Ari Posted August 31, 2014 Posted August 31, 2014 (edited) More than half a century ago(in fact, now nearly four-fifths of one), a fan of E.E. Smith's cosmic-scale science fiction series, Lensman, which would later come to inspire the Silver Age Green Lantern Corps and several million other parts of thousands of other stories, decided to mock the sillier parts of the thing he so loved. This parody, titled 'Backstage Lensman', preceding the modern abridged series in both form and function, presents everything ghastly, ridiculous, unrealistic, tiresome and plain moronic about that laudable workhorse of a story as the stuff of high comedy. It is so good that Smith, upon reading it at a convention, was wracked with hilarity for the entirety of its brief page-space. In honor of the recent surge of space adventures and the many more to come, and in honor of this, my last day of posting(besidesthetimeitwilltaketofinishmyGMthreadsandgetalltheNPCsandsoforthontothetable), I present to you, my comrades in Play by Post, the great, the ineluctable, the inexorable, the fantastic, BACKSTAGE LENSEMANEdit 22/09/2015: Changed link, inserted text (within spoiler tags) in case of future link outages. The Lensman series, comprising, as it does, some six hundred thousand words, isstill, to my mind, the greatest space opera yet written. It has, to use one of DocSmithтАЩs favorite words, scope.тАЭE. E. Smith, Ph.D., had more scope, more breadth and depth of cognizance of theCosmic All, than anyone beforeтАФor since.He had his flaws; we all do. But the grandeur of his writing overpowered thoseflaws, made them insignificant.I first wrote Backstage Lensman nearly thirty years ago. The original is long lost.There was no market for it in those days, and my moving about... well, it got lost.This is a re-creation from memory. It was a test of memory in another way, too notonce, during the writing, did I look into the Lensman for descriptions or phraseologyor situations to parody. IтАЩve read those books so often over the years that there wasno necessity for it. The style came naturally.Only once did my memory fail me. I was too accurate. I had to rewrite oneparagraph because, when I checked with the original, it was word-for-word. AndthatтАЩs plagiarism.Doc saw the first version of Backstage Lensman in 1949, and laughed all through theconvention. It was his suggestion that I call the spaceship Dentless.On a planet distant indeed from Tellus, on a frigid, lightless globe situated within an almost completely enclosing hollow sphere of black interstellar dust, in a cavern farbeneath the surface of that abysmally cold planet, a group of entities indescribableby, or to, man stood, sat, or slumped around a circular conference table.Though they had no spines, they were something like porcupines; though they hadno tentacles, they reminded one of octopuses; though they had no wings or beaks,they seemed similar to vultures; and though they had neither scales nor fins, therewas definitely something fishy about them.These, then, composed the Council of the Meich, frigid-blooded poison-breatherswhose existence at temperatures only a few degrees above zero absolute requiredthem to have extensions into the fourth and fifth dimensions, rendering them horriblyindescribable and indescribably horrible to human sight.Their leader, Meichfrite, or, more formally, Frite of the Meich, radiated harshly toothers of the Council: The time has now come to consider the problem of ourrecent losses in the other galaxy. Meichrobe, as Second of the Meich, you will reportfirst.тАЭThat worthy pondered judiciously for long moments, then: тАЬI presume you wish tohear nothing about the missing strawberries?тАЬNothing,тАЭ agreed the other.тАЬThen,тАЭ came MeichrobeтАЩs rasping thought, тАЬwe must consider the perniciousactivities of the Tellurian Lensman whose workings are not, and have not been,ascribed to Star A Star.тАЬThe activities and behavior of all members of the never-to-be-sufficiently-damnedGalactic Patrol have, as you know, been subjected to rigid statistical analysis. Ourcomputers have come to the conclusion that, with a probability of point oh oh one,the Lensman known as Gimble Ginnison either is or is not the agent whom we seek.тАЭтАЬA cogent report indeed,тАЭ Meichfrite complimented. тАЬNext, the report of Meichron,Third of this Council.тАЭтАЬAs a psychologist,тАЭ Meichron replied, тАЬI feel that there is an equal probability thatthe agent whom we seek is one whose physical makeup is akin to ours, rather than tothat of the fire-blooded, oxygen-breathing Tellurians. Perhaps one of the immoralPalanians, who emmfoze in public.тАЭтАЬThat, too, must be considered,тАЭ Meichfrite noted. тАЬNow to Meichrotch, Fourth ofthe Meich...тАЭAnd so it went, through member after member of that dark Council. How theyarrived at any decision whatever is starkly unknowable to the human mind.On green, warm Tellus, many mega parsecs from the black cloud which envelopedthe eternally and infernally frigid planet of the Meich, Lensman Gimble Ginnison,having been released from the hospital at Prime Base, was talking to Surgeon-MajorMacy, who had just given him his final checkup.тАЬHow am I, Doc?тАЭ he asked respectfully, тАЬQX for duty?тАЭWell, you were in pretty bad shape when you came in,тАЭ the Lensman surgeon saidthoughtfully. тАЬWe almost had to clone you to keep you around, son. Those Axlemenreally shot you up.тАЭтАЬCheck. But how am I now?тАЭThe older Lensman looked at the sheaf of charts, films, tapes, and reports on hisdesk. тАЬMmm. Your skeleton seems in good shape, but I wonder about the rest ofyou. The most beautiful nurses in the Service attended you during your convalescence, and you never made a pass-never even patted a fanny.тАЭтАЬGosh,тАЭ Ginnison flushed hotly, тАЬwas I expected to?тАЭтАЬNot by me,тАЭ the older man said cryptically.