<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_9" id="CHAPTER_9">CHAPTER 9</SPAN></h2>
<p>Piracy was rife. There was no suspicion, however, nor would there be
for many years, that there was anything of very large purpose about the
business. Murgatroyd was simply a Captain Kidd of space; and even if he
were actually connected with Galactic Spaceways, that fact would not be
surprising. Such relationships had always existed; the most ferocious
and dreaded pirates of the ancient world worked in full partnership
with the First Families of that world.</p>
<p>Virgil Samms was thinking of pirates and of piracy when he left Senator
Morgan's office. He was still thinking of them while he was reporting
to Roderick Kinnison. Hence:</p>
<p>"But that's enough about this stuff and me, Rod. Bring me up to date on
Operation Boskone."</p>
<p>"Branching out no end. Your guess was right that Spaceways' losses to
pirates are probably phony. But it wasn't the <i>known</i> attacks—that
is, those cases in which the ship was found, later, with some or most
of the personnel alive—that gave us the real information. They were
all pretty much alike. But when we studied the total disappearances we
really hit the jack-pot."</p>
<p>"That doesn't sound just right, but I'm listening."</p>
<p>"You'd better, since it goes farther than even you suspected. It was no
trouble at all to get the passenger lists and the names of the crews of
the independent ships that were lost without a trace. Their relatives
and friends—we concentrated mostly on wives—could be located, except
for the usual few who moved around so much that they got lost. Spacemen
average young, you know, and their wives are still younger. Well, these
young women got jobs, most of them remarried, and so on. In short,
normal."</p>
<p>"And in the case of Spaceways, not normal?"</p>
<p>"Decidedly not. In the first place, you'd be amazed at how little
publication was ever done of passenger lists, and apparently crew
lists were not published at all. No use going into detail as to how we
got the stuff, but we got it. However, nine tenths of the wives had
disappeared, and none had remarried. The only ones we could find were
those who did not care, even when their husbands were alive, whether
they ever saw them again or not. But the big break was—you remember
the disappearance of that girls'-school cruise ship?"</p>
<p>"Of course. It made a lot of noise."</p>
<p>"An interesting point in connection with that cruise is that two days
before the ship blasted off the school was robbed. The vault was
opened with thermite and the whole Administration Building burned to
the ground. All the school's records were destroyed. Thus, the list of
missing had to be made up from statements made by friends, relatives,
and what not."</p>
<p>"I remember something of the kind. My impression was, though, that
the space-ship company furnished.... Oh!" The tone of Samms' thought
alerted sharply. "That was Spaceways, under cover?"</p>
<p>"Definitely. Our best guess is that there were quite a few shiploads of
women disappeared about that time, instead of one. Austine's College
had more students that year than ever before or since. It was the
extras, not the regulars, who went on that cruise; the ones who figured
it would be more convenient to disappear in space than to become
ordinary missing persons."</p>
<p>"But Rod! That would mean ... but where?"</p>
<p>"It means just that. And finding out 'where' will run into a project.
There are over two thousand million suns in this galaxy, and the best
estimate is that there are more than that many planets habitable by
beings more or less human in type. You know how much of the galaxy has
been explored and how fast the work of exploring the rest of it is
going. Your guess is just as good as mine as to where those spacemen
and engineers and their wives and girl-friends are now. I am sure,
though, of four things; none of which we can ever begin to prove. One;
they didn't die in space. Two; they landed on a comfortable and very
well equipped Tellurian planet. Three; they built a fleet there. Four;
that fleet attacked the Hill."</p>
<p>"Murgatroyd, do you suppose?" Although surprised by Kinnison's
tremendous report, Samms was not dismayed.</p>
<p>"No idea. No data—yet."</p>
<p>"And they'll keep on building," Samms said. "They had a fleet much
larger than the one they expected to meet. Now they'll build one larger
than all our combined forces. And since the politicians will always
know what we are doing ... or it might be ... I wonder...?"</p>
<p>"You can stop wondering." Kinnison grinned savagely.</p>
<p>"What do you mean?"</p>
<p>"Just what you were going to think about. You know the edge of the
galaxy closest to Tellus, where that big rift cuts in?"</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>"Across that rift, where it won't be surveyed for a thousand years,
there's a planet that could be Earth's twin sister. No atomic energy,
no space-drive, but heavily industrialized and anxious to welcome
us. Project Bennett. Very, <i>very</i> hush-hush. Nobody except Lensmen
know anything about it. Two friends of Dronvire's—smart, smooth
operators—are in charge. It's going to be the Navy Yard of the
Galactic Patrol."</p>
<p>"But Rod ..." Samms began to protest, his mind leaping ahead to the
numberless problems, the tremendous difficulties, inherent in the
program which his friend had outlined so briefly.</p>
<p>"Forget it, Virge!" Kinnison cut in. "It won't be easy, of course, but
we can do anything they can do, and do it better. You can go calmly
ahead with your own chores, knowing that when—and notice that I say
'when', not 'if'—we need it we'll have a fleet up our sleeves that
will make the official one look like a task force. But I see you're
at the rendezvous, and there's Jill. Tell her 'hi' for me. And as the
Vegians say—'Tail high, brother!'"</p>
<p>Samms was in the hotel's ornate lobby; a couple of uniformed "boys" and
Jill Samms were approaching. The girl reached him first.</p>
<p>"You had no trouble in recognizing me, then, my dear?"</p>
<p>"None at all, Uncle George." She kissed him perfunctorily, the bell
hops faded away. "So nice to see you—I've heard <i>so</i> much about you.
