Classic Audiobook Collection - The Galaxy Primes by E. E. Smith ~ Full Audiobook [scifi]
Episode Date: November 23, 2022The Galaxy Primes by E. E. Smith audiobook. Genre: scifi Earth's first instant-travel starship, the Pleiades, is a triumph of engineering and a terrifying gamble: it can wink out to anywhere in the u...niverse, but no one can predict where it will reappear or how to retrace the jump. Aboard are four extraordinary humans - two men and two women - each a Psionic Prime with mind-powers beyond anything Earth has ever seen. When the Pleiades is hurled billions of parsecs from home, their brilliance becomes the only lifeline between survival and oblivion. As they probe alien physics, map unimaginable distances, and test the limits of telepathy and mental combat, the crew must also confront one another: clashing egos, raw attraction, simmering resentment, and the dangerous question of who should lead when every decision could strand them forever. Their search for a route back to Earth becomes a sweeping odyssey through strange regions of space, where unfamiliar intelligences and hostile environments demand equal measures of courage, discipline, and ingenuity. Propulsive and larger-than-life, The Galaxy Primes blends classic pulp adventure with high-concept speculation about power, control, and what it costs to remain human at the edge of the cosmos. For ad-free listening try our premium subscription Chapters (Approximate) (00:00:00) Chapter 01 (01:01:53) Chapter 02 (01:40:42) Chapter 03 (02:27:54) Chapter 04 (03:11:34) Chapter 05 (04:08:34) Chapter 06 (05:01:35) Chapter 07 (05:57:17) Chapter 08 (06:45:57) Chapter 09 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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The Galaxy Primes
Chapter 1
Her hair was a brilliant green.
So was her spectacularly filled halter.
So were her tight short shorts,
her lipstick, and the lacquer on her finger and toenails.
As she strolled into the main of the starship,
followed hesitantly by the other girl,
she drove a mental probe at the black-haired,
powerfully built man seated at the instrument-banked console.
Blot.
then at the other slender man who was rising to his feet from the pilot's bucket seat.
His guard was partially down. He was telepathing a pleasant, if somewhat reserved, greeting to both newcomers.
She turned to her companion and spoke aloud.
"'So these are the system's best!'
The emphasis was somewhere between condescension and sneer.
"'Not much to choose between, I'd say.
Port me a tenth-piece, Clee.
Heads, I take the toe-head.
She flipped the coin dexterously.
Heads it is, Lola, so I get Jim.
James, James, James, the ninth himself.
You have the honor of pairing with Clee,
or should I say,
His Lurtedness write the Honorable Director
Dr. Cleander Simsworth Garlock,
Doctor of Philosophy, Doctor of Science,
Prime Operator,
President and First Fellow of the Galaxian Society,
first fellow of the Gunther Society,
fellow of the Institute of Paraphysics,
of the Institute of Nuclear Physics,
of the College of Mathematics,
of the Congress of Sionicists,
and of all the other top-bracket brain gangs
you ever heard of?
Also, for your information,
his men have given him a couple of informal degrees,
PDQ and SOB.
The big Sionic's expression of Saturnine
almost contemptuous amusement had not changed,
His voice came flat and cold.
The less you say, Dr. Bellamy, the better.
Obstinate, swelled-headed women give me an acute rectal pain.
Pitching your curves over all the vizis in space got you aboard,
but it won't get you a thing from here on.
And for your information, Dr. Bellamy, one more crack like that,
and I take you over my knee and blister your fanny.
Try it, you big, clumsy, muscle-bound gorilla.
She jeered.
That I want to see.
Any time you want to get both arms broken at the elbows, just try it.
Now's as good a time as any.
I'd like your spirit, babe, but I can't say a thing for your judgment.
He got up and started purposefully toward her, but both non-combatants came between.
Jet back, Clee, James protested, both hands against the heavier man's chest.
What the hell kind of shepherds?
is that to put on?"
And simultaneously, Belle, shame on you!
Picking a fight already and with nobody knows how many million people looking on?
You know as well as I do that we may have to spend the rest of our lives together,
so act like civilized beings, please, both of you, and don't—
Nobody's watching this but us," Garlock interrupted.
When Pussy there started using her claws, I cut the gun.
"'That's what you think,' James said sharply.
"'But Fatso and his number one girlfriend are coming in on the tight beam.'
"'Oh?' Garluck whirled toward the hitherto dark and silent three-dimensional communications instrument.
The face of a bossy-looking woman was already bright.
"'Garlock! How dare you try to cut Chancellor Ferber off?' she demanded.
Her voice was deep-pitched, blatant with authority.
Here you are, sir.
The woman's face shifted to one side, and a man's appeared, a face to justifying full the
nickname Fatso.
"'Fatso, eh?' Chancellor Ferber snarled.
Pale eyes glared from the fat face.
"'That cost you exactly one thousand credits, James.'
"'How much will this cost me, Fatso?' Garlock asked.
"'Five thousand, and since nobody can call me that deliberately,
Demotion three grades and probation for three years. Make a note, Miss Foster."
Noted, sir.
"'Still sure we aren't going anywhere?' Garlock said.
"'What a brain.'
"'Sure, I'm sure,' Ferber gloated.
"'In a couple of hours I'm going to buy your precious starship in as junk.
In the meantime, whether you like it or not, I'm going to watch your expression while you push
all those pretty buttons and nothing happens.'
The trouble with you, Fatso, Garlock said dispassionately as he opened a drawer and took out a pair of
cutting pliers, is that all your strength is in your glands and none in your alleged brain.
There are a lot of things, including a lot of tests, you know nothing about.
How much will you see after I've cut one wire?
You wouldn't dare, the fat man shouted.
I'd fire you, blacklist you all over the ciss.
voice and images died away, and Garlock turned to the two women in the main.
He began to smile, but his mental shield did not weaken.
"'You've got a point there, Lola,' he said, going on as though Ferber's interruption had not occurred.
Not that I blame either Bell or myself. If anything was ever calculated to drive a man nuts,
this farce was. As the only female prime in the system, Bell should have been in automatically.
She had no competition.
And to anybody with three brain cells working, the other place lay between you, Lola,
and the other three female ops in the age group.
But no, Ferber and the rest of the board, stupidity Uber-Alus,
think all us ops and primes are psycho, and that the ship will never even lift.
So they made a grand circus of it.
But they succeeded in one thing, with such abysmal stupidity,
so rampant I'm getting more and more reconciled to the idea
of our not getting back, at least for a long, long time.
Why, they said we had a very good chance, Lola began.
Yeah, and they said a lot of even bigger damn lies than that one.
Have you read any of my papers?
I'm sorry, I'm not a mathematician.
Our motion will be purely at random.
If it isn't, I'll eat this whole ship.
We won't get back until Jim and I work out something to steer us with.
But they must be wondering no end outside what the score is, so I'm willing to call it
a draw, temporarily, and let them in again. How about it, Bell? A draw it is, temporarily.
Neither, however, even offered to shake hands.
Smile pretty, everybody, Garlock said, and pressed a stud.
"'The matter! What's the matter? Oh!'
The worried voice of the system's ace newscaster came in.
"'Power failure already!'
"'No,' Garlock replied.
"'I figured we had a couple of minutes of privacy coming,
if you can understand the meaning of the word.
Now all four of us tell everybody who is watching or listening,
all revoy or goodbye, whichever it may turn out to be.'
He reached for the switch.
"'Wait a minute,' the newscaster demanded.
"'Leave it on until the last puss!'
His voice broke off sharply.
"'Turn it back on.
Bell ordered.
Nix.
Scared?
She sneered.
You chirped it, birdbrain.
I'm scared purple.
So would you be, if you had three brain cells working in that glory hound's head of yours?
Get set, everybody, and we'll take off.
Stop it, both of you, Lola exclaimed.
Where do you want us to sit, and do we strap down?
You sit there, Bell, at that plate beside Jim.
Yes, strap down. There probably won't be any shock, and we should land right side up,
but there's no sense in taking chances. Sure your stuff's all aboard? Yes, it's in our rooms.
The four secured themselves. The two men checked for the dozenth time their instruments.
The pilot donned his scanner. The ship lifted effortlessly, noiselessly,
through the atmosphere, through and far beyond the stratosphere. It stopped.
Ready, Cle? James licked his lips. As ready as I ever will be, I guess. Shoot.
The pilot's right hand, forefinger outstretched, moved unenthusiastically toward a red button
on his panel. Slowed, stopped. He stared into his scanner at the earth so far below.
Hit it, Jim! Garlock snapped. Hit it for good news.
sake, before we all lose our nerve!' James stabbed convulsively at the button, and in the
very instant of contact, instantaneously, without a fractional microsecond of time-lapse,
their familiar surroundings disappeared. Or rather, and without any sensation of motion,
of displacement, or of the passage of any time whatsoever, the planet beneath them was no
longer their familiar earth. The plates showed no familiar stars, nor patterns of head.
heavenly bodies. The brightly shining sun was very evidently not their familiar Saul.
"'Well, we went somewhere. But not to Alpha Centauri, not much to our surprise.'
James gulped twice, then went on, speaking almost jauntily now that the attempt had been made
and had failed.
"'So now it's up to you, Clee, as Director of Project Gunther and Captain of the Goodship Pleiades,
boss the more or less simple, more, I hope, job of getting us back to tell us.
Science, both physical and paraphysical, had done its best.
Gunther's theorems, which define the electromagnetic and electrogravitic parameters
pertaining to the annihilation of distance, had been studied, tested, and applied to the
full. So had the psionic corollaries, which, while not having the status of paraphysical laws,
do allow computation of the qualities and magnitudes of the stresses required for any given application
of the Gunther effect. The planning of the starship Pleiades had been difficult in the extreme,
its construction almost impossible. While it was practically a foregone conclusion that any man
of the requisite caliber would already be a member of the Galaxian Society, the three planets
and eight satellites were screened, cyanacist, by cyanacist,
to select the two strongest and most versatile of their breed.
These two, Garlock and James, were heads of departments of, and under ironclad contract two,
vast Solar Systems Enterprises, Inc., the only concern able and willing to attempt the building
of the first starship.
Alonzo P. Ferber, Chancellor of SSE, however, would not risk a tenth piece of the company's money
on such a bird-brain scheme.
himself a Gunther First, he believed implicitly that firsts were in fact tops and Gunther ability,
that these few self-styled operators and prime operators were either charlatans or self-deluded crackpots.
Since he could not feel that so-called operator field, no such thing did or could exist.
No Gunther Starship could ever possibly work.
He did Lone Garlock and James to the Galilee.
Galaxians, but that was as far as he would go. For salaries and for labor, for research and
material, for trials and for errors, the Society paid and paid and paid. Thus the Starship Pleiades
had cost the Galaxian Society almost a thousand million credits. Garlock and James had worked
on the ship since its inception. They were to be of the crew. For over a year, it had been
taken for granted that would be its only crew.
As the Pleiades neared completion, however, it became clearer and clear that the displacement
control presented an unsolved and quite possibly an insoluble problem. It was mathematically certain
that when the Gunther field went on, the ship would be displaced instantaneously to some
location in space, having precisely the Gunther coordinates required by that particular field.
One impeccably rigorous analysis showed that the ship would ship would shift.
into the nearest solar system possessing an Earth-type planet, which was believed to be Alpha Centauri,
and which was close enough to Saul, so that orientation would be automatic and return to Earth a simple matter.
Since the Gunther effect did in fact annihilate distance, however, another group of mathematicians,
led by Garlock and James, proved with equal rigor that the point of destination was no more likely to be any one given Gunther point
than any other one of the myriads of billions of equiguntherial points undoubtedly existent
throughout the length, breadth, and thickness of our entire normal spacetime continuum.
The two men would go anyway, of course.
Carefully calculated pressures would make them go.
It was neither necessary nor desirable, however, for them to go alone.
Wherefore, the planets and satellites were combed again,
this time to select two women, the two most highly gifted psionicists in the 18 to 25 age group.
Thus, if the Pleiades returned successfully to Earth, well and good.
If she did not, the four selectees would found, upon some far-off world,
a race much abler than the humanity of Earth,
since 83% of Earth's dwellers had psionic grades lower than four.
This search, with its attended fanfare and studiedly blatant publicity, was so planned and engineered
that two selected women did not arrive at the spaceport until a bare fifteen minutes before the
scheduled time of take-off. Thus, it made no difference whether the women liked the men or not,
or vice versa, or whether or not any of them really wanted to make the trip. Pressures were such
that each of them had to go, whether he or she wanted to or not.
Cut the rope, Jim, and let the old bucket drop, Garlock said.
Not too close. Before we make any kind of contact, we'll have to do some organizing.
These instruments, he waved at his console, show that ours is the only operator field
in this whole region of space. Hence, there are no operators and no primes. That means that from now on,
we get back to tell us—'
If we get back to tell us—' Bell corrected sweetly.
Until we get back to tell us there will be no Gunthering aboard this ship.
What?
Bell broke in again.
Have you lost your mind?
There will be little, if any, lepping, and nothing else at all.
At the table, if we want sugar, we will reach for it or have it passed.
We will pick up things, such as cigarettes, with our fingers.
We will carry lighters and use them. When we go from place to place, we will walk. Is that clear?"
"'You seem to be talking English,' Bell sneered, but the words don't make sense.
"'I didn't think you were that stupid.'
Eyes locked and held. Then Garlock grinned savagely.
"'Okay. You tell her, Lola, in words of as few syllables as possible.'
"'Why, to get used to it, of course,' Lola explained, while Bell glared at Garlock in
frustrated anger.
"'So as not to reveal anything we don't have to.'
"'Thank you, Miss Montandon. You may go to the head of the class. All monosyllables except two.
That should make it clear, even to Miss Bellamy.'
"'You, you beast!' Bell drove a tight-beam-thought.
I was never so insulted in my life.
You asked for it. Keep on asking for it, and you'll keep on getting it.
Then allowed to all three. In emergencies, of course, anything goes. We will now proceed with
business. He paused, then went on bidingly. If possible.
One minute, please, bell snapped. Just why, Captain Garlock, are you insisting on oral communication
when lepping is so much faster and better.
It's stupid, reactionary.
Don't you ever lep?
With Jim on business, yes.
With women, no more than I have to.
What I think is nobody's business but mine.
What a way to run a ship, or a project!
Running this project is my business, not yours.
And if there's any one thing in the entire universe it does not need,
it's a female exhibitionist. Besides, your obvious qualifications to be one of the eaves in case of
ultimate contingency—' He broke off and stared at her, his contemptuous gaze traveling slowly,
dissectingly from her toes to the topmost wave of her hairdo.
"'Forty-two, twenty, forty,' he sneered. "'You flatter me!' her glare was an almost tangible force.
Her voice was controlled fury.
39, 22, 35, 5.7. 135, if any of it's any of your business, which it isn't.
You should be discussing brains and ability, not vital statistics.
Brains? You? No, I'll take that back. As a prime, you have got a brain, one that really works.
What do you think you're good for on this project? What can you do?
I can do anything any man ever born can do, and do it better.
Okay, compute a Guntherfield that will put us 200,000 feet directly above the peak of that
mountain.
That isn't fair.
Not that I expected fairness from you, and you know it.
That doesn't take either brains or ability.
Oh, no?
No, merely highly specialized training that you know I haven't had.
Give me a five-tape course on it, and I'll come closer than either you or James, for a hundred
credits a shot.
I'll do just that.
Something you are supposed to know, then.
How would you go about making first contact?
Well, I wouldn't do it the way you would, by knocking down the first native I saw,
putting my foot on his face, and yelling,
"'Bow down, you stupid ignorant beasts, and worship me, the supreme God of the macrocosmic
universe!'
"'Try again, Belle. That one missed me by—'
"'Hold off, both of you,' James broke in.
"'What the hell are you trying to prove? How about cutting out this cat-and-dog act and getting
some work done?' "'You've got a point there,' Garlock admitted, holding his temper by a visible
effort. "'Sorry, Jim. Bell, what were you briefed for?'
"'To understudy you.'
She, too, fought her temper down.
To learn everything about Project Gunther.
I have a whole box of tapes in my room,
including advanced Gunther Math and First Contact Techniques.
I'm to study them during all my on-watch time,
unless you assign other duties.
No matter what your duties may be,
you'll have to have time to study.
If you don't find what you want in your own tapes,
and you probably won't, since Ferber and his Miss Foster ran the selections,
use our library.
It's good, designed to carry.
on our civilization?"
"'Miss Montandon?'
"'No, that's silly.
The way we're fixed.
Lola?'
"'I'm to learn how to be Dr. James.
"'Jim, please, Lola,' James said.
"'And call him Clee.'
"'I'd like that,' she smiled winningly.
"'And my friends call me brownie.
"'I see why they would.
"'It fits like a coat of lacquer.'
"'It did.
"'Her hair was a dark, lustrous brown,
as were her eyebrows. Her eyes were brown. Her skin, too, her dark red play-suit left little to the
imagination, was a rich and even brown. Originally fairly dark, it had been tanned to a more than fashionable
depth of color by naked sunbathing and by practically naked outdoor sports. A couple of inches
shorter than the green-haired girl, she too had a figure to make any sculptor drool.
I'm to be Dr. Jim's assistant.
I have a thousand tapes, more or less, to study, too.
It'll be quite a while, I'm afraid, before I can be of much use, but I'll do the best I can.
If we had hit Alpha Centauri, that arrangement would have been good, but as we are, it isn't.
Garlock frowned in thought, his heavy black eyebrows, almost meeting above his finely-chiseled aquiline nose.
Since neither Jim nor I need an assistant any more than we need tails, it was designed to give
you girls something to do. But out here, lost, there's work for a dozen trained specialists,
and there are only four of us. So we shouldn't duplicate effort, right? You first, Bell.
Are you asking me or telling me? she asked. And that's a fair question. Don't read anything
into it that isn't there. With your attitude, I will.
want information.
I'm asking you, he replied carefully.
For your information, when I know what should be done, I give orders.
When I don't know, as now I ask advice.
If I like it, I follow it.
Fair enough?
Fair enough.
We're apt to need any number of specialists.
Lola?
Of course we shouldn't duplicate.
What shall I study?
That's what we must figure out.
We can't do it exactly, of course. All we can do now is to set up a rough scheme.
Jim's job is the only one that's definite. He'll have to work full-time on nebular configurations.
If we hit inhabited planets, he'll have to add their star charts to his own. That leaves three of us to do all the other work of a survey.
Ideally, we would cover all the factors that would be of use in getting us back to tell us,
but since we don't know what those factors are. Found out anything yet, Jim?
A little, telestite planet, apparently strictly so. Oceans and continents, lots of inhabitants,
farms, villages, all sizes of cities. Not close enough to say definitely, but inhabitants seem to be
humanoid, if not human. Hold her here. Besides astronomy, which is all yours, what do we need most?
We should have enough to classify planets and inhabitants, so as to chart a space trend if there is any.
I'd say the most important ones would be geology, stratigraphy, paleontology, oceanography,
zinology, anthropology, ethnology, vertebrate biology, botany, and at least some ecology.
That's about the list I was afraid of.
But there are only three of us.
The fields you mention number much more.
Each of you will have to be a lot of specialists in one, then.
I'd say the best split would be planetology, zinology, and anthropology.
Each, of course, stretched all out of shape to cover dozens of related and non-related
specialties.
Good enough.
Zenology, of course, is mine.
Contacts, liaison, politics, correlation, and so on, as well as studying the non-human
life forms, including as many lower animals and plants as possible.
I'll make a stab at it.
Now, Bell, since you're a prime and Lola's an operator,
you get the next toughest job. Planetography.
Why not?
Bell smiled and began to act as one of the party.
All I know about it is a hazy idea of what the word means,
but I'll start studying as soon as we get squared away.
Thanks. That leaves anthropology to you, Lola.
Besides, that's your line, isn't it?
Yes, sociological anthropology. I have my MS in it, and am, was, I mean, working for my PhD.
But, as Jim said, it isn't only the one specialty. You want me, I take it to cover humanoid races too?
Check. You and Jim both, then, will know what you're doing, while Bell and I are trying to play ours by ear.
Where do we draw the line between humanoid and non-human?
In case of doubt, we'll confer.
That covers it as much as we can, I think.
Take us down, Jim, and be on your toes to take evasive action fast.
The ship dropped rapidly toward an airport just outside a fairly large city,
50,000, 40,000, 30,000 feet.
Calling strange spaceship!
You must be a spaceship, in spite of your tremendous, hitherto considered impossible mass.
A thought impinged on all four Tillerian minds.
"'Do you read me?'
"'I read you clearly.
"'This is the Tullurian spaceship Pleiades, Captain Garlock commanding,
"'asking permission to land and information as to landing conventions.'
"'He did not have to tell James to stop the ship.
"'James had already done so.'
"'I was about to ask you to hold position.
"'I thank you for having done so.
"'Hold for inspection, and...
and type test, please. We will not blast unless you fire first. A few minutes, please.
A group of twelve jet fighters took off practically vertically upward and climbed with fantastic speed.
They leveled off a thousand feet below the Pleiades and made a flying circle.
Up and into the ring thus formed, their lumbered a large, clumsy-looking helicopter.
We have no record of any planet named Tellus, nor of any such ship as yours.
such incredible mass and with no visible or detectable means of support or of propulsion.
Not from this part of the galaxy, certainly.
Could it be that intergalactic travel is actually possible?
But, excuse me, Captain Garlock, none of that is any of my business,
which is to determine whether or not you four Tullerian human beings are compatible with
and thus acceptable to our humanity of Hodel.
But you do not seem to have a standard till a video testing box aboard.
No, sir, only our own trie-die and TV.
You must be examined by means of a standard box.
I will rise to your level and teleport one across to you.
It is self-powered and fully automatic.
You needn't rise, sir.
Just toss the box out of your copter into the air.
We'll take it from there.
Then to James, take it, Jim.
Oh, you can lift large masses against much gravity?
The alien was all attention.
I have not known that such power existed.
I will observe with keen interest.
I have it, James said.
Here it is.
Thank you, sir, Garlock said to the alien.
Then, to Lola,
You've been reading these, these Haudelians?
The officer in the helicopter and those in the fighters, yes.
Most of them are gun their firsts.
Good girl.
The set's coming to life.
Watch it.
The likeness of the alien being became clear upon the alien screen, visible from the waist up.
While humanoid, the creature was very far indeed from being human.
He, at least it had masculine rudimentary nipples, had double shoulders and four arms.
His skin was a vividly intense cobalt blue.
His ears were black, long, and highly dirigible.
His eyes, a flaming red in color, were large and vertically slidded like a cat's. He had no hair at all. His nose was large and Roman. His jaw was square, almost jutting. His bright yellow teeth were clean and sharp.
After a minute of study, the alien said,
"'Although your vessel is so entirely alien that nothing even remotely like it is on record, you four are completely human.
and, if of compatible type, acceptable. Are there any other living beings aboard with you?
Accepting microorganisms, none. Such life is of no importance. Approach, please, one of you,
and grasp with a hand the projecting metal knob. With a little trepidation, Garlock did so. He felt
no unusual sensation at the contact. All four of you are compatible, and we
accept you. This finding is surprising in the extreme, as you are the first human beings of record
who grade higher than what you call Gunther II, or Gunther Second. Either one, the terms are
interchangeable. You have minds of tremendous development and power, definitely superior even to my own.
However, there is no doubt that physically you are perfectly compatible with our humanity.
Your blood will be of great benefit to it. You may land. Goodbye.
Wait, please. How about landing conventions, and visiting restrictions and so on? And may we keep
this box? We will be glad to trade you something for it, if we have anything you would like to have.
Ah, I should have realized that your customs would be widely different from ours. Since you have been
examined and accepted, there are no restrictions.
You will not act against humanity's good.
Land where you please, go where you please, do what you please, as long as you please.
Take up permanent residence or leave as soon as you please.
Marry, if you like, or simply breed.
Your unions with this planet's humanity will be fertile.
Keep the box without payment.
As guardians of humanity, we Arpa Lones do whatever small favors we can.
Have I made myself clear?
"'Abundantly so. Thank you, sir. Now I really must go. Goodbye.'
Garlock glanced into his plate. The jets had disappeared. The helicopter was falling
rapidly away. He wiped his brow. "'Well, I'll be damned,' he said. When his amazement subsided,
he turned to the business at hand. Lola, do you check me that this planet is named Hodel,
that it is populated by creatures exactly like us,
arpollones?
Exactly, except they aren't creatures.
They are humanoids and very fine people.
You'd think so, of course.
Correction accepted.
Well, let's take advantage of their extraordinarily hospitable invitation
and go down.
Cut the rope, Jim.
The airport was very large and was divided into several sections,
each of which was equipped with runways
and or other landing facilities to suit one class of craft,
propeller jobs, jets, or helicopters.
There were even a few structures that looked like rocket pits.
Where are you going to sit down, Jim?
With the copters or over by the blast pits?
With the copters, I think,
since I can place her to within a couple of inches,
I'll put her squarely into that far corner
where she'll be out of everybody's way.
No concrete out there, Garlock said.
But the ground seems good and solid.
We'd better not land on concrete, James grinned.
Unless it's terrific stuff, we'd smash it.
On bare ground, the worst we can do is sink in a foot or so, and that won't hurt anything.
Check, a few tons to the square foot is all.
Shall we strap down and hang on to our teeth?
Who do you think you're kidding, boss?
Even though I've got to do this on manual, I won't tip over a half-piece standing on
edge. James stopped talking, pulled out his scanner, stuck his face into it. The immense starship
settled downward toward the selected corner. There was no noise, no blast, no flame, no slightest
visible or detectable sign of whatever force it was that was breaking the thousands of tons of
the vessel's mass in its miles-long, almost vertical plunge to ground. When the pleity struck
ground, the impact was scarcely to be felt.
When she came to rest, after settling into the ground, her allotted foot or so, there was no jar at all.
Atmosphere, temperature, and so on, approximately Earth-normal, Garlock said, just as our friend said it would be.
James scanned the city and the field.
Our visit is kicking up a lot of excitement.
Shall we go out?
Not yet, Belle exclaimed.
I want to see how the women are dressed first.
"'So do I,' Lola added, and some other things besides.
Both women, Lola through her operator scanner,
belled by manipulating the ship's tremendous operator field by the sheer power of her prime
operator's mind, stared eagerly at the crowd of people now beginning to stream across the field.
As an anthropologist, Lola announced,
I'm not only surprised, I am shocked, annoyed, and disgruntled.
Why, they're exactly like white Tullerian human beings.
But look at their clothes, Belle insisted.
They're wearing anything and everything, from bikinis to cover-alls.
Yes, but notice.
This was the anthropological scientist speaking now.
Breasts and loins covered.
Faces uncovered.
Heads and feet and hands either bear or covered.
Ditto for legs up to there.
backs, arms, necks, and shoulders down to here, and torsos clear down to there.
We'll not violate any conventions by going out as we are. Not even you, Bell. You first, chief.
Yours is the high honor of setting first foot, the biggest foot we've got, too, on alien soil.
To hell with that, we'll go out together.
Wait a minute, Lola went on. There's a funny-looking automobile just coming through the gate.
The press. Three men and two women. Two cameras, one walkie-talkie, and two microphones.
The photog in the purple shirt is really a sharpie at lepping.
Class three, at least. Possibly a two.
How about screens down enough to lep, boss?
Bell suggested. Faster. We may need it.
Check. I'm too busy to record anyway. I'll log this stuff up tonight. And thoughts flew.
Check me, Jim, Garlock flashed.
Telepathy very good.
On Gunther, the guy was right.
No signs at all of any first activity, and very few seconds.
Check, James agreed.
And Lola, those guardians out there.
I thought they were the same as the Arp alone we talked to.
They aren't.
Not even telepathic.
Same color scheme as all.
Right, much more brutish.
much flatter cranium, long, tearing canine teeth. Carnivorous. I'll call them just guardians
until we find out what they really are. The press car arrived and the Tullerians disembarked,
and, accidentally or not, it was Bell's green slipper that first touched ground.
There was a terrific babble of thought, worse even than voices in similar case in being so much
faster. The reporters, all of them, wanted to know everything at once. How, what, where, when, and why,
also who, and all about Tellus and the Tullerian solar system. How did the visitors like Hodel,
and all about Bell's green hair, and the photographers were prodigal of film shooting everything from all
possible angles. "'Hold it!' Garlock loosed a blast of thought that silenced almost the whole
field. We will have order, please. Lola Montandon, our anthropologist, will take charge. Keep it orderly, Lola, if you
have to throw half of them off the field. I'm going over to administration and check in. One of you
reporters can come with me if you like." The man in the purple shirt got his bid in first. As the two
men walked away together, Garlock noted that the man was in fact a second. His flow of loose
lucid, cogent thought did not interfere at all with the steady stream of speech going into his
portable recorder. Garlock also noticed that in any group of more than a dozen people, there was
always at least one guardian. They paid no attention whatever to the people, who in turn ignored
them completely. Garlock wondered briefly. Guardians? The Arpollones out in space, yes, but these
creatures, naked and unarmed on the ground, the arpollones were non-human people.
These things were—what?
At the door of the field office, the reporter, after turning Garlock over to a startlingly
beautiful, leggy, breasty, blonde receptionist usherette hurried away.
He flecked a feeler at her mind, and stiffened.
How could a two, a high two at that, be working as an usher?
and with her guard down clear to the floor.
He probed and saw.
Lola, he flashed a tight-beamed thought,
You aren't putting out anything about our sexual customs, family life, and so on.
Of course not.
We must know their mores first.
Good girl, keep your shield up.
Oh, we're so glad to see you, Captain Garlock, sir.
The blonde, who was dressed little more heavily than the cigarette girl,
in Venusburg's Cartier room,
seized his left hand in both of hers
and held it considerably longer than was necessary.
Her dazzling smile, her laughing eyes,
her flashing white teeth,
the many exposed inches of her skin,
and her completely unshielded mind,
all waved banners of welcome.
Captain Garlock, sir,
Governor Adderland has been most anxious to see you
ever since you were first detected.
This way, please, sir.
She turned, brushing a,
bare hip against his leg in the process, and led him by the hand along a hallway.
Her thoughts flowed.
"'I have been, sir, and I'm simply delighted to see you close up, and I hope to see a lot
more of you.
You're a wonderfully pleasant surprise, sir.
I've never seen a man like you before.
I don't think Hodel ever saw a man like you before, sir.
With such a really terrific mind, and yet so big and strong and well-built and handsome.
and clean-looking and blackish.
"'You're wonderful Captain Garlock, sir.
You'll be here a long time, I hope.
Here we are, sir.'
She opened a door, walked across the room,
sat down in an overstuffed chair,
and crossed her legs meticulously.
Then, still smiling happily,
she followed with eager eyes and mind Garlock's every move.
Garlock had been reading Governor Atterlin,
knew why it was the governor who was in that office,
instead of the port manager. He knew that Adeline had been reading him, as much as he had allowed.
They had already discussed many things, and were still discussing. The room was much more like a
library than an office. The governor, a middle-aged, red-headed man, a trifle inclined to portliness,
had been seated in a huge reclining chair facing a TV screen, but got up to shake hands.
Welcome, friend Captain Garlock. Now to continue.
to exchange. Many ships visiting us have nothing we need or can use. For such, all services are
free, or rather are paid by the city. Our currency is based upon platinum, but gold, silver,
and copper are valuable, certain jewels also. That's fair enough. We will pay our way. We have
plenty of metal. What are your ratios of value for the four medals here on Hodel?
Today's quotations are, he glanced at a screen and his fingers flashed over the keys of a computer beside his chair.
One weight of platinum is equal in value to 7.346.
Decimals are not necessary, sir.
Seven plus, then, weights of gold.
One of gold to 11 of silver.
One of silver to four of copper.
Thank you.
We'll use platinum.
I'll bring some bullion to my...
morning and exchange it for your currency.
Shall I bring it here, or to a bank in the city?
Either, or we can have an armored truck visit your ship.
That would be better yet.
Have them bring about five thousand tains.
Thank you very much, Governor Adeline, and good afternoon to you, sir.
And good afternoon to you, sir.
Until tomorrow, then.
Garlock turned to leave.
Oh, may I go with you to your ship, sir, to take just a little look at it?
The girl asked, winningly,
"'Of course, Grand Lady Neldine. I'd like to have your company.'
She seized his elbow and hugged it quickly against her breast. Then, taking his hand,
she walked, almost skipped along beside him.
"'And I want to see Pilot James close up too, sir. He's not nearly as wonderful as you are, sir.
And I wonder why planetographer Bellamy's hair is green. Very striking, of course, sir,
but I don't think I'd care for it much on me, unless you'd think I should, sir."
Bell knew, of course, that they were coming, and Garlock knew that Bell's hackles were very
much on the rise. She could not read him, except very superficially, but she was reading the strange
girl like a book, and was not liking anything she read. Wherefore, when Garlock and his joyous
companion reached the great spaceship—' "'How come you picked up that little man-eating shark?
She sent venomously on a tight band.
It wasn't a case of picking her up, Garlock grinned.
I haven't been able to find any urbane way of scraping her off.
First contact, you know.
She wants altogether too much contact for a first.
I'll scrape her off, even if she is one of the nobler class on this world.
Bell changed her tactics even before Garlock began his reprimand.
I shouldn't have said that, Clee, of course.
She laughed lightly.
It was just the shock.
There wasn't anything in any of my first contact tapes
covering what to do about beautiful and enticing girls
who try to seduce our men.
She doesn't know, though, of course,
that she's supposed to be a bug-eyed monster
and not human at all.
Won't Xenology be in for a rough ride when we check in?
Wow!
You can play that in spade, sister.
And for the rest of the day, Bell played flawlessly the role of perfect hostess.
It was full dark before the Haudelians could be persuaded to leave the Pleiades, and the locks were
closed.
I have refused 178 invitations, Lola reported then.
All of us, individually and collectively, have been invited to eat everything everywhere in town,
to see shows in a dozen different theaters and eighteen night-spot.
to dance all night in twenty-one different places, ranging from dives to strictly soup and fish.
I was nice about it, of course, just begged off, because we were dead from our belts both ways
from our long, hard trip. My thought, of course, is that we'd better eat our own food and take it
slowly at first. Check, Clee? On the beam, dead center. And you weren't lying much either. I feel as though
I'd done a day's work. After supper, there's a thing I've got to discuss with all three of you.
Supper was over, then. We've got to make a mighty important decision, Garlock began abruptly.
Grand Lady Neldine, that title isn't exact but close, wondered why I didn't respond at all either
way. However, she didn't make a point of it, and I let her wonder, but we'll have to decide by
tomorrow morning what to do, and it'll have to be air-tight. These Haudelians expect Jim and me to
impregnate as many as possible of their highest-rated women before we leave. By their code it's mandatory,
since we can't hide the fact that we rate much higher than they do. Their highest rating is only
grade two by our standards, and all the planets hereabouts upgrade themselves with the highest-grade
new blood they can find. Ordinarily, they'd expect you two girls to become pregnant by your
choices of the top men of the planet, but they know you wouldn't breed down and don't expect
you to. But how in all hell can Jim and I refuse to breed them up without dealing out the
deadliest insult they know? There was a minute of silence.
We can't, James said then. A grin began to spread over his face. It might not. It might not
be too bad an idea at that, come to think of it. That ball of fire they picked out for you
would be a blue-ribbon dish in anybody's cookbook. And Grand Lady Lemphie—he kissed the tips
of two fingers and waved them in the air. Strictly big league material in capital letters.
"'Is that nice, you back-alley tomcat?' Bell asked plaintively, then paused in thought
and went on slowly.
"'I won't pretend to like it, but I won't
do any public screaming about it.
Any anthropologists would say you'll have to, Lola declared without hesitation.
I don't like it either. I think it's horrible. But it's excellent genetics, and we cannot
and must not violate systems-wide mores.
You're all missing the point, Garlock snapped. He got up, jammed his hands into his pockets,
and began to pace the floor. I didn't think any one of you was that stupid. If that was
all there were to it, we do it as a matter of course. But think, damn it! There's nothing higher than
Gunther II in the humanity of this planet. Telepathy is the only ESP they have. High Gunther uses
hitherto unused portions of the brain. It's transmitted through genes, which are dominant, cumulative,
and self-multifying by interaction. Jim and I carry more, stronger, and higher Gunther genes than
any two men known to live. Can we, dare we, plant such genes where none have ever been
known before?" Two full minutes of silence.
"'That one has really got a bone in it,' James said unhelpfully.
Three minutes more of silence.
"'It's up to you, Lola,' Garlock said then.
It's your field.'
"'I was afraid of that.
There's a way. Personally, I'd like it less even than the other, but it's the only one I've been
able to think up. First, are you absolutely sure that our refusal, bells and mine, I mean,
to breed down will be valid with them? Positive. Then the whole society from which we come
will have to be strictly monogamous, in the narrowest, most literal sense of the term. No exceptions,
whatever. Adultery, anything illicit, has always been not only unimaginable, but in fact, impossible.
We pair, or marry, or whatever they do here, once only, for life. Desire and potency can exist
only within the pair, never outside it. Like eagles. If a man's wife dies even, he loses
all desire and all potency. That would make it physically impossible for you two to follow
the Haudelian code. You'd both be completely impotent with any women, whatever, except
your mates, Belle and me."
"'That will work,' Belle said.
"'How it will work!' she paused. Then suddenly she whistled, the loud, full-bodied,
ear-piercing tongue and teeth whistle which so few women ever master. Her eyes sparkled,
and she began to laugh with unrestrained glee. But do you know what you've done, Lola?
Nothing except to suggest a solution. What's so funny about that? You're wonderful, Lola,
simply priceless. You've created something brand new to science. An impotent Tomcat. And the more I think
about it. Bell was rocking back and forth with laughter. She could not possibly talk, but her thought
flowed on. I just love you all to pieces. And impudent Tomcat, and he'll have to stay true to me.
Oh, this is simply killing me. I'll never live through it. It does put us on the spot,
especially Jim, came Garlock's thought. He too began to laugh. He too began to laugh.
And Lola, as soon as she stopped thinking about the thing only as a problem in anthropology,
joined in. James, however, did not think it was very funny.
"'And that's less than half of it!' Bell went on, still unable to talk.
"'Think of Clee, Lola. Six-two, over two hundred, hard as nails,
a perfect hunk of hard red meat, telling this whole damn cock-eyed region of space
that he's impotent, too, and with a perfectly straight face. And it ties in so beautifully with
his making no response, yes or no when she propositioned him. The poor, innocent, impotent lamb just
simply didn't have even the faintest inkling of what she meant. Oh, my! Listen, listen, listen,
James finally managed to break in.
Not that I want to be promiscuous, but—
There, there, my precious little impotent tomcat!
Bell soothed him aloud between giggles and snorts.
Us Earth girls will take care of our lover boys, see if we don't.
You won't need any nasty little—' Bell could not hold the pose,
but went off again into whoops of laughter.
"'What a brain you've got, Lola!
I thought I could imagine anything.
but to make these two guys of ours the two absolute tops of the whole solar system,
it's a stroke of genius.
Shut up, will you, you human hyena, and listen!
James roared aloud.
There ought to be some better way than that.
Better than sheer perfection?
Bell was still laughing, but could now talk coherently.
If you can think of another way, Jim, the meeting is still
open." Garlock was wiping his eyes. But it'll have to be a dilly. I'm not exactly enamored of
Lola's idea either, but as the answer, it's 100 percent to as many decimal places as you want to
take time to write zeros. There was more talk, but no improvement could be made upon Lola's
idea. Well, we've got until morning, Garlock said finally. If anybody comes up with anything by then,
let me know. If not, it goes into effect the minute we open the locks. The meeting is adjourned.
Bell and James left the room, and a few minutes later, Garlock went out. Lola followed him into his room
and closed the door behind her. She sat down on the edge of a chair, lighted a cigarette, and began to
smoke in short, nervous puffs. She opened her mouth to say something, but shut it without making a sound.
"'You're afraid of me, Lola?' he asked quietly.
"'Oh, I don't. Well, that is—'
"'She wouldn't lie, and she wouldn't admit the truth.
"'You see, I've never—I mean, I haven't had very much experience.
"'You needn't be afraid of me at all. I'm not going to pair with you.'
"'You're not?'
Her mouth dropped open, and the cigarette fell out of it.
She took a few seconds to recover it.
"'Why not? Don't you think I could do a good enough job?'
She stood up and stretched to show her splendid figure to its best advantage.
Garlock laughed.
"'Nothing like that, Lola. You have plenty of sex appeal. It's just that I don't like the
conditions.'
