Lensman 05 – Second Stage Lensman – E E. Doc Smith

given orders by Alcon to traverse a hyper-spatial tube, the terminus of which will appear

at coordinates 217-493-28 at hour eleven of the seventh Thralian day from the present.”

“Fine business! And you want to chase him, huh?” Kinnison jumped at the

conclusion. “Sure—go ahead. I’ll meet you there. I’ll fake up some kind of an excuse to

get away from here and we’ll run him ragged . . .”

“I do not,” Nadreck interrupted, decisively. “If I leave my work here it will all come

undone. Besides, it would be dangerous—foolhardy. Not knowing what lies at the other

end of that tube, we could make no plans and could have no assurance of safety, or

even of success. You should not go, either—that is unthinkable. I am reporting this

matter in view of the possibility that you may think it significant enough to warrant the

sending of some observer whose life is of little or no importance.”

“Oh . . . uh-huh . . . I see. Thanks, Nadreck.” Kinnison did not allow any trace of

his real thought to go out before he broke the line. Then:

“Funny ape, Nadreck,” he cogitated, as he called Haynes. “I don’t get his angle at

all—I simply can’t figure him out. . . Haynes? Kinnison,” and he reported in full.

“The Dauntless has all the necessary generators and equipment, and the place is

far enough out so that she can make the approach without any trouble,” the Lensman

concluded. “We’ll burn whatever is at the other end of that tube clear out of the ether.

Send along as many of the old gang as you can spare. Wish we had time to get

Cardynge— he’ll howl like a wolf at being left out—but we’ve got only a week . . .”

“Cardynge is here,” Haynes broke in. “He has been working out some stuff for

Thorndyke on the sunbeam. He is finished now, though, and will undoubtedly want to go

along.”

“Fine!” and explicit arrangements for the rendezvous were made.

It was not unduly difficult for Kinnison to make his absence from duty logical,

even necessary. Scouts and observers reported inexplicable interferences with certain

communications lines. With thoughts of THE Lensman suffusing the minds of the

higher-ups, and because of Gannel’s already-demonstrated prowess and keenness, he

scarcely had to signify a willingness to investigate the phenomena in order to be

directed to do so.

Nor did he pick a crew of his own sycophants. Instead, he chose the five highest-

ranking privates of the battalion to accompany him upon this supposedly extremely

dangerous mission; apparently entirely unaware that two of them belonged to the

colonel, two to the general, and one to the captain who had taken his place.

The colonel wished Major Gannel luck—verbally—even while hoping fervently

that THE Lensman would make cold meat of him in a hurry; and Kinnison gravely gave

his well-wisher thanks as he set out. He did not, however, go near any communications

lines; although his spying crew did not realize the fact. They did not realize anything;

they did not know even that they became unconscious within five minutes after leaving

Thrale.

They remained unconscious while the speedster in which they were was drawn

into the Dauntless’ capacious hold. In the Patrol ship’s sick-bay, under expert care, they

remained unconscious during the entire duration of their stay on board.

The Patrol pilots picked up Kandron’s flying vessel with little difficulty; and,

nullifiers full out, followed it easily. When the zwilnik ship slowed down to feel for the

vortex the Dauntless slowed also, and baffled her driving jets as she sneaked up to the

very edge of electro-detector range. When the objective disappeared from three-

dimensional space the point of vanishment was marked precisely, and up to that point

the Patrol ship flashed in seconds.

The regular driving blasts were cut off, the special generators were cut in. Then,

as the force-fields of the ship reacted against those of the Boskonian “shore” station,

the Patrolmen felt again in all their gruesome power the appallingly horrible sensations

of inter-dimensional acceleration. For that sensation is, literally, indescribable. A man in

good training can overcome sea-sickness, air-sickness, and space-sickness. He can

overcome the nausea and accustom himself to the queasily terrifying endless-fall

sensation of weightlessness. He can become inured to the physical and mental ills

accompanying inertialessness. No man ever has, however, been able to get used to

inter-dimensional acceleration.

