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Spacehounds of IPC by E E. Doc Smith

surprise attack, they would have been invulnerable and, hampered as they were by the

defenseless ends of what should have been an endless ring, the hexans took heavy toll.

The heptagons, massive and solidly braced as they were, and anchored by

tractor beams as well, shuddered and trembled throughout their mighty frames under

the impact of fiercely-driven pressors. Sullenly radiant green wall-screens flared brighter

and brighter as the Vorkulian absorbers and dissipators, mighty as they were, continued

more and more to overload; for there were being directed against them beams from the

entire remaining circumference of the stronghold. Every deadly frequency and

emanation known to the fiendish hexan intellect, backed by the full power of the city,

was poured out against the invaders in sizzling, shrieking bars, bands, and planes of

frenzied incandescence. Nor was vibratory destruction alone. Armor-piercing projectiles

of enormous size and weight were hurled—diamond-hard, drill-headed projectiles which

clung and bored upon impact. High-explosive shells, canisters of gas, and the frightful

aerial bombs and radio-dirigible torpedoes of highly scientific war—all were thrown with

lavish hand, as fast as the projectors could be served. But thrust for thrust, ray for ray,

projectile for massive projectile, the Brobdingnagian creations of the Vorkuls gave back

to the hexans.

The material lining of the ghastly moat was the only substance capable of

resisting the action of its contents, and now, that lining destroyed by the uprooting of the

fortress, that corrosive, brilliantly mobile liquid cascaded down into the trough and

added its hellish contribution to the furious scene. For whatever that devouring fluid

touched flared into yellow flame, gave off clouds of lurid, strangling vapor, and

disappeared. But through yellow haze, through blasting frequencies, through clouds of

poisonous gas, through rain of metal and through storm of explosive the two cones

ground implacably onward, their every offensive weapon centered upon the fast-

receding exposed ends of the hexan fortress. Their bombs and torpedoes ripped and

tore into the structure beneath the invulnerable shield and exploded, demolishing and

hurling aside like straws walls, projectors, men, and vast mountains of earth. Their

terrible rays bored in, softening, fusing, volatilizing metal, short-circuiting connections,

destroying life far ahead of the point of attack; and, drawn along by the relentlessly

creeping composite tractor beam, there progressed around the circumference of the

hexan city two veritable Saturnalia of destruction—uninterrupted, cataclysmic

detonations of sound and sizzling, shrieking, multi-colored displays of pyrotechnic

incandescence combining to form a spectacle of violence incredible.

But the heptagons could not absorb nor radiate indefinitely those torrents of

energy, and soon one greenishly incandescent screen went down. Giant shells pierced

the green metal walls, giant beams of force fused and consumed them. Faster and

faster the huge heptagon became a shapeless, flowing mass, its metal dripping away in

flaming gouts of brilliance; then it disappeared utterly in one terrific blast as some

probing enemy ray reached a vital part. The cone did not pause nor waver. Many of its

component units would go down, but it would go on—on and on until every hexan trace

had disappeared or until the last Vorkulian heptagon had been annihilated.

In one of the lowermost heptagons, one bearing the full brunt of the hexan

armament, Kromodeor reared upright as his projector controls went dead beneath his

hands. Finding his communicator screens likewise lifeless, he slipped to the floor and

wriggled to the room of the Chief Power Officer, where he found Wixill idly fingering his

controls.

“Are we out?” asked Kromodeor, tersely.

“All done,” the Chief Power Officer calmly replied. “We have power left, but we

cannot use it, as they have crushed our screens and are fusing our outer walls. Two out

of seven chances, and we drew one of them. We are still working on the infra band,

over across on the Second’s board, but we won’t last long . . .”

As he spoke the mighty fabric lurched under them, and only their quick and

powerful tails, darting in lightning loops about the bars, saved them from being battered

to death against the walls as the heptagon was hurled end over end by a stupendous

force. With a splintering crash it came to rest upon the ground.

“I wonder how that happened ? They should have rayed us out or exploded us,”

Kromodeor pondered. The Vorkuls, with their inhumanly powerful, sinuous bodies, were

scarcely affected by the shock of that frightful fall.