"'I never have paired. I never have had much to do with women, and that little has been
urban, logical, and strictly am passant, on the level of mutual physical desire.
Thus, I have never taken a virgin. Paring with one is very definitely not my idea of urbanity,
and there's altogether too much obligation to suit me, for all of which good reasons I am not
going to pair with you, now or ever. How do you know whether I'm a virgin or not? You've never
read me that deep. Nobody can. Not even.
even you unless I'd let you."
Reading isn't necessary.
You flunt it like a banner.
I don't know what you mean.
I certainly don't do it intentionally.
But I ought to pair with you, Clee.
Lola had lost all of her nervousness, most of her fear.
It's part of the job I was chosen for.
If I'd known, I'd have gone out and got some experience.
Really, I would have.
I believe that.
I think you would have been silly enough to have done just that.
And you have a very high regard for your virginity, too, don't you?
Well, I... I used to, but we'd better go ahead with it. I've got to.
No such thing. Permissible, but not obligatory.
But it was assumed. As a matter of course. Anyway, well, when that girl started making passes at you,
I thought you could have just as much fun, or even more.
She's charming, a real darling, isn't she, without pairing with me?
And then I had to open my big mouth and be the one to keep you from playing games with
anyone except me, and I certainly am not going to let you suffer.
Bunk, Garlock snorted.
Shear flap-doodle, pure psychological prop-wash, started and maintained by men
who are either too weak to direct and control their drives, or who haven't any real work to occupy
their minds. It applies to many men, of course, possibly to most. It does not, however, apply to all,
and it lacks one whole hell of a lot of applying to me. Does that make you feel better?
Oh, it does. It does. Thanks, Clee. You know, I like you a lot.
Do you? Kiss me.
did so. See? You tricked me! I did not. I want you to see the truth and face it. Your idealism
is admirable, permanent, and shatter-proof. But your starry-eyed schoolgirl's mockishness
is none of the three. You'll have to grow up some day. In my opinion, forcing yourself to give up one of your
hardest-held ideals, virginity, merely because of the utter bilge that those idiot head-shrinkers
stuffed you with is sheer, plain idiocy. I suppose that makes you like me even less,
but I'm laying it right on the line. No, more. I'll argue with you when we have time
about some of your points, but the last one, if it's valid, has tremendous force. I didn't know
men felt that way. But no matter what my feeling for you really is, I'm really grateful to you
for the reprieve. And you know, Clee, I'm pretty sure you're going to get us back home.
If anyone can, you can. I'm going to try. Even if I can't, it will be Bell, not you that I take
for the long pole, and not because you'd rather have Jim, which you would, of course. To be
honest, I think I would. Certainly, he's your type. You're not mine. Bell is. Well, that buttons it up,
Brownie, except for one thing. To Jim and Bell and everyone else, we're paired.
Of course. Urbanity, as well as to present a united front to any and all worlds.
Check. So watch your shield. I always do. That stuff is way, way down.
I'm awfully glad you called me Brownie, Clee. I didn't think you ever would. I didn't expect to.
I never talked to a woman this way before either. Maybe it had a mellowing effect.
You don't need mellowing. I do like you a lot, just exactly as you are.
If true, I'm very glad of it. But don't strain yourself, and I mean that literally,
not as sarcasm. I know. I'm not straining a bit, and this'll prove it.
She kissed him again, and this time it was a production.
That was an eminently convincing demonstration, Brownie, but don't do it too often.
I won't, she laughed, gaily and happily. If there's any next time, you'll have to kiss me first.
She paused and sobered. But remember, if you should change your mind any time you really want to,
to kiss me, come right in. I won't be as silly and nervous and afraid as I was just now. That's a promise.
Good night, Clee.
Good night, Brownie.
End of Chapter 1.
Chapter 2.
Of the Galaxy Primes by E.E. Doc Smith.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
The Galaxy Primes.
Chapter 2.
Next morning, Garlock was the last one by a fraction of a minute into the main.
Good morning, all, he said with a slight smile.
Huh?
"'How come?' James demanded, as all four started toward the dining nook.
Garlock's smile widened.
"'Lola! She brought me a pot of coffee and wouldn't let me out until I drank it.'
"'Bought?'
"'Yeah. They haven't read their room tapes yet, so they don't know that room service is practically unlimited.
"'Why didn't I think of that coffee business a couple of years ago?'
"'Well, why didn't I think of it myself ten years ago?'
Bell's eyes have been going from one, man to the other.
"'Just what are you two talking about, if it's anybody's business except your own?'
"'He's an early morning grouch,' James explained as they sat down at the table.
"'Not fit to associate with man or beast, not even his own dog, if he had one, when he first gets up.
"'How come you were smart enough to get the answer so quick, Brownie?'
"'Oh, the pattern isn't too rare.'
She shrugged daintily, sweeping the compliment aside,
especially among men on big jobs who work under tremendous pressure.
Then how about Jim? Bell asked.
Cleese the big brain, not me, James said.
You're a lot bigger brain than any of the men Lola's talking about,
Bell insisted. That's true, Lola agreed,
but Jim probably is, must be, an icebox raider,
eats in the middle of the night.
Klee probably doesn't.
It's a good bet that he doesn't nibble between meals at all.
Check Klee?
Check.
But what has an empty stomach got to do with the case?
Everything.
Nobody knows how.
Lots of theories.
Enzymes, blood sugar, endocrine balance, what have you, but no proof.
It isn't always true.
However, six or seven hours of empty stomach,
in a man who takes his job to bed with him,
is very apt to uglify his pre-breakfast disposition.
Breakfast over and out in the main.
But when a man's disposition is ugly all the time,
how can you tell the difference?
Bell asked innocently.
I'll let that pass.
Garlock's smile disappeared.
Because we've got work to do.
Have any of you thought of any improvement on Lola's monogamous society?
No one had, in fact.
There may be a loophole in it, Lola said thoughtfully.
Did any of you happen to notice whether they know anything about artificial insemination?
Do you think I'd stand for that?
Bell blazed before Garla could begin to search his mind.
I'd scratch anybody's eyes out.
If you'd thought of that idea as a woman instead of as a near Ph.D. in anthropology,
you'd have thrown it into the converter before it even hatched.
Invasion of privacy? That covers it, of course, but I didn't think it would bother you a bit.
Lola paused, studying the other girl intently. You're quite a problem yourself. Callous, utterly savage humor, yet very sensitive in some ways. Fistidious.
I'm not on the table for dissection, Bell snapped. Study me all you please, but keep the notes in your notebook.
I'd suggest you study Clee.
Oh, I have been.
He baffles me, too.
I'm not very good yet.
You—
That's the under—
Cut it! Garlach ordered sharply.
I said we had work to do.
Jim, you're hunting up the nearest observatory.
How about transportation?
No teleportation?
Out.
Rent a car or hire a plane or both.
Fill your wallet.
Better have too much money than not enough.
If you're too far away tonight to make it feasible to come back here, send me a flash.
Brownie, you'll work this town first.
Bell and I will have to work in the library for a while.
We'll all want to compare notes tonight.
Yeah, James said into the pause.
I could tune in remote, but I don't know where I'll be, so it might not be so good.
Check. You can port, but be damn sure nobody sees or see or something.
senses you doing it. That bugs it up, I guess. James and Loa left the ship. Garlock and Bell went into
the library. "'If I didn't know you were impotent, Clee,' Bell shivered effectively and began to
laugh. "'I'd be scared to death to be alone with you in this great big spaceship. Lola hasn't
realized it yet what she really hatched out. The screamingest screamer ever pulled on anybody.'
It isn't that funny.
You have got a savage sense of humor.
Perhaps, she shrugged her shoulders,
but you were on the receiving end, which makes a big difference.
She's a peculiar sort of duck,
brainy, but impersonal, academic.
She knows all the words and all their meanings,
all the questions and all the answers,
but she doesn't apply any of them to herself.
She's always the observer, never the participant.
PURER Egghead. Pure? That's it. She looks, acts, talks, and thinks like a virgin.
Well, if that's all, she isn't any. Or is she? Even though you've started calling her
brownie, like my now-tamed tomcat, you might not—' She stared at him.
Go ahead, probe. Why waste energy trying to crack a prime shield? But just out of curiosity,
Are you two pairing or not?
Tut-tut, don't be inner bane.
Let's talk about Jim instead.
I thought he'd be gibbering.
No, I'm working under double wraps, full dampers.
I don't want him in love with me.
You want to know why?
I think I know why.
Because having him mooning around underfoot
would weaken the team, and I want to get back to tell us.
"'I was wrong then. I thought you were out after bigger game.'
Bell's face went stiff and still.
"'What do you mean by that?'
"'Plain enough, I would think.
Wherever you are, you've got to be the boss.
You've never been in any kind of a party for fifteen minutes without taking it over.
When you snap the whip, everybody jumps or else, and you swing a wicked knife.
For your information, I don't jump.
I am familiar with knives, and you will never run this project or any part of it."
Bell's face set.
Her eyes hardened.
While we're putting out information,
take note that I'm just as good with actual knives as with figurative ones.
If you're still thinking of blistering my fanny, don't try it.
You'll find a raw-hide haft sticking up out of one of those muscles you're so proud of.
Clear enough, Mr. Garlock?
Why don't you talk sense, instead of such yak-yak?
Huh?
I know you're a prime, too, but don't let it go to your head.
I've got more stuff than you have, so you can't gunt or me.
You weigh one-35 to my two-seventeen.
I'm harder, stronger, and faster than you are.
You're probably a bit limberer, not too much, but I forgot more judo than you will ever know.
So what's the answer?"
was breathing hard.
Then why don't you do it right now?
Several reasons.
I couldn't brag much about licking anybody I outweigh
by 82 pounds.
I can't figure out your logic, if any,
but I'm pretty sure now it wouldn't do either of us any good.
Just the opposite.
From your standpoint, would that be bad?
What a hell of a logic!
You have got the finest brain of any woman living.
You're stronger than you.
Jim is by a lot more than the prime to operator ratio. You've got more initiative, more drive,
more guts. You know as well as I do what your brain may mean before we get back. Why in all hell
don't you start using it? You are complimenting me? No, it's the truth, isn't it? What difference does
that make? Klee Garlock, I simply can't understand you at all. That makes it mutual. I can't
understand a geometry in which the crookedest line between any two given points is the best line.
Let's get to work, shall we?
Uh-huh, let's.
One more bit of information, though, first.
Any such idea as taking the project away from you simply never entered my mind.
She gave him a warm and friendly smile as she walked over to the file cabinets.
For hours, then, they worked, each scanning tape after tape.
At midday, they ate a light lunch.
Shortly thereafter, Garlock put away his reader and all his loose tapes.
Are you getting anywhere, Bell? I'm not making any progress. Yes, but of course planets are
probably pretty much the same everywhere. Tell us type ones, I mean, of course. Is all the
zinology as cock-eyed as I'm afraid it must be? Check. The one basic assumption was that
there are no human beings other than Tullerians. From that they derive the secondary assumption
that humanoid types will be scarce. From there they scatter out in all directions.
So I'll have to roll my own. I've got to see Adderlin anyway. I'll be back for supper.
So long. At the port office, Grand Lady Neldine met him even more enthusiastically than before,
taking both his hands and pressing them against her firm, almost bare breasts.
She tried to hold back as Garluck led her along the corridor.
I have an explanation, and in a sense an apology, for you, Grand Lady Neldine, and for you,
Governor Adeline, he thought carefully. I would have explained yesterday, but I had no
understanding of the situation here, until our anthropologist, Lola Montandon, elucidated it
very laboriously to me. She herself, a scientist highly trained in that specialty, could
grasp it only by referring back to somewhat similar situations which may have existed
in the remote past, so remote a past that the concept is known only to specialists and is more
than half-mythical, even to them. He went on to give in detail the sexual customs, obligations,
and limitations of Lola's purely imaginary civilization. Then it isn't that you don't want to,
but you can't? The lady asked incredulously. Mentally, I can have no desire. Physically, the act is
impossible, he assured her.
What a shame!
Her thought was a peculiar mixture of disappointment and relief.
Disappointment in that she was not to bear this man's superchild.
Relief in that, after all, she had not personally failed.
If she couldn't have this perfectly wonderful man herself,
no other woman except his wife could ever have him either.
But what a shame to waste such a man as that on any one woman!
It was really too bad.
I see, I see, wonderful.
Adeline's thought was not at all incredulous, but vastly awed.
It is, of course, logical that as the power of mind increases,
physical matters become less and less important.
But you will have much to give us.
We may perhaps have some small things to give you.
If we could visit your tellus, perhaps.
That also is impossible.
We four in the Pleiades are lost in space.
This is the first planet we have visited on our first trial of a new method, new to us at least,
of interstellar travel.
We missed our objective, probably by many millions of parsecs, and it is quite possible that
we four will never be able to find our way back.
We are trying now by charting the galaxies throughout billions of cubic parsecs of space
to find merely the direction in which our own galaxy lies.
What a concept! What stupendous minds! But such immense distances, sir! What can you possibly be using for a space drive?
None, as you understand the term. We travel by instantaneous translation, by means of something we call Gunther.
I am not at all sure that I can explain it to your satisfactorily, but I will try to do so if you wish.
Please do so, sir, by all means.
Garluck opened the highest Gunther cells of his mind.
There was nothing as elementary as telepathy, teleportation, telekinesis, or the like.
It was the pure, raw Gunther of the Gunther drive, which even he himself made no pretense
of understanding fully.
He opened those cells and pushed that knowledge at the two Haudelian minds.
The result was just as instantaneous and just as catastrophic as Garloc had expected.
Both blocks went up almost instantly.
"'Oh, no!' Adeline exclaimed, his face turning white.
The girl shrieked once, covered her face with her hands, and collapsed on the floor.
"'Oh, I'm so sorry! Excuse my ignorance, please!' Garlock implored as he picked the girl up,
carried her across the room to a sofa, and assured himself that she had not been really hurt.
She recovered quickly.
I'm very sorry, Grand Lady Neldine and Governor Adeline, but I didn't know, that is, I didn't realize.
You are trying to break it gently, Adeline was both shocked and despondent.
This being the first planet you have visited, you simply did not realize how feeble our minds really are.
Oh, not at all really, sir and lady.
Garlock began deftly to repair the morale he had shattered.
Merely younger.
With your system of genetics, so much more logical and efficient than our strict monogamy,
your race will undoubtedly make more progress in a few centuries than we made in many millennia.
And in a few centuries more you will pass us.
We'll master this only partially known Gunther drive.
Aesthetically, Lady Neldine, I would like very much to father you a child.
He allowed his coldly unmoved gaze to survey her charms.
I am sorry indeed that it cannot be.
I trust that you, Governor Adeline, will be kind enough to spread word of our physical shortcomings
and so spare us further embarrassment?
Not shortcomings, sir, and I truly hope no embarrassment, Adeline protested.
We are immensely glad to have seen you, since your very existence gives us so much hope for the
future.
I will spread word, and every Haudelian will do whatever he can to help you.
in your quest.
Thank you, sir and lady.
And Garlock took his leave.
What an act, my male-looking but impudent darling!
Came Bell's clear, incisive thought, bubbling with unrestrained merriment.
For our Dr. Garlock, the prime exponent and first discipline of truth!
What an act!
Aesthetically, he liked to father her a child, it says here in fine print.
"'Boy, if she only knew. One tiny grain of truth, and she'd chase you from here to Andromeda.
Cle, I swear this thing is going to kill me yet!'
"'Anything that would do that I'm very much in favor of!' Garlock growled the thought and
snapped up his shield. This one was quite definitely Bell's round.
Garlock took the Haudelian equivalent of a bus to the center of the city, then set out aimlessly
to walk.
The buildings and their arrangement, he noted, not much to his surprise now, were not too
different from those of the cities of Earth.
With his guard down to about the sixth level, highly receptive, but not at all selective,
he strolled up one street and down another.
He was not attentive to detail yet.
He was trying to get the broad aspects,
the feel of this hitherto unknown civilization.
The ether was practically saturated with thought.
Apparently this was the afternoon rush hour,
as the sidewalks were crowded with people and the streets were full of cars.
It did not seem as though anyone, whether in the buildings on the sidewalks
or in the cars, were doing any blocking at all.
If there were any such things as secrets on Hodel, they were scarce.
Each person, man, woman or child, went about his own business, radiating full blast.
No one paid any attention to the thoughts of anyone else except in the case of couples or groups,
the units of which were engaged in conversation.
It reminded Garlock of a big Tullerian party when the punch-bowls were running low,
everybody talking at the top of his voice and nobody listening.
This whole gale of thought was blowing over Garlock's receptors like a
Great Plains wind over miles wide fields of corn. He did not address anyone directly. No one addressed
him. At first, quite a few young women, at sight of his unusual physique, had sent out tentative
feelers of thought, and some men had wondered in the same tentative and indirect fashion
who he was and where he came from. However, when the information he had given Adderland spread
throughout the city, and it did not take long, no one paid any more attention to him.
than they did to each other.
Probing into and through various buildings,
he learned that groups of people were quitting work
at intervals of about 15 minutes.
There were thoughts of tidying up desks,
of letting the rest of this junk go until tomorrow,
of putting away and or covering up office machines
of various sorts.
There were thoughts of powdering noses and of repairing makeup.
He pulled in his receptors
and scanned the crowded ways for guardians,
He'd have to call them that until either he or Lola found out their real name.
Same as at the airport.
The more people, the more guardians.
What were they?
How?
And why?
He probed, carefully, but thoroughly.
When he had talked to the Arpalone, he had read him easily enough,
but here there was nothing whatever to read.
The creature simply was not thinking at all.
But that didn't make sense.
"'Garlock tuned, first down, then up.
"'And finally, at the very top of his range, he found something.
"'But he did not at first know what it was.
"'It seemed to be a mass detector.
"'No, two of them, paired and balanced.
"'Oh, that was it.
"'One tuned to humanity, one to the other guardians,
"'balanced across a sort of bridge.
"'That was how they kept the ratio so constant.
"'But why?'
There seemed to be some wide-range receptors there, too, but nothing seemed to be coming in.
While he was still studying and still baffled, some kind of stimulus, which was so high and so faint and so alien,
that he could neither identify nor interpret it, touch the Arpollone's far-flung receptors.
Instantly the creature jumped, his powerful, widely bowed legs sending him high above the heads of the crowd,
and it seemed to Garlock directly toward him. Simultaneously, there was an insistent, low-pitched,
whistling scream, somewhat like the noise made by an airplane in a no-power dive,
and Gar-lock saw, out of the corner of one eye, a yellowish something flashing downward through
the air. At the same moment, the woman immediately in front of Gar-lock stifled a scream and jumped
backward, bumping into him and almost knocking him down.
He staggered, caught his balance, and automatically put his arm around his assailant,
to keep her from falling to the sidewalk.
In the meantime, the Guardian, having landed very close to the spot the woman had occupied a moment
before, leapt again, this time vertically upward.
The thing, whatever it was, was now breaking frantically with wings, tail, and body,
trying madly to get away.
Too late.
There was a bone-crushing impact as the two bodies came,
together in mid-air. A jarring thud as the two creatures, inextricably intertwined, struck the pavement
as one. The thing varied in color, Garlock now saw, shading from bright orange at the head
to pale yellow at the tail. It had a savagely tearing curved beak, tremendously powerful wings.
Its short, thick legs ended in hawk-like talons. The Guardian's bowed legs had already immobilized
the yellow wings by clapping them solidly against the yellow body.
His two lower arms were holding the frightful talons out of action.
His third hand gripped the orange throat.
His fourth was exerting tremendous force against the jointure of neck and body.
The neck, originally short, was beginning to stretch.
For several seconds, Garlock had been half conscious that his accidental companion was trying,
with more and more energy to disengage his edge his air.
encircling left arm from her waist. He wrenched his attention away from the spectacular fight,
to which no one else, not even the near victim, had paid the slightest attention, and now saw
that he had his arm around the bare waist of a statuesque matron whose entire costume would have
made perhaps half a Tellurian sunsuit. He dropped his arm with a quick and abject apology.
"'I should apologize to you instead, Captain Garlock. She'd
thought, with a wide and friendly smile, for knocking you down, and I thank you for catching me
before I fell. I should not have been startled, of course. I would not have been, except that
this is the first time that I, personally, have been attacked. But what are they? Garlock
blurted. I don't know. The woman turned her head and glanced in complete disinterest at the
two furiously battling creatures. Garlach knew now that this was the first of her
first time, except for that instantly dismissed thrill of surprise at being the actual target
of an attack, that she had thought of either of them.
Orange yellow? It could be a fumapti, perhaps, but I've no idea, really. You see,
such things are none of our business. She thought at him a half-shrug, half-grimus of
mild distaste, not at the personal contact with the man, nor at the savage duel, but at
even thinking of either the guardian or the yellow monster, and walked away into the crowd.
Garlock's attention flashed back to the fighters. The yellow thing's neck had been stretched
to twice its natural length, and the guardian had eaten almost through it. There was a terrific
crunch, a couple of smacking, gobbling swallows, and head parted from body. The orange beak
still clashed open and shut, however, and the body still thrashed violently. Shifting his grips,
the guardian proceeded to tear a hold into his victim's body just below its breastbone. Thrusting
two arms into the opening, he yanked out two organs, one of which Garlock thought could have
been the heart, and ate them both, if not with extreme gusto, at least in a workman-like
and thoroughly competent fashion. He then picked up the head in one hand.
hand, grabbed the tip of a wing with another, and marched up the street for half a block,
dragging the body behind him. He lifted a manhole cover with his two unoccupied hands,
dropped the remains down the hole thus exposed, and let the cover slam back into place.
He then squatted down, licked himself meticulously clean with a long, black, extremely agile
tongue, and went on about his enigmatic business quite as though nothing had happened.
Garlock strolled around a few minutes longer, but could not recapture any interest in the doings
of the human beings around him.
He had filed away every detail of what had just happened, and it had so many bizarre aspects
that he could not think of anything else.
Wherefore he flagged down a taxi and was taken out to the Pleiades.
Bell and Lola were in the main.
"'I saw the damnedest thing, Clea,' Lola exclaimed.
"'I've been gnawing my fingernails off up to the knuckle.
"'I'm waiting for you.'
"'Lola's experience had been very similar to Garlock's own,
"'except in that her monster was an intense green in color
"'and looked something like a bat about four feet long,
"'with six-inch canine teeth and several stingers.'
"'Did you find out the name of the thing?' Garlock asked.
"'No, I asked half a dozen people,
"'but nobody would even listen to me,
"'except one half-grown boy, and the best he could do,
was that it might be something he had heard another boy say somebody had told him might be
a lemart. And as to those lower-case arpollones, the best I could dig out of anybody was just
guardians. Did you do any better? No, I didn't do as well. And he told the girls about his
own experience. But I didn't find any detectors or receptors, Clee, Lola frowned. Where were they?
Way up, up here, he showed her.
"'I'll make a full tape tonight on everything I found out about the Guardians and the Arpillones,
besides my regular report, I mean.
Since they're yours, and you can make me one about your friend the green bat.'
"'Hey, I like that,' Bell broke in.
"'That could be taken amiss, you know, by such a sensitive soul as I.'
"'check,' Garlock chuckled.
"'I'll have to file that one in case I want to use it sometime.'
"'How are you coming, Bell?'
"'Nice!' Bell's voracious mind had been so busy absorbing new knowledge that she had temporarily
forgotten about her fight with her captain.
"'I'm just about done here. I'll be ready tomorrow, I think, to visit their library and
tape up some planetological and planetographical—notice how insusantly I toss off those two
credit words—data on this here planet Hodel.
"'Good going. You've been listening to this stuff Lola and I were chewing on. Does any of
make sense to you? It does not. I never heard anything to compare with it.
"'Excuse me for changing the subject,' Lola put in plaintively. But when, if ever,
do we eat? Do we have to wait until that confounded James Boy gets back from wherever it was
he went? "'If you're hungry, we'll eat now.'
"'Hungry, look!' Lola turned herself sideways, placed one hand in the small of her back,
and pressed hard with the other her flat, taut belly.
See, only a couple of inches from belt buckle to backbone,
dangerously close to the point of utter collapse.
You poor, abused little thing, Garlock laughed,
and all three crossed the room to the dining alcove.
While they were still ordering, James appeared beside them.
Find out anything, Garlock asked.
Yes and no.
Yes, in that they have an excellent.
observatory, with a hundred eighty-inch reflector, on a mountain only 75 miles from here.
No, in that I didn't find any duplication of nebillary configurations with the stuff I had with
me. However, it was relatively coarse. Tomorrow I'll take a lot of fine stuff along. It'll take
some time, a full day at least. I expected that. Good going, Jim. All four ate heartily,
and after eating they taped up the day's reports.
Then, tired from their first real day's work in weeks,
all went to their rooms.
A few minutes later, Garlock tapped lightly at Lola's door.
"'Come in!' she stiffened involuntarily, then relaxed and smiled.
"'Oh, yes, Clee, of course. You're—'
"'No, I'm not.
"'I've been doing a lot of thinking about you since last night,
and I may have come up with an answer or two. Also, Bell knows we aren't pairing,
and if we don't hide behind a screen at least once in a while, she'll know we aren't going to.
Screen? Screen. Didn't you know these four private rooms are solid? Haven't you read your
house tapes yet? No. But do you think Belle would actually peek? Do you think she wouldn't?
Well, I don't like her very much, but I wouldn't think she would do anything like that,
Clee. It isn't urbane.
She isn't urbane either, whenever she thinks it might be advantageous not to be.
What a terrible thing to say!
Take it for me. If Belle Bellamy doesn't know everything that goes on, it isn't from
lack of trying.
You wouldn't know about room service either, then.
Better scan that tape before you go to sleep.
sleep tonight. What'll you have in the line of a drink to a while away enough time so she will
know we've been playing games? Ginger ale, please. I'll have ginger beer. You do it like so.
He slid a panel aside, his fingers played briefly on a typewriter-like keyboard. Drinks and
ice appeared. Anything you want. Details of the tape. He lighted two cigarettes, handed her one,
stirred his drink. Now, fair lady, or should I say
beauteous dark lady, we will follow the precept of that immortal Chinese philosopher
chin on. You are a prime operator, aren't you? She laughed, but sobered quickly. I'm
worried. You said I flaunted virginity like a banner, and now, Belle, what am I doing
wrong? There's a lot wrong. Not so much what you're doing as what you're doing as what
aren't doing. You're too aloof, detached, egg-headish. You know the score, words and music, but
you don't sing. All you do is listen. Bell thinks you're not only a physical virgin,
but a psychic-blocked prude. I know better. You're so full of conflict between what you want
to do, what you know is right, and what those three-cell-brained nincompoops made you think
you ought to do that you have got no more degrees of freedom than a piston rod.
You haven't been yourself for a minute since you came aboard.
Check?
You have been thinking, haven't you?
You may be right, except that it's been longer than that, ever since the first preliminaries,
I think.
But what can I do about it, Clee?
Contact.
Three-quarters full, say, enough for me to give you what I think is the truth.
But you said you never went screens down with a woman.
"'There's a first time for everything. Come in.'
She did so, held contact for almost a minute, then pulled herself loose.
"'Ugh!' she shivered.
"'I'm glad I haven't got a mind like that.'
"'And the same from me to you. Of course, the real truth may lie somewhere in between.
I may be as far off the beam on one side as you are on the other.
I hope so. But it cleared things up no end. It untied a million knots. Even that other thing,
Brotherly love. It's a very nice concept. You see, I never had any brothers.
That's probably one thing that was the matter with you. Nothing warmer than that, certainly,
and never will be. And I suppose you got the thought. It must have pumped up and smacked you.
Lola's hot blush was visible even through her heavy tan.
How many times I felt like running my fingers up and down your ribs
and grabbing a handful of those terrific muscles of yours
just to see if they're as hard as they look?
I'm glad you brought that up.
I don't know whether I would have dared to or not.
You've got to stop acting like a third instead of an operator.
You've got to stop acting as though you had never been within ten feet of me.
Now's as good a time as any.
He took off his shirt and struck a strong man's pose.
Come ahead.
By golly, I'm going to.
Then, a moment later,
why, they're even harder.
How do you, a scientist, cyanist, and scholar,
keep in such hard shape as that?
An hour a day in the gym, 365 days a year.
Many are better, but a hell of a lot or worse.
I'll say.
She finished her ginger ale, sat down in her chair, leaned back and put her legs up on the bed.
That was a relief of tension, if there ever was one.
I haven't felt so good since they picked me as hometown candidate,
and that was a mighty small town and eight months ago.
Bring on your dragons, clee, and I'll slay them far and wide.
But I can't actually be like she is.
Thank God for that.
"'Deliver me from two such pretzel-benders aboard one ship.'
"'But I could have been a pretty good actress, I think.'
"'Correction, please. Outstanding is the word.'
"'Thank you, kind, sir. And women, men, too, of course, do bring up certain memories to—to—to roll
them around in their tongues and give their taste-buds a treat.
"'Exactly. So, where I don't have any appropriate actual memories to bring up,
I'll make like an actress. Check.
Good girl. Now you're rolling. We're in like Flynn.
Well, we've been in screen long enough, I guess.
Fairly, little sister Brownie, until we meet again.
He tossed the remains of their refreshments, trays and all, into the chute,
picked up his shirt and started out.
Put it on, Clee, she whispered intensely.
Why? He grinned cheerfully.
It'll look still better if I peel down to the altogether.
You're incorrigible, she said, but her answering grin was wide and perfectly natural.
You know, if I had had a brother something like you, it would have saved me a lot of wear and tear.
I'll see you in the morning before breakfast.
And she did.
They strolled together to breakfast, not holding hands, but with hip almost touching hip.
relaxed, friendly, on very cordial, and satisfactory terms. Lola punched breakfast orders for them
both. Bell drove a probe, which bounced. Lola's screen was tight, although her brown eyes were
innocent and bland. But during the meal, in response to a double-edged, wickedly barbed remark of
bells, a memory flashed into being above Lola's shield. It was the veriest flash, instantly suppressed.
Her eyes held clear and steady.
If she blushed at all, it did not show.
Bell caught it, of course, and winked triumphantly at Garlock.
She knew now what she wanted to know.
And Prime Operator, though she was,
it was all he could do to make no sign,
for that fleetingly revealed memory was a perfect job.
He would not have, could not have, questioned it himself,
except for one highly startling fact.
It was of an event that had not happened and never would.
And after breakfast, at some distance from the others,
"'That is my girl, Brownie. You're firing on all forty barrels.
You're an operator, all right, and it takes a damn good one to lie like that with her mind.'
"'Thanks to you, Clee, and thanks a million, really.
I'm me again, I think.'
Then, since Bell was looking, she took him by both ears,
pulled his head down and kissed him lightly on the lips. The spontaneity and tenderness
were perfect at that moment. Clee's appreciation was obvious.
"'I know I said you'd have to kiss me next time,' Lola said, very low. But this act needs
just this much of an extra touch. Anyway, such little, tiny, sisterly ones as this,
and out in public, don't count.
End of Chapter 2
Chapter 3
Of the Galaxy Prime's by E.E. Doc Smith
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
The Galaxy Primes
Chapter 3
Lola and Garlock went to town in the same taxi.
As they were about to separate, Garlock said,
I don't like those hell divers, yellow, green, or any other color.
And you, Brownie,
are very definitely not expendable.
Are you any good at mind bombing?
Why, I never heard of such a thing.
You isolate a little energy in the op-field,
remembering, of course, that you're handling a hundred thousand guts.
Transpose it into platinum or uranium,
anything good and heavy.
For one of these monsters, you'd need two or three micrograms,
for a battleship up to maybe a gram or so.
Port it to the exact place you want it to detonate.
Reconvert and release instantaneously.
One hundred percent conversion atomic bomb, tailored exactly to fit the job.
Very effective.
It would be.
My God, Clee, can you do that?
Sure, so can you.
Any operator can.
Well, I won't.
I never will.
Besides, I'd probably kill too many people besides the monster.
No, I'll port back to the main if anything attacks me.
I'm chain lightning at that.
Do that, then. And if anything very unusual happens, give me a flash.
I'll do that. Bye, Klee.
She turned to the left. He walked straight on, toward the business center,
to resume his study at the point where he had left off the evening before.
For over an hour, he wandered aimlessly about the city, receiving,
classifying, and filing away information. He saw several duels between guardians,
and yellow and green bat monsters, to none of which he paid any more attention that did the
people around him. Then a third kind of enemy appeared, two of them at once, flying wing and wing,
and Garlock stopped and watched. Vivid, clear-cut stripes of red and black, even on the tremendously
long, strong wings, distinctly feline as to heads, teeth, and claws. While they did not at all
closely resemble flying saber-toothed tigers. That was the first impression that leapt into
Garlock's mind. Two bow-legged guardians came leaping as usual, but one of them was a fraction of a
second too late. That fraction was enough. While the first guardian was still high in the air,
grappling with one tiger, the other swung on a dime, the blast of air from its right wing,
blowing the people in the crowd below, thither and yon, and knocking four of them flat, and took the
guardians head off his body with one savage swipe of a frightfully armed paw.
Disregarding the carcass, both attackers whirled sharply at the second guardian,
meeting him in such a fashion that he could not come to firm grips with either of them,
and that battle was very brief indeed. More and more guardians were leaping in from all directions,
however, and the two tigers were forced to the ground and slaughtered.
Since six guardians had been killed, eight guardians marched up the street,
dragging grisly loads.
Eight bodies, friend and foe alike, were dumped into a manhole.
Eight creatures squatted down and cleaned themselves meticulously before resuming their various
patrols.
Ten or fifteen minutes later, Garlock felt Lola's half-excited, half-frightened thought,
"'Clee, do you read me?'
"'Loud and clear.
There's something coming that's certainly none of my business, maybe not even yours.'
"'Cumbing, and with the thought he was there. Where?'
She pointed a thought, he followed it.
Far away yet, but coming fast, was an immense flock of flying tigers.
Lola licked her lips.
"'I'm going home, if you don't mind.'
"'Beed it.'
She disappeared.
"'Jim,' Garlock thought.
"'Where are you?'
Observatory. Need me?'
"'Yes.
"'Bombing.
"'Two point four microgram loads.
Focus spot on my right. Teleport in. Coming in on your right. And I on your left,
Bell's thought drove in as he had never before felt it driven. Being a prime, she did not need a focus
spot and appeared the various instant later than did James. Can you bomb? Garlock snapped.
What do you think? She snapped back. A moment of flashing thought, and the three Tullerians disappeared,
materializing 500 feet in air,
200 feet ahead of the van of that horrible flight of monsters drifting before it.
Bell got in the first shot.
Not only did the victim disappear,
a couple of dozen around it were torn to fragments,
and the force of the blast staggered all three Tullerians.
"'Damn it, Bell, cut down or get to hell out!' Garlock yelped.
"'I said two point four micrograms, not milligrams.
"'Just kill them. Don't scatter them all over hell, hell.
half acre, less mess to clean up, and I don't want you to kill people down below.
Especially, I don't want you to kill us, not even yourself.
Skews, please, I guess I was a bit enthusiastic in my wing.
There began a series of muffled explosions along the front, each followed by the plunge
of a tiger-striped body to the ground.
Faster and faster the explosions came as the operator and the primes learned the routine and
the rhythm of the job.
Nor were they alone. The roaring, screaming howl of jets came up from behind them.
Four Arpalones appeared at their left, strung out along the front. Each held an extraordinarily
heavy-duty blaster in each of his four hands. Sixteen terrific weapons were hurling death into
the flying horde. "'Slide over, Terrestrials,' came a calm thought. "'You three take their left front,
we'll take their right and center.' As they obeyed the insolestrials,
instructions. They don't give a damn where the pieces fly, Bell protested. Why should we be fussy
about their street cleaning department? I'm starting to use fives. Okay, we'll have to hit them harder
anyway to keep up. Five or maybe six. Just be damn sure not to knock us or the Arpollones out of the air.
Carnage went on. The battlefront, while inside the city limits, was now almost stationary.
"'Ha! Help! I hear footsteps approaching on jetback,' Garlick announced.
"'Give them hell, boys! Shovel on the coal!'
A flight of fighter planes, ate abreast and wingtips almost touching, howled close overhead
and along the line of invasion. They could not fire, of course, until they reached the city limits.
There they opened up as one, and the air below became literally filled with falling monsters.
Some had only broken wings. Some were dead, but more or less whole. Many were blown to unrecognizable
bits and scraps of flesh. Another flight screamed into place immediately behind the first,
then another and another and another, until six flights had passed. Then came four helicopters,
darting and hovering, whose gunners picked off individually whatever survivors had managed to
escape all six waves of fighters.
"'That's better,' came a thought from the Arpolo nearest Garlock.
Situation under control, thanks to you Tullerians.
Supposed to be two squads of us gunners, but the other squad was busy on another job.
Without you, this could have developed into a fairly nasty little infection.
I don't know what you're doing or how you're doing it.
We were told that you weren't like any other humans and how true that is,
but I'm in favor of it.
I thought there were four of you.'
One of us is not a fighter.
Oh, you can knock off now if you like.
We'll polish off.
Thanks much.
But don't the boys on the ground need some help?
They are pales.
Those idiots you have been thinking of as guardians,
which they are, of course.
Uh-uh.
Besides, we're air fighters.
Groundwork is none of our business.
Also, these guns would raise altogether too much hell down there,
bound to hit some humans.
Check. Those Arpaels aren't very intelligent. You Arpolans are extremely so. Any connection?
Way back, they say, common ancestry, and doing two parts of the same job. Killing these Fumaptis and
Leemarts and Sincores and what have you. I don't know what humanity's job is, and don't give a damn.
Probably fairly important, some way or other, though, since it's our job to see that the silly,
gutless things keep on living. We have nothing to do with them ever. The only reason I'm talking to you
is you're not really human at all. You're a fighter, too, and a damn good one. I know what you mean.
And the three Tullerians turned their attention downward to the scene on the ground.
The heaviest fighting had been over a large park at the city's edge, which was now literally a shambles.
Very few people were to be seen, and those few more moving unconcernment.
away from the center of violence.
All over the park,
thousands of Arpales were fighting furiously,
and hundreds of them were dying.
For hundreds of the Sincor's had suffered only wing injuries,
the long fall to ground had not harmed them further,
and their tremendous fighting ability
had been lessened very little, if at all.
But I think, just for efficiency, if nothing else,
Garlock argued,
you'd support the Arpail some way.
lighter guns or something? Why, thousands of them must have been killed just in this last hour or so?
Yeah, but that's their business. They breed fast and die fast. Everything has to balance, you know.
Perhaps so. Garlock was silenced, if not convinced. Well, it's about over. What happens to the bodies
they're dumping down manholes? They can't go down a sewer that way. Oh, you didn't know? Food.
Food? For what? The Arpales and us, of course.
What? You don't mean—you can't mean that they—and by your thought, you Arpolones too, are cannibals.
Cannibals? Explain, please. Oh, eaters of our own species. Of course, certainly. Why not?
Why, self-respect? Common decency. Respect for one's fellow man, family ties.
Garlock was floundering, to be called upon to explain his ingrained antipathy to such a custom was new to his experience.
"'You are silly, worse, squeamish, worst, supremely illogical!'
The Arpalome paused, then went on as though trying to educate a hopelessly illogical inferior.
"'While we do not kill Arpales purposely, except when they overbreed, why waste good meat as fertilizer?
If a diet is wholesome, nutritious, well-balanced, and tasty,
what shred of difference can it possibly make what its ingredients once were?
Well, I'll be damned. Garlock quit.
Bell agreed.
This whole deal makes me sick at the stomach, and I think my face is turning green, too.
But I'm devilishly and gleefully glad, Clee, that I was here to hear somebody give you cards,
spaces, and a big casino, and still beat the lights and liver out of you at your own game of
cold-blooded logic. We gunners must go now. Would you like to come along with us and see the
end of this particular breeding-hold of Sencores? At high speed, the seven flew back along the line of
advance of the flying tiger horde, across a barren valley, toward and to the side of a mountain.
An area, almost a mile square of that mountainside, was a burned, blasted, churned, pocked, cratered, and flaming waste,
and the four helicopters were still working on it.
High-energy beams blasted, fairly volatizing the ground as they struck in as deep as they could be driven.
High explosive shells bore deep and detonated, hurling shattered rock and soil and yellow smoke far and wide,
establishing new craters by destroying the ones existing a moment before.
While it seemed incredible that any living creature larger than a microbe could emerge under its own power from such a hell of energy,
many flying tigers did, apparently being blown aloft along with the hitherto undisturbed volume of soil
in which the creatures had been. Most of them were not fully grown. Some were so immature as to be
unrecognizable to an untrained eye. But from all four helicopters, handguns snapped and cracked.
Nothing but nothing was leaving that field of carnage alive.
What are you gunners supposed to be doing here? Garlock asked.
Oh, the copters will be leaving pretty soon. They've got other places to go. But they won't get them all.
Some of the hatches are too deep. So us four gunners will stick around for two, three days to
kill the late hatchers as they come out.
"'I see,' and Garlock probed.
"'There are four cells they won't reach. Shall I bomb them out?'
"'I'll ask.'
The slitted red eyes widened and he sent a call.
"'Commander Knaar, can you hop over here a minute?
"'I want you to meet these things we've been hearing about.
"'They look human, but they really aren't.
"'They're killers, with more stuff and more brains than any of us ever heard of.'
Another Arp alone appeared, indistinguishable to Tullurian eyes from any one of the others.
But why do you want to mix into something that's none of your business?
Kinar was neither officious nor condemnatory. He simply could not understand.
Since you have no concept of our quality of curiosity, just call it education. The question is,
do or do you not want those four deeply buried cells blasted out of existence?
of course I do.
Okay, you've got all of them you're going to get.
Tell your copters to give us about five miles clearance, and we'll all fall back, too.
They drew back, and there were four closely spaced explosions of such violence
that one raggedly mushroom-shaped cloud went into the stratosphere,
and one huge, ragged crater yawned where once churned ground had been.
"'But that's atomic!' Kinnar gasped the,
thought,
"'Fallout!'
"'No fallout. Complete conversion.
Have you got a counter?'
They had. They tested.
There was nothing except the usual background count.
"'There's no life left underground,
so you needn't keep this squad of gunners tied up here,'
Garlock told the commander.
"'Before we go, I went to ask a question.
"'You have visitors once in a while from other solar systems,
"'so you must have a faster-than-light drive.
Can you tell me anything about it?
No, nothing like that would be any of my business.
Kinar and the four gunners disappeared.
The helicopters began to lumber away.
Well, that helps.
I don't think, Garlock thought glumly.
What a world.
Back to the main.
In the Maine, after a long and fruitless discussion,
Garlock called Governor Adderland,
who did not know anything about a faster-than-light-dry,
either. There was one, of course, since it took only a few days or a few weeks to go from one system to
another, but Hodel didn't have any such ships. No ordinary planet did. They were owned and operated
by people who called themselves engineers. He had no idea where the engineers came from, they didn't say.
Garlock then tried to get in touch with the Arpalone Inspector, who had checked the Pleiades in,
and could not find out even who it had been.
The inspector then on duty neither knew nor cared anything
about either faster than light drives or engineers.
Such things were none of his business.
"'What difference would it make anyway?' James asked.
"'No drive that takes a few weeks for an intra-galaxy hop
is ever going to get us back to tell us.
True enough, but if there is such a thing,
I want to know how it works.
How are you coming with you?
their calculations.
I'll finish up tomorrow, easily enough.
Tomorrow came and James finished up, but he did not find any familiar pattern of galactic
arrangement.
The other three watched James set up for another try for Earth.
You don't think we'll ever get back, do you, Clee?
Bell asked.
Right away, no.
Someday, yes.
I've got the germ of an idea.
Maybe three or four more hops will give me something to
work on. I hope so, James said, because here goes nothing, and he snapped the red switch.
It was not nothing. Number two was another guardian inspector and another planet very much like
Hodel. It proved to be so far from both Earth and Hodel, however, that no useful similarities
were found in any two of the three sets of charts. Number three was equally unproductive of
results. James did, however, improve his technique of making galactic charts, and he and Garlock
designed and built a high-speed comparator. Thus, the time required per stop was reduced from days
to hours. Number four produced a surprise. When Garluck touched the knob of the testing box,
he yanked his hand away before it had really made contact. It was like touching a high-voltage wire.
"'You are incompatible with our humanity and must not land,' the inspector ruled.
"'Suppose we blast you and your jets out of the air and land anyway,' Garlock asked.
"'That is perhaps possible,' the inspector agreed, equably enough.
"'We are not invincible. However, it would do you no good.
If any one of you four leaves that so heavily insulated vessel in the atmosphere of this planet,
you will die, not quickly, but slowly and with difficulty.
"'But you haven't tested me,' Bell said.
"'Do you mean they'll attack us on sight?'
"'There is no need to test more than one.
Anyone who could live near any of you could not live on this planet,
nor will they attack you.
Don't you know what the thought incompatible means?'
"'With us it does not mean death.
Here it does, since it refers to life forces. The types are mutually, irreconcilably antagonistic.
Your life forces are very strong. Thus, no matter how peaceable your intentions may be,
many of our human beings would die before you would, but you will not live to get back to your
ship if you land it and leave its protective insulation.
"'Why, what is it? How does it work?' Bell demanded.
It is not my business to know, only to tell.
I have told.
You will go away now."
Garlock's eyes narrowed in concentration.
"'Bell, can you blast?
I mean, could you if you wanted to?'
"'Certainly.
Why, I don't want to, Clee.'
I don't either.
And I'll file that one away to chew on when I'm hungry some night, too.
Take her up, Jim, and try another shot.
was five to nine inclusive were neither productive nor eventful. All were, like the others,
Haudel all over again, in everything fundamental. One was so far advanced that almost all of its
humanity were seconds, one so backward, or so much younger, that its strongest telepaths
were only fours. The Tullerians became acquainted with, and upon occasion fought with,
various types of man-sized monsters in addition to the three varieties they had seen on Hodel.
Every planet they visited had Arpolans and Arpales, not by those names, of course.
Local names for planets, guardians, nation, cities, and persons went into the starship's tapes,
but the welter of names need not be given here. This is not a catalog.
Every planet they visited was peopled by Homo sapiens, capable of interbreeding with the Tullarians
and eager to do so, especially with the Tullerian men.
Their strict monogamy was really tested more than once, but it held.
Each had visited repeatedly by starships,
but all Garlock could find out about them was that they probably came from a world
somewhere that was inhabited by compatible human beings of grade two.
He could learn nothing about the faster than light drive.
Number ten was another queer.
The Tullarians were found incompatible.
"'Let's go down anyway,' Bell suggested.
"'Overcome this unwillingness of ours and find out.
"'What do you think they've got down there, Clee Garlock,
"'that could possibly handle you and me both?'
"'I don't think it's a case of handling at all.
"'I don't know what it is, but I believe it's fatal.
"'We won't go down.'
"'But it doesn't make sense,' Bell protested.
"'Not yet, no, but it's a datum.
enough data and we'll be able to formulate a theory.
You and your theories, I wish we could get some facts.
You can call that a fact, but I want you and Jim to do some math.
We know that we're making mighty long jumps,
assuming that we're at perfect random and of approximately the same length,
the probability is greater than one half that we're getting farther and farther away from Tullus.
Is there a jump number, N, at which the probability is one half that we land nearer
tell us instead of farther away?
My jump in conclusion's guess is that there isn't.
That the first jump set up a bias.
Ouch, that isn't in any of the books, James said.
In other words, do we or do we not attain a maximum?
You're making some bum assumptions.
Among others, that space isn't curved and that the
the dimensions of the universe are very large compared to the length of our jumps.
I'll see if I can put it into shape to feed to copy. You've always held that these generators
work at random. The rest of these assumptions are based on your theory? Check. I'm not getting
anywhere studying my alleged zinology, so I'm going to work full-time on designing a generator
that will steer. You tried to before. So did everybody else. I know it, but I've got a lot more
data now, and I'm not promising, just trying. Okay? Worth a try?"
Sure. I'm in favor of anything that has any chance at all of working."
Jumping went on, and Garlock, instead of going abroad on the planets, stayed in the Pleiades
and worked. At No. 43, their reception was of a new kind. They were compatible with the
people of this world, but the inspector advised them against landing.
I do not forbid you, he explained carefully.
Our humans are about to destroy themselves with fission and fusion bombs.
They send missiles without warning against visitors.
Thus, the last starship to visit us here disregarded my warning and sent down a sensing device
as usual.
Engineers do not land on non-teleopathic worlds, you know, and it was destroyed.
You're a guardian of humanity, Garluck said.
Can't you straighten people out?"
"'Of course not!' the Arpollone was outraged.
"'We guard humanity against incompatibles and non-humans, but it is not our business to interfere
with humanity if it wishes to destroy itself. That is its privilege and its own business.'
Garlock probed down.
"'No telepathy even, not even a seven. This planet is backward, back to year one.
and nothing but firecrackers. We're going down, aren't we?
I'll say we are, Bell said. This will break the monotony at least, and the others agreed.
You won't object, I take it, Garluck said to the inspector. If we try to straighten them out,
we can postpone the blow-up a few years at least. No objections, of course. In fact,
I can say that we guardians of humanity would approve such action.
Down the Pleiades went, into the air of the nation known as the Allied Republican democracies
of the world, and an atomic war-headed rocket came flaming up.
"'Hm! Ingenious little gadget at that!' James reported, after studying it thoroughly.
Filthy thing for fallout, though, if it goes off.
"'Where I flip it, Clee? One of their moons?
Check, third one out. No chance of any contamination from there.'
The missile vanished, and had any astronomer been looking at that world's third and
outermost moon at the moment, he might have seen a tremendous flash of light, a cloud of dust,
and the formation of a new and different crater among the hundreds already there.
No use waiting for him, Jim. All three of you toss everything they've got out onto that same
moon, being sure not to hurt anybody, yet. I'll start asking questions.
The captain who had fired the first missile appeared in the main.
He reached for his pistol to find that he did not have one.
He tensed his muscles to leap at Garlock to find that he could not move.
Garlock drove his probe.
Who is your superior officer?
And before the man could formulate a denial, that superior stood helpless beside him.
Then three and four.
At the fifth,
Oh, you are the man I want.
Prime Minister, euphemism for dictator, Sovig.
Missile launching stations and missile storage?
You don't know?
Who does?
Another man appeared, and for twenty minutes the pleadies darted about the continent.
Now, submarines, atomic and otherwise, and all surface vessels capable of launching missiles.
Another man appeared.
This job took a little longer, since the crew of each vessel.
had to be teleported back to their bases. An immense scrap pile, probably visible with a
telescope of even moderate power, built up rapidly on the third moon.
Now a complete list of your uranium-refining plants, your military reactors, heavy water and
heavy hydrogen plants and so on. Another man appeared, but the starship did not move.
Here is a list of plants, and Garlock named them coldly.
You will remember them. I will return you to your office, and you may, or may not as you please,
order them evacuated. Look at your watch. We start destroying them in exactly 72 of your hours
from this moment. Any and all persons on the properties will be killed. Any within a radius of
ten of your miles may be killed. Our explosives are extremely powerful, but there is no
radioactivity and no danger from the fallout. The danger is from fallout. The danger is from
flashblind, flashburn, sheer heat, shockwave, concussion, and flying debris of all kinds.
The officer vanished, and Garlock turned back to the Prime Minister.
You have an ally, a nation known as the Brotherhood of People's Republics.
Where is its capital?
Slide us over there, Jim.
Now, Prime Minister Sovig, you and your ally, the second and first most populous nations of your world,
are combining to destroy, a Pinser's movement, let us say, the third largest nation, or rather
group of nations, the nations of the North. Oh, I see. Third only in population, but first in
productive capacity and technology. They should be destroyed because their ideology does not agree
with yours. They are too idealistic to strike first, so you will. After you strike,
they will not be able to, whereupon you, personally, will rule the world.
I will add to that something you are not thinking, but should. You will rule it until one of your
friends puts his pistol to the back of your neck and blows your brains out."
They were now over the Allies' capital, which launched five missiles instead of one. Garlock
collected four more men and studied them. Just as bad, if possible, worse. Who, Linginor, is the leader
of your opposition, if any? Another man.
man, very evidently of the same race, appeared.
Idealistic in a way, but spineless and corrupt,
Garluck announced to all.
His administration was one of the most corrupt ever known on this world.
We'll disarm them, too.
They did.
The operation did not take very long.
As this nation, or group it was not very clear exactly what it was,
while very high in manpower was very low in technology.
The Starship moved to a station high above the Capitol building of the Nations of the North,
and moved slowly downward until it hung poised one scant mile over the building.
Missiles, jets, and heavy guns were said and ready, but no attack was made.
Therefore, Garlock introduced himself to various personages and invited them aboard instead of snatching them,
nor did he immobilize them after they had been teleported aboard.
The President, the Chief of Staff, the Chief Justice, the most eminent scientist, the head of a church,
the leaders of the legislative body and four political bosses, the biggest businessman,
biggest labor leader, and biggest gangster.
Fourteen men.
As Garlach studied them, his face hardened.
I thought to leave your nations armed, to entrust this world's future to you, but no.
Only two of you are really concerned about the welfare of your peoples,
and one of those two is very weak.
Most of you are of no higher motivation than are the two dictators and your gangster Clyden.
You are much better than those we have already disarmed, but you are not good enough.
Garlock's hard eyes swept over the group for two minutes before he went on.
I am opening all of your minds, friend and foe alike, to each other,
so that you may all see for yourselves what depths of wrong.
botanness exists there, and just how unfit your world is to associate with the decent worlds of
this or any other galaxy. It would take God himself to do anything with such material,
and I am not God. Therefore, when we have rid this world of Atomics, we will leave, and you will
start all over again. If you really try, you can not only kill all animal life on your planet,
but make it absolutely uninhabitable for, stop it, Clee!
Lola jumped up, her eyes flashing.
Garlock dropped the tune group, but Bell took it over.
Everyone there understood every thought.
Don't you see? You've done enough?
That now you're going too far?
That these twenty-odd men, having had their minds open
and having been given insight into what is possible,
will go forward instead of backward?
Forward.
With such people as the prime ministers,
the labor and business leaders,
the bosses and the gangsters to cope with?
Do you think they've got spines stiff enough for the job?
I'm sure of it.
Our world did it with no better.
Millions and millions of other worlds did it.
Why can't this one do it?
Of course it can.
May I ask a couple of questions?
This thought came from the tall, trim, soldierly, chief of staff.
Of course, General Cordine.
We have all been taking it for great.
granted that you four belong to some superhuman race, some kind or other of homo-superior.
Do I understand correctly your thought that your race is homo-sapians the same as ours?
Why, of course it is, Lola answered in surprise.
The only difference is that we are a few thousand years older than you are.
You said also that there were millions and millions of worlds that have solved the problems
facing us. Were all these worlds also peopled by Homo sapiens? It seems incredible. True, nevertheless.
On any and every world of this type, humanity is identical physically, and the mental differences
are due only to their being in different stages of development. In fact, every planet we have
visited except this one makes a regular custom of breeding its best blood with the best blood of other
solar systems. And as to the millions and millions, I meant only a very large but indefinite
number. As far as I know, not even a rough estimate has ever been made, has their clee?
No, but it will probably turn out to be millions of millions instead of millions and millions,
and squared and then cubed at that. My guess is that it'll take another ten thousand years
of preliminary surveying such as we're doing by all the crews the various Galaxian
societies can put out before even the roughest kind of an estimate can be made as to how
many planets are inhabited by mutually fertile human peoples."
For a moment the group was stunned.
Then,
"'Do you mean to say?' asked the merchant prince,
that you Galaxians are not the only ones who have interstellar travel?
Far from it.
In fact, yours is the only world we have seen that does not have it in one form or another.
Oh, more than one way. That makes it still worse. Would you be willing to sell us plans or
Lisa ships? So that you could exploit other planets? We will not. You would get nowhere,
even if you had an interstellar drive right now. You personally are a perfect example of what
is wrong with this planet. Rapacious, insatiable. You violate every concept of ethics, common decency,
and social responsibility.
Your world's technology is so far ahead of its sociology that you not only should be,
but actually are being held in quarantine.
What?
Exactly.
One race I know of has been inspecting you regularly for several hundreds of your years.
They will not make contact with you or allow you to leave your own world,
until you grow up to something beyond the irresponsible baby stage.
Thus, about two and one half of your own world.
few years ago, a starship of that race sent down a sensing element, unmanned, of course,
to check your state of development.
Brother Sovick volatized it with an atomic missile.
We did not do it, the dictator declared. It was the war-mongering capitalists.
You brainless, mindless, contemptible idiot, Garlock sneered.
Are even you actually stupid enough to try to lie with your mind?
to minds link to your own and to mine?
We did do it then, but it was only a flying saucer.
Just as this ship was to you only a flying saucer, I suppose.
So here's something else for you to think about Brother Sovig,
with whatever power your alleged brain is able to generate.
When you shot down that sensor, the starship did not retaliate,
but went on without taking any notice of you.
When you tried to shoot us down, we took some...
slight action, but did not kill anyone and are now discussing the situation.
Listen carefully now, and remember, it is very possible that the next craft you attack in such
utterly idiotic fashion will, without any more warning than you gave, blow this whole planet
into a ball of incandescent gas.
Can that actually be done?
The scientist asked.
For the first time, he became really interested in the proceedings.
Very easily, Dr. Cheswick," Garlock replied.
"'We could do it ourselves with scarcely any effort and at very small cost.
You are familiar, I suppose, with the phenomenon of ball lightning?'
"'Somewhat.
Its mechanism has never been elucidated in any very satisfactory mathematics.
Well, we have at our disposal a field some—'
"'Hold it, Clee,' James warned.
"'Do you want to put out that kind of stuff around here?'
Um, what do you think?"
James studied Cheswick's mind.
"'Better than I thought,' he decided.
"'He has made two really worthwhile intuitions, a genius type.
He's been working on what amounts almost to the coupler theory for ten years.
He's almost got it.
But you know intuitions of that caliber can't be scheduled.
He might get it tomorrow, or never.
I'd say push him over the hump.
Okay with me. We'll take a vote. One blackball kills it. Brownie? Just a link, of course. A few hints,
perhaps, at application, but no technological data. I say give it to him. He's earned it. Besides,
he isn't young and may die before he gets it, and that will lose them two or three hundred years.
Bell? In favor. Shall I drop the linkage? No, she answered her own question.
No other minds here will have any idea of what it means, and it may do some of them a bit
of good to see one of their own mines firing on more than one barrel.
"'Thank you, Galaxians!' the scientist's mind had been quivering with eagerness.
"'I am inexpressibly glad that you have found me worthy of so much help!'
Garlock entered Cheswick's mind.
First he impressed, indelibly, six symbols and their meanings.
Second, a long and intricate equation, which the scientist studied avidly.
During the ensuing pause, Garla cut the President and Chief of Staff out of the linkage.
We have just given Cheswick a basic formula.
In a couple of hundred years it will give you full telepathy, and then you will begin really
to go up.
There is nothing secret about it.
In fact, I'd advise full publication.
But even so, it might be a smart one.
idea to give him both protection and good working conditions. Brains like his are
apt to be centuries apart on any world. But this is, it could be, it must be,
Cheswick exclaimed, I never would have formulated that. It isn't quite implicit, of course,
but from this there derives the existence of and the necessity for electrogravittics,
An entirely new field of reality and experiment in science.
There does indeed, Garlock admitted, and it is far indeed from being implicit.
You leapt a tremendous gap, and yes, the resultant is more humanistic than technological.
Bell's ear-splitting whistle resounded throughout the main.
"'How do you like them, tidbits, Clee?' she asked.
"'Two hundred years and seventy-eight seconds?'
You folks will have telepathy by the time your present crop of babies grows up.
Clee, are you sorry you got mad and blew your top and wanted to pick up your marbles and go home?
Three such intuitions in one man's lifetime beats par, even for the genius course.
It sure does, Garlock admitted ruefully.
I should have studied these minds, particularly his, before jumping at conclusions.
May I say a few words?
The President asked.
"'You may indeed, sir. I was hoping you would.'
"'We have been discouraged, faced with an insoluble problem.
Sovig and Lingenor, knowing that their own lives were forfeit anyway,
were perfectly willing to destroy all the life on this world to make us yield.
Now, however, with the insight and the encouragement you Galaxians have given us,
the situation has changed.
Reduced to ordinary high explosives, they cannot.
conquer us."
"'Especially without an Air Force,' Lola put in.
"'I personally will see to it that every bomber and fighter plane they now have goes
to the Third Moon.
It will be your responsibility to see to it that they do not rebuild.'
"'Thank you, Miss Montandon.
We will see to it.
As for our internal difficulties, I think, under certain conditions, they can be handled.
Our lawless element,' he glanced at the gangster.
can be made impotent.
The corrupt practices of both capital and labor can be stopped.
We have laws—here he looked at the members of Congress and the judge, which can be enforced.
The conditions I mention would be difficult at the moment, since so few of us are here,
and it is manifest that few, if any, of our people will believe that such people as you Galaxians
really exist.
Would it be possible for you, Miss Montandon?
to spend a few days, or whatever time you can spare, in showing our Congress and as many
other groups as possible what humanity may hope to become?
Of course, sir, I was planning on it.
I'm afraid that is impossible, the chief of staff said.
Why, General Cardine? Lola asked.
Because you'd be shot, Cardine said bluntly.
We have a very good secret service, it is true, and we're
We would give you every protection possible, but such an all-out effort as would be made to
assassinate you would almost certainly succeed."
"'Shot?' Garluck asked in surprise.
"'What with?
You haven't anything that could even begin to crack an operator's shield.'
"'With this, sir,' Cardine held out his automatic pistol for inspection.
"'Oh, I hadn't studied it.
A pellet projector.'
"'Pellet!
Do you call a four-75 slug a pellet?"
Not much of that, really.
It shoots eight times.
Shoot all eight of them at her.
None of them will touch her.
What?
I will not.
One of those slugs will go through three women like her, front to back in line.
I will then—'
The pistol leapt into Garlock's hand.
Hold up one hand, Brownie, and catch him.
Don't let him splash.
No deformation, so he'll be it.
can recognize his own pellets.
Holding the unfamiliar weapon in a clumsy, highly unorthodox grip, something like a schoolgirl's
first attempt, Garlock glanced once at Lola's upraised palm, and eight shots roared out
as fast as the gases of explosion could operate the mechanism.
The pistol's barrel remained rigidly motionless under all the stress of ultra-rapid fire.
Lola's slim, deeply tanned arm did not even quiver under the impact of that.
that storm of heavy bullets against her apparently unsupported hand.
No one saw the bullet strike that gently curved right palm,
but everyone saw them drop into her cupped left hand,
like drops of water dripping rapidly from the end of an icicle into a bowl.
"'Here are your pellets, General Cardine,' Lola handed them to him with a smile.
"'Holy, jumping snakes!' the general said, and,
"'what a torpedo!' came the gangster's envious thundering-thum.
thought. You see, I am perfectly safe from being shot, as you call it, Lola said.
So I'll come down and work with you. You might have your news services put out a bulletin, though.
I never have killed anyone, and I'm not going to hear, but anyone who tries to shoot me or
bomb me or anything will lose both hands at the wrists just before he fires. That would keep
them from killing anyone standing near me, don't you think?
I should think it would.
General Cordine thought, and a pall of awe covered the linked minds.
The implications of the naively frank remark just uttered by this apparently inoffensive and
defenseless young woman were simply too overwhelming to be discussed.
Anything else on the agenda, Clee? Lola asked.
There was not, and the Starship's guests were returned, each to his own home place.
And not one of them, it may be said, was exactly the same as he had.
had been. End of Chapter 3. Chapter 4. Of the Galaxy Primes by E. E. Doc Smith. This Libervox
recording is in the public domain. The Galaxy Primes. Chapter 4. I think I'll come along with you and
bodyguard you, Lola, Bell said the following morning after breakfast. Clee's going to be 7,000 miles
deep in mathematics, and Jim's doing his stuff at the observatory, and I can't.
can't help either of them at the moment. You do a better job, wouldn't you, if
you could concentrate on it?" Of course. Thanks, Bell, but remember,
it's already been announced, no death, just hands. I can't really
believe that I'll be attacked, but they seem pretty sure of it. I'd
like to separate anyone like that from his head instead of his hands,
but as it is published, so it will be performed. How about wearing some kind of
way comfortable shoes instead of those slippers," Garlock asked.
That could turn out to be a long, tough brawl, and your dogs will be begging for mercy
before you get back here.
Uh-uh, very comfortable and a perfect fit.
Besides, if I have to suffer just a little bit for a good appearance's sake in the matter
of intergalactic amity—a matter of showing off, you mean.
"'Why, Clee!'
Bell widened her eyes at him.
How you talk!
They're ready, Lola. Let's go."
The two girls disappeared from the main to appear on the speaker stand in front of the
Capitol building. President Benton was there with his cabinet and certain other personages,
General Cordine and his staff, and many others.
"'Oh, Miss Bellamy, too! I'm very glad you're here,' Benton said as he shook hands cordially
with both.
"'Thank you. I came along as bodyguard. May I meet your Secret Service, Chief, please?'
Why, of course, Miss Bellamy. May I present, Mr. Avengord?"
"'You have the hospital room ready? Where is it, please?'
Back of us in the wing.
"'Just think of it, please, and I will follow your thought. Ah, yes, there it is. I hope
it will not be used. You agree with General Cordine that there will be one or more
attempts at assassination?'
"'I'm very much afraid so. This town is literally riddled with enemy agents, and of course
we don't know all of them, especially the best ones. They know that if these meetings go
through, they're sunk, so they're desperate. We've got this whole area covered like
due. We've arrested sixteen suspects already this morning. But all the advantage is theirs.
Avengord finished gloomily.
"'Not all of it, sir,' Bell smiled at him cheerfully.
"'You have me, and I am a prime operator. That is a wielder of power of
no small ability. Oh, you are right. There is an attempt now being prepared.
While Belle had been greeting and conversing, she had also been scanning. Her range,
her sensitivity, and her power were immensely greater than Lola's, were probably equal
to Garlock's own. She scanned by miles against the scant yards covered by Secret Service.
"'Where?'
"'Give me your thought.'
The Secret Serviceman did not know what she meant. Telepathy was
was of course new to him, so she seized his attention and directed it to a certain window
in a building a couple of miles away on a hill.
But they couldn't from there.
But they can.
They have a quite efficient engine of destruction.
A rifle is their thought.
Large and long, with a very good telescope on it, with crosshairs.
If I scan their minds more precisely you may know the weapon.
Ah!
They think of it as a bufurt-Mars.
Mark-40 anti-aircraft rifle."
A Beaufort!
My God!
They can hit any button on her clothes!
Get her away!
Quick!
He tried to jump but could not move.
As you were, she directed.
There was another Beaufort there and another over there, she guided his thought.
Two men to each Beaufort.
There are now six handless men in your hospital room.
If you will send men to those three places you will find the Beauforts and the hands.
Your surgeon will have no difficulty in matching the hands to the men.
If any seek to remove either Beauforts or hands before your men get there, I will
de-hand them also."
To say that the Secret Service-man was flabbergasted is to put it very mildly indeed.
Cordine had told him, with much pounding on his desk and in searing, air-blowing language,
what to expect, or rather to expect anything, no matter what and with no limits whatever.
hadn't believed it then and simply could not believe it now. God damn it, such things
couldn't happen. And this beautiful, beautifully stacked, half-naked woman, girl rather,
she couldn't be a day over twenty-five, even if it had been their black-browed, top-lofty leader,
Captain Garlock himself.
"'I am twenty-three of your years old, not twenty-five,' she informed him coldly,
and I will permit no distinction of sex.
In your primitive culture, the women may still be allowing you men to believe in the fallacy
of the superiority of the male, but I know right now that I can do anything any man ever-born
can do and do it better.
Oh, I'm sure, certainly, Avondor's thought was incoherent.
If you want me to work with you, you had better start believing right now that there are a lot
of things you don't know.
Bell went on relentlessly.
Stop believing that just because a thing has not already happened on this primitive, backward, mudball
planet of yours, it can't happen anywhere or any when.
You do believe, however, whether you want to or not, things you see with your own eyes?
Yes, I cannot be hypnotized.
I'm very glad you believe that much.
Avengor did not notice that she neither confirmed nor denied the truth of his statement.
To that end, you will go now into the hospital room and see the bandaging
going on.
You will see and hear the news broadcast going out as I prepared it."
He went and came back a badly shaken man.
"'But they're setting it out exactly as it happened,' he protested.
"'They'll all scatter out so fast and so far we'll never catch them.'
By no means.
You see, the amputees didn't believe that they would lose their hands.
Superiors didn't believe it either. They assured each other, and their underlings, that it was
just capitalistic bluff and nonsense. And since they are all even more materialistic and
hidebound and unbelieving than you are, they all are now highly confused, at a complete loss.
You can say that again. If I, working with you and having you pounding it into my head,
couldn't more than half believe it. So they are now very frightened, as well as confused,
used, and the director of their whole spy system is now violating
rule and precedent by sending out messengers to summon certain
high agents to confirm with him in his secret place.
If you tell me where, I'll get over to my office. No, we'll both be in
your office in plenty of time. We'll watch Lola get started. It will be
highly instructive for you to watch a really capable operator at work.
President Benton had been introduced, had in turn finished introducing Lola,
The crowd, many thousand strong, was cheering.
Lola was stepping into the carefully marked speaker's place.
You may disconnect these.
She waved a hand at the battery of microphones, since I do not use speech.
Not only do I not know any of your various languages, but no one language would suffice.
My thought will go into every person on this, your world."
"'World?'
The President asked in surprise.
Surely not behind the curtains.
They will jam you, I'm afraid.
My thought, as I shall drive it, will not be stopped,
Lola assured him.
Since this world has no telepathy, it has no mind blocks,
and I can cover the planet as easily as one mind.
Nor does it matter whether it be day or night,
or whether anyone is awake or asleep.
All will receive my message.
Since you wish a record, the cameras may run, although they are neither necessary nor desirable
for me.
Everyone will see me in his mind much better than on the surface of any TV tube."
"'And I was going to have her address Congress,' the President whispered aside to General
Cordine.
Then Lola put her whole fine personality into a smile, directed apparently not only at each
separate individual within sight, but also individually at every person.
on the globe. And when Brownie Montandon set out to make a production of a smile, it had the
impact of a pile-driver. Then came her smooth, gently flowing, friendly thought.
My name, friends of this world Ormalan, is Lola Montandon. Those of you who are now looking at
TV screens can see my imaged likeness. All of you can see me very much better within your own
minds. I am not here as an invader in any sense, but only as a citizen of the first galaxy of this,
our common universe. I have attuned my mind to each of yours in order to give you a message from
the United Galaxian societies. There are four of us Galaxians in this exploration team.
As Galaxians, it is our purpose here and our duty here to open your minds to certain basic
truths, to be of help to you in clearing your minds of fallacies, of lies, and of
undefensible prejudices, to the end that you will more rapidly become
Galaxians yourselves."
"'Okay, this will go on and on.
That's enough to give you an idea of what a trained and polished performer can do.
What do you think of them, Comfits, Chief?'
Bell deliberately knocked the Secret Serviceman out of his Lola-induced mood.
"'Han? Oh, yes.'
Avengord was still groggy.
She's phenomenal. Good. I don't mean goody-goody, but sincere, and really,
yeah, but don't fall in love with her. Everybody does, and it doesn't do any of them a bit of good.
That's her specialty, and she's very good at it. I told you she's a smooth, smooth worker.
You can say that again.
Avengarde did not know that he was repeating himself.
But it isn't an act. She means it, and it's true.
Of course she means it, and of course it's true. Otherwise, even she, with all her training,
couldn't sell such a big bill of goods? Then, in answer to the man's unspoken question,
Yes, we're all different. She's the contactor, the spreader of the good old oil, the shining
example of purity and sweetness and light. In short, the greaser of the ways.
I'm a fighter myself.
Do you think she could actually have de-handed those men?
Uh-uh.
At the last minute, she would have weakened and brought them in whole.
My job in this operation is to knock the hell out of the ones Lola can't convince,
such as those spies you and I are going to interview pretty quick.
Even though they ought to be convinced, I don't see how anybody could help but be.
Uh-uh, it'll bounce off like hailstones off a tin roof.
The only thing to do with that kind of scum is kill them.
If you'll give me a thought as to where your office is, we'll hop over and—
Bell and Avengor disappeared from the stand, and such was Lola's hold.
No one on the platform or in the throng even noticed that they were gone.
They materialized in Avengor's private office.
He's sitting as usual at his desk, she reclining in legs crossed ease in a big leather chair.
Get to work.
Bill's thought had not been interrupted by any passage of time whatever.
What do you want to do first?
But I thought you were covering Miss Montandon.
I am, like a blanket. Just as well here as anywhere.
I will be until she gets back to the Pleiades. What first?
Oh, well, since I don't know what your limits are, if you have any,
you might as well do whatever you think best, and I'll watch you do it.
That's the way to talk.
You're going to get a shock when you see who the headman is.
George T. Basil.
Basil? I'll say it's a shock.
Avengord steadied, frowned in concentration.
Could be, though. He would never be suspected.
But they're very good at that.
Yeah, his name used to be Baslovkowitz.
He was trained for years, then planted.
None of this can be proved, as his record is perfect.
Born citizen, highest standing in business and social circles, unlimited entry and top security
clearance, right?
Right, and getting enough evidence, in such cases as that, is pure unadulterated hell.
I suppose I could kill him after we've recorded everything he knows, Bell suggested.
No, he snapped. Too many people think of us as a strong-armed squad now.
Anyway, I'd rather kill him myself than wish the job off onto.
You don't like killing, do you?
That's the understatement of the century. No civilized person does.
In a hot fight, yes, but killing anyone who is helpless to fight back, in cold blood,
ugh, it makes me sick in my stomach even to think of it.
With the way you can read minds, we can get evidence enough to send them all to jail,
and that will have to do.
How about this?"
Bell grinned as another solution came to mind.
From those first eight top men, we'll find out a lot of others lower down and so on,
until we have them all locked up here.
We'll announce that exactly so many spies and agents, giving names, addresses and facts, of course,
got panicky after Lola's address.
They fired up their hidden planes and flew back behind the curtain.
Then, when we've scanned their minds and recorded everything you want, I'll pack them all
very snugly and carefully into Sovig's private office.
With the world's situation what it then will be, he won't dare kill them.
He simply won't know what to do when faced with it.
Avengord agreed happily.
He reached out and flipped the switch of his intercom.
"'Miss Kimling, come in, please.'
The door burst open.
"'Why, it is you.
But you were on the rostrum just a minute.
Oh.
She saw Bell and backed eyes wide toward the door she had just entered.
She was there, too, and it's fifteen miles.
Steady, Fram.
I'd like to present you to Prime Operator Bell Bellamy,
who is cleaning out the entire curtain organization for us.
But how did you—
Never mind that.
Teleportation.
It took her half an hour to pound it into me,
and we can't take time to explain anything now.
I'll tell everybody everything I know as soon as I can.
In the meantime, don't be surprised at anything that happens,
and by that I mean anything, such as solid people appearing on this carpet,
on that spot right there instantaneously.
I want you to pay close attention to everything your mind receives.
Put your phenomenal memory into high gear.
Listen to everything I record.
Stop me any time I'm wrong,
and be sure I get everything we need."
"'I don't know exactly what you're talking about, sir, but I'll try.'
Frankly, I don't either. We'll just have to roll it as we go along.
We're ready for George T. Basil now, Miss Bellamy, I hope. Don't jump, Fram.'
Basil appeared, and Fram jumped. She did not scream, however, and did not run out of the office.
The master spy was a big, self-assured, affluent type.
He had not the slightest idea of how he had been spirited out of his ultra-secreted
sub-basement and into this room, but he knew where he was, and, after one glance at Bell,
he knew why.
He decided instantly what to do about it.
This is an outrage! he bellowed, hammering with his fist on Avengarde's desk.
A stupid, high-handed violation of the rights!
Bell silenced him and straightened him up.
"'High-handed?'
"'Yes,' she admitted quite seriously.
"'However, from the Galaxian standpoint, you have no rights at all,
and you are going to be extremely surprised at just how high-handed I am going to be.
I am going to read your mind to its very bottom, layer by layer, like peeling an onion,
and everything you know and everything you think is going down in Mr. Avengarde's big black book.'
Bell linked all four minds together and directed
the search, making sure that no item, however small, was missed. Avengord recorded every
pertinent item. Fram Kimling memorized and correlated and double-checked.
Soon it was done, and Basil, shouting even louder about this last and worst violation
of his rights, those of his own private mind, was led away by two men and put away where
he would keep.
But this is a flagrant violation of law.
Miss Kimling began.
"'You can say that again,' her boss gloated.
And if you only knew how tickled I am to do it, after the way they've been kicking
me around.
But I wonder, are you sure we can get away with it?"
"'Certainly,' Bell put in.
We Galaxians are doing it, not your government or your secret service.
We'll start you clean, but it'll be up to you to keep it clean and that will be no easy
job."
No, it won't, but we'll do it.
Come around again, say, in five or six years and see."
"'You know, I might take you up on that.
Maybe not this same team, but I've got a notion to tape a
recommendation for a revisit, just to see how you get along.
It'd be interesting.
I wish you would.
It might help, too, if everybody thought you'd come back to
check.
Suppose you could?"
I've no idea, really.
I'd like to, though, and I'll see what I can do.
But let's get on with the job.
They're all in what you call the tank now.
Which one do you want next?'
The work went on.
That evening there was, of course, a reception, and then a ball.
And Bell's feet did hurt when she got back to the Pleiades,
but of course she would not admit the fact, and most especially not to Garlock.
Exactly at the expiration of the stipulated 72 hours, the Galaxians began to destroy military
atomic plants, and shortly thereafter the starship's crew was again ready to go.
And James ran home the red button that would send them, all four wondered, where?
It turned out to be another Hodel-type world, and even with the high-speed comparator,
it took longer to check the charts than it did to make them.
The next planet was similar.
So was the next and the next.
The time required for checking grew longer and longer.
How about cutting out this checking entirely, Clee?
James asked then.
What good does it do?
Even if we find a similarity, what could we do about it?
We've got enough stuff now to keep a crew of astronomers busy for five years making a tank of it.
Okay.
We probably are so far away now anyway.
that the chance of finding a similarity is vanishingly small.
Keep on taking the shots, though. They'll prove, I think,
that the universe is one whole hell of a lot bigger than anybody has ever thought it was.
That reminds me, are you getting anywhere on that end problem? I'm not.
I'm getting nowhere fast. You should have been a math-prof in grad school, Clee.
You could flunk every advanced student you had with that one.
Bell and I together can't feed it into Compi in such shape as to get a definite answer.
We think, though, that your guess was right.
If we ever stabilize anywhere it will probably be relative to Hodel not to tell us.
But the cold fact of how far away we must be by this time just scares the pants off me."
"'You and me both, my ripe and old, we're a long ways from home.'
Jumping went on, and two or three planets later they encountered an Arp-alone inspector who
did not test them for compatibility with the humanity of his world.
"'Do not land,' the creature said mournfully.
"'This world is dying, and if you leave the protection of your ship, you too will die.'
"'But worlds don't die surely,' Garlock protested.
"'People, yes, but worlds?'
Worlds die. It is the Dillipic. The humans die, too, of course, but it is the world itself
that is attacked, not the people. Some of them, in fact, will live through it."
Garluck drove his attention downward and scanned.
"'You Arpollones are doing what looks like a mighty good job of fighting. Can't you win?'
"'No, it is too late. It was already too late when they first appeared two days ago.
When the Dilipic strike in such small force that none of their agents, devices, whatever they
are, can land against our beaming, a world can be saved, but such cases are very few.
But this thought, Delipic, Garlock asked impatiently, it is merely a symbol, it doesn't mean
anything, to me at least. What are they? Where do they come from?
No one knows anything about them, came the surprising answer.
answer. Not even their physical shape, if they have any, nor where
they come from, or how they do what they do."
"'They can't be very common,' Garlock pondered.
"'We have never heard of them before.'
"'Fortunately they are not,' the inspector agreed.
Scarcely one world in five hundred is ever attacked by them.
This is the first Dillipic invasion I have seen.
Oh, you Arpolones don't die with your worlds, then?"
Lola asked.
She was badly shaken.
But I suppose the Arpales do, of course.
Practically all of the Arpales will die, of course.
Most of us Arpolones will also die in the battles now going on.
Those of us who survive, however, will stay aloft until the rehabilitation fleet arrives.
Then we will continue our regular work."
"'Rehab?' Bell exclaimed.
"'You mean you can restore planets so badly ruined that all the people die?'
"'Oh, yes. It is a long and difficult work, but the planet is always re-peopled.'
"'Let's go down,' Garlock said.
"'I want to get all of this on tape.'
They went down over what had been one of that world's largest cities.
