“Right.” If Fossten suspected that the Tyrant was somewhat less than frank he
did not show it, and the conversation became strictly technical.
“We must not strike until we are completely ready,” was Kinnison’s first
statement, and he repeated it so often thereafter during the numerous conferences with
the chiefs of staff that it came almost to be a slogan.
The prime minister did not know that Kinnison’s main purpose was to give the
Patrol plenty of time to make Klovia utterly impregnable. Fossten could know nothing of
the Patrol’s sunbeam, to which even the mightiest fortress possible for man to build
could offer scarcely more resistance than could the lightest, the most fragile pleasure
yacht.
Hence he grew more and more puzzled, more and more at a loss week by week,
as Tyrant Gannel kept on insisting upon building up the strongest, the most logically
perfect fleet which all the ability of their pooled brains could devise. Once or twice he
offered criticisms and suggestions which, while defensible according to one theory,
would actually have, weakened their striking power. These offerings Gannel rejected
flatly; insisting, even to an out-and-out break with his co-administrator if necessary,
upon the strongest possible armada.
The Tyrant wanted, and declared that he must and would have, more and bigger
of everything. More and heavier flying fortresses, more and stronger battleships and
super-dreadnoughts, more and faster cruisers and scouts, more and deadlier weapons.
“We want more of everything than our operations officers can possibly handle in
battle,” he declared over and over; and he got them. Then:
“Now, you operations officers, learn how to handle them!” he commanded.
Even the prime minister protested at that, but it was finally accomplished.
Fossten was a real thinker. So, in a smaller way, was Kinnison, and between them they
worked out a system. It was crudeness and inefficiency incarnate in comparison with
the Z9M9Z, but it was so much better than anything previously known to the Boskonians
that everyone was delighted. Even the suspicious and cynical Fossten began to
entertain some doubts as to the infallibility of his own judgment. Tyrant Gannel might be
working under his own power, after all.
And these doubts grew apace as the Tyrant drilled his Grand Fleet. He drove the
personnel unmercifully, especially the operations officers; as relentlessly as he drove
himself. He simply could not be satisfied, his ardor and lust for efficiency were
insatiable. His reprimands were scathingly accurate; officer after officer he demoted
bitingly during ever more complicated, ever more inhumanly difficult maneuvers; until
finally he had what were unquestionably his best men in those supremely important
positions. Then, one day:
“QX, Kim, come ahead—we’re ready,” Haynes Leased him, briefly.
For Kinnison had been in touch with the Port Admiral every day. He had learned
long since that the prime minister could not detect a Lensed thought, particularly when
the Lensman was wearing a thought-screen, as he did practically constantly; wherefore
the strategists of the Patrol were as well informed as was Kinnison himself of every
move made by the Boskonians.
Then Kinnison called Fossten, and was staring glumly at nothing when the latter
entered the room.
“Well, it would seem that we’re about as nearly ready as we ever will be,” the
Tyrant brooded, pessimistically. “Have you any suggestions, criticisms, or other
contributions to offer, of however minor a nature?”
“None whatever. You have done very well indeed.”
“Unnhh,” Gannel grunted, without enthusiasm. “You have observed, no doubt,
that I have said little if anything as to the actual method of approach?”
The prime minister had indeed noticed that peculiar oversight, and said so. Here,
undoubtedly, he thought, was the rub. Here was where Star A Star’s minion would get in
his dirty work.
“I have thought about it at length,” Kinnison said, still hi his brown study. “But I
know enough to recognize and to admit my own limitations. I do know tactics and
strategy, and thus far I have worked with known implements toward known objectives.
That condition, however, no longer exists. The simple fact is that I do not know enough
about the possibilities, the techniques and the potentialities, the advantages and the
disadvantages of the hyper-spatial tube as an avenue of approach to enable me to
come to a defensible decision one way or the other. I have decided, therefore, that if
you have any preference in the matter I will give you full authority and let you handle the
approach in any manner you please. I shall of course direct the actual battle, as in that I
shall again be upon familiar ground.”
The premier was flabbergasted. This was incredible. Gannel must really be
working for Boskonia after all, to make such a decision as that. Still skeptical,
unprepared for such a startling development as that one was, he temporized.
“The bad—the very bad—features of the approach via rube are two,” he
pondered aloud. “We have no means of knowing anything about what happens; and,
since our previous such venture was a total failure, we must assume that, contrary to
our plans and expectations, the enemy was not taken by surprise.”
“Right,” Kinnison concurred, tonelessly.
“Upon the other hand, an approach via open space, while conducive to the
preservation of our two lives, would be seen from afar and would certainly be met by an
appropriate formation.”
“Check,” came emotionlessly non-commital agreement.
“Haven’t you the slightest bias, one way or the other?” Fossten demanded,
incredulously.
“None whatever,” the Tyrant was coldly matter-of-fact. “If I had had any such, I
would have ordered the approach made in the fashion I preferred. Having none, I
delegated authority to you. When I delegate authority I do so without reservations.”
This was a stopper.
“Let it be open space, then,” the prime minister finally decided.
“So be it.” And so it was.
Each of the component flotillas of Grand Fleet made a flying trip to some nearby
base, where each unit was serviced. Every item of mechanism and of equipment was
checked and rechecked. Stores were replenished, and munitions—especially munitions.
Then the mighty armada, the most frightfully powerful aggregation ever to fly for
Boskonia—the mightiest fleet ever assembled anywhere, according to the speeches of
the politicians—remade its stupendous formation and set out for Klovia. And as it flew
through space, shortly before contact was made with the Patrol’s Grand Fleet, the
premier called Kinnison into the control room.
“Gannel, I simply can not make you out,” he remarked, after studying him fixedly
for five minutes. “You have offered no advice. You have not interfered with my handling
of the Fleet in any way. Nevertheless, I still suspect you of treacherous intentions. I
have been suspicious of you from the first . . .”
“With no grounds whatever for your suspicions,” Kinnison reminded him, coldly.
“What? With all the reason possible!” Fossten declared. “Have you not steadily
refused to bare your mind to me?”
“Certainly. Why not? Do we have to go over that again? Just how do you figure
that I should so trust any being who refuses to reveal even his true shape to me?”
“That is for your own good. I have not wanted to tell you this, but the truth is that
no human being can perceive my true self and retain his sanity.”
Fossten’s Eddorian mind flashed. Should he reveal this form of flesh, which was
real enough, as Tellurians understood reality? Impossible. Star-A-Star-Gannel was no
more Tellurian than Fossten was Thralian. He would not be satisfied with perceiving the
flesh; he would bore in for the mind.
“I’ll take a chance on that,” Kinnison replied, skeptically. “I’ve seen a lot of
monstrous entities in my time and I haven’t conked out yet.”
“There speaks the sheer folly of callow youth; the rashness of an ignorance so
abysmal as to be possible only to one of your ephemeral race.” The voice deepened,
became more resonant. Kinnison, staring into those inscrutable eyes which he knew did
not in fact exist, thrilled forebodingly; the timbre and the overtones of that voice
reminded him very disquietingly of something which he could not at the moment recall
to mind. “I forbear to discipline you, not from any doubt as to my ability to do so, as you
suppose, but because of the sure knowledge that breaking you by force will destroy
your usefulness. On the other hand, it is certain that if you cooperate with me willingly
you will be the strongest, ablest leader that Boskonia has ever had. Think well upon
these matters, O Tyrant.”
“I will,” the Lensman agreed, more seriously than he had intended. “But just
what, if anything, has led you to believe that I am not working to the fullest and best of
my ability for Boskonia?”
“Everything,” Fossten summarized. “I have been able to find no flaws in your
actions, but those actions do not fit in with your unexplained and apparently
unexplainable reticence in letting me perceive for myself exactly what is in your mind.