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

Unhesitatingly he did the latter. In mid-leap the apparition swerved, in a full right-

angle turn, directly toward the quietly-poised body of the Lyranian. She acted just barely

in time; the madly-reaching claws were within scant inches of her skin when they

vanished. Her eyes widened in frightened startlement; she was quite evidently shaken

to the core by the Lensman’s viciously skillful riposte. With an obvious effort she pulled

herself together.

“Or these, then, if I must,” and with a sweeping gesture of thought she indicated

the roomful of her Lyranian sisters.

“How?” Kinnison asked, pointedly.

“By force of numbers; by sheer weight and strength. You can kill many of them

with your weapons, of course, but not enough or quickly enough.”

“You yourself would be the first to die,” he cautioned her; and, since she was en

rapport with his very mind, she knew that it was not a threat, but the stern finality of fact.

“What of that?” He in turn knew that she, too, meant precisely that and nothing

else.

He had another weapon, but she would not believe it without a demonstration,

and he simply could not prove that weapon upon an unarmed, defenseless woman,

even though she was a Lyranian.

Stalemate.

No, the ‘copter. “Listen, Queen of Sheba, to what I tell my boys,” he ordered, and

spoke into his microphone.

“Ralph? Stick a one-second needle down through the floor here; close enough to

make her jump, but far enough away so as not to blister her fanny.”

At his word a narrow, but ragingly incandescent pencil of destruction raved

downward through ceiling and floor. So inconceivably hot was it that if it had been a

fraction larger, it would have ignited the Elder Sister’s very chair. Effortlessly, insatiably

it consumed everything in its immediate path, radiating the while the entire spectrum of

vibrations. It was unbearable, and the auburn-haired creature did indeed jump, in spite

of herself—half-way to the door. The rest of the hitherto imperturbable persons

clustered together in panic-stricken knots.

“You see, Cleopatra,” Kinnison explained, as the dreadful needle-beam expired,

“I’ve got plenty of stuff if I want to —or have to—use it. The boys up there will stick a

needle like that through the brain of any one or everyone in this room if I give the word. I

don’t want to kill any of you unless it’s necessary, as I explained to your misbarbered

friend here, but I am leaving here alive and all in one piece, and I’m taking this

Aldebaranian along with me, in the same condition. If I must, I’ll lay down a barrage like

that sample you just saw, and only the zwilnik and I will get out alive. How about it?”

“What are you going to do with the stranger?” the Lyranian asked, avoiding the

issue.

“I’m going to take some information away from her, that’s all. Why? What were

you going to do with her yourselves?”

“We were—and are going to kill it,” came flashing reply. The lethal bolt came

even before the reply; but, fast as the Elder One was, the Gray Lensman was faster. He

blanked out the thought, reached over and flipped on the Aldebaranian’s thought-

screen.

“Keep it on until we get to the ship, sister,” he spoke aloud in the girl’s native

tongue. “Your battery’s low, I know, but it’ll last long enough. These hens seem to be

strictly on the peck.”

“I’ll say they are—you don’t know the half of it.” Her voice was low, rich, vibrant.

“Thanks, Kinnison.”

“Listen, Red-Top, what’s the percentage in playing so dirty?” the Lensman

complained then. “I’m doing my damndest to let you off easy, but I’m all done dickering.

Do we go out of here peaceably, or do we fry you and your crew to cinders in your own

lard, and walk out over the grease spots? It’s strictly up to you, but you’ll decide right

here and right now.”

The Elder One’s face was hard, her eyes flinty. Her fingers were curled into ball-

tight fists. “I suppose, since we cannot stop you, we must let you go free,” she hissed, in

helpless but controlled fury. “If by giving my life and the lives of all these others we

could kill you, here and now would you two die . . . but as it is, you may go.”

“But why all the rage?” the puzzled Lensman asked. “You strike me as being, on

the whole, reasoning creatures. You in particular went to Tellus with this zwilnik here, so

you should know . . .”

“I do know,” the Lyranian broke in. “That is why I would go to any length, pay any

price whatever, to keep you from returning to your own world, to prevent the inrush of

your barbarous hordes here . . .”

“Oh! So that’s it!” Kinnison exclaimed. “You think that some of our people might

want to settle down here, or to have traffic with you?”

“Yes.” She went into a eulogy concerning Lyrane II, concluding, “I have seen the

planets and the races of your so-called Civilization, and I detest them and it. Never

again shall any of us leave Lyrane; nor, if I can help it, shall any stranger ever come

here.”

“Listen, angel-face!” the man commanded. “You’re as mad as a Radeligian

cateagle—you’re as cockeyed as Trenco’s ether. Get this, and get it straight. To any

really intelligent being of any one of forty million planets, your whole Lyranian race

would be a total loss with no insurance. You’re a God-forsaken, spiritually and

emotionally starved, barren, mentally ossified, and completely monstrous mess. If I,

personally, never see either you or your planet again, that will be exactly twenty seven

minutes too soon. This girl here thinks the same of you as I do. If anybody else ever

hears of Lyrane and thinks he wants to visit it, I’ll take him out of— I’ll knock a hip down

on him if I have to, to keep him away from here. Do I make myself clear?”

“Oh, yet—perfectly!” she fairly squealed in school-girlish delight. The Lensman’s

tirade, instead of infuriating her farther, had been sweet music to her peculiarly insular

mind. “Go, then, at once—hurry! Oh, please, hurry! Can you drive the car back to your

vessel, or will one of us have to go with you?”

“Thanks. I could drive your car, but it won’t be necessary. The “copter will pick us

up.”

He spoke to the watchful Ralph, then he and the Aldebaranian left the hall,

followed at a careful distance by the throng. The helicopter was on the ground, waiting.

The man and the woman climbed aboard.

“Clear ether, persons!” The Lensman waved a salute to the crowd and the

Tellurian craft shot into the air.

Thence to the Dauntless, which immediately did likewise, leaving behind her,

upon the little airport, a fused blob of metal that had once been the zwilnik’s speedster.

Kinnison studied the white face of his captive, then handed her a tiny canister.

“Fresh battery for your thought-screen generator; yours is about shot.” Since she

made no motion to accept it, he made the exchange himself and tested the result. It

worked. “What’s the matter with you, kid, anyway? I’d say you were starved, if I hadn’t

caught you at a full table.”

“I am starved,” the girl said, simply. “I couldn’t eat there. I knew they were going

to kill me, and it . . . it sort of took away my appetite.”

“Well, what are we waiting for? I’m hungry, too—let’s go eat.”

“Not with you, either, any more than with them. I thanked you, Lensman, for

saving my life there, and I meant it. I thought then and still think that I would rather have

you kill me than those horrible, monstrous women, but I simply can’t eat.”

“But I’m not even thinking of killing you—can’t you get that through your skull? I

don’t make war on women; you ought to know that by this time.”

“You will have to.” The girl’s voice was low and level. “You didn’t kill any of those

Lyranians, no, but you didn’t chase them a million parsecs, either. We have been taught

ever since we were born that you Patrolmen always torture people to death. I don’t quite

believe that of you personally, since I have had a couple of glimpses into your mind, but

you’ll kill me before I’ll talk. At least, I hope and I believe that I can hold out.”

“Listen, girl.” Kinnison was in deadly earnest. “You are in no danger whatever.

You are just as safe as though you were in Klono’s hip pocket. You have some

information that I want, yes, and I will get it, but in the process I will neither hurt you nor

do you mental or physical harm. The only torture you will undergo will be that which, as

now, you give yourself.”

“But you called me a . . . a zwilnik, and they always kill them,” she protested.

Pages: 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 65 66

Leave a Reply 0

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *