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

own. He had been afraid that some of them would think he was throwing his weight

around when he violated precedent by making her a Lensman. He had been afraid of

animosity and ill-will. He had been afraid that outraged masculine pride would set up a

sex antagonism. But if any of these things existed, the keenest use of his every

penetrant sense could not discover them.

Instead, the human Lensmen literally mobbed her as they took her to their

collective bosom. No party, wherever or for what reason held, was complete without

her. If she ever had less than ten escorts at once, she was slighted. They ran her

ragged, they danced her slippers off, they stuffed her to repletion, they would not let her

sleep, they granted her the privacy of a gold-fish—and she loved every tumultuous

second of it.

She had wanted, as she had told Haynes and Lacy so long ago, a big wedding;

but this one was already out of hand and was growing more so by the minute. The idea

of holding it in a church had been abandoned long since; now it became clear that the

biggest armory of Klovia would not hold even half of the Lensmen, to say nothing of the

notables and dignitaries who had come so far. It would simply have to be the Stadium.

Even that tremendous structure could not hold enough people, hence speakers

and plates were run outside, clear up to the space-field fence. And, although neither of

the principals knew it, this marriage had so fired public interest that Universal Telenews

men had already arranged the hook-up which was to carry it to every planet of

Civilization. Thus the number of entities who saw and heard that wedding has been

estimated, but the figures are too fantastic to be repeated here.

But it was in no sense a circus. No ceremony ever held, in home or in church or

in cathedral, was ever more solemn. For when half a million Lensmen concentrate upon

solemnity, it prevails.

The whole vast bowl was gay with flowers—it seemed as though a state must

have been stripped of blooms to furnish so many—and ferns and white ribbons were

everywhere. There was a mighty organ, which pealed out triumphal melody as the bridal

parties marched down the aisles, subsiding into a lilting accompaniment as the betrothal

couple ascended the white-brocaded stairway and faced the Lensman-Chaplain in the

heavily-garlanded little open-air chapel. The minister raised both hands. The massed

Patrolmen and nurses stood at attention. A profound silence fell.

“Dearly beloved . . .” The grand old service—short and simple, but utterly

impressive—was soon over. Then, as Kinnison kissed his wife, half a million Lensed

members were thrust upward in silent salute.

Through a double lane of glowing Lenses the wedding party made its way up to

the locked and guarded gate of the space-field where lay the Dauntless—the super-

dreadnought “yacht” in which the Kinnisons were to take a honeymoon voyage to

distant Tellus. The gate opened. The couple, accompanied by the Port Admiral and the

Surgeon Marshal, stepped into the car, which sped out to the battleship; and as it did so

the crowd loosed its pent-up feelings in a prolonged outburst of cheering.

And as the newlyweds walked up the gangplank Kinnison turned his head and

Lensed a thought to Haynes:

“You’ve been griping so long about Lyrane VIII, chief —I forgot to tell you—you

can go mop up on it now!”

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