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Gray lensman by E. E. Doc Smith

“Come in,” he called, unctuously, in answer to a tap. “Oh, it’s you! What did you find out?”

“Janice isn’t hurt. He didn’t make a mark on her—just gave her a shove and scared hell out of her. But Clovis was nudged, believe me. He’s still out—will be for an hour, the doctor says. What a sock that guy’s got! He looks like he’d been hit with a tube-maul.”

“You’re sure he was armed?”

“Must have been. Typical gun-fighter’s crouch. He was ready, not bluffing, believe me.

The man don’t live that could bluff a roomful of us like that. He was betting he could whiff us all before we could get a gun out, and I wouldn’t wonder if he was right.”

“QX. Beat it, and don’t let anyone come near here except Williams.”

Therefore the ex-miner was the next visitor.

“You wanted to see me, Crowninshield, before I flit.” Kinnison was fully dressed, even to his flowing cloak, and he was carrying his own kit. This, in an Aldebaranian, implied the extremes! height of dudgeon.

“Yes, Mr. Williams, I wish to apologize for the house. However,” somewhat exasperated, “it does seem that you were abrupt, to say the least, in your reaction to a childish prank.”

“Prank!” The Aldebaranian’s voice was decidedly unfriendly. “Sir, to me thionite is no prank. I don’t mind nitrolabe or heroin, and a little bentlam now and then is good for a man, but when anyone comes around me with thionite I object, sir, vigorously, and I don’t care who knows it.”

“Evidently. But that wasn’t really thionite—we would never permit it—and Miss Carter is an examplary young lady . . .”

“How was I to know it wasn’t thionite?” Williams demanded. “And as for your Miss Carter, as long as a woman acts like a lady I treat her like a lady, but if she acts like a zwilnik . .

.”

“Please, Mr. Williams . . .!”

“I treat her like a zwilnik, and that’s that.”

“Mr. Williams, please! Not that word, ever!”

“No? A planetary idiosyncrasy, perhaps?” The ex-miner’s towering wrath abated into curiosity. “Now that you mention it, I do not recall having heard it lately, nor hereabouts. For its use please accept my apology.”

Oh, this was better. Crowninshield was making headway. The big Aldebaranian didn’t even know thionite when he saw it, and he had a rabid fear of it.

“There remains, then, only the very peculiar circumstance of your wearing arms here in a quiet hotel. . .”

“Who says I was armed?” Kinnison demanded.

“Why . . . I . . . it was assumed . . .” The proprietor was flabbergasted.

The visitor threw off his cloak and removed his jacket, revealing a shirt of sheer glamorette through which could be plainly seen his hirsute chest and the smooth, bronzed skin of his brawny shoulders. He strode over to his kit-bag, unlocked it, and took out a double DeLameter harness and his weapons. He donned them, put on jacket and cloak —open, now, this latter—shrugged his shoulders a few times to settle the burden into its wonted position, and turned again to the hotel-keeper.

“This is the first time I have worn this hardware since I came here,” he said, quietly.

“Having the name, however, you may take it upon the very best of authority that I will be armed during the remaining minutes of my visit here. With your permission, I shall leave now.”

“Oh, no, that won’t do, sir, really.” Crowninshield was almost abject at the prospect. “We should be desolated. Mistakes will happen, sir—planetary prejudices—misunderstandings . . .

Give us a little more time to get really acquainted, sir . . .” and thus it went.

Finally Kinnison let himself be mollified into staying on. With true Adlebaranian mulishness, however, he wore his armament, proclaiming to all and sundry his sole reason therefore: “An Aldebaranian gentleman, sir, keeps his word; however lightly or under whatever circumstances given. I said that I would wear these things as long as I stay here; therefore wear them I must and I shall. I will leave here any time, sir, gladly; but while here I remain armed, every minute of every day.”

And he did. He never drew them, was always and in every way a gentlemen.

Nevertheless, the zwilniks were always uncomfortably conscious of the fact that those grim, formidable portables were there—always there and always ready. The fact that they themselves went armed with weapons deadly enough was all too little reassurance.

