself, Clarissa almost let the connotations of that question become perceptible.
If you give me permission, I will land alone. If you do not, I shall call the dauntless,
and we will land in force. Take your choice.
Land alone, then, if you must land.
Lodora yielded, seethingly.
Land at our city airport.
Under those guns?
No thanks.
I am neither invulnerable nor immortal.
I land where I please.
She landed.
During her previous visit,
she had had a hard enough time
getting any help from these pig-headed matriarchs,
but this time she encountered a non-cooperation
so utterly fanatical
that it put her completely at a loss.
None of them tried to harm her in any way, but not one of them would have anything to do with her.
Every thought, even the friendliest, was stopped by a full coverage block.
No acknowledgement even was ever made.
"'I can crack those blocks easily enough if I want to,' she declared one bad evening to her mirror.
"'And if they keep this up very much longer, by Clonos emerald-filled gizzard, I will.'
End of Chapter 13.
Chapter 14.
Of Children of the Lens.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
Chapter 14.
When Kim Wilkinson received his son's call, he was an ultra-prime,
the patrol's stupendous Clovian base, about to enter his ship.
He stopped for a moment, practically in mid-stride.
While nothing was to be read in his expression or in his eyes,
The lieutenant to whom he had been talking had been an interested, if completely uninformed witness
to many such lensed conferences, and knew that they were usually important.
He was, therefore, not surprised when the lensman turned around and headed for an exit.
Put her back, please. I won't be going out for a while after all.
Kinnison explained briefly.
Don't know exactly how long.
A fast flitter took him to the hundred-story pile of stainless-stil.
steel and glass, which was the coordinator's office. He strode along a corridor through an unmarked
door. Hi, Phyllis, the boss in. Good morning, Chief. Yes, sir. No, I mean. His startled secretary
touched a button and a door opened, the door of his private office. Hi, Kim, back so soon.
Vice-coordinator Maitland also showed surprise as he got up from the massive desk and shook hands cordially.
Good. Taking over?
Emphatically, no. Hardly started yet.
Just dropped in to use your plate if you've got a free high-power wave.
QX? Certainly. If not, you can free one fast enough.
Communications. Kinnison touched a stud.
Will you please get me thrale?
Library 1. Principal librarian Nadine Earnley.
Plate to plate.
This request was surprising enough to the informant.
"'since the coordinator practically never dealt personally with anyone except lensman,
and usually unattached lensman at that, it was a rare event indeed for him to use any
ordinary channels of communication. And as the linkage was completed, subdued murmurs and sundry
squeals gave evidence that intense excitement prevailed at the other end of the line.
"'Mrs. Ernie will be on in one moment, sir.' The operator's business was done.
Her crisp, clear-cut voice ceased, but the background noise increased markedly.
"'Sh!
"'Sh! Sh! Sh! It's the Grey Lensman himself!'
"' Everywhere upon Clovia, Telaus and Therail, and in many localities of many other planets,
"'the words Grey Lensman, without surname, had only one meaning.
"'Not the Grey Lensman? It can't be.
"'It is, really. I know him. I actually met him once.
Let me look, just a peek.
Shh, shh!
He'll hear you.
Switch on the vision.
If we've got a moment, let's get acquainted.
Kinnison suggested, and upon his plate
the burst into view a bevy of excitedly embarrassed
blondes, brunettes, and redheads.
Hi, Madge.
Sorry that I don't know the rest of you, but I'll make it a point
to get acquainted.
Before long, I think.
Don't go away.
The principle I bring you.
was coming on the run.
You're all in on this.
Hi, Nadine. Long time, no sea.
Remember that bunch of squirrel food you rounded up for me?
I remember, sir. What a question.
As though Nadine Ernie, nay, Hostetter,
could ever forget her share in that famous meeting of the 53 greatest
and least stable scientific minds of all civilization.
I'm sorry that I was out in the stacks when you called.
QX, we all have to work sometimes, I suppose.
What I'm calling about is that I've got a mighty big job for you and those smart girls of
yours.
Something like that other one, only a lot more so.
I want all the information you can dig up about a planet named Colonia,
just as fast as you possibly can get it.
What makes it extra tough is that I have never even heard of the planet itself
and don't know of anyone who has.
There may be a million other names for it on a million other planets,
but we don't know any of them.
Here's all I know.
He summarized, concluding,
If you can get it for me in less than 4.95 GP days from now,
I'll bring you, Nadine, a monarchan star drop.
And you can have each of your girls go down to Branleers
and pick out a wristwatch or whatever she likes,
and I'll have it engraved to her, in appreciation, Kimball Kinnison.
"'This job is important.
"'My son, Kit, has met me ten millows that we can't do it that fast.'
"'Ten millows!'
"'Four or five of the girls gasped as one.
"'Fact,' he assured them gravely.
"'So whenever you get the dope, tell communications.
"'No, you listen while I tell them myself.
"'Communications, all along the line, come in.'
"'They came.
"'I expect one of these librarians to call me play-te-te-pearl "'and.
to plate within the next few days.
When she does, no matter what time of the day or night it is,
and no matter what I or anyone else happen to be doing,
that call will have the right of way over any other business in the universe.
Cut.
The plates went dead, and in Library One.
But he was joking, surely.
Ten mellows, one Cento, and a star-drop?
Why, there aren't more than a dozen of them on all thrale.
wristwatches or something from the gray lensman.
Be quiet, everybody,
Magic exclaimed.
I see now.
That's the way Nadine got her watch,
that she always brags about so insufferably,
and that makes everybody's eyes turn green.
But I don't understand that silly ten-millo bet.
Do you, Nadine?
I think so.
He does the nicest things,
things that nobody else would think of.
You have seen red lensman's chid and brand-lens.
ears. This was a statement, not a question. They all had, with what emotions they all knew.
How would you like to have that one cento piece in a thousand-credit frame here in our
main hall, with the legend, one from Christopher Kinnison for Kimball Kinnison by and our names?
He's got something like that in mind, I'm sure. The ensuing clamor indicated that they
liked the idea. He knew we would, and he knew we would. And he
knew that doing it this way would make us dig like we never dug before. He'll give us the watches
and things anyway, of course, but we won't get that one cento piece unless we win it. So let's get to work.
Take everything out of the machines, finished or not. Madge, you might start by interviewing
Lanyon and the other—no, I better do that myself, since you are more familiar with the
encyclopedia than I am. Run the whole English block, starting with K, and follow up any leads, however slight
that you can find. Betty, you can analyze for synonyms, starting with the Therreling equivalent
of Colonia and spreading out to the other Bosconian planets. Put half a dozen texts on it,
with Transformers. Francis, you can study Prelin and Brodzeika, Joan, Leona, Edna, Jalty, Helmuth, and
Crown and Shield. Beth, as our best linguist, you can do us the most good by sensitizing a
tech to the sound of Colonia in each of all the languages you know or that the
rest of us can find, and running and rerunning all the transcripts we have of Bosconian meetings.
How many of us are left? Not enough. We'll have to spread ourselves thin on this list of
Bosconian planets. Thus, Principal Librarian Ernie organized a search beside which the proverbial
one of finding a needle in a haystack would have been as simple as locating a football in a
bushel basket. And she and her girls worked. How they worked! And thus the
Thus, in four days and three hours, Kinnison's top priority person-to-person call came through.
Colonia was no longer a planet of mystery.
Fine work, girls. Put it on a tape and I'll pick it up.
He then left Clovia, precipitately.
Since Kit was not within rendezvous distance, he instructed his son, after giving him the high
points of what he had learned, to forward one one cento piece to Brenlear of Thrail, personal delivery.
He told Brenlear what to do with it upon arrival.
He landed. He bestowed the star-drop.
One of Cartiff's collection of fine gems.
He met the girls and gave each one herself chosen reward.
He departed.
Out in open space, he ran the tape once.
Second Stage lensmen do not forget any detail of anything they have ever learned,
and sat still, scowling blackly.
It was no wonder that Colonia had remained unduly.
known to civilization for over 20 years.
There was a lot of information on that tape, and all of it stunk,
but it had been assembled, one unimportant bit at a time,
from the more than 800 million cards of Thrail's Bosconian archives.
And all of the really significant items
have been found on vocal transcriptions which had never before been played.
Civilization in general had assumed that Thrail had housed the top echelons
of the Bosconian Empire,
and that the continuing inimical activity had been due solely to momentum.
Kinnison and his friends had had their doubts,
but they had not been able to find any iota of evidence
that any higher authority had ever issued any orders to Thrail.
The Grey Lensman now knew, however, that Thrail had never been the top,
nor was Colonia.
The information on this tape, by its paucity, its brevity, its incidental and casual nature,
made that fact startlingly clear.
Thrail and Colonia were equals.
Neither gave the other any orders.
In fact, they had surprisingly little to do with each other.
While Thriel formerly directed the activities of a half a million or so planets,
and Colonia apparently still did much the same,
their field of action had not overlapped at any point.
His conquest of Thrail, hailed so widely as such a triumph,
had got him precisely nowhere.
in the solution of the real problem.
It might be possible for him to conquer Colonia in a similar fashion,
but what would it get him?
Nothing.
There would be no more leads upward from Colonia than there had been from Thrail.
How and all of Noshab-Keming's variegated and iridescent hells was he going to work this out?
A complete analysis revealed only one possible method of procedure.
In one of the transcriptions, made 21 years ago,
and unsealed for the first time by Beth, the librarian linguist,
one of the speakers had mentioned casually that the new Colonian lensman
seemed to be doing a good job, and a couple of the others had agreed with him.
That was all. It might, however, be enough. Since it made it highly probable
that Eddie's lensman was in fact a colonian, and since even a black lensman would
certainly know where he got his lens.
At the thought of trying to visit the Bosconian equivalent of ERISA, he flinched. He flinched.
but only momentarily.
Invasion, or even physical approach, would of course be impossible.
But any planet, even ERISA itself, could be destroyed.
If it could be found, that planet would be destroyed.
He had to find it.
That was probably what Mentor had been wanting him to do all the time.
But how?
In his various previous enterprises against Bosconia,
he had been a gentleman of leisure, a dock walloper,
a meteor miner and many other things.
None of his already established aliases would fit on Colonia.
And besides, it was very poor technique to repeat himself,
especially at this high level of opposition.
To warrant appearance on Colonia at all,
he would have to be an operator of some kind,
not too small, but not big enough,
so that an adequate background could not be synthesized in a hurry.
Azwilnik, an actual drug-runner with a really worthwhile cargo, would be the best bet.
His course of action decided, the grey linsman started making calls.
He first called Kit, with whom he held a long conversation.
He called the captain of his battleship yacht, the Dauntless, and gave him many and explicit orders.
He called Vice-Corpsinator Maitland and various other unattached linsmen,
who had plenty of weight in narcotics, public relations,
criminal investigation, navigation, homicide, and many other apparently totally unrelated establishments of the Galactic Patrol.
Finally, after ten solid hours of mind-wracking labor, he ate a tremendous meal and told Clarissa, he called her last of all,
that he was going to bed and sleep for one whole GP week.
Thus it was that the name of Bradlow Thyron began to obtrude itself above the threshold of galactic consciousness.
For seven or eight years, that name had been below the middle of the patrol's long blacklist
of the wanted.
Now it was well up toward the top.
That notorious Zwillnick and his villainous crew had been chased from one side of the
first galaxy to the other.
For a few months it had been supposed that they had been blown out of the ether.
Now, however, it was known definitely that he was operating in the second galaxy,
and he and every one of his cut-throat gang, fiends who had blasted thousands of his thousand,
of lives with the noxious wares, were wanted for piracy, drug-mongering, and first-degree murder.
From the patrol standpoint, the hunting was very poor.
GP planetographers had charted only a small percentage of the planets of the second galaxy,
and only a few of those are peopled by the adherence of civilization.
Therefore, it required some time, but finally there came the message for which Kinnison
was so impatiently waiting.
A Bosconian pretty big-shot drugmaster named Harkleroy on the planet Fleston 2,
city Nelto, coordinate, so-and-so, fitted his specifications to a T.
A middle-sized operator, neither too close to nor too far away from Colonia,
and Kinnison, having long since learned the lingua franca of the region from a local meteor miner,
was ready to act.
First, he made sure that the mighty Dalnas would be where he wanted her when he needed her,
when he needed her. Then, seated at his speedster's communicator, he put through regular channels
a call to the Bosconian. Harkleroy, I've got a proposition you'll be interested in. Where and when do
you want to see me? What makes you think I want to see you at all? A voice snarled, and the plate
showed a gross, vicious face. Who are you, scum? Who I am is nobody's business. And if you don't
clamp a baffle on that mouth of yours, I'll come down there and shove a glop-skinner's
glove so far down your throat you can sit on it. At the first defiant word, the Zwillnick
began visibly to swell, but in a matter of seconds he recognized Bradlow Thyron, and Kinnison
knew that he did. That pirate could and would be expected to talk back to anybody.
I didn't recognize you at first, Harkleroy almost apologized.
We might do some business at that.
What have you got?
Cocaine, heroin, Bentlam, Hashish, Nitrolabe,
most anything a warm-blooded oxygen breather would want.
The prize package, though, is two kilograms of clear quill thionite.
Dionite? Two kilograms.
The Fleston's eyes gleamed.
Where and how did you get it?
I asked the lensman on Tranko to make it for me special,
and he did.
So, you won't talk, huh?
Kinnison could see Harkleroy's brain work.
Thyrin could be made to talk later.
We can maybe do business at that.
Come down here right away.
I'll do that, but listen.
And the Lensman's eyes burned into the Zwillnix.
I know what you're figuring on,
and I'm telling you right now
not to try it if you want to keep on living.
You know that this ain't the first planet I ever landed on, and if you've got a brain,
you'll know that a lot of guys smarter than you have tried monkey business on me, and I'm still here.
So watch your step.
The lensman landed and made his way to Harkleroy's inner office, in what seemed to be an
ordinary enough, if somewhat oversized, suit of light space armor.
But it was no more ordinary than it was light.
It was a powerhouse, built of durrower.
a quarter of an inch thick. Kinnison was not walking in it. He was merely the engineer of a
battery of two thousand horsepower motors. Unaided, he could not have lifted one leg of that
armor off the ground. As he had expected, everyone he encountered wore a thought-screen, nor was he
surprised at being halted by a blaring loudspeaker in the hall, since the Zwillnick search beams
were being stopped four feet away from his armor.
"'Halt! Cut your screens and we'll blast you where you stand.'
"'Yeah? At your age, Harkleroy. I told you I had a lot of stuff up my sleeve besides my arm,
and I meant it. Either I come as I am, or I flit somewhere else,
to do business with somebody who wants this stuff bad enough to act like half a man.
Smatter! Fray, you ain't got blasters enough in there to handle me?'
This taunt bit deep, and the visitor was allowed to proceed.
As he entered the private office, however,
he saw that Harkleroy's hand was poised near a switch,
whose closing would signal a score or more of concealed gunners to burn him down.
They supposed that the stuff was either on his person or in his speech or just outside.
Time was short.
I abase myself.
That's the formula you insist on, ain't it?
Kinnison sneered without bending his head a millimeter.
Harkleroy's finger touched the stud.
Dauntless, come down.
Kinnison snapped out the order.
Hand, stud, and a part of the desk disappeared in the flare of Kinnison's beam.
Wall ports opened.
Projectors and machine rifles erupted vibratory and solid destruction.
Kinnison leapt toward the desk.
The attack slowing down and stopping as he neared and seized the big shot.
One fierce, short blast reduced the thought-screen generator to blobs of fused metal.
Harkleroy screamed to his gunners to resume fire, but before bullet or beam took the Zwillnick's life,
Kinnison learned what he most wanted to know.
The ape did know something about black lensmen.
He didn't know where the lenses came from, but he did know how the men were chosen.
More, he knew a lensman personally, one Malasnikov, who had his office in Cadill on
Colonia III itself.
Kinnison turned and ran.
The alarm had been given, and they were bringing up stuff too heavy for even his armor
to handle.
But the Dauntless was landing already, smashing to rubble five city blocks in the process.
He settled, and as the Durham-clad gray-lensman began to fight his way out of Harkleroy's
fortress, Major Peter Van Buskirk and a full battalion of Valerians, armed with space-axes
and semi-portables, began to hue and to burying to bowels.
blast their way in.
End of Chapter 14.
Chapter 15.
Of Children of the Lens.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
Chapter 15.
Inch by inch, foot by foot,
Kinnison fought his way back along the corpse-littered corridor.
Under the ravening force of the attacker's beams,
his defensive screens flared into pirate-technic splendor,
but they did not go down.
Fierce-driven metallic slugs spanged and wanged against the unyielding durium of his armor,
but that too held.
Durium is incredibly massive, unbelievably tough, unimaginably hard.
Against these qualities, and against the thousands of horsepower driving that veritable
tank and energizing its screens, the Zwillnix might just as well have been shining flashlights
at him and throwing confetti.
His immediate opponents could not touch him, but the bus'elny's.
Casconians were bringing up reserves that he didn't like a little bit.
Mobile projectors, with whose energies even his screens, could not cope.
He had, however, one great advantage over his enemies.
He had the sense of perception, they did not.
He could see them, but they could not see him.
All he had to do was to keep at least one opaque wall between them
until he was securely behind the mobile screens,
powered by the stupendous generators of the dauntless,
which Van Busskirk and his Valerians were so earnestly urging toward him.
If a door was handy in the moment of need, he used it.
If not, he went through a wall.
The Valerians were fighting furiously and were coming fast.
Those two words, when applied to members of that race,
means something starkly incredible to anyone who has never seen Valerians in action.
They average little less than seven feet in height, something over 400 pounds in weight,
and are muscled, boned, and sinewed against a normal gravitational force of almost three times that of Earth.
Van Buskirk's weakest warrior could do, in full armor, a standing high jump of 14 feet against one Tullerian gravity.
He could handle himself and the 30-pound monstrosity, which was his space-ax,
with a blinding speed and a devastating efficiency, literally,
appalling to contemplate.
They are the deadliest hand-to-hand fighters ever known, and unbelievable as it may seem to any
really highly advanced intelligence, they did and still do fairly revel in that form of
combat.
The Valerian tide reached the battling gray lensman, closed around him.
Hi, you little Tullerian wart!
Major Peter Van Busskirk boomed his friendly thought, a yell of pure joy in case
with the blows of his utterly irresistible weapon.
His rhythm broke. His frightful axe was stuck.
Not even durium inlaid armor could bar the inward course of those furiously driven beaks.
But sometimes it made it fairly difficult to get them out.
The giant pulled, twisted, put one red-splashed boot on the battered breastplate,
bent his muddy back, heaved viciously.
The weapon came free with a snap that would have broken any ordinary man's arm.
arms, but the Valerians thought rolled smoothly on.
"'Ate, we got fun!'
"'Oh, bus, you big Valerian baboon!'
Kinnison thought back in kind.
"'Thought maybe we would need you in your gang.
Thanks for the ride.
But back now and fast.'
Although the Valerians did not like to retreat,
after even a successful operation, they knew how to do it.
Hence, in a matter of minutes, all the survivors,
and their losses had been surprisingly small, were back inside the dauntless.
You picked up my speedster, Frank.
It was a statement, not a question, directed at the young linsman standing beside the
chief pilot's board.
"'Of course, sir. They're massing fast and without any hostile demonstration, as you said they would.'
He nodded unconcernedly at the plate, which showed the sky dotted with warlike shapes.
"'No mullers?'
None detectable as yet.
QX.
Original order stand.
At detection of one muller, execute Operation Able without further instructions.
Tell everybody that, while the announcement of Operation Able would put me out of control
instantly and automatically, until such announcement I will give instructions.
What they will be like, I haven't a foggiest notion.
It depends on what his nibs upstairs decides to do.
It's his move next.
As though the last phrase were a cue, a burst of noise rattled from the speaker,
of which only the words Bradlow Thyron were intelligible to the unlensed members of the crew.
That name, however, explained why they were not being attacked yet.
Colonia had heard much of that intransigent and obdurate pirate,
and of the fabulous and prowess of his ship,
and Kinnison was pretty sure that they were much more interested in his ship than in him.
"'I can't understand you,' the Grey Lensman barked in the polyglot language he had so lately learned.
"'Talk Pigeon.'
"'Very well. I see that you are indeed Bradlow Thyron, as we were informed.
"'What do you mean by this outrageous attack?
"'Surrender. Disarm your men. Take off their armor and march them out of your vessel,
"'or we will blast you as you lie there.'
"'Mendon I, Vice Admiral speaking.'
I abase myself.
Kinnison Thyron did not sneer exactly, but he did incline his stubborn head, perhaps one millimeter.
But he made no move to comply with the order so summarily issued.
Instead—
"'What kind of planet is this anyway?' he demanded hotly.
"'I come here to see this louse harkleroy because a friend of mine tells me that he's a big shot
and so interested in my line that we can do a lot of business with each other.
I give the lug fare warning, too.
Tell him plain that I've been around plenty,
and that if he tries to give me the works,
I'll rub him out like a pencil mark.
So what happens?
In spite of what I just tell him,
he tries dirty work on me,
and I go to work on him,
which he certainly has got coming to him.
Then you and your flock of little tin boats come barging in
as though I'd busted a law or something.
Who do you think you are anyway?
What license you got to be budding into a private business deal?'
"'Ah, I had not heard that version.'
Vision came on. The face upon the plate was typically colonial, blue, cold, cruel,
and keen. Harkle Roy was warned, you say, definitely?'
"'I warned him plenty, definitely. Ask any of the Zwillnicks in that private office of his.
Most of them are still alive, and they all must have heard it.
The plate fogged. The speaker again gave out gibberish.
The linsman knew, however, that the commander of the cruisers above them was indeed
questioning the dead Zwillnick's guards. They knew that Kinnison's story was being corroborated
in full.
You interest me. The Bosconian's language again became intelligible to the group at large.
We will forget, Harcleroy. Stupidity brings its own reward, and the property damage is of
present concern. From what I have been able to learn of you, you have never belonged to that
so-called civilization. I know for a fact that you are not and never have been one of us.
How have you been able to survive? And why do you work alone?
How is easy enough? By keeping one jump ahead of the other guy, like I did with your pal
here, and by being smart enough to have good engineers put into my ship everything that any other
other one ever had, and everything they could dream up besides. As to why, that's simple, too.
I don't trust anybody except myself. If nobody except myself ever knows what I'm going to do,
or when, nobody except myself is ever going to be able to stick a knife into me when I ain't
looking. See? So far, it's paid off big. I'm still around and still healthy,
while them that trusted other guys ain't. I see.
crude, but graphic.
The more I study you, the more convinced I become
that you would be a worthwhile addition to our force.
"'No deal, Mendenai,' Kinnison interrupted,
shaking his unkept head positively.
"'I never yet took orders from no boss, and I ain't going to, never.'
"'You misunderstand me, Thiren.'
"'Tzwilnick was queerly patient and much too forbearing.
"'Kinison's insulting omission of his title
"'should have touched him off,
a rocket. I was not thinking of you in any minor capacity, but as an ally. An entirely
independent ally, working with us in certain, mutually advantageous undertakings.
Such as? Kinnison allowed himself to betray his first sign of interest. You may be talking
sense now, brother, but what's in it for me? Believe me, there's got to be plenty. There will be
plenty. With the ability you have already shown, and with our vast resources back of you,
you will take more every week than you have been taking in a year.
Yeah, people like you just love to do things like that for people like me. What do you
figure on getting out of it? Kinnison wondered and lends a sharp thought to his junior on the
board. On your toes, Frank, he's stalling for something, and I'm betting it's mallers.
None detectable yet, sir.
We stand to gain, of course, the pirate admitted smoothly.
For instance, there are certain features of your vessel,
which might, just possibly you will observe,
and speaking only to mention an example,
be of some interest to our naval designers.
Also, we have heard that you have an unusually hot battery of primary beams.
You might tell me about some of those things.
things now, or at least refocus your plate so that I can see something besides your not
unattractive face. I might not, too. What I've got here is my own business and stays mine.
Is that what we are to expect from you in the way of cooperation? The commander's voice
was still low and level, but now bore a chill of deadly menace.
Cooperation! The cut-throat chief was unimpressed.
I'll maybe tell you a thing or two, eat out of your dish, after I get good and sold on your
proposition, whatever it is, but not one second sooner.
The commander glared.
I weary of this. You probably are not worth the trouble, after all.
I might as well blast you out now's later.
You know that I can, of course, as well as I do.
Do I?
Kinnison did sneer this time.
"'Act your age, pal. As I told that fool Harkleroy, this ain't the first planet I ever sat down on, and it won't be the last. And don't call no mullers!'
as the Bosconian officer's hand moved almost imperceptibly toward a row of buttons.
"'If you do, I start blasting as soon as we spot one on our plates, and they're full out right now.'
"'You would start blasting?'
The Zwillnick's surprise, almost amazement, was plain, but the hand stopped its motion.
Yeah, me.
Them heaps of scrap metal you got up there don't bother me a bit, but mallers I can't handle,
and I ain't afraid to tell you so because you probably know it already.
I can't stop you from calling them if you want to, but ban both ears to this.
I can outrun them, and I'll guarantee that you personally won't be alive to see me.
me run. Why? Because your ship will be the first one I'll whiff on the way out. And if the rest
of your heaps stick around long enough to try to stop me, I'll whiff twenty-five or thirty more of
them before your mullers can get close enough so that I'll have to flit. Now if your brains are
made out of the same kind of thick blue mud that Harkle-Roy's was, start something. This was an impasse.
Kinnisone knew what he wanted the other to do, but he could not give it.
him a suggestion, or even a hint, without tipping his hand. The officer, quite evidently,
was in a quandary. He did not want to open fire upon this tremendous, this fabulous ship.
Even if he could destroy it, such a course would be unthinkable. Unless, indeed, the very
act of destruction would brand as false rumor, the tales of invincibility and invulnerability,
which had heralded its coming, and thus would operate in his favor at the court-mortment,
marshal, so sure to be called.
He was very much afraid, however, that those rumors were not false, a view which was supported
very strongly, both by Thyron's undisguised contempt for the Bosconian worships threatening
him, and by his equally frank declaration of his intention to avoid engagement with craft
of really superior force.
Finally, however, the Bosconian perceived one thing that did not quite fit.
If you are as good as you claim to be, you.
be. Why aren't you doing a flit right now?" Menden I asked smoothly.
"'If you could get away, I should think that you'd be doing it. We've got stuff, you know,
that's both heavy and fast.' "'Because I don't want to flit, that's why. Use your head, pal.'
This was better. Men and I had shifted the conversation into a line upon which the lensman
could do a bit of steering.
I had to leave the first galaxy because it got too hot for me,
and I got no connections at all yet here in the second.
You folks need certain kinds of stuff that I've got,
and I need other kinds that you've got.
So we could do a nice business if you wanted to.
That was what I had in mind with Harkleroy, but he got greedy.
I don't mind saying that I'd like to do business with you,
but I just got bit pretty bad,
and I'll have to have some kind of solid guarantee that you mean business,
and not monkey business, before I take a chance again. See?
I see. The idea is good, but its execution may prove difficult.
I could give you my word, which I assure you, has never been broken.
Don't make me laugh, Kinnison snorted. Would you take mine?
The case is different. I would not.
Your point, however, is...
is well taken.
How about the protection of a high court of law?
I will bring you an unalterable writ from any court you name.
Uh-huh, the gray linsman descended.
There never was no court yet that didn't take orders from the big shots
who kept the fat cats fat,
and lawyers of the crookedest crooks in the whole universe.
You'll have to do better than that, pal.
Well, then, how about a lensman?
You know about lendsmen, don't you?
"'A lensman?' Kinnison gasp. He shook his head violently.
"'Are you completely nuts, or do you think I am?'
"'I do know, linsman. A lensman chased me from Alsaken to Vandamar once,
and if I hadn't had a dose of hell's own luck, he'd have got me.
Lensman chased me out of the first galaxy. Why else do you think I'm here?
Use your brain, mister. Use your brain!'
"'You're thinking of civilization's lensmen,
particularly of gray lensmen.'
The officer was manifestly enjoying Thiren's passion.
Ours, the black lensmen, are different, entirely different.
They have as much power or more,
but they use it as it should be used.
They work with us right along.
In fact, they have been bumping gray lensmen off right and left lately.
You mean that he could open up, for instance, your mind and mine, so that we could see that the other guy wasn't figuring on running in no stacked decks?
And that he'd stand by and sort of referee this business deal we got on the fire?
And do you know one yourself, personally?
He could and would do all that.
Yes, I know one personally.
His name is Malasnikov, and his office is on Colonia 3.
not an hour's flit from here.
He may not be there at the moment,
but he will come in if I call.
How about it? Shall I call him now?
Don't work up a sweat.
Sounds like it might work,
if we can figure out an approach.
I don't suppose that you and him
would come out to me in space.
Hardly.
After the way you have acted,
you wouldn't expect us to, would you?
It wouldn't be very bright of you.
and since I want to do business, I guess I got to meet you part way.
How would this be? You'll pull your ships away, out of range.
My ship takes station right above this here Lensman's office.
I go down in my speister, like I did here, and go inside to meet him and you.
I'll wear my armor, and when I say it's real armor, I ain't just snapping my choppers neither.
I can see only one slight flaw.
The Bosconian was really trying to work out a mutually satisfactory solution.
The lensman will open our minds to you in proof, however,
that we'll have no intention of bringing up our mallers or other heavy stuff while we are in conference.
Right. Then he'll show you that you hadn't better, too.
Kinnison grinned wolfishly.
What do you mean? the officer demanded.
I mean that I've got enough good big soup.
super-atomic bombs aboard to blow the planet apart, and that the boys will drop them all if you
start playing dirty. I've got to take a little chance, of course, to start doing business,
but it's a small one. If you ain't smart enough to know that what would happen would be mighty
poor business, your lendsman will be, especially when it won't get you any dope on what makes
the ship of mine tick the way she does. And the clincher is that, even if you bring up everything
you've got. I never did figure on living forever. And going out in an atomic blast of that
size, together with your fleet and half your planet, and you and your lensman and 700 million other
people, is as good a way as I can think of. If the lensman's examination bears that out,
it will constitute an absolute guarantee. The officer agreed. Hard as he was, he could not
conceal the fact that he had been shaken.
Everything then is satisfactory?
On the green. Are you ready to flit?
We are ready.
Call your lensman then, and lead the way.
Boys, take her upstairs.
End of Chapter 15.
Chapter 16.
Of Children of the Lens.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
Chapter 16.
Karen Kinnison was worried. She, who had always been so steady, so sure of herself,
had for weeks been conscious of a gradually increasing—what was it anyway? Not exactly a loss of
control, a change—a something that manifested itself in increasingly numerous fits of senseless,
sheerly idiotic, stubbornness. And always, and only it was directed at, of all the people in the
universe, her brother. She got along with her sisters perfectly. Their tiny tiffs barely rippled the
surface of any of their minds. But any time her path of action crossed kits, it seemed, the profoundest
depths of her being flared into opposition like exploding duodeck. Worse than senseless and idiotic,
it was inexplicable, for the feeling which the five had for each other was much deeper than that
felt by ordinary brothers and sisters.
She didn't want to fight with Kit.
She liked him.
She liked to feel his mind on rapport with hers,
just as she liked to dance with him.
Their bodies as completely in accord as were their minds.
No change of step or motion,
however suddenly conceived and executed,
or however bizarre, had ever succeeded in taking the other by surprise,
or in marring by a millimeter the effortless precision
of their performance.
She could do things with Kit
that would tie any other man into knots
and break half of his bones.
All other men were lumps.
Kit was so far ahead of any other man in existence
that there was simply no comparison.
If she were Kit,
she would give her a going over that would,
or could even he...
At the thought she turned cold inside.
He could not.
Even Kit, with all his history,
tremendous power, would hit that solid wall and bounce.
Well, there was one, not a man, but an entity who could.
