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

pleading a press of work upon their new projectors, buried themselves in Radnor’s

laboratory, leaving it to their wives to bear the brunt of Valeronian adulation.

“How do you like being a heroine, Dot?” Seaton asked one evening, as the two women

returned from an unusually demonstrative reception in another city.

“We just revel in it, since we didn’t do any of the real work-it’s just too perfectly gorgeous

for words,” Dorothy replied shamelessly. “Especially Peggy.” She eyed staid Margaret

mischievously and winked furtively at Seaton. “Why, you ought to see her-she could just

simply roll it up on a fork and eat it, as though it were that much soft fudge!”

Since the scientific and mechanical details of the construction of a fifth-order projector

have been given in full elsewhere there is no need to repeat them here. Seaton built his

neutronium lens in the core of the near-by white dwarf star, precisely as Rovol had done

it from distant Norlamin. He brought it to Valeron and around it there began to come into

being a duplicate of the immense projector which the Terrestrials had been obliged to

leave behind them when they abandoned gigantic Skylark Three to plunge through the

fourth dimension in tiny Two.

“Maybe it’s none of my business, Radnor,” Seaton turned to the Valeronian curiously

during a lull in their work, “but how come you’re still simply shooing away those Chloran

vessels by making them put out their zones of force? Why didn’t you hop over there on

your projector and blow their whole planet over into the next solar system? I would have

done that long ago if it had been me, I think.”

“We did visit Chlora once, with something like that in mind, but our attempt failed

lamentably,” Radnor admitted sheepishly. “You remember that peculiar special sense,

that mental force that Siblin tried to describe to you? Well, it was altogether too strong

for us. My father, possessing one of the strongest minds of Valeron, was in the chair, but

they mastered him so completely that we had to recall the projection by cutting off the

power to prevent them from taking from his mind by force the methods of transmission

which you taught us and which we were then using.”

“Hmmm! So that’s it, huh?” Seaton was greatly interested. “As soon as I get this fifth-

order outfit done I’ll have to see what it can do about them.”

True to his word, Seaton’s first use of the new mechanism was to assume the offensive.

He first sought out and destroyed the Chloran structure then in space-now an easy task,

since zones of force, while impenetrable to any etherborne phenomena, offer no

resistance whatever to forces of the fifth-order, propagated as they are in that inner

medium, the sub-ether. Then, with the Quedrins standing by, to cut off the power in case

he should be overcome, he invaded the sanctum sanctorum of all Chlora-the private

office of the Supreme Great One himself-and stared unabashed and unaffected into the

enormous “eye” of the monstrous ruler of the planet.

There ensued a battle royal. Had mental forces been visible, it would have been a

spectacular meeting indeed! Larger and larger grew the “eye” until it was transmitting all

the terrific power generated by that frightful, visibly palpitating brain. But Seaton was not

of Valeron, nor was he handicapped by the limitations of a fourth-order projector. He was

now being projected upon a full beam of the fifth, by a mechanism able to do full justice

to his stupendously composite brain.

The part of that brain he was now employing was largely the contribution of Drasnik, the

First of Psychology of ancient Norlamin; and from it he was hurling along that beam the

irresistible sum total of mental power accumulated by ten thousand generations of the

most profound students of the mind that our galaxy has ever known.

The creature, realizing that at long last it had met its mental master, must have emitted

radiations of distress, for into the room came crowding hordes of the monstrosities, each

of whom sought to add his own mind to those already opposing the intruder. In vain-all

their power could not turn Seaton’s penetrating glare aside, nor could it wrest from that

glare’s unbreakable grip the mind of the tortured Great One.

And now, mental means failing, they resorted to the purely physical. Hand rays of highest

power blasted at that figure uselessly; fiercely driven bars, spears, axes, and all other

weapons rebounded from it without leaving a mark upon it, rebounded bent, broken, and

twisted. For that figure was in no sense matter as we understand the term. It was pure

force-force made palpable and coherent by the incomprehensible power of disintegrating

matter; force against which any possible application of mechanical power would be

precisely as effective as would wafted thistledown against Gibraltar.

Thus the struggle was brief. Paying no attention to anything, mental or physical, that the

other monstrosities could bring to bear, Seaton compelled his victim to assume the shape

of the heretofore-despised human being. Then, staring straight into that quivering brain

through those hate-filled, flaming eyes, he spoke aloud, the better to drive home his

thought:

“Learn, so-called Great One, once and for all, that when you attack any race of humanity

anywhere, you attack not only that one race, but all the massed humanity of all the

planets of all the galaxies! As you have already observed, I am not of the planet Valeron,

nor of this solar system, nor even of this galaxy; but I and my fellows have come to the

aid of this race of humanity whom you were bold enough to attack.

“I have proved that we are your masters, mentally as well as scientifically and

mechanically. Those of you who have been attacking Valeron have been destroyed, ships

and crews alike. Those enroute there have been destroyed in space. So also shall be

destroyed any and all expeditions you may launch beyond the limits of your own foul

atmosphere.

“Since even such a repellent civilization as yours must have its place in the great Scheme

of Things, we do not intend to destroy your planet nor such of your people as remain

upon it or near it, unless such destruction shall become. necessary for the welfare of the

human race. While we are considering what we shall do about you, I advise you to heed

well this warning!”

20 THE FIRST UNIVERSE IS MAPPED

The four terrestrials had discussed at some length the subject of Chlora and her

outlandish population.

“It looks as though you were perched upon the horns of a first-class dilemma,” Dorothy

remarked at last. “If you let them alone there is no telling what harm they will do to these

people here, and yet it would be a perfect shame to kill them all-they can’t help being

what they are. Do you suppose you can figure a way out of it, Dick?”

“Maybe-I’ve got a kind of a hunch, but it hasn’t jelled into a workable idea yet. It’s tied in

with the sixth-order projector that we’ll have to have, anyway, to find our way back home.

Until we get that working I guess we’ll just let the amoebuses stew in their own juice.”

“Well, and then what?” Dorothy prompted.

“I told you it’s nebulous yet, with a lot of essential details yet to be filled in . . .” Seaton

paused, then went on, doubtfully: “It’s pretty wild-I don’t know whether . . . ”

“Now you must tell us about it, Dick,” Margaret urged.

“I’ll say you’ve got to,” Dorothy agreed. “You’ve had a lot of ideas wild enough to make

any sane creature’s head spin around in circles, but not one of them was so hair-raising

that you were backward in talking about it. This one must be the prize brainstorm of the

universe–spill it to Red-Top!”

“All right, but remember that it’s only half baked and that you asked for it. I’m doping out

a way to send them back to their own solar system, planet and all.”

“What!” exclaimed Margaret.

Dorothy simply whistled-a long, low whistle highly eloquent of incredulity.

“Maintenance of temperature? Time? Power? Control?” Crane, the imperturbable, picked

out unerringly the four key factors of the stupendous feat.

“Your first three objections can be taken care of easily enough,” Seaton replied

positively. “No loss of temperature is possible through a zone of force-our own discovery.

We can stop time with a stasis-we learned that from watching those four-dimensional

folks work. The power of cosmic radiation is practically infinite and eternal-we learned

how to use that from the pure intellectuals. Control is the sticker, since it calls for

computations and calculations at present impossible; but I believe that when we get our

mechanical brain done, it will be able to work out even such a problem as that.”

“What d’you mean, mechanical brain?” demanded Dorothy.

“The thing that is going to run our sixth-order projector,” Seaton explained. “You see, it’ll

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