Spacehounds of IPC by E E. Doc Smith

“All passengers and all members of the crew except lookouts on duty will

assemble immediately in Saloon Three to discuss a possible immediate rescue.”

The subject being one of paramount interest, it was a matter of minutes until the

full complement of two hundred men and women were in the main saloon, clinging to

hastily rigged hand lines, closely packed before the raised platform upon which were

King and Czuv, wired together with the peculiar Callistonian harnesses. To most of the

passengers, familiar with the humanity of three planets, the appearance of the stranger

brought no surprise; but many of them stared in undisguised amazement at his childish

body, his pale, almost colorless skin, his small, weak legs and arms, and his massive

head.

“Ladies and gentlemen!” Captain King opened the meeting. “I introduce to you

Captain Czuv, of the scout cruiser Bzarvk, of the only human race now living upon the

fourth large satellite of Jupiter, which satellite we know as Callisto. I am avoiding their

own names as much as possible, because they are almost unpronounceable in English

or Interplanetarian. This device that you see connecting us is a Callistonian thought

transformer, by means of which any two intelligent beings can converse without

language. Our situation is peculiar, and in order that you may understand fully what lies

ahead of us, the captain will now speak to you, through me— that is, what follows will

be spoken by Captain Czuv, of the Bzarvk, but he will be using my vocal organs.

“Friends from distant Tellus,” King’s voice went on, almost without a break, “I

greet you. I am glad, for your sake as well as our own, that our vessel was able to

destroy the hexan ship holding you captive, and whose crew would have killed you all

as soon as they had landed your vessel and had read your minds. I regret bitterly that

we can do so little for you, for only the representatives of a human civilization being

exterminated by a race of highly intelligent monsters can fully realize how desirable it is

for all the various races of humanity to assist and support each other. In order that you

may understand the situation it is necessary that I delve at some length into ancient

history, but we have ample time. In about . . .” he broke off, realizing that the two races

had no thought in common in the measure of time.

“One-half time of rotation of Great Planet upon axis ?” flashed from Czuv’s brain,

and “About five hours,” King’s mind flashed back.

“It will be about five hours before any steps can be taken, so that I feel justified in

using a brief period in explanation. In the evolution of the various forms of life upon

Callisto, two genera developed intelligence far ahead of all others.” One genus was the

human, as you and I; the other the hexan. This creature, happily unknown to you of the

planets nearer our common sun, is the product of an entirely different evolution. It is a

six-limbed animal, with a brain equal to our own—one perhaps in some ways superior to

our own. They have nothing in common with humanity, however; they have few of our

traits and fewer of our mental processes. Even we who have fought them so long can

scarcely comprehend the chambers of horror that are their minds. Even were I able to

paint a sufficiently vivid picture with words, you of Earth could not begin to understand

their utter ruthlessness and inhumanity, even among themselves. You would believe

that I was lying, or that my viewpoint was warped. I can say only that I hope most

sincerely that none of you will ever get better acquainted with them.

“Ages ago, then, the human and the hexan developed upon all four of the major

satellites of the Great Planet, which you know as Jupiter, and upon the north polar

region of Jupiter itself. By what means the two races came into being upon worlds so

widely separated in space we know not—we only know it to be the fact. Human life,

however, could not long endure upon Jupiter. The various human races, after many

attempts to meet conditions of life there by variations in type, fell before the hexans;

who, although very small in size upon the planet, thrived there amazingly. Upon the

three outer satellites humanity triumphed, and many hundreds of cycles ago the hexans

of those satellites were wiped out, save for an occasional tribe of savages of low

intelligence who lived in various undesirable portions of the three worlds. For ages then

there was peace upon Callisto. Here is the picture at that time—upon Jupiter the

hexans; upon lo hexans and humans, waging a ceaseless and relentless war of mutual

extermination; upon the three outer satellites humanity in undisturbed and unthreatened

peace. Five worlds, each ignorant of life upon any other.

“As I have said, the hexans of Jupiter were, and are, diabolically intelligent.

Driven probably by their desire to see what lay beyond their atmosphere of eternal

cloud, to the penetration of which their eyesight was attuned, they first perfected the

space-ship; and effected a safe landing, first upon the barren, airless moonlet nearest

them, and then upon fruitful lo. There they made common cause with the hexans

against the humans, and in a space of time Ionian humanity ceased to exist. Much

traffic and interbreeding followed between the hexans of Jupiter and those of lo,

resulting in time in a race intermediate in size between the parent stocks and equally at

home in the widely variant air pressures and gravities of planet and satellite. Soon their

astronomical instruments revealed the cities of Europa to their gaze, and as soon as

they discovered that the civilization of Europa was human they destroyed it utterly, with

the insatiable blood lust that is their heritage.

“In the meantime the human civilizations of Ganymede and Callisto had also

developed instruments of power. Observing the cities upon the other satellites, many

scientists studied intensively the problem of space navigation, and finally there was

some commerce between the two outer satellites at favorable times. Finally, vessels

were also sent to lo and to Europa, but none of them returned. Knowing then what to

expect, Ganymede and Callisto joined forces and prepared for war. But our science, so

long attuned to the arts of peace, had fallen behind lamentably in the devising of more

and ever more deadly instruments of destruction. Ganymede fell, and in her fall we read

our own doom. Abandoning our cities, we built anew underground. Profiting from

lessons learned full bloodily upon Ganymede, we resolved to prolong the existence of

the human race as long as possible.

“The hexans were, and are, masters of the physical sciences. They command

the spectrum in a way undreamed of. Their detectors reveal etheric disturbances at

unbelievable distances, and they have at their beck and call forces of staggering

magnitude. Therefore in our cities is no electricity save that which is wired, shielded,

and grounded; no broadcast radio; no source whatever of etheric disturbances save

light—and our walls are fields of force which we believe to be impenetrable to any

searching frequency capable of being generated. Now I am able to picture to you the

present.

“We are the last representatives of the human race in the Jovian planetary

system. Our every trace upon the surface has been obliterated. We are hiding in our

holes in the ground, coming out at night by stealth so that our burrows shall not be

revealed to the hexans. We are fighting for time in which our scientists may learn the

secrets of power— and fearing, each new day, that the enemy may have so perfected

their systems of rays that they can detect ‘us and destroy us, even in our underground

and heavily shielded retreats, by means of forces even more incomprehensible than

those they are now employing.

“Therefore, friends, you see how little we are able to do for you—we, a race

fighting for our very existence and doomed to extinction save for a miracle. We cannot

take you to Callisto, for it is besieged by the hexans and the driving forces of your

lifeboats, practically broadcast as they are, would be detected and we should all be

destroyed long before we could reach safety. Captain King and I have pondered long,

and have been able to see only one course of action. We are drifting at constant

velocity, using no power, and with all save the most vitally necessary machinery at rest.

Thus only may we hope to avoid detection during the next two hours. Our present

course will take us very close to Europa, which the hexans believe to be, like

Ganymede, entirely devoid of civilized life. Its original humanity was totally destroyed,

and all its civilized hexans are finding shelter from our torpedoes upon Jupiter until we

of Callisto shall likewise have been annihilated. The temperature of Europa will suit you.

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