He might kill her, but even that would be better than to allow the continued growth
within her mind of this monstrosity, which she could neither control nor understand.
Where was she, and where was Lyraine?
And where was Erysa?
Good, not too far off the line.
She would stop off at Eryan.
Marissa on route. She did so and made her way to Mentor's quiet office on the hospital grounds.
She told her story.
Fighting with Kit was bad enough, she concluded, but when I start defying you, mentor,
it's high time that something was done about it. Why didn't Kit ever knock me into a spiral?
Why didn't you work me over? You called Kid in, with a distinct implication that he needed more
education. Why did you pull me in here, too, and pound some intelligence into me?
Concerning you, Christopher had definite instructions, which he obeyed.
I did not touch you for the same reason that I did not ask you to come to me.
Neither course would have been of any use. Your mind, daughter Karen, is unique.
One of its prime characteristics, the one, in fact, which is to make you an all-important place,
player in the drama which is to come, is a yieldlessness very nearly absolute.
Your mind might just conceivably be broken, but it cannot be bent by any imaginable
external force, however, applied. Thus it was inevitable from the first that nothing could be
done about the untoward manifestations of this characteristic until you yourself should
recognize the fact that your development was not complete. It would be idle for me to
say that during adolescence you have not been more than a trifle trying. I was not speaking idly
when I said that the development of you has been a tremendous task. It is with equal seriousness,
however, that I now tell you that the reward is commensurate with the magnitude of the undertaking.
It is impossible to express the satisfaction I feel, the fulfillment, the completion,
the justification, as you children come one by one each in his proper time for final instruction.
Oh, you mean then that there's nothing really the matter with me? Hard as Karen was,
she trembled as her awful tension eased. That I was supposed to act that way? And I can tell Kit right
away? No need. Your brother now knows that it was a passing phase.
He shall know very shortly that it has passed.
It is not that you were supposed to act as you acted.
You could not help it, nor could your brother, nor I.
From now on, however, you shall be completely the mistress of your own mind.
Come fully, daughter Karen, into mine.
She did so, and in a matter of time her formal education was complete.
There is one thing that I don't quite understand, she began before she boarded her speester.
Consider it, and I am sure that you will, Mentor assured her. Explain it, whatever it is to me.
QX, I'll try. It's about Fauston and Dad. Karen cogitated.
Faustin was, of course, an Adorian. You're making Dad believe him to be an indebted. You're making Dad
believe him to be an insane Elysian was a masterpiece.
I see, of course, how you did that, principally by making Fauston's real shape exactly like the
one he saw of you in Elysia.
But his physical actions as Fauston—
Go on, daughter.
I am sure that your visualization will be sound.
While acting as Faustin, he had to act as a Threlian would have acted.
Kate decided with a rush.
He was watched everywhere he went and knew it.
To display his real power would have been disastrous.
Just like Eurisians, they have to keep in the background
to avoid setting up an inferiority complex that will ruin everything for them.
Fauston's actions then were constrained.
Just as they were when he was Gray Roger so long ago,
except that then he did make a point of unhuman longevity,
deliberately to put an insoluble problem up to First Lensman Sam's and his men.
Just as you, you must have. You did coach Virgil Sam's mentor, and some of the Orissians were
there as men. We were. We wrought briefly as men, and died as men. Up to the present moment,
no one has ever been the wiser. But you weren't Virgil Sam's, please—Kay almost begged.
"'Not that it would break me if you were, but even I would much rather you hadn't been.'
"'No, none of us was Sam's,' Mentor assured her,
"'nor Cleveland, nor roadbush, nor Costigan, or even Cleo Marsden.
"'We worked with, coached as you express it,
"'those persons and others from time to time in certain small matters,
"'but we were at no time integral with any of them.
One of us was, however, Dr. Bergenholm.
The full inertialist space drive became necessary at that time,
and it would have been poor technique to have had either
roadbush or Cleveland developed so suddenly
the ability to perfect the device as Bergenholm did perfect it.
QX.
Bergenholm isn't important.
He was just an inventor.
To get back onto the subject of Fauston.
When he was there on the flagship with Dad,
and in position to throw his full weight around,
it was too late.
You Elysians were on the job.
You'll have to take it from there, though.
I'm out beyond my depth.
Because you lack data.
Know then, daughter,
that the planet Edor is screened as heavily as is our own ERISIA,
by screens which can be extended at will to any desired point in space.
In those last minutes the Adorian knew that Kimball Kinnison was neither alone,
nor unprotected. He called instantaneously for help, but help did not come. It could not.
Edor's screens were being attacked at every point by every force generable by the masked
intellect of Erycia. They were compressed almost to the planet's surface. If the Edorians had weakened
those screens sufficiently to have sent through them a helping thought, every one of them
would in that instant have perished. Nor could Fauston escape from the form of
flesh he was then energizing. I myself saw to that. Karen had never before felt the Erysian display
emotion, but his thought was grim and cold. From that form which your father never did perceive,
he passed into the next plane of existence. Karen shivered. It served him right. That clears
everything up, I think. But are you sure, mentor, that you can't?
can't, or rather shouldn't, teach me any more than you have.
It's just about time for me to go, and I feel—well, incompetent is putting it very
mildly indeed.
To a mind of such power and scope as yours, in its present state of development, such a
feeling is inevitable. Nor can anyone except yourself do anything about it.
Cold comfort, perhaps, but it is the stark truth that from now on your development
is your own task. Yours alone. As I have already told Christopher and Catherine, and will very shortly
tell Camilla and Constance, you have had your last Erysian treatment. I will be on call to any of you
any instant of any day to aid you or to guide you or to reinforce you at need. But a formal
instruction there can be no more. Karen left Erycia and drove for Lyrain, her thoughts in a
turmoil. The time was too short by far. She deliberately cut her vessel's speed and took a long
detour so that the vast and chaotic library of her mind could be reduced to some semblance of order
before she landed. She reached Lyraine too, and there, again to all outward seeming, a happy,
carefree girl, she hugged her mother rapturously. Nor was this part of it acting in any sense. As has been said,
those four girls loved each other and their mother and their father and their brother
with a depth and fervor impossible to portray intelligibly in words.
"'You're the most wonderful thing, mums,' Karen exclaimed.
"'It's simply marvel at seeing you again in the flesh.'
"'Now, why bring that up?'
Clarissa had, just barely, become accustomed to working undraped in the Lyranian fashion.
I didn't mean it that way at all, and you know I didn't.
Kay snickered.
Shame on you, fishing for compliments, and at your age, too.
Ignoring the older woman's attempt at protest, she went on.
All kidding aside, mums, you're a mighty smart-looking hunk of woman.
I approve of you exceedingly much.
In fact, we're a keen pair, and I like both of us.
I've got one advantage over you of you of.
of course, in that I never did care a particle whether I ever had a stitch of clothes on or not,
anywhere, and you still do a little. But what I was going to ask, though, was, how are you doing?
Not so well. Of course, though, I haven't been here very long. Clarissa, forgetting her undressedness,
frowned. I haven't found Helen, and I haven't found out yet why she retired. I can't quite
decide whether to put pressure on now or wait a little longer.
Lodora, the new elder person, is—that is—I don't know. Oh, here she comes now.
I'm glad. I want you to meet her.
If Lodora was glad to meet Karen, however, she did not show it. Instead, for an inappreciable
instant of time, which was nevertheless sufficient for the acquirement of full information,
each study the other.
Like Helen, the former queen of the matriarchy of Lyrene too,
Lodora was tall, beautifully proportioned, flawless of skin and feature, hard and fine.
But so, and in most respects even more so, to Lodora's astonishment and quick-mounting
wrath, was this pink-tanned stranger.
Practically instantaneously, therefore, she hurled a vicious mental bolt,
only to get the surprise of her life.
She had not yet crossed wills in a serious enough way with this strange person, Clarissa,
to find out what she had in the way of equipment, but it certainly couldn't be much.
She had never tried to do her harm, nor ever seemed to resent her studied and arrogant aloofness,
and therefore her daughter, younger and less experienced, of course, would be easy enough prey.
But Lodora's bolt, the heaviest she could send, did not pierce even the outermost fringes
of her intended victim's defenses, and so vicious was the almost simultaneous counter-thrust
that it went through the Lyrannian's hard-held block and nothing flat.
Inside her brain it wrought such hellishly poignant punishment
that the matriarch, forgetting everything, tried only and madly to scream.
She could not.
She could not move a muscle of her face or of her body.
She could not even fall.
and the one brief glimpse she had into the stranger's mind
showed it to be such a blaze of incandescent fury
that she, who had never feared in the slightest any living creature,
knew now in full measure what fear was.
I'd like to give that alleged brain of yours a real massage, just for fun.
Karen forced her emotion to subside to a mere seething rage,
and Lodora watched her do it.
But since this whole sticking planet is,
is my mother's dish, not mine. She blasts me to a cinder. She's done it before, if I dip in.
She cooled further, visibly. At that, I don't suppose you're too bad an egg, in your own
poisonous way. You just don't know any better. So maybe I better warn you, you poor fool,
since you haven't got sense enough to see it, that you're playing with a live fuse when you
push my mother around like you've been doing.
About one more millimeter of it, and she'll get mad,
like I did a second ago, except more so,
and you'll wish to Clono you had never been born.
She'll never make a sign until she blows up,
but I'm telling you that she's as much harder and tougher than I am
as she is older, and what she always does to people who cross her,
I wouldn't want to watch happen again, even to a snake.
Want to know what she'll do to you first?
She'll pick you up, curl you into a perfect circle, pull off your arms, shove both your
legs down your throat to the knees, and roll you down that chute there into the ocean.
After that, I don't know what she'll do. Depends on how much pressure she develops before she
blows up. One thing, though, she's always sorry afterward. Why, she even attends the funeral
sometimes and insists on paying the expenses.
With which outrageous thought she kissed Clarissa an enthusiastic goodbye.
Told you I couldn't stay a minute.
Got to do a flit.
See a man about a dog.
Came a million parsecs to squeeze you, mums, but it was worth it.
Clear, ether.
She was gone.
And it was a dewy-eyed and rapt mother, not a lensman,
who turned to the still completely disorganized Lyranian.
Clarissa had perceived nothing whatever of what had happened.
Karen had very carefully seen to that.
"'My daughter,' Clarissa mused,
as much to herself as to La Dora.
"'One of four, the four dearest, finest, sweetest girls that ever lived.
"'I often wonder how a woman of my limitations, of my faults,
"'could possibly have born such children.'
"'And Lodora of Lyraine, humorless and literal as all Lyrenians are,
took those thoughts at their face value, and correlated their every connotation and implication
with what she herself had perceived in that dear sweet daughter's mind, with what that daughter
had done and had said. The nature and quality of this hellish person's limitations and faults
became eminently clear, and as she perceived what she thought was the truth, the Lyrrhenian
literally cringed. As you know, I have been in doubt as to whether or not to support you actively,
as you wish."
Lodora offered, as the two walked together across the field toward the line of ground cars.
On the one hand, the certainty that the safety, and perhaps the very existence of my race
will be at hazard, on the other, the possibility that you are right in saying that the
situation will continue to deteriorate if we do nothing.
The decision has not been an easy one to make.
Lodora was no longer aloof.
She was just plain scared.
She had been talking against time
and hoping that the help for which she had long since called
would arrive in time.
I have touched only the outer surfaces of your mind.
Will you allow me, without offense,
to test its inner quality before deciding definitely?
She asked, and in the instant of asking,
sent out an exploratory tentacle of thought,
which was in actuality a full-driven probe.
I will not.
Lador's beam struck a barrier which seemed to her exactly like the daughters.
None of her race had developed anything like it.
She had never seen.
Yes, she had, too, years ago when she was a child,
that time in the assembly hall,
that utterly hated male Kinnison of Tellus.
This visitor then was not a real person at all,
But a female.
Kinnison's female, the red lensman of whom even Lirene had heard.
And that purse, that thing, was their offspring.
But behind that impenetrable block, there might very well be,
there probably was, exactly the kind of mind that the offspring had described.
A creature who was physically a person, but mentally that inconceivable monstrosity,
a female, might be anything and might do,
anything. Lodora temporized.
Excuse me, I did not mean to intrude against your will.
She apologized, smoothly enough.
Since your attitude makes it extremely difficult for me to cooperate with you,
I can make no promises as yet.
What is it that you wish to know first?
I wish to interview your predecessor elder person, the one we called Helen.
strangely refreshed, in a sense galvanized by the brief personal visit with her dynamic daughter,
it was no longer Mrs. Kimball Kinnison who faced the Lyrainian queen. Instead, it was the red
lensman, a full-powered, second-stage lensman who had finally decided that, since appeals to reason,
logic and common sense had no perceptible effect upon this stiff-necked near woman, the time
had come to bear down.
Furthermore, I intend to interview her now, and not at some such indefinite future time
as your whim may see fit to allow.
Lodora sent out a final desperate call for help, and mustered her every force against the interloper.
Fast and strong as her mind was, however, the Red Linsman's was faster and stronger.
The Lyrannian's defensive structure was wrecked in the instant of its building.
The frantically struggling mind was taken over.
over in toto. Help arrived uselessly. Since, although Clarissa's newly enlarged mind had not been put
to warlike use, it was brilliantly keen and ultimately sure. Nor in times of stress did the
softer side of her nature operate to stay mind or hand. While carrying Lensman's load,
she contained no more of Ruth for civilization's foes than did abysmally frigid Nadrick himself.
head thrown back, tawed and tense, gold-flected tawny eyes flashing, she stood there for a moment
and took on her shield everything that those belligerent persons could send.
More, she returned it in kind, plus, and under those withering blasts of force, more than one
of her attackers ceased to live. Then, still holding her block, she and her unwilling captive
raced across the field toward the line of peculiar little fabric and wire machines,
which were still the last word in Iranian air transport.
Clarissa knew that the Lyrannians had no modern offensive or defensive weapons.
They did, however, have some fairly good artillery at that airport,
and she hoped fervently as she ran that she could put out jets enough to spoil the aim and fusing.
Luckily, they hadn't developed proximity fuses yet,
of what ACAC they could bring to bear on her crate
during the few minutes she would have to use it.
Fortunately, there was no artillery at the small,
unimportant airport on which her speedster lay.
Here we are. We'll take this tripe.
It's the fastest thing here.
Clarissa could operate the triplane, of course.
Any knowledge or ability that Lodora had ever had
was now and permanently the lensments.
She started the queer engines.
and as the powerful little plane screamed into the air, hanging from its props, she devoted
what of her mind she could spare to the problem of anti-aircraft fire.
She could not handle all the gun crews, but she could and did command the most important
members of most of them. Thus, nearly all of the shells either went wide or exploded too soon.
Since she knew every point of aim of the few guns with whose operations she could not interfere,
she avoided their missiles by not being at any one of those points at the predetermined instant of functioning.
Thus plane and passengers escaped unscathed, and in a matter of minutes arrived at their destination.
The Lyranians there had been alerted, of course, but they were few in number,
and they had not been informed that it would take physical force, not mental,
to keep that red-headed pseudo-person from boarding her outlandish ship of space.
In a few more minutes, then, Clarissa and her captive, safe in the speedster, were high in the
stratosphere.
Clarissa sat Ladora down hard in a seat and fastened the safety straps.
Stay in that seat and keep your thoughts to yourself.
She directed curtly.
If you don't, you'll never again either move or think in this life.
She opened a sliding door, put on a couple of wisps of monarch and glamorette, reached for a dress, and paused.
Eyes glowing, she gazed hungrily at a suit of plain gray leather,
a costume which she had not as yet so much as tried on.
Should she wear it or not?
She could work efficiently, at service maximum really, in ordinary clothes.
Ditto, although she didn't like to, unclothed.
In gray, though, she could hit absolute max if she had to.
Nor had there ever been any question of right involved.
The only barrier had been her own.
own hypersensitivity. For over twenty years, she herself had been the only one to deny her right.
What license, she was one to ask, did an imitation or synthetic or amateur or red lensman have
to wear the garb of which meant so much to so many? Over those years, however, it had become
increasingly widely known that hers was one of the five finest and most powerful minds in
the entire Grey Legion. And when Coordinator Cunison recalled her to active duty in unattached
status, that Legion passed by unanimous vote a resolution asking her to join them in gray.
Psychics all, they knew that nothing less would suffice. That if there was any trace of resentment
or of antagonism or a feeling that she did not intrinsically belong, she would never
don the uniform which every adherent of civilization so revered and for
for which, deep down, she had always so intensely longed.
The Legion had sent her these greys.
Kit had convinced her that she did actually deserve them.
She really should wear them. She would.
She put them on, thrilling to the core as she did so,
and made the quick little gesture she had seen Kim make so many times.
Lensman's seal.
No one, however accustomed, has ever dawned or ever will done,
unmoved the plain gray leather of the unattached lensman of the Galactic Patrol.
Hands on hips, she studied herself minutely and approvingly, both in the mirror and by means
of her vastly more efficient sense of perception. She wriggled a little and giggled inwardly
as she remembered deploring as exhibitionistic this same conduct in her oldest daughter.
The gray's fitted her perfectly, a bit revealing perhaps, but her figure
was still good. Very good, as a matter of fact. Not a speck of dirt or tarnish.
Her dilameters were fully charged. Her tremendous lens flamed brilliantly upon her wrist.
She looked and felt ready. She could hit absolute max in a fraction of a microsecond.
If she had to get reedy tough, she would. She sent out a call.
Helen of Lyrain. I know they've got you around here somewhere, and
if any of your guards try to screen out this thought, I'll burn their brains out.
Clarissa of Saul three calling,
Come in, Helen.
Clarissa!
This time there was no interference.
A world of welcome was in every nuance of the thought.
Where are you?
High up at—
Clarissa gave her position.
I'm in my speedster, so can get to anywhere on the planet in minutes.
More important, where are you?
and why?
In jail, in my own?
The elder person's office.
Queen should have palaces,
but Lirene's ruler did not.
Everything was strictly utilitarian.
The tower on the corner, remember?
On the top floor.
Why is too long to discuss now.
I'd better tell you as much as possible
of what you should know while there is time.
Time, are you in danger?
Yes, Lador would have killed me long ago if it had dared.
My following grows less daily, the Boscone and stronger.
The guards have already summoned help.
They're coming now to take me.
That's what they think.
Clarissa had already reached the scene.
She had exactly the velocity she wanted.
She slanted downward in a screaming dive.
Can you tell whether they're limbering up any of that ac-ac around the office or not?
I don't believe so. I don't feel any such thoughts.
QX. Get away from the window.
If they hadn't started already, they never would start. The Red Lensman was deadly
sure of that. She came within range, her range, of the guns.
She was in time. Several gunners were running toward their stations. None of them arrived.
The Speeaster leveled off and stuck its hard nose into and almost through the indicated room.
reinforced concrete, steel bars, and glass showering abroad as it did so.
The port snapped open.
As Helen leapt in, Clarissa practically threw Lodora out.
"'Bring Lidora back!' Helen demanded.
"'I shall have its life!'
"'Nicks,' Clirissa snapped.
"'I know everything that she does.
We've other fish to fry, my dear.'
The massive door clanged shut.
The Speaster darted forward, straight through the solid concrete.
concrete wall. That small vessel, solidly built of beryllium alloys, had been designed to take
brutal punishment. She took it. Out in open space, Clarissa went free, leaving the artificial
gravity at normal. Helen stood up, took Clarissa's hand, and shook it gravely and strongly,
a gesture at which the red linceman almost choked. Helen of Lyrain had changed even less than
had the earthwoman. She was so.
still six feet tall, erect, taut, springy, and poised. She didn't weigh a pound more than the
180 she had scaled twenty-odd years ago. Her vivid Auburn hair showed not one strand of gray.
Her eyes were as clear and as proud. Her skin, almost as fine and firm. You are then alone?
In spite of her control, Helen's thought showed relief. Yes, my husband— Kimball Kinnison is very busy.
elsewhere. Clarissa understood perfectly. Helen, after 20 years of thinking things over,
really liked her. But she still simply couldn't stand a male, not even Kim. Any more than
Clarissa could ever adapt herself to the Lyranian habit of using the neuter pronoun it
when referring to one of themselves. She couldn't. Anybody who ever got a glimpse of Helen
would have to think of her as she. But enough of this will give you. But enough of this will
gathering, which had taken perhaps one millisecond of time.
There's nothing to keep us from working together perfectly.
Clarissa's thought flashed on.
Lodora didn't know much, and you do.
So tell me all about things so that we can decide where to begin.
End of Chapter 16.
Chapter 17.
Of Children of the Lens.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
Chapter 17.
When Candron called his minion in that small and nameless base to learn whether or not
he had succeeded in trapping the Pellonian lensman, Nadrek's relay station functioned so perfectly,
and Nadrick was so completely in charge of his captive's mind, that the caller could feel
nothing out of the ordinary.
Ultra suspicious, though Candron was, there was nothing whatever to indicate that anything
had changed at or pertaining to that base since he had last called its commander.
That individual subconscious mind reacted properly to the key stimulus.
The conscious mind took over, remembered, and answered properly a series of trick questions.
These things occurred because the base commander was still alive.
His ego, the pattern and matrix of his personality, was still in existence and had not been
changed.
What Kandran did not and could not suspect was that that ego was no longer in control of the
commander's mind, brain, or body, that it was utterly unable of its own volition, either to think
any iota of independent thought, or to stimulate any single physical cell. The Alonian's ego was
present, just barely present, but that was all. It was Nadrick, who, using that ego as a guide,
and, in a sense as a helplessly impotent transformer, received the call. Nadrick made those
exactly correct replies. Nadrick was now ready to render a detailed and fully documented,
and completely mendacious, report upon his own destruction.
Nadrick's special tracers were already out, determining line and intensity.
Strippers and analyzers were busily at work on the fringes of the beam,
dissecting out, isolating, and identifying each of the many scraps of extraneous thought
accompanying the main beam. These side thoughts, in fact, were
Nadrick's prime concern.
The second-stage lensman had learned that no being, except possibly in Eurysian, could narrow
a beam of thought down to one single pure sequence.
Only Nadrick, however, recognized in those sidebands a rich field.
Only he had designed and developed mechanisms with which to work that field.
The stronger and clearer the mind, the fewer and less complete were the extraneous fragments
of thought.
But Nadrick knew that he had.
even Candron's brain would carry quite a few such non-germane accompaniments,
and from each of those bits he could reconstruct an entire sequence,
as accurately as a competent paleontologist,
reconstructs a prehistoric animal from one fossilized piece of bone.
Thus, Nadrick was completely ready when the harshly domineering Candron
asked his first real question.
I do not suppose that you have succeeded in killing the lensman?
"'Yes, your supremacy, I have.'
Nadrick could feel Candron's start of surprise, could perceive, without his instruments,
Candron's fleeting thoughts of the hundreds of unsuccessful previous attempts upon his life.
It was clear that the Unlonian was not at all credulous.
"'Report in detail,' Candron ordered.
Nadrick did so, adhering rigidly to the truth up to the moment in which his probes of force
had touched off the Baskonian alarms.
Then,
Spy-ray photographs,
taken at the instant of alarm,
show an indetectable speedster
with one and only one occupant,
as your supremacy anticipated.
A careful study of all the pictures taken
of that occupant shows,
first, that he was definitely alive at that time,
and was neither a projection
nor an artificial mechanism.
And second, that his physical measurements
agree in every particular
with the specifications furnished by your supremacy
as being those of Nadrick of Palain 7.
Since your supremacy personally computed
and supervised the placement of those projectors,
Nadrick went smoothly on,
you know that the possibility is vanishingly small
that any material thing,
free or inert, could have escaped destruction.
As a check, I caused to be taken
729, 3 to the 6th power, samples of the circumambient space, statistically at random for analysis.
After appropriate allowances for the exactly observed elapsed times of sampling, diffusion of droplets
and molecular and atomic aggregates, temperatures, pressures, and all other factors
known or assumed to be operating, I determined that there had been present in the center
of action of our beams, a mass of approximately 4,000
6778.1 metric tons.
This value, your supremacy will note, is in close agreement with the most efficient mass of an
indetectable speedster designed for long-distance work.
That figure was, in fact, closer than close.
It was an almost exact statement of the actual mass of Nadrick's ship.
Exact composition?
Kandron demanded.
Nadrick recited a rapid-fire string of elements and figures.
They, too, were correct within the experimental error of a very good analyst.
The base commander could not possibly have known them,
but it was well within the bounds of possibility that the insidious Candron would.
He did. He was now practically certain that his ablest and bitterest enemy
had been destroyed at last, but there were still a few lingering shreds of doubt.
"'Let me look over your work,' Candron directed.
Yes, your supremacy.
Nadrick the Thoreau was ready for even that extreme test.
Through the eyes of the ultimately enslaved base commander,
Kandron checked and rechecked Nadricks' pictures,
Nadricks' charts and diagrams,
Nadricks' more than 400 pages of mathematical,
physical and chemical notes and determinations,
all without finding a single flaw.
In the end, Kandron was ready to believe that Nadrick had in fact,
ceased to exist. However, he himself had not done the work. There was no corpse. If he himself had
killed the Pellanian, if he himself had actually felt the Lensman's life depart in the grasp of his
own tentacles, then, and only then would he have known that Nadrick was dead? As it was, even though
the work had been done in exact accordance with his own instructions, there remained an infinitesimal
uncertainty. Wherefore?
Shift your field of operations to cover X-174, Y-240, Z-16. Do not relax your vigilance in the
slightest because of what has happened. He considered briefly the idea of allowing his
minion to call him, in case anything happened, but decided against it. Are the men standing
up? Yes, your supremacy. They are in very good shape, indeed. And so on.
Yes, your supremacy. The psychologist is doing a very fine job.
Yes, your supremacy. Yes. Yes. Yes.
Very shortly after the characteristically Kandran-esque ending of that interview,
Nadrick had learned everything he needed to know. He knew where Kandran was and what he was doing.
He knew much of what Kandran had done during the preceding 20 years.
And, since he himself figured prominently in many of those sequences,
they constituted invaluable checks upon the validity of his other reconstructions.
He knew the construction, the armament, and the various ingenious mechanisms,
including the locks, of Candron's vessel.
He knew more than any other outsider had ever known of Candron's private life.
He knew where Candron was going next and what he was going to do there.
He knew in broad what Candron intended to do during the coming century.
Thus well informed,
Nadrick set his spester into a course toward the planet of civilization, which was
Kandron's next objective. He did not hurry. It was no part of his plan to interfere in any way
in the horrible program of planet-wide madness and slaughter which Kandron had in mind.
It simply did not occur to him to try to save the planet as well as to kill the Onlonian.
Nadrick, being Nadrick, took without doubt or question the safest and surest course.
Nadrick knew that Candron would set his vessel into an orbit around the planet,
and that he would take a small boat, a flitter,
for the one personal visit necessary to establish his lines of communication and control.
Vessel and flitter would be alike indetectable, of course.
But Nadrick found the one easily enough, and knew when the other left its mothership.
Then, using his lightest, stealthiest spy rays,
the Pellanians set about the exceedingly delicate business of boring the Bosconian craft.
That undertaking could be made a story in its own right, for Candron did not leave his ship unguarded.
However, merely by thinking about his own safety,
Candron had all unwittingly given away the keys to his supposedly impregnable fortress.
While Candron was wondering whether or not the Lensman was really dead,
and especially, after he had been convinced that he most probably was,
the Unlonian's thoughts had touched fleetingly upon a multitude of closely related subjects.
Would it be safe to abandon some of the more onerous precautions he had always taken,
and which had served him so well for so many years?
And as he thought of them, each one of his safeguards flashed at least partially into view,
and for Nadrick any significant part was practically as good as the whole.
Kandron's protective devices, therefore, did not protect.
Projectors, designed to flame out against intruders, remained cold, ports opened,
and, as Nadrick touched sundry buttons, various invisible beams,
whose breaking would have produced unpleasant results, ceased to exist.
In short, Nadrek knew all the answers.
If he had not been coldly certain that his information was complete,
he would not have acted at all.
After entry, his first care was to send out spotting devices,
which would give ample warning in case the Unlonian should return unexpectedly soon.
Then, working in the service spaces behind instrument boards and panels,
in junction boxes, and in various other out-of-the-way places,
he cut into lead after lead, ran wire after wire,
and installed item after item of apparatus and equipment,
upon which he had been at work for weeks.
He finished his work undisturbed.
He checked and re-checked the circuits,
making absolutely certain that every major one of the vessel's controlling leads
ran to or through at least one of the things he had just installed.
With pains-taking nicety, he obliterated every visible sign of his visit.
He departed as carefully as he had come,
restoring to full efficiency as he went,
each one of Candron's burglar alarms.
Candron returned, entered his ship as usual,
stored his flitter, and extended a tentacular member
toward the row of switches on his panel.
Don't touch anything, Candron.
He was advised by a thought as cold and as deadly
as any one of his own, and upon the Unlonian equivalent of a visiplate,
there appeared the one likeness which he least expected
and least desired to perceive.
"'Nadrach of Palain seven! Star A. Star! The Lensman!'
The Alonian was physically and emotionally incapable of gasping, but the idea is appropriate.
"'You have, then, wired and mined this ship?'
There was a subdued clicking of relays. The Bergenholm came up to speed,
the speedster spun about and darted straight away from the planet under a couple of kiladines
of drive.
I am Nadrake-a-Pallane seven yes.
One of the group of lensmen whose collective activities you have ascribed to star A-star
and the lensman.
Your ship is, as you have deduced, mind.
The only reason you did not die as you entered it is that I wish to be absolutely certain,
and not merely statistically so, that it is actually Kandran of Onno and not someone else
who dies.
"'That unutterable fool!'
Candron quivered in helpless rage.
"'Oh, that I'd taken the time and killed you myself!'
"'If you had done your own work,
the techniques I used here could not have been employed,
and you might have been in no danger at the present moment.'
Nandrick admitted equably enough,
"'my powers are small, my intellect feeble,
"'and what might have been has no present bearing.'
I am inclined, however, to question the validity of your conclusions,
due to the known fact that you have been directing a campaign against me for over 20 years without success,
whereas I have succeeded against you in less than half a year.
My analysis is now complete.
You may now touch any control you please.
By the way, you do not deny that you are a Camdron of Onlow, do you?
Neither of those monstrous being asked, suggested, or even thought of mercy.
In neither of their languages, was there any word for or concept of such a thing?
That would be idle. You have a record of my life pattern, of course, just as I have one of yours.
But I cannot understand how you got through that. It is not necessary that you should.
"'Do you wish to close one of those switches, or shall I?'
Candron had been thinking for minutes, studying every aspect of his predicament.
Knowing Nadrick, he knew just how desperate the situation was.
However, there was one very small chance, just one.
The way he had come was clear.
He knew that that was the only clear way.
Wherefore, to gain an extra instant of time,
he reached out toward a switch.
But even while he was reaching,
he put every ounce of his tremendous strength
into a leap which hurled him across the room
toward his flitter.
No luck.
One of Nadrex's minor tentacles
was already curled around a switch,
tensed and ready.
Candron had not moved a foot
when a relay snapped shut
and four canisters of Duodec detonated as one.
Duodeca plilatimate,
that frightful detonate
whose violence is exceeded only by that of nuclear disintegration itself.
There was an appalling flash of viciously white light,
which expanded in microseconds into an enormous globe of incandescent gas.
Cooling and darkening as it expanded rapidly into the near vacuum of interplanetary space,
the gases and vapors soon became invisible.
Through and throughout, the entire volume of volatilization,
Nadrek drove analyzers and detectors.
until it was a mathematical certainty
that no particle of material substance
larger in diameter than five microns
remained of either Candron or his spaceship.
He then called the gray lensman.
Kinnison, Nadrappellane 7 calling
to report that my assignment has been completed.
I have destroyed Candron of Onmo.
Good! Fine business, Ace!
