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

“Well, here’s hoping, anyway. Thanks again. See you again some time, maybe —

clear ether!”

Chief Pilot Henderson had, a few minutes since, changed the course of the

cruiser from right-line flight to fantastic, zig-zag leaps through space, and now he turned

frowningly to Kinnison.

“We’d better begin dumping them out pretty soon now, I think,” be suggested.

“We haven’t detected anything yet, but according to the figures it won’t be long now,

and after they get their traps set we’ll run out of time mighty quick.”

“Right,” and one after another, but even so several light-years apart in space,

eighteen of the small boats were launched into the void. In the control room there were

left only Henderson and Thorndyke with vanBuskirk and Kinnison, who were of course

to be the last to leave the vessel.

“All right, Hen, now we’ll try out your roulette-wheel director-by-chance,” Kinnison

said, then went on, in answer to Thorndyke’s questioning glance. “A bouncing ball on

an oscillating table. Every time the ball carroms off a pin it shifts the course through a

fairly large, but unpredictable angle. Pure chance — we thought it might cross them up a

little.”

Hairline beams were connected from panels to pins, and soon four interested

spectators looked on while, with no human guidance, the Brittania lurched and leaped

even more erratically than she had done under Henderson’s direction. Now, however,

the ever-changing vectors of her course were as unexpected and surprising to her

passengers as to any possible external observer.

One more lifeboat left the vessel, and only the Lensman and his giant aide

remained. While they were waiting the required few minutes before their own departure,

Kinnison spoke.

“Bus, there’s one more thing we ought to do, and I’ve just figured out how to do

it. We don’t want this ship to fall into the pirates’ hands intact, as there’s a lot of stuff in

her that would probably be as new to them as it was to us. They know we got the best

of that ship of theirs, but they don’t know what we did or how. On the other hand, we

want her to drive on as long as possible after we leave her — the farther away fron2 us

she gets, the better our chance of getting away. We should have something to touch off

those duodec torpedoes we have left — all seven at once — at the first touch of a spy

beam, both to keep them from studying her and to do a little damage if possible — they’ll

go inert and pull her up close as soon as they get a tracer on her. Of course we can’t do

it by stopping the spy-ray altogether, with a spyscreen, but I think I can establish an

R7TX7M field outside our regular screens that will interfere with a TX7 just enough —

say one-tenth of one percent — to actuate a relay in the field-supporting beam.”

“One-tenth of one percent of one milliwatt is one microwatt, isn’t it? Not much

power, I’d say, but that’s a little out of my line. Go ahead — IM observe while you’re

busy.”

Thus it came about that, a few minutes later, the immense sky-rover of the

Galactic Patrol darted along entirely untenanted. And it was her non-human helmsman,

operating solely by chance, that prolonged the chase far more than even the most

optimistic member of her crew could have hoped. For the pilots of the pirate pursuers

were Intelligent,.and assumed that their quarry also was directed by intelligence.

Therefore they aimed their vessels for points toward which the Brittania should logically

go, only and maddeningly to watch her go somewhere else. Senselessly she hurled

herself directly toward enormous suns, once grazing one so nearly that the harrying

pirates gasped at the foolhardiness of such exposure to lethal radiation. For no reason

at all she shot straight backward, almost into a cluster of pirate craft, only to dash off on

another unexpected tangent before the startled outlaws could lay a beam against her.

But finally she did it once too often. Flying between two vessels, she held her line

the merest fraction of a second too long. Two tractors lashed out and the three vessels

flashed together, zone to zone to zone. Then, instantly, the two pirate ships became

inert, to anchor in apace their wildly fleeing prey. Then spy-beams licked out, to explore

the Brittania’s interior.

At the touch of those beams, light and delicate as they were, the relay clicked

and the torpedoes let go. Those frightful shells were so designed and so charged that

one of them could demolish any inert structure known to man, what of seven? There

was an explosion to stagger the imagination and which must be left to the imagination,

since no words in any language of the galaxy can describe it adequately.

The Brittania, literally blown to bits, more-than-half fused and partially volatilized

by the inconceivable fury of the outburst, was hurled in all directions in streamers,

droplets, chunks, and masses, each component part urged away from the center of

pressure by the ragingly compressed gases of detonation. Furthermore, each

component was now of course inert and therefore capable of giving up its full measure

of kinetic energy to any inert object with which it should come in contact.

One mass of wreckage, so fiercely sped that its victim had time neither to dodge

nor become inertialess, crashed full against the side of the nearer attacker. Meteorite

screens flared brilliantly violet and went down. The full-driven wall-shield held, but so

terrific was the concussion that what few of the crew were not killed outright would take

no interest in current events for many hours to come.

The other, slightly more distant attacker was more fortunate. Her commander

had had time to render her inertialess, and as she rode lightly away, ahead of the

outermost, most tenuous fringe of vapor, he reported succinctly to his headquarters all

that had transpired. There was a brief interlude of silence, then a speaker gave tongue.

“Helmuth, speaking for Boskone,” snapped from it. “Your report is neither

complete nor conclusive. Find, study, photograph, and bring in to headquarters every

fragment and particle pertaining to the wreckage, paying particular attention to all

bodies or portions thereof.”

“Helmuth, speaking for Boskone!” roared from the general-wave unscrambler.

“Commanders of all vessels, of every class and tonnage, upon whatever mission

bound, attention! The vessel referred to in our previous message has been destroyed,

but it is feared that some or all of her personnel were allowed to escape. Every unit of

that personnel must be killed before he has opportunity to communicate with any Patrol

base. Therefore cancel your present orders, whatever they may be, and proceed at

maximum blast to the region previously designated. Scour that entire volume of space.

Beam out of existence every vessel whose papers do not account unquestionably for

every intelligent being aboard. Investigate every possible avenue of escape. More

detailed orders will be given each of you upon your nearer approach to the

neighborhood under search.”

CHAPTER 4

Escape

Space-suited complete except for helmets, and with those ready to hand, Kinnison and

vanBuskirk sat in the tiny control room of their lifeboat as it .drifted inert through inter-

stellar apace. Kinnison was poring over charts taken from the Brittania’s pilot room, the

sergeant was gazing idly into a detector plate.

“No clear ether yet, I don’t suppose,” the captain remarked, as he rolled up a

chart and tossed it aside.

“No let-up for a second, they’re not taking any chances at all. Found out where

we are? Alsakan ought to be hereabouts somewhere, hadn’t it?”

“Yeah. Not close, though, even for a ship-out of the question for us. Nothing

much inhabited around here, either, to say nothing of being civilized. Scarcely one to

the block. Don’t think I’ve ever been out here before, have you?”

“0ff my beat entirely. How long do you figure it’ll be before it’s safe for us to blast

off?”

“Can’t start blasting until your plates are clear. Anything we can detect can detect

us as soon as we start putting out power.”

“We may be in for a spell of waiting, then . . . . . ” VanBuskirk broke off suddenly

and his tone changed to one of tense excitement. “Help, Noshabkeming, help! Look at

that I”

“Blinding blue blazes!” Kinnison exclaimed, staring into the plate. “With all

macro-universal space and all eternity to play around in, why in all space’s hells did she

have to come back here and now?”

For there, right in their laps, not a hundred miles away, lay the Brittania and her

two pirate captors!

“Better go free,, hadn’t we?” whispered vanBuskirk.

“Damn!” Kinnison grunted. “At this range they’d spot us in a split second. Acting

like a hunk of loose metal’s our only chance. We’ll be able to dodge any flying chunks, I

think . . . . . there she goes!”

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