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Gray lensman by E. E. Doc Smith

They knew that it was the fifth planet out from the sun and that it was bitterly cold. It had an atmosphere, but one containing no oxygen, one poisonous to oxygen-breathers. It had no rotation—or, rather, its day coincided with its year—and its people dwelt upon its eternally dark hemisphere. If they had eyes, a point upon which there was doubt, they did not operate upon the frequencies ordinarily referred to as “visible” light. In fact, about the Eich as persons or identities they knew next to nothing. Jalte had seen them, but either he did not perceive them clearly or else his mind could not retain their true likeness; his only picture of the Eichian physique being a confusedly horrible blue.

“I’m scared, Worsel,” Kinnison declared. “Scared purple, and the closer we come the worse scared I get.”

And he was scared. He was afraid as he had never before been afraid in all his short life.

He had been in dangerous situations before, certainly; not only that, he had been wounded almost fatally. In those instances, however, peril had come upon him suddenly. He had reacted to it automatically, having had little if any time to think about it beforehand.

Never before had he gone into a place in which he knew in advance that the advantage was all upon the other side; from which his chance of getting out alive was so terrifyingly small.

It was worse, much worse, than going into that vortex. There, while the road was strange, the enemy was known to be one he had conquered before, and furthermore, he had had the Dauntless, its eager young crew, and the scientific self-abnegation of old Cardynge to back him.

Here he had the speedster and Worsel—and Worsel was just as scared as he was.

The pit of his stomach felt cold, his bones seemed bits of rubber tubing. Nevertheless the two Lensman were going in. That was their job. They had to go in, even though they knew that the foe was at least their equal mentally, was overwhelmingly their superior physically and was upon his own ground.

“So am I,” Worsel admitted. “I’m scared to the tip of my tail. I have one advantage over you, however—I’ve been that way before.” He was referring to the time when he had gone to Delgon, abysmally certain that he would not return. “What is fated, happens. Shall we prepare?”

They had spent many hours in discussion of what could be done, and in the end had decided that the only possible preparation was to make sure that if Kinnison failed his failure would not bring disaster to the Patrol.

“Might as well. Come in, my mind’s wide open.”

The Velantian insinuated his mind into Kinnison’s and the Earthman slumped down, unconscious. Then for many minutes Worsel wrought within the plastic brain. Finally: “Thirty seconds after you leave me these inhibitions will become operative. When I release them your memory and your knowledge will be exactly as they were before I began to operate,” he thought; slowly, intensely, clearly. “Until that time you know nothing whatever of any of these matters. No mental search, however profound; no truth-drug, however potent; no probing even of the subconscious will or can discover them. They do not exist. They have never existed. They shall not exist until I so allow. These other matters have been, are, and shall be facts until that instant Kimball Kinnison, awaken!”

The Tellurian came to, not knowing that he had been out. Nothing had occurred, for him no time whatever had elapsed. He could not perceive even that his mind had been touched.

“Sure it’s done, Worsel? I can’t find a thing!” Kinnison, who had himself operated tracelessly upon so many minds, could scarcely believe his own had been tampered with.

“It is done. If you could detect any trace of the work it would have been poor work, and wasted.”

Down dropped the speedster, as nearly as the Lensmen dared toward Jarnevon’s tremendous primary base. They did not know whether they were being observed or not. For all they knew these incomprehensible beings might be able to see or to sense them as plainly as though their ship were painted with radium and were landing openly, with searchlights ablaze and with bells a-clang. Muscles tense, ready to hurl their tiny flyer away at the slightest alarm, they wafted downward.

Through the screens they dropped. Power off, even to the gravity-pads; thought, even, blanketed to zero. Nothing happened. They landed. They disembarked. Foot by foot they made their cautious way forward.

In essence the plan was simplicity itself. Worsel would accompany Kinnison until both were within the thought-screens of the dome. Then the Tellurian would get, some way or other, the information which the Patrol had to have, and the Velantian would get it back to Prime Base.

If the Gray Lensman could go too, QX. And after all, there was no real reason to think that he couldn’t—he was merely playing safe on general principles. But, if worst came to worst . . . well.

. .

They arrived.

“Now remember, Worsel, no matter what happens to me, or around me, you stay out.

Don’t come in after me. Help me all you can with your mind, but not otherwise. Take everything I get, and at the first sign of danger you flit back to the speedster and give her the oof, whether I’m around or not Check?”

“Check,” Worsel agreed, quietly. Kinnison’s was the harder part Not because he was the leader, but because he was the better qualified. They both knew it The Patrol came first It was bigger, vastly more important, than any being or any group of beings in it The man strode away and in thirty seconds underwent a weird and striking mental transformation. Three-quarters of his knowledge disappeared so completely that he had no inkling that he had ever had it. A new name, a new personality were his, so completely and indisputably his that he had no faint glimmering of a recollection that he had ever been otherwise.

He was wearing his Lens. It could do no possible harm, since it was almost inconceivable that the Eich could be made to believe that any ordinary agent could have penetrated so far, and the fact should not be revealed to the foe that any Lensman could work without his Lens. That would explain far too much of what had already happened. Furthermore, it was a necessity in the only really convincing role which Kinnison could play in the event of capture.

As he neared his objective he slowed down. There were pits beneath the pavement, he observed, big enough to hold a speedster. Traps. He avoided them. There were various mechanisms within the blank walls he skirted. More traps. He avoided them. Photo-cells, trigger- beams, invisible rays, networks. He avoided them all. Close enough.

Delicately he sent out a mental probe, and almost in the instant of its sending cables of steel came whipping from afar. He perceived them as they came, but could not dodge them. His projectors flamed briefly, only to be sheared away. The cables wrapped about his arms, binding him fast. Helpless, he was carried through the atmosphere, into the dome, through an airlock into a chamber containing much grimly unmistakable apparatus. And in the council chamber, where the nine of Boskone and one armored Delgonian Overlord held meeting, a communicator buzzed and snarled.

“Ah!” exclaimed Eichmil. “Our visitor has arrived and is awaiting us in the Delgonian hall of question. Shall we meet again, there?”

They did so; they of the Eich armored against the poisonous oxygen, the Overlord naked.

All wore screens.

“Earthling, we are glad indeed to see you here,” the First of Boskone welcomed the prisoner. “For a long time we have been anxious indeed “I don’t see how that can be,” the Lensman blurted. “I just graduated. My first big assignment, and I have failed,” he ended, bitterly.

A start of surprise swept around the circle. Could this be?

“He is lying.” Eichmil decided. “You of Delgon, take him out of his armor.” The Overlord did so, the Tellurian’s struggles meaningless to the reptile’s superhuman strength.

“Release your screen and see whether or not you can make him tell the truth.”

After all, the man might not be lying. The fact that he could understand a strange language meant nothing. All Lens-men could.

“But in case he should be the one we seek. . .” the Overlord hesitated.

“We will see to it that no harm comes to you . . .”

“We cannot,” the Ninth—the psychologist—broke in. “Before any screen is released I suggest that we question him verbally, under the influence of the drug which renders it impossible for any warm-blooded oxygen-breather to tell anything except the complete truth.”

The suggestion, so eminently sensible, was adopted forth-with.

“Are you the Lensman who has made it possible for the Patrol to drive us out of the Tellurian Galaxy?” came the sharp demand.

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