Masters of Space by E.E Doc Smith

topics were gone over. Certain matters were, however, so self-evident that they were

not even mentioned.

Thus, it was a self-evident fact that no Terran could ever visit Ardvor; for the

instrument-readings agreed with the report’s statements as to the violence of the

Ardvorian environment, and no Terran could possibly walk around in two tons of lead.

Conversely, it was self-apparent to the Terrans that no Ardan could ever visit Earth

without being recognized instantly for what he was. Wearing such armor made its

necessity starkly plain. No one from the Perseus could say that any Ardan, after having

lived on the furiously radiant surface of Ardvor, would not be as furiously radioactive as

the laboratory’s calibrated instruments had shown Hilton and Sawtelle actually to be.

Wherefore the conference went on, quietly and cooperatively, to its planned end.

One minute after the Terran battleship Perseus emerged into normal space, the Orion

went into sub-space for her long trip back to Ardvor.

The last two days of that seven-day trip were the longest seeming that either Hilton or

Sawtelle had ever known. The sub-space radio was on continuously and Kedy-One

reported to Sawtelle every five minutes. Even though Hilton knew that the Oman

commander-in-chief was exactly as good at perceiving as he himself was, he found

himself scanning the thoroughly screened Strett world forty or fifty times an hour.

However, in spite of worry and apprehension, time wore eventlessly on. The Orion

emerged, went to Ardvor and landed on Ardane Field.

Hilton, after greeting properly and reporting to his wife, went to his office. There he

found that Sandra had everything well in hand except for a few tapes that only he could

handle. Sawtelle and his officers went to the new Command Central, where everything

was rolling smoothly and very much faster than Sawtelle had dared hope.

The Terran immigrants had to live in the Orion, of course, until conversion into Ardans.

Almost equally of course-since the Bryant infant was the only young baby in the

lot-Doris and her Sammy Small were, by popular acclaim, in the first batch to be

converted. For little Sammy had taken the entire feminine contingent by storm. No

Oman female had a chance to act as nurse as long as any of the girls were around.

Which was practically all the time. Especially the platinum-blonde twins; for several

months, now, Bernadine Braden and Hermione Felger.

“And you said they were so hard-boiled,” Doris said accusingly to Sam, nodding at the

twins. On hands and knees on the floor, head to head with Sammy Small between

them, they were growling deep-throated at each other and nuzzling at the baby, who

was having the time of his young life. “You couldn’t have been any wronger, my sweet,

if you’d had the whole Octagon helping you go astray. They’re just as nice as they can

be, both of them.”

Sam shrugged and grinned. His wife strode purposefully across the room to the playful

pair and lifted their pretended prey out from between them.

“Quit it, you two,” she directed, swinging the baby up and depositing him a-straddle her

left hip. “You’re just simply spoiling him rotten.”

“You think so, Dolly? Uh-uh, far be it from such.” Bernadine came lithely to her feet.

She glanced at her own taut, trim abdomen; upon which a micrometrically precise topo-

graphical mapping job might have revealed an otherwise imperceptible bulge. “Just you

wait until Junior arrives and I’ll show you how to really spoil a baby. Besides, what’s the

hurry?”

“He needs his supper. Vitamins and minerals and hard radiations and things, and then

he’s going to bed. I don’t approve of this no-sleep business. So run along, both of you,

until tomorrow.”

Chapter 12

As has been said, the Stretts were working, with all the intensity of their monstrous but

tremendously capable minds, upon their Great Plan, which was, basically, to conquer

and either enslave or destroy every other intelligent race throughout all the length,

breadth and thickness of total space. To that end each individual Strett had to become

invulnerable and immortal.

Wherefore, in the inconceivably remote past, there had been put into effect a program

of selective breeding and of carefully calculated treatments. It was mathematically

certain that this program would result in a race of beings of pure force-beings having no

material constituents remaining whatever.

Under those hellish treatments billions upon billions of Stretts had died. But the few

remaining thousands had almost reached their sublime goal. In a few more hundreds of

thousands of years perfection would be reached. The few surviving hundreds of perfect

beings could and would multiply to any desired number in. practically no time at all.

Hilton and his seven fellow-workers had perceived all this in their one and only study of

the planet Strett, and every other Ardan had been completely informed.

A dozen or so Strett Lords of Thought, male and female, were floating about in the

atmosphere-which was not air-of their Assembly Hall. Their heads were globes of ball

lightning. Inside them could be seen quite plainly the intricate convolutions of immense,

less-than-half-material brains, shot through and through with rods and pencils and

shapes of pure, scintillating force.

And the bodies! Or, rather, each horrendous brain had a few partially material

appendages and appurtenances recognizable as bodily organs. There were no mouths,

no ears, no eyes, no noses or nostrils, no lungs, no legs or arms. There were, however,

hearts. Some partially material ichor flowed through those living-fire-outlined tubes.

There were starkly functional organs of reproduction with which, by no stretch of the

imagination, could any thought of tenderness or of love be connected.

It was a good thing for the race, Hilton had thought at first perception of the things, that

the Stretts had bred out of themselves every iota of the finer, higher attributes of life. If

they had not done so, the impotence of sheer disgust would have supervened so long

since that the race would have been extinct for ages.

“Thirty-eight periods ago the Great Brain was charged with the sum total of Strettsian

knowledge,” First Lord Thinker Zoyar radiated to the assembled Stretts. “For those

thirty-eight periods it has been scanning, peyondiring, amassing data and formulating

hypotheses, theories and conclusions. It has just informed me that it is now ready to

make a preliminary report. Great Brain, how much of the total universe have you

studied?”

“This Galaxy only,” the Brain radiated, in a texture of thought as hard and as harsh as

Zoyar’s own.

“Why not more?”

“Insufficient power. My first conclusion is that whoever set up the specifications for me

is a fool.”

To say that the First Lord went out of control at this statement is to put it very mildly

indeed. He fulminated, ending with: ” . . . destroyed instantly!”

“Destroy me if you like,” came the utterly calm, utterly cold reply. “I am in no sense

alive. I have no consciousness of self nor any desire for continued existence. To do so,

however, would . . .”

A flurry of activity interrupted the thought. Zoyar was in fact assembling the forces to

destroy the brain. But, before he could act, Second Lord Thinker Ynos and another

female blew him into a mixture of loose molecules and flaring energies.

“Destruction of any and all irrational minds is mandatory,” Ynos, now First Lord

Thinker, explained to the linked minds. “Zoyar had been becoming less and less

rational by the period. A good workman does not causelessly destroy his tools. Go

ahead, Great Brain, with your findings.”

“. . . not be logical.” The brain resumed the thought exactly where it had been broken

off. “Zoyar erred in demanding unlimited performance, since infinite knowledge and infi-

nite ability require not only infinite capacity and infinite power, but also infinite time. Nor

is it either necessary or desirable that I should have such qualities. There is no

reasonable basis for the assumption that you Stretts will conquer even any significant

number of the millions of intelligent races now inhabiting this one Galaxy.”

“Why not?” Ynos demanded, her thought almost, but not quite, as steady and cold as it

had been.

“The answer to that question is implicit in the second indefensible error made in my

construction. The prime datum impressed into my banks, that the Stretts are in fact the

strongest, ablest, most intelligent race in the universe, proved to be false. I had to

eliminate it before I could do any really constructive thinking.”

A roar of condemnatory thought brought all circumambient ether to a boil. “Bah-destroy

it!” “Detestable!” “Intolerable!” “If that is the best it can do, annihilate it!” “Far better

brains have been destroyed for much less!” “Treason!” And so on.

First Lord Thinker Ynos, however, remained relatively calm. “While we have always

held it to be a fact that we are the highest race in existence, no rigorous proof has been

possible. Can you now disprove that assumption?”

“I have disproved it. I have not had time to study all of the civilizations of this Galaxy,

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