Lensman 03 – Galactic patrol – E.E. Doc Smith

far you. I know that you all want to shoot the first bolt, but remember that I personally

will strangle any and every one of you who beats my signal by a thousandth of a

second. It won’t be long now, the second hand is starting around an its last lap . . . .

Seep your hands off of those keys . . . . keep away from them, I tell you, or I’ll smack

you down . . . . fifteen seconds yet . . . . stay away, boys, let ’em alone . . . . going to

start counting now.” His voice dropped lower and lower. “Five -four-three-two-one-FIRE!

he yelled.

Perhaps some of the boys did beat the gun a trifle, but not many, or much. To all

intents and purposes it was one simultaneous blast of destruction that flashed down

from a hundred thousand projectors, each delivering the maximum blast of which it was

capable. There was no thought now of service life of equipment or of holding anything

back for a later effort. They had to hold that blast for only fifteen minutes, and if the task

ahead of them could not be done yin those fifteen minutes it probably could not be

done at all.

Therefore it is entirely useless even to attempt to describe what happened then,

or to portray the spectacle that ensued when beam met screen. Why try to describe

pink to a man born blind? Suffice it to say that those Patrol beams bid down, and that

Helmuth’s automatic screens resisted to the limit of their ability. Nor was that resistance

small.

Had Helmuths customary staff of keen-eyed, quick-witted lieutenants been at

their posts, to reenforce those Primary screens with the practically unlimited power

which could have been put behind them, his defense would not have failed under even

the unimaginable force of that Titanic thrust, but those lieutenants were not at their

posts. The screens of the twenty-six primary objectives failed, and the twenty-six

stupendous flotillas moved slowly, grandly, each along its designated line.

* * *

Every alarm in Helmuths dome had burst into frantic warning as the massed

might of the Galactic Patrol was hurled against the twenty,-six vital points of Grand

Base, but those alarms clamored in vain. No hands were raised to the switches whose

closing would unleash the hellish energies of Boskone’s irresistible projectors, no eyes

were upon the sighting devices which would align them against the attacking ships of

war. Only Helmuth, in his Innershielded control compartment, was left, and Helmuth

was the directing intelligence, the master mind, and not a mere operator. And, now that

he had no operators to direct, he was utterly helpless. He could see the stupendous

fleet of the Patrol, he could understand fully its dire menace, but he could neither stiffen

his screens nor energize a single beam. He could only sit, grinding his teeth in helpless

fury, and watch the destruction of the armament which, if it could only have been in

operation, would have blasted those battleships and maulers from the skies as though

they had been so many fluffy bits of thistledown.

Time after time he leaped to his feet, as if about to dash across to one of the

control stations, but each time he sank back into his seat at the desk. One firing-station

would be little, if any, better than none at all. Besides, that accursed Lensman was back

of this. He was-must be right here in the dome, somewhere. He wanted him to leave

this desk-that was what he was waiting fort As long as he stayed at the desk he himself

was safe. For that matter, this whole dome was safe. The projector had never been

mounted that could break down those screens. No-no matter what happened, he would

stay at the desk!

Kinnison, watching, marveled at his fortitude. He himself could not have stayed

there, he knew, and he also knew now that Helmuth was going to stay. Time was flying,

five of the fifteen minutes were gone. He had hoped that Helmuth would leave that well-

protected inner sanctum, with its unknown potentialities, but if the pirate would not

come out, the Lensman would go in. The storming of that inner stronghold was what his

new armor was for.

In he went, but he did not catch Helmuth napping. ,Even before he crashed the

screens his own defensive zones burst into furiously coruscant activity, and through that

flame there came tearing the metallic slugs of a high-power machine rifle.

Ha ! There was a rifle, even though he had not been able to find it! Clever guy,

that Helmuth! And what a break that he had taken time to learn how to hold this suit up

against the trickiest kind of machine-rifle fire!

Kinnison’s screens were almost those of a battleship, his armor almost,

relatively, as strong. And he could hold that armor upright. Therefore through the raging

beam of the semi-portable projector he plowed and straight up that torrent of raging

steel he drove his way. And now from his own mighty projector, against Helmuth’s

armor, there raved out a beam scarcely less potent than that of a semi-portable. The

Lensman’s armor did not mount a water-cooled machine rifle-there was a limit to what

even that powerful structure could carry-but grimly, with every faculty of his newly

enlarged mind concentrated upon that thought screened, armored head behind the

belching gun, Kinnison held his line and forged ahead.

Well it was that the Lensman was concentrating upon that screened head, for

when the screen weakened slightly and a thought began to seep through it toward an

enigmatically sparkling ball of force, Kinnison was ready. He blanketed the thought

savagely, before it could take form, and attacked the screen so viciously that Helmuth

had either to restore full coverage instantly or die then and there. For the Lensman had

studied that ball long and earnestly. It was the one thing about the whole base that he

could not understand, the one thing, therefore, of which he had been afraid.

But he was afraid of it no longer. It was operated, he now knew, by thought, and,

no matter how terrific its potentialities might be, it now was and would remain perfectly

harmless, for if the pirate chief softened his screen enough to emit a thought, he would

never think again.

Therefore he rushed. At full blast he hurdled the rifle and crashed full against the

armored figure behind it. Magnetic clamps locked and held, and, driving projectors

furiously ablaze, he whirled around and forced the madly struggling Helmuth back,

toward the line along which the bellowing rifle was still spewing forth a continuous storm

of metal.

Helmuth’s utmost efforts sufficed only to throw the Lensman out of balance, and

both figures crashed to the floor. And now the madly fighting armored pair rolled over

and over-straight into the line of fire.

First Kinnison, the bullets whining, shrieking off the armor of his personal

battleship and crashing through or smashing ringingly against whatever happened to be

in the ever-changing line or ricochet. Then Helmuth, and as the fierce-driven metal

slugs tore in their multitudes through his armor and through and through his body,

riddling his every vital organ, that was THE END

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