Children of the lens by E.E Doc Smith

itself upon her mind.

* * * *

And Karen and Camilla, together in Tregonsee’s ship, glanced at each other and

exchanged flashing thoughts. Should they interfere? They hadn’t had to so far, but it

began to look as though they might have to, now—it would wreck their mother’s mind, if

she could understand. She probably could not understand it, any more than Cleonie

could—but even if she could, she had so much more inherent stability, even than dad,

that she might be able to take it, at that. Nor would she ever leak, even to dad—and he,

bless his tremendous boots, was not the type to pry. Maybe, though, just to be on the

safe side, it would be better to screen the stuff, and to edit it a little if necessary. The

two girls synchronized their minds all imperceptibly with their mother’s and Cleonie’s,

and “listened.”

* * * *

The time was in the unthinkably distant past; the location was unthinkably remote

in space. A huge planet circled slowly about a cooling sun. Its atmosphere was not air;

its liquid was not water. Both were noxious; composed in large part of compounds

known to man only in his chemical laboratories.

Yet life was there; a race which was even then ancient. Not sexual, this race. Not

androgynous, nor hermaphroditic, but absolutely sexless. Except for the many who died

by physical or mental violence, its members lived endlessly:

after hundreds of thousands of years each being, having reached his capacity to

live and to learn, divided into two individuals; each of which, although possessing in toto

the parent’s memories, knowledges, skills, and powers, had also a renewed and

increased capacity.

And, since life was, there had been competition. Competition for power.

Knowledge was desirable only insofar as it contributed to power. Power for the

individual—the group —the city. Wars raged—what wars!—and internecine strifes which

lasted while planets came into being, grew old, and died. And finally, to the survivors,

there came peace. Since they could not kill each other, they combined their powers and

hurled them outward—together they would dominate and rule solar

systems—regions—the Galaxy itself—the entire macrocosmic universe!

More and more they used their minds, to bring across gulfs of space and to

enslave other races, to labor under their direction. By nature and by choice they were

bound to their own planet; few indeed were the planets upon which their race could

possibly live. Thus, then, they lived and ruled by proxy, through echelon after echelon of

underlings, an ever-increasing number of worlds.

Although they had long since learned that their asexuality was practically unique,

that sexual life dominated the universe, this knowledge served only to stiffen their

determination not only to rule the universe, but also to change its way of life to conform

with their own. They were still seeking a better proxy race; the more nearly asexual a

race, the better. The Kalonians, whose women had only one function in life—the

production of men—approached that ideal.

Now these creatures had learned of the matriarchs of Lyrane. That they were

physically females meant nothing; to the Eddorians one sex was just as good—or as

bad—as any other. The Lyranians were strong; not tainted by the weaknesses which

seemed to characterize all races believing in even near-equality of the sexes. Lyranian

science had been trying for centuries to do away with the necessity for males; in a few

more generations, with some help, that goal could be achieved and the perfect proxy

race would have been developed.

This story was not obtained in any such straightforward fashion as it is presented

here. It was dim, murky, confused. Cleonie never had understood it. Clarrissa

understood it somewhat better: that unnamed and as yet unknown race was the highest

of Boskone, and the place of the Kalonians in the Boskonian scheme was at long last

clear.

“I am giving you this story,” the Kalonian Lensman told Cleonie coldly, “not of my

own free will but because I must. I hate you as much as you hate me. What I would like

to do to you, you may imagine. Nevertheless, so that your race may have its chance, I

am to take you on a trip and, if possible, make a Lensman out of you. Come with me.”

And, urged by her jealousy of Helen, her seething ambition, and probably, if the truth

were to be known, by an Eddorian mind, Cleonie went.

There is no need to dwell at length upon the horrors, the atrocities, of that trip; of

which the matter of Eddie the meteor-miner was only a very minor episode. It will suffice

to say that Cleonie was very good Boskonian material; that she learned fast and passed

all tests successfully.

“That’s all,” the Black Lensman informed her then, “and I’m glad to see the last of

you. You’ll get a message when to hop over to Nine and pick up your Lens. Flit—and I

hope the first Gray Lensman you meet rams his Lens down your throat and turns you

inside out.”

“The same to you, brother, and soon,” Cleonie sneered. “Or, better, when my

race supplants yours as Proxies of Power, I shall give myself the pleasure of doing just

that to you.”

“Clarrissa! Clarrissa! Pay attention, please!” The Red Lensman came to herself

with a start—Helen had been thinking at her, with increasing power, for seconds. The

Velan’s image filled half the plate.

In minutes, then, Clarrissa and her party were in Kinnison’s private quarters in

the Dauntless. There had been warm mental greetings; physical demonstrations would

come later. Worsel broke in.

“Excuse it, Kim, but seconds count. Better we split, don’t you think? You find out

what the score around here is, from Clarrissa, and take steps, and I’ll chase that damn

Boskonian. He’s flitting—fast.”

“QX, Slim,” and the Velan disappeared.

“You remember Helen, of course, Kim.” Kinnison bent his head, flipping a quick

grin at his wife, who had spoken aloud. The Lyranian, trying to unbend, half-offered her

hand, but when he did not take it she withdrew it as enthusiastically as she had twenty

years before. “And this is Cleonie, the . . . the wench I’ve been telling you about. You

knew her before.”

“Yeah. She hasn’t changed much, either—still as unbarbered a mess as ever. If

you’ve got what you want, Cris, we’d better . . .”

“Kimball Kinnison, I demand Cleonie’s life!” came Helen’s vibrant thought. She

had snatched one of Clarrissa’s DeLameters and was swinging it into line when she was

caught and held as though in a vise.

“Sorry, Toots,” The Gray Lensman’s thought was more than a little grim. “Nice

little girls don’t play so rough. ‘Scuse me, Cris, for dipping into your dish. Take over.”

“Do you really mean that, Kim?”

“Yes. It’s your meat—slice it as thick or as thin as you please.”

“Even to letting her go?”

“Check. What else could you do? In a lifeboat—I’ll even show the jade how to run

it.”

“Oh . . . Kim . . .”

“Quartermaster! Kinnison. Please check Number Twelve lifeboat and break it out.

I am loaning it to Cleonie of Lyrane II.”

CHAPTER 22: KIT INVADES EDDORE; AND –

Kit had decided long since that it was his job to scout the planet Eddore. His

alone. He had told several people that he was en route there, and in a sense he had

been, but he was not hurrying. Once he started that job, he would have to see it through

with absolutely undisturbed attention, and there had been altogether too many other

things popping up. Now, however, his visualization showed a couple of weeks of free

time, and that would be enough. He wasn’t sure whether he was grown-up enough yet

to do a man’s job of work or not, and Mentor wouldn’t tell him. This was the best way to

find out. If so, QX. If not, he would back off, wait and try again later.

The kids had wanted to go along, of course.

“Come on, Kit, don’t be a pig!” Constance started what developed into the last

violent argument of their long lives.

“Let’s gang up on it—think what a grand work-out that would be for the Unit!”

“Uh-uh, Con. Sorry, but it isn’t in the cards, any more than ‘it was the last time we

discussed it,” he began, reasonably enough.

“We didn’t agree to it then,” Kay cut in, stormily, “and I for one am not going to

agree to it now. You don’t have to do it today. In fact, later on would be better. Anyway,

Kit, I’m telling you right now that if you go in, we all go, as individuals if not as the Unit.”

“Act your age, Kay,” he advised. “Get conscious. This is one of the two places in

the universe that can’t be worked from a distance, and by the time you could get here I’ll

have .the job done. So what difference does it make whether you agree or not? I’m

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