The air, the stratosphere, and all nearby space were full of battling vessels of all shapes and sizes,
ranging from the tremendous globular spaceships of the invaders, down to the tiny one-man jet fighters of the Arpollones.
The Dilipics were using projectile weapons only, ranging in size, with the size of the vessels,
from heavy machine guns up to 75-millimeter quick-firing rifles.
They were also launching thousands of guided missiles of fantastic speed and of tremendous explosive
power.
The Arpalones were not using anything solid at all.
Each defending vessel, depending upon its type and class, carried from four, up to a hundred
or so burnished metal reflectors, some four feet in diameter, each with a small black device
at its optical center, and each pouring out a tight beam of highly effective.
energy. It was at these reflectors, and particularly at these tiny devices, that the small
arms fire was directed, and the marksmanship of the Delipix was very good indeed. However,
each projector was oscillating irregularly, and each fighter plane was taking evasive action,
and since a few bullet holes in any reflector did not reduce its efficiency very much,
and since the central mechanisms were so small and were moving so erratically,
a good three-quarters of the Arpollonium beams were still in action.
There was no doubt at all that those beams were highly effective.
Invisible for the most part,
whenever one struck a dilipic ship or plane,
everything in its path flared almost instantly into vapor,
and the beam glared incandescently,
blindingly white or violet or high blue,
never anything lower than blue.
Almost everything material,
that is, for guns, ammunition, and missiles were not affected.
They did not even explode.
When whatever fabric it was that supported them was blasted away,
all such things simply dropped,
simply fell through thousands or hundreds of thousands of feet of air
to crash unheeded upon whatever happened to be below.
The invading task force was arranged in a way,
whirling, swirling, almost cylindrical cone, more or less like an earthly tornado. The largest
vessels were high above the stratosphere. The smallest fighters were hedge-hoppingly close to the
ground. Each Dalypic unit seemed madly, suicidally determined that nothing would get through
that furious wall to interfere with whatever it was that was coming down from space to the
ground through, along, the relatively quiet eye of the pseudo-hurricane.
On the other hand, the Arpolones were madly, suicidally determined to break through that
vortex wall to get into the eye, to wreak all possible damage there.
Group after group after group of five jet fighters each came driving in, and occasionally
the combined blats of all five made enough of an opening in the wall so that the center
fighter could get through.
Once inside, each pilot stood his little stubby-winged craft squarely on her tail, opened his
projectors to absolute maximum of power and of spread, and climbed straight up the spout
until he was shot down. And the Arpolones were winning the battle. Larger and larger
gaps were being opened in the vortex wall, gaps which it became increasingly difficult for
the Delipix to fill. More and more Arpolon fighters were getting inside. They were lasting
longer and doing more damage all the time. The tube was growing narrower and narrower.
All four Galaxians perceived all this in seconds.
Garlock weighed out and detonated a terrific matter-conversion bomb in the exact center of one of the largest vessels of the attacking fleet.
It had no effect.
Then a larger one.
Then another, still heavier.
Finally, at over a hundred megatons equivalent, he did get results, of a sort.
The invaders' guns, ammunition, and missiles were blown out of the ship and skimely.
scattered outward for miles in all directions, but the structure of the
Dalypic ship itself was not harmed.
Bell had been studying, analyzing, probing the things that were coming down through
that hellish tube.
"'Clee,' she drove a thought.
Cut out the monkey business with those damn fire-crackers of years and look here.
Pure solid force, like ball lightning or our upfield, but entirely different.
See if you can analyze the stuff."
"'Alive?' Garlock asked, as he drove a probe into one of the things.
They were furiously radiating spheres some seven feet in diameter, and began to tune to it.
"'I don't know. Don't think so. If they are, they're a form of life that no sane human
being could even imagine.'
"'Let's see what they actually do,' Garlock suggested, still trying to tune in with the thing,
whatever it was, and still following it down.
This particular force-ball happened to hit the top of a six-story building.
It was not going very fast, fifteen or twenty miles an hour, but when it struck the roof,
it did not even slow down.
Without any effort at all, apparently, it continued downward through the concrete and steel
and glass of the building, and everything in its path became monstrously, sickeningly
changed.
I simply can't stand any more of this," Lola gasped.
If you don't mind, I'm going to my room, set all the Gunther blocks it has and bury
my head under a pillow.
Go ahead, Brownie, James said.
This is too tough for anybody to watch.
I'd do the same, except I've got to run these cameras.
Lola disappeared.
Garlock and Bell kept on studying.
Neither had paid any attention at all to either Lola or James.
Instead of the structural material it had once been, the board that the thing had traversed
was now full of a sparkling, bubbling, writhing, partly fluid, partly viscous, obscenely
repulsive mass of something unknown and unknowable on earth.
A something which Garlock now recalled had been thought of by the Arpillone inspector as
Gullop. As that unstoppable globe descended through office after office, it neither sought out
people nor avoided them. Walls, doors, windows, ceilings, floors and rugs, office furniture
and office personnel, all alike, were absorbed into and made a part of that indescribably
horrid brew. Nor did the track of that hellishly wanton globe remain abhorred. Instead,
Instead, it spread. That devil's brew ate into and dissolved everything it touched, like a stream
of boiling water being poured into a loosely heaped pile of granulated sugar. By the time the
ravening sphere had reached the second floor, the entire roof of the building was gone, and
the writhing, racing flood of corruption had flowed down the outer walls and across the street,
engulfing and transforming sidewalks, people, pavement, poles, wires, automobiles, people,
anything and everything it touched.
The globe went on down, through basement and sub-basement, until it reached solid, natural ground.
Then, with its top a few inches below the level of natural ground, it came to a full stop
and, apparently, did nothing at all. By this time, the ravening flood outside had eaten
far into the lower floors of the buildings across the street, as well as along all four sides
of the block, and tremendous masses of masonry and steel, their supporting structures devoured,
were subsiding, crumbling, and crashing down into the noisome flood of Gallup, and were being
transformed almost as fast as they could fall. One tremendous mass, weighing hundreds or perhaps
thousands of tons, toppled almost as a whole, splashing the stuff in all directions for
hundreds of yards. Wherever each splash struck, however, a new center of attack came
into being, and the peculiarly disgusting, abhorrent liquidation went on.
"'Can you do anything with it, Clee?' Bell demanded.
"'Not too much. It's a mess,' Garlock replied.
Besides, it wouldn't get us far, I don't think. It'll be more productive to analyze the beams the
Arpolones were using to break them up, don't you think?"
Then for twenty solid minutes the two prime operators worked on those enigmatic beams.
"'We can't assemble that kind of stuff with our minds,' Bell decided then.
"'I'll say we can't,' Garlock agreed.
"'Ten megacles, and cycling only twenty per second.'
He whistled raucously through his teeth.
My guess is it'd take four months to design and build a generator to put out that kind of stuff.
It's worse than our upfield.
I'm not sure I could ever design one, Bell said thoughtfully.
But, of course, I'm not the engineer you are.
Then she could not help adding, yet.
No, and you never will be, he said flatly.
No, that's what you think.
Even in such circumstances as those, Belle Bellamy was eager to carry on her warfare with
her project chief.
That's exactly what I think, and I'm so close to knowing it for a fact that the difference
is indetectable.
Bell almost, but not quite, blew up.
Well, what are you going to do?
Unless and until I can figure out something effective to do, I'm not going to try to do anything.
If you, with your vaunted belief in the inherent superiority of the female over the
male, can dope out something useful before I do, I'll lead crow and help you do it.
As for arguing with you, I'm all done for the moment."
Belle gritted her teeth, flounced away and plumped herself down into a chair.
She shut her eyes and put every iota of her mind to work on the problem of finding something,
anything that could be done to help this doomed world and to show that big, overbearing jerk
of a Garlock that she was a better man than he was.
Which of the two objectives loomed more important she herself could not have told to save
her life.
And Garlock looked around.
The air and the sky over the now vanished city were both clear of Delipic craft.
The surviving Arpalone fighters and other small craft were making no attempt to land, anywhere
on the world's surface. Instead, they were flying upward toward and were being drawn one
by one into the bowels of huge Arpolian space freighters. When each such vessel was filled
to capacity, it flew upward and set itself into a more or less circular orbit around the planet.
Around and around and around the ruined world the Pleiades went, recording, observing, charting.
Fifty-eight of those atrocious Dalipic Fortices had been driven.
to ground. Every large landmass surrounded by large bodies of water have been struck once,
and only once. From the tremendous area of the largest continent down to the relatively tiny
expanses of the largest islands. One landmass, one vortex, one only. What do you suppose that
means? James asked. Afraid of water? Damn fine, oh, could be. Let's check, mountains too. Skip a
back to where we started, oceans and mountains both fairly close there.
The city had disappeared long since.
For hundreds of almost level square miles there extended a sparkling, seething, writhing expanse
of—of what?
The edge of that devouring flood had almost reached the foothills, and over that gnawing,
dissolving edge the Pleiades paused.
Small lakes and ordinary rivers bothered the gallop very little if
at all. There was perhaps a slightly increased sparkling, a slight stiffening, a little darkening,
some freezing and breaking off of solid blocks. But the thing's forward motion was not noticeably
slowed down. It drank a fairly large river and a lake one mile wide by ten miles long while
the two men watched. The gallop made no attempt to climb either foothills or mountains. It leveled
them. It ate into their bases at its own level.
The undermined masses, small and large, collapsed into the foul, corrosive semi-liquid
and were consumed. Nor was there much raising of the gallops level, even when the highest
mountains were reached, and miles-high masses of solid rock broke off and toppled. There
was some raising, of course, but the stuff was fluid enough so that its slope was not apparent
to the eye. Then the Pleiades went back, over the place where the city had been and onto what
had once been an ocean beach. The original wave of degradation had reached that shore long
since, had attacked its sands out into deep water, and there it had been stopped. The
corrupt flood was now being reinforced, however, by an ever-rising tide of material that
had once been mountains, and the slope, which had not been even noticeable at the mountains or over
the plain, was here very evident. As the rapidly flowing gallop struck water,
the water shivered, came to a weirdly unforgettable cold boil, and exploded into drops and streamers
and jagged-ed-edged chunks of something that was neither water nor land, or rock or soil or sand,
or Satan's unholy brew. Nevertheless, the water won. There was so much of it. Each barrel of
water that was destroyed was replaced instantly and enthusiastically, with no lowering of level or of
pressure. And when the water struck the gallop, the gallop also shivered violently, then sparkled even
more violently, then stopped sparkling and turned dark, then froze solid. The frozen surface, however,
was neither thick enough nor strong enough to form an effective wall. Again and again, the wave of
gallop built up high enough to crack and to shatter that feeble wall. Again and again,
gallop and water met in ultimately furious, if incensate battle.
Inch by inch the ocean's shoreline was driven backward toward ocean's depths,
but every inch the ocean lost was to its tactical advantage,
since the advancing front was by now practically filled with hard, solid, dead blocks of its
own substance, which it could neither assimilate nor remove from the scene of conflict.
Hence the wall grew ever thicker and solider. The advance became slower and slower.
Then, finally, ocean waves of ever-increasing height and violence rolled in against the new-formed
shore. What caused those tremendous waves, earthquakes, perhaps due to the shifting of the
mountain's masses, no Tullerian ever surely knew. Whatever the cause, however, those waves operated
to pin the gallop down. Whenever and wherever one of those monstrous waves white-capped in,
hurling hundreds of thousands of tons of water inland for hundreds of yards, the battlefront
stabilized then and there. All over that world, the story was the same. Wherever there was water
enough, the water won, and the total quantity of water in that world's oceans remained practically
unchanged. Good! A lot of people escaped.
James said, expelling a long-held breath.
"'Everybody who lives on, or could be flown to all the islands smaller than the biggest
ones, if they can find enough to eat, and if the air isn't poisoned?'
"'Air's okay, so's the water, and they'll get food,' Garlock said.
The Arpolans will handle things, including distribution.
What I'm thinking about is how they're going to rehabilitate it.
That, as an engineering project, is a feat to end all things.
Feats. "'Brother, you can play that in spades,' James agreed.
"'Except that it'll take too many months before they can even start the job. I'd like to
stick around and see how they go about it. How does this kind of stuff fit into that theory
you're not admitting as a theory?' "'Not worth a damn. However, it's a datum, and, as I've said
before and may say again, if we can get enough data, we can build a theory out of it.'
Then it began to rain.
For many minutes the clouds had been piling up, black, far-flung, thick and high.
Immense bolts of lightning flashed and snapped and crackled.
Thunder crashed and rolled and rumbled.
Rain fell and continued to fall like a cloudburst in Colorado.
And shortly thereafter, first by square feet and then by acres and then by square miles,
the surface of the gallop began to die.
to die, that is, if it had ever been even partially alive.
At least it stopped sparkling, darkened and froze into thick skins, which broke up into
blocks, which in turn sank, thus exposing an ever-renewed surface to the driving, pelting, relentlessly
cascading rain.
"'Well, I don't know that there's anything to hold us here any longer,' Garlock said finally.
"'Shall we go?'
They went.
but it was several days before any of the wanderers really felt like smiling,
and Lola did not recover from her depression for over a week.
End of Chapter 4
Chapter 5 of the Galaxy Primes by E.E. Doc Smith.
This Liberovox recording is in the public domain.
The Galaxy Primes
Chapter 5
Supper was over, but the four were.
still at the table, sipping coffee and smoking.
During a pause in the casual conversation, James suddenly straightened up.
"'I want an official decision, Clee,' he said abruptly.
"'While we're out of touch with United Worlds, you, as captain of the ship and director
of the project, are boss, with a capital B. The Lord of Justice, high and low. The works.
Check?'
On paper, yes.
with my decision subject to appeal and or review when we get back to base,
in practice I didn't expect to have to make any very gravid rulings.
I never thought you'd have to either, but Bell fed me one with a bone in it, so...
Just a minute. How official do you want it? Full formal, screens down and recorded?
Not unless we have to. Let's explore it first. As of right now,
Are we under the code or not?
Of course we are.
Not necessarily, Bell put in sharply.
Not slavishly, to the letter.
We're so far away, and our chance of getting back is so slight
that it should be interpreted in the light of common sense.
Garlock stared at Belle, and she stared back.
Her eyes as clear and innocent as a baby's.
The code is neither long enough nor complicated
enough to require interpretation," Garlock stated finally.
It either applies in full and exact or not at all.
My ruling is that the code applies, strictly, until I declare
the state of ultimate contingency.
Are you ready, Belle, to abandon the project, find an uninhabited
Tullerian world and begin to populate it?"
Well, not quite, perhaps.
Yes or no, please?
No.
We are under the code that.
then. Go ahead, Jim."
I broke pairing with Bell, and she refused to confirm.
Certainly I refused. He had no reason to break with me.
I had plenty of reason, James snapped. I'm fed up to hear, he drew his right forefinger
across his forehead, with making so-called love to a woman who can never think of anything
except cutting another man's throat. She's a heartless conniver. You both know that you know
that reasons are unnecessary and are not discussed in public, Garlock said flatly.
Now, as to confirmation of a break, in simple pairing, there is no marriage, no registration,
no declaration of intent or of permanence. Thus legally, or logically, there is no obligation.
Morally, however, there is always some obligation. Hence, as a matter of urbanity,
in cases where no injury exists, except as concerns chastity,
The code calls for agreement without rancor.
If either party persists in refusal to confirm and cannot show injury,
that party's behavior is declared in urbane.
Confirmation is declared, and the offending party is ignored.
Just how would you go about ignoring Prime Operator Bell Bellamy?
You've got a point there, Jim.
However, she hasn't persisted very long in her refusal.
As a matter of information, Bell,
why did you take Jim in the first place?
I didn't, she shrugged her shoulders.
It was pure chance. You saw me flip the tenth piece?
Am I to ignore the fact that you are one of the best telekineticists living?
I don't have to control things unless I want to.
She stamped her foot.
Can't you conceive of me flipping a coin honestly?
No. However, since this is not a screens-down inquiry,
I'll give you, orally at least, the benefit of the doubt.
The next step, I presume, is for Lola to break with me.
Lola?
Well, I hate to say this, Clee.
I thought that mutual consent would be better, but...
Lola paused, flushing in embarrassment.
She feels, James said steadily, as I do,
that there should be much more to the sexual relation
than merely releasing the biological tensions of two
pieces of human machinery. That's hardly civilized.
"'I confirm, Lola, of course,' Garlock said, then went on, partly thinking aloud,
partly addressing the group at large. Ha, reasons again, and very well put, not off
the cuff. Evasions, flat lies, something very unfunny here, as queer as a nine-credit
bill. In some, indefensible actions based upon
unwarranted conclusions drawn from erroneous assumptions.
The pattern is not clear.
But I won't order screens down until I have to.
If the reason had come from Bell,
Me! Bell flared. Why from me?
Instead of Jim, ignoring Bell's interruption,
Garlock frowned in thought.
After a minute or so, his face cleared.
Jim, he said sharply,
Have you been consciously aware of Bell's manipulation?"
Why?
No, of course not.
She couldn't.
That's really a brainstorm, Klee," Bell sneered.
You'd better turn yourself in for an overhaul.
Nice scheme, Bell, Garlock said.
I underestimated, at least didn't consider carefully enough, your power and
overestimated your ethics and urbanity.
What are you talking about,
Chief?" James asked.
You lost me ten parsecs back.
Just this.
Bell is behind this whole operation, working under a perfectly beautiful smokescreen.
I'm afraid the boss is cracking up, kids, Bell said.
Listen to him if you like, but use your own judgment.
But nobody could make Jim and me really love each other, Lola agreed.
And we really do.
It's real love.
"'Admitted,' Garlock said.
"'But she could have helped it along,
"'and she's all set to take every possible advantage of the situation thus created.'
"'I still don't see it,' James objected.
"'Why, she would even confirm our break. She hasn't yet.'
"'She would have, at the exactly correct psychological moment,
"'after holding out long enough to put you both under obligation to her.
"'There would have also been certain strings
attached. Her plan was, after switching the pairings,
"'I wouldn't pair with you,' Bell broke in viciously,
if you were the only man left in the macrocosmic universe.
Part of the smokescreen,' Garlock explained.
The repairings would give her two lines of attack on me,
to be used simultaneously, first to work on me in bed.
See, Bell interrupted, he doesn't think I've got any hard at all.
Oh, you may have one, but it's no softer than your head, and that
could scratch a diamond.
Second, to work on you two, with no holds barred, to form a three-unit team
against me.
Her charges that I'm losing my grip made a very smart opening lead.
"'Do you think I'd let her work on me?' James demanded.
"'She's a prime.
You wouldn't know anything about it.
However, nothing will happen.
nor am I going to let her confuse the real issue.
Belle, you are either inside the code or a free agent outside it, which.
I have made my position clear.
To me, yes, to Jim and Lola, decidedly unclear.
Unclear, then. You cannot coerce me.
If you follow the code, no.
If you don't, I can and will.
If you make any kind of a pass at Jim James,
from now on. I'll lock you into your room with a Gunther block.
You wouldn't dare, she breathed. Besides, you couldn't. Not to another prime.
Don't bet on it, he advised. After a full minute of silence, Garlock's attitude changed suddenly
to his usual one of casual friendliness. Why not let this one drop right here, Bell? I can
marry them with all the official trimmings. Why not let them really enjoy their honeymoon?
Why not?" Bell's manner changed to match Garlocks, and she smiled
warmly.
I confirm, Jim.
You two are really serious, aren't you?
Marriage, declarations, registration and everything.
I wish, I sincerely and really wish you every happiness possible."
We really are serious, James said, putting his arm around Lola's waist.
And you won't?
Won't interfere?
Not a bit. I couldn't now, even if I wanted to."
Bill grinned Riley.
You see, you kids miss the main feature of the show, since you can't know exactly what
a prime operator is.
Especially you can't know what Cleander Simsworth Garlock really is.
He's an out-and-out tiger on wheels.
The three of us could have smacked him bow-legged, but of course all chance of that blew up just
now.
So if you two want to take the big jump, you can do it with my blessing as well as cleese.
I'll clear the table."
That small chore taken care of, a quick folding up of everything into the tablecloth and
a heave into the chute did it.
Bell set up the recorder.
"'Are you both fully certain that you want the full treatment?'
Garlock asked.
Both were certain, and Garlock read the brief but solemn marriage lines.
As the newlyweds left the room, Bell turned to Garlock with a quizzical smile.
"'Are you going to ask me to pair with you, Clee?'
"'I certainly am,' he grinned back at her.
"'I owe you that much revenge, at least.
But seriously, I'd like it immensely, and we fit like grace and poise.
Look at that mirror.
Did you ever see a better matched couple?'
"'Will you give me a try, Bell?'
"'I will not,' she said emphatically.
I'll take back what I said a while ago.
If you were really the only man left, I would.
But as it is, the answer is a definite, resounding, and final, no.
Definite and resounding, yes.
Final, I won't accept.
I'll wait.
You'll wait a long time, Buster.
My door will be locked from now on.
Good night, Dr. Garlock.
I'm going to bed.
So am I." He walked with her along the corridor to their rooms, the doors of which were opposite
each other. In view of the code, locking your door is a meaningless gesture. Mine will remain
unlocked. I invite you to come in whenever you like, and assure you formally that no such entry
will be regarded as an invasion of privacy. Without a word, she went into her room and closed the door
with a firmness just short of violence. Her lock clicked sharply. The next morning, after breakfast,
James followed Garlock into his room and shut the door. Clee, I want to tell you, I don't want to get
sloppy, but—' Want to leppet? Hell no. It's about Brownie, then. Uh-huh. I've always liked
you immensely, admired you. Hero, sort of. Yeah, I quote, harder than
Pharaoh's heart, colder than frozen helium and all the rest.
But this thing about Brownie!
He reached out, two hard hands met in a crushing grip.
How could you possibly lay off, just the strain if nothing else?
A little strain doesn't hurt a man unless he lets it.
I've done without for months at a stretch, with it running around loose on all sides of me.
But she's so—she's got it.
everything. There speaketh the insorcelled bridegroom. For my taste, she hasn't. She told you, I suppose,
when explaining a certain fact that I told her she wasn't my type? Yes, but she still isn't.
She's a very fine person, with a very fine personality. She is one of the two most nearly
perfect young women of her race. Her face is beautiful. Her body is an artist's dream. Her mind is
the very best. Besides all that, she's a very good egg and a mighty tasty dish. But put yourself
in my place. Here's this paragon we have just described. She has extremely high ideals, and she's
a virgin, never really aroused. Also, she's so full of this sickening crap they've been pouring
into us, propaganda, rocket oil, prop-wash, and psychological gobbledygook, that it's running out of her
ears. She so stuffed with it that she's going to pair with you. Ideals and virginity be damned
even if it kills her, even though she's shaking, cleared down to her shoes, scared yellow.
Also, she is and always will be scared half to death of you. She thinks you're some kind of robot.
She's a starry-eyed, soft-headed sissy, a sapadilla, a sucker for a smooth line of balloon juice and
flap-doodle. No spine, no bottom. A gutless doll-baby. Strictly, a pet. You could no more love her
ever than you could a half-grown kitten. That's a hell of a picture, James broke in savagely,
even with your cold-blooded reputation. People in love can't be objective, is all? If I saw
her through the same set of filters you do, I'd be in love with her, too. So, let's see her. Let's
see if you can use your brain instead of your outraged sensibilities to answer a hypothetical question.
If the foregoing were true, what would you do, Jr.?
I'd pass, I guess. I'd have to, if I wanted to look at myself in the mirror next morning.
But that's such an ungodly cock-eyed picture, Clee. But if that's actually your picture of
Brownie, you're no part of a liar, just what kind of a woman could you love, if any?
Bell.
Bell? Bellamy?
Hell's flaming furies.
That iceberg?
That egomaniac?
That Jezebel?
She's the hardest boiled babe that ever went unhung.
Right on all counts.
Also, she's crooked and treacherous.
She's a ground and lofty liar by instinct and training.
I could add a lot more, but she's got
brains, ability, and guts.
Guts enough to supply the Women's Army Corps.
She's got the spine and the bottom and the drive.
So just imagine her thawed out and really shoveling on the coal,
blasting wide open on all 40 torches.
Back to back with you when you're surrounded,
she wouldn't cave and she wouldn't give.
Or wing and wing, holding the beam come hell or space warps.
Roll that one around on your tongue, Jim,
and give your taste buds a treat.
Well, maybe, if I've got that much imagination,
that's a tough blueprint to read.
I can't quite visualize the finished article.
However, you're as hard as she is, even harder.
You've got more of what it takes.
Maybe you can make a Christian out of her.
If so, you might have something.
But I'm damned if I can see exactly what.
Whatever it turned out to be,
I wouldn't care for any part of it.
You can have it all."
Exactly.
And you can have your brownie."
I'm beginning to see.
I didn't think you had anything like that in your chilled steel carcass.
And I went to a p'uil—
Don't do it, boy!
If the time ever comes when you go soft on me as to quit laying it on the line and start
sifting out your language, Garlock paused.
For one of the very few times in his life—
He was at a loss for words. He thrust his hands into his pockets and shrugged his shoulders.
"'Hell, I don't want to get maudlin either, so—well, how many men do you think could
have gone the route with me on this hellish job without killing me or me killing them?'
"'Oh, that's not—lay it on the line, Jim. I know what I am. Just one. You. One man in six thousand
million.
Okay, how many women could live with me for a year without going crazy?"
Lots of them.
But, being masochists, they'd probably drive you nuts.
And you can't stand stupidity, which, by definition, lets everybody out.
Nope, it's a tough order to fill.
Check.
She'd have to be strong enough and hard enough not to be afraid of me by any trace.
and eager to stand up to me and slug it out, to pin my ears back flat against my skull whenever
she thinks I'm off the bean. Do it with skill and precision and nicety, with power and control.
Yet, without doing herself any damage and without changing her basic feeling for me. In short,
a female Jim James Nine.
Huh? Hell's blow-torches! You think I'm like Belle Bellamy? Not by nine.
thousand megacycles. Like Belle Bellamy could be and should be. Like I hope she will be.
I'd have to give, too, of course. Maybe we can make Christians out of each other. It's quite a dream,
I admit, but it'll be Bell or nobody. But I'm not used to slopping over this way. Let's go.
I'm glad you did, big fellow. Once in a lifetime is good for the soul. I'd say,
you were in love with her right now, except that if you were, you couldn't possibly
dissect her like a specimen on the table the way you've just been doing.
Are you or aren't you?"
I'll be damned if I know.
You and Brownie believe that the poet's concept of love is valid.
In fact, you make a case for its validity.
I never have and don't now.
But under certain conditions, I simply don't.
don't know. Ask me again sometime. Say in about a month?"
"'That's the surest thing you know. Oh, brother, this is a thing I'm going to watch
with my eyes out on stalks.' For the next week, Belle locked her door every night. For another
few nights she did not lock it. Then one night she left it ajar. The following evening,
the two again walked together to their doors.
I left my door open last night.
I know you did.
Well?
And have you screamed a high heaven that I opened it?
And put me on a tape for willful inner vanity, for deliberate inter-sexual invasion
of privacy?
Blast and damn!
You know perfectly well, Clee Garlock!
I wouldn't pull such a dirty, lousy trick as that!
Maybe I should apologize.
Then, but as a matter of fact,
I have no idea whatever as to what you wouldn't do.'
He stared at her, his face hard in thought.
"'As you probably know, I have had very little to do with women.
That little has always been on a logical level.
You are such a completely new experience that I can't figure out what makes you tick.'
"'So you're afraid of me,' she sneered.
"'Is that it?'
"'Close enough.'
"'And I suppose it's you that cartoonist
"'What's his name is using as a model for Timor's Timmy?'
"'Since you've guessed it, yes.'
"'You—you weasel!'
She took three quick steps up the corridor, then back.
"'You say my logic is cock-eyed.
"'What system are you using now?'
"'I'm trying to develop one to match yours.'
"'Oh, I invited that one I guess.
Yes, since I know you aren't afraid of God, man, woman, or devil, and you're big enough
so you don't have to be proving it all the time."
She laughed suddenly, her face softening markedly.
"'Listen, you big lug!
Why don't you ever knock me into an outside loop?
If I were you and you were me, I'd have busted me loose from my front teeth long ago.'
I'm not sure whether I know better or I'm afraid to.
I'm not rocking any boat so far from shore."
"'Says you?'
"'You're wonderful, Clee. Simply priceless.
Do you know you're the only man I ever met
that I could make fall for me like a rock falling down a cliff?
And that the falling is altogether too apt to be the other way?'
"'The first I have suspected.
The second is chemically pure rocket oil.'
"'I hope it is.'
I wish I could be as certain of it as you are.
You see, Clee, I really expected you to come in last night, and there really wasn't any
bone in it.
Surely you don't think I'm going to invite you into my room, do you?
I can't see why not.
However, since no valid system of logic seems to apply, I accept your decision as a fact.
By the same reasoning, however invalid, if I ask you again, you will again refuse.
So all that's left, I guess, is for me to drag you into my room by force.'
He put his left arm around her and applied a tiny pressure against her side,
under which she began to move slowly toward his door.
"'You admit that you're using force?' she asked.
Her face was unreadable.
Her mental block was at its fullest force.
"'That I'm being coerced?
Definitely?'
"'Definitely,' he agreed.
at least ten dines of sheer brute force.
Not enough to affect a tape, but enough, I hope, to affect you.
If it isn't, I'll use more.
Oh, ten dines is enough, just so it's force.
She raised her face toward his and threw both arms around his neck.
His right arm went into action with his left, and Cleander Garlock forgot all about dines and tapes.
After a time she disengaged one arm, reached out, opened his door. He gathered her up,
lips still locked to lips, carried her over the threshold. A few jumps later they met their
first really old Arpalone. This inspector was so old that his skin, instead of the usual
bright, clear cobalt blue, was dull and tending toward gray. The old fellow was strangely
garrulous for a guardian. He wanted to be a little.
them to pause a while in gossip.
Yes, I am lonesome, he admitted. It has been a long time since I exchanged thoughts with anyone.
You see, nobody has visited this planet, Grub, its name is, since almost all our humanity
was killed a few periods ago.
Killed? How? Garlock asked sharply. Not Dillipik.
Oh, you have seen them? I never have myself. No, nothing.
Nothing nearly that bad.
Merely the Ozobes.
The world itself was scarcely harmed at all.
Rehabilitation would be a simple matter, so there's no real reason why some of those engineers.
The Beast!"
Lola shot a tight being thawed at her husband.
Who cares anything about the rock and dirt of a planet?
It's the people that count, and his are dead, and he's perfectly complacent about it,
just lonesome.
"'Don't let it throw, you pet,' James soothed.
"'He's an Arpalone, you know, not a sociological anthropologist.'
"'Shouldn't come out here and spend a few hours once in a while, but they don't.
Too busy with their own business, they say.
But while you are physically human, mentally you are not.
You are all too—too—I can't put my thought exactly on it, but—
More as though you were human-fired.
if such a thing could be possible."
We are fighters.
Where we come from, most human beings are fighters.
Oh, I never heard of such a thing.
Where can you be from?"
This took much explanation since the Arpolone had never heard of intergalactic travel.
You are willing then to fight side by side with us Arpolans against the enemies of humanity?
You have actually done so at times, and one?
We certainly have."
I am glad.
I am expecting a call for help any time now.
Will you please give me enough of your mental pattern, Dr. Garlock, so that I can call you in
case of need?
Thank you.
What makes you think you're going to get an SOS so soon?
Where from?
Because these ozobe invasions come in cycles, years apart, but
there are always several planets attacked at very nearly the same time.
We were the first this time, so there will be one or two others very shortly."
"'Do they always kill all the people?'
Blola asked.
"'Oh, no, scarcely half of the time.
It depends on how many fighters the planet has, and how much outside help can get there
soon enough.'
"'Your call could come from any of the other solar systems in this neighborhood, then?'
Garlock asked.
Yes, there are fifteen inhabited planets within about six light years of us, and we form a
close-knit group.
What are these ozobes?
Animals, warm-blooded, but egg-layers, not mammals, like this.
And the inspector spread in their minds a picture of a creature, somewhat like the flying
tigers of Hodel, except that the color was black, shading off to iridescent green at the extremities.
Also, it was armed with a short and heavy but very sharp sting.
They say that they come from space, but I don't believe it."
The old fellow went on.
What would a warm blood be doing out in space?
Besides, they couldn't find anybody to lay their eggs in out there.
No, sir.
I think they live right here on group somewhere.
Maybe hold up in caves or something for ten or thirteen years.
That wouldn't make sense either, would it?
I just don't know.
Garlock finally broke away from the lonesome inspector, and the pleity started down.
That's the most utterly horrible thing I ever heard of in my life, Lola burst out.
Like wasps, only worse.
People aren't bugs?
Why don't all the planets get together and develop something to kill every ozobe in every system of the group?
That one has got too many bones.
in it for me to answer," James said.
"'I'm going to get hold of that engineer as soon as we land,' Lola said darkly,
and stick a pin into him."
They found the engineering office easily enough in a snug camp well outside a large city.
They grounded the starship and went out on foot, enjoying contact with solid ground.
The head engineer was an Arp alone, too.
were not a separate race, but dwellers on a planet of extremely high technology. But he
did know anything about space drives. His specialty was rehabilitation. He was top boss of a rehab
crew. Then Lola pushed Garlock aside. Yes, the ozobs came from space. He was sure of it. Yes,
they laid eggs in human bodies. Yes, they probably stayed alive quite a while, or might, except
for the rehab crew.
No, he didn't know what would hatch out.
He'd never let one live that long.
But what the hell else could hatch except Ozob's?
No, not one.
Not one single damn one.
If just one ever did, on any world where he bossed the job, he'd lose his job as boss and
go to the mines for half a year.
"'Ridiculous,' Lola snapped.
If Ozopes hatched, they couldn't possibly have come
space. If they did come from space, the adult form would have to be something able to
get back into space, some way or other. That is simple elementary biology. Don't you see
that?" He didn't see it. He didn't give a damn either. It was none of his business. He
was a rehab man."
Lola ran back to the ship in disgust.
"'Something else is even more ridiculous, and is your business.
James told the head engineer.
Garlock and I are both engineers, top ones.
We know definitely that a 100% cleanup on such a job as this,
millions simply can't be done, ever, under any conditions.
Are you lying in your teeth, or are you dumb enough to believe it yourself?
Neither one, the engineer insisted stubbornly.
I've wondered myself at how I could get them all,
but I always do, every time so far. That's why they give me the big job. I'm good at it.
Oh, Lola's right, Jim, Garlock said. It's the adult form that hatches. Something so different,
they don't even recognize it. Something able to get into space. Enough survivors to produce the next
generation. Sure, I'll tell Brownie. She'll be tickled. She'll be more than tickled. She'll
want to hunt up somebody around here with three brain cells working and give them an earful.
Then to the engineer,
Do you know how they rehab a planet that's been leveled flat by the gullop?
You've seen one?
I never have, but of course I've studied it.
Slow, but not too difficult.
After killing, the stuff weather's down in a few years,
wonderful soil it makes.
What makes it slow is that you have to wait fifty or a hundred years
for the mountains to get built up again and for the earth.
earthquakes to quit. "'Excuse me, please. I've got a call. We have to leave, right now.'
The call was from the inspector. The nearest planet, Klamer, was being invaded by the
ozobs and needed all the help they could get. In seconds, the Pleiades was at the port of entry.
"'Where is this, Klamer?' Garlock asked. The inspector pointed a thought. All four followed it.
"'Let's go, Jim. Maybe. Just a minute.'
Lola snapped. She was breathing hard. Her eyes were almost shooting sparks as she turned
to the old Arpoloom and drove a thought so forcibly that he winced.
"'Do you, so-called guardians of humanity, care it all about the humanity you're supposed
to be protecting?' she demanded viciously, the thought boring in and twisting.
"'Or are you just loafing on the job and doing as little as you possibly can without getting
fired. Bell and Garlock looked at each other and grinned. James was surprised and shocked.
This woman blowing her top was no Brownie Montandon any of them knew.
We do everything we possibly can. The inspector was not only shocked, but injured and abused.
If there's any one possible thing we haven't done, even the tiniest. There's plenty, she snapped,
plain dumb stupidity, then, it must be.
There must be somebody around here who has been at least exposed to elementary biology.
You should have exterminated these ozobe vermin ages ago.
All you have to do is find out what its life cycle is, how many stages and what they are,
how the adults get into space and where they go.
And she went on in flashing thoughts to explain in full detail.
Are you smart enough to understand that?
Oh, yes.
Your thought may be the truth at that.
And are you interested enough to find out whose business it would be and follow through on it?
Yes, of course.
If it works, I'll be quite famous for suggesting it.
I'll give you part of the credit.
Keep the credit.
Just see to it that it gets done!
She whirled on James.
This loss of human life.
is so appallingly unnecessary. This time we're going to claim her and nowhere else. Push the button, Jim.
All I can do is set up for it, Pet. Whether we'll get there, she blazed. It's high time we got a break.
Punch it. This time the ship's going to claim her if we have to all get out and push it there.
Now punch that button. James pushed the button, glanced into his scanner, and froze. Eyes
staring. He did not even whistle. Bell, however, did, with ear-shattering volume. Garlock's
mouth fell open in the biggest surprise of his life. They were in the same galaxy. All three had
studied charts of nebulae configuration so long and so intensely that recognition of a full
sphere identity was automatic and instantaneous. Lola, had buried in scanner, had already checked in
with the port inspector.
"'It is a claimer,' she shrieked aloud.
"'I told you it was time for our luck to change if we pulled hard enough.
They are being invaded by Ozogs, and they did call for help, and they didn't
think we could possibly get here this fast, and we don't need to be inspected because
we're compatible or we couldn't have landed on Groob.'
For five long minutes, Garlock held the starship motionless while he studied the entire
situation. Then he drove a probe through the mental shield of the general in charge of the
whole defense operation. Battlecruiser Pleiades, Captain Garlock commanding, reporting for duty
in response to your SOS received on Group. The general, furiously busy as he was, dropped
all other business. But you're human! You can't fight! Watch us! You don't know apparently
that the Ozo bases are on the far side of your moon.
They're bringing their fighters in most of the way in transports.
Why, they can't be.
They're coming in from all directions from deep space.
That's what they want you to think.
They're built to stand many hours of zero pressure and almost absolute zero cold.
Question.
If we destroy all their transport, say in three hours,
can you handle all the fighters who will be in the air or in nearby space at that time?
Very easily.
They've hardly started yet.
I appoint you Admiral Pro Tem Garlock, in command of space operations, and will refer to you
any other space fighters who may come.
I thank you, sir.
Good luck."
The General returned his attention to his boiling office.
His mind was seething with questions as to what these not-human beings were, how or if they
knew so much, and so on.
But he forced them out of his mind and went fast and efficient back to work.
shot the Pleiades up to within a thousand miles or so of the moon."
"'How long does it take to learn this bombing business, Jim?'
Lola asked.
"'About fifteen seconds.
All you have to do is want to.
Do you, really?'
"'I really do.
If I don't do something to help these people.'
It did not occur to her that she had already done a tremendous job.
I'll never forgive myself."
James showed her, and much to her surprise she found it very easy.
to do. The vessels transporting the invading forces were huge, spherical shells equipped with short-range
drives, and with nothing else. No accommodations, no facilities, no food, no water, not even any air.
Each transport, when filled to the bursting point with, as yet docile cargo, darted away,
swinging around to approach Klamer from some previously assigned direction. It did not, however,
approached the planet's surface. At about two thousand miles out, great ports opened and the
load was dumped out into space to fall the rest of the way by gravity. Then the empty shell,
with only its one pilot aboard, rushed back for another load.
"'How heavy shots, Clee?' James asked. He and Lola were getting into their scanners.
"'Wouldn't take as much as a kiloton equivalent, would it?'
"'Half a kilo is plenty, but no use being to take.
too fussy about precision out here."
Garlock and Bell were already bombing.
James and Lola began.
Slow and awkward at first, Lola soon picked up the technique and was firing blast for blast
with the others.
No more loaded transport vessels left the moon.
No empty one, returning toward the moon, reached there.
In much less than the three hours Garlock had mentioned every
Azobian transport craft had been destroyed.
And now the Rubean transport craft had been destroyed.
And now the real job begins," Garlock said as James dropped the starship down to within a few miles
of the moon's surface.
That surface was cratered and jagged, exactly like that of the half always-facing
Klamer.
No sign of activity could be seen by eye, nor anything unusual.
Even the immense trap-doors, all closed now, matched exactly their surroundings.
Underground, however, activity was violently intense, and now confused.
fused in the extreme.