What kind of a picture did you get?
He must have not.
known something about the higher echelons, or did he? Was he just another dead-end?
I did not go into that. Huh? Why not? Kinnison demanded, exasperation in every line of his
thought. Because it was not included in the project, Nadrick explained patiently. You already know
that one must concentrate in order to work efficiently. To secure the requisite minimum of information,
it was necessary to steer his thoughts into one and only one set of channels.
There were some foreign side-bands, of course,
and it may be that some of them touched upon this new subject,
which you have now too late introduced.
No, there were no such.
Damnation! Kinnison exploded.
Then by main strength shut himself up.
QX-A's, skip it.
But listen, my Spinean murders, friend.
"'Get this, engrave it in big type right on the top side inside of your thick skull.
What we want is information, not mere liquidation.
Next time you get hold of such a big shot as Candron must have been,
don't kill him until either. First, you get some leads as to who or what the real head of
the outfit is, or second, you make sure that he doesn't know.
Then kill him all you want to. But find out what he knows first.'
Have I made myself clear this time?
You have, and as coordinator, your instructions should and will govern.
I point out, however, that the introduction of a multiplicity of objectives into a problem
not only destroys its unity, but also increases markedly both the time necessary for
and the actual personal danger involved in its solution.
"'So what?' Kinnis encountered as evenly as he could.
"'That way we may be able to get the answer some day.
"'Your way, we never will.
"'But the thing's done.
"'There's no use yapping and yowling about it now.
"'Have you any ideas as to what you should do next?
"'No, whatever you wish, that I shall try to do.'
"'I'll check with the others.'
"'He did so, receiving no helpful ideas
"'until he consulted his wife.'
"'Hi, Kim, my dear,' came Clarissa's buoyant thought.
and after a brief but intense greeting.
Glad you called.
Nothing definite enough yet to report to you officially,
but there are indications that Lyrain Nine may be an important—
Nine—Kinnison interrupted.
Not eight again?
Nine, she confirmed.
A new item.
So I may be doing a flit over there one of these days.
Uh-uh, he denied.
Lyrain Nine would be none of your business.
Stay away from it.
"' Says who,' she demanded.
"'We went into this once before Kim about you telling me what I could and couldn't do.'
"'Yeah, and I came out second best,' Kinnison grinned.
"'But now, as the coordinator, I make suggestions to even second-stage lensman,
and they follow them or else.
"'I, therefore, suggest officially that you stay away from Lyrain Nine
on the grounds that, since it is colder than a Palanian's heart,
it is definitely not your problem, but Nadrex.
And, personally, I am adding that, if you don't behave yourself,
I'll come over there and administer appropriate physical persuasion.
Come on over. That would be fun.
Clarissa giggled, then sobered quickly.
But seriously, you win, I guess, this time.
You'll keep me informed?
I'll do that.
Clear ether, Chris.
And he turned back to the Pellanian.
So, you see, this is your problem.
Go to it, little chum.
I go, Kinnison.
End of Chapter 17.
Chapter 18.
Of Children of the Lens.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
Chapter 18.
For hours, Camilla Kinnison and Tragansi
wrestled separately and fruitlessly
with the problem of the...
elusive X. Then, after she had studied the Rigelian's mind in a fashion which she could
neither detect nor employ, Camilla broke the mental silence.
Uncle Trigg, my conclusions frighten me. Can you conceive of the possibility that it was
contact with my mind, not yours, that made X run away? That is the only tenable conclusion.
I know the limitations of my own mind, but I have never been able to guess at the capability.
of yours. I fear that I at least underestimated our opponent. I know that I did, and I was
terribly wrong. I shouldn't have tried to fool you either, even a little bit. There are some
things about me which I just can't show to most people, but you are different. You're such a
wonderful person. Thanks, Camilla, for your trust. Understandingly, he did not go on to say that he
would keep on being worthy of it. I accept the fact that you five, being children of two second-stage
lensmen, are basically beyond my comprehension. There are indications that you do not as yet thoroughly
understand yourself. You have, however, decided upon a course of action. Oh, I'm so relieved. Yes, I have,
but before we go into that, I haven't been able to solve the problem of X. More, I have proved that I
cannot solve it without more data.
Therefore, you can't either.
Check?
I had not yet reached that conclusion,
but I accept your statement as truth.
One of the most common powers of mine,
to which you referred a while ago,
is a wide range of perception,
from large masses down to extremely tiny components.
Another, or perhaps a part of the same one,
is that, after resolving and analyzing these fine details,
I can build up a logical and coherent whole by processes of interpolation and extrapolation.
I can believe that such things would be possible to such a mind as yours must be.
Go on.
Well, that is how I know that I underestimated Mr. X.
Whoever or whatever he is, I am completely unable to resolve the structure of his thought.
I gave you all I got of it.
Look at it again, please, hard.
what can you make of it now?
It is exactly the same as it was before,
a fragment of a simple and plain introductory thought to an audience.
That is all.
That's all I can see, too, and that's what surprises me so.
The hitherto imperturbable and serene Camilla
got up and began to pace the floor.
That thought is apparently absolutely solid.
And since that is a definitely impossible condition,
the truth is that its structure is so fine that I cannot resolve it into its component units.
This fact shows that I am not nearly so competent as I thought I was.
When you and Dad and the others reached that point, you each went to ERISA.
I have decided to do the same thing.
That decision seems eminently sound.
Thanks, Uncle Trigg. That was what I hoped you would say.
I have never been there, you know, and the idea scared me a little.
Clear either.
There is no need to go into detail as to Camilla's bout with Mentor.
Her mind, like Caron's, had had to mature of itself before any treatment could be really
effective.
But once mature, she took as much in one session as Catherine had taken in all her many.
She had not suggested that the Rigelian accompanied her to Erysia.
They both knew that he had already received all that he could take.
Upon her return, she greeted him.
him as casually as though she had gone only a matter of hours.
What mentor did to me, Uncle Trigg,
shouldn't have been done to a Delgonian cat-lat.
It doesn't show too much, though, I hope, does it?
Not at all.
He scanned her narrowly, both physically and mentally.
I can perceive no change in detail.
In general, however, you have changed.
You have developed.
Yes, more than I would have believed.
possible. I can't do much with my present very poor transcription of that thought, since the
all-important fine detail is missing. We'll have to intercept one another. I'll get it all this time,
and it will tell us a lot. But you did something with this one, I am sure. There must have been
some developable features, a sort of latent image effect? A little, practically infinite
tesmo compared to what was really there. Physically, his classification to four places is
T-U-U-U-V. Quite a bit like the Nevians, you notice. His home planet is big, and practically
covered with liquid. No real cities, just groups of half-submerged temporary structures.
Mentality very high, but we knew that already. Normally, he thinks upon a very short wave,
so short that he was then working at the very bottom of his range.
His son is a fairly hot main-sequent star, of spectro-class somewhere around F,
and it's probably more or less variable, because there is quite a distinct implication of change.
But that's normal enough, isn't it?
Within the limits imposed by the amount and kind of data available,
Camilla's observations and analyses had been perfect, her reconstruction flawless.
She did not then have any idea, however, that X was in fact a spring-form plurin.
More, she did not even know that such a planet as Plur existed, except for mentors one mention of it.
Of course. People's of planets of variable suns think that such suns are the only kind fit to have planets.
You cannot reconstruct the nature of the change?
No. Worse, I can't find even a hint of where this planet is in the world.
space. But then, I probably couldn't anyway, even with a whole fresh thought to study.
Probably not. Rigel IV would be an utterly meaningless thought to anyone ignorant of
Rigel. And except when making a conscious effort, as in directing strangers, I never think of
its location in terms of galactic coordinates. I suppose that the location of a home planet
is always taken for granted. That would seem to leave us just about where we were
before in our search for X, except for your implied ability to intercept another of his thoughts
almost at will. Explain, please. Not my ability, ours. Camilla smiled confidently. I couldn't do it
alone. Neither could you. But between us, I don't believe that it will be too difficult. You, with
your utterly calm, utterly unshakable certainty, can drive a thought to any corner of the universe.
You can fix and hold it steady on any indicated atom.
I can't do that, or anything like it.
But with my present ability to detect and to analyze,
I'm not afraid of missing X if we can come within parsecs of him.
So my idea is a sort of piggyback hunting trip.
You to take me for a ride mentally,
very much as Wurzel takes Kahn physically.
That would work, don't you think?
Perfectly, I am sure.
The stolid Vigelian was immensely pleased.
Link your mind with mine, then, and we will set out.
If you have no better plan of action mapped out,
I would suggest starting at the point where we lost him and working outward,
covering an expanding sphere.
You know best.
I will stick to you wherever you go.
I am ready.
Tragonzi launched his thought.
A thought which, at a velocity not to be measured even in multiples of
that of light, generated the surface of a continuously enlarging sphere of space.
And with that thought, a very part of it, sped Camilla's incomprehensibly delicate,
instantaneously reactive detector web. The Rigelian, with his unhuman perseverance,
would have surveyed total space had it been necessary, and now the adult Camilla would have
stayed with him. However, the patient pair did not have to comb all of space.
In a matter of hours, the girl's almost infinitely tenuous detector touched, with infinitesimal power,
and for an inappreciable instant of time, the exact thought structure to which it had been so carefully attuned.
Halt, she flashed, and Targanzi's mighty super-dreadnought shot away along the indicated line at maximum blast.
You are not now thinking at him, of course, but how sure are you that he did not feel your detector?
Tragansi asked.
Positive, the girl replied.
I couldn't even feel it myself until after a million-fold amplification.
It was just a web, you know, not nearly solid enough for an analyzer or a recorder.
I didn't touch his mind at all.
However, when we get close enough to work efficiently, which we will be in about five days,
we will have to touch him.
Assuming that he is as sensitive as we are, he will feel us.
Hence, we will have to work fast,
and according to some definite plan.
What are your ideas as to technique?
I may offer a suggestion or two later,
but I resign leadership to you.
You already have made plans, have you not?
Only a framework.
I could not go into a detail without consulting you.
Since we agree that it was my mind that he did not like,
you will have to make the first contact.
Of course.
But since the action of thought is so nearly instantaneous,
Are you sure that you will be able to protect yourself in case he overcomes me at that first contact?
If the Rigelian gave any thought at all to his own fate in such a case, no trace of it was evident.
My screens are good. I am fairly certain that I could protect both of us,
but it might slow me down a trifle, and even an instance delay might keep me from getting the
information we want. It would be better, I think, to call Kid in, or better yet, K.
She can stop a superatomic bomb.
With K covering us both, we will be free to put our full power into the offense.
And that offense is to be—I have no idea.
We will work that out together.
Again, they went into a union of minds, considering, weighing, analyzing, rejecting,
and a few times, accepting.
And finally, well within the five-day time limit,
they had drawn up a completely detailed plan of battle.
How uselessly that time was spent!
For that battle, instead of progressing according to their carefully worked-out plan,
was ended almost in the instant of its beginning.
According to plan, Traganzi tuned his mind to X's pattern
as soon as they had come within working range.
He worked out as delicately as he could,
and his best was very fine work indeed.
He might just as well have struck with all his power,
for at the first touch of the fringe,
extremely light and entirely innocuous thought it was,
the stranger's barriers flared into being,
and there came back instantly a mental bolt of such vicious intensity
that it would have gone through Tragansi's hardest-held block
as though no barrier had been there.
But that bolt did not strike Tragansi's shield.
He did not even know, until much later, that it had been sent.
Instead, it struck Karen Kinnisans, which has already been described.
It did not exactly bounce, nor did it cling, nor did it linger, even for a microsecond to do battle as expected.
It simply vanished, as though that minute interval of time had been sufficient for the enemy to have recovered from the shock of encountering a completely unexpected resistance,
to have analyzed the texture of the shield, to have deduced from that analysis the full capabilities of its owner and operator,
to have decided that he did not care to have any dealings with the entity so deduced,
and finally, as he no doubt supposed, to have begun to retreat in good order.
His retreat, however, was not in good order.
He did not escape this time.
This time, as she had declared that she would be,
Camilla was ready for anything, literally anything.
Everything she had, and she had plenty, was on the trips,
tense, taught, and poised.
Knowing that Karen, the ultimate of defense, was on guard,
she was wholly free to hurl her every force
in the instant of perceiving the enemy's poignant thrust.
Scarcely had the leading element of her attack
touched the stranger's screens, however,
when those screens, X himself, his vessel,
and any others that might have been accompanying it,
and everything tangible in nearby space,
all disappeared at once in the inconceivably violent,
the ultimately cataclysmic detonation of a superatomic bomb.
It may not perhaps be generally known
that the completely liberating, or superatomic bomb,
liberates 100% of the total component energy
of two or more subcritical masses of an unstable isotope
in a space of time estimated to be 69-hundredths of one microsecond.
Its violence and destructiveness thus differ,
both in degree and in kind,
from those of the earlier type, which liberated only the energy of nuclear fission,
very much as the radiation of Esteratus differs from that of Earth's moon.
Its mass attains and holds for an appreciable length of time,
a temperature to be measured only in millions of centigrade degrees,
which fact accounts in large part for its utterly incredible vehemence.
Nothing inert in its entire sphere of primary action
can even begin to move out of the way
before being reduced to its subatomic constituents and thus contributing in some measure to the cataclysm.
Nothing is or becomes visible until the secondary stage begins, until the frightful globe has expanded
to a diameter of some hundreds of miles, and by this expansion has cooled down to a point
at which some of its radiation lies in the visible violet. As for lethal radiation,
there are radiations, and they are lethal. The Battle with X had occupied,
applied approximately two milliseconds of actual time.
The expansion had been progressing for a second or two when Karen lowered her shield.
"'Well, that finishes that,' she commented.
"'I better get back on the job.
"'Did you find out what you want to know, Cam, or not?'
"'I got a little in the moment before the explosion.
Not much.'
Camilla was deep in study.
"'It is going to be quite a job of reconstruction.
One thing of interest to you, though, is that this X had quit sabotaged temporarily and was on his
way to Lyrain Nine, where he had some kind of important—' Nine? Karen asked sharply.
Not eight.
I've been watching eight, you know. I haven't even thought of nine.
Nine, definitely. The thought was clear.
You might give it a scan once in a while. How is Mother doing?
She's doing a grand job, and that Helen is quite an operator, too.
too. I'm not doing much. Just a touch here and there. I'll see what I can see on nine.
I'm not the scanner or detector that you are, though, you know. Maybe you'd better come over here,
too, in person, suppose? I think so. Don't you, Uncle Trigg? Tragansy did. We can do some
exploring as we come, but since I have no definite patterns for webwork, we might not be able to do
much until we get close.
Clear ether K.
The fine structure is there, and I can resolve it and analyze it,
Camilla informed Tregonzi, after a few hours of intense concentration.
There are quite a few clear extraneous sequences,
instead of the blurred latent images we had before,
but there is still no indication whatever of the location of his home planet.
I can see his physical classification to ten places instead of four,
more detail as to the sun's variation,
the seasons, their habits, and so on.
Things that seem mostly to be a very little importance, as far as we are concerned.
I found one fact, though, that is new and important.
According to my reconstruction, his business of Lyrain Nine was the induction of Bosconian lensman,
black lensman, Tragansi, just as father suspected.
In that case, he must have been the Bosconian counterpart of an Erysian,
and hence one of the highest echelon.
I am very glad indeed that you and Karen relieve me of the necessity of trying to handle him myself.
Kinnison will be very glad to know that we have at last and, in fact, reach the top.
Camilla was paying attention to the Regelian's cogitations with only a fraction of her mind,
most of it being engaged in a private conversation with her brother.
So, you see, Kit, he was under a subconscious compulsion.
He had to destroy himself, his ship, and everything in it, in the very very very good.
instant of attack by any mind definitely superior to his own. Therefore, he couldn't have been
an Adorium possibly, but merely another intermediate, and I haven't been of much help.
Sure you have, Cam. You've got a lot of information, and some mighty good leads to Lyrain
Nine and what goes on there. I'm on my way to Edor now, and by working down from there and up
from Lyrain Nine, we can't go wrong. Clear ether says, end of Chapter 18.
Chapter 19
Of Children of the Lens
This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
Chapter 19
Constance Kinnison did not waste much time in idle recriminations, even at herself.
Realizing at last that she was still not fully competent,
and being able to define exactly what she lacked,
she went to ERISA for final treatment.
She took that treatment and emerged from it,
as her brother and sisters had emerged a completely
integrated personality. She had something of everything the others had, of course, as did they all,
but her dominance, the characteristics which had operated to make Worsal her favorite second-stage
lensman, were much like those of the Valentian. Her mind, like his, was quick and facile,
yet of extraordinary power and range. She did not have much of her father's flat driving urge,
or of his indomitable will to do. She was the least able of all the five to exist. She was the least able, of all the five,
long-sustained extreme effort.
Her top, however, was vastly higher than theirs.
Like Worsals, her armament was almost entirely offensive.
She was far and away the deadliest fighter of them all.
She only of them all had more than a trace of pure killer instinct.
And when roused to full fighting pitch,
her mental bolts were weapons of as starkly incomprehensible and effectiveness
as the sphere of primary action of a superatomic bomb.
As soon as Constance had left the Vellan, remarking that she was going to ERISA to take her medicine,
Worsal called a staff meeting to discuss in detail the matter of the hell-hole in space.
That conference was neither long nor heated. It was unanimously agreed that the phenomenon was,
must be, simply another undiscovered cavern of overlords.
In view of the fact that Worsal and his crew have been hunting down and killing overlords for more than 20 years,
the only logical course of action was for them to deal similarly with one more,
perhaps the only remaining large group of their hereditary foes.
Nor did any doubt of their ability to do so enter any one of the Valentian's minds.
How wrong they were!
They did not have to search for the hell-hole.
Long since, to stop its dreadful toll,
a spherical cordon of robot guardships had been posted to warn all traffic away from the outer fringes of its influence.
Since they merely warned against, but could not physically prohibit entry into the dangerous space,
Worsal did not pay any attention to the guardships or to their signals as the Velen went through the warning web.
His plans were, he thought, well laid.
His ship was free.
Its speed, by Valentian standards, was very low.
Each member of his crew wore a full-coverage thought screen.
A similar and vastly more powerful screen,
would surround the whole vessel if one of Worsel's minor members
were either to tighten or to relax its grip upon a spring-mounted control.
Worcelsel was, he thought, ready for anything.
But the hell-hole in space was not a cavern of overlords.
No sun, no planet, nothing material existed within that spherical volume of space.
That something was there, however, there was no doubt.
Slow as was the Veelein's pace, it was still,
still too fast by far. For in a matter of minutes, through the supposedly impervious thought screens,
there came an attack of utterly malignant ferocity. An assault which tore at Worssel's mind in a fashion
he had never imagined possible. A poignant, rending, unbearably crescendo force whose violence
seemed to double with every mile of advance. The Veeleon's all-encompassing screen snapped on,
uselessly. Its tremendous power was as unopposed as were the lesser powers of the personal shields,
that highly inimical thought was coming past, not through the barriers. An Erysian, or one of the
children of the lens, would have been able to perceive and to block that band. No one of lesser
mental stature could. Strong and fast as Worcelsel was, mentally and physically, he got his
vessel turned around just barely in time. All his resistance and all his strength had to be called
into play to maintain his mind's control over his body, to enable him to spin his ship end for end
and to kick or drive up to maximum blast. To his surprise, his agony decreased with distance as
rapidly as it had built up, disappearing entirely well before the Velen reached the web she had
crossed such a short time before. Groggy, sick and shaken,
hanging slackly from his bars,
the Valentian lensman was roused to action
by the mental and physical frenzy of his crew.
Ten of them had died in the hellhole.
Six more were torn to bits
before their commander could muster enough force
to stop their insane rioting.
Then Master Therapist Worssel went to work,
and one by one he brought the survivors back.
They remembered, but he made those memories bearable.
He then called Kinnison.
But there didn't seem to be anything personal about it, as one would expect from an overlord,
he concluded his brief report.
It did not concentrate on us, reach for us, or follow us as we left.
Its intensity seemed to vary only with distance, perhaps inversely as distance squared.
It might very well have been radiated from a center.
While it was nothing like anything I ever felt before, I still think that it
it must be an overlord, maybe a sort of second-stage overlord, just as you and I are second-stage
lensman. He is too strong for me now, just as they used to be too strong for us before we met you.
By the same reasoning, however, I am pretty sure that if you can come over here, you and I
together could figure out a way of taking him. How about it?' "'Mighty interesting, and I'd like to,
but I'm right in the middle of a job.' Kinnison replied, and when
on to explain rapidly what he, as Bradlow Thyron, had done and what he still had to do.
As soon as I can get away, I'll come over. In the meantime, fellow old snake, keep away from
there. Do a flit. Find something else to keep you amused until I can join you.
Wursell set out, and after a few days, or weeks, idle time means practically nothing to a
valentian. A sharply-lensed thought drove in. Help! A lensman calling help!
"'Line this thought and come at speed to system—'
The message ended as sharply as it had begun,
in a flare of agony which Worsal knew met that the Lensman,
whoever he was, had died.
Since the thoughts, although broadcast, had come in strong and clear,
Wurzel knew that its center had been close by.
While the time had been very short indeed,
he had been able to get a line of sorts.
Into that line he whirled the veiled the veiled and sharp prow,
and along it she hurtled at the literally inconceivable pace of her absolute maximum drive.
As the Grey Lensman had often remarked, the Valentian Super Dreadnought had more legs than a centipede,
and now she was using them all.
In minutes then, the scene of battle grew large upon her plates.
The patrol ship, hopelessly outclassed, could last only seconds longer.
Her screens were down.
Her very wall shield was dead.
Red Pockmark sprang into being along her sides as the Bosconian needlebeamers wiped out her few
remaining controls. Then, as the helplessly raging Worsal looked on, his brain seething with
unutterable Valentian profanity, the enemy prepared to board, a course of action which
Worcelsso could see was changed abruptly by the fact, and perhaps as well by the terrific
velocity, of his own unswerving approach. The Concord Patrol Cruiser disappeared in a blaze of
detonating Doodek. The conqueror devoted his every jet to the task of running away,
strewing his path as he did so with sundry items of solid and explosive destruction.
Such things, however, whether dirigible or not, whether inert or free, were old and simple
stuff to the Veland's war-wise crew. Their spotters and detectors were full out, as was also
a practically solid forefand of annihilating and disintegrating beings.
Thus none of the Bosconian's missiles touched the Velen, nor with all his speed could he escape.
Few indeed were the ships of space able to step it, parsec for parsec, with Worsal's mighty craft,
and this luckless pirate vessel was not one of them.
Up and up the pursuer rushed. Second by second, the intervening distance lessened,
tractor shot out, locked on, and pulled briefly with all the force of their stupendous generators.
Briefly, but long enough.
As Worsal had anticipated, that savage yank had, in the fraction of a second required for the
Baskonian commander to recognize and to cut the tractors, been enough to bring the
two inertialist warcraft practically screen to screen.
Primaries! Blast! Worcels! Hurll hurled the thought even before his tractors'
snapped. He was in no mood for a long, drawn-out engagement. He might be able to win with
his secondaries, his needles, his tremendously powerful short-range stuff, and his other ordinary
offensive weapons, but he was taken no chances. Besides, the Bosconians might very well have primaries
of their own by this time, and if they did, his only chance was to use them first. His men
knew what to do, and would do it without further orders. A dozen or so of those hellishly irresistible
projectors of sheer destruction lashed out as one. One, two,
Three. The three courses of Bosconian defensive screens scarcely winked as each,
locally overloaded, flared through the visible into the black, and went down.
Crash. The stubborn fabric of the wall shield offered little more resistance before it too
went down, exposing the bare metal of the Bosconian's hull. And, as is well known,
any conceivable material substance simply vanishes tracelessly at the merest touch of
such fields of force as those.
Driving projectors carved away, and main battery silenced.
Wursell's needle-beamers proceeded systematically
to riddle every control panel and every lifeboat,
to make of the immense space rover a completely helpless hulk.
Hold!
An observer flashed the thought,
No. 8 slip is empty.
Number 8 lifeboat got away!
Damnation!
Worsall at the head of his armed and armored strong.
storming party, as furiously eager as they to come to grips with the enemy, paused briefly.
"'Trace it! Or can you?'
"'I did. My traces can hold it for fifteen minutes, perhaps twenty, no longer than twenty.'
Worsal thought intensely. Which had first call, ship or lifeboat? The ship he decided almost instantly.
Its resources were vastly greater. Most of its personnel were probably practically unharmed.
Given any time at all, they might very well be able to jury-rig a primary, and that would
be bad.
Very bad.
Besides, there were more people here.
And even if, as was distinctly possible, the Boscone and Big Shot had abandoned his vessel
and his crew in an attempt to save his own life, Warsall had plenty of time.
"'Hold that lifeboat,' he instructed the observer.
"'Ten minutes is all we need here.'
"'And it was.
The Bosconians, barrel-bodied, blocky-limbed monstrosities resembling human beings
about as much as they did the Volantians.
War armor, possessed hand weapons of power, and fought viciously.
They had even managed to rig a few semi-portable projectors, but none of these were allowed
a single blast.
Spy-ray observers were alert and needle-beam operators.
Hence the fighting was all at hand-to-hand, with hand-weapons only.
for while the Valentians to a man lusted to kill, they had had it drilled into them for 20 years
that the search for information came first. The pleasure of killing, second.
Worsal himself went straight for the Bosconian captain, his pre-selected prey. That white had a
couple of guards with him, but they did not matter. Needle-ray men took care of them. He also
had a pair of heavy beam guns, which he held steadily on the Volantian.
Worcel paused momentarily.
Then, finding that his screens were adequate,
he slammed the control room door shut with a flick of his tail
and launched himself, straight and level at his foe,
with an acceleration of seven gravities.
The captain tried to dodge, but could not.
The frightful impact did not kill him, but it hurt him badly.
Worsal, on the other hand, was scarcely jarred.
Hard, tough, and durable,
Philanthians are accustomed from birth to knockings about which would pulverize human bones.
Worsall batted the Baskonians' guns away with two terrific blows of an armored paw,
noting as he did so that violent contact with the steel wall did not do their interior mechanisms a bit of good.
Then, after cutting off both his enemy's screens and his own, he batted the Baskonian's helmet.
At first, experimentally, then with all his power.
Unfortunately, however, it held.
So did the thought-screen, and there were no external controls.
That armor was good stuff.
Leaping to the ceiling, he blasted his whole mass straight down upon the breastplate,
striking it so hard this time that he hurt his head.
Still no use.
He wedged himself between two heavy braces,
flipped a loop of tail around the Bosconian's feet, and heaved.
The armored form flew across the room, struck the heavy,
steel wall, bounced and dropped. The bulges of the armor were flattened by the force of the
collision. The wall was dented, but the thought-screen still held. Worsal was running out of time
fast. He couldn't treat the thing very much rougher without killing him if he wasn't dead already.
He couldn't take him aboard. He had to cut that screen here and now. He could see how the
armor was put together, but armored as he was, he could not take it apart. And since the
the whole ship was empty of air, he could not open his own. Or could he? He could. He could breathe
space long enough to do what had to be done. He cut off his air, loosened a plate enough to
release four or five gnarled hands, and paying no attention to his involuntarily laboring lungs,
set furiously to work. He tore open the Baskonian's armor, snapped off his thought-screen.
The creature was not quite dead yet. Good. He did. He did.
didn't know a thing, though, nor did any member of his crew, except—
Yes, one man, a big shot, had got away.
Who or what was he?
"'Tell me!'
Worsal demanded, with the full power of mind and lens, even while he was exploring with all his
skill and speed.
"'Tell me!'
But the Baskonian was dying fast.
The ungentle treatment, and now the lack of air, were taking toll.
His patterns were disintegrating by the
second, faster and faster.
Meaningless blurs,
which, under Worstle's vicious probing,
condensed into something which seemed to be a lens.
A lensman?
Impossible.
Starkly unthinkable.
But Jetback.
Hadn't Kim intimated a while back that there might be such things as black
lensman?
But Worsel himself wasn't feeling so good.
He was only half-conscious.
Red, black, and purple spots were dancing in front of
every one of his eyes. He sealed his suit, turned on his air, gasped, and staggered. Two of the nearest
Valantians, all of whom had, of course, been on rapport with him throughout, came rushing to his
aid, arriving just as he recovered full control. "'Back to the vealin, everybody!' he ordered.
"'No time for any more fun. We've got to get that lifeboat.'
Then, as soon as he had been obeyed, bomb that hulk. Good! Flit!
"'Overtaking the lifeboat did not take long.
"'Sparing it with a tractor and yanking it alongside required only seconds.
"'For all his haste were also found in it only something
"'that looked as though it once might have been a Delgonian lensman.
"'It had blown itself apart with a grenade.
"'Because of its reptilian tenacity of life, however, it was not quite dead.
"'Its lens still showed an occasional flicker of light,
"'and its shattered mind was not yet entirely devoid of patterns.
Wurzel studied that mind until all trace of life had vanished, then again reported to the
coordinator.
"'So, you see, I guessed wrong. The lens was too dim to read, but he must have been a black
lensman. The only readable thought in his mind was an extremely fuzzy one of the planet
Lyrain Nine. I hate to have hashed the job up so, especially since I had one chance and two
of guessing right.
Well, no use in squawking now.
Kinnison paused in thought.
Besides, he could have done it anyway, and would have.
You haven't done so badly at that.
You found a black lensman who was not a colonian,
and you've got confirmation of Bosconian interest in Lyrain Nine.
What more do you want?
Stick around fairly close to the hell-hole, slim,
and as soon as I can make it, I'll join you there.
End of Chapter 19.
Chapter 20.
Of Children of the Lens.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
Children of the Lens. Chapter 20.
Boys, take her upstairs.
Kinnison Thyron ordered, and the Tremendous Rader, actually the dauntless in disguise,
floated sereney upward to a station immediately astern of the Vice Admiral's flagship.
All three courses of multi-plied defensive screysm,
were out, as were full-coverage spy-ray blocks and thought screens.
As the fleet blasted in tight formation for Colonia 3,
Vice-Admiral Mendonai tested the Dauntless defenses thoroughly,
and found them bottled tight. No intrusion was possible.
The only open channel was that one plate-to-plate,
the other end of which was so villainously fog that nothing could be seen
except Bradlow Thyron's face.
Convinced at last of that fact,
Mendenai sat back and seethed quietly, his pervasive colonial blueness pointing up his grim and vicious mood.
He had never in all his long life been insulted so outrageously. Was there anything, anything he could do about it?
There was not. Thyrin, personally, he could not touch, yet, and the fact that the outlaw had so brazenly and so nonchalantly placed his vessel in the exact center of the Bosconian fleet, made it pellucidly clear,
to any Bosconian mind that he had nothing whatever to fear from that fleet.
Wherefore the Colonians seethed, and his minion stepped ever more softly
and followed with ever-increasing punctilio the rigid Bosconian code.
For the grapevine carries news swiftly. By this time, the whole fleet knew that his nips
had been taken a god-awful kicking around, and that the first guy who gave him an excuse to blow off
steam would be lucky if he only got boiled in oil.
As the fleet spread out for inert maneuvering above the colonial stratosphere,
Kinnison turned again to the young lensman.
One last word, Frank.
I am as sure as I can be that I am fully covered.
A lot of smart people worked on this problem.
Nevertheless, something may happen,
so I will send you the data as fast as I get it.
Remember what I told you before.
If I get the dope we need, I'm expendable,
and it'll be your job to get it back to base.
No heroics. Is that clear?
Yes, sir, the young linsman gulped.
I hope, though, that it doesn't. So do I.
Kinnison grinned as he climbed into his highly specialized durium armor.
And the chances are a million to one that it won't.
That's why I'm going down there.
In their respective speedsters, Kinnison and Mendenai made the long drop to the ground.
