‘You can unthink it. I wouldn’t. There’s no tomcat blood in me – and remember what I said?’
‘Do you think I don’t? But you’ve seen some really beautiful women now. Much prettier than I am.’
‘You know what they call that technique in English? “Fishing”,’ grinned DuQuesne. ‘Prettier or not, Milady, you top them all by a country mile.’
‘I know about fishing. I was fishing a little, perhaps.’ She laughed happily and hugged his arm against her firm breast. ‘But it did get you to say it again, and it means ever so much more, now that you’ve seen the competition.’
She steered him to a table for two against a wall, where he seated her meticulously – a gesture that, while evidently new to her, was evidently liked.
‘You order,’ she said, handing him the helmet. ‘You invited me, you know.’
‘But I don’t know what you like to eat.’
‘Oh, I like almost everything, really; and if there should be anything I don’t like I won’t eat it. Okay?’
‘Okay,’ and DuQuesne proceeded to set the table with fine linen and translucent china and sterling silver and sparkling cut glass.
The first course was a thin, clear soup; which Sennlloy liked. She also liked the crisp lettuce with Roquefort dressing; the medium rare roast beef with mushroom sauce and the asparagus in butter and the baked Idaho potato stuffed with sour cream; and she especially enjoyed the fruits-and-nuts-filled Nesselrode ice cream. She did not, however, like his corrosively strong, black, unsweetened coffee at all. Wrinkling her nose, she sniffed at it, then took a tiny sip, which she let flow back into the cup.
‘How can you possibly drink such vile stuff as that?’ she demanded, and replaced it with a tall glass of a fizzy, viscous concoction that looked like eggnog and reeked of something that was halfway between almond and lemon.
After dinner – DuQuesne wanted to smoke, but since no one else was doing anything of the kind he could and would get along without it as long as he was aboard the Mallidaxian – they milled about with the milling throng. She introduced him right and left and showed him off generally; especially to over a hundred stunning young women, with whom she discussed the ‘project’ in American English with a completely uninhibited frankness that made DuQuesne blush more than once.
After something over an hour of this the crowd broke up; and as the two left the hall Sennlloy said, ‘Ha! We’re free now, my Vance, to go about our business!’
Arms tightly around each other, savoring each contact and each motion, they walked slowly and in silence to Sennlloy’s room.
Three Mallidaxian days later, DuQuesne took his leave. Of Sennlloy last, of course. She put her arms around him and rubbed her cheek against his. ‘Goodbye, friend Vance. I have enjoyed our association tremendously. Scarcely ever before has work been such pleasure. So much so that I feel guilty of selfishness.’
‘You needn’t, Milady. That was exactly the way I wanted it, remember?’
‘I remember with joy; and I have wondered why.’
‘Because you are the only one of your class aboard this ship,’ DuQuesne said.
‘You said that, but still – well, I am the only Allondaxian aboard, which may account for our great compatibility. And there should be, as there has been, something more than the purely physical involved.’
DuQuesne was very glad she had said that; it gave him one last chance to explore. ‘Definitely,’ he agreed. ‘Liking, respect, appreciation, admiration – you’re a tremendous lot of woman, Milady Sennlloy. But not love. Naturally.’
‘Of course not. I have my love and my work and my planet; you have yours; it would be terrible for either of us or any of ours to be hurt.
‘Our rememberings of each other should be and will be most pleasant. Goodbye, friend Vance; may All Powerful Llenderllon guard you and aid you as you Seek.’
15
DuQuesne’s Assassins
Not even Marc DuQuesne was able – quite! – to put his rather astonishing, and totally pleasurable, experiences with the Jelmi – and with one Jelm in particular! – out of his mind without a second’s hesitation. In another man, his mood as he set a minimum-time course and began to speed back to Earth, might have been called nostalgic … even sentimental.
But as the parsecs fled by his thoughts hardened. And just in time; for some very hard things indeed had to be done.
First and foremost, his deal with Seaton was utterly, irrevocably and permanently off. He no longer needed it. With the information he had received from the Jelmi, he had no further reason to worry about Seaton’s offensive capabilities.
