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

still? He had not for an instant lost control of that!-at the ready. “What in Japnonk’s

rankest hell was that?”

“X-plosive shell,” Seaton said, his voice as hard as his eyes. “This time I came loaded

for bear. Now we’ll mop up and find out what’s been going on. I gather, sir, that your two

platoon leaders were in on it?”

“Yes. It’s a shame I had to kill ’em without asking ’em a few questions.” He did not

explain that he had had neither the time in which nor the weapon with which merely to

wound them seriously enough so that neither of them could fight back with any sort of

weapon. There was no need.

“That won’t make too much difference.” Seaton looked around; first at his own crew and

then at the guards, half of whom were down. Medics and first-aid men were rushing in

to work on them. He looked again, more closely, at his people and at Prenk and Kay-

Lee. Not one of them, apparently, had even been scratched.

That, however, was logical. The mercenaries were hardtrained fighting men, shooting

`was their business. Hence the attackers’ orders had been to shoot the guards first, and

there had been no time to evaluate the actual situation and to change the plan of

attack. Hence, as far as anyone knew, not a single bullet had been aimed at the far end

of the room.

Seaton took a pair of headsets out of his pocket and applied one of them, first to one of

the two lieutenants’ heads, then to the other.

“Uh-huh,” he grunted then. “That ape didn’t know too much, but this one was going to

be the new captain-general. I suppose you’ve got a recorder, Ree-Toe?”

“I’ll get it, sir!” Kay-Lee exclaimed; and Prenk, eyes bulging, gasped:

“Don’t tell me you can read a dead brain, sir!”

“Oh, yes. They keep their charges, sometimes for days.’

Kay-Lee handed Seaton a microphone then, and he spoke into it for ten minutes the

while three Rayseenian faces went through gamuts of emotion; each culminating in the

same expression of joyous satisfaction.

When Seaton paused for breath Prenk said in awe, “That machine is certainly a

something . . . I don’t suppose . . .” He stopped.

“I do suppose, yes. I’ll give you a few sets, with blueprints, and show you how they

work,” and Seaton went on with his reading.

A few minutes later he cut off the mike and said, “That ape over there,” he pointed, “is

one of the Big Wheels. Have someone latch onto him, Ree-Toe; we’ll read him next.

He’s one you’ll be really interested in, so I’ll hook you up in parallel with me so you can

get everything he knows into your own brain.” He took a third headset from his pocket

and began to adjust its settings, going on, “It takes a different set-up . . . so . . . and

goes on your head so.”

“That ape” was a fattish, sallow-faced man of fifty, who had been directing operations

from outside the room and had intended to stay outside it until everything was secure

within. He had been blown into the room and halfway along its length by the force of the

blasts. He was pretty badly smashed up, but he was beginning to regain consciousness

and was weakly trying to get to his feet.

This unlucky wight was a mine of information indeed, but Prenk stopped the mining

operation after only a couple of minutes of digging.

“Sy-By,” he said. “Two more of your officers you can shoot.” He gave two names. “Then

come back here with some men you think you can trust and we’ll test ’em to make sure.

By that time I’ll have a list of people for you to round up and bring in for examination.”

There is no need to follow any farther the Premier’s progress in cleaning up his planet.

In fact, only one more incident that occurred there is of interest here-one that occurred

while Seaton and Dorothy were getting ready for bed in one of the suites of honor. She

put both arms around him suddenly; he pressed her close.

“Dick, I belonged there. Beside you. Every fiber of my being belonged there. That was

exactly where I belonged.”

“I know you did, sweet. I’ll have to admit it. But . . .”

She put her hand over his mouth. “But nothing, my dearest. No buts. I’ve killed rats and

rattlesnakes, and that wasn’t any different. Not a bit different in any way.”

Of the more than five thousand Fenachrone who had left their noisome home planet in

Sleemet’s flagship, almost seven hundred had died and more were dying.

It was not that the Llurdi were physically cruel to them or abused them in any way. They

didn’t. Nor were they kind; they were conspicuously and insultingly neutral and

indifferent to them. Conspicuous and insulting, that is, to the hypersensitive minds of

the captives. In their own minds, the Llurdi were acting strictly according to logic. Every

item of the subjects’ environment duplicated precisely its twin on the subjects’ home

world. What more could logically be done? Nothing.

The Llurdi observed the mental anguish of the Fenachrone, of course, and recorded

their emotions quite accurately, but with no emotional reactions whatever of their own.

Practically all emotions were either illogical or unsane, or both.

To the illogical and unsane Fenachrone, however-physically, mentally, intellectually and

psychologically-the situation was intolerable; one that simply could not be endured.

They were proud, haughty, intolerant; their race had always been so. Since time

immemorial it had been bred into their innermost consciousnesses that they were the

RACE SUPREME-destined unquestionably to be the absolute rulers of all things living

or yet to live throughout all the transfinite reaches of the Cosmic All.

Holding this belief with every fiber of their beings, they had been plunged instantly into a

condition of complete, utter helplessness.

Their vessel could not fight. While it was intact except for its tail-section and its power-

pods, its every offensive projector was burned out; useless. Nor could they fight

personally, either physically or mentally. Their physical strength, enormous as it was,

was of no avail against the completely logical, completely matter-of-fact minds of the

Llurdi.

Most galling condition of all, the Fenachrone were not treated as enemies; nor as

menaces or threats; nor even as intelligent entities whose knowledges and abilities

might be worthy of notice. These things were observed and recorded, to be sure, but

only as component parts of a newly discovered class of objects, the Fenachrone; a

class of objects that happened to be alive. The Fenachrone were neither more nor less

noteworthy than were birds or barnacles.

Sleemet, no longer young and perhaps the proudest and most intractable and most

intransigent of the lot, could not endure that treatment very long; but he did -not bend.

The old adage “Where there’s life there’s hope,” simply is not true where such as the

Llurdi and the Fenachrone are concerned. Sleemet lost all hope and broke; broke

almost completely down.

He stopped eating. That did not bother the Llurdi in any way. Why should it? They were

neither squeamish nor humane, any more than they were cruel or vindictive. The fact

that certain of these creatures stopped taking nourishment under certain conditions was

merely a datum to be observed and recorded.

But since Sleemet was big and strong, even for a Fenachrone, and had previously

eaten very well indeed, it took him a long time to die. And as he weakened-as the

bindings between flesh and spirit loosened more and ever more -he regressed more

and ever more back into the youth of his race. Back and back. Still farther back; back

into its very childhood; back to a time when his remote ancestors ate their meat alive

and communicated with each other, sometimes by grunts and gestures, but more often

by means of a purely mental faculty that was later to evolve into the power of ocular

hypnosis.

Half conscious or less of his surroundings but knowing well that death was very near,

Sleemet half-consciously sent out his race’s ages-old mental message-in-extremity of

the dying.

Marc C: DuQuesne knew vastly more about the Fenachrone than did any other man

alive, not excluding Richard Seaton. He and Seaton were, as far as is known, the only

two men ever to meet Fenachrone mind to mind and live through the experience; but

DuQuesne had been in thoughthelmet contact with a Fenachrone much longer and

much more intimately and very much more interestedly than Seaton ever had-because

of the tremendous intrinsic differences between the personalities of the two men.

Seaton, after having crippled a war-vessel of the Fenachrone, had pinned its captain

against a wall with so many beams of force that he could not move his head and could

scarcely move any other part of his monstrous body. Then, by means of a pair of

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