Always the quintessence of good behavior, Kinnison began to relax his barriers of reserve. He began to drink—to buy, at least—more and more. He had taken regularly a little bentlam; now, as though his will to moderation had begun to go down, he took larger and larger doses. It was not a significant fact to any one except himself that the nearer drew the time for a certain momentous meeting the more he apparently drank and the larger the doses of bentlam became.

Thus it was a purely unnoticed coincidence that it was upon the afternoon of the day during whose evening the conference was to be held that Williams’ quiet and gentlemanly drunkenness degenerated into a noisy and obstreperous carousal. As a climax he demanded—and obtained— the twenty four units of bentlam which, his host knew, comprised the highest-ceiling dose of the old, unregenerate mining days. They gave him the Titanic jolt, undressed him, put him carefully to bed upon a soft mattress covered with silken sheets, and forgot him.

Before the meeting every possible source of interruption or spying was checked, rechecked, and guarded against; but no one even thought of suspecting the free-spending, hard- drinking, drug-soaked Williams. How could they?

And so it came about that the Gray Lensman attended that meeting also; as insidiously and as successfully as he had the one upon Euphrosyne. It took longer, this time, to read the reports, notes, orders, addresses, and so on, for this was a regional meeting, not merely a local one. However, the Lensman had ample time and was a fast reader withal; and in Worsel he had an aide who could tape the stuff as fast as he could send it in. Wherefore when the meeting broke up Kinnison was well content He had forged another link in his chain—was one link nearer to Boskone, his goal.

As soon as Kinnison could walk without staggering he sought out his host. He was ashamed, embarrassed, bitterly and painfully humiliated; but he was still—or again—an Aldebaranian gentleman. He had made a resolution, and gentlemen of that planet did not take their gentlemanliness lightly.

“First, Mr. Crowninshield, I wish to apologize, most humbly, most profoundly, sir, for the fashion in which I have outraged your hospitality.” He could slap down a girl and half-kill a guard without loss of self-esteem, but no gentleman, however inebriated, should descend to such depths of commonness and vulgarity as he had plumbed here. Such conduct was inexcusable. “I have nothing whatever to say in defense or palliation of my conduct. I can only say that in order to spare you the task of ordering me out, I am leaving.”

“Oh, come, Mr. Williams, that is not at all necessary. Anyone is apt to take a drop too much occasionally. Really, my friend, you were not at all offensive: we have not even entertained the thought of your leaving us.” Nor had he. The ten thousand credits which the Lensman had thrown away during his spree would have condoned behavior a thousand times worse; but Crowninshield did not refer to that.

“Thank you for your courtesy, sir, but I remember some of my actions, and I blush with shame,” the Aldebaranian rejoined, stiffly. He was not to be mollified. “I could never look your other guests in the face again. I think, sir, that I can still be a gentleman; but until I am certain of the fact—until I know I can get drunk as a gentleman should—I am going to change my name and disappear. Until a happier day, sir, goodbye.”

Nothing could make the stiff-necked Williams change his mind, and leave he did, scattering five-credit notes abroad as he departed. However, he did not go far. As he had explained so carefully to Crowninshield, William Williams did disappear—forever, Kinnison hoped; he was all done with him—but the Gray Lensman made connections with Worsel.

“Thanks, old man,” Kinnison shook one of the Velantian’s gnarled, hard hands, even though Worsel never had had much use for that peculiarly human gesture. “Nice work. I won’t need you for a while now, but I probably will later. If I succeed in getting the data I’ll Lens it to you as usual for record—I’ll be even less able than usual, I imagine, to take recording apparatus with me. If I can’t get it I’ll call you anyway, to help me make other arrangements. Clear ether, big fella!”

“Luck, Kinnison,” and the two Lensmen went their separate ways; Worsel to Prime Base, the Tellurian on a long flit indeed. He had not been surprised to learn that the galactic director was not in the galaxy proper, but in a star cluster; nor at the information that the entity he wanted was one Jalte, a Kalonian. Boskone, Kinnison thought, was a highly methodical sort of a chap—he marked out the best way to do anything, and then stuck by it through thick and thin.

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