“They must have had a whole battery of pressors on us when our greens went

out—they threw us half-way across the city, almost into the gate we made first,” Wixill

replied, studying the situation of the vessel in the one small screen still in action. “We

aren’t hurt very badly—only a few holes that they are starting to weld already. When the

absorber and dissipator crews get them cooled down enough so that we can use power

again, we’ll go back.”

But they were not to resume their place in the attack. Through the holes in the

still-glowing walls hexan soldiery were leaping in steady streams, fighting with the

utmost savagery of their bloodthirsty natures, urged on by the desperation born of the

knowledge of imminent defeat and total destruction. Hand-weapons roared, flashed,

and sparkled; heavy bars crashed and thudded against crunching bones; mighty bodies

and tails whipped crushingly about six-limbed forms which wrenched and tore with

monstrously powerful hands and claws. Fiercely and valiantly the Vorkuls fought, but

they were outnumbered by hundreds and only one outcome was possible.

Kromodeor was one of the last to go down. Weapons long since exhausted, he

unwrapped his deadly coils from about a dead hexan and darted toward a store-room,

only to be cut off by a horde of enemies. Throwing himself down a vertical shaft, he flew

toward a tiny projector-locker in the lowermost part of one of the great star’s points, the

hexans in hot pursuit. He wrenched the door open, and even while searing planes of

force were riddling his body he trained the frightful weapon he had sought. He pressed

the contact, and a burst of intolerable flame swept the entire passage clear of life.

Weakly he struggled to go out into the aisle, but his muscles refused to do the bidding of

his will and he lay there, twitching feebly.

In the power room of the heptagon a hexan officer turned fiercely to another, who

was offering advice.

“Vorkuls? Bah!” he snarled, viciously. “Our race is finished. Die we must, but we

shall take with us the one enemy who above all others needs destruction!” and he

hurled the captured Vorkulian fortress into the air.

As the heptagon lurched upward the massive door of a lower projector locker

clanged shut and Kromodeor collapsed in a corner, his consciousness blotted out.

* * * * *

“Well, that certainly tears it! That’s a . . . I . . .” Stevens’ ready vocabulary failed

him and he turned to Brandon, who was still staring narrow-eyed into the plate,

watching the destruction of the hexan city.

“They’ve got something, all x—you’ve got to hand it to ’em,” Brandon replied.

“Here we thought we knew something about forces and physical phenomena in

general—and those birds’ve forgotten more than we ever will know. Just one of those

things could take the whole I-P fleet, armed as we are now, any morning before

breakfast, just for setting-up exercises. We’ve got to do something about it—but what ?”

“It’s by me—you tell ’em. There may be an out somewhere, but I don’t see it,”

and Stevens’ gloomy tone matched his words.

Highly trained scientists both, they had been watching that which transcended all

the science of the inner planets and knew themselves outclassed immeasurably.

“Only one thing to do, as I see it,” Brandon cogitated. “That’s to keep on going

straight out, the way we’re headed now. We’d better call a council of war, to dope out a

line of action.”

CHAPTER 12

The Citadel in Space

For the first time in many days Brandon and Westfall sat at dinner in the main dining

room of the Sirius. They were enjoying greatly the unaccustomed pleasure of a

leisurely, formal meal; but still their talk concerned the projection of pure forces instead

of subjects more appropriate to the table; still their eyes paid more attention to diagrams

drawn upon scraps of paper than to the diners about them.

“But I tell you, Quince, you’re full of little red ants, clear to the neck!” Brandon

snorted, as Westfall waved one of his arguments aside. “You must have had help to get

that far off—no one man could possibly be as wrong as you are. Why, those fields

absolutely will . . .”

“Hi, Quincy! Hi, Norman!” a merry voice interrupted. “Fighting, as usual, I see!

What kind of knights are you, anyway, to rescue us poor damsels in distress, and then

never even know that we’re alive ?” A tall, willowy brunette had seen the two physicists

as she entered the saloon, and came over to their table, a hand outstretched to each in

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Categories: E.E Doc Smith
curiosity: