generated within minds such as the Velantians’ became literally indescribable. Fear was
there yet and in abundance—it simply could not be eradicated. Horror and revulsion.
Sheer, burning hatred; and, more powerful than all, amounting almost to an obsession,
a clamoring, shrieking, driving urge for revenge which was almost tangible. All these,
and more, Worsel felt as he waited, twitching.
The Valerians wanted to go in because it meant a hand-to-hand fight. Fighting
was their business, their sport, and their pleasure; they loved it for its own sweet sake,
with a simple, wholehearted devotion. To die in combat was a Valerian soldier’s natural
and much-to-be-desired end; to die in any peaceful fashion was a disgrace and a
calamity. They did and do go into battle with very much the same joyous abandon with
which a sophomore goes to meet his date in Lover’s Lane. And now, to make physical
combat all the nicer and juicier, they carried semi-portable tractors and pressors, for the
actual killing was not to take place until after the battle proper was over. Blasting the
Overlords out of existence would have been simplicity itself: but they were not to die
until after they had been forced to divulge whatever they might have of knowledge or of
information.
Nadreck of Palain wanted to go in solely to increase his already vast store of
knowledge. His thirst for facts was a purely scientific one; the fashion in which it was to
be satisfied was the veriest, the most immaterial detail. Indeed, it is profoundly
impossible to portray to any human intelligence the serene detachment, the utterly
complete indifference to suffering exhibited by practically all of the frigid-blooded races,
even those adherent to Civilization, especially when the suffering is being done by an
enemy. Nadreck did know, academically and in a philological sense, from his reading,
the approximate significance of such words as “compunction”, “sympathy”, and
“squeamishness”; but he would have been astounded beyond measure at any
suggestion that they would apply to any such matter-of-fact business as the extraction
of data from the mind of an Overlord of Delgon, no matter what might have to be done
to the unfortunate victim in the process.
Tregonsee went in simply because Kinnison did—to be there to help out in case
the Tellurian should need him.
Kinnison went in because he felt that he had to. He knew full well that he was not
going to get any kick at all out of what was going to happen. He was not going to like it,
any part of it. Nor did he. In fact, he wanted to be sick— violently sick—before the
business was well started. And Nadreck perceived his mental and physical distress.
“Why stay, friend Kinnison, when your presence is not necessary?” he asked,
with the slightly pleased, somewhat surprised, hellishly placid mental immobility which
Kinnison was later to come to know so well. “Even though my powers are admittedly
small, I feel eminently qualified to cope with such minor matters as the obtainment and
the accurate transmittal of that which you wish to know. I cannot understand your
emotions, but I realize fully that they are essential components of that which makes you
what you fundamentally are. There can be no justification for your submitting yourself
needlessly to such stresses, such psychic traumata.”
And Kinnison and Tregonsee, realizing the common sense of the Palainian’s
statement and very glad indeed to have an excuse for leaving the outrageous scene,
left it forthwith.
There is no need to go into detail as to what actually transpired within that
cavern’s dark and noisome depths. It took a long time, nor was any of it gentle. The
battle itself, before the Overlords were downed, was bad enough in any Tellurian eyes.
Clad in armor of proof although they were, more than one of the Valerians died.
Worsel’s armor was shattered and rent, his leather-hard flesh was slashed, burned, and
mangled before the last of the monstrous forms was pinned down and helpless.
Nadreck alone escaped unscathed —he did so, he explained quite truthfully, because
he did not go in there to fight, but to learn.
What followed the battle, however, was infinitely worse. The Delgonians, as has
been said, were hard, cold, merciless, even among themselves; they were pitiless and
unyielding and refractory in the extreme. It need scarcely be emphasized then, that they
did not yield to persuasion either easily or graciously; that their own apparatus and
equipment had to be put to its fullest grisly use before those stubborn minds gave up
the secrets so grimly and so implacably sought. Worsel, the raging Velantian, used
those torture-tools with a vengeful savagery and a snarling ferocity which are at least
partially understandable; but Nadreck employed them with a calm capability, a coldly,
emotionlessly efficient callousness the mere contemplation of which made icy shivers
chase each other up and down Kinnison’s spine.
At long last the job was done. The battered Patrol forces returned to the
Dauntless, bringing with them their spoils and their dead. The cavern and its every
molecule of contents was bombed out of existence. The two ships took off; Cartiff’s
heavily-armed “merchantman” to do the long flit back to Tellus, the Dauntless to drop
Helen and her plane off at her airport and then to join her sister super-dreadnoughts
which were already beginning to assemble in Rift Ninety Four.
“Come down here, will you please, Kim?” came Clarrissa’s thought. “I’ve been
keeping her pretty well blocked out, but she wants to talk to you—in fact, she insists on
it— before she leaves the ship.”
“Hm . . . that is something!” the Lensman exclaimed, and hurried to the nurse’s
cabin.
There stood the Lyranian queen; a full five inches taller than Clarissa’s five feet
six, a good thirty five pounds heavier than her not inconsiderable one hundred and forty
five. Hard, fine, supple; erectly poised she stood there, an exquisitely beautiful statue of
pale bronze, her flaming hair a gorgeous riot. Head held proudly high, she stared only
slightly upward into the Earth-man’s quiet, understanding eyes.
“Thanks, Kinnison, for everything that you and yours have done for me and
mine,” she said, simply; and held out her right hand in what she knew was the correct
Tellurian gesture.
“Uh-uh, Helen,” Kinnison denied, gently, making no motion to grasp the proffered
hand—which was promptly and enthusiastically withdrawn. “Nice, and it’s really big of
you, but don’t strain yourself to like us men too much or too soon; you’ve got to get used
to us gradually. We like you a lot, and we respect you even more, but we’ve been
around and you haven’t. You can’t be feeling friendly enough yet to enjoy shaking hands
with me—you certainly haven’t got jets enough to swing that load—so this time we’ll
take the thought for the deed. Keep trying, though, Toots old girl, and you’ll make it yet.
In the meantime we’re all pulling for you, and if you ever need any help, shoot us a call
on the communicator we’ve put aboard your plane. Clear ether, ace!”
“Clear ether, MacDougall and Kinnison!” Helen’s eyes were softer than either of
the Tellurians had ever seen them before. “There is, I think, something of wisdom, of
efficiency, in what you have said. It may be . . . that is, there is a possibility . . . you of
Civilization are, perhaps, persons—of a sort, that is,—after all. Thanks—really thanks, I
mean, this time—good-bye.”
Helen’s plane had already been unloaded. She disembarked and stood beside it;
watching, with a peculiarly untranslatable expression, the huge cruiser until it was out of
sight.
“It was just like pulling teeth for her to be civil to me,” Kinnison grinned at his
fiancee, “but she finally made the lift. She’s a grand girl, that Helen, in her peculiar,
poisonous way.”
“Why, Kim!” Clarrissa protested. “She’s nice, really, when you get to know her.
And she’s so stunningly, so ravishingly beautiful!”
“Uh-huh,” Kinnison agreed, without a trace of enthusiasm. “Cast her in chilled
stainless steel—she’d just about do as she is, without any casting—and she’d make a
mighty fine statue.”
“Kim! Shame on you!” the girl exclaimed. “Why, she’s the most perfectly beautiful
thing I ever saw in my whole life!” Her voice softened. “I wish I looked like that,” she
added wistfully.
“She’s beautiful enough—in her way—of course,” the man admitted, entirely
unimpressed. “But then, so is a Radelegian cateagle, so is a spire of frozen helium, and
so is. a six-foot-long, armor-piercing punch. As for you wanting to look like her—that’s
sheer tripe, Cris, and you know it. Beside you, all the Helens that ever lived, with
Cleopatra, Dessa Desplaines, and Illona Potter thrown in, wouldn’t make a baffled flare .
. .”
That was, of course, what she wanted him to say; and what followed is of no
particular importance here.
Shortly after the Dauntless cleared the stratosphere, Nadreck reported that he
had finished assembling and arranging the data, and Kinnison called the Lensmen