And side by side, they went into the office of black lensman molestum
Malasnikov. That worthy, too, wore heavy armor, but he did not have a mechanical thought
screen. Arrogantly conscious of his tremendous power of mind, what did any black lensman need
of mechanical shields? Thiren, of course, did, a fact of which Malastikov became instantly aware.
"'Release your screen,' he directed brusquely.
"'Not yet, pal. Don't be so hasty,' Thin Rindon advised.
There are some things about this here, hookup, that I don't exactly like.
We got quite a bit of talking to do before I open up.
No, talk, worm. Talk, especially your talk, is entirely meaningless.
From you I want, and will have the truth, and not talk.
Cut those screens.
And lovely Catherine, in her speech, her not too far away,
straightened up and sent out a call.
Kit, K, Cam, K, K, K, are you free?
"'They were for the moment.
"'Stand-by, please, all of you.
"'I'm pretty sure something is going to happen.
"'Dad can handle this Molasnikov easily enough
"'if none of the higher-ups step in,
"'but they probably will.
"'Their linsmen are probably important enough
"'to rate protection.
"'Check?'
"'check.
"'So as soon as Dad begins to get the best of the argument,
"'the protector will step in.'
"'Catherine continued.
"'And whether I can handle him alone or not
"'depends on how high a-hah.'
higher up they send in. So I'd like to have you all stand by for a minute or two, just in case.
How different was Catherine's attitude now than it had been in the hyperspacial tube,
and how well for civilization that it was.
Hold it, kids, I've got a thought, Kit suggested. We've never done any teamwork since you became
able to handle heavy stuff, and we'll have to get in some practice before the big blow-off.
What say we link up now on this?
Oh, yes, let's do.
Take over, Kit.
Three approvals came as one, and...
QX, came Catherine's less enthusiastic concurrence a moment later.
Naturally enough, she would rather do it alone if she could,
but she had to admit that her brother's plan was the better.
Kit laid out the Matrix, and the four girls came in.
There was a brief moment of snuggling and fitting,
then each of the five caught his breath in awe.
This was new, brand new.
Each had thought himself complete and full.
Each had supposed that much practice and at least some give and take would be necessary
before they could work efficiently as a group.
But this.
This was the supposedly unattainable.
Perfection itself.
This was unity, full, round, complete.
No practice was or ever would be necessary.
Not one micro-microsecond of doubt or of uncertainty would or ever could exist.
This was the unit, a thing for which there are no words in any written or spoken language.
A thing theretofore undreamed of, save as a purely theoretical concept in an unthinkably ancient four-ply eryssean brain.
U.M. N-G-N-K. Kit swallowed a lump as big as his fist before he could think.
"'This kid's is really some—'
"'Ah, children, you have done it!'
Mentor's thought rolled smoothly in.
"'You now understand why I could not attempt
"'to describe the unit to any one of you.
"'This is the culminating moment of my life.
"'Of our lives, we may now say.
"'For the first time in more years than you can understand,
"'we are at last sure that our lives have not been lived in vain.
"'But attend, that for which,
you are waiting will soon be here.
What is it? Who? Tell us how to. We cannot. Four separate Erysians smiled as one. A wash of
ineffable blessing and benedictions effused the five. We, who made the unit possible,
are almost completely ignorant of the details of its higher functions. But that it will need
no help from our lesser minds is certain. It is the most powerful and the most nearly perfect
creation this universe has ever seen. The Eurycans vanished, and even before Kimball Kinnison
had released his screen, a cryptic, utterly untraceable, and all-pervasive foreign thought came in.
To aid the black lensman, to study this disturbing new element, or merely to observe, or what?
The only certainty was that that thought was coldly, clearly, and highly inimical to all civilization.
Again, everything happened at once.
Karen's impenetrable block flared into being, not instantly, but instantaneously.
Constance assembled and hurled, and the same lack of time, a mental bolt of whose size and
power she had never dreamed herself capable.
Camilla, the detector scanner, synchronized herself with the attacking thought and steered,
and Catherine and Kit, with all the force, all the will and all the drive of human heredity,
got behind it and pushed.
Nor was this, any of it, conscious individual effort.
The children of the lands were not now five, but one.
This was the unit at work, doing its first job.
It is literally impossible to describe what happened,
but each of the five knew that one would be protector,
wherever he had been in space or whenever in time,
would never think again.
Seconds passed.
The unit held tense, awaiting the repost.
No repost came.
Fine work, kids!
Kit broke the linkage, and each girl felt hard, brotherly paths on her back.
That's all there is to this one, I guess.
Must have been only one guard on duty.
You're good eggs, and I like you.
How we can operate now!
But it was too easy, Kit,
Catherine protested.
Too easy,
by far for it to have been an Adorian.
We aren't that good.
Why, I could have handled him alone, I think.
She added hastily, as she realized that she, although an essential part of the unit,
had as yet no real understanding of what that unit really was.
You hope you mean, Constance jeered.
If that bolt was as big and as hot as I'm afraid it was, anything it hit would have looked easy.
Why didn't you slow us down, Kit?
You're supposed to be the big brain, you know.
As it was, we haven't the faintest idea of what happened.
Who was he anyway?
Didn't have time, Kit grinned.
Everything got out of hand.
All of us were sort of inebriated by the exuberance of our own enthusiasm, I guess.
Not that we know what our speed is, though, we can slow down next time, if we want to.
As for your last question, Con, you're asking the wrong guy.
Was it an Adorian Cam or not?
What difference does it make?
Karen asked.
On the practical side, none.
For the completion of the picture, maybe a lot.
Come in, Cam.
It was not an Adorian,
Camilla decided.
It was not of Elysian, or even near ERISian grade.
Sorry to say it, Kit,
but it was another member of that high-thinking race
that you've already got down on page one of your little black book.
I thought it might be.
The missing link between Colonia and Edor.
Credits to Millos, it's that dopy planet Plour that Mentor was yowling about.
Let's link up and let the unit find it, Constance suggested brightly.
That'd be fun.
Act your age, baby, kid advised.
Plore is taboo.
You know that as well as I do.
Mentor told us all not to try to investigate it,
"'that we'd learn of it in time, so we probably will.'
"'I told him a while back that I was going to hunt it up myself,
"'and he told me that, if I did, he'd tie both my legs around my neck and a lover's knot,
"'or words to that effect.
"'Sometimes I'd like to half-brain the old buzzard,
"'but everything he has said so far has dead-centered the beam.
"'We'll just have to take it and try to like it.'
"'Kinnison was eminently willing to cut his thought-screen,
since he could not work through it to do what had to be done here,
nor was he overconfident.
He knew that he could handle the black lensman, any black lensman,
but he also knew enough of mental phenomena in general
and of lensmanship in particular
to realize that Molastikov might very well have within call
reserves about whom he, Kinnison, could know nothing.
He knew that he had lied outrageously to young Frank
in regard to the odds applicable to this enterprise,
that instead of a million to one, the actuality was one to one, or even less.
Nevertheless, he was well content.
He had neither lied nor exaggerated in saying that he himself was expendable.
That was why Frank and the Dauntless were upstairs now.
Getting the dope and getting it back to base were what mattered.
Nothing else did.
He was coldly certain that he could get all the information that Malasnikov had
once he had engaged the Colonian Lensman mind to mind.
No busconian power or thing he was convinced
could treat him rough enough to kill him fast enough
to keep him from doing that.
And he could and would shoot this stuff along to Frank
as fast as he got it.
And he stood an even, almost even anyway,
chance of getting away afterward.
If he could, QX.
If he couldn't, well, that would have to be QX too.
Knesson flipped.
his switch, and there ensued a conflict of wills that made the sub-eather boil.
The Colonian was one of the strongest, hardest, and ablest individuals of his hellishly
capable race, and the fact that he believed implicitly in his own complete invulnerability
operated to double and to quadruple his naturally tremendous strength.
On the other hand, Kimball Kinnison was a second-stage lensman of the Galactic Patrol.
back and back then, inch by inch and foot by foot, the black lensman's defensive zone was forced,
back to and down into his own mind. And there, appallingly enough, Kinnison found almost
nothing of value. No knowledge of the higher reaches of the Bosconian organization. No hint that
any real organization of black lensman existed. Only the peculiarly disturbing fact that he had picked
up his lens on Lyrain Nine, and picked up was literal. He had not seen, nor heard, nor had any
dealings of any kind with anyone while he was there. Since both armored figures stood motionless,
no sign of the tremendous actuality of their mental battle was evident. Thus the Bosconians
were not surprised to hear their black lensmen speak. Very well, Thyrind, you have passed this
preliminary examination. I know all that I now need to know.
I will accompany you to your vessel to complete my investigation there.
Lead the way.
Kinnison did so, and as the Speister came to rest inside the dauntless,
the black lensman addressed Vice Admiral Mendonai via plate.
I am taking Bradlow Thyron and its ship to the space-yards on four,
where a really comprehensive study of it can be made.
Return to and complete your original assignment.
I abase myself, your supremacy,
But—but I—I discovered that ship, Menden I protested.
Granted, the black lensman sneered, you will be given full credit in the report for what you have
done. The fact of discovery, however, does not excuse your present conduct. Go, and consider
yourself fortunate that, because of that service, I forbear from disciplining you for your
intolerable insubordination. I abase myself your supremacy. I
go. He really did abase himself this time, and the fleet disappeared.
Then, the mighty dauntless safely away from Colonia, and on her course to rendezvous with
the Veland, Kinnison again went over his captive's mind, line by line, and almost cell
by cell. It was still the same. It was still Lyrine Nine, and it still didn't make any kind of
sense. Since Baskonians were certainly not Superman, and hence could not possibly
have developed their own lenses, it followed that they must have obtained them from the
Bosconian counterpart of ERISA. Hence, Lyrain Nine must be it, a conclusion which was certainly
fallacious, ridiculous, preposterous, utterly untenable. Lyrine Nine never had been, was not,
and never would be the home of any Bosconian super-race. Nevertheless, it was a definite fact
that Malasnikov had got his lens there.
Also, if he had ever had any special training,
such as any lensman must have had,
he didn't have any memory of it.
Nor did he carry any scars of surgery.
What a hash!
How could anybody make any sense out of such a mess as that?
Ever watchful Catherine, eyes narrowed now in concentration,
could have told him, but she did not.
Her visualization was beginning to clear up.
Lyrain was out. So was Plur. The lenses originated on Edor, that was certain.
The fact that their training was subconscious weakened the black lensman in precisely the
characteristics requisite for ultimate strength, although probably neither the Adorians nor the plurans,
with their warped Bosconian sense of values, realized it. The black lensman would never constitute
a serious problem. QX
The time of rendezvous approached.
Kinnison, having attended to the unpleasant but necessary job of resolving Molasnikov into his
component atoms, turned to his lensman aide.
Hold everything, Frank, until I get back.
This won't take long.
Nor did it, although the outcome was not at all what the gray lensman had expected.
Kinnison and Worsal, in an inert speedster, crossed the Hellhole's barrier web at a speed of only
miles per hour, and then slowed down.
The ship was backing in on her brakes, with everything set to hurl her forward under
full drive should either linsman flick a finger.
Kinnison could feel nothing, even though, being on rapport with Worsal, he knew that his
friend was soon suffering intensely.
"'Let's flit,' the gray lensman suggested, and threw on the drive.
"'I probed my limit and couldn't touch or feel a thing.
Had enough, didn't you?
More than enough.
I couldn't have taken much more.
Each boarded his ship,
and as the Dauntless and the Veland tore through space toward far Lyrain,
Kinison paced his room, scowling in black abstraction.
Nor would a mind-reader have found his thoughts either cogent or informative.
Lyrain Nine! Lyrain Nine!
Lyrain Nine!
Lyrain 9, and something that I can't even feel or perceive,
but that kills anybody and everybody else.
Clonos tungsten teeth and curving carballoy claws.
End of Chapter 20.
Chapter 21 of Children of the Lens.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
Chapter 21.
Helen's story was short and bitter.
Human or near-human Bosconians came to Lyrain II and spread insidious propaganda all over the planet.
Lyranian matriarchy should abandon its policy of isolationism.
Matriarchs were the highest type of life.
Matriarchy was the most perfect of all existing forms of government.
Why keep on confining it to one small planet when it should by right be ruling the entire galaxy?
The way things were, there was only one El-Ellible.
older person. All other Lyrinians, even though better qualified than the then-in-combat,
were nothing and so on. Whereas, if things were as they should be, each individual
Iranian person could be and would be the elder person of a planet at least, and perhaps
of an entire solar system, and so on. And the visitors, who they insisted, were no more males
than the Lyrrhenian persons were females would teach them. They would be amazed at how easily
under Bosconian guidance, this program could be put into effect.
Helen fought the intruders with every jet she had.
She despised the males of her own race.
She detested those of all others.
Believing that hers was the only existing matriarchal race,
especially since neither Kinnison nor the Bosconians seemed to know of any other,
she was sure that any prolonged contact with other cultures
would result not in the triumph of matriarchy but in its fall.
She not only voiced these beliefs as she held them violently, but also acted upon them in the same fashion.
Because of the ingrained matriarchally conservative habit of Lyranian thought,
particularly among the older persons, Helen found it comparatively easy to stamp out the visible
manifestations. And being in no sense of sophisticate, she thought that the whole matter was
settled. Instead, she merely drove the movement underground where it grew tremendously.
The young, of course, rebellious as always against the hidebound,
Mossbacked, and reactionary older generation, joined the subterranean New Deal in droves.
Nor was the older generation solid.
In fact, it was riddled by the defection of many thousands
who could not expect to attain any outstanding place in the world as it was,
and who believed that the Bosconian's glittering forecasts would come true.
Disaffection spread then, rapidly and unobserved.
culminating in the carefully planned uprising, which made Helen an ex-chief person,
and put her into the tower room to await a farcical trial and death.
I see, Clarissa caught her lower lip between her teeth.
Very unfunny.
I noticed that you didn't mention or think of any of your persons as ringleaders.
Peculiar that you couldn't catch them, with your telepathy.
No, natural enough at that.
But there's one I want very much to get hold of.
"'Don't know whether she was really a leader or not,
"'but she was mixed up in some way with a Bosconian lensman.
"'I never did know her name.
"'She was the woman—the person who managed your airport here
"'when Kim and I were—'
"'Cleone? Why, I never thought.
"'But it might have at that.
"'Yes, as I look back—'
"'Yes, hindsight is a lot more accurate than foresight.'
"'The red lensman grinned.
I've noticed that myself, lots of times.
It did. It was a leader, Helen declared furiously.
I shall have its life, too, the jealous cat, the blood-sucking, back-biting louse.
She's all of that, in more ways than you know,
Clarissa agreed grimly, and spread in the Lyrrhenian's mind the story of Eddie the derelict.
So you see that Cleone has got to be our starting point.
Have you any idea of where we can find her?
I haven't seen or heard anything of Cleone lately.
Helen paused in thought.
If, though, as I am now practically certain,
it was one of the prime movers behind this brainless brat Ladora,
it wouldn't dare leave the planet for very long at a time.
As to how to find it, I don't quite know.
Anybody would be apt to shoot me on sight.
Would you dare fly this funny plane of years down close to a few of our cities?
"'Certainly. I don't know of anything around here that my screens and fields can't stop. Why? Because I know of
several places where Clioni might be, and if I can get fairly close to them, I can find it in spite of
anything it can do to hide itself from me. But I don't want to get you into too much trouble,
and I don't want to get killed myself either, now that you have rescued me. At least until after I
have killed Cleoni and La Dora.
QX?
What are we waiting for?
Which way, Helen?
Back to the city first, for several reasons.
Cleone probably is not there, but we must make sure.
Also, I want my guns.
Guns?
No, dilameters are better.
I have several spares.
In one fleeting mental contact,
Clarissa taught the Lyranian all there was to know about dilameters,
and that feat impressed Helen
even more than did the nature and power of the weapon.
What a mind! she exclaimed.
You didn't have any such equipment as that the last time I saw you.
Or were you—no, you weren't hiding it.
You're right. I have developed considerably since then.
But about guns? What do you want of one?
To kill that nitwit Lador on sight and that snake Cleoni tube as soon as you get done with it.
But why guns?
Why not the mental force you always used?
Except by surprise, I couldn't, Helen admitted frankly.
All adult persons are of practically equal mental strength.
But speaking of strength, I marvel that a craft as small as this
should be able to ward off the attack of one of those tremendous busconian ships of space.
But she can't.
What made you think she could?
Your own statement? Or were you thinking of purely Iranian dangers, not realizing that
Lodora, of course, called Cleone as soon as you showed your teeth, and that Cleoni is surely
called the Lensman or some other Bosconian, and that they must have ships of war not too far
away? Heavens, no, it never occurred to me. Clarissa thought briefly. It wouldn't do any good
to call Kim. Both the Dauntless and the Velen were coming.
as fast as they could come, but it would be a day or so yet before they arrived.
Besides, he would tell her to lay off, which was exactly what she was not going to do.
She turned her thought back to the matriarch.
Two of our best chips are coming, and I hope they get here first.
In the meantime, we'll just have to work fast and keep our detectors full out.
Anyway, Cleone won't know that I'm looking for her.
I haven't even mentioned her to anyone except you.
"'No,' pessimistically.
"'Cleone knows that I am looking for it,
"'and since it knows by now that I am with you,
"'it would think that both of us were hunting it,
"'even if we weren't.
"'But we are nearly close enough now.
"'I must concentrate.
"'Fly around quite low over the city, please.'
"'QX.
"'I'll tune in with you, too.
"'Two heads, you know.'
"'Clerissa learned Cleone's pattern,
"'tuned to it, and combed the city.
while Helen was getting ready.
She isn't here, unless she's behind one of those thought screens,
the red lensman remarked,
Can you tell?
Thought screens.
The Baskolians had a few of them, but none of us ever did.
How can you find them?
Where are they?
One there, two over there.
They stick out like big black spots on a white screen.
Can't you see them?
I suppose that your scanners were the same as mine,
but apparently they aren't.
Take a quick peek at them with the spy.
You work it like so.
If they've got spy ray blocks up too,
we'll have to go down there and blast.
Politicians only, Helen reported,
after a moment's manipulation of the suddenly familiar instrument.
They need killing, of course, on general principles,
but perhaps we shouldn't take time for that now.
The next place to look is a few degrees east of north of here.
Cleoni was not, however, in that city,
nor in the next, nor the next.
But the Speedster detector screens remained blank,
and the two allies, so much alike physically,
so different mentally, continued their hunt.
There was opposition, of course, all that the planet afforded.
But Clarissa's second-stage mind
took care of the few items of offense,
which her Speedster's defenses could not handle.
Finally, two things happened almost at once.
Clarissa found Cleoni, and Helen saw a dim and fuzzy white spot upon the lower left-hand
corner of the detector plate.
Can't be ours.
The red lensman decided instantly.
Almost exactly the wrong direction.
Bosconians.
Ten minutes, twelve at most, before we have to flit.
Time enough, I hope, if we work fast.
She shot downward.
going inert and matching intrinsics at a lack of altitude which should have been suicidal for any
ordinary pilot. She rammed her beryllium bronze torpedo through the first floor wall of a
forbidding, almost windless building. Its many stories of massive construction, she knew,
would help no end against the heavy stuff so sure to come. Then, while every hitherto hidden
offensive arm of the Boscon Coats Lyrenians converged, screaming through the air and crashing and
clanking along the city's streets. Clarissa probed and probed and probed.
Cleoni had locked herself into a veritable dungeon cell in the deepest sub-basement of the structure.
She was wearing a thought-screen, too, but she had been releasing it for an instant at a time
to see what was going on. One of those instance was enough. That screen would never work again.
She had been prepared to kill herself at need, but her full-charged weapons emptied themselves
futilely against a massive luck, and she threw her vial of poison across the corridor and
into an empty cell.
So far, so good.
But how to get her out of there?
Physical approach was out of the question.
There must be somebody around somewhere, with keys or hacksaws or sledgehammers or something.
Ha!
Oxacetylene torches!
Very much against their wills, two Lirranian mechanics trundled a dolly along a corridor
into an elevator.
The elevator went down four levels.
The artisans began to burn away a barrier of thick steel bars.
By this time, the whole building was rocking to the detonation of high explosives.
Much more of that kind of stuff, and she would be trapped by the sheer mass of the rubble.
She was handling six jackass-dubborn people already, and that Baskonian worship was coming fast.
She did not quite know whether she was going to get away with this or not.
But somehow, from the unplumbed and unplumbable depths which made her what she so uniquely was,
the red lensman drew more and ever more power.
Kinnison, who had once made heavy going of handling two-and-a-fraction lensman,
guessed but never did learn from her what his beloved wife really did that day.
Even Helen, only a few feet away, could not understand what was happening.
Left Parsecs behind long since, the Lyrannian could not help.
in any particular, but could only stand and wonder.
She knew that this queerly powerful, lens-bearing earth-person,
white-faced, sweating, strong to the very snapping point as she sat motionless at her board,
was exerting some terrible, some tremendous force.
She knew that the heaviest of the circling bombers sheared away and crashed.
She knew that certain mobile projectors, a few blocks away, did not come any closer.
She knew that Cleone, against every I-O-O-O-Wing,
of her mulish-Lyranian will was coming toward the Speedster. She knew that many persons,
who wished intensely to bar Clione's progress or to shoot her down, were physically unable
to act. She had no fade idea, however, of how such work could possibly be done.
Cleone came aboard, and Clarissa snapped out of her trance. The Speeaster nudged and blasted
its way out of the wrecked stronghold, then tore a hole through protesting air into open space.
"'Clarissa shook her head, wiped her face,
"'studied a tiny double dot in the corner of the plate
"'opposite the one now showing clearly the Basconian warship
"'and set her controls.
"'We'll make it, I think,' she announced.
"'Even though we're indetectable, they, of course, know our line,
"'and they're so much faster that they'll be able to find us
"'even on their visuals before long.
"'On the other hand, they must be detecting our ships now,
"'and my guess is that they won't dare follow us
long enough to do us any harm.
Keep an eye on things, Helen, while I find out what Cleoni really knows.
And while I think of it, what's your real name?
It isn't polite to keep on calling you by a name that you never even heard of until you met us.
Helen?
The Larianian made surprising answer.
I liked it, so I adopted it, officially.
Oh, that's a compliment, really, to both Kim and me.
Thanks.
The red lensman then turned her attention to her captive, and as mind fitted itself precisely
to mind, her eyes began to gleam and gratified delight.
Cleoni was a real find. This seemingly unimportant Lyranian knew a lot, an immense lot,
about things that no adherent of the patrol had ever heard before. And she, Clarissa Kinnison,
would be the first of all the gray lensmen to learn of them. Therefore, taking her time,
now, she allowed every detail of the queer but fascinating picture story to imprint itself upon
her mind. And Karen and Camilla, together in Tragancy's ship, glanced at each other and exchanged
flashing thoughts. Should they interfere? They hadn't had to so far, but it began to look as
though they would have to now. It would wreck their mother's mind if she could understand. She
probably could not understand it any more than Cleone could, but even if she could,
she had so much more inherent stability, even than Dad, that she might be able to take it
at that.
Nor would she ever leak even to Dad, and Dad, bless his tremendous boots, was not the type
to pry.
Maybe, though, just to be on the safe side, it would be better to screen the stuff,
and to edit, if necessary, anything about Edor.
The two girls synchronized their minds, all imperceptibly with their mothers and
Helens, and learned.
The time was in the unthinkably distant past.
The location was unthinkably remote in space.
A huge planet circled slowly about a cooling sun.
Its atmosphere was not air.
Its liquid was not water.
Both were noxious, composed in large part of compounds even yet unknown demand.
Yet life was there, a race which was even then ancient.
Not sexual this race.
not androgynous nor hermaphroditic, but absolutely sexless.
Except for the many who died by physical or by mental violence, its members lived endlessly.
After many hundreds of thousands of years, each being, having reached his capacity to live and to
learn, divided into two individuals, each of which, although possessing in toto the
parents' memories, knowledge, skills, and powers, had also a renewed and increased capacity.
And since life was, there had been competition.
Competition for power.
Knowledge was desirable only insofar as it contributed to power.
Power for the individual, the group, the city.
Wars raged.
What wars?
And internecine strifes which lasted while planets came into being,
grew old and died.
And finally, to the few survivors, there came peace.
Since they could not kill each other, they combined their powers and hurled them outward.
Together, they would dominate and rule solar systems, regions, the galaxy itself, the entire
macrocosmic universe.
Amorphous amoeboid, each could assume at will any imaginable form, could call into being
members to handle any possible tool.
Nevertheless, as time went on, they used their bodies less and less.
More and more they used their minds to bring across gulfs of space and to enslave other races,
to labor under their direction.
By nature and by choice they were bound to their own planet.
Few indeed were the planets upon which their race could possibly live.
Also, it was easier to rejuvenate their own world, or to move it to a younger son,
than to enforce and to supervise the myriads of man-hours of slave labor necessary
to rebuild any planet to their needs.
Thus then they lived and ruled by proxy in every increasing number of worlds.
Although they had long since learned that their asexuality was practically unique,
that bisexual life dominated the universe,
this knowledge served only to stiffen their determination to rule,
and finally to change to their own better standards, that universe.
They were still seeking a better proxy race.
The more nearly asexual race, the better.
One race, the denizens of a planet of a variable sun, approached that idea closely.
So did the colonians, whose women had only one function in life, the production of men.
Now these creatures had learned of the matriarchs of Lyrain.
That they were physically females meant nothing.
To the Adorians, one sex was just as good, or as bad as the other.
The Lyrainians were strong, not tainted by the weaknesses which seemed to
to characterize all races believing in even near a quality of the sexes.
Lyranian science have been trying for centuries to do away with the necessity for males.
In a few more generations, with some help, that goal could be achieved, and the perfect proxy
race would have been developed.
It is not to be supposed that this story was obtained in such straightforward fashion as
it is presented here.
It was dim, murky, confused.
Cleoni never had understood it. Clarissa understood it better, but less accurately, for in the version
the Red Lensman received, one minor change was made. In it the Plurins and the Adorians were one and the
same race. She understood, however, that that actually unnamed and to her unknown race was the highest
of Boscon, and the place of the Colonians in the Bosconian scheme was plain enough.
"'I am giving you this story,' the Colonian Lensman told Cleone coldly,
"'not of my own free will, but because I must.
"'I hate you as much as you hate me.
"'What I would like to do to you, you may imagine.
"'Nevertheless, so that your race may have its chance,
"'I am to take you on a trip, and, if possible, make a lensman out of you.
"'Come with me.'
"'And urged by her jealousy of Helen, her seething ambition,
and probably, if the truth were to be known, by an Adorian mind, Cleoni went.
There is no need to dwell at length upon the horrors, the atrocities of that trip,
of which the matter of Eddie the Meteor Minor was only a very minor episode.
It will suffice to say that Cleone was very good Busconian material,
that she learned fast and passed all tests successfully.
That's all, the black lensman informed her then,
and I'm glad to see the last of you.
You'll get a message when to hop over to nine and pick up your lens.
Flit, and I hope that the first gray lensman you meet
will ram his lens down your throat and turn you inside out.
Same to you, brother, and many of them, Cleoni sneered.
Or better, when my race supplants yours as proxies of power,
I shall give myself the pleasure of doing just that to you.
"'Clarissa! Clarissa! Pay attention, please!'
The red lensman came to herself with a start.
Helen had been thinking at her, with increasing power for seconds.
The Veelein's blunt nose filled half the plate.
In minutes then, Clarissa and her party were in Kinnison's private quarters in the Dauntless.
There had been warm mental greetings.
Physical demonstrations would come later.
Worsal broke in.
"'Excuse it, Kim, but seconds count.
Better we split, don't you think?
You'll find out what the score around here is from Clarissa and take steps, and I'll chase that
Bosconian.
He's flitting, fast.
QX Lim, and the Veeleon disappeared.
You remember Helen, of course, Kim.
Kinnison bent his head, flipping a quick grin at his wife, who had spoken aloud.
The Lyran, trying to unbend, half offered her hand, but when he did not
take it. She withdrew it as
enthusiastically as she had twenty years
before. And
this is Cleone, the
wench I've been telling you about.
You knew her before.
Yeah, she hasn't changed much.
Still as unbarbered a mess as ever.
If you've got what you want, Chris, we'd better
Kimball Kinnison, I demand Cleone's
life, came Helen's vibrant
thought. She had snatched one of Clarissa's
delameters and was swinging it into line when she was caught and held as though in a vice.
Sorry, Toots, the Grey Lensman's thought was more than a little grim. Nice little girls don't
play so rough. Excuse me, Chris, for dipping into your dish. Take over. Do you really mean that, Kim?
Yes, it's your meat. Slice it as thick or as thin as you please. Even to letting her go?
Check. What else could you do? In a lifeboat. I'll even show the
the jade how to run it. Oh, Kim! Quartermaster, Kinnison, please check number 12 lifeboat and
break it out. I am loaning it to Cleone of Lyrain II. End of Chapter 21. Chapter 22.
Of Children of the Lens. This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
Chapter 22
Kit had decided long since that it was his job to scout the planet Eddor.
His alone. He had told several people that he was en route there, and in a sense he had been,
but he was not hurrying. Once he had started that job, he knew that he would have to see it
through with absolutely undisturbed attention, and there had been altogether too many other things
popping up. Now, however, his visualization showed a couple of weeks of free time, and that would be
enough. He wasn't sure whether he was grown up enough yet to do a man's job of work or not,
and mentor wouldn't tell him. This was the best way to find out. If so, QX. If not,
he would back off, wait, and try again later. The kids had wanted to go along, of course.
Come on, Kit, don't be a pig. Constance started what developed into the last violent argument
of their long lives.
"'Let's gang up on it. Think what a grand workout that would be for the unit.'
"'A-uh, Khan. Sorry, but it isn't in the cards, any more than it was the last time we discussed it.'
He began reasonably enough. "'We didn't agree to it then,' Kay cut in stormily,
and I for one am not going to agree to it now. You don't have to do it today. In fact,
later on would be better. Anyway, Kit, I'm telling you, I'm telling you,
you right now that if you go in, we all go as individuals, if not as the unit.
Act your age, K, he advised. Get conscious. This is one of the two places in the universe
that can't be worked from a distance. And by the time you could get here, I'll have the job done.
So what difference does it make whether you agree or not? I'm going in now, and I'm going in
alone. Pick that one out of your pearly teeth.
That stopped Karen cold.
They all knew that even she would not endanger the Enterprise
by staging a useless demonstration against Edor's defensive screens,
but there were other arguments.
Later he was to come to see that his sisters had some right upon their side,
but he could not see it then.
None of their ideas would hold air, he declared,
and his temper wore thinner and thinner.
No, Cam, no.
You know as well as I do that we can't all be spared
at once, either now or at any time in the near enough future.
Kay's full of pickles, and you all know it. Right now is the best time I'll ever have.
Seal it, Cat. You can't be that dumb. Taking the unit in would blow things wide open.
There isn't a chance that I can get in, even alone, without touching something off.
I alone won't be giving too much away, but the unit would be a flare-lit tip-off, and all hell would be
out for noon.
Or are you actually nitwitted enough to think that,
Alderisi to the contrary, we are ready for the grand showdown?
Hold it, all of you.
Pipe down!
He snorted finally.
Have I got to bash in your skulls to make you understand that I can't coordinate
an attack against something without even the foggiest idea of what its actual physical setup
is?
Use your brains, kids.
Please use your brains.
He finally won them over, Eve and Karen,
and while his speister covered the last leg of the flight,
he completed his analysis.
He had all the information he could get,
in fact all that was available,
and it was pitifully meager and confusingly contradictory in detail.
He knew the Elysians, each of them, personally,
and had studied, jointly and severally,
the Elysian visualizations of the ultimate foe.
He knew the Lyrenrenrenrenrenren,
mean impression of the plurin version of the story of Edor.
