Skylark Vol 3 – Skylark of Valeron – E E. Doc Smith

slower she drove onward, the bright green star about which she was circling resolving

itself first into a group of bright-green points and finally into widely spaced, tiny green

suns.

Although facing the completely unknown and about to do battle, with their wits certainly,

and with their every weapon possibly, against overwhelming odds, neither man showed

or felt either nervousness or disorganization. Loring was a fatalist. It was DuQuesne’s

party; he was merely the hired help. He would do his best when the time came to do

something; until that time came there was nothing to worry about.

DuQuesne’s, on the other hand, was the repose of conscious power. He had laid his

plans as best he could with the information then at hand. If conditions changed he would

change those plans; otherwise he would drive through with them ruthlessly, as was his

wont. In the meantime he awaited he knew not what, poised, cool, and confident.

Since both men were really expecting the unexpected, neither betrayed surprise when

something that was apparently a man materialized before them in the air of the control

room. His skin was green, as was that of all the inhabitants of the Green System. He

was tall and well-proportioned, according to Earthly standards, except for his head,

which was overlarge and particularly massive above the eyes and backward from the

ears. He was evidently of advanced years, for his face was seamed and wrinkled, .and

both his long, heavy hair and his yard-long, square-cut beard were a snowy white, only

faintly tinged with green.

The Norlaminian projection thickened instantly, with none of the oscillation and “hunting”

which had been so noticeable in the one which had visited Skylark Two a few months

earlier, for at that comparatively short range the fifth-order keyboard handling it could

hold a point, however moving, as accurately as a Terrestrial photographic telescope

holds a star. And in the moment of materialization of his projection the aged Norlaminian

spoke.

“I welcome you to Norlamin, Terrestrials,” he greeted the two marauders with the

untroubled serenity and calm courtesy of his race. “Since you are quite evidently of the

same racial stock as our very good friends the doctors Seaton and Crane, and since you

are traveling in a ship built by the Osnomians, I assume that you speak and understand

the English language which I am employing. I suppose that you are close friends of

Seaton and Crane and that you have come to learn why they have not communicated

with you of late?”

Self-contained as DuQuesne was, this statement almost took his breath away, squaring

almost perfectly as it did with the tale he had so carefully prepared. He did not show his

amazed gratification, however, but spoke as gravely and as courteously as the other had

done:

“We are very glad indeed to see you, sir; particularly since we know neither the name

nor the location of the planet for which we are searching. Your assumptions are correct

in every particular save one . . .”

“You do not know even the name of Norlamin?” the Green scientist interrupted. “How can

that be? Did not Dr. Seaton send the projections of all his party to you upon Earth, and

did he not discuss matters with you?”

“I was about to explain that.” DuQuesne lied instantly, boldly, and convincingly. “We

heard that he had sent a talking, three-dimensional picture of his group to Earth, but after

it had vanished all the real information that any one seemed to have obtained was that

they were here in the Green System somewhere, but not upon Osnome, and that they

had been taught much of science. Mrs. Seaton -did most of the talking, I gather, which

may account for the dearth of pertinent details.

“Neither my friend Loring, here, nor I-I am Stewart Donovan, by the way–saw the

picture, or rather, projection. You assumed that we are Seaton’s close friends. We are

engineers in his company, but we have not the honor of his personal acquaintance. His

scientific knowledge was needed so urgently that it was decided that we should come

out here after him, since the chief of construction had beard nothing from him for so

long.”

“I see.” A shadow passed over the seamed green face. “I am very sorry indeed at what I

have to tell you. We did not report anything of it to Earth because of the panic that would

have ensued. We shall of course send the whole story as soon as we can learn what

actually did take place and can deduce therefrom the probable sequence of events yet to

occur.”

“What’s that-an accident? Something happened to Seaton?” DuQuesne snapped. His

heart leaped in joy and relief, but his face showed only strained anxiety and deep

concern. “He isn’t here now? Surely nothing serious could have happened to him.”

“Alas, young friend, none of us knows yet what really occurred. It is highly probable,

however, that their vessel was destroyed in intergalactic space by forces about which we

have as yet been able to learn nothing; forces directed by some intelligence as yet to us

unknown. There is a possibility that Seaton and his companions escaped in the vessel

you knew as Skylark Two, but so far we have not been able to find them.

“But enough of talking; you are strained and weary and you must rest. As soon as your

vessel was detected the beam was transferred to me-the student Rovol, perhaps the

closest to Seaton of any of my race-so that I could give you this assurance. With your

permission I shall direct upon your controls certain forces which shall so govern your

flight that you shall alight safely upon the grounds of my laboratory in a few minutes more

than twelve hours of your time, without any further attention or effort upon your part.

“Further explanations can wait until we meet in the flesh. Until that time, my friends, do

nothing save rest. Eat and sleep without care or fear, for your flight and your landing

shall be controlled with precision. Farewell!”

The projection vanished instantaneously, and Loring expelled his pent-up breath in an

explosive sigh.

“Whew! But what a break, chief, what a . . .”

He was interrupted by DuQuesne, who spoke calmly and quietly, yet insistently: “Yes, it

is a singularly fortunate circumstance that the Norlaminians detected us and recognized

us; it probably would have required weeks for us to have found their planet unaided.”

DuQuesne’s lightning mind found a way of covering up his companion’s betraying

exclamation and sought some way of warning him that could not be overheard. “Our

visitor was right in saying that we need food and rest badly, but before we eat let us put

on the headsets and bring the record of our flight up to date it will take only a minute or

two.”

“What’s biting you, chief?” thought Loring as soon as the power was on. “We didn’t have

any. . . ”

“Plenty!” DuQuesne interrupted him viciously. “Don’t you realize that they can probably

hear every word we say, and that they can see every move we make, even in the dark?

In fact, they may be able to read thoughts, for all I know; so think straight from now on,

if you never did before! Now let’s finish up this record.”

He then impressed upon a tape the record of everything that had just happened. They

ate. Then they slept soundly the first really untroubled sleep they had enjoyed for weeks.

And at last, exactly as the projection had foretold, the Violet landed without a jar upon

the spacious grounds beside the laboratory of Rovol, the foremost physicist of Norlamin.

When the door of the space ship opened, Rovol in person was standing before it, waiting

to welcome the voyagers and to escort them to his dwelling. But DuQuesne, pretending a

vast impatience, would not be dissuaded from the object of his search merely to satisfy

the Norlaminian amenities of hospitality and courtesy. He poured forth his prepared story

in a breath, concluding with a flat demand that Rovol tell him everything he knew about

Seaton, and that he tell it at once.

“It would take far too long to tell you anything in words,” the ancient scientist replied

placidly. “In the laboratory, however, I can and will inform you fully in a few minutes

concerning everything that has happened.”

Utter stranger himself to deception in any form, as was his whole race, Rovol was easily

and completely deceived by the consummate acting, both physical and mental, of

DuQuesne and Loring. Therefore, as soon as the three had donned the headsets of the

wonderfully efficient Norlaminian educator, Rovol gave to the Terrestrial adventurers

without reserve his every mental image and his every stored fact concerning Seaton and

his supposedly ill-fated last voyage.

Even more clearly than as if he himself had seen them all happen, DuQuesne beheld and

understood Seaton’s visit to Norlamin, the story of the Fenachrone peril, the building of

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