She could work efficiently—at service maximum, really—in ordinary clothes. Ditto, although she didn’t like to, unclothed. In Gray, though, she could hit absolute max if she had to. Nor had there ever been any question of right involved; the only barrier had been her own hyper-sensitivity.
For over twenty years she herself had been the only one to deny her right. What license, she was wont to ask, did an imitation or synthetic or amateur or “Red” Lensman have to wear the garb which meant so much to so many? Over those years, however, it had become increasingly widely known that hers was one of the five finest and most powerful minds in the entire Gray Legion; and when Coordinator Kinnison recalled her to active duty in Unattached status, that Legion passed by unanimous vote a resolution asking her to join them in Gray. Psychics all, they knew that nothing less would suffice; that if there was any trace of resentment or of antagonism or of feelings that she did not intrinsically belong, she would never don the uniform which every adherent of Civilization so revered and for which, deep down, she had always so intensely longed. The Legion had sent her these Grays. Kit had convinced her that she did actually deserve them.
She really should wear them. She would.
She put them on, thrilling to the core as she did so, and made the quick little gesture she had seen Kim make so many times. Gray Seal. No one, however accustomed, has ever donned or ever will don unmoved the plain gray leather of the Unattached Lensman of the Galactic Patrol.
Hands on hips, she studied herself minutely and approvingly, both in the mirror and by means of her vastly more efficient sense of perception. She wriggled a little, and giggled inwardly as she remembered deploring as “exhibitionistic” this same conduct in her oldest daughter.
The Grays fitted her perfectly. A bit revealing, perhaps, but her figure was still good—very good, as a matter of fact. Not a speck of dirt or tarnish. Her DeLameters were fully charged. Her tremendous Lens flamed brilliantly upon her wrist. She looked—and felt—ready. She could hit absolute max in a fraction of a micro-second. If she had to get really tough, she would. She sent out a call.
“Helen of Lyrane! I know they’ve got you around here somewhere, and if any of your guards try to screen out this thought I’ll burn their brains out. Clarrissa of Sol III calling. Come in, Helen!”
“Clarrissa!” This time there was no interference. A world of welcome was in every nuance of the thought. “Where are you?”
“High up, at…” Clarrissa gave her position. “I’m in my speedster, so can get to anywhere on the planet in minutes. More important, where are you? And why?”
“In jail, in my own apartment.” Queens should have palaces, but Lyrane’s ruler did not. Everything was strictly utilitarian. “The tower on the corner, remember? On the top floor? ‘Why’ is too long to go into now—I’d better tell you as much as possible of what you should know, while there’s still time.”
“Time? Are you in danger?”
“Yes. Ladora would have killed me long ago if it had dared. My following grows less daily, the Boskonians stronger. The guards have already summoned help. They are coming now, to take me.”
“That’s what they think!” Clarrissa had already reached the scene. She had exactly the velocity she wanted. She slanted downward in a screaming dive. “Can you tell whether they’re limbering up any ack-ack around there?”
“I don’t believe so—I don’t feel any such thoughts.”
“QX. Get away from the window.” If they hadn’t started already they never would; the Red Lensman was deadly sure of that.
She came within range—her range—of the guns. She was in time. Several gunners were running toward their stations. None of them arrived. The speedster leveled off and stuck its hard, sharp nose into and almost through the indicated room; reenforced concrete, steel bars, and glass showering abroad as it did so. The port snapped open. As Helen leaped in, Clarrissa practically threw Ladora out.
“Bring Ladora back!” Helen demanded. “I shall have its life!”
“Nix!” Clarrissa snapped. “I know everything she does. We’ve other fish to fry, my dear.”
The massive door clanged shut. The speedster darted forward, straight through the solid concrete wall. Clarrissa’s vessel, solidly built of beryllium alloys, had been designed to take brutal punishment. She took it.
Out in open space, Clarrissa went free, leaving the artificial gravity at normal. Helen stood up, took Clarrissa’s hand, and shook it gravely and strongly; a gesture at which the Red Lensman almost choked.
Helen of Lyrane had changed even less than had the Earth-woman. She was still six feet tall; erect, taut, springy, and poised. She didn’t weigh a pound more than the one-eighty she had scaled twenty-odd years ago. Her vivid auburn hair showed not one strand of gray. Her eyes were as clear and as proud; her skin almost as fine and firm.
“You are, then, alone?” In spite of her control, Helen’s thought showed relief.
“Yes. My hus… Kimball Kinnison is very busy elsewhere.” Clarrissa understood perfectly. Helen, after twenty years of thinking things over, really liked her; but she still simply couldn’t stand a male, not even Kim; any more than Clarrissa could ever adapt herself to the Lyranian habit of using the neuter pronoun “it” when referring to one of themselves. She couldn’t. Anybody who ever got one glimpse of Helen would simply have to think of her as she! But enough of this wool-gathering—which had taken perhaps one millisecond of time.
“There’s nothing to keep us from working together perfectly,” Clarrissa’s thought flashed on. “Ladora didn’t know much, and you do. So tell me all about things, so we can decide where to begin!”
CHAPTER
17
Nadreck vs. Kandron
HEN KANDRON CALLED HIS minion in that small and nameless base to learn whether or not he had succeeded in trapping the Palainian Lensman, Nadreck’s relay station functioned so perfectly, and Nadreck was so completely in charge of his captive’s mind, that the caller could feel nothing out of the ordinary. Ultra-suspicious though Kandron was, there was nothing whatever to indicate that anything had changed at that base since he had last called its commander. That individual’s subconscious mind reacted properly to the key stimulus. The conscious mind took over, remembered, and answered properly a series of trick questions.
These things occurred because the minion was still alive. His ego, the pattern and matrix of his personality, was still in existence and had not been changed. What Kandron did not and could not suspect was that that ego was no longer in control of mind, brain, or body; that it was utterly unable, of its own volition, either to think any iota of independent thought or to stimulate any single physical cell. The Onlonian’s ego was present—just barely present—but that was all. It was Nadreck who, using that ego as a guide and, in a sense, as a helplessly impotent transformer, received the call. Nadreck made those exactly correct replies. Nadreck was now ready to render a detailed and fully documented—and completely mendacious—report upon his own destruction!
Nadreck’s special tracers were already out, determining line and intensity. Strippers and analyzers were busily at work on the fringes of the beam, dissecting out, isolating, and identifying each of the many scraps of extraneous thought accompanying the main beam. These side-thoughts, in fact, were Nadreck’s prime concern. The Second-Stage Lensman had learned that no being—except possibly an Arisian—could narrow a beam of thought down to one single, pure sequence. Of the four, however, only Nadreck recognized in those side-bands a rich field; only he had designed and developed mechanisms with which to work that field.
The stronger and clearer the mind, the fewer and less complete were the extraneous fragments of thought; but Nadreck knew that even Kandron’s brain would carry quite a few such nongermane accompaniments, and from each of those bits he could reconstruct an entire sequence as accurately as a competent paleontologist reconstructs a prehistoric animal from one fossilized piece of bone.
Thus Nadreck was completely r
eady when the harshly domineering Kandron asked his first real question.
“I do not suppose that you have succeeded in killing the Lensman?”
“Yes, Your Supremacy, I have.” Nadreck could feel Kandron’s start of surprise; could perceive without his instruments Kandron’s fleeting thoughts of the hundreds of unsuccessful previous attempts upon his life. It was clear that the Onlonian was not at all credulous.
“Report in detail!” Kandron ordered.
