Authors: E. E. 'Doc' Smith
‘All these things shall be done.’
The conference ended, the four nobles were quickly landed upon Osnome and once more the
Skylark
traveled out into her element, the total vacuum and absolute zero of the outer void.
‘You certainly sounded savage, Dick. I almost thought you really meant it!’ Dorothy chuckled.
‘I did mean it, Dot. Those fellows are mighty keen on detecting bluffs. If I hadn’t meant it, and if they hadn’t known that I meant it, I’d never have got away with it.’
‘But you
couldn’t
have meant it, Dick! You wouldn’t have destroyed the Osnomians, surely – you know you wouldn’t.’
‘No, but I would have destroyed what was left of the Urvanians, and all five of us knew exactly how it would have turned out and exactly what I would have done about it – that’s why they pulled in their horns.’
‘I don’t know what would have happened,’ interjected Margaret. ‘What would have?’
‘With this new stuff the Urvanians would have wiped the Osnomians out. They are an older race, and so much better in science and mechanics that the Osnomians wouldn’t have stood much chance, and knew it. Incidentally, that’s why I’m having them build our new ship. They’ll put a lot of stuff into it that Dunark’s men would miss – maybe some stuff that even the Fenachrone haven’t got. However, though it might seem that the Urvanians
had all the best of it, Urvan knew that I had something up my sleeve besides my bare arm – and he knew that I’d clean up what there was left of his race if they polished off the Osnomians.’
‘What a frightful chance you were taking, Dick!’ gasped Dorothy.
‘You have to be hard to handle those folks – and believe me, I was a forty-minute egg right then. They have such a peculiar mental and moral slant that we can hardly understand them at all. This idea of cooperation is so new to them that it actually dazed all four men, ever to consider it.’
‘Do you suppose they will fight, anyway?’ asked Crane.
‘Absolutely not. Both nations have an inflexible code of honor, such as it is, and lying is against both codes. That’s one thing I like about them – I’m sorta honest myself, and with either of these races, you need nothing signed or guaranteed.’
‘What next, Dick?’
‘Now the real trouble starts. Mart, did you devote the imponderable force of the massive intellect to that problem – and have you got the answer?’
‘What problem?’ asked Dorothy. ‘You didn’t tell us anything about a problem.’
‘No, I told Mart. I want the best physicist in this entire solar system – and since there are only one hundred and twenty-five planets around these seventeen suns, it should be simple to yon phenomenal brain. In fact, I expect to hear him say, “Elementary, my dear Watson, elementary!”’
‘Hardly that, Dick, but I have found out a few things. There are some eighty planets which are probably habitable for beings like us. Other things being equal, it seems reasonable to assume that the older the sun, the longer its planets have been habitable, and therefore the older and more intelligent the life …’
‘“Ha! ha! It was elementary,” says Sherlock,’ Seaton interrupted. ‘You’re heading directly at that largest, oldest, and most intelligent planet, then, I take it, where I can catch me a physicist?’
‘Not directly at it, no. I am heading for the place where it will be when we arrive there. That
is
elementary, my dear Watson.’
‘Ouch! That got to me, Mart, right where I live. I’ll be good.’
‘But you are getting ahead of me, Dick – it is not as simple as you have assumed from what I have said so far. The Osnomian astronomers have done wonders in the short time they have had, but their data, particularly on the planets of the outer suns, is as yet necessarily very incomplete. Since the furthermost outer sun is probably the oldest, it is the one in which we are most interested. It has seven planets, four of which are probably habitable, as far as temperature and atmosphere are concerned. However, nothing exact is yet known of their masses, motions, or places. Therefore I have laid our course to intercept the closest one to us, as nearly
as I can from what meager data we have. If it should prove to be inhabited by intelligent beings, they can probably give us more exact information concerning their neighboring planets. That is the best I can do.’
‘That’s a darn fine best, old top – narrowing down to four from a hundred and twenty-five. Well, until we get there, what to do? Let’s sing us a song, to keep our fearless quartette in good voice.’
‘Before you do anything,’ said Margaret seriously, ‘I would like to know if you really think there is a chance of defeating those monsters.’
‘In all seriousness, I do. In fact, I am quite confident of it. If we had two years I know that we could lick them cold; and by shoveling on the coal I believe we can get the dope in less than the six months we have to work in.’
‘I know that you are serious, Dick. Now you know that I do not want to discourage anyone, but I can see small basis for optimism.’ Crane spoke slowly and thoughtfully. ‘I hope that you will be able to control the zone of force – but you are not studying it yourself. You seem to be certain that somewhere in this system there is a race who already knows all about it. I too would like to know your reasons for thinking that such a race exists.’
‘They may not be upon this system; they may have been outsiders, as we are – but I have reasons for believing them natives of this system, since they were green. You are as familiar with Osnomian mythology as I am – you girls in particular have read Osnomian legends to Osnomian children for hours. Also identically the same legends prevail upon Urvania. I read them in that lieutenant’s brain – in fact, I looked for them. You also know that every folk-legend has some basis, however tenuous, in fact. Now, Dottie, tell teacher about the battle of the gods, when Osnome was a pup.’
‘The gods came down from the sky,’ Dorothy recited. ‘They were green, as were men. They wore invisible armor of polished metal, which appeared and disappeared. They stayed inside the armor and fought outside it with swords and lances of fire. Men who fought against them cut them through and through with swords, and they struck the men with lances of flame so that they were stunned. So the gods fought in days long gone and vanished in their invisible armor, and …’
‘That’s enough,’ interrupted Seaton. ‘The little red-haired girl has her lesson perfectly. Get it, Mart?’
‘No, I cannot say that I do.’
‘Why, it doesn’t even make sense!’ exclaimed Margaret.
‘All right, I’ll elucidate. Listen!’ Seaton’s voice grew tense with earnestness. ‘Visitors came down out of space. They were green, as were men. They wore zones of force, which they flashed on and off. They stayed inside the zones and projected their images outside, and used weapons
through the zones
. Men who fought against the images cut them through and through with swords, but could not harm them since they were not actual
substance; and the images directed forces against the men so that they were stunned. So the visitors fought in days long gone, and vanished in their zones of force. How does that sound?’
‘You have the most stupendous imagination the world has ever seen – but there may be some slight basis of fact there, after all,’ Crane said, slowly.
‘I’m convinced of it, for one reason in particular. Notice that it says specifically that the visitors
stunned
the natives. Now that thought is absolutely foreign to all Osnomian nature – when they strike they kill, and always have. Now if that myth has come down through so many generations without having that “stunned” changed to “killed”, I’m willing to bet a few weeks of time that the rest of it came down fairly straight, too. Of course, what they had may not have been the zone of force as we know it, but it must have been a pure force of some kind – and believe me, that was one educated and talented force. Somebody certainly had something, even way back in those days. And if they had anything at all back there, they must know a lot by now. That’s why I want to look ’em up. As for working on this problem myself – I know just enough to realize exactly how hopeless it would be for me to try to do anything with it in six months. If a dozen of the best physicists on Earth were working on it and had twenty years, I’d say go ahead – as it is we’ve got to locate that race that knows all about it already.’
‘But suppose they want to kill us off at sight?’ objected Dorothy. ‘They might be able to do it, mightn’t they?’
‘Sure, but they probably wouldn’t want to – any more than you would step on an ant who asked you to help him move a twig. That’s about how much ahead of us they probably are. Of course, we struck a pure mentality once who came darn near dematerializing us entirely, but I’m betting that these folks haven’t got that far along yet. By the way, I’ve got a hunch about those pure intellectuals.’
‘Oh, tell us about it!’ laughed Margaret. ‘Your hunches are the world’s greatest brainstorms!’
‘Well, I pumped out and re-jeweled the compass we put on that funny planet – as a last resort, I thought we might maybe visit them and ask that bozo we had the argument with to help us out. I thought maybe he – or it – would show us everything about the zone of force we want to know. I don’t think that we’d be dematerialized, either, because the situation would give him something more to think about for another thousand cycles; and thinking seemed to be his main object in life. However, to get back to the subject, I found that even with the new power of the compass the entire planet was still out of reach. Unless they’ve dematerialized it, that means about ten billion light-years as an absolute minimum. Think about that for a minute! … I’ve got a kind of a hunch that maybe they don’t belong in this galaxy at all – that they might be from some other galaxy, planet
and all; just riding around on it like we are riding in the
Skylark
. Is the idea conceivable to a sane mind, or not?’
‘Not!’ decided Dorothy, promptly. ‘We’ d better go to bed. One more such idea, in progression with the last two you’ve had, would certainly give you a compound fracture of the skull. ’Night, Cranes – sweet dreams!’
Far from our solar system a cigar-shaped space-cruiser slackened its terrific acceleration to a point at which human beings could walk and two men got up, exercised vigorously to restore the circulation to their numbed bodies, and went into the galley to prepare their first meal since leaving the Earth some eight hours before.
Because of the long and arduous journey he had decided upon, DuQuesne had had to abandon his custom of working alone, and had studied all the available men with great care before selecting his companion and relief pilot. He finally had chosen ‘Baby Doll’ Loring – so called because of his curly yellow hair, his pink and white complexion, his guileless blue eyes, his slight form of rather less than medium height. But never did outward attributes more belie the inner man! The yellow curls covered a brain agile, keen, and hard; the girlish complexion neither paled nor reddened under stress; the wide blue eyes had glanced along the barrels of so many lethal weapons that in various localities the noose yawned for him; the slender body was built of rawhide and whalebone and responded instantly to the dictates of that ruthless brain. Under the protection of Steel he flourished, and in return for that protection he performed quietly, and with neatness and despatch, such odd jobs as were in his line.
When they were seated at an excellent breakfast of ham and eggs, buttered toast, and strong, aromatic coffee, DuQuesne broke the long silence.
‘Do you want to know where we are?’
‘I’d say we were a long ways from home, by the way this elevator of yours has been climbing all night.’
‘We are a good many millions of miles from the Earth, and we are getting farther away at a rate that would have to be measured in millions of miles per second.’ DuQuesne, watching the other narrowly as he made this startling announcement and remembering the effect of a similar one upon Perkins, saw with approval that the coffee cup in mid-air did not pause
or waver in its course. Loring noted the bouquet of his beverage and took an appreciative sip before he replied.
‘You certainly can make coffee, doctor; and good coffee is nine-tenths of a good breakfast. As to where we are – that’s all right with me. I can stand it if you can.’
‘Don’t you want to know where we’re going, and why?’
‘I’ve been thinking about that. Before we started I didn’t want to know anything, because what a man doesn’t know he can’t be accused of spilling in case of a leak. Now that we are on our way, though, maybe I should know enough about things to act intelligently if something unforeseen should develop. If you’d rather keep it dark and give me orders when necessary, that’s all right with me, too. It’s your party, you know.’
‘I brought you along because one man can’t stay on duty twenty-four hours a day, continuously. Since you are in as deep as you can get, and since this trip is dangerous, you should know everything there is to know. You are one of the higher-ups now, anyway: and we understand each other pretty thoroughly, I believe?’
‘I believe so.’
Back in the bow control room DuQuesne applied more power, but not enough to render movement impossible.
‘You don’t have to drive her as hard all the way, then, as you did last night?’
‘No, I’m out of range of Seaton’s instruments now, and we don’t have to kill ourselves. High acceleration is punishment for anyone and we must keep ourselves fit. To begin with, I suppose that you are curious about that object-compass?’
‘That and other things.’
‘An object-compass is a needle of specially treated copper, so activated that it points always toward one certain object after being once set upon it. Seaton undoubtedly has one upon me; but, sensitive as they are, they can’t hold on a mass as small as a man at this distance. That was why we left at midnight, after he had gone to bed – so that we’d be out of range before he woke up. I wanted to lose him, as he might interfere if he knew where I was going. Now I’ll go back to the beginning and tell you the whole story.’