"'Why, there isn't a single adult anywhere,' Lola exclaimed.
"'I thought the whole place would be full of them.'
"'So did I,' Bell said.
However, by hindsight, it's plain enough.
Their job done, they were killed and eaten.
Last meal, perhaps.'
"'I'm afraid so.
Whatever they were, they had hands and brains.
Just look at those shops and machines.'
"'What do we do,
boss? James asked. Run a search pattern first? We'll have to, I guess, before we can lay the job out.
It was run, and Garlock frowned in thought. Almost half the moon covered, honeycombed. We'll have to
fine-tooth it, around the periphery first, then spiral into the center. This moon isn't very big,
but even so, this is going to be a hell of a long job. Any suggestions, anybody? Jim?
The only way, I guess. You can't do it, hit or miss. I'm damn glad we've got plenty of
stuff in our upfield and plenty of hydride for the engines. The horses will all know they've
been at work before they get the field filled up again. So will you, Junior, believe me. Ready
all? Start blasting. Then for three hours the Pleiades moved slowly, for her, a long
a plotted and automatically controlled course. It was very easy to tell where she had been.
The sharply cut, evenly spaced, symmetrical pits left by the Galaxian's full conversion blasts
were entirely different from the irregularly cratered, ages-old original surface.
"'Knock off, Brownie,' Garlock said then.
"'Go eat all you can hold and get some sleep. Come back in three hours. Jim, cut our speed to
75%.
Lola shed her scanner, heaved a tremendous sigh of relief, and disappeared.
Three silent hours later, all three were too intensely busy to think of anything except
the work in hand, Lola came back.
Take Bell's swath, Brownie.
Okay, Belle, you can lay off.
Three hours.
I'll stay, Bell declared.
Go yourself, or send Jim.
Don't be any more of a damn fool than you have to.
I said beat it."
And I said I wouldn't.
I'm just as good.
Chop it off."
Garlock snapped.
It isn't a case of being just as good as it's a matter of physical reserves.
Jim and I have more to draw on for the long shifts than you have.
So get the hell out of here, or I'll stop the ship and slap you even sillier than you are
now."
Bill threw up her head, tossing her shoulder-length green mop in her characteristic gesture
of defiance.
But after holding Garlock's hard stare for a moment, she relaxed and smiled.
Okay, Clee, and thanks for the kind words.
She disappeared and the work went on.
And finally, when all four were so groggy that they could scarcely think, the job was done
and checked.
Claimers' moon was as devoid of life as any moon had ever been.
Lola pitched her scanner at its rack and threw herself face down on a Davenport.
sobbing uncontrollably. James sat down beside her and soothed her until she quieted down.
"'You better eat something, sweetheart, and then for a good long sleep. Eat? Why, I couldn't, Jim,
not possibly.' "'Let her sleep first, I think, Jim,' Belle said, and followed with her eyes as Jim picked
his wife up and carried her into the corridor. "'We'd better eat something, I suppose,' Belle said thoughtfully.
I don't feel like eating either, but I never realized until this minute just how much this
has taken out of me, and I'd better start putting it back in. She did a wonderful job,
Clee, even if she couldn't take it full shift toward the last. I'll say she did. I hated like
the devil to let her work that way, but—' You knew I was scared witless every second until we
topped off. Exhausted and haggard as she was, Belle laughed.
I know damn blasted well you weren't, but I know what you mean.
Fighting something you don't know anything about and can't guess what may happen next is tough.
Seconds count.
Side by side, they strolled toward the alcove.
I simply didn't think she had it in her, Belle marveled.
She didn't.
She hasn't.
It'll take her a week to get back into shape.
Right.
She was going on pure nerve out of her.
at the last, nothing else. But she did a job, and she's so sweet and fine. I wonder,
Clee, if—if I've been missing the boat. You have not."
Garlock sent the thought so solidly that Bell jumped.
If you just let yourself be, you'd be worth a million of her, just as you stand.
Yes. You lie in your teeth, Cleander, but I love it. Oh, I don't know what I went
to eat, if anything.
I'll think up yours, too, along with mine.
Please, something light and just a little.
Yeah, sit down, just a light snack.
A two-pound steak, rare, a bowl of mushrooms fried in butter, French
fries, French dips, salad, and a quart of coffee.
The same for me, except more of each.
Here we are.
Why, Clee, I couldn't possibly eat half of that.
Then after a quarter of it was gone.
I am hungry at that, simply ravenous. I could eat a horse and saddle and chase the rider.
That's what I thought. I knew I could and figured you accordingly."
They ate those tremendous meals slowly, enjoying every bite and sip, in an atmosphere of
friendliness and good fellowship, chatting on a wide variety of subjects as they ate.
Neither was aware of the fact that this was the first time they had ever been on really friendly
terms. And finally, every dish and container was empty, almost polished clean.
"'One hundred percent capacity. Can chew but can't swallow,' Garlock said then,
lighting two cigarettes and giving Bell one. How's that for a masterly job of calibration?
Me too. It'll pass.' Bell sighed in repletion.
Your ability to estimate the exact capacity of containers is exceeded only by your good looks
and by the size of your feet.
And now to hit the good old sack for an indefinite but very long period of time.
You chirped it, Bertie.
Still eminently friendly, the two walked together to their doors.
Bell put up a solid block and paused, irresolute, twisting the toe of one slipper into the carpet.
Clee, I—I wonder—if—her voice died away.
I know what you mean."
He put his arms around her gently, tenderly, and looked deep into her eyes.
"'I want to tell you something, Belle.
You're a woman, not in seven thousand million women, but in that many planets full of women.
What it takes you very definitely and very abundantly have got.
And you aren't the only one that's pooped.
I don't need company tonight either.
I'm going to sleep until I wake up if it takes all.
all day. Or say, if you wake up first, why not punch me and we'll have breakfast together?"
That's a thought. Do the same for me. Good night, Clee."
Good night, Ace. He kissed her, as gently as he had been holding her, opened her door,
closed it after her, and stepped across the corridor into his own room.
"'What a man!' Belle breathed to herself behind the solid screens of her room.
He thought I was too tired, not just scared to death, too.
What a man! Bell-Belamy, you ought to be kicked from here to tell us.
Then she threw back her head, drove a hard little fist into a pillow, and spoke aloud
through clenched teeth.
No, damn and blast it. I won't give in. I won't love him.
I'll take the project away from him if it's the last thing I ever do in this life.
She woke up the next morning, not morning either, since it was well afternoon, a little before
Garlock did, but not much. When she went into his room he was shaved and fully dressed,
except for one shoe which he was putting on.
"'Hi, boss. Better we eat, huh? Not only am I starving by inches, but if we don't eat
pretty quick, we'll get only one meal to-day instead of three. Did you eat your candy bar?'
I sure did, Ace.
Oh, I'm still Ace.
You can kiss me, then.
She raised her face toward his.
He kissed her, still tenderly, and they strolled to and through the main and into the alcove.
James and Lola, the latter looking terribly strained and worn, had already eaten,
but joined them in their after-breakfast coffee and cigarettes.
You've checked, of course, Garlock said.
Everything on the beam?
Dead center.
Even to Lola and her biologists.
Everybody's full of joy and gratitude and stuff, as well as information.
And we managed to pry ourselves loose without waking you two trumpet of doom sleepers up.
So we're ready to jump again.
I wonder where in hell we'll wind up this time.
I'm glad you said that, Jim, Garlock said.
It gives me the nerve to spring a thing on you that I've been mulling around in my mind
ever since we landed here.
Nerve?
You?
James asked incredulously.
Pass the coffee-pot around again, Brownie.
If that character there said what I heard him say, this'll make your hair stand straight
up on end.
On our jumps, we've had altogether too much power and no control whatever.
Garlock paused in thought.
Like a rookie pitcher?
Bell suggested.
Uh-uh.
Lola objected. It couldn't be that wild. He'd have to stand with his back to the plate
and pitch the ball over the center field stands and seven blocks downtown.
Cut the perciphage, you too, Garlock ordered. Consider three things. First, as you all
know, I've been trying to figure out a generator that would give us intrinsic control,
but I haven't gotten any farther with it than we did back on Tullus.
Second, consider all the jumps we've made except this last one.
Every time we've taken off, none of us has had his shield really up.
You, Jim, were concentrating on the drive, and so were wide open to it.
The rest of us were at least thinking about it, and so were more or less open to it.
Not one of us has ever ordered it to take us to any definite place.
In fact, I don't believe that any one of us has ever even suggested
a destination. Each one of us has been thinking, at the instant of energization of the fields,
exactly what you just said, and with exactly the same emphasis.
Third, consider this last jump all by itself. It's the first time we've ever stayed in the
same galaxy. It's the first time we've ever gone where we wanted to. And it's the first time,
here's the crux as I see it, that any one of us has been concentrating on any destination.
at the moment of firing the charge. Brownie was willing the Pleiades to this planet so hard
that we all could taste it. The rest of us, if not really pushing to get here, were at least
not opposed to the idea. Check?
Check. That's right. Yes, I was pushing with all my might, came from the three listeners,
and James went on. Are you saying the damn things alive? No, I'm saying I don't believe in
miracles. I don't believe in coincidence. That concept is as meaningless as that of paradox. I certainly
do not believe that we hit this planet by chance against odds of almost infinity to one.
So I've been looking for a reason. I found one. It goes against my grain, against everything
I've ever believed. But, since it's the only possible explanation, it must be true. The only possible
director of the Gunther Drive must be the mind.
Hell's blow-torches! Now you're insisting that the damn thing's alive!
Far from it! It's Brownie who's alive! It was Brownie who got us here. Nothing else. Repeat.
Nothing else makes sense. James pondered for a full minute.
I wouldn't buy it except for one thing. If you, the hardest
boiled skeptic that ever went unhung, can feed yourself the whole bowl of such a mess as that,
I can't at least take a taste of it. Shoot. Okay. You know that we don't know anything really
fundamental about either teleportation or the drive. I'm sure now that the drive is simply
mechanical teleportation. If you try to port yourself without any idea of where you wanted to go,
where do you think you'd land? You might scatter yourself all over space,
space. No, you wouldn't. You wouldn't move, because it wouldn't be
teleportation at all. Destination is an integral part of the concept. Exactly
so, but only because you've been conditioned to it all your life. This
thing hasn't been conditioned to anything."
Like a newborn baby, Lola suggested.
"'Life again,' James said.
"'I can't see it. Too many bones in it. Pure luck, even at
those odds makes a lot more sense."
And to make matters worse, Garlock went on as though neither of them had spoken.
Just suppose that a man had four minds instead of one and they weren't working together.
Then where would he go?
This time James simply whistled.
The girl stared speechless.
I think we proved that my school of mathematics was right.
The thing was built to operate purely at random.
Fotheringham was wrong.
However, I missed the point that if control is possible, the
controller must be a mind.
Such a possibility never occurred to me or anyone working with me,
or to Fotheringham or to anybody else.
I can't say I'm sold, but it's easy to test and the results
can't be any worse.
Let's go.
How would you test it?
Same way you would.
Anyway, first, each one of us alone. Then pairs and threes. Then, all four together. Fifteen
tests in all. No. Three destinations for each setup, near, medium, and far. Except tell us,
of course, we'd better save that shot until we learn all we can find out. Everybody not in the
set should screen up as solidly as they can set their blocks, eyes shut even, and concentrating
on something else. Check?
James did not express the thought that Tellis must by now be so far away that no possible
effort could reach it, but he could not repress the implication.
Check.
I'll concentrate on a series of transfinite numbers.
Bell, you work on the possible number of shades of the color green.
Lola, on how many different perfumes you can identify by smell.
Jim, hit the button.
End of Chapter 5.
of the Galaxy Primes by E.E. Doc Smith.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
The Galaxy Primes
Chapter 6
Since the test took much time and were strictly routine in nature,
there is no need to go into them in detail.
At their conclusion, Garlock said,
First, either Jim alone or Lola alone, or Jim and Lola together,
can hit any destination within any galaxy, but can't go from one galaxy to another.
Second, either Bell or I, or any combination containing either of us without the other,
has no control at all. Third, Bell and I together, or any combination containing both of us,
can go intergalactic under control. In spite of confession being supposed to be good for the soul,
I don't like to admit that we put gravel in the gear-buby.
Garlock's, do you, Bell?"
Garlock's smile was both rueful and forced.
"'You can play that in spades!'
Bell licked her lips.
For the first time since boarding the Starship she was acutely
embarrassed.
"'We'll have to, of course.
It was all my fault.
It makes me look like a damn stupid juvenile delinquent.'
Not by nineteen thousand kilocycles, since neither of us had any idea.
I'll be glad to settle for half the blame."
"'Will you please stop talking Sanskrit?' James asked.
"'Or Lepit so we two innocent bystanders can understand it?'
"'We'll do,' and Garlock went on in thought.
"'Remember what I said about this drive not being conditioned to anything?
I was wrong.
Bell and I have conditioned it, but badly.
We've been fighting so much that something or other in that mess down there has become
conditioned to her, something else to me. My part will play along with anyone except Bell,
hers with anybody except me. Anti-conditioning, you might call it. Anyway, they lay back their ears
and balk. Oh, hell, James snorted. Talk about gobbledy gook. You are still saying that that
conglomeration of copper and silver and steel and insulation that we built ourselves has got intelligence,
and I still won't buy it.
By no means. Remember, Jim, that this concept of mechanical teleportation and that the mind is the only possible controller are absolutely new. We've got to throw out all previous ideas and start new from scratch. I postulate, as a working hypothesis drawn from original data as modified by these tests, that that particular conglomeration of materials generates at least two fields about the properties of which we know nothing.
at all. That one of those properties is the tendency to become preferentially resonant
with one mind and preferentially non-resident with another. Clear so far? As mud? It's a mighty
tough blueprint to read, James scowled in thought. However, it's no harder to swallow
than Sanderson's theory of teleportation, or for that matter the actual basic coupling between
mind and ordinary musketer action. Does that mean we'll have a little bit of
to rebuild half a million credits worth of—'
No, you and Bell can work it together."
"'I don't know,' Garlock paced the floor.
"'I simply can't see any possible mechanism of coupling.'
"'Subconscious, perhaps?' Bell suggested.
"'For my money, that whole concept is invalid,' Garlock said.
"'It merely changes I don't know to I can't know, and I don't want any part of that.
However, unconscious could be the answer.
If so, we may have a lever.
Bell, are you willing to bury your hatchet for about five minutes?
Work with me like a partner ought to?
I certainly am, Clee.
Honestly, screens down flat, if you say so.
Halfways enough, I think.
You'll know when we get down there.
Her mind joined his, and he went on.
Ignore the machines themselves completely.
Consider only the fields. Feel around with me. Keep tuned. See if there's anything at all here
that we can grab hold of and manipulate. Like an op-field, except probably very much finer.
I'll be completely damned if I can see how this type of Gunther generator can put out a
manipulable field, but it must. That's the only—'OOCH! This last was a yell of pure mental
agony. Both hands flew to his head, his face turned white, sweat poured, and he slumped down
unconscious. He came to, however, as the other three were stretching him out on a Davenport.
Bell was mopping his face with a handkerchief.
"'What happened, Clee?' all three were exclaiming at once.
"'I found my manipulable field, but a bomb went off in my brain when I straightened it out.'
He searched his mind anxiously.
Then smiled.
"'But no damage done, just the opposite. It opened up a Gunther cell I didn't know I had.
Didn't it sock you, too, Bell?'
"'Ah, she said, more than half bitterly. I must not have one. That makes you a super-prime,
if I may name a new classification. Nonsense. Of course you've got it. Unconscious, of course,
like me, but without it you couldn't have conditioned the field.'
But why?
Oh, what bit me was the one condition to me?"
"'Oh, nice!'
Bell exclaimed.
"'Come on, Clee.
Let's go get mine!'
"'Do you want a bit of knowledge that badly, Bell?'
Lola asked.
"'Besides, wait, he isn't strong enough yet.'
"'Of course he's strong enough.
A little knock like that?
"'Want it!
I'd give my right leg and—and almost anything for it.
didn't kill him, so it won't kill me."
There may be an easier way," Garlock said.
I wouldn't wish a jolt like that onto my worst enemy, but that had two hundred
kilowolts and four hundred kilagunts behind it.
Since I know now where and what the cell is, I think I can open it up for you without
being quite so rough.
Oh, lovely, come in quick, I'm ready now."
Garlock went in and wrought.
It took longer, half an hour, in fact, but it was very much easier to take.
"'What did it feel like, Belle?' Lola asked eagerly.
"'You winced like he was drilling teeth and struck a couple of nerves.
Uh-uh, more like being stretched all out of shape, like having a child maybe in a small
way.
Let's go, Clee.'
They joined up and went.
"'Ha!
There you are, you cantankerous little fabrication of nothings.
Bell said aloud in a low, throaty, gloating voice.
Take that, and that!
And now behave yourself.
If you don't, Mama spank, but good.
Then, breaking connection.
Thanks a million, Clee, you're tall, solid gold.
Do you want to run some more tests to see which of us is the intergalactic
transporter?
Not unless you do.
Who, me?
I'll be tickled to death not to,
just like I'd swallowed an ostrich feather.
Back to tell us, then?
Tell us, here we come, Garlock said.
Jim, what are the Tullurian figures for exactly five hundred miles up?
I'll punch him, got him in my head.
James did so.
Shall Brownie and I set our blocks?
No, Bell said.
Nothing can interfere with us now.
Ready?
Garlach sat down in the pilot seat.
Cluster round, Chum.
Bell leaned against the back of the chair and put both arms around Garlock's neck.
"'I'm clustered!'
The spot we're shooting at is exactly over the exact center of the middle blast pit at Port Gunther.
In sync?
To a scillionth of a willyenth of a microphase.
I'm exactly on and locked.
Shoot.
Now you sheet-iron bucket of nuts and bolts, jump!
And Garlock snapped the red switch.
Earth lay beneath them. So did Port Gunther.
"'Hah!' Garlock's huge sigh held much more of relief than of triumph.
"'They did it! We're home!' Lola shrieked, and breaking into unashamed and unrestrained tears,
went into her husband's extended arms.
"'Cry ahead, sweet. I'd ball myself if Garlock wasn't looking.
Maybe I will anyway,' James said.
then, extending his right arm to Garlock and to Bell,
"'I was scared to death you couldn't make it, except by backtracking.
Good going, you two primes!'
But his thoughts said vastly more than his words.
Bell's eyes too were wet, Garlock's own were not quite dry.
"'You weren't as sure as you looked, then, that we could do it the hard way,'
Bell said.
All inside, I was one quivering mass of jelly.
Afterward you mean?
You were solid as Gibraltar when I fired the charge.
You're the kind of woman a man wants with him when the going's tough.
Slide around here a little, so I can get hold of you.
Garlock released Bell, finally, and turned to the pilot,
who was just pulling a data sheet from Compi the computer.
How far did we miss target, Jim?
James held up his right hand, thumb and forefinger, forming a circle.
You're 1.87 inches high and off-center, point five-three inches to the north-northeast by east.
I hereby award each of you the bronze medal of Marksman first.
Shall I take her down now, or do you want to check in from here first?
Neither, I think.
What do you think, Belle?
Right, not until you know what.
Check.
we decide whether or not to let them know just yet that we can handle the ship. If we do,
how many of our taped reports we turn in and how many we toss down the shoot."
"'I get it,' James exclaimed, with a spreading grin.
"'That, my dear people, is something I never expected to live long enough to see, our
straight-laced Dr. Garlock applying the bugger factor to a research problem.'
I prefer the term monk's coefficient myself, Garlock said, from the standpoint of mathematical rigor.
At Polytech we called it Finagle's formula, Bell commented, the most widely applicable operator known.
Have you three lost your minds? Lola demanded. That's nothing to joke about. You wouldn't destroy
official reports. All that astronomy and anthropology that nobody ever even dreamed.
of before? You couldn't! Not possibly!"
Each of us knows just as well as you do how much data we have, exactly how new and
startling it is, but we've thought ahead farther than you have. None of us likes the idea
of destroying it a bit better than you do. We won't either, without your full, unreserved,
whole-hearted consent, nor without your fixed, iron-clad, unshakable determination never to reveal
any least bit of it."
That language is far too strong for me.
I'd like to be able to go along with you, but on those terms I
simply can't.
I think you can, when you've thought it through.
You've met Alonzo P. Ferber, haven't you?
Read him?
One glimpse, that was all I could stand.
He pawed me mentally and wanted to paw me physically the first
time I ever saw him.
Check.
So I'm going to ask you two to tell you to feel.
questions, which you may answer as an anthropologist, as Lola Montandon, as Mrs. James
James James the Ninth, as a member of our team, or as any other character you choose
to assume.
Remembering that Ferber is a Gunther first and pretends to be an operator whenever he can
get away with it, should he or anyone like him ever be allowed to visit Hodel?
Second question.
If there is any possible way for him to get there, can he be made to stay away?
away. Oh, Grand Lady Neldine and that perfectly stunning
Grand Lady Lemphi they picked out for Jim. They're such nice people. And the
Gunther jeans. As Lola thought on, her expressive face showed a
variety of conflicting emotions before it hardened into a decision. The
answer to both questions, the only possible answer, is no. I
subscribe on the exact terms you stipulated.
And you don't believe, Clee, that my thesis had anything to do with my holding out at
first?"
"'Certainly I don't. Besides.
"'What thesis?'
Bell asked.
"'For my Ph.D. in anthropology.
I thought I had it made, but it just went down the chute.
And I don't know if any of you realize just how nearly impossible it is to make a really
worthwhile original contribution to science in that field.
I started to tell you, Brownie," Garlock said.
I don't think you've lost a thing.
There's a bigger and better one coming up.
What?
Sh!
Vell Stage whispered.
He's got a theory, such a weirdie, that he won't talk about it to anybody.
It isn't a theory yet, at least not ripe enough to pick, but it's something more than a hunch,
Garlock said.
But what could possibly make as good a thesis as those extra-golars?
Galactic tapes," Lola wailed. They would have made my thesis a summer breeze."
More like a hurricane, the hottest thing since doctorate disputations first started,"
Garlock said.
However, as I started to say twice before, it still will be.
Intragalactic tapes will be just as good, in this case better.
Well, possibly, but we haven't any.
That is what this conference is about.
We can't destroy the stuff we have unless we can replace it with something better.
My idea is that we should visit a few, say, fifty, tellus-type planets in this galaxy,
the ones closest to tell us.
I'm pretty sure they'll be inhabited by Homo sapiens.
There's a chance, of course, that they'll be like Hodel and the others we've seen,
in which case I don't see how we can keep Gunther genes confined to Earth.
I'm pretty sure in my own mind that we'll find them all very much like Tellis,
Gunther and all."
"'What would you think of that for a thesis, Lola?'
"'Oh, wonderful.'
"'Okay. Now, to get back to whether we want to check in or not, I don't like to
duck out without letting them know we can handle this heap, after a fashion, that is.
They don't need to know we can really handle it. But we've got nothing we can report,
and Fatso will blow his stack.
Oh, oh, should have remembered Tellis isn't Hodel.
The tridey setting up.
Belle, you take it.
She'd give me fatso because he wants to chew me out, but she won't put him on for you.
Cut her throat but good.
Brownie, hide somewhere.
Jim, set up for Beta Centauri, not Alpha but Beta and fast.
Give her hell, Belle."
Garlock sent his last thought from behind to Davenport from which hiding place he could
see the trie-eye screen and both Bell and James, but anyone on the screen could not see him.
Miss Foster's likeness appeared upon the screen. Chancellor Ferber Secretary was a big woman,
but not fat, middle-aged, gray-haired, wearing consciously the aura and the domineering, overbearing
expression of a woman who has great power and an even greater drive to exert her authority.
"'Why haven't you reported in?'
Miss Foster snapped with a glare that was pure frost.
You arrived thirteen minutes ago.
Such delay is inexcusable.
Get Garlock.
Captain Garlock is off watch, asleep.
I, Commander Bellamy am in command.
Standing stiffly at attention,
Bell paused to exchange glares with the woman across the big desk.
If Miss Foster's was frost, Captain Bellamy's was helium ice.
Ready to go, Jim?
Bell flashed the thought.
Half a minute yet.
Any time after I sign off.
Pick your own spot.
Then, aloud into the screen,
I will report to Chancellor Ferber.
I will not report to Chancellor Ferber's secretary.
Dr. James!
Miss Foster's voice was neither as cold nor as steady as it had been.
Bring that ship down at once!
James made no sign that he had heard the order.
Bell stood changelessly stiff. She had not for an instant taken her coldly competent
eyes from those of the woman on the ground. Her emotionless, ultra-refrigerated voice went,
as ever, directly into the screen. I trust that this conversation is being recorded. It
certainly is. Good. I wanted on record that we, the personnel of the Starship Pleiades,
are not subject to the verbal orders of the Chancellor's secretary.
You will now connect me with Chancellor Ferber, please.
The Chancellor is in conference and is not to be disturbed.
I have authority to act for him.
You will report to me and do it right now.'
Foster's voice rose almost to a screen.
That ground has been covered.
Since you have taken it upon yourself to exceed your authority
to such an extent as to refuse
to connect the officer in command of the Pleiades with the Chancellor, I cannot report to him
either the reasons why we are not landing at this time or when we expect to return to tell us.
You are advised that we may leave at any instant just like that."
Bell snapped her finger under the imaged nose.
You may inform the Chancellor, or not inform him if you prefer, that our control of the Starship Pleiades
is something less than perfect.
I do not know exactly how many seconds longer we will be here.
Commander Bellamy signing off. Over and out.
Commander Bellamy, indeed! Commander my left foot!
Miss Foster was screaming now in thwarted fury.
You're no more a commander than my lowest office girl is.
Just wait till you get down here, you green-haired hussy, you shameless notorious—
The set went instantaneously from full volume to zero-sort.
sound as Jim drove the red button home.
"'Bell, you, honey!' Garlock scrambled out from behind the Davenport, seized her around
the waist and swung her, feet high in air, through four full circles before he let her down
and kissed her vigorously.
"'You little sweetheart! You're the first living human being ever to really pull Foster's cork!'
"'What a goat-getting!' James applauded.
"'That will go down in history as the...
the star-spangled act of the century.
Bell was, however, unusually diffident.
I stuck my neck out a mile, worse, Clees.
I'm sorry, Clee.
I had to have some weight to throw around, and I only had a second to think,
and that was the first thing I thought of, and after half a minute
she made me so damn mad that I went entirely too far.
Uh-uh, just far enough.
That was a perfect job.
But she'll never forget that, and she'll crucify you as well as me when we land.
She knows I'm not a commander."
She just thinks you ain't.
The official log will show, though, that after only one day out I discovered that we should
all be officers, one captain and three commanders, with pay and perquisites of rank.
I'll think up good and sufficient reasons for it between now and when I make up the log.
But you can't.
Or can you, really?"
Well, nobody told me I couldn't, so I assumed the right.
Besides, you didn't tell her commander of what, so I'll make it stick, too, see if I don't.
Or else I'll tear two or three offices apart, finding out why I can't.
You can be sure of that."
"'All that may not be necessary,' Lola said.
That tape will never be heard.
I'll bet she's erased it already.
Perhaps, but ours isn't going to be erased.
It will be heard exactly where it will do the most good."
"'I'm awfully glad you don't think we're on the hook.
All that's left, then, is that second-in-command business.
Both of you know, of course, that that was just window-dressing.'
"'You were telling the truth and didn't know it,' James said cheerfully.
You have actually been second-in-command ever since the drive tests.
I haven't, and I won't. Surely you don't think I'm enough of a heel, Jim, to step on
your toes like that."
Nothing like that involved. You tell her, Clee."
Gunther ability is what counts. You're a prime. Jim's an operator. So, now that we can handle
the heap, you'll have to be second in command whether you like it or not. Any time you can
out-Gunther me, we'll trade places. And you won't have to take the job away from me.
I'll give it to you.
But—no hard feelings, Jim? No reservations? Screens down?
None whatever. In fact, I'm relieved. I'm gutthered for this board here. For that one,
I'm not. Come in and look and shake on it."
Bell looked, and while they were shaking hands she flashed a thought at Lola.
Do you know that we've got two of the finest men that ever lived?
I've known that for a long time.
a flashback. But you've hardly started to realize what they really are.
Well, shall we start earning our pay and perquisites by getting to work on this planet
that we haven't even looked? Wait a minute. We're just about to open up the galaxy, aren't we?
They were. Then there'll have to be some kind of a unifying and correlating authority,
a galactic council or something, and the quicker it set up the better. The less confusion and turmoil
and jockeying for position there will be.
Question.
Should this authority be political?
It should not, James declared.
It takes United World's seven solid days of debate
to decide whether or not to buy one lead pencil.
Military or naval, I suppose, it be.
That's what Clee's driving at, Bell said.
You're wonderful, Clee, simply priceless.
We're officers of the brand-new Galactic Navy.
subject to civilian control, of course, but the civilians will be the
United Galaxian societies of the galaxy, and nobody else.
Beautiful, Clee.
There are ten operators, Jim, right?"
Check.
Brownie and I are here.
The other aide are running the Galaxian Society under Clee, and the
whole society eats out of his hand.
I don't know about that, but Bell and I together could swing it,
I think.
I'll say we could, Bell breathed, and I simply
I can't wait to see you kick Fatsos' teeth in with this one."
"'I don't like the word Navy,' Garlock said.
It's tied definitely to warfare.
How about calling it the Galactic Service?
Applicable to either war or peace.
Brass hats will think of us in terms of war, even though we will actually work for
peace.
Any objections?
There were no objections.
"'About the uniforms,' Lola said Eve.
eagerly, space black and star white, with chromium comets and things on the shoulders.
"'To hell with uniforms,' Garluck broke in.
"'Why do women have to go off the deep end on clothes?'
"'She's right. You're wrong, Clee,' James said.
"'Without a uniform, you won't get off the ground, not even with the society.
And you'll be talking to top planetary brass.
Also, they're Gunthered plenty.
You can feel their op-field clear out here."
"'Could be,' Garlock conceded.
"'Okay, you girls dope it out to suit yourselves.
But think you can stand at Bell to wear more than twelve square inches of clothes?
Wait till you see it, chum.
I've been designing a uniform for myself for positively years.
I can't wait.
And you're a captain, of course.
Huh?
You can't have two cap...
Oh, I see. Primes. I appreciate that, Clee. Thanks.
Hold on, both of you, James said. You haven't thought this through far enough.
Suppose we meet forces already organized. Better start high than low. You've got to be top
admiral, Clee. Rocket oil. Suppose we don't find anything at all.
You're right, Jim, Bell said.
Clee, you talk like a man with a paper nose.
It's you who's been yowling for two solid years about being ready for
anything. We've got to do just that.
Correction accepted. Brief me.
Ranks should be different from those of United Worlds.
They should be descriptive, but impressive.
Tops could be Galactic Admiral. That's you.
Vice-Galactic Admiral? Me.
Galactic Vice Admiral would be better, Lola said.
Accepted.
Those two will make stick come hell or space warps, right?
Garlock did not reply immediately.
Up to either one of two points, he agreed finally.
What points?
War, or being out-gunthered?
Top Gunther takes top place.
Man, woman, bird, beast, fish, or bug-eyed monster.
Oh, Bell was staggered for a moment.
No war, of course.
As to the other, I hadn't thought of that.
There are lots of things none of us has thought of, but as amended, I'll buy it.
Then several regional admirals, each with his regional vice-admiral.
Then system admirals and vices, and world or planetary, naming the planet, you know,
admirals and vices.
Let the various Galaxian societies take over for,
from there down. How do you like them, potatoes, Buster?"
"'Nice. The formal address, Intra-Ship, will be Mr. and Miss. Jim and Brownie?'
They liked it.
"'Where do we fit in?' James asked.
"'Pick your own spots,' Garlock said.
"'If we stick to the solar system we aren't so apt to get bumped by primes, so make
me Solar System Admiral and Brownie my vice.'
Okay. How long will it take you, Bell, to materialize those uniforms?"
Fifteen seconds longer than it takes the converter to scan us.
Lola's color scheme is right, and I've got everything else down to the last
curlicue of chrome. Let's go."
They went and came back into the main in uniform.
Bell had really done a job.
That of the men, while something on the spectacular side, was more or less conventional,
stiff-visored, screened, heavily-chromed caps. But the women's?
Slippers, overseas caps, shorts and jackets. But what jackets?"
Well, Garlock said after examining the two girls
speechlessly for a good half-minute.
Doesn't look exactly like a spray-on job, but if you ever take a deep breath,
it'll split from here to there. Fly off, leave you naked as a jaybird.
Oh no! The fabric's
Stretches a little. See? Nothing like a sweater, but a similar effect. Perhaps a bit more so."
Quite a bit more so, I'd say. However, since operators and primes are automatically stacked
like Tenick towers, I don't suppose your recruits will be unduly perturbed at or will squawk
too much about over exposure.
Are we finally ready to go down and get to work?
I am, James said. How do you want to handle it?
Run a search pattern. Bell and I will center their op field and check on ops and primes. You
two probe it will. Around and around the planet, in brief bursts of completely incomprehensible
speed, the huge ship darted. The biggest, solidest, yet most elusive and fantastic flying saucer
ever to visit that world. The tremendous oceans and six great continents were traversed. The ice caps,
the frigid, the temperate, and the torrid zones. Wherever she went, powerful and efficient radar
scanned and tractor. Wherever she went, excitement seethed. Beta Centauri 5, Garlock reported after a few
minutes. Margonia, they call it. Biggest continent and nation named Nargota. Capital City,
Margon. Margon. Bays on coast nearby. Lots of Gunther firsts. All.
All the real Gunther, though, is clear across the continent.
They're building a starship, fourteen ops and two primes, man and woman.
Deggy Delcamps a big bruiser, with a god-awful lot of stuff.
Ugly as hell, though.
He's a bossy type.
I'm amazed, James played it straight.
I thought all male primes would be just like you, Timorous Timmy's.
Huh?
Oh.
was taken slightly aback, but went on quickly.
"'What do you think of your opposite number, Bell?'
He whistled a wolf-call and made hourglass motions with his hands.
"'I thought of trading you in on a new model, but Fowtelahou is no bargain either, and nobody's
push over.
"'Trade!
You tomcat!'
Bell's nostrils flared.
You know what that bleach blonde tried to do?
I HAT ME!"
I noticed.
When we four get down to business, face to face, there should be some interesting
by-products.
You chirped it, boss.
Primes seem to be such nice people.
James rolled his eyes upward and steepled his hands.
If you've got all the dope, no use finishing this search pattern.
Go ahead, window dressing.
The brass hasn't any idea of what's going on any more than ours did.
The search went on until,
"'This is it,' James reported.
"'Where? Over Margon Base?'
"'check. Kick us over there, ten or twelve hundred miles up.'
"'On the way, boss. Looks like your theory is about to pick.'
It isn't much of a theory yet. Just that cultural and evolutionary pattern should be more or
less homogeneous within galaxies. Until it can explain why so many out-galaxies are just alike,
It doesn't amount too much.
By the way, I'm glad you people insisted on organization and rank in uniforms.
The brass is going to take a certain amount of convincing.
Take over, Brownie. This is your dish.
I was afraid of that.
The others watched Lola drive her probe, a diamond-clear, razor-sharp bolt of thought
that no Gunther first could possibly either wheeled or stop,
down into the innermost private office of that immense and far-flung.
BAS. Through Lola's inner eyes they saw a tall, trim, handsome, 50-ish man in a resplendent uniform
of purple and gold. They watched her brush aside that officer's hard-held mental block.
I greet you, Supreme Grand Marshal Entlore, highest commander of the armed forces of Nargoda. This
is the starship Pleiades of System Saul, Planet Tellus. I am Saul System Vice Admiral
Lola Montandon. I have with me as guests three of my superior officers of the Galactic Service,
including the Galactic Admiral himself. We are making a good-will tour of the Telas-type planets
of this region of space. I request permission to land and information as to your landing conventions.
The landing pad, bottom of the Pleiades, is flat, 60 feet wide by 120 feet long. Area loading is
approximately eight tons per square foot. Solid dry ground is perfectly satisfactory.
While we land vertically, with little or no shock impact, I prefer not to risk damaging
your pavement." They all felt the Marshal's thoughts race.
"'Starship! Tell us! Saul! That insignificant type G. Dwarf! Interstellar travel a commonplace!
A ship that size and weight! An organized, uniformed, functioning gas.
galaxy-wide navy, and they don't want to damage my pavement.
My God!"
Good going, Brownie.
Kisser for me, Jim."
Garluck flashed the thought.
Entlore, realizing that his every thought was being read, pulled himself
together.
I admit that I was shocked, Admiral Montandon.
But landing, really, I have nothing to do with landings.
They are handled by—I realize that, sir, but you realize that
No underling could possibly authorize my landing.
That is why I always start at the top.
Besides, I do not like to waste time on officers of much lower rank than my own, and,
Lola, allowing a strong tinge of good humor to creep into her thought,
the bigger they are, the less apt they are to pass the well-known buck.
"'You have had experience, I see,' the Marshal laughed.
He did have a sense of humor.
While landing here is forbidden, top secret, you know, would my refusal mean much to you?
Having made satisfactory contact, I introduce you to Galactic Admiral Garlock.
Take over, sir, please."
Entler winced, for the probe Garlock used then compared to Lola's very much as a diamond
drill compares to a piece of soft brass pipe.
It would mean everything to us, Garlock assured him.
Our mission is a perfectly friendly one. We will have a friendly visit, or none. If you do not
care for our friendship, another nation will."
That wouldn't do either, of course."
Entler paused in thought.
It boils down to this. I must either welcome you or destroy you.
You may try."
Garlach grinned in frankly self-satisfied amusement.
However, the best you can do is lithium-hydroids.
lithium-hydride fusion missiles in the hundreds of megaton's range.
Firecrackers.
Every once in a while, a planet has to try a few such things on us
before it will believe that we are powerful as well as friendly.
Would you like to test our defenses?
If so, I will neither take offense nor retaliate."
Supreme Grand Marshal Entlore was floored.
Why, er, not at all.
I read in your mind,
He broke off to quell an invasion into his own private office.
"'Damn't, keep still!' All four heard him yell.
"'I know they ran a search pattern. I know that, too. I know everything about it, I tell you.
I'm in full rapport with their Supreme Grand Admiral. There's only the one ship. They're friendly,
and I'm inviting them to land here on Margonne Base. Give that to the press. Say also that entrance
restrictions to Margon Base will not be relaxed at present. Grand Marshal Holson and
calm off Flournoy stay here and tune in. The rest of you, get out and stay out. Throw all
reports about any alien vessel or flying saucer or what have you into the wastebasket.
Resume command, please, Miss Montandon, Garlock directed, and withdrew his probe from Entlore's
mind. I thank you, Supreme Grand Marshal Entlore for your welcome.
Lola sent.
I'm sorry that our visits caused so much disturbance,
but I suppose it can't be helped.
Our Gunther blocks are down.
Would you and your two assistants like to teleport out here to us
and con us down yourselves?
Lola knew instantly that they could not and covered deftly for them.
But, of course you can't, without knowing a focus spot here in the main.
Shall I teleport you aboard?
"'Come off Fleur Noy's face. She was an attractive, nicely built redhead, wearing throat-mic,
earphone, and recorder, turned so pale that a faint line of freckle stood out across the bridge of her nose.
She very evidently wanted to scream a protest, but would not. Both men, strangely enough,
were eager to go. Instantly all three were standing in line on the deep-piled rug of the main,
facing the four Tullerians.
Seven bodies came rigidly to attention.
Seven right hands snapped into two varieties of formal salute.
Standing thus, each party studied the other for a couple of seconds.
There was no doubt at all as to which two of the visitors the two Nargodian men were studying,
but neither of them could quite make up his mind as to which of the black and white-clad women to study first or most.
The red-heads glanced, too, flickered between Bell and Garlock.
Incredulous envy and equally incredulous admiration lit her eyes.
"'At rest, please, fellow officers,' Garlock said, and Lola performed the necessary introductions,
adding, "'We do not, however, use titles aboard ship. Mr. and Miss are customary and sufficient.'
Behind each row of officers, a long Davenport appeared. Between them,
a table loaded with sandwiches, olives, pickles, relishes, fruits, nuts, soft drinks,
cigars, and cigarettes."
"'Help yourselves,' Garlock invited.
"'We serve neither intoxicants nor drugs, but you should find something there to your taste.'
"'Indeed, we shall, and thank you,' Aunt Lorr said.
"'Is there any objection, Mr. Garlock, to Miss Flournoy transmitting information of this
meeting and of this ship to our base?'
