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

Of that ultra mathematical dissertation Dunark understood not even the first sentence;

Sacner Carfon perhaps grasped dimly a concept here and there. The Norlaminians,

however, sat back in their seats, relaxed and smiling, their prodigious mentalities not only

absorbing greedily but assimilating completely the enormous doses of mathematical and

physical science being thrust upon them so rapidly. And when that epoch-making, that

almost unbelievable, tale was done, not one of the aged scientists even referred to the

tape of the recorder.

“Oh, wonderful-wonderful!” exclaimed Rovol in ecstasy, his transcendental

imperturbability broken at last. “Think of it! Our knowledge extended one whole order

farther in each direction, both into the small and into the large. Magnificent! And by one

brain, and that of a youth. Extraordinary! And we may now traverse universal space in

ordinary time, because that brain has harnessed the practically infinite power of cosmic

radiation, a power which exhausted the store of uranium carried by Skylark Three in forty

hours. Phenomenal! Stupendous!”

“But do not forget that the brain of that youth is a composite of many,” said Fodan

thoughtfully, “and that in it, among others, were yours and Drasnik’s. Seaton himself

ascribes to that peculiar combination his successful solution of the problem of the sixth

order. You know, of course, that I am in no sense belittling the native power of that brain.

I am merely suggesting that perhaps other noteworthy discoveries may be made by

superimposing brains in other, but equally widely divergent, fields of thought.”

“An interesting idea, truly, and one which may be fruitful of result,” assented Orlon, the

First of Astronomy, “but I would suggest that we waste no more time. I, for one, am

eager to behold with my own inner consciousness the vistas of the galaxies.”

Agreeing, the five white-bearded scientists seated themselves at the multiplex console of

their fifth-order installation and set happily to work. Their gigantic minds were undaunted

by the task they faced-they were only thrilled with interest at the opportunity of working

with magnitudes, distances, forces, objects, and events at the very contemplation of

which any ordinary human mind would quail.

Steadily and contentedly they worked on, while at the behest of their nimble and unerring

fingers there came into being the forces which were to build into their own vessel a

duplicate of the mechano-electrical brain which actuated and controlled the structure,

almost of planetary proportions, in which Seaton was even then hurtling toward them.

Hurtling with a velocity rapidly mounting to a value incalculable; driven by the power

liberated by the disintegrating matter of all the suns of all the galaxies of all the universes

of cosmic space!

22 TRAPPING THE INTELLECTUALS

With all their might of brain and skill of hand and with all the resources of their fifth-order

banks of forces, it was no small task for the Norlaminians to build the sixth-order

controlling system which their ship must have if they were to traverse universal space in

any time short of millenia. But finally it was done.

A towering mechano-electrical brain almost filled the midsection of their enormous sky

rover, the receptors and converters of the free energy of space itself had been installed,

and their intra-atomic space-drive, capable of developing an acceleration of only five

light-velocities, had been replaced by Seaton’s newly developed sixth-order cosmic-

energy drive which could impart to the ship and its entire contents, without jolt, jar, or

strain, any conceivable, almost any calculable, acceleration.

For many days the Norlaminian vessel had been speeding through the void at her frightful

maximum of power toward the Skylark of Valeron, which in turn was driving toward our

galaxy at the same mad pace. Braking down now, since only a few thousand light-years

of distance separated the hurtling fivers, Seaton materialized his image at the brain

control o ‘the smaller cruiser and thought into it for minutes.

“There, we’re all set!” In the control room of the Skylark Seaton laid aside his helmet and

wiped the perspiration from his forehead in sheer relief. “The trap is baited and ready to

spring-I’ve been scared to death for a week that they’d tackle us before we were ready

for them.”

“What difference would it have made?” asked Margaret curiously. “Since we have our

sixth-order screens out they couldn’t hurt us, could they?”

“No, Peg; but keeping them from hurting us isn’t enough -we’ve got to capture them. And

they’ll have to be almost directly between Rovol’s ship and ours to make that capture

possible. You see, we’ll have to send out from each vessel a hollow hemisphere of force

and to surround them. If we had only one ship, or if they don’t come between our two

ships, we can’t bottle them up, because they have exactly the same velocity of

propagation that our forces have.

“Also, you can see that our projector can’t work direct on more than a hemisphere

without cutting its own beams, and that we can’t work through relay stations because,

fast as relays are, the Intellectuals would get away while the relays were cutting in. Any

more questions?”

“Yes; I have one,” put in Dorothy. “You told us that this artificial brain of yours could do

anything that your own brain could think of, and here you’ve got it stuck already and have

to have two of them. How come?”

“Well, this is a highly exceptional case,” Seaton replied. “What I said would be true

ordinarily, but now, as I explained to Peg, it’s working against something that can think

and act just as quickly as I can.”

“I know, dear, I was just putting you on the spot a little. What are you using for bait?”

“Thoughts. We’re broadcasting them from a point midway between the two vessels.

They’re keen on investigating any sixth-order impulses they feel, you know-that’s why

we’ve kept all our stuff on tight beams heretofore, so that they probably couldn’t detect

it-so we’re sending out a highly peculiar type of thought, that we are pretty sure will bring

them in from wherever they are.”

“Let me listen to it, just for a minute?” she pleaded.

“W-e-I-I . . . I don’t know.” He eyed her dubiously. “Not for a minute-no. I haven’t even

tried to listen to the finished product, myself. Being of a type that not even a pure

intellectual can resist, they’d burn out any human brain in mighty short order. Maybe you

might for about a tenth of a second, though.”

He lowered a helmet over her expectant head and snatched it off again, but that moment

had been enough for Dorothy. Her violet eyes widened terribly in an expression

commingled of amazedly poignant horror and of dreadfully ecstatic fascination; her whole

body trembled uncontrollably.

“Dick-Dick!” she shrieked; then, recovering slowly: “How horrible-how ghastly-how

perfectly, exquisitely damnable! What is it? Why, I actually heard babies begging to be

born! And there were men who had died and gone to heaven and to hell; there were

minds that had lost their bodies and didn’t know what to do-were simply shrieking out

their agony, despair, and utter, unreasoning terror for the whole universe to hear! And

there were joys, pleasures, raptures, so condensed as to be almost as unbearable as

the tortures. And there were other things-awful, terrible, utterly indescribable and

unimaginable things! Oh, Dick, I was sure that I had gone stark, raving crazy!”

“Easy, dear,” Seaton reassured his overwrought wife. “All those things are really there,

and more. I told you it was bad medicine-that it would tear any human mind to pieces.”

Seaton paused, weighing in his mind how best to describe the utterly indescribable signal

that was being broadcast, then went on, choosing his words with care:

“All the pangs and all the ecstasies, all the thoughts and all the emotions of all evolution

of all things, animate and inanimate, are there; of all things that ever have existed from

the unknowable beginning of infinite time and of all things that ever shall exist until time’s

unknowable end. It covers all animate life, from the first stirring of that which was to

vitalize the first unicell in the slime of the first world ever to come into being in the

cosmos, to the last cognition of the ultimately last intelligent entity ever to be.

“Our present humanity was of course included, from before conception through birth,

through all of life, through death, and through the life beyond. It covers inanimate

evolution from the ultimate particle and wave, through the birth, life, death, and rebirth of

any possible manifestation of energy and of matter, up to and through the universe.

“Neither Mart nor I could do it all. We carried everything as far as we could, then the

Brain went through with it to its logical conclusion, which of course we could not reach.

Then the Brain systematized all the data and reduced it to a concentrated essence of

pure thought. It is that essence which is being broadcast and which will certainly attract

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