Plur, merely a name, a symbol which Mentor had always kept rigorously apart from any
Bosconian actuality.
Plur must be the missing link between Colonia and Edor, and he knew practically everything
about it except the two really important facts, whether or not it really was that link,
and where, within 11,000 million parsecs, it was in space.
He and sisters had done their best.
So had many librarians, who had found, not at all to his surprise,
that no scrap of information or conjecture concerning Edor or the Adorians
was to be found in any library, however comprehensive or exclusive.
Thus he had guesses, hypotheses, theories, and visualizations galore,
but none of them agreed, and not one of them was convincing.
He had no real facts whatever. Mentor had informed him, equably enough, that such a state of affairs
was inevitable because of the known power of the Adorian mind. That state, however, did not make Kit Kinnison
any too happy as he approached dread and dreaded Edor. He was in altogether too much of a dither
as to what actually to expect. As he neared the boundary of the star cluster within which Edor lay,
he cut his velocity to a crawl.
An outer screen, he knew, surrounded the whole cluster.
How many intermediate protective layers existed,
where they were, or what they were like, nobody knew.
That information was only a small part of what he had to have.
His far-flung detector web, at practically zero power,
touched the barrier without giving alarm and stopped.
His speedster stopped. Everything stopped.
Christopher Kinnison, the matrix and the key element of the unit, had tools and equipment about
which even Mentor of ERISA knew nothing in detail, about which it was hoped and believed,
the Adorians were completely in ignorance. He reached deep into the storehouse toolbox of his
mind, arranged his selections in order, and went to work. He built up his detector web, one infinitesimal
increment at a time, until he could just perceive the strong.
structure of the barrier. He made no attempt to analyze it, knowing that any fabric or structure
solid enough to perform such an operation would certainly touch off an alarm. Analysis could come
later, after he had found out whether the generator of this outer screen was a machine
or a living brain. He felt his way along the barrier, slowly, carefully. He completely outlined
one section, studying the fashion in which the joints were made and how it must be supported.
and operated.
With the utmost nicety of which he was capable,
he synchronized a probe with the almost impossibly complex structure of the
thing, and slid it along a feeder beam into the generator station.
A mechanism.
They didn't waste live Adorians then, any more than the Eurycans did, on outer defenses.
QX.
A precisely tuned blanket surrounded his speedster,
a blanket which merged imperceptibly into, and,
in effect became an integral part of the barrier itself.
The blanket thinned over half of the speedster.
The speedster crept forward.
The barrier, unchanged, unaffected, was behind the speedster.
Man and vessel were through.
Kit breathed deeply in relief and rested.
This didn't prove much, of course.
Nadrick had done practically the same thing in getting Candron,
except that the Pallanian would never be able to analyze.
or to synthesize such screens as these.
The real test would come later,
but this had been mighty good practice.
The real test came with the fifth,
the innermost screen.
The others, while of ever-increasing sensitivity,
complexity and power,
were all generated mechanically,
and hence posed problems differing only in degree
and not in kind from that of the first.
The fifth problem, however,
involving a living and highly capable brain,
differed in both degree and kind from all the others.
The Edorian would be sensitive to form and to shape, as well as to interference.
Bulges were out, unless he could do something about the Adorian,
and the speister couldn't go through a screen without making a bulge.
Furthermore, this zone had visual and electromagnetic detectors,
so spaced as not to let a microbe through.
There were fortresses, mullers, battleships,
and their attendant lesser craft.
There were projectors and mines,
and automatic torpedoes with atomic warheads and other such things.
Were these things completely dependent upon the Adorian Guardian, or not?
They were not.
The officers, colonians for the most part,
would go into action at the Guardian signal, of course.
But they would at need act without instructions.
A nice setup, a mighty hard nut to crack.
He would have to use zones of compulsion.
Nothing else would do.
Picking out the biggest fortress in the neighborhood,
with its correspondingly large field of coverage,
he insinuated his mind into that of one observing officer after another.
When he left a few minutes later,
he knew that none of those officers would initiate any action
in response to the arms which he would so soon set off.
They were alive, fully conscious, alert,
and would have resented bitterly any suggestion that they were not completely normal in every respect.
Nevertheless, whatever colors the lights flashed, whatever pictures the plates revealed,
whatever noises blared from the speakers, in their consciousnesses would be only blankness and silence.
Nor would recorder tapes reveal later what had occurred.
An instrument cannot register fluctuations when its movable member is controlled by a couple of steady fingers.
Then the Adorian. To take over his whole mind was, Kit knew, beyond his present power.
A partial zone, though, could be set up, and young Kinnison's mind had been developed specifically
to perform the theretofore impossible. Thus, the guardian, without suspecting it,
suffered an attack of partial blindness, which lasted for the fraction of a second necessary
for the speecher to flash through the screen. And there was a little bit of a second of a second necessary,
and there was no recorder to worry about.
Edorians, never sleeping and never relaxing their vigilance,
had no doubt whatever of their own capabilities
and needed no checks upon their own performances.
Christopher Kinnison, child of the lens,
was inside Edor's innermost defensive sphere.
For countless cycles of time,
the Elysians have been working toward
and looking forward to the chain of events
of which this was the first link.
Nor would he have much time here.
He would have known that even if Mentor had not so stressed the point.
As long as he did nothing, he was safe.
But as soon as he started sniffing around, he would be open to detection,
and some Adorian would climb his frame in mighty short order.
Then, blast and lock on.
He might get something, or a lot, or nothing at all.
Then, win, lose, or draw, he had to get away.
strictly under his own power against an unknown number of the most powerful and the most ruthless
entities ever to live.
The Erysian couldn't get in here to help him, and neither could the kids.
Nobody could.
It was strictly and solely up to him.
For more than a moment his spirit failed.
The odds against him were far too long.
The load was too heavy.
He didn't have half enough jets to swing it.
Just how did a guy as smart as mentor figure that he, a dumb green kid, stood a chance against
old Edor?
He was scared, scared to the core of his being, scared as he had never been before and never would be
again.
His mouth felt dry, his tongue caught knee.
His fingers shook, even as he doubled them into fists to steady them.
To the very end of his long life, he remembered the fabric of his fabric.
and the texture of that fear.
Remembered how it made him decide to turn back
before it was too late to retrace his way
as unobserved as he had come.
Well, why not?
Who would care and what matter?
The Elysians?
Nuts!
It was all their fault, sending him in half-ready.
His parents?
They wouldn't know what the score was and wouldn't care.
They would be on his side anyway, no matter what happened.
"'The kids? The kids.
"'Clono's holy claws.
"'They had tried to talk him out of coming in alone.
"'They had fought like wildcats to make him take them along.
"'He had refused.
"'Now, if he sneaked back with his tail between his legs,
"'how would they take it?
"'What would they do? What would they think?
"'Then, later, after he had loused up the big job
"'and let the Elysians and the patrol and all says,
civilization get knocked out, then what? The kids would know exactly how and why it had happened.
He couldn't offend himself, even if he tried, and he wouldn't try. Did he have any idea how
much sheer, vitriolic, corrosive contempt those four red-headed hellions would generate? Or even if
they didn't, or as a follow-up, their condescending sisterly pity would be a thousand
million times worse? And what would he think of himself?
No soap. It was out. Definitely. The Adorians could kill him only once.
QX. He drove straight downward, noting as he did so that his senses were clear, his hand steady,
his tongue normally moist. He was still scared, but he was no longer paralyzed.
Low enough, he led his every perceptive sense roam abroad, and became instantly too busy to worry
about anything.
There was an immense amount of new stuff here,
if he only could be granted time enough to get it all.
He wasn't.
In a second or two, it seemed,
his interference was detected,
and an Adorian came in to investigate.
Kit threw everything he had,
and in the brief moment before the completely surprised Denizen died,
the young Clovian learned more of the real truth of Edor
and of the whole Bosconian Empire
than all the Elysians had ever found,
found out. In that one flash of ultimately intimate fusion, he knew a Dorian history, practically
in toto. He knew the enemy's culture. He knew how they behaved and why. He knew their ideals
and their ideologies. He knew a great deal about their organization, their systems of offense
and of defense. He knew their strengths, and more important, their weaknesses. He knew exactly how,
if civilization were to triumph at all, its victory must be achieved.
This seems, or rather it is, incredible. It is, however, simple truth.
Under such stresses as those, an Adorian mind can yield, and the mind of such a one as
Christopher Kinnison can absorb an incredible amount of knowledge in an incredibly brief
interval of time. Kit, already seated at his controls, cut in his every course of
thought screen. They would help a little in what was coming, but not much. No mechanical screen
then known to civilization could block third-level thought. It kicked in full drive toward the
one small area in which he and his speister would not encounter either beams or bombs,
the fortress whose observers would not perceive that anything was amiss. He did not fear physical
pursuit since his speister was the fastest thing in space. For a second or so,
it was not so bad.
Another Edorian came in, suspicious and on guard.
Kit blasted him down, learning still more in the process,
but he could not prevent him from radiating a frantic and highly revealing call for help.
And although the other Edorians could scarcely realize
that such an astonishing thing as a physical invasion had actually happened,
that fact neither slowed them down nor made their anger less violent.
When Kit flashed past his friend,
friendly fortress, he was taking about all that he could handle, and more and more
Adorians were piling on.
At the fourth screen it was worse.
At the third, he reached what he was sure was his absolute ceiling.
Nevertheless, from some hitherto unsuspected profundity of his being, he managed to draw
enough reserve force to endure that hellish punishment for a little while longer.
Hang on, Kit, hang on.
Only two more screens to go.
Maybe only one.
Maybe less.
Living Edorian brains, and not mechanical generators,
are now handling all the screens, of course.
But if Mentor's visualization is worth a tinker's damn,
he must have had that first screen knocked down by this time
and must be working on the second.
Hang on, Kit, and keep on slugging.
And grimly, doggedly, toward the end, sheerly desperately,
Christopher Kinnison, eldest child of the lens, hung on and slugged.
End of Chapter 22.
Chapter 23 of Children of the Lens.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
Chapter 23
If the historian has succeeded in his attempt to describe the characters and abilities
concerned, it is not necessary to enlarge upon what Kit went through in escaping
Edor.
If he has not succeeded,
enlargement would be useless.
Therefore, it is enough to say that
the young lensman,
by dint of calling up and putting out everything he had,
hung on long enough and slugged his way through.
Mentor's visualization had been sound.
The Adorian Guardians had scarcely taken over the first screen
when it was overwhelmed by a tremendous wave of ERISian thought.
It is to be remembered, however,
that this was the second time that the masked mind
of ERISIA had been thrown against Edor's defenses, and the Bosconians had learned much
during the intervening years from their exhaustive analyses of the offensive and defensive
techniques of that earlier conflict. Thus, the Elysian drive was practically stopped at the
second zone of defense as Kidd approached it. The screen was wavering, shifting, yielding stubbornly
wherever it must, and springing back into place whenever it could. Under a tremendous concentration
of ERISian force, the screen weakened in a limited area directly ahead of the hurtling speedster.
A few beams lashed out aimlessly, uselessly. If the Adorians could not hold their main screen's
proof against the power of the Elysian attack, how could they protect such minor things as gunner's
minds? The little ship flashed through the weakened barrier and into the center of a sphere of
impenetrable, impermeable ERISian thought. At the shock of the sudden ending of his terrific
battle, the instantaneous transition from supreme to zero effort, Kit fainted in his control
chair. He lay slumped, inert, in a stupor which changed gradually into a deep and natural sleep.
And as the sleeping man in his inertial as speedster traversed space at full touring blast,
that peculiar sphere of force still enveloped and still protected him.
Kit finally began to come too. His first foggy thought was that he was hungry,
Then, wide awake and remembering, he grabbed his levers.
"'Rest quietly and eat your fill,' a grave resonant pseudo-voice assured him.
"'Everything's exactly as it should be.
"'Hi, meant. Well, well, if it isn't my old chum eucaniter.
"'Hi, young fellow. What's the good word?
"'And what's the big idea of letting, or making me sleep for a week when there's work to do?'
"'You're part of the work, at least for the immediate pre-night.
present is done, and let me say, very well done.
Thanks, but...
Kit broke off, flushing darkly.
Do not reproach yourself, nor us.
Consider please and recite the manufacture of a fine tool of ultimate quality.
The correct alloy?
Hot-working, perhaps cold, too?
Forging, heating, quenching, drawing?
Enough.
Think you that the steel, if sentient, would enjoy those treatments?
While you did not enjoy them, you are able to appreciate their necessity.
You are now a finished tool, forged, and tempered.
Oh, you may have something there at that.
But as to ultimate quality, don't make me laugh.
There was no nuance of merriment in Kit's thought.
You can't square that with cowardice.
Nor is there need.
The term ultimate was used advisedly, and still stands.
It does not mean or imply, however, a state of perfection, since that condition is unattainable.
I am not advising you to try to forget, nor am I attempting to force forgetfulness upon you,
since your mind cannot now be coerced by any force presently existing.
Be assured that nothing that occurred should irk you, for the simple truth is that
although stressed as no other mind has ever before been stressed, you did not yield. Instead,
you secured and retained information which we of ERISA have never been able to obtain.
Information which will, in fact, be the means of preserving your civilization.
I can't believe—that is, it doesn't seem—' Kit, knowing that he was thinking muddily and
foolishly, paused and pulled himself together.
Overwhelming, almost paralyzing as that information was, it must be true.
It was true.
Yes, it is the truth.
While we of ERISA have at various times made ambiguous statements to lead certain
lendsmen and others to arrive at erroneous conclusions, you know that we do not lie.
Yes, I know that.
Kip plumbed the Elysian's mind.
It sort of knocks me out of my orbit.
That's an awfully big bite to swallow at one gulp, you know.
It is.
That is one reason I am here, to convince you of the truth, which you would not otherwise
believe fully.
Also, to see to it that your rest, without which you might have been hurt, was not disturbed,
as well as to make sure that you were not permanently damaged by the Adorians.
I wasn't.
At least I don't think so, was I?
You were not.
"'Good.'
"'I was wondering.
"'Mentor will be tied up for quite a while, of course,
"'so I'll ask you.
"'They must have got a sort of pattern of me,
"'in spite of all I could do,
"'and they'll be camping on my trail from now on.
"'So I suppose I'll have to keep a solid block up all the time?'
"'They will not, Christopher, and you need not.
"'Guided by those whom you knew as mentor,
"'I myself, as a guardian, am to see to that.
But time presses.
I must rejoin my fellows.
One more question first.
You've been trying to sell me a bill of goods that I would like to buy.
But Euconiter, the kids will know that I showed a streak of yellow a meter wide.
What will they think?
Is that all?
Euconider's thought was almost a laugh.
They will make that eminently plain in a moment.
The Erysian's presence vanished, as did it.
his fear of force, and four clamoring thoughts came jamming in.
"'Oh, Kit, we're so glad. We tried to help, but they wouldn't let us. They smacked us down.
Honestly, Kit, oh, if we'd only been in there, too!'
"'Hold it, everybody. Jet back.'
This was con, Kit knew, but an entirely new con. Scan him, Cam, as you never scanned anything
before. If they burned out even one cell of his mind, I'm
going over there right now and kick every one of Mentor's teeth out.
And listen, Kit. This was an equally strange Catherine, blazing with fury, and yet suffusing
his mind with a more than sisterly tenderness, a surpassing richness. If we had had the faintest
idea of what they were doing to you, all the Orsians and all the Adorians and all the devils
and all the hells of the macroscopic universe couldn't have kept us away. You must believe that,
kit, or can you quite?
Of course, sis.
You don't have to prove an axiom.
Seal it, all of you.
Your swell people, absolute tops.
But I—you—that is—
He broke off and marshalled his thoughts.
He knew that they knew in every minute particular everything that had occurred.
Yet to a girl, they thought that he was wonderful.
Their common thought was that they should have been in there, too.
taking what he took, giving what he gave.
What I don't get is that you are trying to blame yourselves for what happened to me,
when you were on the dead center of the beam all the time.
You couldn't have been in there, kids.
It would have blown the whole works higher than up.
You knew that then, and you know it even better now.
You also know that I flew the yellow flag.
Didn't that even register?
Oh, that.
Practically identical thoughts of complete dismissal came in unison, and Karen followed through.
The only thing about that is that since you knew what to expect, we marvel that you ever
managed to go in at all. No one else could have possibly.
Or once in, and seeing what was really there, that you didn't flit right out again.
Believe me, brother of mine, you qualify.
Kit choked.
This was too much, but it made him feel good all over.
These kids, the universe is best.
As he thought, a partial block came unconsciously into being.
For not one of those gorgeous, those utterly splendid creatures
suspected even now that which he so surely knew,
that each one of them was very shortly to be wrought and tempered
as he himself had been.
At worse, he would have to stand aside and why,
them one by one walk into it.
Was there anything he could do to ward off,
or even to soften what was coming to them?
There was not.
With his present power, he could step in, of course.
At what awful cost to civilization,
only he, Christopher Kinnison, of all civilization, really knew.
No, that was out, definitely.
He could come in afterwards to ease their hurts,
as each had come to him, but that was all.
And there was a difference.
They had known about it in advance.
It was tough.
Could he do anything?
He could not.
And on clammy noisome Edor,
the Erysian attackers, having been beat off and normality restored,
a meeting of the highest command was held.
No two of those entities were alike in form.
Some were changing from one horrible shape into another.
All were starkly, indescribably mind.
all were concentrating upon the problem which had been so suddenly thrust upon them.
Each of them thought at and with each of the others.
To do justice to the complexity or the cogency of that maze of intertwined thoughts is impossible.
The best that can be done is to pick out a high point here and there.
This explains the star A-star whom the plurins and the colonians so fear,
and the failure of our operator on Thrayo and its fault.
Also, our recent quite serious reverses.
Those stupid, those utterly brainless underlings!
We should have been called in at the start!
Could you analyze or even perceive its pattern, save in small part?
No. Nor could I.
An astounding and highly revealing circumstance.
Anurisian, or rather an Elysian development, certainly.
No other entity of civilization could possibly do what was done,
done here, nor could any Elysian, as we know or deduce them.
They have developed something very recently which we have not visualized.
Kinnison's son, bah, think they to deceive us by the old device of energizing a form of
ordinary flesh?
Kinnison, his son, Nadrick, Wursell, Tragansi, what matters it?
or, as we now know, the completely imaginary star a star.
We must revise our thinking, an authoritatively composite mind decided.
We must revise our theory and our plan.
It may be possible that this new development will necessitate immediate instead of later action.
If we had had a competent race of proxies, none of this would have happened,
as we would have been kept informed.
To correct a situation which may become grave,
as well as to acquire fullest and latest information,
we must attend the conference which is now being held on Plur.
They did so.
With no perceptible lapse of time or mode of transit,
the Adorian mind was in an assembly room upon that now-flooded world.
Resembling Nevians as much as any other race with which man is familiar,
the now amphibious plurins lulled upon padded benches and argued heatedly.
They were discussing, upon a lower level, much of the same material which the
Adorians have been considering so shortly before.
Star A. Star.
Kinnison had been captured easily enough, but had, almost immediately, escaped from an escape-proof
trap.
Another trap was set, but would it take him?
Would it hold him if it did?
Kinnison was, must be, star a star.
No, he could not be.
There had been too many unrelated and simultaneous occurrences.
Kinnison, Nadrick, Clarissa, Worssel, Trigonsi, even Kinnison's young son,
had all shown intermittent flashes of inexplicable power.
Kinnison, most of all.
It was a fact worthy of note that the beginning of the long series of Bosconian setbacks
coincided with Kinnison's appearance among the lensman.
The situation was bad, not irreparable by any means, but grave.
The fault lay with the Ike, and perhaps with Candron of Onmo.
Such stupidity, such incompetence.
Those lower echelon operators should have had brains enough
to have reported the matter to plure before the situation got completely out of hand.
But they didn't, hence this mess.
None of them, however, expressed a thought that the present situation was already one with
which they themselves could not cope, nor suggested that it be referred to Edor before
it should become too hot for even the masters to handle.
Fools!
Imbeciles!
We, the masters, although through no foresight or design of yours, are already here.
Know now that you have been and still are yourselves guilty of the same conduct which you
are so violently condemning in others.
Neither Edorians nor Plurins realized that that deficiency was inherent in the Bosconian
scheme of things, or that it stemmed from the organization's very top.
Shear stupidity! Gross overconfidence!
Those are the reasons for our recent reverses.
But masters, a Plurin argued, now that we have taken over, we are winning steadily.
Civilization is rapidly going to pieces.
In a few more years, we will have smashed it flat.
That is precisely what they wish you to think.
They have been and are playing for time.
Your bungling and mismanagement have already given them sufficient time
to develop an object or an entity able to penetrate our screens
so that Edor suffered the disgrace of an actual physical invasion.
It was brief, to be sure,
and unsuccessful, but it was an invasion nonetheless, the first in our long history.
But, masters, silence! We are not here to indulge in recriminations, but to determine facts.
Since you do not know Edor's location in space, it is a certainty that you did not,
either willingly or otherwise, furnish that information. That in turn makes it clear
who basically the invader was.
"'Star A Star?' a star. A wave of question swept the group.
"'One name serves as well as another for what is almost certainly an ERISian entity or device.
"'It is enough for you to know that it is something with which your masked minds would be completely unable to deal.
"'To the best of your knowledge, have you been invaded either physically or mentally?'
"'We have not masters, and it is unbelievable that, is it so?'
The master sneered.
Neither our screens, nor our Adorian guardsman, gave any alarm.
We learned of the Erysian's presence only when he attempted to probe our very minds,
at Edore's very surface.
Are your screens and minds then so much better than ours?
We erred, masters. We abase ourselves.
What do you wish us to do?
That is better.
You will be informed, as soon as a few last men
details have been worked out. Although nothing is established by the fact that you know of no
occurrences here on Plur, the probability is that you are still unknown and unsuspected,
since it is unthinkable that the enemy's minds are in any real sense as strong as ours.
Nevertheless, one of us is now taking over control of the trap which you set for Kinnison
in the belief that he is star A-star. Starr? Belief, masters? It is certain that he is star
A. Star. In essence, yes. In exactness, no. Kinison is, in all probability, merely a puppet
through whom an Elysian works at times. If you take Kinison in that trap, however, the entity you call
star A. Star will assuredly kill you all. But, masters! Again, fools, silence! The thought dripped
vitriol. Remember how easily Kinnison escaped from you. It was a little. It was a
was the supremely clever move of not following through and destroying you then that obscured the
truth for years. That gave them all this additional time. As we have said, you are completely
powerless against the one you call star A-star. Against any lesser force, however, and the probability
is exceedingly great that only such forces, if any, will be sent against you, you should be
able to win. Are you ready? We are ready, masters.
At last the plurans were upon familiar ground.
Since ordinary weapons will be useless against us,
they will not attempt to use them,
especially since they have developed three extraordinary
and supposedly irresistible weapons of attack.
First, projectiles composed of negative matter,
particularly those of planetary antimass.
Second, loose planets driven inertialists,
but inerted at the point at which their intrinsic velocity,
render collision unavoidable.
Third and worst, the sunbeam.
These gave us some trouble, particularly the last,
but the problems were solved,
and if any one of the three, or all of them are used against us,
disaster for the Galactic Patrol is assured.
Nor did we stop there.
Our psychologists, working with our engineers,
after having analyzed exhaustively the capabilities
of the so-called second-stage lensman,
developed countermeasures against every super weapon
which they will be able to develop during the next century.
Such as...
The masters were unimpressed.
The most probable one is an extension of the sunbeam principle
to operate from a distant sun,
or preferably a nova.
We are now installing fields and grids
by the use of which we, not the patrol, will direct that beam.
Interesting, if true, spread in our minds the details of all that you have foreseen and the fashions in which you have safeguarded yourselves.
It was a long operation, even at the speed of thought. At its end, Theodorians were unconvinced,
skeptical, and pessimistic. We can visualize several other things which the forces of civilization
may be able to develop well within the century. The mastermind said,
coldly. We will assemble data concerning a few of them for your study. In the meantime,
hold yourselves in readiness to act, as we shall issue final orders very shortly.
Yes, masters. And the Adorians went back to their home planet as effortlessly as they had left it.
There they concluded their conference. It is clear that Kinnison will enter that trap. He cannot
do otherwise. Kinnison's protector, whoever or whatever he or it may be, may or may not
enter it with him. It may or may not be taken with him. Whether or not the new Erysian figment is taken,
Kimball Kinnison must die. He is the very keystone of the Galactic Patrol. At his death,
as we will advertise it to have come about, the patrol will fall apart. The Elysians,
themselves unknown, will be forced to try to rebuild it around another puppet.
But neither his son, nor any other man, will ever be able to take Kinnison's place
in the esteem of the hero-worshipping, undisciplined mob, which is civilization.
Hence the importance of your project.
You personally will supervise the operation of the trap.
You personally will kill him.
With one exception, I agree with everything says,
I am not at all certain that death is the answer.
One way or another, however, I shall deal effectively with Kinnison.
Deal with? We said kill.
I heard you. I still say that mere death may not be adequate.
I shall consider the matter at length, and shall submit in due course my conclusions
and recommendations for your consideration and approval.
Although none of the Adorians knew it, their pessimism in regard to the ability of the plurans
to defend their planet against the assaults of second-stage lensman was even then being justified.
Kimball Kinnison, after pacing the floor for hours, called his son.
Ket, I've been working on a thing for months, and I don't know whether I've got a workable solution
at last or not. It may depend entirely on you. Before I go into it, though,
I take it that you check me in saying that when we find Baskonius' top planet,
we're going to have to blow it out of the ether, and that nothing that we ever have used before will work?
Check on both, Kit thought soberly for minutes.
More, it will have to be practically instantaneous, as well as complete,
like the negaboms or the sunbeam, but a lot faster.
My thought exactly.
I've got something, I think, but nobody except old Carty,
and mentor of ERISA, hold it, Dad, while I do a bit of spying and put out some coverage.
QX, go ahead.
Nobody, except those two, knew anything about the mathematics involved.
Even Sir Austin knew only enough to be able to understand mentor's directions.
He didn't do any of the deep stuff himself.
Nobody in the present conference of science could even begin to handle it.
It's that foreign space.
You know, that we call the end.
space, where that hyperspacial tube dumped us that time.
You've been doing a lot of work with some of the Elysians on that sort of stuff.
Could you get them to help you compute a tube between Lyrain and there,
so that Thorndyke and some of his boys and I could go there and get back?
Hmm.
Let me think a second.
Yes, I can.
When do you need it?
Today, or even yesterday.
Too fast.
It'll tell you.
take a couple of days, but it'll be ready for you long before you can get your ship ready
and get your gang and the stuff for your gadget aboard her. That won't take so long, son.
Same ship we rode before. She's still in commission, you know. Space Laboratory 12,
her name is now. Special generators, tools, instruments, everything. We'll be ready in two days.
They were, and Kitz smiled as he greeted Vice-Admiral LeVern Thorndyke, principal technician,
and the other surviving members of his father's original crew.
"'What a tonnage of brass!' Kit said to Kim later.
"'Heaviest load I ever saw on one ship.
One sure thing, though, they earned it.
You must have been able to pick men, too, in those days.'
"'What do you mean those days, you disrespectful young ape?
I can still pick men, son.'
Kim grinned back at Kit, but sobered quickly.
There's more to this than meets the eye.
They went through the strain once and know what it means.
They can take it, and just about all of them will come back.
With a crew of kids, 20% would be a high estimate.
As soon as the vessel passed system limits, Kit got another surprise.
Even though those men were studded with brass and were, by a boy standard, old,
they were not passengers.
In their old dauntless and well away from port,
they gleefully threw off their full-dress uniforms.
Each donned the clothing of his status of twenty-odd years back and went to work.
The members of the regular crew, young as all regular space crewmen are,
did not know at first whether they liked the idea of working watch and watch
with such heavy brass or not, but they soon found out that they did.
Those men were men.
It is an iron-clad rule of space, however, that operating pilots must be young.
Master pilot Henry Henderson cursed that ruling so furiously, even while he watched with a proud,
if somewhat jaundiced eye, the smooth performance of his son Henry at his own old board.
They approached their destination, cut the jets, felt for the vortex, found it, cut in the special
generators.
Then, as the fields of the ship reacted against those of the tube,
every man aboard felt a malaise to which no being has ever become accustomed.
Most men become immune rather quickly to sea-sickness, to air-sickness, and even to space-sickness.
Interdimensional acceleration, however, is something else.
It is different.
Just how different cannot be explained to anyone who has never experienced it.
The almost unbearable acceleration ceased.
They were in the tube.
Every plate showed blank.
Everywhere there was the same drab and featureless gray.
There was neither light nor darkness.
There was simply, and indescribably, nothing whatever, not even empty space.
Kit threw a switch.
There was a wrenching, twisting shock, followed by a deceleration exactly as sickening
as the acceleration had been.
It ceased.
They were in that enigmatic enth space, which each of the older men remembered so well,
in which so many of their natural laws did not hold.
Time still raced, stopped, or ran backward, seemingly at whim.
Inert bodies had intrinsic velocities far above that of light, and so on.
Each of those men, about to be marooned of his own choice in this utterly hostile environment,
drew a deep breath and squared his shoulders as he prepared to disembark.
"'That's computation, Kit,' Kinnison exclaimed after one glance into a plate.
"'That's the same planet we worked on before, right there. All our machines and stuff untouched.
If you'd figured it any closer, it'd have been a collision course.
Are you dead sure, Kit, that everything's all set?'
"'Dead, sure, Dad, in full duplicate and Thorndy can have.
Anderson both know the board.
QX.
Well, fellows, I'd like to stay here with you, and so would Kit,
but we've got chores to do.
I don't have to tell you to be careful, but I'm going to anyway.
Be careful.
And as soon as you get done, come back home just as fast as Clona will let you.
Clear ether, fellows.
Clear ether, Kim.
Lensman father and lensman's son bordered their speech-ter,
and left. They traversed the tube and emerged into normal space all without a word.
Kit, the older man ground out finally. This gives me the collie-wobblies, no less.
Suppose some of them, or all of them, get killed out there. Is it worth it? I know it's my own
idea, but will we need it badly enough to take the chance? We will, Dad. Mentor says that we will.
And that was that.
End of Chapter 23.
Chapter 24.
Of Children of the Lens.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
Chapter 24.
Kit had had to get back to normal space as soon as possible,
in order to be available in case of need.
He wanted to get back in time to help his sisters pull themselves together.
Think as he would.
He could find no flaw in any one of them.
but he knew that mentor would find something or other the matter with each of them.
Not a weakness in any ordinary sense, but a strength which was not the ultimate.
Kinnison had had to get back because his business was really pressing.
He had called a conference of all the second-stage lensman and his children,
a conference which, bizarrely enough, was to be held in person and not via lens.
Not strictly necessary, of course.
The Grey Lensman half apologized to his son, as their speester near the point of rendezvous with the Dauntless.
I still think that it's a good idea, though, especially since we were all so close to Lyrain anyway.
So do I. It's been a mighty long time since we were all together.
Everybody's there now except Nadrick. He'll board about the same time we do.
They boarded. Spacehounds both. They saw to it that their speechster was dulled.
dog down subtly into her chocks before they went to the main saloon.
"'Hi, mums! Still stopping traffic at all intersections, I see!'
Kit lowered his mother's feet to the floor and attempted the physically impossible feat
of embracing all four of his sisters at once.
By common consent, the five used only their eyes. Nothing showed. Nevertheless, the girls
blushed vividly and Kit's face twisted into a dry, wry grin.
It was good for what ailed us, though, at that, I guess.
Kit did not seem to be at all positive.
Mentor, the lug, told me no less than six times that I had arrived,
or at least made statements which I interpreted as meaning that.
And you canider just told me that I was a finished tool, whatever that means.
Personally, I think that they were sitting back and wondering
how long it was going to take us to realize that we never could be half as
good as we used to think we were, suppose?