"'None whatever.
"'Send as you please, Miss Flournoy, or as Mr. Entler directs.'
"'I'm glad I didn't quite scare myself out of coming up here,' the communications officer said.
"'This is the biggest and nicest thrill I ever had. Such a thrill that I don't know just where to begin.'
She cocked an eyebrow at her commanding officer.
"'As usual, whatever you think should be sent.'
Entelor sent her a steadying thought. Then, as the girl settled back,
with a sandwich in one hand and a tall glass of ginger ale in the other he went on to Garlock.
She is a very fine and very strong telepath, by our standards at least.
By galactic standards also!"
Garluck had of course been checking.
Accurate, sharp, wide range, clear thinking and fast.
Not one of us four could do it any better.
I thank you, Mr. Garlock, the girl said with a blush of pleasure and with
scarcely a perceptible pause in her work. A tour of the ship followed, and as it progressed,
the more confused and dismayed the two Nargodian commanders became.
"'But no crew at all?' Holson demanded incredulously.
"'How can a thing like this possibly work?'
"'It's fully Gunthered,' Lola explained.
"'It works itself, that is, almost all the time. Whenever we land on
any planet for the first time, one of us has to control it, or for any
other special job not in its memory banks.
When you're ready for us to land, I'll show you.
It's my turn to work."
Miss Fleurneoy, have they cleared the air over Pylon Six?
Yes, sir.
Clearance came through five minutes ago.
They are holding it clear for us.
Thank you.
Miss Montenden, you may land at your convenience.
Thank you, sir.
Lola took the pilot's chair.
"'This is the scanner. I pull it over my face and head, so, since I am always in tune with the field—'
"'What does that mean?'
Entler asked, dark foreboding in his mind.
"'I was afraid of that. You can't feel an operator field. I'm sorry, sir, but that means you can't
handle these forces and never will be able to. Certain Gunther areas of your brain are inoperative.
On our scale, you're a Gunther first.
On ours, I'm an Esper 10, the highest rating in the world, except for a few theoretical
crackpots who—excuse me, please, I shouldn't have said that, in view of what I see
happening here.
No offense taken, sir.
Those who developed the Gunther Drive were crackpots until they got the first starship out
into space.
But with this scanner on, I think of where I went to look, and I can see.
it. I then think the ship a few miles sideways, so, and we are now directly over your
pylon six. I'm starting down, but I won't go into free fall."
A parrot weight grew less and less, until...
"'This is about enough for you, Miss Flournoy?'
"'Just,' the calm-off agreed with a gulp. One pound less, and I'm afraid I'll up-chuck
that lovely lunch I just ate.
We're going fast enough now. Everyone sitting down.
down? Brace yourselves, please. You'll be about fifty percent
overweight for a while." As bodies settled deeper into cushions,
Entler sent Garlock a thought. We three weigh about five hundred pounds. You
lifted us, instantaneously, or nearly so, but I'll pass the
question of acceleration for the moment. Eleven hundred miles straight up. How
did you repeal the law of conservation? We didn't. We have
fusion engines of 20 million horsepower. Our operator field, which has a radius of 15,000 miles
and is charged to an electrogravitic potential of 100,000 guns, stores energy. Its action is
not exactly like that of an electrical condenser or of a storage battery, but is more or less
analogous to both. Thus, the energy required to lift U-3 came from the field, but the amount was so
small that it did not lower the potential of the field by any measurable
amount. Setting this ship down, call it sixty thousand tons for a
thousand miles at one gravity, will increase the field's potential by
approximately one tenth of one gut. Have you studied paraphysics?"
No. It wasn't practical, eh? Garlock smiled. Then I can't make
even a stab at explaining instantaneous translation to you. I'll just
say that there is no acceleration involved, no time-lapse. There is no violation of the
law of conservation, since departure and arrival points are equa-guntherial. But what I'm
really interested in is that small group of high espers you mentioned. Yes, I inferred that
from Miss Montandon's comments. Etlore fell silent, and Garlock watched his somber thoughts,
picture Margon Base and his nation's capital, being attacked and destroyed by a
a fleet of invincible and invulnerable starships like this Pleiades."
You are wrong, sir," Garlock put in quietly.
The Galactic Service has not had, does not and will not have anything to do with
intraplanetary affairs.
We have no connection with and no responsibility to any world or any group of worlds.
We are an arm of the United Galaxian Societies of the galaxy.
Your function is to control space, to forbid, to prevent, to rectify any interplanetary or
interstellar aggression.
Above all, to prevent, by means of procedures up to and including total destruction of planets
if necessary, any attempt whatever to form any multi-world empire.
The three Nargodians gasped as one, as much at the scope of the thing as at the calmly cold
certainty of ability carried by the thought.
"'You are transmitting this precisely, Miss Flournoy?'
Aunt Lor asked.
"'Precisely, sir, including background, fringes, connotations, and implications,
just as he is giving it to us.
Let us assume that your Nargodian government decides to conquer all the other nations
of your planet Margonia.
Assume farther that it succeeds.
We will not object.
In fact, we will, as a usual thing, not even be informed of it.
If then, however, your government decides that one world is not enough for it to rule
and prepares to conquer or take aggressive action against any other world, we will be
informed and we will step in.
First, warning will be given.
Second, any and all vessels dispatched on such a mission will be annihilated.
Third, if the offense is continued or repeated,
trial will be held before the Galactic Council, and any sentence imposed will be carried out.
In spite of Garlock's manner and message, both marshals were highly relieved.
"'You're in plenty of time with us, sir,' Antelor said.
"'We have just sent our first rocket to our nearer moon, that is, unless that group of
of Espers gets their ship off the ground.'
"'How far along are they?'
The ship itself is built, but they are having trouble with their drive.
The hull is spherical and much smaller than this one.
It has atomic engines, but no blasts or ion plates, but neither has this one.
Exactly.
They may be pretty well along.
I'd like to get in touch with them as soon as possible.
May I borrow a talker like Miss Flournoy for a few days?
You have others, I suppose.
Yes, but I'll let you have her. It is of the essence that you have the best one available.
Miss Flournoy? Yes, sir. Besides reporting, she had been conversing busily with James and Bell.
Would you like to be assigned to Mr. Garlock for the duration of his stay on Margonia?
Oh, yes, sir, she replied excitedly.
You are so assigned. Take orders from him or from any designate as though I myself were issuing them.
Thank you, sir. But what limits? And do I transmit to and or record for you, sir?
No limit. These four Galaxians are hereby granted nationwide top clearance.
Transmit as usual, whatever is permitted.
Full reporting is not only permitted, but urged, Garlock said.
There is nothing secret about our mission.
As the Pleiades landed,
If you will give us your focus spot, Mr. Entlore, we can all port to your office and save
calling staff cars.
"'And cause a revolution?' Antelor laughed.
"'Apparently you haven't been checking outside.'
"'Afraid I haven't. I've been thinking.
Take a look.
I got orders from the cabinet to put guards wherever people absolutely must not go and open
everything else to the public.
I hope there are enough guards to keep a lane open for us, but I wouldn't bet on it.
Garlock was very glad that the military men's stiff formality had disappeared.
You Galaxians took this whole planet by storm while you were still above the stratosphere.
There is no need to go into detail concerning the reception and celebration.
On Earth, one inauguration of a president and one coronation of a monarch,
were each almost as well covered by broadcasters, if not as
turbulently and enthusiastically prolonged.
From the Pleiades they went to the Administration Building,
where an informal reception was held, thence to the Capitol, where
the reception was very formal indeed, thence to the grand ballroom of the
city's largest hotel, where a tremendous and long-winded banquet
was served.
At Garlock's request all sixteen members of the
crackpot group, the most active members of the Deep Space Club, had been invited to the
banquet.
And even though Garlock was a very busy man, his talker tuned in to each one of the sixteen,
tuned them all to the Galactic Admiral, and in odd moments a great deal of business was
done.
After being told most of the story, in tight-beamed thoughts that Kamov-Flearnoy could not receive,
the whole group was wildly enthusiastic.
They would change the name of their club forthwith to the Galaxian Society of Margonia.
They laid plans for a worldwide organization which would have tremendous prestige and tremendous income.
They already had a field. Garlock knew about their ship.
They wanted the Pleiades to move over to it as soon as possible.
Yes, Garloc thought he could do it the following day, if not, as soon as he could.
The Pleiades had landed at ten o'clock in the forenoon, local time.
The banquet did not come to an end until long after midnight.
Throughout all this time the four Galaxians carried on, without a slip, the act that all
this was to them old stuff.
It was just a little before daylight when they returned, exhausted to the ship.
Calm off Fleurnoi went with them.
She was still agog at the wonder of it all, as Belle and Brownie showed her.
her to her quarters. End of Chapter 6. Chapter 7 of The Galaxy Prime's by E.E. Doc Smith.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain. The Galaxy Primes. Chapter 7. Since everyone,
including the bullion come-off, slept late the following morning, they all had brunch instead
of breakfast and lunch.
All during the meal, Garlock was preoccupied and stern.
Hold everything for a while, Jim, he said, when everyone had eaten.
Before we move, Bell and I have got to have a conference.
Not a fatso-ferber nine o'clock type, I hope, James frowned in mock reproach and
calm off Fleurnoi cocked an eyebrow in surprise.
Monkey business on company time is only for big shots like him.
not for small fry such as you.
Well, it won't be exclusively monkey business anyway.
While we're gone, you might clear with the control tower and take us up into take-off position.
Come on, Belle.
He took her by one elbow and led her away.
Why, Dr. Garlock!
Mincing along beside him, pretending high reluctance, she looked up at him, wide-eyed.
I'm surprised.
I really am.
I'm shocked.
too. I'm not that kind of a girl, and if I wasn't afraid of losing my job, I would scream.
I never even suspected that you would use your position as my boss to force your unwelcome
attentions on a poor and young and innocent and suffering.'
Inside his room, Garlock, who had been grinning, sobered down and checked every
Gunther block, a most unusual proceeding. Bell stopped joking in the middle of the sentence.
Yeah, how you suffer, he said.
I was just checking to be sure we're prime-proof.
I'm not ready for Deggy Delcamp yet.
That guy, Bell, as you probably noticed, has got one god-awful load of stuff.
Not as much as you have, Klee, nor as much push behind what he has got.
And his shield wouldn't make patches for yours.
Huh? How are you sure of that?
I'm positive.
I'm the one who is going to be.
to get bumped, I'm afraid. That Fowtalaho is a hard-hitting, hard-boiled hellcat on wheels.
I'll be damned. You're wrong. I checked her from stem to gudgeon, and you lay over her like a
circus tent. What's the answer? Oh, do I? I'm mighty glad. Funny both of us being wrong. It must be
clear that it's sex-based differences. We're used to each other, but neither of us has ever felt
a prime of the same sex before, and there must be more differences between ops and primes than
we realized, suppose?
Could be, I hope.
But that doesn't change the fact that we aren't ready.
We haven't got enough data.
If we start out with this grandiose galactic service thing and find only two or three planets
Guntherd, we make jackasses of ourselves.
On the other hand, if we start out with a small organization or none, and find a little
lot of planets, it'll be one continuous catfight. On the third hand, three hands, clee? What are you,
an octopusy or an arpulone? Keep your beautiful trap shut a minute. On the third hand, we've got to
start somewhere. Any ideas? I never thought of it that way. Hmm, I see. She thought for a minute,
then went on. We'll have to start without starting, then. Quite a trick. We'll have to start without starting,
then. Quite a trick. But how about this? Suppose we take a fast tour, with you and I taking
quick peaks without the peak-ees ever knowing we've been peeking. That's using the brain bell. Let's go.
Then out in the main. Jim, we want to hit a few high spots, as far out as you can reach without
losing orientation. Beta Centauri here is pretty bright. Rigel and Canopus are real lanterns.
With those three as a grid, you could reach 1,500 or 2,000 light years, couldn't you?
More than that.
That many parsecs, at least.
Good.
Bell and I want to make a fast, random sampling check of primes and ops around here.
We'll need five minutes at each planet, quite a ways out.
So, set up as big a globe as you can and still be dead sure of your locations.
Then, sample it.
Not enough data.
How many samples do you want?
As many as we can get in the rest of today.
Six or seven hours, say.
Eight hours max.
Call it seven.
Brownie on the guns, me on compi.
Five minutes for you.
I should be able to lock down the next shot in five.
One minute extra, say, for safety factor.
That'd be ten an hour.
Seventy planets enough?
That'll be fine.
Okay.
We're practically at number one now.
and James and Lola donned their scanners ready for the job.
Miss Fleurnoi, Garlock said.
You might tell Mr. Entler that we're—oh, I already have, sir.
You don't have to come along, of course, if you'd rather stay here.
Stay here, sir?
Why, he'd kill me.
I'm off the air for a minute.
This last thought was a conspiratorial whisper.
Besides, do you think I'd miss a chance to be the first person and just a girl, too,
of a whole world to see other planets of other sons,
unless, of course, you invite Mr. Entler and Mr. Holson along,
they're both simply dying to go, I know, but of course, won't admit it.
You'd be just as well pleased if I didn't?
What do you think, sir?
We'll be working at top speed, and they'd be very much in the way,
so they'll get theirs later, after you've licked the cream off the top of the—
"'Ready to roll, Clee,' James announced.
Roll. Why, I lost contact, Miss Flournoy exclaimed.
Naturally, Garlock said,
Did you expect to cover a distance it takes light thousands of years to cross?
You can record anything you see in the plates.
You can talk to Jim or Lola any time they'll let you.
Don't bother Miss Bellamy or me from now on.
Garlock and Bell went to work.
All four Galaxians worked all day with half an hour off for lunch.
They visited 70 planets and got back to Margonia in time for a very late dinner.
Com off Fleurnoi had less than a quarter of one roll of recorder tape left unused,
and the Primes had enough information to start the project they had in mind.
And shortly after dinner, all five retired.
In one way, Clee, I'm relieved, Bell pondered.
But I can't figure out why all the Primes, the grown-up ones, I mean,
on all the worlds are just about the same cantankerous
you be damned out-and-out-stinkers as you and I are.
How does that fit into your theory?
It doesn't. Too fine a detail.
My guess is, at least it seems to me to make sense.
It's because we haven't had any competition strong enough
to smack us down and make Christians out of us.
I don't know what a psychologist would say.
And I know exactly what you'd think of whatever he did say,
so you don't need to tell me. Bell laughed and presented her lips to be kissed.
Good night, Clee. Good night, Ace. And the next morning, early, Garlock and Bell
teleported themselves, by arrangement and appointment, of course, across almost the full width of a nation
and into the private office in which Deggy Del Camp and Fou Talahou awaited them. For a time,
which would not have been considered polite in Tullurian social circles, the four prime stood still,
each couple facing the other with blocks set tight, studying each other with their eyes.
Del Camp was, as Garlock had said, a big bruiser. He was shorter and heavier than the Tullurian.
Heavily muscled, splendidly proportioned. He was a man of tremendous physical, as well as
mental strength. His hair, clipped close all over his head, was blonde. His eyes were a clear,
keen, cold, dark blue. Fow Talahoe was a couple of inches short.
than Bell, and a good 15 pounds heavier. She was in no sense fat, however, or even plump.
Actually, she was almost lean. She was whiter and thicker than was the Earth woman,
with heavier bones forming a wider and deeper frame. She, too, was beautifully, yes,
spectacularly built. Her hair, fully as thick as Bell's own and worn in a free-falling bob,
three or four inches longer than bells, was bleached almost white. Her eyes were not really speckled,
nor really muddled, but were regularly patterned in lighter and darker shades of hazel. She was,
Garlock decided, a really remarkable hunk of woman. Both Nargodians wore sandals without either socks or
stockings. Both were dressed, insofar as they were dressed at all, in yellow. Fow's single garment was of a thin,
closely knitted fabric, elastic, and sleek. Above the waist it was necklace, backless,
and almost frontless. Below, it was a very short, very tight, and clinging skirt.
Del Camp wore a sleeveless jersey and a pair of almost legless shorts.
Garlock lowered his shield enough to send and to receive a thin layer of superficial thought.
Delcamp did the same.
So far, I like what I see.
Garlock said then.
We are well ahead of you. Hence, I can help you a lot if you want me to, and if you want to be friendly
about it. If you don't, on either count, we leave now. Fair enough?
Fair enough. I too like what I have seen so far. We need help, and I appreciate your offer.
Thanks immensely. I can promise full cooperation and friendship for myself and for most of our
group, and I assure you that I can and will handle any non-cooperation that may come up.
"'Nisely put, Diggy,' Garlock smiled broadly, and led his guard down to a comfortable
lepping level.
"'I was going to bring that up. The faster it's cleared, the better.
Bell and I are paired.
Someday, unless we kill each other first, we may marry.
However, I'm no bargain, and she's one-third wildcat, one-third vixen.
and one-third cobra.
How do you two stand?
You took the thought right out of my own mind.
Your custom of pairing is not what you call urbane on this world.
Nevertheless, Fow and I are paired.
We had to.
No one else has ever interested either of us.
No one else ever will.
We should not fight, but we do, furiously.
But no matter how vigorously we fly apart,
we inevitably fly together again just as fast.
No one understands it, but you two are pretty much the same.
Check. Just one more condition, then, and we can pull those women of ours apart.
Bell and Fow were still staring at each other, both still sealed tight.
The first time Fow Talahos starts throwing her weight at me,
I'm not going to wait for you to take care of her.
I'm going to give her the surprise of her life.
It had tickled me silly if it could be done, Del Camp smiled and was perfectly frank.
But the man doesn't live that can do it. How would you go about trying it?
Set your block solid. Del Camp did so, and through that block, the supposedly impenetrable
shield of a prime operator, Garlock insinuated a probe. He did not crack the screen or break it down by force.
He neutralized and counter-faced, painlessly and almost imperceptibly its every component and layer.
Like this, Garlock said in the depths of the Margonian's mind.
My God, you can do that?
If I tell her this deep, to play ball or else, do you think she'd need two treatments?
She certainly oughtn't to.
this makes you Galactic Admiral no question.
I thought, of course, of trying you out for Top Gunther,
but this settles that.
We will support you, sir, wholeheartedly,
and my heartfelt thanks for coming here.
I have your permission, then,
to give Fow a little discipline when she starts rocking the boat?
I wish you would, sir.
I'm not too easy to get along with, I admit,
but I've tried to meet her a lot more than halfway.
way. She's just too
damned cocky for anybody's good.
Check. I wish somebody would come along
who could knock hell out of Bell.
Then aloud.
Bell, Del Clamp and I have the thing going.
Do you want in on it?
Delcamp spoke to Fow, and the two women
slowly, reluctantly lowered their shield to match those of the man.
Your Galaxian shaking of the hands,
handshake, I mean, is very good, Del Camp said, and he and Garlock shook vigorously.
Then the crossed pairs, and lastly the two girls, although neither put much effort into the gesture.
Snap out of it, Bell, Garlock sent a tight-beamed thought.
She isn't going to bite you.
She's been trying to, damn her, and I'm going to bite her right back.
See if I don't.
Garlock called the immediate order.
and all four sat down. The Tullerians lighted cigarettes and the others, who, to the earthling
surprise, also smoked, assembled and lit two peculiar-looking things halfway between pipe and cigarette,
and both pairs of smokers, after a few tentative tests, agreed in not liking at all the others'
taste in tobacco.
"'You know, of course, of the trip we took yesterday,' Garlock asked.
"'Yes,' Delcamp admitted.
We read Kamov-Fleurnoi.
We know of the 70 planets, but nothing of what you found.
Okay.
Of the 70 planets all have op fields, and all have two or more operators.
One planet has 44 of them.
Only 61 of the planets, however, have primes old enough for us to detect.
Each of these worlds has two and only two primes, one male and one female.
and on each world the two primes are of approximately the same age.
On 15 of these worlds, the primes are not yet adult.
On the 46 remaining worlds, the primes are young adults,
from pretty much like us four down to considerably younger.
None of these couples is married for family.
None of the girls has as yet had a child or is now pregnant.
Now, as to the information circulating all over this place,
planet about us. Part of it is false. Part of it is misleading to impress the military mind.
Thus, the fact is that the Pleiades, as far as we know, is the only starship in the whole galaxy.
Also, the information is very incomplete, especially as to the all-important fact that we were
lost in space for some time before we discovered that the only possible controller of the Gunther
drive is the human mind.
What?
An argument raged until Garlock stopped it by declaring that he would prove it in the Margonian's own ship.
Then Garlock and Bell together went on to explain and to describe, not even hinting, of course,
that they had ever been outside the galaxy or had even thought of trying to do so, their concept
of what the Galaxian societies of the galaxy would and should do, or what the Galaxian societies of the galaxy
would and should do, or what the Galaxian service could, should, and would become,
the service to which they both intended to devote their lives.
It wasn't even in existence yet, of course.
Fow and Deggy were the only other primes they had ever talked to in their lives.
That was why they were so eager to help the Margonians get their ship built.
The more starships there were at work,
the faster the service would grow into a really tremendous...
Fow's getting ready to blow her top,
Del Camp flashed Garluck a tight-beamed thought.
If I were doing it, I'd have to start right now.
I'll let her work up a full head of steam,
then smack her bow-legged.
Cheers, brother. I hope you can handle her.
Organization. Then, when enough ships were working
and enough Galaxian societies were rolling,
there would be the regional organizations and the Galactic Council.
"'So, on a one-planet basis, and right out of your own little fat head,'
"'Fow sneered, you have set yourself up as Grand High Chief Mughal,
"'and all the rest of us are to crawl up to you on our bellies and kiss your feet?'
"'If that's the way you want to express it, yes.
"'However, I don't know how long I personally will be in the pilot's bucket.
"'As I told you, I will enforce the basic tenet that Top Gunther is top.
top boss, man, woman, snake, fish, or monster.
Top Gunther be damned, foul blazed.
I don't and won't take orders from any man.
In hell or in heaven or on this earth or on any planet of any,
Fow, Del Camp exclaimed, please keep still, please.
Let her rave, Garlock said coldly.
This is just a three-year-old baby's tantrum.
If she keeps it up, I'll give her.
heard the damnedest jolt she ever got in all her spoiled life.
Bell whistled sharply to call Fow's attention, then tight-beamed a thought.
If you've got any part of a brain, slick chick, you'd better start using it.
The boyfriend not only plays rough, but he doesn't bluff.
To hell with all that, Fowl rushed on.
We don't have anything to do with your organization.
Go on back home or anywhere else you want to.
finish our own ship and build our own organization and run it to suit ourselves. We'll— That's enough
of that. Garlott penetrated her shield as easily as he had the man's, and held her in luck.
You are not going to wreck this project. You will start behaving yourself right now, or I'll
spread your mind wide open for Bell and Deggy to look at and see exactly what kind of a half-baked
jerk you are. If that doesn't work, I'll put you into a Gunther-blocked cell aboard the Pleiades and
keep you there, until the ship is finished and we leave Margonia. How do you want it?'
Fah was shocked as she had never been shocked before. At first, she tried viciously to fight,
but finding that useless against the appalling power of the mind holding hers, she stopped
struggling and began really to think. That's better. You've got what
it takes to think with. Go ahead and do it. And Fow Talahou did have it. Plenty of it, she learned.
I'll be good, she said finally. Honestly, I'm ashamed, really, but after I got started, I couldn't
stop. But I can now, I'm sure. I'm sure you can too. I know exactly how it is. All us primes have
to get hell knocked out of us before we amount to a whoop in Haiti.
"'Deggy got his one way. I got mine another. You got yours this way. No, neither of the others
knows anything about this conversation, and they won't. This is strictly between you and me.'
"'I'm awfully glad of that. And I think I—' "'Yes, damn you, thanks.'
Garlock released her, and after a few sobs, a couple of gulps, and a dabbing at her eyes with an
inadequate handkerchief, she said,
I'm sorry, Deggy, and you too, Belle. I'll try not to act like such a fool anymore.
Del Camp and Bell both stared at Garlock. Bell licked her lips.
No comment, he thought at the man, and to Belle, she just took a beating. Will you sheathe
your claws and take a lot of pains to be extra nice to her the rest of the day? Why, surely,
I'm always nice to anybody who is nice to me.
"'Says you,' Garlock replied, skeptically, and all four went to work as though nothing had happened.
They went through the shops and the almost finished ship. They studied blueprints. They met all
the operators and discussed generators and fields of force and mathematics and paraphysics and
Guntherics. They argued so hotly over mental control that Garlock had James bring the
pleities over to New Christened Galaxian Field so that he could prove his point then and there.
Entlore and Holson came along this time, as well as the calm-off,
and all three were non-plussed and surprised to see each member of the crack-pot group
hurled the huge starship from one solar system to any other one desired, apparently merely by
thinking about it. And the crack-pots were extremely surprised to find themselves, hopelessly lost in
uncharted galactic wildernesses every time they did not think, definitely, and positively,
of one specific destination. Then Garlock took a chance. He had to take it some time. He might
just as well do it now. See if you can hit Andromeda, Deggy, he suggested. While Bell,
James, and Lola held their breaths, Del Camp tried. The starship went toward the huge nebula,
stopped at the last suitable planet on the galaxy's rim.
Can you hit Andromeda? Del Camp asked, more than half jealously, and bell tenser muscles.
Never tried it, Garlock said easily. I suppose, though, since you couldn't kick the old girl
out of our good old home galaxy, she'll just sit right here for me, too. He went through the motions,
and the Pleiades did sit right there, which was exactly.
exactly what he had told her to do. And everybody, even the crackpots, breathed more easily.
And Bell was nice to foul. She didn't use her claws even once all day. And, just before quitting time,
does he, I mean, did he ever, well, sort of knock you around? Fow asked.
I'll say he hasn't. Bell's nostrils flared slightly at the mere thought.
I'd stick a knife into him, the big jerk.
Oh, I didn't mean physically.
Through my blocks? A primes blocks?
Don't be ridiculous, Fow.
What do you mean, ridiculous? Fow snapped.
You tried my blocks.
What did they feel like to you, mosquito netting?
What I thought was...
Oh, all he really said was
that all primes had to have hell knocked out of them
before they could be any good, that he had had it one way,
Deggy another, and me a third.
I see, you haven't had yours yet.
I certainly haven't.
And if he ever tries it, I'll...
Oh, he won't.
He couldn't very well, because, after you're married,
it would...
Did the big lug tell you I was going to marry him?
Of course not.
No fringes even.
But who else are you going to marry?
If the whole universe was clear full of the finest men imaginable, pure dreamboats no less,
can you even conceive of you marrying any one of them except him?
I'm not going to marry anybody ever.
No, you with your prime's mind and your prime's body not have any children?
And you tell me not to be ridiculous?
That stopped Bell cold, but she wouldn't admit it.
Instead,
"'I don't get it.
What did he do to you anyway?'
Fowl's block set itself so tight
that it took her a full minute to soften it down enough
for even the thinnest thought to get through.
That's something nobody will ever know.
But, anyway, unless—
Unless you find another prime as strong as Klee is,
and I don't really think there are any, do you?
Of course there aren't.
There's only one of his class anywhere.
He's it, Bell said with profound conviction.
That makes it tough for you.
You'll have the toughest job imaginable.
The very toughest.
I know.
Huh?
What job?
Since Clee won't do it for you, and since nobody else can,
you'll have to just simply knock the hell out of yourself.
And in Garluck's room that night, getting ready for bed,
Bell asked suddenly.
Clee, what in hell did you do to Fowtelahoe?
Nothing much.
She's a mighty good egg, really.
Could you do it, whatever it was, to me?
I don't know.
I never tried it.
Would you, then, if I asked you to?
No.
Why not?
Answer that yourself.
And it was nothing much, it says here in fine print.
But I think I know just about what it was, don't I?
I wouldn't be surprised.
You knocked hell out of yourself, didn't you?
I lied to her about that.
I'm still trying to.
So I've got to do it to myself.
And I haven't started yet?
Check.
But you're several years younger than I am, you know.
Bell thought it over for a minute,
then stubbed out her cigarette and shrugged her shoulders.
No sale. Put it back on the shelf. I like me better the way I am. That is, I think I do.
In a way, though, I'm sorry, Clee, darling. Darling, something new has been added. I wish you
really met that, Ace. I'm still Ace after what I just said. I'm glad, Clee. Ace is ever so much
nicer than chum. Ace, the top of the deck.
You are and always will be.
As for meaning it, I wish I didn't.
Ready for bed, Belle was much more completely and much less revealingly dressed than during
her working hours.
She slid into bed beside him, pulled the covers up to her chin, and turned off the light
by glancing at the switch.
If I thought anything could ever come of it, though, I'd do it if I had to pound myself
unconscious with the club.
But I wouldn't be here then either.
I'd scoot into my own room so fast my head would spin.
You wouldn't have to. You wouldn't be here.
I wouldn't at that. That's one of the things I like so much about you.
But honestly, Klee, seriously, screens down honestly.
Can you see any possible future in it?
No. Neither of us would give that much.
neither of us can, and there's nothing one-sided about it.
I'm no more fit to be a husband than you are to be a wife,
and God help our children. They'd certainly need it.
We'd never have any. I can't picture us living in marriage for nine months
without committing at least mayhem. Why, in just the little time we've been paired,
how many times have you thrown me out of this very room with the fervent hope that I
to drown in deep space before you ever saw me again.
At a guess, about the same number of times
as you have stormed out under your own power,
slamming the door so hard it sprung half the seams of the ship,
and swearing you'd slice me up into sandwich meat
if I ever so much as looked at you again.
That's what I mean.
But how can we got off on this subject, I wonder?
Because when we aren't fighting, like now, it's purely wonderful.
So I'll say it again.
Good night, Clee, darling.
Good night, Ace.
In the dark his lips sought hers and found them.
The fervor of her kiss was not only much more intense than any he had ever felt before.
It was much, very much more intense than Belle Bellamy had either wanted it or intended it to be.
Next morning, at the workman's hour of eight o'clock, the four Tillerians appeared in the office of Margoni,
his Galaxian field.
The first thing to do, Deggy,
is to go over in detail your blueprints
for the generators and the drive,
Garlock said.
I suppose so.
The funny pictures, eh?
Delcamp had learned much the previous day.
His own performance with the Pleiades
had humbled him markedly.
By no means, my friend,
Garlock said cheerfully.
While your stuff isn't exactly like ours,
It couldn't be hardly. The field is so big and so new. That alone is no reason for it not to work.
James can tell you, he's the solar system's top engineer. What do you think, Jim?
What I saw in the ship yesterday will work. What few of the prints I saw yesterday will fabricate,
and the fabrications will work. The main trouble with this project, it seems to me,
is that nobody's building the ship.
"'What do you mean by that crack?' Fow blazed.
"'Just that. You're a bunch of prima donnas, each doing exactly as he pleases.
So some of the stuff is getting done three or four times in three or four different ways,
while a lot of it isn't getting done at all.'
"'Such as,' Del Clamp demanded, and—'
"'Well, if you don't like the way we are doing things, you can,' Fowle began.
"'Just a minute, everybody.'
Lola came in with a disarming grin.
"'How much of that is hindsight, Jim?
You've built one, you know, and from all accounts, progress wasn't nearly as smooth as your story can be taken to indicate.'
"'You've got a point there, Lola,' Garlock agreed.
"'We slid back two steps for every three we took forward.'
"'Well, maybe,' James admitted.
"'So why don't you, Fow and Deggy, put Jim in charge.
of construction. Fow threw back her silvery head and glared, but Delcamp jumped at the chance.
Would you, Jim? Sure, unless Miss Tallaho objects. She won't. Delcamp's eyes locked with Fow's,
and Fow kept still. Thanks immensely, Jim, and I know what you mean. He went over to a cabinet of
wide, flat drawers and brought back a sheaf of drawings. Not blueprints.
but original drawings in pencil.
Such as this.
I haven't even got it designed yet, to say nothing of building it.
James began to leave through the stack of drawings.
They were full of erasures, re-drawings,
and such notations as C-sheets 17B, 21A, and 27F.
Halfway through the pile, he paused,
turned backward three sheets, and studied for minutes.
Then, holding that one sheet by a corner,
he went rapidly through the rest of the stack.
"'This is it,' he said then, pulling the one sheet out and spreading it flat.
"'What we call Unit 8, the heart of the drive.'
Then, tight-beam to Garlock,
"'This is a thing that you designed in toto and that I never could understand any part of.
All I did was build it. It must generate those prime fields.'
"'Probably,' Garlock flashed back.
"'I didn't understand it any too well myself.'
How does it look?
He isn't even close.
He's got only half of the constants down,
and half of the ones he has got down or wrong.
Look at this mess here.
I'll take your word for it.
I haven't your affinity for blueprints, you know,
or your idetic memory for them.
Do you want me to give him the whole works?
We'll have to, I think,
or the ship might not work at all.
Could be.
But how about intergalactic hops?
He couldn't do it with the Pleiades, so he won't be able to do it with this.
Besides, if we change it in any particular, he might.
You see, I don't know very much more about Unit 8 than you do.
That could be, too.
Then, as though just emerging from his concentration on the drawings,
James thought at Del Camp and Fow, but on the open general band.
A good many errors and a lot of blanks, but in general you're on the right track.
I can finish up this drawing in a couple of hours, and we can build the unit in a couple of days.
With that in place, the rest of the ship will go fast.
If Miss Talahua wants me to, he concluded pointedly,
Oh, I do, Jim, really, I do.
At long last, stiff-backed fow softened and bent.
She seized both his hands.
If you can, it'd be too wonderful for words.
Okay, one question.
Why are you building your ship so small?
Why, it's plenty big enough for two, Del Clamp said,
for four in a pinch.
Why did you make yours so big?
Your main is big enough almost for a convention hall.
That's what we figured it might have to be at times,
Garlock said.
But that's a very minor point.
With yours so nearly ready to flit,
no change in size is indicated now.
But Bell and I have got to have another conference
with the legal eagle.
So if you and Brownie Jim will port whatever you need
out of the Pleiades, we'll be on our way.
So long, see you in a few days, he added,
and the Pleiades vanished,
to appear instantaneously high above the stratosphere
over what was to become the
Galaxian field of Earth.
Got a minute, Gene, he sent a thought.
For you two primes, as many as you like.
We haven't started building or fencing yet, as you suggested, but we have bought all the
real estate.
So land the ship anywhere out there, and I'll send a Jeep out after you.
Thanks, but no Jeep.
Nobody but you knows that we've really got control of the Pleiades, and I want
everybody else to keep on thinking it's strictly for the birds. We'll pour it into your office whenever
you say. I say now. In no time at all, the two primes were seated in the private office of Eugene Evans,
head of the legal department of the newly reincorporated Galaxian Society of Saul, Inc. Evans was a
tall man, slightly thin, slightly stooped, whose thick trifocals did nothing whatever to hide the keenness
of his steel-gray eyes.
The first thing, Gene, Garlock said,
is this employment contract thing.
Have you figured out a way to break it?
It can't be broken, the lawyer shook his head.
Huh?
I thought you top-bracket legal eagles
could break anything if you really tried.
A good many things, yes,
especially if they're long and complicated.
The standard employment
contract, however, is short, explicit, and iron-clad.
The employer can discharge the employee for any one of a number of offenses, including insubordination,
which, as a matter of fact, the employer himself is allowed to define.
On the other hand, the employee cannot quit, except for some such fantastic reason as the
non-tendering, not non-payment, mind you, but non-tendering of salary.
I didn't expect that.
It kicks us in the teeth before we get started.
Garlock got up, lighted a cigarette, and prowled about the big room.
Okay, Jim and I will have to get ourselves fired, then.
Fired, Bell snorted.
Clee, you talk like a man with a paper nose.
Who else could run the project?
That is, her whole manner changed.
He doesn't know I can run it as well as you can.
or better, but I could tell him, and maybe you think I wouldn't.
You won't have to.
Gene, you can start spreading the news that Bell Bellamy is a real, honest-to-god prime operator
in every respect, that she knows more about Project Gunther than I do, and could run it better.
Ferber undoubtedly knows that Bell and I have been at loggerheads ever since we first met.
Spread it thick that we're fighting worse than ever, which, by the way, is the truth.
"'Fighting? Why, you seemed friendly enough?'
"'Yeah, we can be friendly for about fifteen minutes if we try real hard, as now.
The cold fact is, though, that she's just as much three-quarters hellcat and one-quarter
potassium cyanide as she—'I like that!' Bell stormed.
She leapt to her feet, her eyes shooting sparks.
"'All my fault! Why, you self-centered, egotistical, domineering jerk!
I could write a book.
That's enough. Let it go, please, Evans pleaded.
He jumped up, took each of the combatants by his shoulder,
sat them down into the chairs they had vacated, and resumed his own seat.
The demonstration was eminently successful.
I will spread the word through several channels.
Chancellor Ferber will get it all, rest assured.
And I'll get the job, Bell snapped.
and maybe you think I won't take it."
"'Yeah?' came Garlock's searing thought.
"'You do anything to get it and keep it.
Yeah, I do think.'
"'Oh?' Bell's body stiffened.
Her face hardened.
"'I've heard stories, of course, but I couldn't quite—'
"'But surely he can't be that stupid
"'to think he can buy me like so many pounds of calf-liver.'
He surely is. He does, and it works. That is, if he's ever missed, nobody ever heard of it.
But how could a man in such a big job possibly get away with such foul stuff as that?
Because all the SSE is interested in is money, and Alonzo P. Ferber is a tremendously able top executive.
In the big black and red money books, he's always way, way up in the black, and nobody cares about his conduct.
Bell, even though she was already convinced, glanced questioningly at Evans.
"'That's it, Miss Bellamy. That's it in a precise, if somewhat crude, nutshell.'
"'That's that, then. But just how, Clee, if he's as smart as you say he is,
do you think you can make him fire you?'
"'I don't know. Haven't thought about it yet. But I could be pretty insubordinate if I really tried.'
That's the understatement of the century.
I'll devote the imponderable force of the intellect to the problem and check with you later.
Now, Gene, about the proposed Galactic Service, the Council and so on.
What is the reaction? Yours personally and others.
My personal reaction is immensely favorable. I think it the greatest advance that humanity has ever made.
I have been very cautious, of course, in discussing, or even
mentioning the matter, but the reaction of everyone I have sounded, good men, big men in their
respective fields, has been as enthusiastic as my own. Good. It won't surprise you probably to be told
that you are to be this system's counselor, and, if we can swing it, and I think we can, the first
president of the Galactic Council—' Evans was so surprised that it was almost a minute before he
could reply coherently. Then—
I am surprised. Very much so. I thought, of course, that you yourself would. Far from it,
Garlock said positively. I'm not the type. You are. You're better than anyone else of the Galaxians,
which means than anyone else, period. With the possible exception of Lola, and she fits better on our
exploration team. Check bell? Check. For once, I agree with you without reservation. That's a job we can work
at all the rest of our lives and scarcely start it.
True, indubidably true.
I appreciate your confidence in me,
and if the vote so falls, I will do whatever I can.
We know you will, and thank you.
How long will it take to organize?
A couple of weeks?
And is there anything else we have to cover now?
A couple of weeks!
Evans was shocked.
You are naive indeed.
Indeed, young man, to think anything of this magnitude can even be started in such a short
time as that. And yes, there are dozens of matters, hundreds, that should be discussed
before I can even start to work intelligently. Hence, discussions went on and on and on. It was three
days before Garlock and Bell poured themselves up to the Pleiades, and the starship displaced
itself instantaneously to Margonia. Meanwhile, on Margonia,
James James, James, the Ninth, went directly to the heart of his job by leading Lola and Fow
into Delcamps' office and setting up its Gunther blocks. You said you want me to build your
starship. Okay, but I want you both, Fow especially, to realize exactly what that means.
I know what to do and how to do it. I can handle your operators and get the job done.
However, I can't handle either of you, since you both out-guntar me and I'm not going to try.
But there can't be two bosses on any one job, to say nothing of three or seventeen.
So either I run the job or I don't.
If either of you steps in, I step out and don't come back in.
And remember that you're not doing us any favors, it's strictly vice versa.
Jim, Lola protested.
Fow's hackles were very evidently on the rise.
Delclam's face was hardening.
Don't be so rough, Jim, please.
That's no way to.
If you can pretty this up, pet, I'll be glad to have you say it for me.
Here's what you have to work on.
If I do the job, they'll have their starship in a few weeks.
The way they've been going, they won't have it in 25 years.
And the only way to get that bunch,
out there to really work is to tell each one of them to cooperate or else, and enforce the
or else.
"'But they'd quit,' Del Clamp protested.
"'They'll all quit.'
"'With suspension or expulsion from the society, the consequences?
