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

need it. Since these small ships are designed for purely local scout work, though, they

are comparatively slow and would certainly be destroyed in any such cosmic explosion

as is manifestly a possibility. That possibility is very remote, it is true, but it should be

taken into consideration.”

“So what? You’re talking yourself around a circle, right back to where you started from.”

“Only, considering the thing from all angles.” DuQuesne was unruffled. “We have lots of

time, since it will take them quite a while to perfect this formation. To finish the summing

up-we want to use this vessel, but is it safe? It is. Why? Because the Fenachrone, having

had atomic energy themselves for a long time, are thoroughly familiar with its possibilities

and have undoubtedly perfected screens through which. no such bomb could penetrate.

“Furthermore, we can install the highspeed drive in this ship in a few days-I gave you all

the dope on it over the educator, you know-so that we’ll be safe, whatever happens.

That’s the safest plan, and it will work. So you move the stores and our most necessary

personal belongings in here while I’m figuring out an orbit for the Violet. We don’t want

her anywhere near us, and yet we want her to be within reaching distance while we are

piloting this scout ship of ours to the place where she is supposed to be in Plan X821 S.”

“What are you going to do that for-to give them a chance to knock us off?”

“No. I need some time to study these brains, and it will take some time for that battleship

mother ship of ours to get into her assigned position, where we can steal her most

easily.” DuQuesne, however, did not at once remove his headset, but remained standing,

where he was, silent and thoughtful.

“Uh-huh,” agreed Loring. “I’m thinking the same thing you are. Suppose that it is Seaton

that’s got them all hot and bothered this way?”

“The thought has occurred to me several times, and I have considered it at length,”

DuQuesne admitted at-last. “However, I have concluded that it is not Seaton. For if it is,

he must have a lot more stuff than I think he has. I do not believe that he can possibly

have learned that much in the short time he has had to work in. I may be wrong, of

course; but the immediately necessary steps toward the seizure of that battleship remain

unchanged whether I am right or wrong; whether or not Seaton was the cause of this

disturbance.”

The conversation definitely at an end, Loring again encased himself in his space suit and

set to work. For hours he labored, silently and efficiently, at transferring enough of their

Earthly possessions and stores to render possible an extended period of living aboard

the vessel of the Fenachrone.

He had completed that task and was assembling the apparatus and equipment

necessary for the rebuilding of the power plant before DuQuesne finished the long and

complex computations involved in determining the direction and magnitude of the force

required to give the Violet the exact trajectory he desired. The problem was finally solved

and checked, however, and DuQuesne rose to his feet, closing his book of nine-place

logarithms with a snap.

“All done with the Violet, Doll?” he asked, donning his armor.

“Yes ”

“Fine! I’ll go aboard and push her off, after we do a little stage-setting here. Take that

body there-I don’t need it any more, since he didn’t know much of anything, anyway and

toss it into the nose compartment. Then shut that bulkhead door, tight. I’m going to drill a

couple of holes through there from the Violet before I give her the gun.”

“I see-going to make us look disabled, whether we are or not, huh?”

“Exactly! We’ve got to have a good excuse for our visirays being out of order. I can make

reports all right on the communicator, and send and receive code messages and orders,

but we certainly couldn’t stand a close-up inspection on a visiplate. Also, we’ve got to

have some kind of an excuse for signaling to and approaching our mother battleship. We

will have been hit and punctured by a meteorite. Pretty thin excuse, but it probably will

serve for as long a time as we will need.”

After DuQuesne had made sure that the small compartment in the prow of the vessel

contained nothing of use to them, the body of one of the Fenachrone was thrown

carelessly into it, the air-tight bulkhead was closed and securely locked, and the chief

marauder stepped into the airlock.

“As soon as I get her exactly on course and velocity, I’ll step out into space and you can

pick me up;” he directed briefly, and was gone.

In the Violet’s engine room DuQuesne released the anchoring attractor beams and

backed off to a few hundred yards’ distance. He spun a couple of wheels briefly, pressed

a switch, and from the Violet’s heaviest needle-ray projector there flashed out against

the prow of the scout patrol a pencil of incredibly condensed destruction.

Dunark, the crown prince of Kondal, had developed that stabbing ray as the culminating

ultimate weapon of ten thousand years of Osnomian warfare: and, driven by even the

comparatively feeble energies known to the denizens of the Green System before

Seaton’s advent, no known substance had been able to resist for more than a moment its

corrosively, annihilatingly poignant thrust.

And now this furious stiletto of pure energy, driven by the full power of four hundred

pounds of disintegrating atomic copper, at this point-blank range, was hurled against the

mere inch of transparent material which comprised the skin of the tiny cruiser. DuQuesne

expected no opposition, for with a beam less potent by far he bad consumed utterly a

vessel built of arenak-arenak, that Osnomian synthetic which is five hundred times as

strong, tough, and hard as Earth’s strongest, toughest, and hardest alloy steel.

Yet that annihilating needle, of force struck that transparent surface and rebounded from

it in scintillating torrents of fire. Struck and rebounded,,. struck and clung; boring in

almost imperceptibly as its irresistible energy tore apart, electron by electron, the

surprisingly obdurate substance of the cruiser’s wall. For that substance.. was the

ultimate synthetic-the one limiting material possessing the utmost measure of strength,

hardness, tenacity, and rigidity theoretically possible to any substance built up from the

building blocks of ether-borne electrons. This substance, developed by the master

scientists of the Fenachrone, was in fact identical with the Norlaminian synthetic metal,

inoson, from which Rovol and his aids had constructed for Seaton his gigantic ship of

space-Skylark Three.

For five long minutes DuQuesne held that terrific beam against the point of attack, then

shut it off; for it had consumed less than half the thickness of the scout patrol’s outer

skin. True, the focal area of the energy was an almost invisibly violet glare of

incandescence, so intensely hot that the concentric shading off through blinding white,

yellow, and bright-red heat brought the zone of dull red far down the side of the vessel;

but that awful force had had practically no effect upon the space worthiness of the

stanch little craft.

“No use, Loring!” DuQuesne spoke calmly into the transmitter inside his face-plate. True

scientist that he was, he neither expressed nor felt anger or bafflement when an idea

failed to work, but abandoned it promptly and completely, without rancor or repining. “No

possible meteorite could puncture that shell. Stand by!”

He inspected the power meters briefly, made several readings through the filar

micrometer of number six visiplate, and checked the vernier readings of the great circles

of the gyroscopes against the figures in his notebook. Then, assured that the Violet was

following precisely the predetermined course, he entered the airlock, waved a bloated

arm at the watchful Loring, and coolly stepped off into space. The heavy outer door

clanged shut behind him, and the globular ship of space rocketed onward; while

DuQuesne fell with a sickening acceleration toward the mighty planet of the Fenachrone,

so many thousands of miles below.

That fall did not long endure. Loring, now a space pilot second to none, had held his

vessel even with the Violet; matching exactly her course, pace, and acceleration at a

distance of barely a hundred feet. He had cut off all his power as DuQuesne’s right foot

left the Osnomian vessel, and now falling man and plunging scout ship plummeted

downward together at the same mad pace; the man drifting slowly toward the ship

because of the slight energy of his step into space from the Violet’s side and beginning

slowly to turn over as he fell. So good had been Loring’s spacemanship that the scout did

not even roll; DuQuesne was still opposite her starboard airlock when Loring stood in its

portal and tossed a space line to his superior. This line-a small, tightly stranded cable of

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