It is best likened to a compression; not as a whole, but atom by atom. A man

feels as though he were being twisted —corkscrewed in some monstrously obscure

fashion which permits him neither to move from his place nor to remain where he is. It is

a painless but utterly revolting transformation, progressing in a series of waves; a re-

arrangement, a writhing, crawling distortion, an incomprehensibly impossible extrusion

of each ultimate particle of his substance in an unknowable, ordinarily non-existent

direction.

The period of acceleration over, the Dauntless began to travel at uniform velocity

along whatever course it was that the tube took. The men, although highly

uncomfortable and uneasy, could once more move about and work. Sir Austin

Cardynge in particular was actually happy and eager as he flitted from one to another of

the automatic recording instruments upon his special panel. He resembled more closely

than ever a lean, gray tomcat, Kinnison thought—he almost expected to see him begin

to lick his whiskers and purr.

“You see, my ignorant young friend,” the scientist almost did purr as one of the

recording pens swung wildly across the ruled paper, “it is as I told you—the lack of

exact data upon even one tiny factor of this extremely complex phenomenon is

calamitous. While my notes were apparently complete and were certainly accurate, our

experimental tubes did not function perfectly. The time factor was

irreconcilable—completely so, in every aspect, even that of departure from and return to

normal space—and it is unthinkable that time, one of the fundamental units, is or can be

intrinsically variable . . .”

“You think so?” Kinnison broke in. “Look at that,” pointing to the ultimate of

timepieces, Cardynge’s own triplex chronometer. “Number One says we’ve been in this

tube for an hour, Number Two says a little over nine minutes, and according to Number

Three we won’t be starting for twenty minutes yet—it must be running backwards—let’s

see you comb that out of your whiskers!”

“Oh-h . . . ah . . . a-hum.” But only momentarily was Sir Austin taken aback. “Ah, I

was right all the time!” he cackled gleefully. “I thought it was practically impossible for

me to commit an error or to overlook any possibilities, and I have now proved that I did

not Time, in this hyper-spatial region or condition, is intrinsically variable, and in major

degree!”

“And what does that get you?” Kinnison asked, pointedly.

“Much, my impetuous youngster, much,” Cardynge replied. “We observe, we

note facts. From the observations and facts we theorize and we deduce; thus arriving

very shortly at the true inwardness of time.”

“You hope,” the Lensman snorted, dubiously; and in his skepticism he was right

and Sir Austin was wrong. For the actual nature and mechanism of time remained, and

still constitute, a mystery, or at least an unsolved problem. The

Arisians—perhaps—understand time; no other race does.

To some of the men, then, and to some of the clocks and other time-measuring

devices, the time seemed—or actually was?—very long; to other “and similar beings

and mechanisms it seemed—or was—short. Short or long, however, the Dauntless did

not reach the Boskonian end of the hyper-spatial tube.

In mid-flight there came a crunching, twisting cloonk! and an abrupt reversal of

the inexplicably horrible inter-dimensional acceleration—a deceleration as sickeningly

disturbing, both physically and mentally, as the acceleration had been.

While within the confines of the hyper-spatial tube every eye of the Dauntless

had been blind. To every beam upon every frequency, visible or invisible, ether-borne or

carried upon the infinitely faster waves of the sub-ether, the murk was impenetrable.

Every plate showed the same mind-numbing blankness; a vague, eerily-shifting,’ quasi-

solid blanket of formless, textureless grayness. No lightness or darkness, no stars or

constellation or nebulae, no friendly, deep-space blackness—nothing.

Deceleration ceased; the men felt again the wonted homeliness and comfort of

normal pseudo-gravity. Simultaneously the gray smear of the visiplates faded away into

commonplace areas of jetty black, pierced by the brilliantly dimensionless vari-colored

points of light which were the familiar stars of their own familiar space.

But were they familiar? Was that our galaxy, or anything like it? They were not. It

was not. Kinnison stared into his plate, aghast.

He would not have been surprised to have emerged into three-dimensional

space anywhere within the Second Galaxy. In that case, he would have seen a Milky

Way; and from its shape, apparent size, and texture he could have oriented himself

fairly closely in a few minutes. But the Dauntless was not within any lenticular

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