Nadreck did so, adhering rigidly to the truth up to the moment in which his probes of force had touched off the Boskonian alarms. Then:
“Spy-ray photographs taken at the instant of alarm show an indetectable speedster, with one, and only one occupant, as Your Supremacy anticipated. A careful study of all the pictures taken of that occupant shows: first, that he was definitely alive at that time, and was neither a projection nor an artificial mechanism; and second, that his physical measurements agree in every particular with the specifications furnished by Your Supremacy as being those of Nadreck of Palain VII.”
“Since Your Supremacy personally computed and supervised the placement of those projectors,” Nadreck went smoothly on, “you know that the possibility is vanishingly small that any material thing, free or inert, could have escaped destruction. As a check, I took seven hundred twenty nine samples of the circumambient space, statistically at random, for analysis. After appropriate allowances for the exactly-observed elapsed times of sampling, diffusion of droplets and molecular and atomic aggregates, temperatures, pressures, and all other factors known or assumed to be operating, I determined that there had been present in the center of action of our beams a mass of approximately four thousand six hundred seventy eight point zero one metric tons. This value, Your Supremacy will note, is in close agreement with the most efficient mass of an indetectable speedster designed for long distance work.”
That figure was in fact closer than close. It was an almost exact statement of the actual mass of Nadreck’s ship.
“Exact composition?” Kandron demanded.
Nadreck recited a rapid-fire string of elements and figures. They, too, were correct within the experimental error of a very good analyst. The base commander had not known them, but it was well within the bounds of possibility that the insidious Kandron would. He did. He was now practically certain that his ablest and bitterest enemy had been destroyed at last, but there were still a few lingering shreds of doubt.
“Let me look over your work,” Kandron directed.
“Yes, Your Supremacy.” Nadreck the Thorough was ready for even that extreme test. Through the eyes of the ultimately enslaved monstrosity Kandron checked and rechecked Nadreck’s pictures, Nadreck’s charts and diagrams, Nadreck’s more than four hundred pages of mathematical, physical, and chemical notes and determinations; all without finding a single flaw.
In the end Kandron was ready to believe that Nadreck had in fact ceased to exist. However, he himself had not done the work. There was no corpse. If he himself had killed the Palainian, if he himself had actually felt the Lensman’s life depart in the grasp of his own tentacles; then, and only then, would he have known that Nadreck was dead. As it was, even though the work had been done in exact accordance with his own instructions, there remained an infinitesimal uncertainty. Wherefore:
“Shift your field of operations to cover X-174, Y-240, Z-16. Do not relax your vigilance in the slightest because of what has happened.” He considered briefly the idea of allowing the underling to call him, in case anything happened, but decided against it. “Are the men standing up?”
“Yes, Your Supremacy, they are in very good shape indeed.”
And so on. “Yes, Your Supremacy, the psychologist is doing a very fine job. Yes, Your Supremacy…yes…yes…yes…”
Very shortly after the characteristically Kandronesque ending of that interview, Nadreck had learned everything he needed to know. He knew where Kandron was and what he was doing. He knew much of what Kandron had done during the preceding twenty years; and, since he himself figured prominently in many of those sequences, they constituted invaluable checks upon the validity of his other reconstructions. He knew the construction, the armament, and the various ingenious mechanisms, including the locks, of Kandron’s vessel; he knew more than any other outsider had ever known of Kandron’s private life. He knew where Kandron was going next, and what he was going to do there. He knew in broad what Kandron intended to do during the coming century.
Thus well informed, Nadreck set his speedster into a course toward the planet of Civilization which was Kandron’s next objective. He did not hurry; it was no part of his plan to interfere in any way in the horrible program of planet-wide madness and slaughter which Kandron had in mind. It simply did not occur to him to try to save the planet as well as to kill the Onlonian; Nadreck, being Nadreck, took without doubt or question the safest and surest course.
Nadreck knew that Kandron would set his vessel into an orbit around the planet, and that he would take a small boat—a flitter—for the one personal visit necessary to establish his lines of communication and control. Vessel and flitter would be alike indetectable, of course; but Nadreck found the one easily enough and knew when the other left its mother-ship. Then, using his lightest, stealthiest spy-rays, the Palainian set about the exceedingly delicate business of boarding the Boskonian craft.