"'Hardly,' James said.
"'But you wouldn't do that.
You couldn't.
"'I wouldn't.'
"'Of course he wouldn't,' Lola put in, soothingly.
as a very last resort.
And even at worst, Jim could build it almost as easily with common labor.
You primes don't really have to have any operators at all, you know,
but all your operators together would be perfectly helpless without at least one prime.
How come? And in what way? Del Clamp and Fow demanded together.
Oh, didn't you know? After the ship's built and the fields are charged and so on,
everything has to be activated, the 101 things that make it so nearly alive, and that is
strictly a prime's job. Even Jim can't do it. I see, or rather, I don't see it all, Fow said thoughtfully.
She was no longer either excited or angry. A few weeks against 25 years. What do you think of his
time estimate, Degg, my dear? I hadn't thought it would be.
take nearly that long, but this activation thing scares me. Nothing in my theory even hints at any
such thing. So, if there's so much I don't know yet, even in theory, it would take a long time.
Maybe I'd never get it. Well, anyway, I want our celestial queen done in weeks, not years,
Fow said, extending her hand to James and shaking his vigorously. So I promise.
us not to interfere a bit. If I feel any such urge coming on, I'll dash home and lock myself up in a
closet until it dies. Fair enough? Since Fowl really meant it, that was fair enough. For a whole day,
James did nothing except study blueprints, going over in detail and practically memorizing every
drawing that had been made. He then went over the ship, studying minutely every part, plate,
member machine and instrument that had been installed. He noted what each man and woman was doing
and what they intended to do. He went over material on hand and material on order, paying particular
attention to times of delivery. He then sent a few, surprisingly few telegrams. Finally, he called all
14 operators together. He told them exactly what the revised situation was and exactly what he was
going to do about it. He invited comments. There was, of course, a riot of protest. But, in view of what James
had said, annant suspensions and expulsions from the Galaxian society, not one of them actually
did quit. Four of them, however, did appeal to Delcamp, considerably to his surprise, to oust the
interloper and put things back to where they had been. But they did not get much satisfaction.
James says that he can finish building this starship in a few weeks,
Delclamp told them flatly.
Specifically, three weeks, if we can get the special stuff made fast enough.
Fow and I believe him.
Therefore, we have put him in full charge.
He will remain in charge unless and until he fails in performance.
You are all good friends of Fow's in mine,
and we hope that all of you will stay with the project.
If, however, we must choose now between you, any one of you or all of you, and James,
there is no need to tell you what the choice will be.
Wherefore all fourteen went back to work, grudgingly at first and dragging their feet.
In a very few hours, however, it became evident to all that James did in fact know what he was doing
and that the work was going faster and smoother than ever before.
whereupon all opposition and all malingering disappeared.
They were operators, and they were all intensely interested in their ship.
Moral was at a high.
Thus, when the Pleiades landed beside the now seething celestial queen,
Garlock found James with feet on desk, hands in pockets, and scanner on head,
doing, apparently, nothing at all.
Nevertheless, he was a very busy man.
A soprano shriek of thought emanated from a gorgeous 17-year-old blonde.
I can't read this funny picture.
It's been folded too many times.
Where does this lead go to?
Data insufficient.
Careful, Vinji.
I'd hate to have to send you back to school.
Excuse, please, Jr.
Unit 6, sub-assembly T-9.
Terminal 4.
From said terminal, there's a lead.
B. Sub,
something or other, go somewhere. Where?
B sub-4. It goes to Unit 7, Sub-Assembly Q-3, Terminal 2.
And, watch your insulation. That's a mighty hot lead.
Uh-huh, I got that. Double-sink Mill Mill, Class Albert Dog Kittens.
Thanks, boss.
Hi, Jim, Garlock said. Then to Del Camp.
I see, you're rolling.
He's rolling.
rolling, you mean. Delcamp had not yet recovered fully from a state of near shock.
So that's what an idetic memory is. He knows every nut, bolt, lead, and coil in the ship.
More than that, he's checking every move everybody makes. When they're done, you won't have
to just hope everything was put together, right? You'll know it was. Jim was their man.
And Fow settled over toward Bell.
There was something new about the silver-haired girl, Belle decided instantly.
The difference was slight.
Bell couldn't put her finger on it at first.
She seemed quieter, softer, more subdued?
No, definitely.
More feminine?
No, that would be impossible.
More, more adult?
Bell hated to admit it even to herself,
but that was what it was.
Deg and I got married day before yesterday,
Falkinfited via tight beam.
Oh, so you're pregnant?
Of course, I saw to that the first thing.
I knew you'd want to be the first one to know.
Oh, isn't it wonderful?
She seized Bell's arm and hugged it ecstatically against her side.
Just too perfectly marvelous for anything?
Oh, I am sure.
Sure it is, and I'm so happy for you, Fow.
And it would have taken the mind of a Garlock to perceive anything either false or forced in thought or bearing.
Nevertheless, when Bell went into Garlock's room that night, storm signals were flying high in her almost Topaz eyes.
Fow Talah Del Camp is pregnant, she stormed, and it's all your fault.
Uh-uh, he demurred, trying to snap her eyes.
of her obviously savage mood.
Not me, Ace.
Not a chance in the world.
It was Deggy.
You, you, weasel!
You know very well, Clee Garlock, what I meant.
If you hadn't given her that treatment,
she'd have kept on fighting with him,
and they wouldn't have been married
and had any children for positively years.
So now she'll have the first double-prime baby,
and it ought to be mine.
I'm older than she is.
Our group is way ahead of theirs. We have the first and only starship. And then you do that.
And you wouldn't give me that treatment. Oh, no, just to her, that bleached blonde.
I'd like to strangle you to death with my own bare hands.
What a hell of a logic! Garlock had been trying to keep his own temper in leash,
but the leash was slipping. Assume I tried to work on you. Assume I succeeded.
What would you be?
What would I have?
What age do you think this is?
That of the Vikings?
When SOP and getting a wife was to beat her unconscious with a club and drag her into the longboat by her hair?
Hardly.
I do not want and will not have a conquered woman, nor a spoiled, rotten, mentally retarded brat.
You unbearable, conceited, overbearing jerk!
Why, I'd rather get out.
and this time stay out.
Bell got out, and if door and frame had not been built of super steel, both would have been
wrecked by the blast of energy she loosed in closing the door behind her.
In her own room, with Gunther blocks full on, she threw herself face down on the bed
and cried as she had not cried since she was a child.
And finally, without even taking off her clothes, she cried herself to sleep.
End of Chapter 7. Chapter 8 of the Galaxy Primes by E.E. Doc Smith. This Libravox recording is in the public domain. The Galaxy Primes. Chapter 8. Next morning early, Bell tapped lightly on Garlock's door. Come in? She did so. Have you had your coffee? Yes. So have I. Neither Bell nor Garlock had recovered.
Both faces showed strain and drain.
I think we'd better break this up, Bell said quietly.
Check, we'll have to, if we expect to get any work done.
Bell could not conceal her surprise.
Oh, not for the reason you think, Garlock went on quickly.
Your record as a man-killer is still 100.000.000%.
I've been in love with you ever since we paired, before that even.
"'Flap-doodle!' she snorted inelegantly.
"'Why, I keep still a minute.'
"'And I'm not going to fight with you again, ever.
"'I'm not going to touch you again
"'until I can control myself a lot better than I could last night.'
"'Oh, that was mostly my fault, of course.
"'But in love—uh, uh-uh, I've seen men in love.
"'You aren't.
"'I couldn't make you be, not with the best I could do,
"'not even in bed.
You aren't, Clee. If you are, I am an Australian Bushman.
Perhaps I'm an atypical case. I'm not raving about your perfect body. You know what that is like
already. Nor about your mind, which is the only one I know of as good as my own. Maybe I'm in
love with what I think you ought to be, or what I hope you will be. Anyway, I'm in love with
something connected with you, and with no other woman alive.
"'Shall we go eat?'
"'A-huh, let's.'
They joined Lola and James at the table, and if Lola noticed anything out of the ordinary,
she made no sign.
And after breakfast, in the main—
"'About three weeks, Jim, you think?' Garlock asked.
"'Give or take a couple of days, yes.'
And Bell and I would just be in the way, at least until time to show Deggy about the activation.
And all those primes to organize—'
We'd better leave you here, don't you think, and get going?
I'll buy that. We'll finish as soon as possible.
Lola and James moved a few personal belongings planet-side.
Garlock and Bell shot the Pleiades across a vast Gulf of space to one of the planets
they had scanned so fleetingly on their preliminary survey.
Its name was, both remembered, Lazoria.
Its two primes were named Resdo Simolo and Maria Matala, male and female, respectively.
After sending down a very brief and perfunctory request for audience, which was, in effect, a
declaration of intent and nothing else, Garlock and Bell teleported themselves down into
Somodo's office, where both Lazorian Primes were. Both got up out of peculiar-looking chairs
to face their visitors. Both were tall, both were peculiarly thin, not the thinness of emaciation,
but that of bodily structure. On them, it looks so much so.
good, Belle tight-beamed a thought to Garlock. Both moved fast and with exquisite control. Both were
extraordinarily graceful. Snakey was Bell's thought of the woman. Sineous was Garlocks of the man.
Both were completely hairless, of body and of head, not by nature, but via electric shaver clipping.
Both wore sandals. The man wore shorts and a shirt-like garment of nylon or its
like. The woman wore just enough ribbons and bands to hold a hundred thousand credits
worth of jewels in place. She appeared to be about twenty years, Tullery an equivalent old.
He was probably twenty-three or twenty-four.
"'We did not invite you in, and we do not want you here,' Simolo said coldly.
"'So get out, both of you. If you don't, when I count three, I'll throw you out,
and I won't be too careful about how many of your bones I break.
One, two.
Pipe down, Resdo, the girl exclaimed.
They have something we haven't, or they wouldn't be here.
Whatever it is, we want it.
Oh, let him try, Miss Matala,
Garlock said, through her hard-held block in the depth of her mind.
He won't hurt us a bit, and it may do him some good.
While he's wasting effort, I'll compare notes with my
partner here, Galactic Vice Admiral Bell Bellamy.
I'm glad to see that one of you has at least a part of a brain.
Three, Simodo did his best with everything he had, without even attracting Garlock's attention.
He then tried to leap at the intruder physically, despite the latter's tremendous advantage in
weight and muscle, but found that he could not move.
Then, through Bell's solidly set blocks,
"'How are you doing, Ace? Getting anywhere?'
"'My God!' came Bell's mental shriek.
"'What? How can? But no, you didn't give that to Fow, surely.
I'll say I didn't, nor to Delcamp. But you're going to need it, I'm thinking.
"'But can you? Even if you would. And I'm just beginning to realize how big a man you really are.
Can that kind of stuff be taught? I probably haven't got the brain cells it take,
to handle it.
I'm not sure, but I've reworked our prime fields into one and made a couple of other changes.
Theoretically, it ought to work.
Shall I come in and try it?
Don't be an idiot, darling.
Of course!
As impersonally as a surgeon exploring an organ, Garlock went into Bell's mind.
Tune to the field.
That's it.
Fine.
Then I'll do it real slow, and watch me close.
You do it like so.
Get it?
Uh-huh,
Bell breathed excitedly.
Got it.
Then this, and this, and there you are.
You can try it on me if you like.
Uh-uh, no sale.
I don't need practice,
and I'd like to preserve the beautiful illusion
that maybe I could crack your shield if I wanted to.
I'll work on Miss Snake Hips here,
the serpentine charmer.
But say, I'll bet there's a bone in it.
You can block it, can't you?
Yes, it goes like this, he showed her.
It takes full mastery of the prime field, but you've got that.
Oh, wonderful.
Thanks, Clee, darling.
But do you mean to actually say I can now completely block you or any other prime out?
You're going too far, Ace.
Me, yes.
But don't forget that there are very well maybe people, or things,
as far ahead of us as we are ahead of pointer-pups.
Huh, balloon juice and prop-wash!
I just know, Clee, that you're the absolute tops
of the whole entire macrocosmic universe.
Well, we can dream, of course.
Garlock withdrew his mind from bells
and turned his attention to the now-quiet Simolo.
Well, my overconfident and contumacious young squirt,
are you done horsing around,
or do you want to keep it up until you addle completely what few brains you have?'
The Lazorian made no reply, but merely glared.
The trouble with you half-baked, juvenile—I almost added delinquent to that, and perhaps I should have,
Primes, is that you know too damned much that isn't true. As an old Tullurian saying hath it,
you're altogether too big for your bridges. Thus simply because you have lived a few years on one single planet,
and haven't encountered anyone able to stand up to you,
you've sold yourself on the idea that there's nobody anywhere who can.
You're wrong. You couldn't be more so if you had an army to help you.
What actually have you done? What actually have you got?
Practically nothing. You haven't even started a starship. You've scarcely started making plans.
You realize dimly that the theory is not in any of the books,
that you'll have to slug it out for yourself, but that is work.
So you're still just posing and throwing your weight around.
As a matter of fact, you're merely a drop in a lake.
There are thousands of millions of planets, and thousands of millions of prime operators.
Most of them are probably a lot stranger than you are.
Many of them may be stronger than my partner and I are.
I am not at all certain that you will pass even the first screening.
But since you are without question a prime operator, I will deliver the message we came to deliver.
Miss Patala, do you want to listen, or shall we drive it into you, too?
I want to listen to anyone or anything who has a working starship, and who can do what you have just done.
Very well, and Garlock told the general distribution version of the story of the Galactic Service.
Quite interesting, Simolo said loftily at its sense.
end. Whether or not I would be interested depends, of course, on whether there's a position
high enough, for I doubt very much if there's one low enough, Garla cut in sharply.
However, since it's part of my job, I'll get in touch with you later. Okay, Bell.
And in the main, what a jerk, Belle exclaimed. What a half-cooked, half-digested pill!
I simply marvel at your forbearance, Clee.
You should have turned him inside out and hung him up to dry, especially behind the ears.
Then suddenly she giggled.
But do you know what I did?
I can guess.
A couple of shots in the arm?
Uh-huh.
Next time he pitches into her, she'll slap his ears right off.
Oh, brother!
Check and double-check.
But let's hop to number two.
Here it is.
"'Oh, yes,' came a smooth, clear, diamond-sharp thought in reply to Garlock's introductory call.
"'This world, as you have perceived, as Falna. I am indeed Baver 14 W.D. 27. My companion prime is indeed
Gular, 12 W.D. 91. You are, we perceive, bearers of the truth, of great skill and of high
advancement. Your visit here will, I am sure, be of immense benefit to us, and possibly,
I hope, of some small benefit to you. We will both be delighted to have you both port yourselves
to us at once. The Tullerians did so, and in the very instant of appearance, Garlock was met by a
blast of force, the like of which he had never even imagined. The two Fulian primes, capable
operators both, had built up their highest possible potentials and had longed.
launched both terrific bolts without any hint of warning.
Bell's mind, however, was already fused with Garlocks.
Their combined blocks were instantaneous in action.
Their counter-thrust was nearly so.
Both Fawley and staggered backward until they were stopped by the room's wall.
"'Ah, yes,' Garlock said then.
"'You are indeed, in a small and feeble way,
seekers after the truth, of which we are indeed bearers.
Lesser bearers, perhaps, but still bearers.
You will indeed profit greatly from our visit.
You err, however, in thinking that we may in any respect profit from you.
You have nothing whatever that we have not had for long.
Now let us, if you please, take a few seconds of time to get acquainted, each with the other.
That, indeed, is the logical and seemly thing to do.
Both Fulian straightened up and stepped forward, neither arrogantly nor apologetically,
nor apologetically, but simply as though nothing at all out of the ordinary had taken place.
Each pair studied the other. Physically, the two pairs were surprisingly alike.
Bavar was almost as big as Garlock, almost as heavily muscled.
Gular could have been cast in Bell's own mold. With that, however, all resemblance ceased.
Both Falnians were naked. The man wore only a belt and pouch in lieu of
of pockets. The woman, only a leather carry-all, slung from one shoulder. Big enough, Garlock thought,
to hold a weak supplies for an explorer scout. His hair was thick, bushy, unkempt, sun bleached to a
nondescript blend of pale colors. Hers, long, heavy, meticulously middle-parted and dressed,
was a startling two-tone job. To the right of the part, it was a searingly brilliant red,
to the left an equally brilliant royal blue.
His skin was deeply tanned.
The color of hers was completely masked by a bizarrely spectacular overlay of designs,
done in semi-indelible, multicolored dyes.
Ah, you are worthy indeed of receiving an increment of truth.
Here, then, the message we bring.
And again, Garlock told the story.
We thank you, sir and madam, from our hearts.
We will accept with joy your help in finishing our ship.
We will do all that in us lies to further the cause of the Galactic service.
Until a day, then?
Until a day.
Then to Bell.
Okay, Ace, ready?
Go.
And up in the main.
Sweet sin, Bell exclaimed.
What a pair they turned out to be!
Clee, that simply scared me witless.
You can play that in spades.
Garlock jammed his hands into his pockets and prowled about the room, his face of black scowl of
concentration.
Until, finally, he pulled himself out of the brown study and said,
I've been trying to think if there's any other thing, however slight, that I have and you
haven't.
There isn't.
You've got it all.
You're just as fast as I am, just as sharp and as accurate.
And, since we now draw on the same field, just as strong.
Why, Cle, you're worrying about me?
You've done altogether too much for me already.
Anything I can do, I've got to do.
Well, shall we go?
We shall.
They visited four more planets that day,
and after supper that night, standing in the corridor between their doors,
Bell began to soften her shield, as though to send a thought.
Almost instantly, however, she changed her mind and snapped it back to full
on. Good night, Cle, she said. Good night, Belle. And each went into his own room.
The next day they worked nine planets, and the day after that they worked ten. They ate
supper in friendly fashion, then strolled together across the main to a Davenport.
It's funny, Belle said thoughtfully, having this tremendous ship all to ourselves,
to have a private conference right out here in the main, or is it?
He triggered the shields.
She watched him do it.
It is now, he assured her.
Prime-proof?
Not ordinary Gunther blocks?
Uh-huh.
Two-hundred-kilovolts and four hundred kilagunts,
backed by all the force of the prime and op-fields
and the full power of the engines.
I told you I'd made some changes in the setup.
Private enough, I guess.
What a mess those primes are!
And we'll have to make the rounds twice more.
when we alert them and when we pick them up.
Not necessarily.
This new setup ought to give us a galaxy-wide reach.
Let's try Simolo on Lazoria, shall we?
Uh-huh, let's.
Tune in, then, Ace.
Ace, darling.
Ace, darling.
Darling, you said you weren't going to fight with me anymore.
Okay, I'm not going to try any more to lick you until after I've licked myself.
I'm tuned. You may fire when ready, Gridley.
They fired, and hit the mark dead center.
Top lofty and arrogant and belligerent as ever, the Lazurian Prime took the call.
I thought all the time you wanted something.
Well, I neither want nor need.
Cut it, you unlicked cub, until you can begin to use that half-liter of gallop you call a brain,
Garlock said harshly.
We're just trying out a new ultra-communicator.
Thanks for your help.
On the fourth day they worked eleven planets.
The fifth day saw the 46th planet done and the immediate job finished.
All during supper, it was very evident that Bell had something on her mind.
After eating, she went out into the main and slumped down on a Davenport.
Garlock followed her.
A cigarette leapt out of a closed box and into place between her lips.
It came alight.
She smoked it slowly, without relish,
almost as though she did not know that she was smoking.
Might as well get it out of your system, Bell,
Garlock said aloud.
What are you thinking about at the moment?
Bell exhaled, the half-smoked butt vanished.
At the moment I was thinking about Gunther blocks,
specifically their total inability to cope with that new prime probe of yours.
She stared at him, narrow-eyed.
It goes through them just like nothing at all.
She paused, eyed him questioningly.
No comment.
And yet you gave it to me, freely of your own accord, even before I needed it.
Why?
Still, no comment.
You'd better comment, Buster, before I blow my top.
There is such a thing as urbanity.
I've heard of it, yes, even though you never did believe I ever had any.
You talk a good game of urbanity, but your brand of it would never carry you that far.
She paused. He remained silent. She went on.
Of course, it does put a lot of pressure on me to develop myself.
I'm glad you use the word develop instead of treat.
Oh, sometimes, at rare intervals, I'm not exactly dumb.
But you knew, you must have known, what a horrible risk you took in making me as tremendously
powerful as you are.
Some, perhaps, but very definitely less risky than not doing it.
Getting information out of you is harder than pulling teeth.
Clee, Garlock, I want you to tell me why.
Very well, Garlock's jaw set.
You've had it in mind all along that this is some kind of a lark,
that you and I are Gunther tops of the universe?
Or did that belief weaken a bit when we met Baver 14WD27?
Well, perhaps, a little.
However, the probability is becoming greater with every planet we visit.
After all, some race has to be tops.
Why shouldn't it be us?
What a logic.
Excuse me. Skip it.
Oh, you really meant it when you said you weren't going to fight with me anymore?
"'I'm going to try not to.'
"'Now, remembering that I don't consider your premise valid,
"'just suppose that when we visit some planet some day,
"'you get your mind burned out, and I don't,
"'s solely because I had something I could have given you and wouldn't.
"'What then?'
"'Oh, I thought that was what you—'
"'But suppose I can't—'
"'We won't suppose anything of the kind.
"'But that wasn't all that was on your mind.
nor most.
How true.
Those primes, the women.
Honestly, Cree, I never saw, never imagined,
such a bunch of exhibitionistic, obstreperous,
obnoxious, swell-headed hussies in my whole life.
And every day it was borne in on me more and more
that I was, am, exactly like the rest of them.
Garlock was wise enough to say nothing, and Bell went on.
I've been talking a good game of licking myself, but this time I'm going to do it.
She jumped up and doubled her fists.
If you can do it, I can, she declared.
Like the ancient ballad, anything you can do, I can do better.
She tried to be jaunty, but the jauntiness did not ring quite true.
That's an unfortunate quotation, I'm afraid.
The trouble is, I haven't.
"'Hah? Don't be an idiot, Clee. You certainly have. What else do you suppose put me so far down into the dumps?'
"'In that case, you certainly will. So come on up out of the dumps.'
"'Will Coe, and I certainly will.'
But for a woman who has been talking so big, I feel low in my mind.
A good-night, kiss, Clee, darling, just one, and just a little one at that.
"'Sweetheart!'
"'There were more than one, and none of them was little.
Eventually, however, the two stood, arms still around each other, in the corridor between
their doors.
"'But kissing's as far as it goes, isn't it?' Bell said.
The remark was not a question, nor was it quite a statement.
"'That's right.
So, good-night, darling.'
"'Good-night, Ace.'
And when they next saw each other at the breakfast table,
Bell was apparently her usual dauntless self.
"'Hi, darling, sit down,' she said gaily.
"'Your breakfast is on the table, bacon, eggs, toast, strawberry jam,
and a liter of coffee.
Nice. Thanks, Ace.'
They ate in silence for a few minutes.
Then her hand crept tentatively across the table.
He pressed it warmly.
"'You look a million, Belle.
out of the dumps? Pretty much, in most ways. One way, though, I'm in deeper than ever. You see,
I know exactly what you did to Fowal Tallaho, and why neither you or anybody else could do it to me,
or if they could, what would happen if they did. I was hoping you would. I couldn't very well tell you
before, but, of course not, I see that. The fact is that Fowl and all the others we've met
are young enough, unformed enough, plastic enough? Yes, damn it, weak enough to bend. But you are
tremendously strong, and twelve Rockwell numbers harder than a diamond. You wouldn't bend.
If enough stress could be applied, and that's decidedly questionable, you wouldn't bend,
you'd break, and I can't figure it. You're a little older, of course, but not enough to...
How about the fact that I've been banging myself for eight years?
years against Cleander Garlock, the top prime of the universe and the hardest. That might have
something to do with it, don't you think? Garlock said, indefensible conclusions drawn from insufficient
data. That's just what I've been talking about. No matter how we got the way we are, though,
the fact is that you and I have got to fight our own battles and bury our own dead.
Check, like having a baby, but worse. There's nothing anybody else can
do, even you, except maybe hold my hand, like now. That's about it. But speaking of holding hands,
would it help if we pare it again? Bell studied the question for two full minutes. Her fine
eyes clouded. No, she said finally. I would enjoy it too much, and you'd—well, you wouldn't.
Huh? he demanded. Oh, physically, of course. But that isn't enough. But that isn't enough.
or good enough now.
You see, I know what your personal code is.
It's unbelievable.
Almost...
I never heard of one like it, except maybe a priest or two,
but I admire you tremendously for it.
You would never, willingly, pair with a woman you really loved.
That was why you were so glad to break ours off.
You can't deny it.
I won't try to deny it.
But you can't bluff me, Bell, so please quit trying.
Basically, your code is the same as mine.
Why else did you initiate our break?
Bell's block went solid, and Garlock said hastily aloud,
"'Excuse it, please, cancel.
I've just said, and I know as an empirical fact,
that you've got to do the job alone,
but I can't seem to help putting my big flat foot in it by blundering in anyway.
Let's go to work, shall we?'
"'What hat?'
"'Interview the Primes, I'd say.'
Tell them to hold themselves in readiness to attend.
On very short notice.
Yes, to attend the big meeting on TELUS.
We'll have to make a schedule.
It shouldn't be held until after Fow and Diggy get their ship built.
It can't be held, of course, until after you and Jim are out of SSE.
Have you got that figured out yet?
Pretty much, he told her his plan.
Bell giggled, then burst into laughter.
So I'm in it to?
wonderful. You have to be. If we make him mad enough, he'll fire you, too. Without hiring me first,
he couldn't. He could, very easily. He doesn't know one-tenth of one percent of his people.
If we work it right, he'll assume that you're one of his wage slaves, too. Lola, too, for that matter.
Careful, Clee, you and I think this is funny, but Lola wouldn't. She'd be shocked to her sweet little
core, and she louse up the whole deal, so be very sure she doesn't get in on it.
I guess you're right. Well, shall we go out and insult our touchy young friend Simolo?
Ready? Go. Oh, it's you again. I tell you, the Lazorian began. You will tell me nothing.
You will listen. Link your mind to Metales. And the linked Tullorian minds enforced the order.
In about two weeks the primes of many worlds will meet in person on Tellis.
Arrange your affair so that on ten minutes notice you both can leave Lazoria for Tellus aboard our starship the Pleiades.
That is all.
He'll come, too, bell chortled.
He'll rithe and scream, but he'll come.
You couldn't keep him away, Garlock agreed.
On the next planet, Faulna, the procedure was a little different.
The information was the same, but
One word of warning, Garlock added.
It is to be a meeting of minds, not a contest to set up a pecking order.
If you try any such business, you will be disciplined, sharply, and in public.
Suppose that, under such conditions, we refuse to attend the meeting.
That is your right.
There is no coercion whatever.
Whether or not you come will depend upon whether or not you two are in reality,
seekers after truth. Until a day. And so it went, planet after planet. On not one of those worlds had any
prime changed his thinking. Not one was really interested in the galactic surface as an instrument for the
good of all mankind. There were almost as many attitudes as there were primes, but all were essentially
self-centered and selfish. That tears it bell, busts it wide open. I can, I mean we together,
can do either job, that is, either be top boss and run the thing, or put in full time beating
some sense into those hard skulls. We can't do both. On paper we should, Bell said thoughtfully.
You're Galactic Admiral, I'm your vice, one job apiece. But we're not going to be separated.
Besides, two minds, brains, brains are much better than one, both said, except for one word in unison.
Bell laughed.
That settles it.
The Garlock-Bellamy fusion is Galactic Admiral.
So we need a good vice.
Who?
Deggy and Fowl?
They're cooperative and idealistic enough, but...
Oh, I don't know exactly what it is they lack, do you?
No, I can't put it into words or thoughts.
Probably the concept is too new for pigeonholing.
It isn't exactly strength or hardness or toughness or resilience or Bryson's.
Maybe a combination of all five.
What we need is a pair like us, but better.
There aren't any.
Don't be too sure.
Bill glanced at him in surprise, and he went on,
Not that we've seen, no.
But each of those worlds centers a volume of space containing thousands of planets,
including the Tullurian and the Margonian, we now have 48 regions to find.
Let's run a very fast search pattern of Region 49 and see what we come up with.
All right, but suppose we do find somebody who out-Gunthers us.
I'd a lot rather have it that way than the way it is now.
I'll do the hopping, you the checking.
Here's the first. What do you read?
N-G.
And this one?
The same.
and this
ditto
until finally
Clee
just how long are you going to keep this up
until we find something
or run out of time for the meeting
Bell I really want to find
somebody who amounts to something
so do I really
so go ahead
but they did not
run out of time
at planet number 400 something
Bell suddenly emitted a shriek
vocally as well as mentally
"'Clee! Hold it! Here's something, I think!'
"'I'm sure there is, and I'm gladder to see you two people than can possibly be expressed.'
"'Pell whirled, so did Garlock. A man stood in the middle of the main. A man shaped very much like
Garlock, but with long, badly tousled hair and a bushy wilderness of fiery red whiskers.
"'Please excuse this intrusion, Admiral, or should it be plural?'
"'I'm sure.
"'But your joint tenure is a concept so new and so vast
"'that I am not yet able to grasp it fully.
"'But you are working at such high speed
"'that I had to do something drastic.
"'You will, I trust, remain here long enough
"'to discuss certain matters with my wife and me?'
"'We'll be very glad to.'
"'Thank you.
"'I will return then, more decorously, and bring her.
"'One moment.'
"'He disappeared.'
"'Were.'
"'We'll be very glad to.'
"'We'll be very glad to.'
"'Thank you.'
Wife, Bell exclaimed, more than half in dismay.
They must be, then,
Yeah.
The thought of a wife did not bother Garlock at all.
Talk about power and speed.
To get all that stuff and poured up here in the millisecond or so we had the screens open?
Baby doll, there's a guy who is what a prime operator ought to be.
In less than a minute, the man reappeared, accompanied by a woman who was very obviously pregnant,
eight months or so. Like the man, she was dressed in tight-fitting cover-alls. Her hair, however,
it was a natural red too, was cut to a uniform length of eight inches, and each hair
individually stood out, perfectly straight and perfectly perpendicular to the element of the scalp
from which it sprang. Friends Bell and Cle of Tellis, I present Terea, my wife, and Alcyne
myself, of this planet Thaker. We have number number two,
too, but they are never used among friends.
Acknowledgments were made, and a few minutes of conversation ensued,
during which the two couples studied each other.
"'This looks mighty good to me,' Garlock said then.
"'Shall we go screens half down, Elsin, and cry in each other's beer?'
In thirty seconds of flashing communication each became thoroughly informed.
Those minds could send and could receive an incredibly vast amount of information
in an incredibly brief space of time.
Your ship should work and doesn't, Garlock said.
Show me in detail. Al-Sign showed him.
Oh, I see. You didn't work out quite all the theory.
It has to be activated. Like this, Garlock showed Al-Sign.
I see, thanks. Al-Sine disappeared and was gone for some ten minutes.
He reappeared, grinning hugely behind his full.
flaming wilderness of beard. It works perfectly, for which our heartfelt thanks. And now that my mind
is at complete peace with the universe, we will consider the utterly fascinating subject of your proposed
galactic service. You two Tillerians, immature although you are, have made two tremendous
contributions to the advancement of the scheme of things, three, if you count the starship, which
is comparatively unimportant, each of such import that no human mind can foresee any fraction of its
consequences. First, your prime field, the probe, and its screen.
Clee! Bell drove the thought. You didn't give him that, surely. Tutt, my child,
Thorea sooth them. You are alarming yourself about nothing.
The only trouble with you two youngsters is that you aren't quite, very nearly a
of course, but very definitely not quite, grown up. Al Sein smiled again, not only with mouth and
eyes, but with his whole hairy face. To the mature mind, there is no such thing as status. Each
knows what he can do best and does it as a matter of course. Rank is not necessary. Second,
the unimaginably important contribution of the ability to combine two dissimilar but intimately
compatible minds into one tremendously effective fusion.
While Torea and I have had only a few moments to play with it, we realize some of its possibilities.
Thus, since she is a doctor of humanities, oh, Bell interrupted, that's why you knew what I was
thinking about, even though I tight-beamed the thoughts and my screens were tight.
Exactly so.
But to continue, with her sympathy and empathy, and my driving force and so on, the
job of licking these young primes into shape is, as your idiom has it, strictly our dish.
It is a truly delicious thought. You, too, on the other hand, have much that we lack.
Breath and depth and scope of imagination and a vision, yet almost incredible willpower and
stamina and resolve. That's the word I was trying to think of. Willpower, bell flashed a thought at
Garlock. Qualities virtually always mutually exclusive, but the combination of which makes your
fusion uniquely qualified to lead and direct this new and magnificent movement. But Torrea and I
have been idle and frustrated far too long. We can be of most use at the moment on Margonia,
working with the Fowdegi unit. Therefore, with renewed deep thanks, we go.
Man and wife disappeared, and ten seconds later the Thaker and Starship vanished from its world.
"'Well, what do you think of that?' Bell gasped.
"'I was actually afraid to think, even behind a prime screen.
"'I don't know yet whether I want to kiss him or kill him.'
"'I do. That guy is really a prime, Bell.
"'He's older, bigger, and a lot better than I am.'
"'uh, she demurred positively.
"'Older, yes. More mature. You, baby, you!' she snickered gleefully.
"'If he hadn't included you in that crack, I'd have stabbed him, so help me,
even though it wasn't true. He said himself, it's you who has got what it takes to lead and direct,
not him.'
"'Us, we, I mean,' he corrected absently.
"'A-huh, us, we. One, now and forever.
Hot dog.
Anyway, he wants us to, and we want to, so everything's lovely.
So let's get to work on Fatso and his foster.
I think we ought to have some fun for a change, and that'll be a lot.
When do we want to hit him?
Any day Monday through Friday, 9.15 a.m. Eastern daylight time, plus or minus one minute.
Nice. Catch him in flagrante delicto.
Lovely. Shovel on the coal, my intrepid engineer.
air? On Wednesday morning, then, at 12 minutes past 9 EDT, the Pleiades hung poised, high over the
Chancery of Solar Systems Enterprises, Inc. Remember Bell, Garlick was pacing the main. To keep
them staggering, we'll have to land slugging and beat them to every punch. You did a wonderful job on her
last time, and it's been eating on her ever since. She's probably been rehearsing in front of a mirror
just how she's going to tear you apart next time, and just how she's going to spit out the pieces.
Last time, you were cold, stiff, rigidly formal, and polite.
So this time it'll be me, and I'll be hot and bothered, dirty, low, coarse, lewd, and very, very rough.
Bell threw back her head and laughed.
Rough, yes.
Vicious, contemptuous, or ugly?
Yes.
A master of fluent, biting, and pyrotechnic.
profanity? Yes. But low or dirty or coarse or lewd, Clee? Or any one of the four, to say nothing of
them all? Uh-uh. Ferber's a filthy beast, of course, but even he knows you're one of the cleanest
men that ever lived. They know it was an act. Not unless I give him time to think, or unless you do,
before he fires Jim, in which case we'll lose the game anyway. But how about you? If I can knock him too
gruggy to think, will you carry on and keep them that way?
Watch my blasts, bell giggled gleefully.
I never tried anything like that, any more than you have, but I'll guarantee to be just as low,
dirty, coarse, lewd and crude as you are, probably more so, because in this particular
case, it'll be fun.
You see, you're a man.
You can't possibly despise and detest that slimy stinker either in the same way,
or as much as I do.
This ought to be good.
Cut the rope, Jim.
Even before the starship came to rest,
Garlock drove a probe into the sanctum sanctorum of the chancelry,
an utterly unheard of act of insolence.
Foster, this is the pleadies coming in,
Garlock calling.
Hot up the trie and the recorder toots.
Put Fatso on and snap into it.
I said, shake a leg.
Why, I.
"'You!' Stop stuttering and come to life, you half-witted bag.
Give me Ferber and hurry it up. This ship's tricky.
"'Why, you, I never!'
Ferber's outraged First Secretary could scarcely talk.
"'He, he is. I know, babe, I know. I could set that to music and sing it with gestures.
Chancellor Ferber is in conference and cannot be disturbed.'
He mimicked savagely.
"'Put him on now, but quick!'
The trident tank brightened up.
Chancellor Ferber's image appeared.
He was disheveled, surprised, and angry, but Garlock gave him no chance to speak.
Well, Fatso, at last! Where the hell have you been all morning?
I want some stuff, just as fast as God will let you get it together.
And he began to read off as fast as he could talk a long list of highly technical items.
Ferber tried for many seconds to break in, and Garlock finally allowed him.
him to do so.
Are you crazy, Garlock? he shouted.
What in hell's name are you bothering me with that stuff for?
You know better than that.
Make out your requisitions and send them through channels.
Channels hell?
Garlock shouted back.
Hasn't it got through your four-inch thick skull into your idiot's brain yet that I'm in a
hurry?
I don't want this stuff today.
I won it day before yesterday.
This damned junk heap is apt to fall apart.
any minute. So quit goggling and slobbering at me, you wall-eyed, slimy, fat toad? Get that 300
weight of suet into action. Help yourself. You, you, why, I was never so insulted. Insulted? You?
Garlock outroared him. Listen, Fatso. If I ever set out to really insult you, you'll know it.
It'll blister all the pain off the walls. All I'm trying to do now is to get you. You're
get you off that fat butt of ears and get some action.
Ferber became purple and pounded his desk in consuming anger.
Garlock yelled louder and pounded harder.
Start rounding up this stuff, but fast,
or I'll come down there and take your job away from you and do it myself.
And for your own greasy hides sake,
you'd better believe I'm not just chomping my choppers either.
You're what?
Ferber screamed.
You're fired!
"'You fire me!' Garlock mimicked the scream.
"'And make it stick. You'd better write that one up for the funnies. Why, you lard-brain,
you couldn't fire a cap-pistol.' "'Fauster!' Furber yelled.
"'Terminate Garlock as of now! Insubordination and misconduct, abuse of position,
incompetence, malfeasance, everything else you can think of. Blacklist him all over the system.
At the word fired, Bell had leapt to her feet and had stopped laughing.
Miss Bellamy! Ferber snapped.
Yes, sir, she answered sweetly.
You are hereby promoted to be the head of the...
Oh, yeah!
Bell sneered, her voice cutting like a knife.
You, unprincipled, lascivious, lecherous, Hitler!
Have you got the unmitigated gall to take me for a flusie?
To think you can add me to your collection of bootlicking round-heeled tramps?
You're fired and blacklisted too.
How nice.
You know, I don't know of anything I'd rather have happened to me.
Get James on there.
You, James.
You don't need to fire me, you fat-headed old goat, James said contemptuously.
I've already quit.
The exact second you fired Clee.
No, you didn't.
Ferber screamed,
Resignation not accepted.
You're fired.
Dishonorably discharged.
Blacklisted everywhere.
You'll never get another job anywhere.
And here's your slip, too.
Miss Foster was very fast on the machines.
James poured his slip up to the Pleiades,
just as Garlock and Bell had done with theirs,
and disappeared with it as they had,
reappearing almost instantly.
"'Montenden!'
"'Chancellor, are you completely out of your mind?
"'You can't discharge either Miss Bellamy or me.'
"'I can't,' he gloated.
"'Why not?'
"'Because neither of us is employed, by anybody.'
"'That's right, Fatso,' Bell said.
"'We just came along, just to keep the boys' company.
"'It's lonesome, you know, way out in deep space.'
Miss Foster ripped a half-filled-filled-out termination form out of her machine and hurled it into a waste-basket.
Ferber's jar dropped, and his eyes stared glassily, but he rallied quickly.
I can blacklist her, though, and maybe you think I won't.
Belle Bellamy will never get another job in this whole solar system as long as she lives,
except through me.
Maybe I'll hire her someday for something, and maybe I won't.
Are you listening, Bellamy?
Not only listening, I'm reveling in every word.
Bell laughed derisively.
I hate to shatter such wonderful dreams, or do I?
You see, the Pleiades really works, and the Galaxians own her, lock, stock, and barrel.
You wouldn't have any part of her, remember?
Insisted on payment for every nut, wire, and service?
Now they went to hire us for for a big operation with this Starship.
"'Since you only loaned Garlock and James to them,
"'you might have made some legal trouble on that score,
"'but now that you fired them both,
"'and in such conclusive language, we're all set.
"'So when you blacklist us with a society,
"'please let me know.
"'I want to take a trie-dye in technicolor of you doing it.
"'How do you like them, parsnips, your royal fatness?'
"'I'll see about that,' Furber stormed.