Something like that, probably.
We've shivered more than once,
wondering whether we are really finished products yet or not.
We've learned, I hope.
Karen, hard as she was, did shiver physically.
If we aren't, it will be...
Pst, Dad's starting the meeting.
So, settle down all of you, and we'll get going.
What a group!
Tregonzi of Rigel four,
stolid, solid, blocky, immobile,
looking as little as possible
like one of the profoundest thinkers
civilization had ever produced,
did not move.
Worsal, the ultra-sensitive,
yet utterly implacable Valentian,
curled out three or four eyes
and looked on languidly,
while Constance kicked a few coils of his tail
onto a comfortable chaise-long,
reclined unconcernedly in the seat thus made,
and lighted an alsaken-a-sacanice.
cigarette. Clarissa Kinnison, radiant in her grays and looking scarcely older than her
daughters, sat beside Catherine, each with an arm around the other. Karen and Camilla, neither of whom
could ordinarily be described by the adjective Cuddlesome, were on a Davenport with Kit,
snuggling as close to him as they could get. And in the farthest corner, the heavily armored,
heavily insulated spacesuit, which contained Nadrick of Palane Seven,
chilled the atmosphere for yards around.
QX, Kinnison began.
We'll take Nadrick first, since he isn't any too happy here, and let him flit.
He'll keep in touch from outside after he leaves.
Report, please, Nadrick.
I have explored Lyrain Nine thoroughly.
Nadrick made the statement and paused.
When he used such a thought at all, it meant much.
When he emphasized it, which no one.
and there had ever before known him to do, it meant that he had examined the planet
practically atom by atom.
There was no life of the level of intelligence in which we are interested to be found
on, beneath, or above its surface. I could find no evidence that such life has ever been
there, either as permanent dwellers or as occasional visitors.
When Nadrick settles anything as definitely as that, it stays settled.
Kinnison remarked as soon as the Palanian had like to be.
I'll report next.
You all know what I did about colonia and so on.
The only significant fact I have been able to find,
the only lead to the Bosconian higher-ups,
is that black-lensman Malasnikov got his lens on Lyrain Nine.
There were no traces of mental surgery.
I can see two and only two alternatives.
Either there was mental surgery which I could not detect,
or there were visitors to Lyraine Nine who left
no traces of their visits.
More reports may enable us to decide.
Worsel?
The second-stage lensman reported in turn.
Each had uncovered leads to Lyrain Nine,
but Worsel and Tragancy,
who had also studied that planet with care,
agreed with Nadrick that there was nothing to be found there.
Kit?
Kett? Kiddison asked then.
How about you and the girls?
We believe that Lyrene Nine was visited by beings
having sufficient power of mind to leave no traces whatever as to who they were or where they
came from. We also believe that there was no surgery, but an infinitely finer kind of work,
an indetectable subconscious compulsion done on the minds of the black lensman and others
who came into physical contact with the Bosconians. These opinions are based upon experiences
which we five have had and upon deductions we have made. If we are right,
Lyrain is actually, as well as apparently, a dead end and should be abandoned.
Furthermore, we believe that the black lensman have not been and cannot become important.
The coordinator was surprised, but after Kid and his sisters had detailed their findings and
their deductions, he turned to the Rigelian.
What next, then, Tragansi?
After Lyrene 9, it seems to me that the two most promising subjects are the
those entities who think upon such a high band, and the phenomenon which has been called the hell-hole
in space. Of the two, I preferred the first until Camilla's researchers showed that the available
data could not be reconciled with the postulate that the life-forms of her reconstruction
were identical with those reported to you as coordinator. This data, however, was scanty and casual.
While we are here, therefore, I suggest that we review this matter,
much more carefully, in the hope that additional information will enable us to come to a definite
conclusion one way or the other. Since it was her research, Camilla will lead.
First, a question, Camilla began. Imagine a sun so variable that it periodically covers
practically the entire possible range. It has a planet whose atmosphere, liquid, and distance
are such that its surface temperature varies from approximately 200 degrees centigrade in mid-summer
to about five degrees absolute in midwinter. In the spring, its surface is almost completely
submerged. There are terrible winds and storms in the spring, summer, and fall, but the fall storms
are the worst. Has anyone here ever heard of such a planet having an intelligent life-form
able to maintain a continuing existence through such varied environments by radical changes in its physical body?
A silence ensued, which Nadrig finally broke.
I know of two such planets. Near Pelaine there is an extremely variable sun,
two of whose planets support life. All of the higher life forms, the highest of which are quite
intelligent, undergo regular and radical changes, not only a form,
but of organization.
Thanks, Nadrick.
That will perhaps make my story believable.
From the thoughts of one of the entities in question,
I reconstructed such a solar system.
More, that entity himself belonged to just such a race.
It was such a nice reconstruction,
Camilla went on plaintively,
and it fitted all those other life-forms so beautifully,
especially Cat's four cycle periods,
And to prove it, Cat, put up your block now.
You never told anybody the classification of your pet to more than seven places,
did you, or even thought about it.
No, Catherine's mind, since the moment of warning, had been unreadable.
Take the seven.
The next three were S-T-R.
Check?
Check.
But that makes it solid, sis, Kit exclaimed.
That's what I thought for a minute, that we had boss
gone at last. However, when Trigonsi and I first felt X, long before you met yours, Cat,
his classification was T-U-U-U-V. That would fit in well enough as a spring-form,
with cats as the summer form. What ruins it, though, is that when he killed himself,
just a little while ago, and long after a summer form could possibly exist, to say nothing
of a spring-form, his classification was still T-U-U-V.
To ten places, it was T-U-U-U-V-W-Y-X-X-W-T.
Well, go on, Kinnison suggested.
What do you make of it?
The obvious explanation is that one or all of those entities were planted or primed,
not specifically for us, probably, since we are relatively unknown, but for any competent observer.
If so, they don't mean a thing.
Camilla was not now overestimating her own powers or underestimating those of Baskonia.
There are several others, less obvious, leading to the same conclusion.
Traganzi is not ready to believe any of them, however, and neither am I.
Assuming that our data was not biased, we must also account for the fact that the locations and space were,
just a minute, Cam, before we leave the classifications.
Constance interrupted.
I'm guarded. What was my friends to ten places?
V-W-Z-Y-T-X-S-Y-Z-Y, Camilla replied unhesitatingly.
Right, and I don't believe that was planted either. So there—let me in a second, Kit demanded.
I didn't know that you were on that band at all. I got that RTSL thing even before I graduated.
Huh? What RTSL? Cam broke in sharply.
"'My fault,' Kinnison put in then.
"'Skipped my mind entirely when she asked me for the dope.
"'None of us thought any of this stuff important until just now, you know.
"'Tell her, Kit.'
"'Kit repeated his story, concluding,
"'Beyon four places was pretty dim,
"'but Q. P. arms and legs, Dillian, A, would fit,
"'and so would an R-type hide.
"'Both cats and mine, then, could very well have been summer forms,
one of their years apart.
The thing I felt was on its own planet,
and it died there,
and credits to Millows,
the thought I got wasn't primed.
And the location,
Break-down Kit,
Camilla instructed,
Let's settle this thing of timing first.
I've got a theory,
but I want some ideas from the rest of you.
Maybe something like this?
Clarissa asked, after a few minutes of silence.
In many forms which metamorphose completely,
the change depends upon temperature.
No change takes place as long as the temperature remains the same.
Your T-U-U-U-V could have been flitting around in a spaceship at constant temperature.
Could this apply here, Cam, do you think?
Could it?
Kinnison exclaimed.
That's it, Chris, sure.
That was my theory, Camilla said, still dubiously,
but there is no proof that it applies.
Nadrick, do you know whether or not it applies to your neighbors?
Unfortunately, I do not.
But I can find out, by experiment if necessary.
It might be a good idea, Kitteson suggested.
Go on, Kamm.
Assuming its truth, there is still left the problem of location,
which Kit has just made infinitely worse than it was before.
Kahn's and mine were so indefinite that they might possibly have been
reconciled with cats' precisely known coordinates, but yours, Kit, is almost as definite as cats,
and cannot possibly be made to agree with it. After all, you know, there are many planets
people by races humanoid to ten places, and if there are four different races, none of them
can be the one we want. I don't believe it, Kit argued. Not that I think on that peculiar
your band. I'm sure enough of my dope so that I want to cross-question cat on hers.
QX Cat?
Shirley Kit? Any questions you like? Those minds both had plenty of jets. How do you know that he was
telling you the truth? Did you drive in to sea? Are you sure even that you saw his real shape?
Certainly I'm sure of his shape, Catherine snapped. If there had been any zones of compulsion around,
I would have known it and got suspicious right then.
Maybe and maybe not, Kit disagreed.
That might depend, you know, on how good the guy was who was putting out the zone.
Nuts! Catherine snorted inelegantly.
But as to his telling the truth about his home planet, I'm not sure of that, no.
I didn't check his channels.
I was thinking about other things then.
The Five knew that she had just left Mentor.
But why should he want to lie about a thing like that?
He would have, though, at that.
Good Bosconian technique.
Sure.
In your official capacity of coordinator, Dad, what do you think?
The probability is that all those four forms of life belong on one planet.
Your location must be wrong, Cat.
He gave you the wrong galaxy, even.
Too close to Trenko, too.
Tregonzi and I both know that region like a book, and no such variable is anywhere near there.
We've got to find out all about that planet as soon as possible.
Worsal, will you please get the charts of Kitt's region?
Kit, will you check with the planetographers of Klovia as to the variable stars anywhere near where you want them,
and how many planets they've got?
I'll call tell us.
The charts were studied, and in due time the reports of the planetographers were received.
The Clovian scientists reported that there were four long-period variables in the designated
volume of space, gave the spatial coordinates and catalog numbers of each, and all available
data concerning their planets. The Tullorians reported only three in considerably less detail,
but they had named each sun and each planet.
Which one did they leave out? Kinnison wondered audibly as he fitted the two transparencies
together. This one they call Artanin, no planets. Dunley, two planets, ABAB and Dunster. Descriptions
and so on. Rontief, one planet that they don't know anything about except the name they have given it.
Silly-sounding names. Suppose they assemble them by grabbing letters at random? Plur. Plur! At last!
Only their instantaneous speed of reaction enabled the five to converse.
seal from the linkage the shrieked thought of what Plur really meant.
After a flashing exchange of thought, Kitt smoothly took charge of the conference.
The planet Plur should be investigated first, I think.
He resumed communication with the group as though his attention had not wavered.
It is the planet nearest the most probable point of origin of that thought burst.
Also, the period of the variable and the planet's distance
seem to fit our observations and deductions better than any of the others.
Any arguments?
No arguments.
They all agreed.
Kinnison, however, demanded action, direct and fast.
We'll investigate it, he exclaimed,
with the dauntless, the Z-9-Z and Grand Fleet,
and with our very special knick-knack as an ace up our sleeve.
"'Just a minute, Dad,' Kit protested.
If, as some of this material seems to indicate, the plurrence actually are the top of the Bosconian culture,
even that array may not be enough.
You may be right. Probably are.
What then?
What do you say, Traganzi?
Fleet action, yes, the Rigelian agreed.
Also, as you implied, but did not clearly state, independent but correlated action by us five-second-stage lensmen with our various skills.
I would suggest, however, that your children be put first, very definitely first, in command.
We object. We haven't got jets enough to. Overruled. Kinnison did not have to think to make that
decision. He knew. Any other objections? Approved. I'll call Cliff Maitland right now, then,
and get things going. That call, however, was never sent. For at that moment, the mind of mentor
of ERISA flooded the group.
Children, attend.
This intrusion is necessary because a matter has come up
which will permit of no delay.
Bosconia is now launching the attack
which has been in preparation for over 20 years.
Ariscia is to be the first point of attack.
Kinnison, Traganzi, Worsal, and Nadrick
will take immediate steps to assemble the grand fleet
of the Galactic Patrol in defense.
I will confer at length with the younger
Kinnisans.
The Adorians, as you know,
Mentor went on to the children of the lens,
believe primarily in the efficacy of physical,
material force.
While they possess minds of real power,
they use them principally as tools
in the development of more and ever more efficient
mechanical devices.
We of ERISA, on the other hand,
believe in the superiority of the mind.
A fully competent mind would have no need
of material devices, since it could control all material substance directly.
While we have made some progress toward that end, and you will make more in the cycles to come,
civilization is, and for some time will be, dependent upon physical things.
Hence the Galactic Patrol and its Grand Fleet.
The Edorians, after ages of effort, have succeeded in inventing a mechanical generator
able to block our most penetrant thoughts.
They believe implicitly that their vessels, so protected,
will be able to destroy our planet.
They may believe that the destruction of our planet
would so weaken us that they would be able to destroy us.
It is assumed that you children have deduced
that neither we nor the Adorians can be slain by physical force.
Yes, the clincher being that no suggestion was made
about giving Edor a planet from Enth space.
We Elysians, during an equally long time,
have been aiding nature in the development of minds much abler than our own.
While those minds will not attain their full powers
until after many years of work and study,
we believe that you will be able, immature as you are,
to use the patrol and its resources to defend ERISA
and to destroy the Bosconian fleet.
That we cannot do it ourselves is important.
implicit in what I have said.
But that means, this is the big show, then, that you have been hinting at so long?
Far from it!
An important engagement, of course, but only preliminary to the real test, which will come
when we invade Edor.
Do you agree with us that if ERISA were to be destroyed now, it would be difficult to
repair the damage done to the morale of the Galactic Patrol?
Difficult? It would be impossible. Not necessarily. We have considered the matter at length,
however, and have decided that a Bosconian success at this time would not be for the good of civilization.
I'll say it wouldn't. That's a masterpiece of understatement if there ever was one.
Also, a successful defense of ERISA would be about the best thing that the patrol could possibly do for itself.
Exactly so. Go then children and work to that end.
But how, mentor, how? Again, I tell you that I do not know. You have powers,
individually, collectively, and as the unit, about which I know little or nothing.
Use them. End of Chapter 24.
Chapter 25 of Children of the Lens
This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
Chapter 25
The Big Brass,
socially the directrix,
technically the Z-9-N-9-Z,
floated through space at the center of a hollow sphere of mullers
packed almost screen-to-screen.
She carried the brains.
She had been built around the 17 million cubic feet of unobstructed space
which comprised her tank,
the three-dimensional chart in which very color
lights, stationary and moving, represented the positions and motions of solar systems,
ships, loose planets, megaspheres, and all other objects and items in which Grand Fleet
operations was or might become interested. Completely encircling the tanks more than
2,000 feet or circumference was the Rigelian Manned, multi-million plug board, a crew and a board
capable of handling efficiently more than a million combat units.
In the Reducer, the comparatively tiny ten-foot tank set into an alcove,
there were condensed the continuously changing major features of the main chart,
so that one man could comprehend and direct the broad strategy of the engagement.
Instead of Port Admiral Haynes, who had conned that reducer and issued the general orders
during the only previous experience of the Z9M9C in serious warfare,
Kimball Kinnison was now in Supreme Command.
Instead of Kinnison and Worsall, who had formerly handled the big tank and the board,
there were Clarissa, Worsall, Trigonsi, and the children of the lens.
There also, in a built-in, thoroughly competent refrigerator was Nadrick.
Port Admiral Raoul LaForge and Vice-Corpsinator Clifford Maitland were just coming aboard.
Might he need anybody else, Kinnison wondered.
Couldn't think of anybody.
He had just about the whole top echelon.
of civilization.
Cliff and Laugh weren't L-2s, of course, but they were mighty good men.
Besides, he liked them.
Too bad that the fourth officer of their class couldn't be there, too.
Gallant Vidal-Holmberg, killed in action.
At that, three out of four was a high average, mighty high.
Hi, Cliff, high laugh.
Hi, Kim.
The three old friends shook hands cordially,
then the two newcomers stared for minutes into the maze of lights flashing and winking in the
tremendous space chart.
Glad I don't have to try to make sense out of that, LaForge commented, finally.
Looks a lot different in battle harness than on practice cruises.
You want me on that forward wall there, you said?
Yes, you can see it planar down here in the reducer.
The white star is ERISA.
The yellows, all marked, are suns and other fixed points,
such as the markers along the arbitrary rim of the galaxy running from there to there.
Reds will be Bosconians when they get close enough to show.
Greens are ours.
Up in the big tank, everything is identified,
but down here there is no room for details.
Each green light marks the location of a whole operating fleet.
That block of green circles there is your command.
It's about 80 parsecs deep and covers everything within two hours, say 150 parsecs, of the line
between ERISA and the second galaxy.
Pretty loose now, of course, but you can tighten it up and shift it as you please as soon as
some reds show up.
You'll have a Rigelian talker.
Here he is now.
When you want anything done, think at him, and he'll give it to the right panel on the board.
QX?
I think so.
I'll practice a bit.
Now you, Cliff,
these green crosses,
halfway between the forward wall and ERISA
are yours.
You won't have quite as much depth as Laf,
but a wider coverage.
The green tetrahedrons are mine.
They blanket ERISA, you notice,
and fill the space out to the second wall.
Do you think that you and I will have anything to do?
Maitland asked,
waving a hand at La Forge's tremendous barrier.
I wish I could hope that we won't, but I can't.
I have it from a usually reliable source that they're going to throw the book.
That means hyperspacial tubes as well as open space.
They'll probably strike everywhere at once.
Then for weeks, Grand Fleet drilled, maneuvered, and practiced.
All space within ten parsecs of Orisia was divided into minute cubes,
each of which was given a reference number.
fleets were so placed that any point in that space could be reached by at least one fleet
in thirty seconds or less of elapsed time.
Drill went on until, finally, it happened.
Constance, on guard at the moment, perceived the slight curdling of space
which presages the appearance of the terminus of a hyperspacial tube and gave the alarm.
Kit, the girls, and all the Elysians responded instantly.
All knew that this was to be a thing which not did.
even the five could handle unaided.
Not one, or a hundred, or a thousand,
but at least two hundred thousand of those tubes erupted,
practically at once.
Kit could alert and instruct ten Rijelian operators every second,
and so could each of his sisters.
But since every tube within striking distance of ERISA
had to be guarded or plugged within thirty seconds of its appearance,
and since all of the work was done out in space and not in the tank,
it is seen that the Elysians did practically all of the spotting and placing
during those first literally incredible two or three minutes.
If the Baskonians could have emerged from a tubes terminus in the moment of its appearance,
it is quite probable that nothing could have saved Elysia.
As it was, however, the enemy required seconds, or sometimes even hold minutes,
to traverse their tubes, which gave the defenders much valuable time.
One of the observers, an Elysian or a third-stage lensman, at first perception of a terminus erupting,
noted the number of the threatened space cubicle, informed the Rigelian operator upon whose panel the number was,
and flashed a message to all other observers that that number had been handled.
The observer flashed the number to the communications board of the flagship of the fleet covering that space,
a flash which was automatically relayed to every communications and navigations officer of that fleet,
and which also automatically called up reserve for another fleet to take the place being vacated.
Without further orders, the fleet drove toward its target cube. On route, tube locators mapped the
terminus and marked its exact location upon each vessel's tube plates.
Upon arriving, the fleet englobed the terminus and laced itself, by means of
of tractors and pressers, into a rigid, although inertialist structure.
Then, if there was time, and because the theory was that the pirates would probably send a
negasphere through first, with an intrinsic velocity aimed at ERISA, a suitably equipped loose planet
was tossed into this end of the tube. Since they might send a loose or an armed planet
through first, however, the fleet admiral usually threw a negosphere in, too.
What happened when planet metegosphere in the unknown medium which makes up the interior of a hyperspacial tube is not and probably never will be surely known.
Several highly abstruse mathematical treatises and many volumes of rather gruesome fiction have been written upon the subject,
none of which, however, has any bearing here.
If the patrol fleet did not get there first, the succession of events was different.
the degree of difference depending upon how much time the enemy had had.
If, as sometimes happened, a fleet was coming through, it was met by superatomic bombs,
and by the concentrated fire of every primary projector that the englobbing task force could bring to bear,
with consequences upon which it is neither necessary nor desirable to dwell.
If a planet had emerged, it was met by a negasphere.
Have you ever seen a negasphere? Have you ever seen a negas?
A negosphir strike a planet? The necospheres built of negative matter. This material, or rather
antimaterial, is in every respect the exact opposite of the everyday matter of normal space.
Instead of electrons, its ultimate units are positrons. The Dirac holes in an infinity of negative
energy. To it, a push, however violent, is a pull. A pull is a push. When negative
matter strikes positive, then, there is no collision in the usual sense of the word. One electron and
one positron neutralize each other and disappear, giving rise to two quanta of extremely hard radiation.
Thus, when the spherical hyperplane, which was the aspect of negosphere, tended to occupy the same
three-dimensional space in which the loose planet already was, there was no actual collision.
Instead, the materials of both simply vanished, along the surface of what should have been a contact,
in a gigantically crescendo burst of pure, raw energy.
The atoms and the molecules of the planet's substance disappeared.
The physically incomprehensible texture of the negosphere's antimass changed into that of normal space.
And all circumambient space was flooded with inconceivably lethal radiation.
so intensely lethal that any being not adequately shielded from it
died before he had time to realize that he was being burned.
Gravitation, of course, was unaffected,
and the rapid disappearance of the planet's mass
set up unbalanced forces of tremendous magnitude.
The hot, dense, pseudo-liquid magma tended to erupt
as the sphere of nothingness devoured so rapidly the planet's substance,
but not a particle of it could move.
Instead, it vanished.
Mountains fell crashingly.
Oceans poured.
Earth cracks appeared.
Miles wide, tens of miles deep, hundreds of miles long.
The world heaved, shuddered, disintegrated, vanished.
The shock attack upon ERISI itself, which, in the Adorian mind, had been mathematically certain to succeed, was over in approximately six minutes.
Kinnison, Maitland and LaForge,
Fuming at their stations had done nothing at all.
The Baskonians had probably thrown everything they could.
The probability was vanishingly small that that particular attack was to be or could be resumed.
Nevertheless, a host of Kinnison's task forces remained on guard,
and a detail of Eryscian still scanned all nearby space.
"'What shall I do next, Kit?' Camilla asked.
"'Help Connie crack that screen?'
Kit glanced at his youngest sister, who was stretched out flat, every muscle rigidly tense
in an extremity of effort.
No, he decided.
If she can't crack it alone, all four of us couldn't help her much.
Besides, I don't believe that she can break through it.
That's a mechanical screen, you know, powered by atomic motor generators.
My guess is that it'll have to be solved, not cracked, and the solution will take time.
When she comes down off that peak, Kay, you might tell her so, and both of you start solving it.
The rest of us have another job.
The mopper's up are coming in force, and there isn't a chance that either we or the Elysians
can derive the counter-formula of that screen in less than a week.
Therefore, the rest of this battle will have to be fought out on conventional lines.
We can do the most good, I think, by spotting the Baskonians into the big tank.
Our scouts aren't locating 5% of them,
for the L2s to pass on to Dad and the rest of the heavy brass
so that they can run this battle the way it should be run.
You'll do the spotting cam, of course.
Cat and I will do the pushing.
And if you thought that Traganzi took you for a wild ride,
it'll work, don't you think?
Of course it will work, and I like wild rides.
The faster, the better.
Thus, apparently, as though by magic,
Red lights winked into being throughout a third of the volume of the immense tank,
and the three master strategists, informed of what was being done,
heaved tremendous size of relief.
They now had real control.
They knew not only the positions of their own task forces,
but also, and exactly, the position of every task force of the enemy.
More, by merely forming in his mind the desire for the information,
any one of the three could know, with no appreciable lapse of time,
the exact composition and the exact strength of any individual one of the horde of Bosconian fleets.
Kit and his two sisters stood close-grouped, motionless, heads bent and almost touching,
arms interlocked.
Kinnison perceived with surprise that lenses, as big and as bright as Kit's own,
flamed upon his daughter's wrists.
A surprise, which changed to awe as the very air around those three red-bron's
arborne heads began to thicken, to pulsate, and to glow with that indefinable, indescribable
polychromatic effulgence, which is so uniquely characteristic of the lens of the Galactic
Patrol. But there was work to do, and Kinnison did it.
Since the Z-9M-9-Z was now working as not even the most optimistic of her planners and designers,
had dared to hope that she ever could work, the war could now be, and was now being fought
strategically. That is, with the object of doing the enemy as much harm as possible, with the
irreducible minimum of risk. It was not sporting. It was not clubby. There was nothing whatever of
chivalry. There was no thought whatever of giving the enemy a break. It was a massacre. It was murder.
it was war.
It was not ship to ship.
No, nor fleet to fleet.
Instead, ten or twenty patrol task forces, under sure pilotage, dashed out to
englobe at extreme range one fleet of the Busconians.
Then, before the opposing admiral could assemble a picture of what was going on,
his entire command became the center of impact of hundreds or even thousands of detonating
superatomic bombs.
as well as the focus of an immensely greater number of scarcely less ravaging primary beams.
Not a ship nor a scout nor lifeboat of the englobed fleet escaped ever.
In fact, few indeed were the blobs, or even droplets of hard alloy or of durium,
which remained merely liquefied or which later were able to condense.
Fleet by fleet, the bosconians were blown out of the ether.
One by one, the red lights in the tank and in the reducer winked out.
And finally, the slaughter was done.
Kit and his two now lensless sisters unlaced themselves.
Karen and Constance came up for air,
announcing that they knew how to work the problem Kit had handed them,
but that they would need more time on it.
Clarissa, wide and shaken by what she had driven herself to do,
looked and felt sick.
So did Kinnison.
nor had either of the other two commanders derived any pleasure from the engagement.
Draganzi deplored it. Of all the lensed personnel, only Worsel had enjoyed himself.
He liked to kill enemies, at close range or far, and could not understand or sympathize with squeamishness.
Nadrick, of course, had neither liked nor disliked any part of the whole affair. To him,
his part had been merely another task, to be performed with a
the smallest outlay of physical and mental effort consistent with good workmanship."
"'What next?' Kinnison asked then of the group at large.
"'I say the plurins. They're not like these poor devils were. They've probably sent them in.
They've got it coming. They certainly have—' "'Plure! By all means, plure!'
"'But how about ERISia here?' Maitland asked.
"'Under control,' Kinnison replied.
We'll leave a heavy guard and a spare tank.
The Elysians will do the rest.
As soon as the tremendous fleet had shaken itself down into the course for Plur,
all seven of the Kinnisons retired to a small dining room and ate a festive meal.
They drank after-dinner coffee.
Most of them smoked.
They discussed, for a long time and not very quietly,
the matter of the hell-hole in space.
Finally,
I know it's a trap as well as you do.
Kinnison got up from the table, rammed his hands into his breechless pockets, and paced the floor.
It's got T-R-A-P painted all over it, in Bill Poster letters, 17 meters high.
So what?
Since I'm the only one who can, I've got to go in, if it's still there after we knock plor off,
and it'll still be there for all the tea in China.
All the plurants aren't on plure.
Four young Kinnisans flashed thoughts at Catherine, who frowned and bit her lip.
She had hit that hole with everything she had, and had simply bounced.
She had been able to block the radiation, of course, but such solid barriers had been necessary
that she had blinded herself by her own screens.
That it was a Dorian there could be no doubt, worn by her own activities in the other tube,
Plurin, of course, and Dad would be worth taking in more ways than one.
I can't say that I'm any keener about going in than any of you are about having me to do it,
the big linsman went on.
But unless some of you can figure out a reason for my not going in,
that isn't fuller of holes than a sponge-rubber cushion,
I'm going to tackle it just as soon after we blow Plur apart as I can possibly get there.
Aunt Catherine, his self-appointed guardian, knew that nothing could stop him.
Nor did anyone there, even Clarissa, tried to stop him.
Lensman all, they knew that he had to go in, and why.
To the five, the situation was not too serious.
Kinnison would probably come through unhurt.
The Adorians could take him, of course,
but whether or not they could do anything to him after they got him,
got him, would depend no little on what the Kinnison kids would be doing in the meantime,
and that would be plenty.
They couldn't delay Dad's entry into the tube very much without making a smell,
but they could and would hurry ERISA up.
And even if, as seemed probable, Dad was already in the tube when ERISA was ready for the
big business with Edor, a lot could be done at the other end.
Those amoeboy monstrosities would be fighting for their own precious lives this time,
not for the lives of slaves, and the five promised each other grimly that the Adorians would
have too much else to worry about to waste any time on Kimball Kinnison.
Clarissa Kinnison, however, fought the hardest and bitterest battle of her life.
She loved Kim with a depth and a fervor which very few women anywhere have ever been able to feel.
She knew with a sick, cold certainty, knew with every fiber of her mind and with every cell of her
brain, that if he went into that trap, he would die in it. Nevertheless, she would have to let him go in.
More, and worse, she would have to send him in to his death with a smile. She could not ask him
not to go in. She could not even suggest again that there was any possibility that he need not go in.
He had to go in. He had to. And if Lensman's load was heavy on him, on
her, it was almost unbearable. His part was vastly the easier. He would only have to die,
she would have to live. She would have to keep on living, without Kim, living a lifetime of deaths,
one after another. And she would have to hold her block and smile, not only with her face,
but with her whole mind. She could be scared, of course, apprehensive as he himself was. She could
wish with all her strength for his safe return. But if he suspected the thousandth part of what
she really felt, it would break his heart. Nor would it do a bit of good. However broken-hearted
at her rebellion against the inflexible code of the lens, he would still go in. Being Kimball
Kinnison, he could not do anything else. As soon as she could, Clarissa went to a distant room
and turned on a full coverage block.
She lay down, buried her face in the pillow,
clenched her fists, and fought.
Was there any way, any possible way,
that she could die instead?
None. It was not that simple.
She would have to let him go.
Not gladly, but proudly and willingly,
for the good of the patrol.
Clarissa Kinnison gritted her teeth and writhed.
She would simply have to let him go into that ghastly trap,
go to his absolutely sure and certain death,
without showing one white feather,
either to her husband or to her children.
Her husband, her Kim, would have to die,
and she would have to live.
She got up, smiled experimentally, and snapped off the block.
Then, actually smiling and serenely confident,
she strolled down the corridor.
Such is Lensman's Lode.
End of Chapter 25.
Chapter 26 of Children of the Lens.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
Chapter 26.
Twenty odd years before, when the then Dauntless and her crew were thrown out of a hyperspacial tube,
and into that highly enigmatic Enth space, Laverne Thorndyke had been a chief technician.
Mentor of ERISIA found them and put into the mind of Sir Austin Cardinge, the mathematician
extraordinary, the knowledge of how to find the way back to normal space.
Thorndyke, working under nerve-breaking difficulties, had been in charge of building the
machines which were to enable the vessel to return to her home space.
He built them, she returned.
He was now again in charge, and every man of his present crew had been a member of his former one.
He did not command the spaceship or her regular crew, of course, but they did not count.
Not one of these kids would be allowed to set foot on the fantastically dangerous planet,
to which the inertialist Space Laboratory 12 was anchored with tractors and pressers.
Older, leaner, grayer, he was now even more than then,
civilization's past master of mechanism.
If anything could be built, Thorny Thorndyke could build it.
If it couldn't be built, he could build something that would do the work.
As soon as the Grey Lensman and his son left the vessel,
chief technician Thorndyke, not the vice-admiral of the same name,
lined his crew up for inspection.
Men, who, although many of them had as much rank
and had had had as many years of as much authority as their present boss,
have been working for days to forget as completely as possible
their executive positions and responsibilities.
Each man wore not one, but three personal neutralizers, one inside and two outside of his
spacesuit. Thorndyke, walking down the line, applied his test kit to each individual neutralizer.
He then tested his own.
QX. All were at Max.
Fellows, he said then, you all remember what it was like last time.
This is going to be the same, except more so and for a longer time.
How we did it before without any casualties, I'll never know.
If we can do it again, it'll be a major miracle, no less.