тАЬWell, am I QX for duty? I have to do a flit.тАЭSurgeon-Major Macy handed Ginnison an envelope. тАЭTake this to the StarboardAdmiralтАЩs office. HeтАЩll let you know. Where are you flitting for?тАЭтАЬIтАЩm not sure yet,тАЭ Ginnison said evasively, taking the envelope.тАЬRight. Clear ether, Gimble.тАЭтАЬClear ether, Macy.тАЭTrue to an old tradition, these two friends never told each other anything.The Starboard Admiral slit open the envelope and took in its contents at a glance.тАЬAccording to Macy, youтАЩre fit for duty, son. Congratulations. And, in spite ofeverything, that was a right smart piece of work you did on Mulligans II.тАЭGinnison looked at the tips of his polished boots. тАЬGee whiz,тАЭ he said, blushing.Then, looking up: тАЬIf IтАЩm fit for duty, sir, IтАЩd like to make a request. That mess onCadilax needs to be cleaned up. IтАЩm ready to try it, sir, and I await your orders.тАЭThe Starboard Admiral looked up into the gray eyes of the young, handsome,broad-shouldered, lean, lithe, tough, hard, finely-trained, well-muscled, stubborn,powerful man who stood before him.тАЬGim,тАЭ he said firmly, тАЬYou have disobeyed every order I have ever given you. Italways came out all right, so I canтАЩt gripe, but, as of now, IтАЩm getting out fromunder. IтАЩve talked to the Galactic Council, and they agree. We are giving you yourRelease.тАЭ The Release! The goal toward which every Lensman worked and so few attained!He was now an Unattached Lensman, responsible to no one and nothing save hisown conscience. He was no longer merely a small cog in the mighty machine of theGalactic PatrolHe was a Big Wheel!тАЬJeepers!тАЭ he said feelingly. тАЬGoshtimighty!тАЭтАЬItтАЩs all of that,тАЭ the Starboard Admiral agreed. тАЬNow go put on your Grays, takethe Dentless. and get the hell out of here!тАЭтАЬYes, sir!тАЭ And Ginnison was gone.He went to his quarters and took off his black-and-silver uniform. Then he proudlydonned the starkly utilitarian gray leather uniform which was the garb of theUnattached Lensman. And as he did so, he made that curious gesture known asGray Seal. No entity has ever donned or ever will don that Gray uniform withoutmaking that gesture. It is the only way you can get the zipper closed.In his office, solidly sealed against both thought and spy-ray beams, the StarboardAdmiral sat and stared at the glowing Lens on his wrist, the Lens which was, and is,the symbol of the rank and power of every Lensman of the Galactic Patrol.But it is far more than merely a symbol.It is a lenticular structure of hundreds of thousands of tiny crystalloids, and each isbuilt and tuned to match the ego of one individual entity. It is not, strictly speaking,alive, but its pseudolife is such that when it is in circuit with the living entity to whomit is synchronized, it gives off a strong, changing, characteristically polychromaticlight. It is a telepathic communicator of astounding power and range, and kills any being besides its owner who attempts to wear it.Thus, it is both pretty and useful.Manufactured and issued by the mysterious beings of dread and dreaded Arisia, itcannot be counterfeited, and is given only to those entities of the highest honor,integrity, honesty, and intelligence. That knowledge made the Starboard Admiral, as,indeed, it did all Lensmen, feel smug.The mighty Dentless. from needle prow to flaring jets, was armed and armored,screened and shielded as was no other ship of her class and rating. Under the almostinconceivable thrust of her mighty driving jets, she drilled a hole through the void ather cruising velocity of a hundred parsecs per hour.Not in the inert state could she so have done, for no body with inertial mass cantravel faster than the velocity of light, which, in the vast reaches of the galaxy, is theveriest crawl.But her Bergenholm, that intricate machine which renders a spaceship inertialess, orтАЬfree,тАЭ permitted her to move at whatever velocity her ravening jets could achieveagainst the meager resistance of the almost perfect vacuum of interstellar space.Unfortunately, the Bergenholm, while it could completely neutralize inertial mass,never quite knew what to do with gravitational mass, which seems to come and go asthe circumstances require.As the Dentless bored on through the awesome void toward her goal, Ginnison andChief Firing Officer Flatworthy checked and rechecked her mighty armament. Hot GinnisonтАЩs dooropened and there entered a leatherwinged, crocodile-headed, thirty-foot-long,crooked-armed, pythonish, reptilian nightmare. He draped himself across a couple ofparallel bars, tied himself into a tasteful bow-knot, and extended a fewweirdly-stalked eyes. тАЬWell?тАЭGinnison looked affectionately at the horribly monstrous Lensman. тАЬConcerninglтАЩaffaire Cadilax,тАЭ he began.тАЬI know nothing about it, fortunately,тАЭ Woozle interrupted. тАЬThat gives you a chanceto explain everything.тАЭтАЬVery well, then. As you well know, I have spent a long time searching for clues thatwill lead me to the top echelon of Boskonia-Boskonia, that frightful, inimical.soul-destroying, intergalactic organization which is so ineradicably opposed to all themoral values which we of Civilization hold so dear.тАЭWoozle closed a few eyes. тАЬYes. Continue.тАЭ тАЬOn Leanonabar,тАЭ Ginnison continued, тАЬI got a line through Banjo Freeko, theplanetary dictator, but only after I blew up the mining industry on his planet andkilled a few thousand innocent peopleтАФregretfully, of course. But I do that all thetime. It revolts me, but I do it.тАЭтАЬWhat boots it?тАЭ Woozle asked. тАЬYou got your line, didnтАЩt you? You humans areso squeamish.тАЭтАЬTo continue,тАЭ said Ginnison. тАЬThis is the line I traced.тАЭAnd in WoozleтАЩs mind there appeared a three-dimensional representation ofintergalactic space. Two galaxies floated there in the awesome awfulness of theunimaginable vastness of the intergalactic void.From Leanonabar, in the First, or Tellurian, Galaxy, a thin, hard red line ran straightthrough and past the Second Galaxy, out into the vast reaches of the intergalacticspace beyond.тАЬIsnтАЩt that rather overdoing it?тАЭ came WoozleтАЩs thought. тАЬYou think this line mayextend beyondтАФ?тАЭGinnison shook his head. тАЬNot really. ThereтАЩs nothing along that line for half abillion parsecs, and thatтАЩs a Seyfert Galaxy.тАЭтАЬTough about them,тАЭ Woozle opinioned. тАЬLetтАЩs get back to Cadilax.тАЭтАЬOh, yes. Well, Cadilax is clear across the Galaxy from Leanonabar, so that wouldgive us a good baseline for our second triangulation.тАЭтАЬI trust,тАЭ Woozle thought, тАЬthat you have a better reason than that for pickingCadilax.тАЭтАЬCertainly.тАЭ Rising from his seat, Ginnison paced across the deck of his cabin,turned, and paced back. тАЬIn the past several months, all hell has broken loose onCadilax. The drug trade has gone up three hundred percent. Thionite, heroin, hashish, nitrolabe, cocaine, bentlam, and caffeineтАФall of them have increasedtremendously, and Narcotics canтАЩt find the source. The adolescents have gone wild;the boys are wearing their hair long, and the girls have given up perms. Illicit sex isrampant. They live in unstructured social groups.тАЭ He took a deep breath, and said,in a hushed voice: тАЬThere have even been demonstrations against the way the Patrolis running the Boskonian War!тАЭтАЬMadness, indeed,тАЭ Woozle agreed, тАЬbut are you certain that your information isup-to-date?тАЭтАЬReasonably certain,тАЭ Ginnison pondered. тАЬThe latest information we haveтАФтАЭAt that point, a sharp, cold, Lensed thought intruded.тАЬLensman Ginnison, greeting. I humbly request communication with you.тАЭGinnison recognized that thought. It was that of Shadrack, a poison-blooded,frigid-breathing Lensman he had known of yore.тАЬSure, little chum; what is it?тАЭтАЬI do not interrupt?тАЭ Shadrack quavered.тАЬNot at all. Go ahead.тАЭтАЬI trust I do not intrude upon matters of far greater importance than that of my ownmeager and faulty information?тАЭтАЬCertainly not,тАЭ Ginnison reassured.тАЬAs is well known,тАЭ continued the soft thought, тАЬI am a yellow-bellied,chicken-livered, jelly-gutted coward тАФa racial characteristic which I cannot and donot deny. Therefore, I most humbly apologize for this unwarranted intrusion uponyour thoughts.тАЭтАЬNo need to overdo it, little chum,тАЭ said Ginnison. тАЬ A simple grovel will beenough.тАЭ тАЬThank you, Ginnison,тАЭ Shadrack snivelled gravely. тАЬThen may I inquire, in my ownsmall way, if you are aware of the existence of an entity known as Banlon ofDownlo? He is, like myself, a creature accustomed to temperatures scarcely abovezero absolute, but of far greater courage and bravery than any of my race possess.тАЭтАЬBANLON!тАЭ GinnisonтАЩs Lensed thought fairly shrieked. тАЬKlono, yes, I know ofhim!тАЭ Then, more calmly: тАЬHeтАЩs been out after my hide since we destroyedDownlo.тАЭтАЬThat, I fear, is true,тАЭ Shadrack commented. тАЬEven now, he has, according to theinformation which my poor powers have allowed me to glean, englobed the Dentlesswith a fleet of twelve ships which are prepared to blast you out of the ether.тАЭтАЬKlonoтАЩs curving carballoy claws arid gilded gadolinium gizzard!тАЭ Ginnison roaredmentally. тАЬWhy didnтАЩt you say so in the first place?тАЭтАЬI am devastated,тАЭ Shadrack replied. тАЬIt is, again, a racial characteristic which Icannot avoid. It took me too long to apologize.тАЭ A pause, then: тАЬI fear, even now,that I may have been too late,тАЭ Shadrack apologized. тАЬClear ether, Ginnison.тАЭтАЬClear ether, little chum,тАЭThe Lensed connection cut off, and Ginnison flashed a thought to the control room,only to discover that, indeed, the Dentless was surrounded.In a black, indetectable, refrigerated speedster, many parsecs from the soon-to-bescene of battle, that entity known as Banlon of Downlo gloated over his instrumentsas he watched the englobement of the Dentless take form.Like the Meich, and like Shadrack, he was of a race whose normal temperature wasnear that of boiling helium, and thus required extra-dimensional extensions in orderto gather enough energy to survive. Superficially, that sounds glib enough, but,unfortunately, your historian knows less about dimensional analysis than you do, so letтАЩs drop it right there.To return to our narrative, Banlon, a safe distance away from the impending conflict,observed minutely the behavior of the Boskonian squadron which had englobed theDentless. Each captain of the twelve Boskonian warships had done his job toperfection.тАЬVery well,тАЭ Banlon radiated harshly to his minions, тАЬenglobement is now complete.Tractors and pressors on! Cut your Bergenholms and go inert! Blast that ship out ofthe ether!Inertialess as she was, the mighty Dentless, caught in a web of tractor and pressorbeams, could not continue at speed against the resistance of an inert combined masstwelve times that of her own. Relative to the Boskonian squadron, she came to adead halt in space, easy prey for the Boskonians.At BanlonтАЩs order, all twelve Boskonian ships fired at once toward the center of theirenglobement, where the apparently helpless Patrol ship floated.Beams, rods, cones, stilettos, icepicks, corkscrews, knives, forks, and spoons ofenergy raved against the screens of the Dentless. Quasi-solid bolts of horrendouspower chewed, gnawed, flared, snarled, and growled against he energy screens ofthe Patrol ship, seeking eagerly to blast through them to the hull metal. All ofcircumambient space was filled with the frightful discharge of those tremendousbolts of power.The screens of the Dentless flared red, orange, yellow, green blue, and into theviolet. From there, they went into the ultraviolet and x-ray spectrum. But still theyheld. Gimble Ginnison, teeth clenched and jaw muscles knotted, stared with unblinkinggaze of grey eyes at the plate before him, listening to the reports from the officerscommanding the various functions of the ship. But only one of those reports wasreally important.тАЬScreens holding, Lensman!тАЭтАЬFire secondariesтАЭ the Lensman ordered crisply.The prodigious might of the Patrol shipтАЩs secondaries flared out toward the twelveBoskonian ships. Those screens, too, blazed up the spectrum toward the ultraviolet,then toward blackness.тАЬPrimaries one through twelve! Ready?тАЭтАЬReady, sir!тАЭтАЬAt my order, then.тАЭ Ginnison watched his plate closely.тАЬFive seconds! Four...Three...Two...One...FIREтАЭTwelve primary batteries flamed forth as one, each ravening beam smashing into,through, and past the already weakened shields of the Boskonian battleships. Liketissue paper in the flame of an oxyhydrogen torch, the dozen ships dissolved intowhitehot gas.As far as his detectors could scan, Ginnison could see that there was not a singlethreat in the ether about the Dentless.тАЬNavigator,тАЭ he ordered crisply, тАЬcontinue toward Cadilax.тАЭFrom his coign of vantage, so many parsecs away, Banlon stared in unbelief at hisinstruments, knowing to the full what they had reported. But after that firstmomentary shock, the ultrahard logic of his ultracold brain reasserted itself. тАЬShit,тАЭ he thought. And, flipping his speedster end-for-end, he turned around andran.Came, betimes, to Cadilax, a bum.He showed up, unobtrusively, in the streets of Ardis, the capital of that disturbedplanet. He was, apparently, a man approaching sixtyтАФgraying, flabby, rheumy-eyed,alcoholic, and not too bright. He was so typical of his kind that no one noticed him;he was merely one of ten thousand such who wandered about the streets of thevarious cities of Cadilax. He hung around the bars and bistros of the spaceport,cadging drinks, begging for small change, leering innocuously at the hookers, andtelling stories of the days of his youth, when he was тАЬsomebody.тАЭ He claimed tohave been a doctor, a lawyer, a pimp, a confidence man, a bartender, a judge, apolice officer, a religious minister, and other such members of highly respectedoccupations, but he could never produce any proof that he had ever been anyone ofthem.And no one expected him to, for that was the sine qua non of the spaceport bum.He was what he was, and no one expected more of him. He called himself Goniff,and, because of his vaguely erudite manner of speech, soon became known asтАЬProfessorтАЭ Goniff.He was never completely sober, and never completely drunk.The student of this history has, of course, already surmised that beneath this guiselay the keen mind and brain of Gimble Ginnison, Gray Lensman, and he is right.Throughout this time, Ginnison was searching out and finding a wight bedightGauntluth.It had taken time. The Gray LensmanтАЩs mind had probed into the depths ofdegradation, the valleys of vileness, the caverns of corruption, in the dregs of the noxious minds of the foulest folk of a planet before finding that name and thatindividual. He might have found him earlier, had he not been enjoying himself somuch.At first, only vaguely had he been able to construct from the clues available a pictureof the all-powerful drug baron and pirate who ruthlessly ruled the underworld ofCadilax. Then, as time went on and more and more data came in, his visualization ofGauntluth became complete.Gauntluth was tall, lean, and tough, with the all-pervading cadaverous blue of aKalonian. His headquarters were in the Queen Ardis Hotel, the biggest luxury hotelon the planet, which catered only to the top fringe of the upper crust of theultra-ultra.There, in his superbly screened and shielded suite of offices, Gauntluth controlled,through an intricate webwork of communicationsтАЩ and by a highly efficientlyorganized army of minions, the drug traffic of half a dozen solar systems.For long Ginninson pondered, and came to the obvious conclusion that тАЬProfessorтАЭGoniff could in no wise gain admission to the elite society of the Queen Ardis Hotel.Therefore Goniff the bum vanished.Instead, it was Lester Q. Twodyce, cosmopolitan, and wealthy playboy, whochecked into the Queen Ardis with an entourage of flunkies and yes-men, not one ofwhom could easily be detected as an officer of the Galactic Patrol. As was de rigeuron Cadilax, everyone of TwodyceтАЩs men wore a thought-screen.Carefully, step by step, Ginnison laid his trap. Through the highest ranks ofGauntluthтАЩs organization, it became known that Lester Q. Twodyce had somethingvaluable that he was eager to sell. It became clear, even to Gauntluth, that whatever itwas Twodyce had, it was certainly worth investigating. Thus it came about that one evening, when the impeccably dressed Mr. Twodycewas seated at a table in the grand dining room of the hotel with two of his hard-facedgunmen, he was approached by two equally well-dressed men who bowed politelyand smiled pleasantly.One of them said: тАЬGood evening, Mr. Twodyce. I trust we do not interrupt yourrepast?тАЭTwodyce looked up. тАЬNot at all,тАЭ he said. тАЬWill you be seated?тАЭThen, almost as an afterthought: тАЬMay I order you drinks? Such distinguished menas yourselves deserve only the best, of course.тАЭтАЬYou know, then, who we are?тАЭ asked the spokesman.тАЬCertainly, Mr. Thord,тАЭ replied the Lensman suavely, тАЬyou and Mr. Thield arehardly anonymous.тАЭ Drinks were brought.тАЬTheseтАФтАЭ he gestured toward the men on either side of him. тАЬтАФare my associates,Mr. Kokomo and Mr. De Katur.тАЭAfter several minutes of preliminary conversation, the apefaced Thord finallybroached the subject which they had all been anticipating.тАЬI hear, Mr. Twodyce,тАЭ he said, тАЬyou are here to do business.тАЭтАЬNot primarily,тАЭ said the Lensman nonchalantly. тАЬI am here to enjoy myself.Business is not a primary concern of mine.тАЭтАЬI understand,тАЭ said Thord, тАЬfor such a man as yourself...тАЭтАЬNevertheless,тАЭ continued Ginnison, тАЬI do have a small trifle which I am willing todispose of for a proper price.тАЭThe lizard-like Mr. Thield spoke. тАЬAnd that is?тАЭTwodyce said off-handedly, тАЬFifty grams of clear-quill thionite.тАЭThere was a stunned silence from Thord and Thield. Thionite! Thionite, that dreadful and dreadfully expensive drug which, in microgramdoses, induces in the user clear, three-dimensional, stereosonic visions in which heindulges in his every desire to the point of ecstasy. Every desire, base or noble,mental or physical, conscious or subconscious. Whatever pleasurable experience hewishes for himself, he experiences. It is addictive to the nth degree. It is the ultimatehigh, but the slightest overdose is deadly.It is also purple.One milligram of that dire drug was enough for a thousand doses, and the insouciantMr. Twodyce was offering fifty thousand times that amount!тАЬGad!тАЭ murmured Mr. Thield.тАЬIndeed?тАЭ said Thord. тАЬIf that is true, we are prepared to offer...тАЭтАЬYou will offer nothing,тАЭ Ginnison said calmly. тАЬI do not deal with underlings.тАЭThordтАЩs face darkened. тАЬUnderlings? Underlings? To whom do you think you arespeaking, Mister Twodyce?тАЭтАЬTo underlings,тАЭ said the unruffled Twodyce. тАЬAnd you may tell Gauntluth I saidso.тАЭThere was a momentary silence from Thord and Thield as their eyes darted fromGinnisonтАЩs face to those of the bodyguards. Each bodyguard was fingering hisnecktie, his right hand only inches away from the DeLameter that was undoubtedly ina shoulder holster concealed by the loose-fitting dress jacket that each man wore.Thord and Thield rose, superficially regaining their composure. тАЬWe will speak toyou later, Mr. Twodyce,тАЭ said Thord.тАЬYou will not,тАЭ said Ginnison in a low, deadly voice. тАЬI have no desire to see eitherof you again. Gauntluth may contact me if he so wishes. Tell Gauntluth that I cautionhim to think of a hamburger.тАЭ тАЬA...a hamburger?тАЭ gasped Thord.тАЬPrecisely. A hamburger.тАЭтАЬтАФButтАФтАЭтАЬYou may not be able to figure it out,тАЭ Ginnison said coldly, тАЬbut your boss will.Now go.тАЭWithout another word, the two underlings turned and went.That night, in his own suite, Lester Q. Twodyce was Lensing a thought toLieutenant-Admiral Partisipple, the Lensman in charge of the Patrol base on Cadilax.тАЬPartisipple?тАЭтАЬYes, Ginnison, what is it?тАЭ came the Lensman-AdmiralтАЩs thought,тАЬThis thingтАЩs about to bust wide open,тАЭ Ginnison declared, тАЬand IтАЩll need somehelp.тАЭтАЬAnything you want, Gray Lensman.тАЭтАЬGood. Can you get me about fifty logons?тАЭтАЬLogons?тАЭ Lensed the base commander in astonishment. тАЬLOGONS!тАЭThere was reason for his astonishment, for the logon, or Cadiligian rateagle, is oneof the nastiest, most vicious, and intractable beasts in the galaxy. Its warped mind iscapable of containing but one emotion: HATRED! The Cadiligian rateagle hatesanything and everything living, the only desire in the small compass of its mind beingto reduce that life to something edible.The logon resembles the Tellurian rat at its worst, but it is the size of a Tellurianterrier and has the wings and claws of an eagle. Logons do not make nice pets.тАЬYes, logons,тАЭ Ginnison replied. тАЬI can control them.тАЭ тАЬWith your superior mental equipment,тАЭ the base commander thought humbly, тАЬI amsure you can. How do you want them packaged?тАЭтАЬPut them in a тАШcopter. Have the pilot ready to release them on my order, within onekilometer of the roof of the Queen Ardis Hotel.тАЭтАЬCertainly. Clear ether, Gray Lensman.тАЭтАЬClear ether, Partisipple.тАЭThen, another Lensed thought to Woozle, in the Dentless, hovering invisibly in orbithigh above the surface of Cadilax. тАЬWoozle, old serpent, hereтАЩs the story so far.тАЭAnd in flashing thoughts he told the reptilian Lensman his plans. тАЬSo have LieutenantHess von Baschenvolks and his company of Dutch Valerians down here and readyto go.тАЭтАЬWill do, Ginnison. Clear ether.тАЭтАЬClear ether.тАЭIn the office on the top floor of the Queen Ardis Hotel, the inscrutable face ofGauntluth stared thoughtfully at the banks of screens, meters, switches, dials,indicators, knobs, buttons, and flickering lights on the panels and control boardswhich surrounded him.Finally, after long pondering, he touched a button on one of his control panels.тАЬGive me suite 3305,тАЭ he said.Ginnison was waiting for the call when it came. The cadaverous blue face of thegaunt Gauntluth appeared on his visiscreen. тАЬYes?тАЭ he said calmly.тАЬI am told,тАЭ came GauntluthтАЩs rasping voice, тАЬthat you are in a position to deal withme concerning a certainтАФahтАФarticle.тАЭ тАЬAs long as the deal is on the up-and-up, I am,тАЭ replied Ginnison. тАЬOf course, theusual precautions must be taken on both sides.тАЭтАЬOf course, my dear fellow,тАЭ Gauntluth said agreeably. тАЬShall we, then, makearrangements that are agreeable to both sides?тАЭтАЬLet us do so,тАЭ said Ginnison.On cold and distant Jugavine, the planet of the Meich, the First of the frightfulCouncil, Meichfrite, radiated harshly to the others: тАЬyou have all scanned the tapescontaining the report of our agent, Banlon of Downlo. Somehow, by what means weknow not, the Lensman, Ginnison, escaped the trap Banlon set for him. Twelve ofour ships have vanished utterly, and BanlonтАЩs report is neither complete norconclusive. I would now like to hear your comments. Meichrobe.тАЭтАЬIt seems to me,тАЭ that worthy radiated, тАЬthat the strawberries areтАФтАЭтАЬForget the goddam strawberries!тАЭ Meichfrite riposted. тАЬWhat about Ginnison?тАЭтАЬWell, then,тАЭ Meichrobe thought raspingly, тАЬour computers have calculated that witha probability of point oh oh four, Gimble Ginnison has either gone to Cadilax orsomewhere else.тАЭтАЬIndeed,тАЭ Meichfrite thought thoughtfully. тАЬMeichrodot, Fifth of the Meich, give usyour thoughts on this subject.тАЭтАЬOur reports from Cadilax,тАЭ informed Meichrodot, тАЬindicate that all is goingsmoothly. There is no trace of the Lensman on or near the planet. However,BanlonтАЩs agent Gauntluth has reported through Banlon that he is running short ofthionite. He wants to make a buy.тАЭMeichfrite turned his attention to the Sixth of the Meich. тАЬMeichroft, this is your department.тАЭтАЬBanlon,тАЭ Meichroft emitted, тАЬmust go to Trenco.тАЭTrenco! That planet was, and is, unique. Its atmosphere and its liquid are its twooutstanding peculiarities. Half of the atmosphere and almost all of the liquid of theplanet is a compound with an extremely low heat of vaporization. It has a boilingpoint such that during the day it is a vapor and it condenses to a liquid at night. Thedays are intensely hot, the nights intensely cold.The planet rotates on its axis in a little less than twenty-six hours; during the night itrains exactly forty-seven feet, five inches-no more and no less, every night of everyyear.The winds are of more than hurricane velocity, rising to some eight hundred milesper hour, accompanied by blinding, almost continuous lightning discharges.What makes the planet unique, however, is that, with compounds of such low latentheat, the energy transfer is almost nil. Theoretically, the hot days should evaporatethat liquid as quietly and gently as a ghost evaporates in a spotlight, and during thenight it should condense as softly as dew from heaven falling upon the placebeneath. Thermodynamically speaking, the planet Trenco should be about asturbulent as a goldfish bowl. Nobody can figure out where those winds or thelightning come from.Be that as it may, Trenco was, and is, the only planet where the plant known asTrenconian broadleaf grows, and that plant is the only source of thionite in any ofseveral galaxies.In addition, Trenco has a strong Galactic Patrol base, manned by RigellianPatrolmen whose sole job it is to kill anyone who comes to Trenco. One can wellunderstand why thionite was, and is, so expensive. тАЬAh, a cogent thought indeed!тАЭ radiated Meichfrite. тАЬVery well, then, relay to Banlonthat he is to proceed at speed to Trenco and pick up a cargo of broadleaf, to bringhere for processing. Meantime he is to order his underling Gauntluth to reportdirectly to us.тАЭIn his office atop the Queen Ardis, Gauntluth the Kalonian watched with hard,steel-blue eyes as a figure on his spy-ray plate moved toward his suite of offices.Twodyce, with the exception of the DeLameter in his shoulder holster, was unarmed;he was carrying nothing else but the hermetically sealed container which bore withinitself fifty grams of almost impalpable purple powder.A smile twisted GauntluthтАЩs face. тАЬFool!тАЭ he gritted harshly under his breath.He continued to watch as Twodyce came to the outer door and activated theannouncer. He activated the door-opener. тАЬCome in, Mr. Twodyce,тАЭ he spoke into amicrophone. тАЬDown the hall and first door to your left.тАЭGimble Ginnison, fully alert, strode down the corridor and opened the door. Alonebehind his desk sat the unsuspecting Kalonian.тАЬI perceive,тАЭ said the zwilnik, [A zwilnik is anyone connected with the drug trade.]тАЬthat you have brought the thionite with you.тАЭтАЬI have,тАЭ said the Lensman. тАЬHave you the payment ready?тАЭтАЬCertainly. Half in bar platinum, half in Patrol credits, as specified. But first, ofcourse, I must test the thionite.тАЭтАЬFirst I test the platinum,тАЭ said Twodyce impassively.Gauntluth blinked. тАЬWe seem to be at an impasse,тАЭ he murmured. тАЬHowever, I thinkI see a way around it. Know, Twodyce, that you stand now in the focus of a complex of robotic devices which, with rays and beams of tremendous power, willreduce you to a crisp unless you hand over that thionite container instantly.тАЭтАЬSince it is inevitable,тАЭ Ginnison said calmly, тАЬI might as well enjoy it.тАЭ He carefullyput the thionite container on GauntluthтАЩs desk.Gauntluth needed no further check. Directing his thought toward a lump of force in anearby corner of the room, he sent a message to Jugavine.This was the moment for which Ginnison had been waiting. In an instant, heeffortlessly took over the zwilnikтАЩs [A zwilnik is still a zwilnik.] mind. He allowedGauntluth to send the message, since it would only further confuse all thoseconcerned. Gauntluth reported in full to Meichfrite that he had, indeed, obtained agoodly supply of thionite.тАЬExcellent,тАЭ the cold thought returned. тАЬThere will be more coming. Endcommunication.тАЭBy main force and awkwardness, Ginnison held GauntluthтАЩs mind in thrall. He nowhad his second line to the Boskonian base, but Gauntluth, although taken by surpriseat first, was now fighting GinnisonтАЩs mental control with every mega-erg of his hardKalonian mind.тАЬThink you can succeed, even now?тАЭ sneered the still-rigid Kalonian mentally. And,with a tremendous effort of will, he moved a pinkie a fraction of a millimeter to covera photocell. Every alarm in the building went off.GinnisonтАЩs mind clamped down instantly to paralyze the hapless zwilnik. [See above.] With a mirthless smile on his face, Ginnison said: тАЬI permitted that as agesture of futility. You did not, as I suggested, contemplate a hamburger.тАЭтАЬBah!тАЭ came GauntluthтАЩs thought. тАЬThat childishness?тАЭтАЬNot childishness,тАЭ said the Lensman coldly. тАЬA hamburger is so constructed thatmost of the meat is hidden by the bun. My resources are far greater than those whichappear around the edge.тАЭThen Ginnison invaded GauntluthтАЩs mind and took every iota of relevant informationtherein, following which, he hurled a bolt of mental energy calculated to slay anyliving thing. Perforce, Gauntluth ceased to be a living thing.Meanwhile, from a hidden and shielded barracks in a subbasement of the QueenArdis came a full squadron of armed and armored space-thugs, swarming upstairways and elevators to reach the late GauntluthтАЩs suite. Closer, and, at this pointin space and time, far more dangerous, were the DeLameter-armed,thought-screened executives and plug-uglies who were even now battering down thedoors of the suite.Calmly and with deliberation, Ginnison flashed a thought to Woozle:тАЬHE-E-E-ELP!тАЭтАЬAt speed, Ginnison,тАЭ came the reply.Ginnison went into action. Snatching the hermetically sealed thionite container fromthe desk at which lay the cooling corpse of Gauntluth, he broke the seal and emptiedthe contents into the intake vent of the air conditioner. He had, of course, taken theprecaution of putting anti-thionite plugs in his nostrils; all he had to do was to keephis mouth shut and he would be perfectly safe. The impalpable purple powder permeated the atmosphere of the hotel. There wasenough of the active principle of that deadly drug to turn on fifty million people;since the slightest overdose could kill, every person in the hotel not wearinganti-thionite plugs or space armor died in blissful ecstasy. Most of GauntluthтАЩs thugswere wearing one or the other, but at least the Galactic Patrol need no longer worryabout interference from innocent bystanders.With lightning speed, Ginnison grabbed a heavy-caliber, water-cooled machine riflethat just happened to be standing near GauntluthтАЩs desk, swiveled it to face thedoors of the office, and waited.At the same moment, a borazon-hard, bronze-beryllium steel-prowed landing craftsmashed into the side of the Hotel Queen Ardis at the fifteenth floor. Steel girders,ferroconcrete walls, and brick facing alike splattered aside as that hard-driven,specially-designed space boat, hitting its reverse jets at the last second to bring it to adead halt, crashed into and through the bridal suite. The port slammed open andfrom it leaped, strode, jumped and strutted a company of Dutch Valerians in fullspace armor, swinging their mighty thirty-pound space axes.No bifurcate race, wherever situate, will voluntarily face a Valerian in battle. Thosemighty warriors, bred in a gravitational field three times that of Tellus, have no ruthfor any of CivilizationтАЩs foes. The smallest Valerian can, in full armor, do a standinghigh jump of nearly fifteen feet in a field of one Tellurian gravity; he can feint, parry,lunge, swing, and duck with a speed utterly impossible for any of the lesser breedsof man. Like all jocks, they are not too bright.Led by Lieutenant Hess von Baschenvolks, they charged in to block off the armed and armored space-thugs who were heading toward the top floor. As they chargedin, the Lieutenant shouted their battle-cry.тАЬKill! Bash! Smash! Cut! Hack! Destroy! Bleed, you bastards! Bleed and die!тАЭ And,of course, they did.A thirty-pound space axe driven by the muscles of a Valerian can cut its waythrough any armor. Heads fell; arms were lopped off; gallons of gore flowed overthe expensive carpetry. Leaving behind them dozens of corpses, the Valerianscharged upward, toward the suite of offices where the Gray Lensman awaited theassault of GauntluthтАЩs men, fingers poised, ready to press the hair triggers of theheavy machine rifle.The news of the attack, however, reached those winsome wights long before theValerians did. They knew that, unarmored as they were, they stood no chanceagainst those Patrolmen. They headed for the roof, where powerful тАШcopters awaitedthem for their getaway.It was not until they were all on the roof that the logons, released from the specialтАШcopter less than a kilometer away, and individually controlled by the mighty mind ofGimble Ginnison, launched their attack. The zwilnik [Forget it.] executives andplug-uglies had no chance. Only a few managed to draw and fire their ray guns, andeven those few missed their targets. Within a space of seconds, the entire group hadbeen slashed, cut, scratched, bitten, killed, and half-eaten by the winged horrors thathad been released upon them.In GauntluthтАЩs office, Ginnison waited behind the machine rifle, his fingers stillpoised on the hair-triggers. The door smashed and fell. But Ginnison recognized thebulky space-armored eight-foot figure that loomed before him. His hands came awayfrom the triggers as he said: тАЬHi, Hess!тАЭ тАЬDuuuhh...Hi, Boss,тАЭ said Lieutenant Hess von Baschenvolks.In a totally black, intrinsically undetectable, ultrapowered speedster, towing threenegaspheres of planetary antimass, Gimble Ginnison cautiously approached thehollow sphere of light-obliterating dust which surrounded the dread planet Jugavineof the Meich.With his second line of communication, it had been a simple job to locate exactlyand precisely the planet which had been the source of the disruption which had hitthe planet Cadilax.Further, that mental communication had given Ginnison all the information he neededto wipe out this pernicious pesthole of pediculous parasites on the body politic ofCivilization.The negaspheres were an integral part of the plan.The negasphere was, and is, a complete negation of matter. To it, a push is, orbecomes, a pull, and vice versa. No radiation of whatever kind can escape from orbe reflected by its utterly black surface. It is dense beyond imagining; even anegasphere of planetary antimass is less than a kilometer in diameter. When anegasphere strikes ordinary matter, the two cancel out, bringing into being vastquantities of ultrahard and very deadly radiation. A negasphere is, by its very nature,inherently indetectable by any form of radar or spy-ray beam. Even extra-sensoryperception reels dizzyingly away from that vast infinitude of absolute negation...Like the Bergenholm, the negasphere can never really make up its mind aboutgravity; gravity is, was, and always has been a pull, and it should act as a pushagainst a negasphere; since it does not do so, we must conclude that there is something peculiar about the mathematics of the negasphere.It is to GinnisonтАЩs credit that he had perceived this subtle, but inalterable, anomaly.Into the hollow cloud of black interstellar dust that surrounded frigid Jugavine, therewas but one entrance, and into that entrance the Gray LensmanтАЩs speedster, towingwith tractors and pressors those three deadly negaspheres, wended its intricate way.In his office, the Starboard Admiral glowered. тАЬI donтАЩt like it. Ginnison should havetaken the full fleet with him.тАЭThe personage he was addressing was Sir Houston Carbarn, the most brilliantmathematical physicist in the known universe. He was one of a handful of livingentities who could actually think in the abstruse and abstract language of puremathematics.тАЬI donтАЩt like his going in there alone,тАЭ the Starboard Admiral continued. тАЬIf thathollow sphere of dust is as black and bleak as he says it is, he will have nothing toguide him but his sense of perception.тАЭтАЬDIV B = O; CURL B = je-+ (dE/dt); DIV E = Pe; CURL E = O тАУ (dB/dt ).тАЭ saidSir Houston Carbarn thoughtfully. тАЬTrue,тАЭ agreed the Starboard Admiral. тАЬbut I cansee no way for him to illuminate such a vast amount of space with the means at hiscommand. That hollow globe is two parsecs across, and contains within it only asingle solid body-the planet Jugavine. How can he possibly get enough illuminationto find the planet?тАЭтАЬX2+ y2 + Z2 = r2,тАЭ murmured Sir Houston, тАЬE = MC2.тАЭтАЬYes, yes, obviouslyтАЭ snapped the Starboard Admiral, тАЬbut in order to illumine theinterior of that hollow globe, he will have to find Jugavine first, and to do that heneeds illumination. It seems to me this involves a paradox.тАЭтАЬpq ? qp.тАЭ Sir Houston snapped forcefully. тАЬAh, I see what you mean,тАЭ said the Starboard Admiral. тАЬBut what about Banlon ofDownlo? According to GinnisonтАЩs report, Banlon is returning to Jugavine with acargo of Trenconian broadleaf which he somehow managed to steal from under thevery noses of Trigonemetree, the Rigellian Lensman in charge of our base onTrenco. If Ginnison destroys Jugavine, BanlonтАЩs sense of perception willimmediately tell him that the planet no longer exists, and he will not fall intoGinnisonтАЩs trap. How is he going to get around that?тАЭтАЬ?тАЭ mused Sir Houston abstractedly.Gimble Ginnison, Gray Lensman, had no need of slow, electromagnetic radiation tolocate the planet of the Meich. His tremendous sense of perception had pinpointedthat doomed planet exactly. Calculating carefully the intrinsic velocity of his firstnegasphere in relation to that of the planet of the Meich, he released that black,enigmatic ball of negation toward its hapless target.The negasphere struck. Or perhaps not. Is it possible for nothing to strike anything?Let us say, then, that the negasphere began to occupy the same space as that ofJugavine. At the hyperdimensional surface of contact, the matter and antimattermutually vanished. Where the negasphere struck, a huge hole appeared in thattheretofore frigid planet. The planet collapsed in on itself, its very substance eatenaway by the all-devouring negasphere. The radiation of that mutual annihilationwrought heated havoc upon the doomed planet. Helium boiled; hydrogen melted;nitrogen fizzed; and all fell collapsingly into the rapidly diminishing negasphere.When the awful and awesome process had completed itself, there was nothing left.Thus perished the Meich. When the process was completed, the Gray Lensman hurled his two remainingnegaspheres toward the exact same spot in space.Then he sat and waited for Banlon of Downlo.Time passed. Ginnison, ever on the alert with his acute sense of perception, at lastdetected BanlonтАЩs speedster entering the globe of dust. Banlon could not detect, atthat distance, the flare of radiation which had resulted from the destruction ofJugavine. That radiation, struggling along at the speed of light, would require years toreach the interior surface of the globe.Ginnison, waiting like a cat at a mouse hole, pounced at the instant that Banlonentered the globe. One flash of a primary beam, and Banlon of Downlo was forcedinto the next plane of existence. He ceased to be, save as white-hot gas, spreadingand dissipating its energy through a relatively small volume of space.Immediately, Ginnison Lensed his report back to Prime Base, then made his way outof the hollow globe and back to the Dentless.The Starboard Admiral frowned and looked up at Sir Houston Carbarn. тАЬIтАЩm afraidI still donтАЩt understand. After Jugavine was destroyed, Banlon, with his sense ofperception, which is instantaneous and is not hampered by the velocity of light, should have detected the fact that the planet no longer existed. Why did he continueon in toward a non-existent planet?тАЭSir Houston Carbarn smiled. тАЬ(-1)(-1) = +1,тАЭ he informed.The Starboard Admiral slammed his palm on the desk. тАЬOf course! The principle ofthe double negative! Two negaspheres made a posisphere! Banlon thought it wasJugavine! Our Gray Lensman has genius, Sir Houston!тАЭтАЬ!тАЭ agreed Sir Houston.When Gimble Ginnison strode into his quarters aboard the Dent less, Woozle waswaiting for him. тАЬWhat now?тАЭ queried that sapient serpent.тАЬNow for a decent meal, Woozle.тАЭ He activated a communicator. тАЬGalley? Send upa two-inch-thick steak, rare. Mashed potatoes and thick brown gravy. And a quart ofblack coffee.тАЭтАЬYes, sir,тАЭ came the reply. тАЬAnd what about dessert, sir?тАЭGinnison sat down in his chair with a triumphant sigh of relief. тАЬNow, at last,тАЭ hesaid, тАЬI can enjoy that for which I have waited so long.тАЭтАЬThe strawberries, sir?тАЭтАЬExactly. The strawberries.тАЭ Edited September 22, 2015 by Ari
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