"'We'll have an injunction out in an hour,
"'Go ahead,' Garlock said with a wide grin.
"'Have fun. The Galaxians have legal eagles, too, you know.'
One thing Bell forgot. Just in case you recover consciousness sometime and want to steal
our termination papers back, especially Bells, what a howler that was, don't try it.
They're in a Gunther blocked safe.
Then, as comprehension began to dawn on Ferber's face,
Sutter!
Garlock drawled.
The Pleiades disappeared.
End of Chapter 8.
Chapter 9.
Of the Galaxy Primes by E.E. Doc Smith.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
The Galaxy Primes.
Chapter 9.
The Pleiades landed on Margonius Galaxian Field,
where the Tullarians found the project running smoothly,
a little ahead of schedule. Del Camp and Fow were working at their fast and efficient pace,
but the hairy pair from Thaker seemed to be literally everywhere at once.
"'Hi, Belle?' Fow poured it up and shook hands warmly.
"'I thought I was going to have the first double-prime baby, until she appeared on the scene.
"'Didn't it make you mad? I'd have been furious.'
"'Maybe a little at first, but not after I talked with her for half a minute.
She'd never even thought of that angle.
Besides, she thinks the whole galaxy is fairly crawling with double primes.
That's funny, so does Clee.
But there are other things, strictly not angles, that she hasn't thought of, too.
If those cover-alls were half an inch tighter, they'd choke her to death.
You'd think she'd—
"'Huh?' Fow interrupted.
"'You should scream.
Oh, that ridiculous Tullerian prude.
"'It isn't ridiculous.
Bell snapped. And it isn't prudishness either. Not with me, anyway. It's just that—'
She ran an indicative glance over Fow's lean, trim, flanks, and hard flat abdomen. It spoils your
figure. It's only temporary, of course, but—s spoils it! Why, how utterly idiotic! Why,
it's magnificent! Just as soon as it starts to show on me, Belle, I'm going to start wearing
only half as many clothes as I've got on now.
You couldn't, Belle eyed the other girl's bathing suit-like garment, except for being blue instead of yellow, it was the same as the one she had worn before.
Not without the League for Public Decency sending the wagon out after you.
Oh, Miss Experience? Well, three-quarters, maybe.
Hey, you two, came Del Camp's hail. How about cutting the gab and getting some work done?
Coming, boss.
excuse it, please, and two fast and skillful women went efficiently to work.
With six prime operators on the job, the work went on very rapidly, yet without error.
The celestial queen was finished, tested, and found perfect one full day ahead of James' most
optimistic estimate for construction alone. The six primes conferred.
"'Do you want us to help you pick up the other primes?' Delcamp asked.
your main, big as it is, will be crowded, and we have three ships here now instead of one.
I don't think so, no, Garlock decided. We told him we'd do it and in the Pleiades, so we'd better.
Unless, Al-Sine, you don't agree. I agree. The point, while of course minor, is very well taken.
We and our operators, we brought six along, experts in their various fields, can
serve best by working on Tullus with its Galaxian society in getting ready for the meeting.
Oh, of course, Fow said. Probably Deg and I should do the same thing.
That would be our thought. The two Thakerns were thinking and lepping in fusion.
However, they went on carefully, it must not be and is not our intent to sway you in any
action or decision.
While not all of you four perhaps are as yet fully mature, not one of you should be subjected
to any additional exterior stresses.
I hope you don't think that way about all primes, Garlock said grimly.
I'm going to smack some of those kids down so hard that their shirt-tails will roll up their
backs like window-shades.
If you find such action either necessary or desirable, we will join you quite happily in it.
We go.
The four remaining primes looked at each other in puzzled surprise.
What do you think about that?
Garlock asked finally, of no one in particular.
I don't understand them, Fow said, but they're mighty nice people.
Do you suppose, Clee, they'll nibbled at her lower lip,
that we're getting off on the wrong foot with uniforms and admirals and things,
that with really adult primes running things the galactic,
service would run itself, no bosses or anything?
Umk, Garlock grunted, as though Bell had slugged him. I hope not, or do I?
Anyway, not enough data yet to make speculation profitable. But I wonder, Miss Bellamy,
if it would be considered an unjustifiable attempt to sway you in any action or decision
if I were to suggest, oh ever so diffidently, that if we're going to saddle up our Bronx and ride out on
round up tomorrow morning, we ought to be logging some sack time right now.
Considering the source, as well as and or in connection with the admittedly extreme provocation,
Bell straightened up into a regal pose,
you may say, Mr. Garlock, without fear of successful contradiction,
that in this instance no umbrage will be taken at least for the moment.
She broke the pose and giggled infectiously.
Night, you two lovely people.
Bell was still sunny and gay when the Pleiades reached Lazoria.
Garlock was inwardly happy and outwardly content.
Somolo, however, was his usual intransigent self.
In fact, if it had not been for Maria Matala and the fact that she, metaphorically,
did pin Somolo's ears back, Garlock would not have taken him aboard at all.
Thus, after loading on only one pair of primes, that auspiciously beginning day,
had lost some of its luster.
And as the day wore on, it got no better fast.
Bavar of Fauna had not learned anything either.
Only Garlock's intervention saved the cocky and obstreperous Samolo
from a mental blast that would have knocked him out cold.
Then there were Onthave and Lerthi of Crenna,
Coral and Kierl of Glear, Parlyov and Gensiona of Pasquharone,
Atnam and Sotara of Flandoon, and eighty others.
Very few of them were as bad as Simolo.
Some of them, particularly the Pascoronians and the Glearns, were almost as good as Delcamp and Fowl.
This was the first time that any pair of them had ever come physically close to any other prime.
Many of them had not really believed that any primes abler than themselves existed.
The Pleiades was crowded, and Garlock and Bell were not giving to any of them the deference
and the consideration and submissive respect, which each considerate,
considered his unique due. Wherefore the undertaking was neither easy nor pleasant, and both
Tullrians were tremendously relieved when the last pair picked up, they flashed the starship back to
Tulles, and Delcamp, Fowl and the Thakerns ported themselves aboard.
"'Give me your attention, please,' Garlock said crisply. Then, after a moment,
"'Any and all who are not tuned to me in five seconds will be returned immediately to
their home planets and will lose all contact with this group.
That's better. For some of you, this has been a very long day. For all of you, it has been a
very trying day. You were all informed previously as to what we had in mind. However, since you
are young and callow, and were thoroughly convinced of your own omniscience and omnipotence,
it is natural enough that you derived little or no benefit from that information. You are
now facing reality, not to be able to be able to be able to be able to be it. You are now facing reality,
your own fantasies. Each pair of you has been assigned a suite of rooms in Galaxian Hall.
Each suite is furnished appropriately. Each is fully Gunthered for self-service.
This meeting has not been announced to the public, and, at least for the present, will not be.
Therefore, none of you will attempt to communicate with anyone outside Galaxian Hall.
Anyone making any such attempt will be surprised. The meeting will open at 8 o'clock.
tomorrow morning in the auditorium. The Thakerns and the Margonians will now inform you as to your
quarters. There was a moment of flashing thought. Dismissed. At one second before eight o'clock,
the auditorium was empty. At eight o'clock, ninety-eight human beings appeared in it, six on the
stage, the rest occupying the first few rows of seats.
"'Good morning, everybody,' Garlock said pleasantly.
one being rested, fed, and having had some time in which to consider the change reality faced
by us all, I hope and am inclined to believe that we can attain friendship and accord.
We will spend the next hour in becoming acquainted with each other. We will walk around,
not teleport. We will meet each other physically, as well as mentally. We will learn each other's
forms of greeting, and we will use them. This meeting is adjourned until nine o'clock, or rather
the meeting will begin then.
For several minutes, no one moved.
All blocks were locked at maximum.
Each prime used only his eyes.
Physically, it was a scene of almost overpowering perfection.
The men were, without exception, handsome, strong, and magnificently male.
The women, from heroically framed Fow Talahou up or down to surprisingly slender Maria Matala,
all were arrestingly beautiful, breathtakingly proportioned, spectacularly female.
Clothing varied from complete absence to almost complete coverage, with a bewildering variety
of intermediate conditions. Color was rampant. Hair, or lack of it, was also an individual
and highly variant matter. Some of the women, like Belle and Fow, were content with one solid but
unnatural shade. One shaven head, Maria Metallas, was deeply tanned but unadorned, even though the rest of
her body was almost covered by precious stones. Another was decorated with geometrical and esoteric
designs in eye-searing colors. A third supported a structure, it could not possibly be called a hat
of spun metal and gems. Among the medium and long hairs, there were two, three, and multi-tone
jobs galore. Some of the color combinations were harmonious. Some were sharply contrasting,
such as black and white. Some looked as though their wearers had used the most violently clashing
colors they could find. The prize winner, however, was Terea of Thaker's enormous, inexplicable
mop, and it was that phenomenon that first broke the ice. The girl with the decorated scalp
had been glancing questioningly at neighbor after neighbor, only to be
met by uncompromising stares. Finally, however, her gaze met another, as interested as her own.
This second girl, whose coiffure was a high-piled confection of black, white, yellow, red, blue, and green,
half-masked her screen, and said,
"'Oh, thanks, Jethay of Lodi Yan. I'm glad everybody isn't going to stay locked up all day.
I'm Gin Siona of Pascarone. They call me gin, whenever they want to call me anything printable.
And this—she dug a knuckle into her companion's short ribs, whereupon he jumped, rolled
around, lowered his screen, and grinned.
"'Is my—the boyfriend, Parliov. Also of Pascaron, of course.
Par, both Jeth A. and I. Call me Jett. Everybody does,' Jethay said,
almost shyly for a prime.
Both Jett and I have been wondering about that woman's hair over there.
How could you possibly give a head of hair a static charge of fifth—'
or a hundred kilowolts and not have it leak off.
You couldn't, unless it was a perfectly insulated wig,
but it looks as though she did at that, and Parleyoff paused and thought,
Maybe Bayyuk would have an idea or two.
And Jed uttered aloud a dozen or so crackling syllables
that sounded as though they could have been ladylike profanity.
Whatever they were, Bayyuk jumped to and tuned in with the other three.
Oh, it's quite easy, really,
Terea said then.
Look, her mass of hair
cascaded gracefully down
around her neck and shoulders.
Look again.
Each hair stood fiercely out all by itself
exactly as before.
All you young people
will learn much more difficult
and much more important things
before this meeting is over.
I cannot tell you how glad I am
that so many of you are here.
And so it went
all over the auditorium.
Once cracked, the ice broke up fast.
Fow and Delcamp worked hard.
So did Bell and Garlock.
Alcyne was a potent force indeed.
His abounding vitality and his tremendous smile
broke down barriers that logic could not affect.
And Taria worked near miracles.
Did more than the other five combined.
Her sympathy, her empathy, her understanding and feeling
were as great as low as own.
Her operative ability was as much greater than Lola's
as Lola's was greater than that of a Bobby Sox babysitter.
Thus, when half of the hour was gone,
Garlock heaved a profound sigh of relief.
He wouldn't have half the trouble he had expected.
It was not going to be a riot.
And when he called the meeting to order,
he was pleasanter and friendlier than Belle had ever before seen him.
While I am calling this meeting to order, it is only in the widest possible sense that I am its presiding officer,
for we have as yet no organization by the delegated authority of which any man or any woman has any right to preside.
Yesterday I ruled by force, simply because I am stronger than any one of you or any pair of you.
Today, in the light of the developments of the last hour, that rule is done, except perhaps
for one or two isolated and non-representative cases which may develop today.
By this time tomorrow, I hope that we will be forever done with the law of claw and fang.
For, as a much abler man has said,
to the really mature mind, the concept of status is completely invalid.
He's putting that as a direct quote, Al-Sine, and it isn't.
Bell lanced the thought.
He thinks it is, Al-Sine flashed back.
That is the way his mathematician's mind recorded it.
This meeting is informal, preliminary, and exploratory,
a meeting of minds from which we hope a useful and workable organization can be developed.
Since you all know what we think it basically should be, there is no need to repeat it.
I must now say something that a few of you will construe as a threat.
You are all prime operators.
Each pair of you is the highest development of a planet, perhaps of a solar system.
You can learn if you will. You can cooperate, if you will. Any couple here who refuses to learn,
and hence to cooperate, will be returned to its native planets and will have no further contact
with this group. I now turn this meeting over to our first moderators, Al-Syne and Torea of Thaker,
the oldest and ablest prime operators of us all.
Thank you, Garluck of Tillis. One correction, however, if you please. I who speak am neither this man nor this woman standing here, but both. I am the prime unit of Thaker. For brevity, and for the purposes of this meeting only, I could be called simply Thaker. Before calling for general discussion, I wish to call particular attention to two points, neither of which has been sufficiently emphasized. First,
The purpose of a prime operator is to serve not to rule.
Thus, no prime should be or will be boss of anything, except possibly of his own starship.
Second, since we have no data, we do not know what form the proposed Galactic Service will assume.
One thing, however, is sure.
Whatever power of enforcement or of punishment it may have will derive not from its primes,
but from the fact that it will be an arm of the Galactic Council,
which will be composed of operators only. No prime will be eligible for membership.
Faker went on to explain how each pair could obtain instruction and assistance in many projects,
including starships, how each pair would, when they were mature enough,
be coached in the use of certain abilities they did not as yet have.
He suggested procedures and techniques to be employed in the opening up,
of each pair's volume of space.
He then asked for questions and comments.
Somolo was the first.
"'If I'm a good little boy,' he sneered,
and do exactly as I'm told,
and take over the region you tell me to
and not the one I want to,
what assurance have I that some other prime,
just because he's a year older than I am,
won't come along and take it away from me.'
"'Your question is meaningless.'
Faker replied,
"'Since you will not take over, or have, or own any region,
it cannot be taken away from you.'
"'Then I will,' Samolo began.
"'You will keep still,' came a clear, incisive thought,
just as Garlock was getting ready to intervene.
Miss Matala then switched from thought,
which everyone there could understand
and launched a ten-second blast of furious speech.
Somolo wilted, and the girl went on in thought.
He'll be good, or else.
A girl demanded recognition and got it.
Somolo's right.
What's the use of being primes if we can't get any good out of it?
We're the strongest people of our respective worlds.
I say we're bosses and should keep on being bosses.
Garlock got ready to shut her up, then paused, holding his fire.
"'Ah, yes, friend Garlock, you are maturing fast,' came Faker's thoughts, and in answer to Garlock's surprise, it went on.
"'This situation will, I think, be self-adjusting, just as will be those in the as-yet-unexplored regions of space.'
The girl kept on.
"'I, at least, am going to keep on bossing my own planet, milking it just as I—'
Her companion had been trying to crack her shield.
failing in that he stepped in close and tapped her solidly but with carefully measured force behind the ear.
Before she could fall, he poured her back up to their quarters.
This happens all the time, he explained to the group at large.
Carry on.
Discussion went on, with less and less acrimony all the rest of the day,
and the next day and the next.
Then, argument having reached the point of diminishing returns,
the three starships took the 46 couples home.
The six primes went into Evans' office,
where the lawyer was deeply engaged with Gerald Banks,
the Galaxian's public relations chief.
Banks was holding his head in both hands.
Garlock, maybe you can tell me, Banks demanded.
How much of this stuff, if any, can I publish?
And if so, how?
Nothing, Garlock said flatly.
"'What do you think, Thaker?' Bell asked.
"'You're smarter than we are.'
"'What Thaker thinks has no bearing,' Garlock said.
"'Bell, Fow, and Del Camp all began to protest at once,
but they were silenced by Thaker himself.
"'Garlock is right.
"'My people are not your people.
"'I know not at all how your people think
"'or what they will or will not believe.
"'I go.'
"'That lets Deg and mean.
out, too, then double-plus, Fow said with a grin. So we'll leave that baby on your
laps. We go, too. Well, little Miss Weisenheimer, Garlock smiled quizzically at Bell. You
grabbed the ball. What are you going to do with it? Nothing, I guess, Bell thought for a minute.
We couldn't stuff any part of that down the throat of a simple-minded six-year-old. We haven't really
God anything anyway. Time enough, I think, when we have six or seven hundred planets in each region,
instead of only one planet. Maybe we'll know something by then. Does that make sense?
It does to me, Garlock said, and the others agreed. That Thackern we go business sounds rough at
first, but it's contagious. Fow and Deggy caught it, and I feel like I'm coming down with it
myself, how about you, Cle? We go, Bell and Garlock said in unison, and vanished.
Abboard the Pleiades the next few days passed quietly enough. James set up, in the Starship's
memory banks, a sequence to mass-produce instruction tapes and blueprints. Garlock and Bell began
systematically to explore the Tullerian region. Now, however, their technique was different. If either prime of any
world was not enthusiastic about the project.
Very well. Think it over, they would say.
We will get in touch with you again in about a year, and the starship would go on to the next planet.
On Earth, however, things became less and less tranquil with every day that passed.
For in deciding not to publish anything, Garlock had not considered at all the basic function
and the tremendous ability, power, and scope of the press.
and Galaxian Hall had never before been closed to the public,
not for any hour of any day, of any year of its existence.
A non-profit organization, dependent upon the public for its tremendous income,
the Galaxian Society had always quartered that public in every possible ethical way.
Thus, in the first hour of closure, a board reporter came out,
read the smoothly phrased notice, and leapt it into the desk.
It might be worth, he thought, half an inch.
Later in the day, however, the world's most sensitive news nose began to itch.
Did or did not, this quiet, unannounced closing, smell ever so slightly of cheese,
wherefore Benjamin Bundy, the newscaster who had covered the starship's maiden flight,
went out himself to look the thing over.
He found the whole field closed.
Not only closed, but Gunther blocked impenetrably tight.
He studied the announcement, his sixth sense, the born newsman's sense for news, probing every word.
Regret, research, of such extreme delicacy, vibration, temperature control, one one-hundredth of one degree centigrade.
He sought out his long-time acquaintance banks, finding him in a temporary office half a block away from the hall.
What's the story, Jerry?
He asked.
The real story, I mean.
You know as much about it as I do, Ben.
Garlock and James don't waste time trying to detail me on that kind of business, you know.
This should have satisfied any news hawk, but Bundy's nose still itched.
He mulled things over for a minute, then probed, finding that he could read nothing
except Banks' outermost, most superficial thoughts.
Well, maybe, but...
Then Bundy plunged.
All you have to do, Jerry, is tell me screens half down that your damn story is true.
And that's the one thing I can't do, Banks admitted, and Bundy could not detect that any part of his sheepishness was feigned.
You're just too damned smart, Ben.
Oh, one of those things.
So that's it?
Yep, I told Evans it might not work.
That should have satisfied the rule.
reporter, but it didn't. Now it doesn't smell just a trifle cheesy. It stinks like rotten fish.
He won't go screens down on that one either. No comment.
Oh, joy, Bundy exulted, so big that Gerald Banks, the top press agent of all time, actually
doesn't want publicity. The starship works. This lack of control stuff is the bunk. From here to
another star in nothing flat. Garlock's back, and he's brought. What have you got in there, Jerry?
The only way I can tell you is in confidence for Evans' release. I'd like to, Ben, believe me,
but I can't. Confidence, Hal, do you think we won't get it? In that case, no comment.
The interview ended and the siege began. Newshounds and detectives questioned and peered and probed.
dug into morgues, tabulating and classifying. They recalled and taped and sifted all the gossip
they had heard. They got a picture of sorts, but it was maddeningly confusing and incomplete.
And, since it was certain that inter-systemic matters were involved, they could not extrapolate.
Any guess was far too apt to be wrong. Thus nothing went on the air or appeared in print,
and although the surface remained calm, all newsdom seethed to its depths.
Wherefore Haggard Banks and Harry Devons greeted Garlock with shouts of joy
when the four wanderers came back to spend the weekend on Earth.
I'll talk to him, Garlock decided, after the long story he had been told.
Have somebody get hold of Bundy and ask him to come out.
Get hold of him, Banks snorted.
He's here, 24 hours a day, eating sandwiches and cat-napping on chairs in the lobby.
All you have to do is unseal that door.
Garluck flung the door wide. Bundy rushed in, followed by a more or less steady stream of some
fifty other top-bracket newspeople, both men and women.
"'Well, Garlock, perhaps you will give us some screens-down facts,' Bundy asked angrily.
"'I'll give you all the screens down.'
"'Clee, you're crazy! You can't! Don't!'
Bell and all the operators protested at once.
Ignoring the objections, Garluck cut his shield to half and gave the whole
group a true account of everything that had happened in the galaxy.
Then, while they were all too stunned to speak,
a grin of Saturnine amusement spread over his dark, five o'clock shadowed face.
You pestiferous gnats insisted on grabbing the ball, he sneered.
Now, let's see you run with it.
Bundy came out of his trance.
What a story, he yelled.
We'll plaster it.
Yeah, Garlock said dryly.
What a story.
exactly.
Oh, Bundy deflated suddenly.
You'll have to prove it.
Demonstrate it.
Of course.
Of course.
You tickle me.
Not only do I not have to prove it, I won't.
I won't even confirm it.
Bundy glared at Garlock, then whirled on banks.
If you don't give me this in shape to use,
you'll never get another line or mention anywhere.
Oh, no?
For the first time in his professional life,
Banks gloated, openly and avidly.
"'From now on, my friend, who is in the saddle?
Who is going to come to whom?
Oh, brother!'
When the fuming newsman had gone, Garlock said,
"'It'll leak, of course.'
"'Of course,' Banks agreed.
"'It is rumored, from a usually reliable source, and so on.
Nothing definite, but each one of them will want to put out the first and biggest.'
"'That's what I figured. It'll have to break some time, and I thought easing it out would be best.
"'But wait a minute.' He thought for two solid minutes.
"'But we're going to need a lot of money, and we're just about broke, aren't we?'
This thought was addressed to Frank Macy, the Galaxian's treasurer.
"'Worse than broke, much worse.'
"'I could loan you a couple of credits, Frank,' Bell said brightly.
"'But go ahead, Clee.'
People like to be sidewalk superintendents.
Suppose they could watch the construction of an outpost so far away that nobody ever dreamed of ever getting there.
Could you do anything with that, Jerry?
Could I? Just!
And Banks went into a rhapsody.
That's the first good idea any one of you crackpots has had for five years,
Macy said suddenly.
But wouldn't transportation of material and so on present problems?
"'No, just buying it,' Garlock said soberly.
"'Or rather, paying for it.'
"'No trouble there.'
"'What?' Bell exclaimed.
"'No trouble,' it says here in fine print.
"'How the old skin flint has changed.
"'Instead of screaming his head off about spending money he's actually offering to.
"'Frank, I'll loan you three credits.'
"'Hush, honey-child, the men-folks are talking man-business.'
"'Look, Clee.
We'll use the Pleiades at first, while we're building a regular transport.
A hundred passengers per trip, 1,000 credits one way.
Wow, Bell put in.
Our ex-Skinflint is now a bare-faced, legally protected robber.
By no means, Bell, Evan said.
How much would that be per mile?
Say ten round trips per day.
That would be twenty million a day gross for a small ship not intended for passenger service.
When we get ships built and the extras, the money man went into a financial revel of his own.
Lots of extras, banks agreed.
And, oh, brother, what a public relations dream of heaven.
Maybe I'm dumb, Garlock broke in, but just what are you going to use for money to get started?
The minute we confirm any part of the story, the credit of the Galaxian Society will jump from XO to A-A-1.
Oh, so Belle and I will have to lose our Pleiades for a while.
I don't like that, but we do need the money.
But we can have her for this coming week?
Of course.
So maybe we'd better break the story now instead of letting it leak.
Can you, after what you just told them?
Sure I can.
He set his mind and searched.
Bundy, this is Garlock.
So, what am I supposed to do?
burst into tears of joy? Save it. I've changed my mind. You can break it as fast and as hard as you like.
I'll play along. Yeah? Why the switch? What's the angle? Strictly commercial. Get it from banks.
And you'll personally go on my hour with it? Yes, also we'll demonstrate. Take you to any star system in the galaxy.
You and all the rest of the news hawks who were here and any 50 VIPs you want to invite.
Tomorrow morning all right with you?
You, personally, in the Pleiades?
Bundy insisted.
Better than that.
The other two starships, too.
You've got them, particularly those four primes, clearly in mind?
Not exactly.
There was so much of it.
Spread it on me now, huh?
Garlock did so.
Thanks, pal, for the scoop.
I'll crash it right now and follow up with Banks.
Bye.
Think you can deliver on that clee? Banks asked.
Sure. Both Deggy and Al-Sine will need a lot of extra money fast.
They'll play along.
They did.
And that three-star ship tour, which visited 20 solar systems instead of one,
was the most sensational thing old Earth had ever spawned.
Bell and Garlock did not spend that weekend on Earth.
"'We go,' they said, as soon as the Pleiades was empty of pressmen,
and they took James and Lola along.
"'If we never see another such brawl as this is going to be,'
Bell told Banks, who was basking in glory and entreating them to stay on for the show,
it will be exactly twenty minutes too soon.
Thus it came about that Earth's first four deep spacemen were completely out of reach
when unexpected developments began.
Alonzo P. Ferber was one of the VIP's on Bundy's personally conducted tour of the stars.
As has been said, he was a very able executive. He had an extremely keen profit sense.
This new thing smelled, simply reeked, of money. S.S.E. would have to get in on it.
Ferber was not thin-skinned. Where money was concerned, it would never even occur to him to cherish grudges or to retain animal.
homicides. Wherefore, SSE's purchasing department suggested to the Galaxian Society that negotiations
be opened concerning licenses, franchises, royalties, and so on. These suggestions were politely,
but firmly brushed off. Then emissaries were sent of ever-increasing caliber and weight.
Next, Ferber himself tried the trie, and finally he came in person. Rebuffed, he made such
legally sound threats that Evans and Macy agreed to a meeting, stating flatly, however, that no
commitments could possibly be made without the knowledge and approval of the society's president,
Cleander Garlock. Thus, at the meeting, the Galaxians made only two statements that were even
approximately definite. One was that Garlock would probably return to Earth during the afternoon
or evening of the following Friday. The other, that they would take the matter up with Garlock as
soon as they could. After that meeting, Macy was unperturbed, but Evans was a deeply worried man.
"'You see,' he explained, the real crux was not even mentioned. "'No, what is it then?'
Operators, primes, and the practically non-existent loss pertaining to their what, labor, skill,
genius? For instance, could Garlock be forced to do whatever it is that he does? On the other hand,
if Ferber offered Bell Bellamy five million credits a year to work for SSE, is there anything we could do about it?
Oh, I thought all there was to it was that you delay him for a year or so, and that'd be it.
Far from it. To date, I have listed 58 points for which, as far as we can learn, there are no precedence.
And the lawyer called a meeting of his staff. For Bell and Garlock, the week went fast. On Friday afternoon,
high above Earth's Galaxine field, Garlock said, more than half regretfully,
No more fun. Back to the desk. Back to the salt mines.
I weep for you, Bell snickered. Sob, sob, sob, shed him a tear, Lola.
One tear coming up. Oh, whoa, oh, whoa.
Oh, whoa, James snorted.
Why the sob and moan routine, Clee, from a guy who's going to be monarch of all he's
surveys. His conscience aches him, Bell explained. This monarchy business is tough if you haven't
thought about how to monarch, and he hasn't. Have you, Cle? Not a lick, Garlock smiled slightly. I've been busy.
You'd better start to, she advised darkly. You aren't busy now, and we have an hour. We better
confer. I'll make like a slave driver. They poured it into his room, and he set the blocks.
His attitude changed instantly.
Nice act, Bell.
What was it all about?
That theory of yours.
Your predictions are too uncannily accurate to be guesswork,
and the more times you dead-centered the bullseye,
the worst scared I get.
I really want to know, Clee.
Okay.
It isn't complete.
I need a lot more data,
but I'll show you what I have.
It's fairly strong medicine,
and it comes in big chunks.
It would have to. It covers the whole macrocosmic universe, doesn't it?
Yes. I'll start with a striking fact that, on every out-galaxy of planet we visited,
the human beings were homo-sapians to n-decimal places, fertile with each other, and, according
to expert testimony, with us. All planets had humanoid guardians, the Arpollones and Arpales.
Some, but not all, had one or more non-human, more or less
intelligent races, such as the Fumaptis, the Lymarts, the Sancors, and so on.
These other races never seem to fight each other, but both races of guardians fought any and
all of them, on sight and to the death. What do those facts mean to you?
Nothing beyond face value. I've thought about them, but I haven't been able to come up with anything.
I have. He unrolled a sheet of drafting paper covered with diagrams, symbols, and equations.
But before I go into this stuff, consider the human body.
How many red cells are there in your bloodstream?
Billions, I suppose?
And there are billions of human beings on billions of planets,
each having red blood cells identical, as far as we know, with yours and mine.
Also white cells.
Also, sometimes, various kinds of pathogenic microorganisms,
such as staffs, streps, viruses, spiros, and so on.
Okay, my thought is that the lemarts, ozobs, and the like are analogous to disease-producing organisms.
We saw the full range of effects, from none at all, up to death itself.
But they, the ozobs and so on, died too.
How long do disease germs live in a human body after they've killed it?
But that horrible dilipic, the gallop, they don't seem to fit.
Try that on for size as cancer.
Also, the Arpalones typed us before they'd let us land on any planet.
Why did we blast them out of the way and land anyway?
Why, we didn't want to.
It wasn't worthwhile.
We couldn't.
Psychic block.
And if we had, we would have died.
Different blood types don't mix.
So you and I are merely two red cells in the bloodstream of a super-duper,
Galactic Super Monster?
Fooey, she jeered.
That chestnut was propounded a thousand years ago.
Are you trying to take me for a ride on that old sawhorse?
That's the attitude I had at first.
So now we're ready for the chart,
he pointed to a group of symbols.
We start with symbolic logic,
manipulating like so to get this.
There was a long mathematical dissertation,
a mind-to-mind, rigorous point-by-point-point proof.
QED, Garlock concluded.
I see your math, and if I believed half of it, I'd be scared witless.
Those few pieces fit, but they're scattered around in vast areas of blankness,
and you're jumping around like the Swiss Miss leaping from Alp to Alp.
And how about our own galaxy, the most important piece of all?
It's different, and we're different mentally.
That wrecks your whole theory.
No, I told you I need a lot more data.
Also, beyond a certain point, the analogy appears to get looser.
Appears to. It's as loose as a goose.
Think a minute. Is it actually loose?
Or are we getting up into concepts that no human mind can grasp?
That might be the case, you know.
Oh, you're quite a salesman, Clee, but I'm still not buying.
Our galaxy is a bit of specialized tissue, part of a ganglion maybe.
Over here, see?
I'll have to leave it dangling until we find some more like it.
I see.
But anyway, you have an intense worth of real material on that whole sheet.
Feed everything you have there into a computer, and it'd just laugh at you.
Sure it would.
The great advantage of the human brain is its ability to arrive at valid conclusions from incomplete data.
For instance, what would your computer do with the figures you shot at me the day we started out?
39, 22, 39, 57, 135.
Yet, they're completely informative.
To anyone interested in that kind of figures, yes.
Which includes practically all adults.
Then take the figure 3.14159.
Compi would still be baffled.
But unlike the first set, most...
people would be too. Yes, perhaps two out of ten would get your message. Now, take something
really new, like the original work on gravitation or relativity. No possible computer would be of any use.
That takes a brain. The brain of a Newton or an Einstein, yes. Bell thought for a minute,
then grinned at him impishly. Now watch the brain of a Bellamy perform. Get into high gear.
Dear Brain, I wish I knew something about biochemical embryology, but I read somewhere that
Ova are sterile. So our galaxy is an ovum. Therefore, our super glooper is a gal. Which,
incontrovertible fact accounts for and explains rigorously the long-known truth that women
always have been, are now, and always will be vastly superior to men in every quality,
aspect, and—' "'Hold it!' Garlock snapped.
His face hardened into intense concentration.
Then, do you think you're kidding, Bell?
Why, of course I'm kidding.
You big.
Look here, then.
He picked up a pencil and filled in blank after blank after blank.
I'm making one unjustifiable assumption
that the Pleiades is the first intergalactic starship.
The super being is a female, and she is just becoming pregnant.
Flap-Doodle, there are no blood cells in a world.
a sperm, and I don't think there are any in an ovum. I didn't mention either sperm or ovum.
The analogy is so loose here that it holds only in the broadest, most general terms.
The actual process of reproduction is unknowable. But wherever we went, we changed things.
Not only by what we actually did, but also as a catalyst. No. No, not a catalyst, a hormone.
Exactly. Each of these changes would cause others.
and so on, an infinite series.
Calling the first three terms alpha, beta, and gamma,
we operate like this.
Garlock's pencil was flying now.
Following me?
On your tail!
Bell was breathing hard,
as the blank spaces became fewer and fewer.
Her face began to turn white.
From this, we get that.
And that makes the whole bracket
tie into the same conclusion I had before.
So except for that one assumption,
it's solid.
My Lord Clee, Bell studied the chart.
I mentioned Newton and Einstein, add to that the brain of a garlock, better than either.
Then, seeing his reaction,
You're blushing.
I didn't think, cut the comedy.
You know I couldn't carry either of their hats to a dogfight.
And I would never have believed that you are basically modest.
I said, cut out the kidding, Bell.
I'm deadly serious.
A brain that could do that, she waved at the chart,
well, even I am not enough of a heel to belittle one of the most tremendous intuitions
ever achieved by man.
Not that I like it.
It's horrible.
It denies mankind everything that made him come up from the slime, everything that made him
man.
Not at all.
Nothing has changed in man's own frame of reference.
It merely takes our thinking one step farther.
That step, of course, isn't easy.
That is the understatement of all time.
What it will do, though, is set up an inferiority complex that would wipe out the whole human race.
There might be some slight tendency.
Also, since my basic assumption can't be justified, the whole thing may be fallacious.
So I'm not going to publish it.
He glanced at the chart, and it vanished.
"'Clee!' Bell stared, almost goggle-eyed.
"'With your name?'
The tremendous splash, I see, you're really growing up.
Not all the way, probably, but pretty nearly, I hope.
But some of the, not exactly corollaries, but Bell's face, which had regained some of its
color, began again to pale.
Which of the many?
The most shattering one, to me, concerns intelligence.
If it is true that our vaunted mentality is only that of one
blood cell compared to that of a whole brain, and that intelligence is banked, level upon level,
well, it's simply mind-wrecking. I've been trying madly not to think of that concept at all,
but I can't put it off much longer. Now's as good a time as any. I'll hold your hand. You better
hold more of me than that, I think. I'll do even that in a good cause. He put his arms around her,
held her close. Go ahead. Face it.
All the way down and all the way up. You've got what it takes. You'll come back sane,
and it'll never bother you again. She closed her eyes, put her head on his shoulder. Her every muscle
went tense. Neither of them ever knew how long they stood there, close, clasped, and motionless in
silence. But finally, her muscles loosened. She lifted her head, raised her brimming eyes.
All the way down, he asked.
almost a geometrical point.
And all the way up?
I touched the fringe of infinity.
Intelligence all the way?
All the way.
I couldn't understand any of them, of course,
but I looked each one squarely in the eye.
Good girl.
And you're still sane?
As much so as ever.
More so, maybe.
She disengaged herself, sat down on the bed,
lighted a cigarette, and smoked half of it.
Then she stood up.
"'Clee, if anything in the whole universe ever knocked hell out of anything, that did out of me.
"'I'm going to do something that will take about ten minutes. Will you wait right here?'
"'Of course. Take all the time you want.'
When she came back, Garlock leapt to his feet and stared speechlessly. He could not even whistle.
Bell's hair was now its natural, deep, rich chestnut. Her lipstick was red. Her nails were bare,
and she wore a white shirt and an almost knee-length crimson skirt.
Here's what I'm going to do, she said quietly.
I'm going to be a plain, ordinary, brownette.
I'm going to marry you as soon as we land, registered permanent family.
I'm going to have six kids and spoil them rotten.
In short, I have grown up, partly at least two.
Plain? He managed finally.
Ordinary? You?
Yes, like a supernova going off under a man's feet.
With a visible effort, Garlock pulled himself together.
I don't need to tell you what a surprise this is,
and can't tell you what it means to me.
But you never have said you love me.
Hadn't you better?
I'm afraid to.
Our next kiss will be different.
I'd spoil all this nice new makeup.
She tried to grin in her old-time fashion.
but failed. She sobered then, and went on with a completely new intensity.
Listen, Klee, I'm all done, forever, lying and pretending to you. I love you so much that,
well, there simply aren't any thoughts. And when I think of how I acted, it hurts. Lord, how it
hurts. I don't see how you can love me at all. It'd take a miracle. Miracles happened then.
He put both arms around her very gently.
For the first time in my life, I'm cutting my screens to zero.
Come in.
What?
For a moment, she was unable to believe the thought.
Then, cutting her own shield, she went fully into his mind.
Oh, I didn't dare hope you could possibly feel.
Oh, this is wonderful, Clee, simply wonderful.
As the two fully opened minds met and joined,
she threw both arms around him, and their embrace tightened as though their bodies were trying to become as nearly one as were their minds.
Finally, she pulled herself away and put up a solid block.
"'What a mess,' she said shakily.
"'Lipstick all over you.'
"'Why, word, sweetheart. That was perfect.
"'Oh, it was. But wide open, with such a mind as yours.'
She paused, then came back to normal, almost with a snap.
"'But say, I'll bet that's what Terea and Alcyne were doing.
"'That fusion thing. We'll practice it tonight.'
He pondered briefly.
"'Sure it was.'
"'But he said they learned it from us.
"'How could he have, when we—'
"'Oh, we did, of course, in moments of high stress.
"'But we didn't actually know it.'
"'She paused.
"'We wouldn't admit it, you mean,
even to ourselves.
Maybe, and of course it never occurred to us,
callow youngsters we were then, weren't we,
that it could be done for more than a microsecond at a time,
or that two people could ever possibly live that way.
Or what a life it would be.
So let's chop this and get back to you and me.
Uh-huh, let's, she agreed, but in a severely practical tone.
You've got lipstick even on your shirt,
So change it, and I'll go put on a new face and bring over some stuff and clean you up.
While she cleaned, she talked.
I told you our next kiss would be different, but I had no idea.
Wow, that will be as much different, too, I'm sure.
Hmm?
Again, she pressed herself against him, this time in a somewhat different fashion.
Stop that, you little devil, or I'll...
His arms came up of themselves, but he forced them back.
down. No, I won't. We'll save that for tonight, too. I'll behave myself. She laughed, pure joy in
voice, eyes and smile. I bet myself you wouldn't, and I won. Your tall, solid gold-clee
darling, the absolute top. Thanks, sweetheart. I wish that were true, he said soberly.
But I can't help wondering if two such hellions as you and I are can make a good
go of marriage. No, cancel that. We'll do it. All we have to figure out is how. I know what you mean.
Not at first. It'll be purely wonderful then. After five years, say, when the glamour has worn off
and I've had three of our six children, and two of them are in bed with the epizutic, and I'm all
frazzled out and you're strung up tight as a bowstring with overwork, and hold it, uh-uh,
No. If we can live together six months, or even six weeks, without killing each other,
we'll have it made. It's at first that it'll be rugged. No matter how rugged it gets, though,
we'll know one thing for certain sure. We couldn't live apart. That'll give us enough leverage.
Check? And double-check. She giggled suddenly. I'll take care of any in all situations,
whatever they are, that arise in the first six months. You'll be responsible. You'll be responsible.
for the next 60 years. That's a perfectly fair and equitable division of responsibility.
Now, kiss me and we'll go. When Garlock cut the Gunther box, however, James thought came instantly
in. Ben tried to get you for 20 minutes. And in a couple of seconds he brought Garlock and Bell up to date.
So Fatso's been waiting in Evans' office. He's throwing fits all over the place and Evans and Macy are going
quietly mad. It'll have to wait.
Garluck decided instantly. No matter how many fits he has, no such decision is going to be made until
there's enough of a Galactic Council to make it. Well, you'll have to tell him that yourself, in person.
I'll do just that, and tell him so he'll stay told. Okay, but shake-a—' Bell and Garloc poured it out into the
main, arms around each other like a couple of college freshmen. Leg—ug-g-g-g, James gurgled.
"'Bell!' Lola shrieked.
"'Why, Bell, Bellamy!'
"'What goes on here?' James demanded.
"'Nothing much,' Garlock replied,
"'although he blushed almost as deeply as Bell did.
"'We just decided to quit fighting as all.
"'Cut the rope, Jr., and let the old bucket drop.
"'The end of the Galaxy Primes by E.E. Doc Smith.