Before, all we had to do was to build a couple of small generators
and some controls out of stuff native to the planet,
and we didn't find that any too easy a job.
This time, for starter, we've got to build a Bergenholm big enough to free the whole planet,
after which we install the burgs, tube generators, atomic blasts, and other stuff we brought along.
But that native burg is going to be a Class A prime headache, and until we get it running,
it's going to be hell on wheels. The only way we can get away with it is to check and recheck
everything and every step. Check, check, double check, then go back and double check again.
Remember that the fundamental characteristics of this nth space are such that inert matter can travel faster than light.
And remember every second of the time that our intrinsic velocity is something like 15 lights relative to anything solid in this space.
I want every one of you to picture himself going inert accidentally.
You might take a tangent course or higher, but you might not, too.
And it wouldn't only kill the one who did it.
It wouldn't only spoil our record.
It could very easily kill us all
and make a crater full of boiling metal out of our whole installation.
So, be careful.
Also, bear in mind that one piece, however small of this planet's material,
accidentally brought aboard, might wreck the dauntless.
Any questions?
If the fundamental characteristics, constants, of this space are so different,
how do you know that the stuff will work here?
Well, the stuff we built here before worked.
The Erisians told Kit Kinnison that two of the fundamentals, mass, and length, are about
normal.
Time is a lot different, so that we can't compute power-to-mass ratios and so on, but
we'll have enough power anyway to get any speed that we can use.
I see.
We missed the really fancy stuff?
Yes.
Well, the quicker we get started, the quicker we'll get done.
Let's go.
The planet was airless,
desolate, a chaotic jumble of huge and jagged fragments of various metals
in a non-metallic continuous phase.
It was as though some playful child-giant of space
had poured dipperfuls of silver, of iron, of copper,
of other granulated pure metals into a tank of something else,
and then, tired of play, had thrown the whole mess away.
Neither the metals nor the non-metallic substances
were either hot or cold.
They had no apparent temperature,
to thermometers or to the feeders of the suits.
The machines which these men had built so long before
had not changed in any particular.
They still functioned perfectly.
No spot of rust or corrosion or erosion marred any part.
This, at least, was good news.
Inertialist machines,
extravagantly equipped with devices to keep them inertialists,
were taken ashore.
nor were any of these ever to be returned to the ship.
Kinnison had ordered and reiterated
that no unnecessary chances were to be taken
of getting any particle of nth space stuff
aboard Space Laboratory 12, and none were taken.
Since men cannot work indefinitely in spacesuits,
each man had periodically to be relieved,
but each such relief amounted almost to an operation.
Before he left the planet, his suit was scrubbed,
rinsed and dried. In the vessel's airlock it was air-blasted again before the outer port was
closed. He unshelled in the lock and left his suit there. Everything which had come into contact
with nth space matter either would be left on the planet's surface or would be jettisoned
before the vessel was again inerted. Unnecessary precautions? Perhaps, but Thorndyke and his crew
returned on harm to normal space in undamaged ships.
Finally, the Bergenholm was done.
By dint of what improvisation, substitution, and artifice, only Thorny Thorndyke ever knew.
At what strain and cost was evidenced by the gaunt bodies and haggard faces of his overworked
and underslept crew.
To those experts, and particularly to Thorndyke, the thing was not a good job.
It was not quiet nor smooth.
It was not in balance, statically, dynamically, or electrically.
The chief technician, to whom a meter jump of one and a half thousands
had always been a matter of grave concern,
swore feelingly in all the planetary languages he knew
when he saw what those meters were doing.
He scowled morosely.
There might have been poor machines built sometime, somewhere, he supposed,
but if so, he had never seen any.
But the improvised Berg ran and kept on running.
The planet became inertialist and remained that way.
For hours then, Thorndyke climbed over and around and through the Brobdingnegian fabrication,
testing and checking the operation of every part.
Finally, he climbed down and reported to his waiting crew.
QX fellows, a nice job. A good job, in fact, considering.
Even though we all know that it isn't what any of us would call a good machine.
Part of that meter jump, of course, is due to the fact that nothing about the heap is true or
balanced, but most of it must be due to this cock-eyed ether.
Anyway, none of it is due to the usual causes,
lose spars and faulty insulation.
So, my best guess is that she'll keep on doing her stuff
while we do ours.
One sure thing, she isn't going to fall apart,
even under that ungodly knocking.
And I don't think that she's going to shake herself off the planet.
After Thorndyke's somewhat less than enthusiastic approval,
of his brainchild, the adventurers into that fantastic region attacked the second phase of their
project.
Two patrol Bergenhomes were landed and were installed. Their meters jumped too, but the engineers
were no longer worried about that. Those machines would run indefinitely, and a concerted sigh
relief arose when the improvised generator was shut down. Pits were dug. Atomic blast and other
engines were installed, as were many exceedingly complex instruments and mechanisms.
A few tons of foreign matter on the planet's surface would now make no difference,
but there was no relaxation of the extreme precautions against the transfer of any matter-whatever
from the planet to the spaceship.
When the job was done, but before the cleanup, Thorndyke called his crew into conference.
Fellows, I know just what a beating you've been taking.
We all feel as though we had been on a Delgonian clam bake.
Nevertheless, I've got to tell you something.
Kiddison said that if we could get this one fixed up without too much trouble,
it'd be a mighty good idea to have two of them.
What do you say?
Did we have too much trouble?
He got exactly the reaction he had expected.
Lead us to it.
Pick out the one you want.
Trouble, it's all over.
We can tow this scrap heap on a space.
baseline, match-intrinsics with clamp-on drivers, and plant it anywhere.
Another metal-studded, barren, lifeless world was therefore found and prepared,
and no real argument arose until Thorndyke broached the matter of selecting the two men
who were to stay with him and Henderson in the two lifeboats, which were to remain for a time
near the two loose planets after Space Laboratory 12 had returned to normal space.
Everybody wanted to stay.
Each one was going to stay, too, by all the gods.
of space if he had to pull rank to do it.
"'Hold it,' Thorndyke commanded.
"'We'll do the same as we did before, then, by drawing lots.'
"'Quatermaster Allardyce?'
"'No.'
Eulen-Huth, formerly Atomic Technician One-C, objected vigorously, and was supported by several
others.
"'He's too clever with his fingers.
Look what he did to the original draw.
We're not squawking about that one, you understand.
a little fixing was QX back there, but we want this one to be honest.
Now that you mention it, I do remember hearing that things were not left entirely to chance.
Thorndyke grinned broadly.
So you hold the pot yourself, Eulie, and Hank and I will each pull out one name.
So it was.
Henderson drew Eulenhooth, to that Burley Admiral's loud delight,
and Thorndyke drew Nelson, the erstwhile chief communications officer.
The two lifeboats disembarked, each near one of the newly loosened planets.
Two men would stay on or near each of those planets to be sure that all the machinery
functioned perfectly.
They would stay there until the atomic blasts functioned perfectly.
They would stay there until the atomic blast went into action,
and it became clear that the Elysians would need no help in navigating those tremendous globes
through inth space to the points at which two hyperspacial tubes were
soon to appear.
Long before the advanced scouts of the Grand Fleet were within surveying distance of Plur,
Kidd and his sisters had spread a completely detailed chart of its defenses in the tactical
tank.
A white star represented Plur's sun.
A white sphere at the planet itself.
White Ryerson string lights marked a portion of a planetary orbit.
Points of white light, practically all of which were connected to the white sphere by red string
lights, marked the directions of neighboring stars and the existence of sunbeams, installed and ready.
Pink globes were loose planets, purple ones, negospheres, red points of light were as before
Baskonian Task Force fleets. Blues were mobile fortresses. Bands of canary yellow and amber
luminescence showed the locations and emplacements of sunbeam grids and deflectors.
Layer after layer of pinks, purples, and blues almost hid the brilliant white,
sphere from sight. More layers of the same colors, not quite as dense, surrounded the entire
solar system. Yellow and amber bands were everywhere. Kinnison studied the thing briefly,
whistling unmelodiously through his teeth. The picture was familiar enough, since it duplicated
in practically every respect the chart of the neighborhood of the patrol's own ultra-prime
around Clovia. It did not require much study to make it clear that that defense could not be
cracked by any concentration possible, of any mobile devices theretofore employed in war.
"'Just about what we expected,' Kinnison thought to the group at large.
"'Some new stuff, but not much. What I want to know, Kidd and the rest of you,
is there anything there that looks as though it was supposed to handle our new baby?
Don't see anything myself.'
"'There is not,' Kitt stated definitely.
"'We looked. There couldn't be anyway.
It can't be handled.
Looking backwards at it, they will probably be able to reconstruct how it was done,
but in advance, no.
Even Mentor couldn't.
He had to call in a fellow who has studied ultra-high mathematics for
Clono only knows how many millions of years to compute the result in vectors.
Kitt's use of the word they, which of course meant plurins to everyone except his sisters,
concealed his knowledge of the fact that Theodorians had taken over the defense of
Plur. Edorians were handling those screens. Edorians were directing and correlating those far-flung
task forces, with a precision which Kinnison soon noticed. Much smoother work than I ever saw
them do before, he commented. Suppose they have developed a Z9M-9-Z? Could be. They copied everything
else you invented. Why not that? Again, the highly ambiguous they. No sign of it around
ERISA, though, but maybe they didn't think they need it there. Or, more likely, they didn't want
to risk it so far from home. We can tell better after the mopping-up starts, if the widget
performs as per specs. But if your dope is right, this is about close enough. You might tip the boys off,
and I'll call mentor. Kinnison could not reach Nth space, but it was no secret that Kit could.
The terminus of one of the patrol's hypers spatial tubes erupted into space close to plure.
That such phenomena were expected was evident.
A Bosconian fleet moved promptly and smoothly to englobe it.
But this was an ERISian tube, computed, installed, and handled by Elysians.
It would be in existence only three seconds.
The nearest offending task force could not possibly get there in time.
To the observers in the Z-9M-9Z, those three seconds stretched endlessly.
What would happen when that utterly foreign planet,
with its absolutely impossible intrinsic velocity of over 15 times that of light,
erupted into normal space and went inert?
Nobody, not even the Elysians, knew.
Everybody there had seen pictures of what happened
when the insignificant mass of a spaceship,
traveling at only a hundredth of the velocity of light,
collided with a planetoid.
That was bad enough.
This projectile, however,
had a mass of about eight times ten to the twenty-first power,
an eight followed by twenty-one zeros, metric tons,
would tend to travel fifteen hundred times as fast,
and kinetic energy equals mass times velocity squared.
There seemed to be a theoretical possibility,
since the mass would instantaneously become some higher order of infinity,
that all the matter in normal space would coalesce with it in zero time.
But Mentor had assured kit that operators would come into effect to prevent such an occurrence,
and that untoward events would be limited to a radius of ten or fifteen parsecs.
Mentor could solve the problem in detail,
but since the solution would require some two hundred clovean years,
and the event was due to occur in two weeks.
"'How about the big computer at Ultra Prime?' Kinnison asked innocently.
"'You know how fast that works.'
"'Roughly two thousand years, if it could handle that kind of math, which it can't.'
Kit had replied, and the subject had been dropped.
Finally, it happened.
What happened?
Even after the fact none of the observers knew, nor did any except the L3s ever find out.
The fuses of all the recorder and analyzer circuits blew at once.
Needles jumped instantly to maximum and wrapped themselves around their stops.
Charts and ultra-photographic film showed only straight or curved lines
running from the origin to and through the limits in zero time.
Plore and everything around it disappeared in an utterly indescribable
and completely incomprehensible blast of pure, wild, raw, uncontrolled and uncontrollable energy.
The infinitesimal fraction of that energy, which was visible,
heterodyneed upon the ultra as it was, and screened as it was,
blazed so savagely upon the plates that it seared the eyes.
And if the events caused by the planet aimed at Plur were indescribable,
what can be said of those initiated by the one directed against Plur's sun?
When the heat generated in the interior of a sun becomes greater than its effective surface is able to radiate,
that surface expands.
If the expansion is not fast enough, a more or less insignificant amount of the sun's material explodes,
thus enlarging by force the radiant surface to whatever extent is necessary to restore equilibrium.
Thus come into being the ordinary Novi.
Suns, which may for a few days or for a few weeks, radiate energy at a rate a few hundreds of thousands of times greater than normal.
Since ordinary Novi can be produced at will by the collision of a planet with a sun,
sun, the scientists of the patrol had long since completed their studies of all the phenomena
involved. The mechanisms of supernovae, however, remained obscure. No adequate instrumentation
had been developed to study conclusively the occasional supernova which occurred naturally.
No supernova had ever been produced artificially, with all its resources of mass,
atomic energy, cosmic energy, and sunbeams. Civilization could neither assemble nor
concentrate enough power. At the impact of the second loose planet, accompanied by the excess
energy of its impossible and unattainable intrinsic velocity, Plora's sun became a supernova.
How deeply the intruding thing penetrated, how much of the sun's mass exploded, never was
and perhaps never will be determined. The violence of the explosion was such, however,
that Clovian astronomers reported a few years later that it was radiating energy at the rate
of some 550 million suns.
Thus, no attempt will be made to describe what happened
when the planet from nth space struck the Bosconian sun.
It was indescribably cubed.
End of Chapter 26.
Chapter 27.
Of Children of the Lens.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
Chapter 27.
The Bosconian fleet's defending Plur
were not all destroyed of,
course. The vessels were inertialists. None of the phenomena accompanying the coming into being of the
supernova were propagated at a velocity above that of light, a speed which to any spaceship is scarcely a
crawl. The survivors were, however, disorganized. They had lost their morale when Plur was wiped out
in such a spectacularly nerve-shattering fashion. Also, they had lost practically alt of their high command.
for the Plurans, instead of riding the ether as did patrol commanders,
remained in their supposedly secure headquarters and directed matters from afar.
Mentor and his fellows had removed from this plane of existence the Adorians
who had been present in the flesh on Plur.
The Erysians had cut all communications between Edor and the remnants of the Bosconian defensive force.
Grand Fleet then moved in for the kill, and for a time the action near ERISian
was repeated. Following definite flight and course orders from the Z-9M-9-Z,
ten or more patrol fleets would make short hops. At the end of those assigned courses,
they would discover that they had englobed a task force of the enemy,
bomb and beam. Over and over, flit, bomb and beam. One Basconian High Officer,
however, had both the time and the authority to act. A full thousand fleets massed together,
their heaviest units outward, packed together screen to screen in a close-order globe of defense.
According to Haynes, that was good strategy in the old days, Kinnison commented,
but it's no good against loose planets and negasphers.
Six loose planets were so placed and so released that their inert masses would crash
together at the center of the Bosconian globe.
Then, a few minutes later, ten negasphers of high antimass were similarly launched.
After those sixteen missiles had done their work, and the resultant had attained an equilibrium
of sorts, very little mopping up was found necessary.
The Bosconian observers were competent. The Bosconian commanders now knew that they had no
chance whatever of success, that to stay was to be annihilated, that the only possibility of
life lay in flight. Therefore, each remaining Bosconian vice-admiral, after perhaps a moment
of consultation with a few others, ordered his fleet to drive at maximum blast for his home planet.
"'No use chasing them individually, is their Kit?'
Kinnison asked, when it became clear in the tank that the real battle was over,
that all resistance had ended.
"'They can't do anything, and this kind of killing makes me sick at the stomach.
Besides, I've got something else to do.'
"'No, me too, so have I,' Kit agreed with his father in full.
As soon as the last Baskonian fleet was beyond detector range,
Grand Fleet broke up, its component fleet setting out for their respective worlds.
"'The hell-hole is still there, Kit,' the Grey Lensman said soberly.
"'If Plur was the top, I'm beginning to think there is no top,
it leads either to an automatic mechanism set up by the Plurins or to Plurins who are still alive somewhere.
If Plur was not the top, it seems to be the only lead we have to war.
that top. In either case, I've got to take it. Check? Well, I...
Kitt tried to duck, but couldn't. Yes, Dad, I'm afraid it's check. Two big hands
met and gripped, and Kinnison went to take leave of his wife. There is no need to go into detail
as to what those two strong souls said or did. He knew that he was going into danger,
that he might not return. That is, he knew empirically or echoed.
as a non-germane sort of fact that he might die. He did not, however, really believe that he would.
No man who was not an errant coward really believes ever that any given event will or can kill him.
In his own mind he goes on living indefinitely. Kinnison expected to be captured,
imprisoned, questioned, and perhaps tortured. He could understand all of those things,
and he did not like any one of them.
That he was more than a trifle afraid, and that he hated to leave her now more than he ever
had before were both natural enough. He had nothing whatever to hide from her. She, on the other
hand, knew starkly that he would never come back. She knew that he would die in that trap. She knew
that she would have to live a lifetime of emptiness alone. Hence, she had much to conceal from him.
She must be just as scared and as apprehensive as he was, but no more.
just as anxious for their continued happiness as he was, but no more,
just as intensely loving, but no more, and in exactly the same sense.
Here lay the test.
She must kiss him goodbye as though he were going into mere danger.
She must not give way to the almost irresistible urge to act in accordance
with what she so starkly, chillingly knew to be the truth,
that she would never, never, never kiss her Kim again.
She succeeded.
It is a measure of the red-lensman's quality that she did not weaken,
even when her husband approached the boundary of the hell-hole
and sent what she knew would be his last message.
Here it is. About a second now.
Don't worry. I'll be back very shortly.
Clear ether, Chris.
Of course you will, dear. Clear ether, Kim.
His speister did not mount any special generators.
He had not thought that they would be necessary.
necessary. Nor were they. He and his ship were sucked into that trap as though it had been a maelstrom.
He felt again the commingled agonies of interdimensional acceleration. He perceived again the formless,
texturless, spaceless void of blankly gray nothingness, which was the three-dimensionally
impossible substance of the tube. A moment later, he felt a new and different acceleration.
He was speeding up inside the tube. Then, very short, very short,
shortly, he felt nothing at all. Stardled, he tried to jump up to investigate and discover
that he could not move. Even by the utmost exertion of his will, he could not stir a finger
or an eyelid. He was completely immobilized. Nor could he feel. His body was as devoid of
sensation as though it belonged to somebody else. Worse, for his heart was not beating. He
was not breathing. He could not see.
It was as though his every nerve, motor and sensory, voluntary and involuntary,
had been separately anesthetized.
He could still think, but that was all.
His sense of perception still worked.
He wondered whether he was still accelerating or not, and tried to find out.
He could not.
He could not determine whether he was moving or stationary.
There were no reference points.
Every infinitesimal volume of that enigmatic grayness was like each and
and every other. Mathematically, perhaps, he was not moving at all, since he was in a continuum
in which mass, length and time, and hence inertia and inertlessness, velocity and acceleration
are meaningless terms. He was outside of space and beyond time. Effectively, however, he was moving,
moving with an acceleration which nothing material had ever before approached. He and his vessel were being
driven along that tube by every watt of power generable by one entire Edorian atomic power plant.
His velocity, long since unthinkable, became incalculable.
All things end. Even Edorian atomic power was not infinite. At the very peak of power and
pace then, all the force, all the momentum, all the kinetic energy of the speedster's mass and
velocity were concentrated in and applied to Kinnison's physical body.
He sensed something and tried to flinch, but could not.
In a fleeting instant of what he thought was time,
he went past, not through his clothing and his lens,
passed not through his armor,
and passed, not through, the hard beryllium alloy structure of his vessel.
He even went past, but not through the n-dimensional interface of the hyperspacial tube.
This, although Kinnison did not know it,
was the Adorian's climactic effort.
He had taken his prisoner as far as he could possibly reach.
Then, assembling and concentrating all available power,
he had given him a catapultic shove into the absolutely unknown and utterly unknowable.
The Adorian did not know any vector of the Lensman's naked flight.
He did not care where he went.
He did not know and could not compute or even guess at his victim's probable destination.
In what his spacehound's time sense told him was one second,
Kinnison passed exactly 200 million foreign spaces.
He did not know how he knew the precise number, but he did.
Hence, in the patrol's measured cadence,
he began to count groups of spaces of 100 million each.
After a few days, his velocity decreased to such a value
that he could count groups of single millions,
then thousands, hundreds, tens, until finally he could perceive the salient features of each
space before it was blotted out by the next.
How could this be, he wondered, but not foggily.
His mind was as clear and as strong as it had ever been.
Spaces were coexistent, not spread out like this.
In the fourth dimension they were flat together, like pages in a book except thinner.
This was all wrong.
It was impossible.
Since it could not happen, it was not happening.
He had not been and could not be drugged.
Therefore, some plurin must have him in a zone of compulsion.
What a zone!
What an operator the ape must be!
It was, however, real, all of it.
What Kinnison did not know, then or ever,
was that he was actually outside the boundaries of space,
actually beyond the confines of time.
He was going past, not through, those spaces and those times.
He was now in each space long enough to study it in some detail.
He was an immense distance above this one,
at such a distance that he could perceive many globular super-universes,
each of which in turn was composed of billions of lenticular galaxies.
Through it.
Closer now.
Galaxies only.
the familiar random masses whose apparent lack of symmetrical grouping is due to the limitations
of civilization's observers. He was still going too fast to stop. In the next space, Kinnison
found himself within the limits of a solar system and tried with all the force of his mind to get
in touch with some intelligent entity upon one, any one of its planets. Before he could succeed,
the system vanished, and he was dropping, from a height of a few thousand kilometers, toward the
surface of a warm and verdant world, so much like Tellis that he thought for an instant that he must
have circumnavigated total space. The aspect, the ice caps, the cloud effects, were identical.
The oceans, however, were similar, were different, as were the continents. The mountains were
larger and rougher and harder. He was falling much too fast. A free fall from infinity wouldn't
give him this much speed. The whole affair was, and
as he had decided once before, absolutely impossible.
It was simply preposterous to believe that a naked man,
especially one without blood circulation or breath,
could still be alive after spending as many weeks in open space as he had just spent.
He knew that he was alive.
Therefore, none of this was happening.
Even though, as surely as he knew that he was alive,
he knew that he was falling.
Jet back, Lensman, he thought viciously to himself,
tried to shout it aloud.
For this could be deadly stuff, if he let himself believe it.
If he believed that he was falling from any such height,
he would die in the instant of landing.
He would not actually crash.
His body would not move from wherever it was that it was.
Nevertheless, the shock of that holy imaginary crash
would kill him just as dead and just as instantaneously
as though all his flesh had been actually smashed into a crimson smear,
upon one of the neighboring mountains huge flat rocks.
Pretty close, my bright young plur and friend,
but you didn't quite ring the bell,
he thought savagely, trying with all the power of his mind
to break through the zone of compulsion.
I admit that you're good,
but I'm telling you that if you want to kill me,
you'll have to do it physically,
and I don't believe you carry jets enough to swing the job.
You might as well cut your zone,
because this kind of stuff has been pulled on me by experts, and it hasn't worked yet.
He was apparently falling, feet downward, toward an open, grassy mountain meadow,
surrounded by forests through which meandered a small stream.
He was so close now that he could perceive the individual blades of grass in the meadow
and the small fishes in the stream, and he was still apparently at terminal velocity.
Without his years of spacehounds training in inertialist maneuvering,
He might have died even before he landed, but speed as speed did not affect him at all.
He was used to instantaneous stops from light speeds.
The only thing that worried him was the matter of inertia.
Was he inert or free?
He declared to himself that he was free, or rather that he had been, was and would continue to be motionless.
It was physically, mathematically, intrinsically impossible that any of this stuff had actually occurred.
It was all compulsion, pure and simple, and he, Kimball Kinnison, Gray-Lensman, would not
let it get him down. He clenched his mental teeth upon that belief and held it doggedly.
One bare foot struck the tip of a blade of grass, and his entire body came to a shockless halt.
He grinned in relief. This was what he wanted, but had not quite dared wholly to expect.
There followed immediately, however, other events which he had not expected at all.
fall. His halt was less than momentary. In the instant of its accomplishment, he began to fall
normally the remaining eight or ten inches to the ground. Automatically, he sprung his
space-trained knees to take the otherwise disconcerting jar. Automatically, his left hand
snapped up to the place where his control should have been. Legs and arms worked. He could
see with his eyes. He could feel with his skin. He was drawing a breath the first time he had
breathed since leaving normal space.
Nor was it an unduly deep breath.
He felt no lack of oxygen.
His heart was beating as normally as though it had never missed a beat.
He was not unusually hungry or thirsty.
But all that stuff could wait.
Where was that plurin?'
Kinnison had landed in complete readiness for strife.
There were no rocks or clubs handy, but he had fists, feet, and teeth,
and they would do, until he could find or make.
something better. But there was nothing to fight. Drive his sense of perception as he would,
he could find nothing larger or more intelligent than a deer. The farther this thing went along,
the less sense it made. A compulsion, to be any good at all, ought to be logical and coherent.
It should fit into every corner and cranny of the subject's experience and knowledge. This one did not
fit anything or anywhere. It didn't even come close. Yet,
technically it was a marvelous job. He couldn't detect a trace of it. This grass looked and
felt real. The pebbles hurt his tender feet so much that he had to wince as he walked gingerly
to the water's edge. He drank deeply. The water, real or not, was cold, clear, and eminently
satisfying. "'Listen, you misguided, what is it?' he thought probingly. "'You might as well
open up now as later, whatever you've got in mind. If this is it, you've got in mind, if this
His performance is supposed to be nonfiction, it's a flat bust.
If it is supposed to be science fiction, it isn't much better.
If it's a space opera, even, you're violating all the fundamentals.
I've written better stuff myself.
Quadgop and Cynthia were a lot more convincing.
He waited a moment, then went on.
Whoever heard of the intrepid hero of a space opera, as big as this one started out to be,
getting stranded on a completely Earth-like planet, and then he said,
having nothing happen. No action at all. How about a couple of indescribable monsters of superhuman
strength and agility for me to tear apart with my steel-thewed fingers? He glanced around
expectedly. No monster appeared. Well, then, how about a damsel in distress for me to rescue
from a fate worse than death? Better make it two of them. Safety and numbers, you know,
a blonde and a brunette. No redheads. I'll play along with you part way on. I'll play along with you partway
on that, oldie, up to the point of falling for either of them.
He waited again.
Q. Export, no woman.
Suites me perfectly. But I hope you haven't forgotten about the tasty vians.
I can eat fish if I have to, but if you want to keep your hero happy, let's see you
lay down here on a platter, a one-kilogram steak, three centimeters thick,
medium rare, fried in Tullerian butter, and smothered in Venusian superlum mushroom.
No stake appeared, and the Grey Lensman recalled and studied intensively every detail of what had apparently happened.
It still could not have occurred.
He could not have imagined it.
It could not have been compulsion or hypnosis.
None of it made any kind of sense.
As a matter of plain fact, however, Kinnison's first and most positive conclusion was wrong.
His memories were factual records of actual events and things.
He would eat well during his stay upon that nameless planet, but he would have to procure his own food.
Nothing would attack him, or even annoy him.
For the Adorian's binding—this is perhaps as good a word for it as any, since Gesh implies a curse,
was such that the gray lensman could not return to space and time only under such conditions and to such an environment,
as would not do him any iota of physical harm.
He must continue alive and in good health.
for at least fifty more of his years.
And Clarissa Kinison, tense and strained,
waited in her room for the instant of her husband's death.
They too were one, with a oneness no other man and woman had ever known.
If one died, from any cause whatever, the other would feel it.
She waited.
Five minutes, ten, fifteen, half an hour, an hour.
She began to relax.
Her fists unclenched, her shallow breathing grew deeper.
Two hours.
Kim was still alive.
A wave of happy, buoyant relief swept through her.
Her eyes flashed and sparkled.
If they hadn't been able to kill him in two hours, they never could.
Her Kim had plenty of jets.
Even the top minds of Baskonia could not kill her Kim.
End of Chapter 27.
Chapter 28 of Children of the Lens
This Liberovox recording is in the public domain.
Chapter 28
The Elysians and the Children of the Lens
had known that Edor must be attacked as soon as possible
after the fall of Plur.
They were fairly certain that the interspatial use of planets
as projectiles was new,
but they were completely certain
that the Adorians would be able to deduce in a short time,
the principles and the concepts, the fundamental equations, and the essential operators involved
in the process. They would find enth space or one like it in one day, certainly not more than two.
Their slaves would duplicate the weapon in approximately three weeks. Shortly thereafter,
both ultra-prime and prime base, both Clovia and Telos, would be blown out of the ether.
So would Erycia. Perhaps ERISA would go first. The Adorno, the Adorno, the Adorno. The Adorno
historians would probably not be able to aim such planets as accurately as the Elysians had,
but they would keep on trying, and they would learn fast.
This weapon was the sheer ultimate in destructiveness.
No defense against it was possible.
There was no theory which applied to it or which could be stretched to cover it.
Even the Elysian masters of mathematics had not as yet been able to invent
symbologies and techniques to handle the quantities and magnitudes involved
when those interloping masses of foreign matter struck normal space.
Thus, Kit did not have to follow up his announced intention of making the Elysians hurry up.
They did not hurry, of course, but they did not lose or waste a minute.
Each Elysian, from the youngest guardian up to the oldest philosopher,
tuned a part of his mind to mentor, another part to some one of the millions of Lensmen
upon his list, and flashed a message.
Lensman attend.
Keep your mind sensitized to this, the pattern of mentor of ERISA,
who will speak to you as soon as all have been alerted.
That message went throughout the first galaxy,
throughout intergalactic space,
and throughout what part of the second galaxy
had felt the touch of civilization.
It went to Al-Saken and Vandamar and Clovia,
to Thrail and Tellus and Rijal 4,
to Mars and Valentia and Pelain 7,
to Medan and Venus and Centralia.
It went to flitters, battleships, and loose planets.
It went to asteroids and moonlets to planets large and small.
It went to newly graduated Lensmen, and to Lensmen long since retired,
to Lensmen at work and at play.
It went to every living wearer of the first stage lens of the Galactic Patrol.
Wherever the message went, turmoil followed.
Lensmen everywhere flashed questions at all the other Lensmen they knew or had ever met.
What do you make of it, Fred?
Did you get the same thing I did?
Mentor, grinning nushab-Kimming, what's up?
Must be big for Mentor to be handling it.
Big, it's immense.
Whoever heard of Arisius stepping in before?
Big, colossal.
Mentor never talked to anybody except Kinnison before, did he?
Millions of lensed questions flooded every base
and every office of the patrol.
Nobody, not even the vice-coordinator, knew a thing.
You might as well stop sending in questions as to what this is all about,
because none of us knows any more about it than you do.
Maitland finally sent out a general notice.
Apparently, everybody with a lens is getting the same message,
no more and no less.
All I can say is that it must be a Class A prime emergency,
and everyone who is not actually tied up in a life-and-death matter
will please drop everything and stand by.
Mentor wanted and had to have high tension.
He got it.
Tension mounted higher and higher as eventless hours passed,
and as for the first time in history,
patrol business slowed down almost to a stop.
And in a small cruiser,
manned by four red-headed girls and one red-headed youth,
tension was also building up.
The problem of the mechanical screens
had long since been solved.
Atomic-powered counter-generators were in place,
ready at the touch of a button to neutralize the mechanically generated screens of the enemy,
and thus to make the engagement of a mind-to-mind combat.
They were as close to Eddor's star cluster as they could be without giving alarm.
They had had nothing to do for hours except wait.
They were probably keyed up higher than any other five-lensmen in all of space.
Kit, son of his father, was pacing the floor, chain-smoking.
Constance was alternately getting up and sitting down, up, up.
She, too, was smoking, or rather she was lighting cigarettes and throwing them away.
Catherine was sitting, stiffly still, manufacturing lenses, which, starting at her wrists,
raced up both bare arms to her shoulders and disappeared.
Karen was meticulously sticking holes in a piece of blank paper with a pin,
making an intricate and meaningless design. Only Camilla made any pretense of calmness,
and the others knew that she was bluffing. She was pretending to read a novel, but instead of
absorbing its full content at the rate of one glance per page, she had read half of it word by word
and still had no idea of what the story was about. "'Are you ready, children?'