Of course, there was no reason for Seaton to know that. Or not until it was entirely too late to do Seaton any good. Let Seaton go on dawdling toward this Galaxy DW-427-LU. Seaton would be travelling at only normal max; DuQuesne would have time to make his arrangements, transact his business and act while Seaton was still on the way.
He did not intend to go to Earth, only to within working distance of it. Even so, he had a certain amount of time to spend. He spent it, all of it, in studying and operating the new device, which was called by the Jelm a name which Sennlloy had told him corresponded roughly to ‘quad’.
And immediately he ran headlong into trouble.
To DuQuesne’s keen disappointment, the confounded thing was both more and less useful than he had hoped. More: its range was enormous, much more than he had expected. Less: well, it simply didn’t do any of the normal things that any machine could be made to do. And he could not tell why. He had received too much knowledge too fast; it took time to nail down all the details.
He could send himself anywhere, but he could not bring himself back. He had to be at the controls. Remote control wouldn’t work and he couldn’t find out why not. The thing – in its present state of development, at least – couldn’t handle a working projection; and he couldn’t explain that fact, either. There was no way at all, apparently, of coupling the two transmitters together or of automating the controls – which was absurd on the face of it. There were job lots of things it couldn’t do; and in no case at all could he understand why not.
That condition was, however, perfectly natural. In fact, it was inevitable. For, as has been pointed out, the laws of the fourth-dimensional region are completely inexplicable in three-dimensional terms. Obvious impossibilities become commonplace events; many things that are inevitable in our ordinary continuum become starkly impossible there.
Tammon had told DuQuesne just that; Seaton had told him the same, and much more strongly for having been there in person; but DuQuesne could not help but boggle at such information. Of the three men, he was far and away the least able to accept an obvious impossibility as a fact and go on from there.
So Blackie DuQuesne, his face like a steel-black thundercloud, methodically and untiringly worked with his new device until he was quite sure that of all the things he could make it do, he could make it do all of them very well.
And that would be enough. Never mind the things it wouldn’t do. What it would do would be plenty to get rid of Richard Ballinger Seaton once and for all.
Within range of Earth at last, DuQuesne set about the first step in that program.
The simplest and crudest methods would work – backed by the weird fourth-dimensional powers of the quad. And DuQuesne knew exactly how to go about recruiting the assistance he needed in those methods.
He launched a working projection of himself to the Safe Deposit Department of the First National Bank. He signed a name and counted out a sheaf of currency from a box. He then took a taxi to the World Building and an elevator up to the office of the president.
Brushing aside private secretaries, vice presidents, and other small fry, he strode through a succession of private offices into the sanctum sanctorum of President Brookings himself.
The tycoon was, as usual, alone. If he was surprised at the intrusion he did not show it. He took the big cigar from his mouth, little-fingered half an inch of ash f
rom the end of it into a bronze tray, put it back between his teeth, and waited.
‘Still thinking your usual devious, petty-larceny, half-vast thoughts, eh, Brookings?’ DuQuesne sneered.
‘Still thinking your usual devious, petty-larceny, half-vast sublime gall to show up around here again,’ Brookings said, evenly. ‘Even via projection, after the raw stuff you pulled and the ungodly flop you made of everything. Especially after the way your pal Seaton dragged you out of here with your tail between your legs. Incidentally, it took everything you had coming to repair the damage you did to the building on your way out.’
‘Stupid as ever, I see. And the galaxy’s tightest penny-pincher. But back pay and the law of contracts and so forth are of no importance at the moment. What I’m here about is: with all these Norlaminian so-called “Observers” looking down the back of your neck all the time, Perkins’ successor and his goon squads must be eating mighty low on the hog.’
‘We haven’t any –’ At DuQuesne’s sardonically contemptuous smile Brookings changed instantly the sense of what he had been going to say – ‘work for them, to speak of, at that. Why?’
‘So six of your best and fastest gunnies would be interested in ten grand apiece for a month’s loaf and a minute’s work.’
‘Don’t say mine, doctor. Please! You know very well that I never have anything to do with anything like that.’
‘No? But you know who took over the Perkins Cafe and the top-mobster job after I killed Perkins. So I want six off the top downstairs in the lobby at sixteen hours Eastern Daylight Time today.’
‘You know I never handle—’
‘Shut up! I’m not asking you – I’m telling you. You’ll handle this, or else.’
Brookings shrugged his shoulders and sighed. He knew DuQuesne. ‘If you want good men they’ll have to know what the job is.’
‘Naturally. Dick and Dorothy Seaton, Martin and Margaret Crane, and their Jap Shiro and his wife – Apple Blossom or whatever her name is. Seaton’s fast, for an amateur, but he’s no pro. Crane is slow – he thinks and aims. And the others don’t count. I’ll guarantee complete surprise enough for one clear shot at Seaton. Anybody who is apt to need two shots I don’t want. So – no problem.’
‘I’ll see what I can do.’
Since DuQuesne knew that was as close as Brookings ever came to saying ‘yes’, he accepted it. ‘In advance, of course.’ Brookings held out his hand.
‘Naturally.’ DuQuesne took a rubber-banded sheaf of thousand-dollar bills out of his inside coat pocket and tossed it across the desk. ‘Count ’em.’
‘Naturally.’ Brookings picked the sheaf up and riffled through it. ‘Correct. Goodbye, doctor.’
‘Goodbye,’ DuQuesne said, and the projection vanished.
At four o’clock that afternoon DuQuesne picked up his goons – through the fourth dimension, which surprised them tremendously and scared them no little, although none of them would admit that fact – and headed for the galaxy toward which the Skylark of Valeron had been flying so long. The Capital D was of course much faster than the gigantic planetoid; and the actual difference in speed between the two intergalactic flyers was much greater than the rated one because DuQuesne was driving with all his engines at absolute max – risking burn-out, tear-out, and unavoidable collision at or near the frightful velocity of turnover – which Seaton of course was not doing. He didn’t want to endanger the Valeron.
In the target galaxy – Galaxy DW-427-LU, according to Klazmon’s chart – there was only one solar system showing really intense sixth-order activity. Almost all of that activity would be occurring on one planet; a planet whose inhabitants were highly inimical to (probably) all other forms of intelligent life.
Klazmon’s side-bands of thought had been very informative on those points.
Thus it was by neither accident nor coincidence that DuQuesne came up to within long working range of the Skylark of Valeron well before that flying worldlet came within what DuQuesne thought was extreme range of a planet that DuQuesne knew to be a very dangerous planet indeed.
He had wanted it that way; he had risked his ship and his life to make it come out that way. When the Valeron came within range of the target planet she would be DuQuesne’s not Seaton’s. And DuQuesne was calmly confident that he and a Valeron re-tuned to his own mind could cope with any possible situation.
As a matter of fact, they couldn’t. It was not, however, DuQuesne’s error or fault that made it so; it was merely the way Fate’s mop flopped. Neither he nor Seaton had any idea whatever of the appalling magnitude of the forces so soon to be hurled against Seaton’s supposedly invulnerable flying fortress, the Skylark of Valeron.
Operating strictly according to plan, then, DuQuesne called his goons to attention. ‘You’ve been briefed and you’ve had plenty of practice, but I’ll recap the essential points.
‘Guns in hands. They’ll be eating dinner, with their legs under the table. Sitting ducks for one shot. But for one shot only. Especially Seaton – for an amateur he’s fast. So work fast – land and shoot. I’ll give you the usual three second countdown, beginning, now – Seconds! Three! Two! One! Mark!’ and the six men vanished.
And in the dining room of the Seatons’ home in the Skylark of Valeron six forty-five-caliber automatics barked viciously, practically as one.
16
The Chlorans
While much work had been done on a personal gravity control, to provide for the comfort of such visitors as Dunark and Sitar, it was still in the design stage when the Skylark of Valeron neared Galaxy DW-427-LU. Wherefore, when the Skylarkers sat down to dinner that evening in the Seatons’ dining room that room was almost forty percent undergrav. And wherefore, when DuQuesne’s six hired killers fired practically as one, all six bullets went harmlessly high.
For, at low gravity, two facts of marksmanship – unknown to or not considered by either DuQuesne or any of his men – became dominant. First, a pistol expert compensates automatically for the weight of his weapon. Second, the more expert the marksman, the more automatic this compensation is.
And one shot each was all those would-be killers had. Dunark and Sitar as has been said, went armed even to bed; and Osnomian reflexes were and are the fastest possessed by any known race of man. Each of their machine pistols clicked twice and four American hoodlums died, liquescent brains and comminuted skulls spattering abroad, before they could do anything more than begin to bring their guns back down into line for their second shots.
The other two gangsters also died; if not as quickly or as messily, just as dead. For Shiro and his bride were, for Earthmen, very fast indeed. Their chairs, too, flew away from the table the merest instant after the invaders appeared and both took off in low, flat dives.
Lotus struck her man with her left shoulder; and, using flawlessly the momentum of her mass and speed, swung him around and put her small but very hard knee exactly where it would do the most good. Then, as he doubled over in agony, she put her left arm around his head, seized her left wrist with her right hand, and twisted with all the strength of arms, shoulders, torso and legs – and the man’s neck broke with a snap audible throughout the room.
And Shiro took care of his man with equal dexterity, precision and speed; and of the invaders, then there were none.
Seaton was a microsecond slower than either the Osnomians or the two Japanese; but he was fast enough to see what was happening, take in the fact that the forces already engaged were enough to handle the six hoodlums and, in mid-flight, divert his leap toward the remote-control headset. He was blindingly certain of one thing: it was Marc DuQuesne who had unleashed these killers on them. And he was equally certain of that fact’s consequence: The truce was off. DuQuesne was to be destroyed.
Wherefore what happened next astonished him even more than if it had occurred at another time.
A strident roar of klaxons filled the room. It was the loudest sound any human had ever heard – without permanent damage; it wa
s calculated to come right up to the threshold of destruction. There was to be no chance that anyone would fail to hear this particular signal.
His hand on the headset, Seaton paused. The bodies of the six gunmen had not yet all reached the floor, but the other Skylarkers were staring too. They had never expected to hear that sound except in test.
It was the dire warning that they were under attack – massive attack – attack on a scale and of a persistence that they had never expected to encounter in real combat, with whatever forces.
For that klaxon warning meant that under the fierce impact of the enemy weapons now so suddenly and mercilessly beating down on them the life of the Valeron’s defensive screens was to be measured only in seconds – and very few of them!
‘Yipe!’ he yelled then. ‘Control-room fast!’ His voice of course went unheard in the clamor of the horns; but his yelling had been purely reflexive, anyway. While uttering the first syllable he was energizing beams of force that hurtled all eight of the party through ultra-high-speed locks that snapped open in front of them and crashed shut behind them – down into the neutral-gray chamber at the base of the giant Brain.
Seaton rammed his head into his master controller and began furiously but accurately to think … and as he sat there, face harsh and white and strained, a vast structure of inoson, interlaced with the heaviest fields of force generable by the Valeron’s mighty engines, came into being around the Brain and the other absolutely vital components of the worldlet’s core.
After a few minutes of fantastic effort Seaton sighed gustily and tried to grin. ‘We’re holding ’em and we’re getting away,’ he said. ‘But I had to let ’em whittle us down to just about a nub before I could spare power enough to grab a lunch off of them while they were getting a square meal off of us.’
He spoke the exact truth. The attack had been so incredibly violent that in order to counter it he had had to apply the full power of the Valeron, designed to protect a surface of over three million square kilometers, to an area of less than thirty thousand.
E.E. 'Doc' Smith SF Gateway Omnibus: The Skylark of Space, Skylark Three, Skylark of Valeron, Skylark DuQuesne Page 84