That undertaking could be made a story in its own right, for Kandron did not leave his ship unguarded. However, merely by thinking about his own safety, Kandron had all unwittingly given away the keys to his supposedly impregnable fortress. While Kandron was wondering whether or not the Lensman was really dead, and especially after he had been convinced that he most probably was, the Onlonian’s thoughts had touched fleetingly upon a multitude of closely-related subjects. Would it be safe to abandon some of the more onerous precautions he had always taken, and which had served him so well for so many years? And as he thought of them, each one of his safeguards flashed at least partially into view; and for Nadreck, any significant part was as good as the whole. Kandron’s protective devices, therefore, did not protect. Projectors, designed to flame out against intruders, remained cold. Ports opened; and as Nadreck touched sundry buttons various invisible beams, whose breaking would have produced unpleasant results, ceased to exist. In short, Nadreck knew all the answers. If he had not been coldly certain that his information was complete, he would not have acted at all.
After entry, his first care was to send out spotting devices which would give warning in case Kandron should return unexpectedly soon. Then, working in the service-spaces behind instrument-boards and panels, in junction boxes, and in various other out-of-the-way places, he cut into lead after lead, ran wire after wire, and installed item after item of apparatus and equipment upon which he had been at work for weeks. He finished his work undisturbed. He checked and rechecked the circuits, making absolutely certain that every major one of the vessel’s controlling leads ran to or through at least one of the things he had just installed. With painstaking nicety he obliterated every visible sign of his visit. He departed as carefully as he had come; restoring to full efficiency as he went each one of Kandron’s burglar-alarms.
Kandron returned, entered his ship as usual, stored his flitter, and extended a tentacular member toward the row of switches on his panel.
“Don’t touch anything, Kandron,” he was advised by a thought as cold and as deadly as any one of his own; and upon the Onlonian equivalent of a visiplate there appeared the one likeness which he least expected and least desired to perceive.
“Nadreck of Palain VII—Star A Star—THE Lensman!” The Onlonian was physically and emotionally incapable of gasping, but the idea is appropriate. “You have, then, wired and mined this ship.”
There was a subdued clicking of relays. The Bergenholm came up to speed, the speedster spun about and darted away under a couple of kilodynes of drive.
“I am Nadreck of Palain VII, yes. One of the group of Lensmen whos
e collective activities you have ascribed to Star A Star and the Lensman. Your ship is, as you have deduced, mined. The only reason you did not die as you entered it is that I wish to be really certain, and not merely statistically so, that it is Kandron of Onlo, not someone, else, who dies.”
“That unutterable fool!” Kandron quivered in helpless rage. “Oh, that I had taken the time and killed you myself!”
“If you had done your own work, the techniques I used here could not have been employed, and you might have been in no danger at the present moment,” Nadreck admitted, equably enough. “My powers are small, my intellect feeble, and what might have been has no present bearing. I am inclined, however, to question the validity of your conclusions, due to the known fact that you have been directing a campaign against me for over twenty years without success; whereas I have succeeded against you in less than half a year… My analysis is now complete. You may now touch any control you please. By the way, you do not deny that you are Kandron of Onlo, do you?”
Neither of those monstrous beings mentioned or even thought of mercy. In neither of their languages was there any word for or concept of such a thing.
“That would be idle. You know my pattern as well as I know yours… I cannot understand how you got through that…”
“It is not necessary that you should. Do you wish to close one of those switches or shall I?”
Kandron had been thinking for minutes, studying every aspect of his predicament. Knowing Nadreck, he knew just how desperate the situation was. There was, however, one very small chance—just one. The way he had come was clear. That was the only clear way. Wherefore, to gain an extra instant of time, he reached out toward a switch; but even while he was reaching he put every ounce of his tremendous strength into a leap which hurled him across the room toward his flitter.
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