Skylark Vol 4 – Skylark DuQuesne – E.E. Doc Smith

After the meeting was over Kay-Lee Barlo came up to Seaton. She now bore herself as

though she had been born an Exalted; her ex-boss’ pistol swung jauntily at one very

female hip as she walked. As she came up to him and took both his hands in hers,

standing so close to him that her upstanding, outstanding hair-do almost tickled his

nose, it became evident that her weapon had been fired quite recently. She wore no

perfume, and the faint but unmistakable acrid odor of burned smokeless powder still

clung to her hair.

“Oh, Ky-El!” she exclaimed, equal to equal now. “I’ll simply never be able to thank you

enough. Nor will all Ray-See-Nee. This world will be an entirely different place to live on

hereafter.”

“I sincerely hope so, Kay-Lee.” Seaton smiled into the girl’s eager, expressive face.

“Ray-See-Nee is lucky to have had as strong, able and just a man as Ree-Toe Prenk to

take over.”

“As you said a while back, `You can say that again.’ He’s all of that. What he’s done

already is marvelous. But everyone knows-he does, too, he’s put you up on a pedestal

a mile high-that it’s you who put him in the saddle. That’s what I wanted mostly to tell

you. Also, I wanted to ask you-” she paused and flushed slightly-“you’ll forget, won’t you

please, what I said about that louse’s brains? I didn’t mean that, really; I’m not the type

to cherish a grudge like that. I was a little . . . well, I’d been a little put out with him, just

before you came in.” With which masterpiece of understatement she gave his hands

another vigorous, friendly squeeze and, swinging around, walked hip-wiggling out of the

room.

She thereupon took certain steps and performed certain actions which would have

astonished Seaton very much, had he known about them. But he did not-until much

later.

Prenk came up to the Skylarkers a few minutes later. He shook hands with each of the

off-worlders; thanked them in rounded phrases. “I would like very much to have you

stay here indefinitely, friends,” he concluded, “but I know of course that that is

impossible. If all the resources of the world could be devoted to the project and if all our

technical men could work on it undetected for a year, we could not build anything able

to withstand those Chlorans’ beams.”

“We can’t either. Not here,” Seaton said. “That’s why we have to go; but we’ll be back. I

don’t know when; but we’ll be back some day.”

“I’m sure you will: and may Great My-Ko-Ta ward you and cherish you as you build.”

Back on what was left of their worldlet, now reconditioned to the extent that it was not

likely to fall apart on the spot, and out in deep space once more, the Skylarkers began

efficiently and expertly to put the pieces of their victory together.

They had located the Enemy. They even had an operating covert base in Chloran

territory, to which they could return at any time. They had weapons which, in theory at

least, could cope with anything the Chlorans were likely to own.

Yet Seaton fretted. The weapons were there, but his control was not adequate; the

weapons had outgrown the control. Dealing with Chlorans was touchy business. You

wanted all the space you could get between you and them. Yet, at any operating range

which even Seaton, to say nothing of Crane and the others, considered safe, their

striking power was simply too erratic to depend on.

“It’s a bust,” Seaton said gloomily. “Course, if worst came to worst I could go back to

undercover methods. Smuggle in a bomb, maybe-just to throw their main centers off

balance while the rest of you hit them with all we’ve got. I could stow away aboard one

of those ore-scows taking the booty off Ray-See-Nee easily enough-”

“You talk like a man with a paper nose,” Dorothy scoffed. “I have a picture of that

expedition-of you in armor, with air-tanks strapped on your back and lugging an

underwater camera or projector around. Un-noticed . . . I don’t think.”

And Dunark added, “And since you haven’t got any idea of what to look for, you’d have

to lug around a full analsynth set-up. A couple of tons of stuff. Uh-uh.”

Seaton grinned, unperturbed. “That’s what I was coming to. Getting in would be easy,

but doing anything wouldn’t. And neither would getting out. But Mart, we’ve chopped

one horn off of the dilemma, but we haven’t even touched the other. We’ve got to

master that fourth-dimension rig; and we’re not even close. It’s a matter of kind, not

merely of degree.”

“I can’t see that. If so, we could not have warded off their attack at all.”

“Oh, I didn’t mean the energies themselves; it’s the control of that much stuff.

Synchronization, phasing in, combination, and so forth. Getting such stuff as that

closely enough together. Look, Mart. This bit that we’ve got left of the Valeron is stuffed

with machinery practically to the skin. She’s so small, relatively, that you wouldn’t think

there’d be any trouble meshing in machines from various parts of her. But there is.

Plenty. It never showed up before because we never had to use a fraction of our total

power before, but it showed up plenty back there. My beam was loose as ashes, and

I’ve figured out why.

“Sixth-order stuff moves as many times faster than light as light does faster than a

snail-maybe more. But it still takes a little time to get from one machine to another,

inside even as small a globe as this is. See?”

Crane frowned in thought. “I see. I also see what the difficulties would be in anything

large enough and strong enough to attack the Chlorans. It would mean timing each

generator and each element of each projector; and each with a permissible variation of

an infinitesimal fraction of a microsecond. That, of course, means Rovol and Caslor.” “I

suppose it does . . . unless we can figure out an easier, faster way . . . I don’t know

whether the Chlorans have got anything like that or not, but they’ve got something.

There ought to be some way of snitching it off of them.”

“Why must they have?” Dunark demanded. “It’s probably just a matter of size. They

have a whole planet to fortify. Dozens of ’em if they want to. So it doesn’t have to be a

matter of refinement at all. Just brutal, piled up, overwhelming power.”

“Could be,” Seaton agreed. “If so, we can’t match it, since the Valeron was as big as

she could be and still have a factor of safety of two point two.” He paused in thought,

then went on, “But with such refinement, we could take a planet no matter how loaded it

was . . . I think. So maybe we’d better take off for Norlamin, at that.”

“One thing we should do first, perhaps,” Dorothy suggested. “Find out what that

DuQuesne really did. He has me worried.”

“Maybe we should at that,” Seaton agreed. “I’d forgotten all about the big black ape.”

It was easy enough to find the line along which DuQuesne had traveled; the plug-chart

was proof that he had not lied about that. They reached without incident the

neighborhood of the point DuQuesne had marked on the chart. Seaton sent out a

working projection of the device that, by intercepting and amplifying light-waves

traversing open space, enabled him actually to see events that had happened in the

not-too distant past.

He found the scene he wanted. He studied it, analyzed and recorded it. Then:

“He lied to me almost a hundred and eighty degrees,” Seaton said. “That beam came

from that galaxy over there.” He jerked a thumb. “The alien who bothered him was in

that galaxy. That much I’ll buy. But it doesn’t make sense that he’d go there. That alien

was nobody he wanted to monkey with, that’s for dead sure. So where did he meet the

Jelmi, if not in that galaxy?”

“On the moon, perhaps,” Margaret said.

“Possibly. I’ll compute it . . . no, the timing isn’t right–2′ Seaton thought for a moment-

“but there’s no use guessing. That galaxy may be the first place to look for sign; but I’ll

bet my case buck it’ll be a long, cold hunt. I’d like awfully well to have that gizmo—flip

bombs past the Chlorans’ screens and walls with it . . .”

“From a distance greater than their working range?” Crane asked.

“That’s so, too . . . or maybe so, at that, chum. Who knows what you can do through the

fourth? But it looks as though our best bet is to beat it to Norlamin, rebuild this wreck,

and tear into that business of refinement of synchronization. So say you all?”

So said they all and Seaton, flipping on full-power sixth order drive, set course for

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