Mentor's thought came in at last. "'Ready?' without knowing how they got there,
the five found themselves standing in the middle of the room, packed tight.
Okay, Kit, I'm shaking like a fool.
Constance wailed.
I just know I'm going to louse up this whole war.
QX, baby, we're all in the same fix.
Can't you hear my teeth chatter?
Doesn't mean a thing.
Good teams, champions, all feel the same way before a big game starts,
and this is the capital it.
Steady down, kids.
We'll be Q.
as soon as the whistle blows, I hope.
Pst, Catherine hissed. Listen.
Lensman of the Galactic Patrol.
Mentor's resonant pseudo-voice filled all space.
I, Mentor of ERISA, am calling upon you because of a crisis in which no lesser force can
be of use.
You have been informed upon the matter of Plur.
It is true that Plur has been destroyed, that the Plurans physically are
no more. You of the lens, however, already know dimly that the physical is not the all.
Know now that there is a residuum of non-material malignancy against which all the physical
weapons of all the universe would be completely impotent. That evil effluvium, intrinsically vicious,
is implacably opposed to every basic concept and idea of your patrol. It has been on the move
ever since the destruction of the planet Plur.
Unaided, we of Elysia are not strong enough to handle it,
but the massed and directed force of your collective mind
will be able to destroy it completely.
If you wish me to do so,
I will supervise the work of so directing your mental force
as to encompass the complete destruction of this menace,
which I tell you most solemnly is the last weapon of power
with which Baskonia will be able to threaten civilization.
Lensmen of the Galactic Patrol met as one for the first time in civilization's long history.
What is your wish? A tremendous wave of thought, expressed in millions of variant phraseologies,
made the wish of the Lensman very clear indeed. They did not know how such a thing could be done,
but they were supremely eager to have Mentor of Erycia lead them against the Bosconians,
whoever and wherever they might be. Your verdict is unanimous, as I had hoped and believed,
that it would be. It is well. The part of each of you will be simple, but not easy. You will all of you
individually think of two things, and of only two. First, of your love for and your pride in and your
loyalty to your patrol. Second, of the clear fact that Baskonia must not and shall not triumph
over civilization. Think these thoughts each of you with all the strength that in him lies.
not consciously direct those thoughts. Being attuned to my pattern, the force will flow at my direction.
As it passes from you, you will replenish it, each according to his strength.
You will find it the hardest labor you have ever performed, but it will be of permanent
harm to none, and it will not be of long duration. One hour will suffice. Are you ready?
We are ready! The Grisendo roared. The Grisendo roared.
of thought must have bulged the galaxy to its poles.
Children, strike.
The unit struck.
The outermost Adorian screen went down.
It struck again, almost instantly,
down with the second, the third, the fourth.
It was that flawless unit, not Camilla,
who detected and analyzed and precisely located
the Adorian guardsman handling each of those far-flung screens.
It was the unit, not Cathaylorian.
Catherine and Kit, who drilled the pilot-hole through each Adorian's hard-held block,
and enlarged it into a working orifice. It was the unit, not Karen, whose impenetrable shield
held stubbornly every circular mill of advantage gained in making such ingress. It was the unit,
not Constance, who assembled and drove home the blast of mental force in which the Adorians
died. No time whatever was lost in consultation or decision. Action was not only
instantaneous, but simultaneous with perception.
The children of the lens were not now five, but one.
The unit.
Come in, mentor.
Kit snapped then.
All you oriscians and all the lensmen.
Nothing specialized, just a general slam at the whole screen.
This fifth screen is the works.
They've got twenty men on it instead of one, and their top-notchers.
Best strategy now is for us five to lay off
a second or two and show them what we've got in the line of defense, while the rest of you
fellows give them hell. Arrissia and the mass lensmen struck, a tidal wave of such tremendous
weight and power that under its impact the fifth screen sagged flat against the planet's surface.
Any one lensman's power was small, of course, in comparison with that of any Adorian. But every
first-stage lensman of the Galactic Patrol was giving, each according to his strength, and the output
of one lensman, multiplied by the countless millions which was the number of lensmen then at work,
made itself tellingly felt. Countless? Yes. No one of ERISA ever knew how many minds
contributed to that stupendous flood of force. Bear in mind that in the first galaxy alone,
there are over 2,000 million suns, that each sun has, on the average, something over 1 and 3,700s
planets inhabited by intelligent life. That a, of a little bit of a thousand thousand thousand thousand,
about one half of these planets adhered to civilization, and that tellus, an average planet,
graduates approximately one hundred lensmen every year.
"'So far, Kit, so good,' Constance panted.
Although she was no longer trembling, she was still highly excited.
"'But I don't know how many more shots like that I've—we've got left in the locker.'
"'You're doing fine, Connie,' Camilla soothed.
"'Sure you are, baby.
"'You've got plenty of jets,' Kit agreed.
"'Except in moments of supreme stress,
these personal individual exchanges of by-thoughts
did not interfere with the smooth functioning of the unit.
"'Fine work, all of you, kids.
I knew that we get over the shakes as soon as—'
"'Watch it!' Camilla snapped.
"'Here comes the shockwave.
"'Brace yourself, K. Hold us together, Kit.'
The wave came.
Everything that the Adorians could send.
the unit's barrier did not waver.
After a full second of it, a time comparable to days of continuous atomic bombing in ordinary warfare,
Karen, who had been standing stiff and still, began to relax.
"'This is too, too easy,' she declared.
"'Who is helping me?
I can't feel anything, but I simply know that I haven't got this much stuff.
You can?
Or is it all of you?'
Not one of the five was as yet thoroughly familiar with the operating characteristics of the unit.
All of us, more or less, but mostly Kit, Camilla decided after a moment's thought.
He's got the weight of an inert planet.
Not me, Kit denied vigorously. Must be you other kids.
Feels to me like Cat mostly. All I'm doing is just sort of leaning up against you a little, just in case.
I haven't done a thing so far.
"'Oh, no, surely not,' Catherine giggled.
An infectious chuckle inherited or copied directly from her mother.
"'We know it, and that you're going to keep on loafing all the rest of the day.
You wouldn't think of doing anything, even if you could.
Just the same.
We're all mighty glad that our big brother is here.
QX kids, seal the chatter.
We've had time to learn that they can't crack us.
So have they, by the way.
So let's get to work.
Since the unit was now under continuous attack, its technique would have to be entirely different
from that used previously. Its bearing must vanish for an infinitesimal period of time,
during which it must simultaneously detect and blast. Or rather, the blast would have to be
directed in mid-flight while the unit's own block was open. Nor could that block be open
for more than the barest possible instant before or after the passage of the bolt.
It is true that the attack of the Adorians, compared with that of the unit, very much as the steady pressure of burning propellant powder, compares with the disruptive force of detonating Duodeck.
Even so, it would have wrought much damage to the minds of the five had any of it been allowed to reach them.
Also, like parachute jumping, this technique could not be practiced.
Since the timing had to be so nearly absolute, the first two shots missed their targets completely.
But the unit learned fast.
Adorian after Adorian died.
Help! All highest help!
A high Adorian appealed finally.
What is it?
His ultimate supremacy, knowing that only utter desperation
could be back of such intrusion, wasted no time.
It is this new Erysian entity!
It is not an entity fooled, but a fusion,
came Kurt reprimand.
We decided that point long ago.
An entity, I say.
In his urgency, the operator committed the unpardonable by omitting the titles of address.
No possible fusion can attain such perfection of timing, of synchronization.
Our best fusions have attempted to match it and have failed.
Its screens are impenetrable.
Its thrust cannot be blocked.
My message is this.
Sol for us and quickly the problem of this entity.
If you do not or cannot do so, we perish all of us, even to you of the innermost circle.
Think you so?
The thought was a sneer.
If your fusions cannot match those of the Erysians, you should die, and the loss will be small.
The fifth screen went down.
For the first time in untold ages, the planet of Eddor lay bare to the Erysian mind.
There were inner defenses, of course, but Kit knew every one.
their strengths and their weaknesses.
He had long since spread in Mentor's mind an exact and completely detailed chart.
They had long since drawn up a completely detailed plan of campaign.
Nevertheless, Kit could not keep from advising Mentor.
Pick off any who may try to get away.
Start on Area B and work up.
Be sure, though, to lay off Area K or you'll get your beard singed off.
The plan is being followed.
Mentor assured him.
Children, you have done very well indeed.
Rest now, and recuperate your powers against that which is yet to come.
QX. Unlace yourselves, kids.
Loosen up, unlax.
I'll break out a few beakers of failing, and all of us,
you especially con, had better eat ten or fifteen of these candy bars.
Eat, why I couldn't, kid insisted, and Constance took an experimental
bite. But say, I am hungry at that. Of course you are. We've been putting out some stuff,
and there's more and worse coming. Now rest, all of you. They rested. So much of their surprise,
they were now seasoned enough campaigners so that they could rest, even Constance. But the
respite was short. Area K, the headquarters and the citadel of his ultimate supremacy and the
innermost circle of the Bosconian Empire, contained all that remained of Edorian life.
No tight linkage yet, kids. Kid the organizer went smoothly to work. Individual effort,
a flash of fusion perhaps now and then, if any of us call for it, but no unit until I give the
word. Then give it everything you've got. Cam, analyze that screen and set us up a pattern for it.
You'll find that it'll take some doing. See whether it's after.
absolutely homogeneous.
Hunt for weak spots, if any.
Khan, narrow down to the sharpest needle you can possibly make and start pecking.
Not too hard.
Don't tire yourself.
Just to get acquainted with the texture of the thing and keep them awake.
K, take over our guard so that Euconiter can join the other Elysians.
Cat, come along with me.
You'll have to help with the Elysians until I call you into the unit.
You Eurisians, except Mentor, blanket this dome.
Thinner than that.
Solider. Harder.
There.
A trifle off balance yet.
Give me just a little more here on this side.
Kewex, hold it right there.
Squeeze.
Cat, watch them.
Hold them right there and in balance until you're sure that the Adorians aren't going to be able to put any bulges up through the blanket.
Now, Mentor, you and all the lensmen.
Tell them to give us for the next five seconds absolutely everything that they can deliver.
When they're at absolute peak, hit us with it all.
Hit us dead center, and don't pull your punch.
We'll be ready.
Khan, get ready to stick that needle there.
They'll think it's just another peck, I hope, and prepare to blast as you never blasted before.
Kay, get ready to drop that screen and stiffen the needle.
When those lensmen hit us, even you will know that you're not.
not just being patted on the back. The rest of us will brace you and keep the shock from
killing us all. Here it comes. Make a unit. Go! The unit struck. The needle of pure force
drove against the Adorian's supposedly absolutely impenetrable shield. The unit's thrust was of
itself, like nothing ever before known. The lensman's pile-driver blow, the integrated some
total of the top effort of every first-stage lensman of the entire Galactic Patrol,
was of itself irresistible.
Something had to give way.
For an instant, it seemed as though nothing were happening or ever would happen.
Strong young arms laced the straining five into a group as motionless
and as sculpturesque as statuary,
while between their bodies and around them there came into being a gigantic lens,
a lens whose splendor filled the entire room with radiance.
Under that awful concentration of force, something had to give way.
The unit held. The Elysians held. The lensman held. The needle of force superlatively braced,
neither bent nor broke. Therefore, the Adorian's screen was punctured, and in the instant of its
puncturing, it disappeared as does a bubble when it breaks. There was no mobbing up to do.
Such was the torrent of force cascading into that citadel that within a moment after its shield went
down, all life within it was snuffed out.
The Bosconian War was over.
End of Chapter 28.
Chapter 29.
Of Children of the Lens.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
Chapter 29.
Did you kids come through QX?
The frightful combat over.
The dreadful tension, a thing of the past,
Kit's first thought was for his sisters.
They were unharmed.
None of the five had suffered anything except mental exhaustion.
Recuperation was rapid.
Better we hunt that tube up and get dad out of it, don't you think?
Kit suggested.
Have you got a story arranged that will hold together under examination?
Camilla asked.
Everything except a few minor details, which we can polish up later.
Smoothly, the four girls link their minds with their brothers.
effortlessly, the unit's thoughts surveyed all nearby space.
No hyperspacial tube, nor any trace of one, was there.
Tune to Kinnison's pattern, the unit then scanned not only normal space and the then-present
time, but also millions upon millions of other spaces and past and future times,
all without finding the gray lensman.
Again and again the unit reached out, farther and farther,
out to the extreme limit of even its extraordinary range.
Every space and every time was empty.
The children of the lens broke their linkage and stared at each other aghast.
They knew starkly what it must mean, but that conclusion was unthinkable.
Kinnison, their dad, the hub of the universe, the unshakable, immutable rock of civilization,
he couldn't be dead.
They simply could not accept the logical explanations as the true one.
And while they pondered shaken, a call from their Red Lensman mother impinged upon their consciousness.
"'You are together? Good. I have been so worried about Kim going into that trap. I have been trying
to get in touch with him, but I cannot reach him. You children, with your greater power!'
She broke off as the dread import of the five surface thoughts became clear to her. At first,
she too was shaken, but she rallied magnificently.
"'Nonsense,' she snapped,
"'not a denial of an unwelcome fact,
"'but ensure knowledge that the supposition was not and could not be a fact.
"'Kimbel Kinison is alive.
"'He is lost, I know.
"'I last heard from him just before he went into that hyperspacial tube,
"'but I did not feel him die.
"'And if he had died, no matter where or when or how,
"'I would most certainly have felt it.
"'So don't be idiots, children, please.
Think, really think.
I am going to do something somehow, but what?
Mentor the Elysian?
I've never called him, and I'm terribly afraid that he might not be willing to do anything.
I could go there and make him do something, but that would take so long.
Tell me, what shall I... What can I do?
Mentor, by all means, Kit decided.
The most logical, the only possible solution.
I am sure that in this case he will act.
It is neither necessary nor desirable to go to ERISA.
Now that the Adorians had ceased to exist,
intergalactic space presented no barrier to Erysian thought,
but Kit did not enlighten his mother upon that fact.
Link your mind with ours.
She did so.
Mentor of Elysia.
The clear-cut thought flashed out.
Kimball Kinnison of Clovia is not present in this,
his normal space and time, nor in any other continuum which we can reach.
We ask assistance. Ah, tis-lensman Clarissa and the five.
Imperturbably, Mentor's mind joined theirs on the instant.
I have given the matter no attention, nor have I scanned my visualization of the cosmic
all. It may be that Kimball Kinnison has passed on from this plane of exist. He has not!
The Red Lensman interrupted violently, so violently that her thought had the impact of a physical blow.
Mentor and the five alike could see her eyes flash and sparkle, could hear her voice crackle as she spoke aloud,
the better to drive home her passionate conviction.
Kim is alive.
I told the children so, and I now tell you so.
No matter where or when he might be, in whatever possible extradimensional nook or cranny of the entire macrocosmic universe,
or in any possible isle of time between plus and minus eternity, he could not die,
he could not possibly die without mine knowing it. So find him, please, please find him,
mentor, or if you can't or won't, just give me the littlest tiniest hint as to how to go
about it, and I will find him myself. The five were appalled, especially Kit, who knew, as the
others did not, just how much afraid of mentor is meant.
mother had always been. To direct such a thought as that to any ERISA was unthinkable.
But Mentor's only reaction was one of pleased interest.
"'There is much of truth, daughter, in your thought,' he replied slowly.
Human love, in its highest manifestation, can be a mighty, a really tremendous thing.
The force, the power, the capability of such a love as yours is a sector of the truth which has not
been fully examined.
Allow me please a moment in which to consider the various aspects of this matter.
It took more than a moment.
It took more than the 29 seconds which the ERISian had needed to solve an earlier
and supposedly similar Kinnison problem.
In fact, a full half-hour elapsed before mentor resumed communication, and then he did so,
not to the group as a whole, but only to the five, using an ultra-frequency to which the
Red Lensman's mind could not be attuned.
I have not been able to reach him.
Since you could not do so, I knew that the problem would not be simple, but I have found
that it is difficult indeed.
As I have intimated previously, my visualization is not entirely clear upon any matter
touching the Adorians directly, since their minds were of great power.
On the other hand, their visualizations of us were probably even more hazy.
Therefore, none of our analyses of each other were or could be much better than approximations.
It is certain, however, that you were correct in assuming that it was the Plurans who set up the
hyperspacial tube as a trap for your father. The fact that the lower and middle operating echelons
of Baskonia could not kill him, established in the Plurin's mind the necessity of taking him
alive. The fact gave us no concern, for you, Catherine, were on guard.
Moreover, even if she alone should slip, it was manifestly impossible for them to accomplish anything against the combined powers of U-5.
However, at some undetermined point in time the Dorians took over, as is shown by the fact that you were all at a loss.
It being scarcely necessary to point out to you that the plurance could neither transport your father to any location which you could not reach, nor pose any problem,
including his death which you could not solve.
It is thus certain that it was one or more of the Adorians,
who either killed Kinnison or sent him where he was sent.
It is also certain that, after the easy fashion in which he escaped from the plurins
after they had captured him and had him all but in their hands,
the Adorians did not care to have the plurins come to grips with Kimball Kinnison,
fearing, and rightly, that instead of gaining information, they would lose everything.
"'Did they know that I was in that tube?' Catherine asked.
"'Did they deduce us, or did they think that Dad was a Superman?'
"'That is one of the many points which are obscure,
but it made no difference, before or after the event,
to them or to us, as you should perceive.
"'Of course. They knew that there was at least one third-level mind at work in the field.
They must have deduced that it was ERISian work.
whether it was dad himself or whether it was coming to his aid at need would make no difference.
They knew very well that he was the keystone of civilization, and that to do away with him
would be the shrewdest move they could make. Therefore, we still do not understand why they
didn't kill him outright and be done with it, if they didn't.
In exactness, neither do I. That point is the least clear of all. Nor is it at all certain.
that he still lives.
It is sheerest folly to assume that the Adorians either thought or acted illogically,
even occasionally.
Therefore, if Kinnison is not dead, whatever was done was calculated to be even more final
than death itself.
This premise, if adopted, forces the conclusion that they considered the possibility of
our knowing enough about the next cycle of existence to be able to reach him there.
Kit frowned.
You still harp on you.
the possibility of his death.
Does not your visualization cover that?
Not since the Adorians took control.
I have not consciously emphasized
the probability of your father's death.
I have merely considered it.
In the case of two mutually exclusive events,
neither of which can be shown to have happened,
both must be studied with care.
Assume for the moment that your mother's theory is the truth,
that your father is still alive.
In that case, what was done and how it was done are eminently clear.
Clear, not to us, the five chorist.
While they did not know at all exactly the power of our minds,
they could establish limits beyond which neither they nor we could go.
Being mechanically inclined, it is reasonable to assume that they had at their disposal
sufficient energy to transport Kyneson and his vessel to some point well beyond those limits.
They would have given control to a director by chance, so that his ultimate destination would
be unknown and unknowable. He would, of course, land safely.
How? How could they possibly? In time, that knowledge will be yours. Not now.
Whether or not the hypothesis just stated is true, the fact confronting us is that Kimball Kinnison
is not now in any region which I am at present able to scan.
descended palpably upon the five.
I am not saying or implying that the problem is insoluble.
Since Hedorian minds were involved, however,
you already realized that its solution will require the evaluation
of many millions of factors, and will consume a not inconsiderable number of your years.
You mean lifetimes—an impetuous young thought broke in.
Why, long before that, contain yourself, daughter Constance.
Mentor reproved gently.
I realized quite fully all the connotations and implications involved.
I was about to say that it may prove desirable to assist your mother in the application of powers,
which may very well transcend in some respects those of either ERISIA or Edo.
He shifted the band of thought to include the red lensman and went on as though he was just emerging from contemplation.
Children, it appears that the solution of this problem by originate,
processes will require more time than can conveniently be spared.
Moreover, it affords a priceless and perhaps a unique opportunity of increasing our store of
knowledge.
Be informed, however, that the probability is exceedingly great that in this project,
you, Clarissa, will lose your life.
Better not, Mother, when Mentor says anything like that, it means suicide.
We don't want to lose you, too, Kit pleaded, and the first of the first of you,
Four girls added their pleas to his.
Clarissa knew that suicide was against the code,
but she also knew that, as long as there was any chance at all,
Lensman always went in.
Exactly how great, she demanded vibrantly.
It isn't absolutely certain. It can't be.
No, daughter, it is not absolutely certain.
QX, then, I'm going in. Nothing can stop me.
Very well.
"'Tighten your linkage, Clarissa, with me.
"'Yours will be the task of sending your thought to your husband,
"'wherever and whenever in total space and in total time he may be.
"'If it can be done, you can do it.
"'You alone, of all the entities in existence, can do it.
"'I can neither help you nor guide you in your quest.
"'But by virtue of your relationship to him whom we are seeking,
"'your oneness with him, you will require neither help nor guidance.
My part will be to follow you and to construct the means of his return, but the real labor is and must be yours alone.
Take a moment, therefore, to prepare yourself against the effort, for it will not be small.
Gather your resources, daughter, assemble all your forces and your every power.
They watched Clarissa, in her distant room, throw herself prone upon her bed.
She closed her eyes, buried her nose in the counterpane, and gripped a side.
side rail fiercely in each hand.
Can't we help two?
The five implored as one.
I do not know.
Mentor's thought was as passionless as the voice of fate.
I know of no force at your disposal which can affect in any way that which is to happen.
Since I do not know the full measure of your powers, however, it would be well for you to
accompany us, keeping yourselves alert to take instant advantage of any opportunity to be
of aid.
"'Are you ready, daughter Clarissa?'
"'I am ready,' and the Red Lensman launched her thought.
"'Clissa Kinison did not know, then or ever,
did not have even the faintest inkling of what she did or of how she did it.
Nor, tied by her bonds of heritage, love and sympathy, though they were,
and of immense powers of mind though they were,
did any of the five succeed, until after many years had passed,
in elucidating the many complex phenomena involved.
Even Mentor, the ancient Erysian sage, never did understand.
All that any of them knew was that an infinitely loving and intensely suffering woman
stretched rigidly upon a bed, hurled out through space and time a passionately questing thought,
a thought behind which she put everything she had.
Clarissa Kinnison, Red Lensman, had much,
and every iota of that impressive sum total eight-four yearned for and insistently demanded her Kim,
her one and only Kim, Kim her husband, Kim the father of her children, Kim her lover, Kim her other
half, Kim her all in all for so many perfect years.
Kim, Kim, Kim! Wherever you are, Kim, or whenever, listen, listen and answer, hear me,
You must hear me calling.
I need you, Kim, from the bottom of my soul.
Kim!
My Kim!
Kim!
To countless spaces and through intelible times that poignant thoughts sped,
driven by a woman's fears, a woman's hopes,
a woman's all-surpassing love,
urged ever onward and ever outward
by the irresistible force of a magnificent woman's frankly bared soul.
Outward.
Farther.
Farther out, farther.
Clarissa's body went limp upon her bed.
Her heart slowed. Her breathing almost stopped.
Kit probed quickly, finding that those secret cells into which he had scarcely dared to glance
were now empty and bare.
Even the Red Lensman's tremendous reserves of vital force were exhausted.
Mother, come back. Come back to us.
Please, please, moms, come back.
No, you children, your mother so little.
They knew her. They knew starkly that she would not come back. Regardless of any danger to herself,
regardless of life itself, she would not return until she had found her Kim.
"'But do something, mentor! Do something!'
"'What? Nothing can be done. It was simply a question of which was the greater,
the volume of the required hypersphere or her remarkable store of vitality.
"'Shut up,' Kit blazed.
"'We'll do something.
"'Come on, kids, and we'll try.'
"'The unit,' Catherine shrieked.
"'Link up, quick. Cam, make Mother's pattern, all of it.
Hurry.
"'Now, unit, grab it.
"'Make her one of us, a six-ply unit.
"'Make her come in and snap it up.
"'There. Now, Kit, drive us.
"'Drive us!'
Kit drove.
As the surging life force of the unit pushed a measure of vitality back into Clarissa's inert body,
she gained a little strength and did not grow weaker.
The children, however, did.
And mentor, who had been entirely unmoved by the woman's imminent death, became highly concerned.
Children, return!
He first ordered, then entreated.
You are throwing away not only your lives, but also long lifetimes of intensive labor and study.
They paid no attention. He had known that they would not. No more than their mother,
would those children abandon such a mission unaccomplished. Seven Kinnisons would come back,
or none. The Erysian pondered and brightened. Now that a theretofore impossible linkage had
been made, the outlook changed. The odds shifted. The unit's delicacy of Webb, its driving
force had not been enough, or rather it would have taken too long.
Adding the Red Lensman's affinity for her husband, however,
yes, definitely, this unit of his should now succeed.
It did. Before any of the five weakened to the danger point,
the unit, again five-fold, snapped back.
Clarissa's life-force, which had tried so valiantly to fill all of space
and all of time, was flowing back into her.
A tight, hard beam ran, it seemed, to infinity and vanished.
Mentor had been unable to follow the unit, but he could and did follow that beam to Kimball Kinnison.
Abruptly, the trace was hidden by the walls of a hyperspacial tube.
A right scholarly bit of work, children, Mentor approved.
I could not follow you, but I have arranged the means of his return.
Thanks, children.
Thanks, mentor.
Instead of fainting, Clarissa sprang from her bed and stood erect.
Flushed and panting, eyes flamingly alight.
She was more intensely vital than any of her children had ever seen her.
Reaction might, would come later, but she was now all buoyantly vibrant woman.
Where will he come into our space and when?
In your room before you, now.
Kinnison materialized, and as the red-lensman and the gray went hungrily into
each other's arms, Mentor and the Five turned their attention toward the future.
First, the hyperspacial tube which was called the Hellhole in Space.
Kit began. We must establish as fact in the minds of all civilization that the plurins were
actually at the top of Boscon. The story as we have arranged it is that Plur was the top,
and, which happens to be the truth, that it was destroyed through the efforts of the second-stage
lensman. The hell-hole is to be explained as being as being the top of the top, and, which happens to be the
explained as being operated by the plurin residuum, which every lansman knows all about,
and which he will never forget. The problem of Dad's whereabouts was different from the previous
one in degree only, not in kind. To all except us, there never were any Adorians. Any objections?
Will that version hold? The consensus was that the story was sound and tight.
The time has come, then, Karen thought, to go into the very important matter of our reason for being
and our purpose in life.
You have intimated repeatedly that you Elysians are resigning your guardianship of civilization,
and that we are to take over.
And I have just perceived the terribly shocking fact that you four are now alone,
that all the other Elysians have already gone.
We are not ready, mentor.
You know that we are not.
This scares me through and through.
You are ready, children, for everything that will have to be done.
You have not come to your full maturity,
and power, of course. That stage will come only with time. It is best for you, however, that we leave you now.
Your race is potentially vastly stronger and abler than ours. We reached some time ago the highest
point attainable to us. We could no longer adapt ourselves to the ever-increasing complexity of life.
You, a young new race, amply equipped for any emergency within recognizable time, will be able to do so.
In capacity and in equipment, you begin where we leave off.
But we know, you've taught us, scarcely anything, Constance protested.
I have taught you exactly enough.
That we do not know exactly what changes to anticipate is implicit in the fact that our race is out of date.
Further Orisian teaching would tend to set you in the outdated Orisian mold, and thereby defeat our every purpose.
As I have informed you repeatedly, we ourselves do not know what extra qualities you possess.
Hence, we are in no sense competent to instruct you in the natures or in the uses of them.
It is certain, however, that you have those extra qualities.
It is equally certain that you possess the abilities to develop them to the full.
I have set your feet on the sure way to the full development of those abilities.
But that will take much time, sir.
Kit thought. And if you leave us now, we won't have it. You will have time enough and to spare.
Oh, then we won't have to do it right away? Constance broke in. Good. We are all glad of that,
Camilla added. We're too full of our own lives, too eager for experiences, to enjoy the
prospect of living such lives as you Elysians have lived. I am right in assuming, am I not, that our own
development will in time force us into the same or a similar existence?
Your muddy thinking has again distorted the truth.
Mentor reproved her. There will be no force involved. You will gain everything, lose nothing.
You have no conception of the depth and breadth of the vistas now beginning to open to you.
Your lives will be immeasurably fuller, higher, greater than any heretofore known to this universe.
As your capabilities increase, you will find that you will no longer care for the society of entities
less able than your own kind.
"'But I don't want to live forever,' Constance wailed.
"'More muddy thinking,' Mentor's thought was, for him somewhat testy.
Perhaps in the present instance barely excusable.
You know that you are not immortal.
You should know that an infinity of time is necessary
for the acquirement of infinite knowledge,
and that your span of life will be just as short,
in comparison with your capacity to live and to learn,
as that of Homo sapiens.
When the time comes, you will want to,
you will need to, change your manner of living.
Tell us when?
Kat suggested.
It would be nice to know so that we could get ready.
I could tell you, since in that way my visualization is clear,
but I will not.
Fifty years, a hundred, a million, what matters it.
Live your lives to the fullest year by year,
developing your every obvious, latent, and nascent capability.
Calmly assured that, long before any need for your services shall arise,
you shall have established yourselves upon some planet of your choice
and shall be in every respect ready for whatever may come to pass.
You are, you must be right, Kit conceded.
in view of what has just happened, however, and the chaotic condition of both galaxies,
it seems a poor time to vacate all guardianship.
All inimical activity is now completely disorganized.
Kinnison and the patrol can handle it easily enough.
The real conflict is finished.
Think nothing of a few years of vacancy.
The lensmakers, as you know, are fully automatic, requiring neither maintenance nor attention.
What little time you may wish to devote to the special training of selected lensmen
can be taken at odd moments from your serious work of developing yourselves for guardianship.
We still feel incompetent, the five insisted.
Are you sure that you have given us all the instruction we need?
I am sure.
I perceived doubt in your minds as to my own competence,
based upon the fact that in this supreme emergency,
my visualization was faulty and my actions almost too late.
Observe, however, that my visualization was clear upon every essential factor,
and that we were not actually too late.
The truth is that our timing was precisely right.
No lesser stress could possibly have prepared you as you are now prepared.
I am about to go.
The time may come when your descendants will realize, as we did,
their inadequacy for continued guardianship.
Their visualizations, as did ours, may become imperfect and incomplete.
If so, they will then know that the time will have come for them to develop
from the highest race than existing, new and more competent guardians.
Then they, as my fellows have done, and as I'm about to do, will of their own accord
pass on. But that is for the remote future.
As to you children, doubtful now and hesitant as is only natural, you may believe implicitly
what I now tell you is the truth, that even though we Elysians are no longer here, all shall
be well. With us, with you, and with all civilization. The deeply resonant pseudo-voice ceased.
The Kinnisans knew that Mentor, the last of the Elysians, was gone.
Epilogue
To you who have scanned this report,
Further greetings. Since I, who compiled it, am only a youth, a guardian only by title, and hence
unable to visualize even approximately either the time of nor the necessity for the opening of this
flask of force, I have no idea as to the bodily shape or the mental attainments of you,
the entity to whom it has now been made available. You already know that civilization is again
threatened seriously. You probably know something of the basic nature of that threat.
While studying this tape, you have become informed that the situation is sufficiently grave
to have it made again necessary to force certain selected minds prematurely into the third
level of lendsmanship.
You have already learned that in ancient time, civilization after civilization fell before
it could rise much above the level of barbarism.
You know that we and the previous race of guardians saw to it that this, our civilization,
has not yet fallen.
Know now that the task of your race, so soon to replace us, will be to see to it that it does not fall.
One of us will become on rapport with you as soon as you have assimilated the facts, the connotations,
and the implications of this material.
Prepare your mind for contact.
Kit Kinnison.
End of Chapter 29
The End of Children of the Lens by E.E. Doc Smith.