The Marine Room, you said?"</p>
<p>"Yes. I reserved a table."</p>
<p>And in that famous restaurant, in the unequalled privacy of the city's
noisiest and most crowded night spot, they drank sparingly; ate
not-so-sparingly; and talked not sparingly at all.</p>
<p>"It's perfectly safe here, you think?" Jill asked first.</p>
<p>"Perfectly. A super-sensitive microphone couldn't hear anything, and
it's so dark that a lip-reader, even if he could read us, would need a
pair of twelve-inch night-glasses."</p>
<p>"Goody! They did a marvelous job, Dad. If it weren't for your ...
well, your personality, I wouldn't recognize you even now."</p>
<p>"You think I'm safe, then?"</p>
<p>"Absolutely."</p>
<p>"Then we'll get down to business. You, Knobos, and DalNalten all have
keen and powerful minds. You can't all be wrong. Spaceways, then, is
tied in with both the Towne-Morgan gang and with thionite. The logical
extension of that—Dal certainly thought of it, even though he didn't
mention it—would be ..." Samms paused.</p>
<p>"Check. That the notorious Murgatroyd, instead of being just another
pirate chief, is really working for Spaceways and belongs to the
Towne-Morgan-Isaacson gang. But dad—what an idea! Can things be <i>that</i>
rotten, really?"</p>
<p>"They may be worse than that. Now the next thing. Who, in your opinion,
is the real boss?"</p>
<p>"Well, it certainly is not Herkimer Herkimer Third." Jill ticked him
off on a pink forefinger. She had been asked for an opinion; she
set out to give it without apology or hesitation. "He could—just
about—direct the affairs of a hot-dog stand. Nor is it Clander. He
isn't even a little fish; he's scarcely a minnow. Equally certainly
it is neither the Venerian nor the Martian. They may run planetary
affairs, but nothing bigger. I haven't met Murgatroyd, of course, but
I have had several evaluations, and he does not rate up with Towne.
And Big Jim—and this surprised me as much as it will you—is almost
certainly not the prime mover." She looked at him questioningly.</p>
<p>"That would have surprised me tremendously yesterday; but after
today—I'll tell you about that presently—it doesn't."</p>
<p>"I'm glad of that. I expected an argument, and I have been inclined
to question the validity of my own results, since they do not agree
with common knowledge—or, rather, what is supposed to be knowledge.
That leaves Isaacson and Senator Morgan." Jill frowned in perplexity;
seemed, for the first time, unsure. "Isaacson is of course a big man.
Able. Well-informed. Extremely capable. A top-notch executive. Not only
<i>is</i>, would <i>have</i> to be, to run Spaceways. On the other hand, I have
always thought that Morgan was nothing but a windbag...." Jill stopped
talking; left the thought hanging in air.</p>
<p>"So did I—until today," Samms agreed grimly. "I thought that he was
simply an unusually corrupt, greedy, rabble-rousing politician. Our
estimates of him may have to be changed very radically."</p>
<p>Samms' mind raced. From two entirely different angles of approach, Jill
and he had arrived at the same conclusion. But, if Morgan were really
the Big Shot, would he have deigned to interview personally such small
fry as Olmstead? Or was Olmstead's job of more importance than he,
Samms, had supposed?</p>
<p>"I've got a dozen more things to check with you," he went on, almost
without a pause, "but since this leadership matter is the only one in
which my experience would affect your judgment, I had better tell you
about what happened today...."</p>
<hr class="tb" />
<p>Tuesday came, and hour fourteen hundred; and Samms strode into an
office. There was a big, clean desk; a wiry, intense, gray-haired man.</p>
<p>"Captain Willoughby?"</p>
<p>"Yes."</p>
<p>"George Olmstead reporting."</p>
<p>"Fourth Officer." The captain punched a button; the heavy, sound-proof
door closed itself and locked.</p>
<p>"<i>Fourth</i> Officer? New rank, eh. What does the ticket cover?"</p>
<p>"New, and special. Here's the articles; read it and sign it." He did
not add "or else", it was not necessary. It was clearly evident that
Captain Willoughby, never garrulous, intended to be particularly
reticent with his new subordinate.</p>
<p>Samms read. "... Fourth Officer ... shall ... no duties or
responsibilities in the operation or maintenance of said space-ship ...
cargo ..." Then came a clause which fairly leaped from the paper and
smote his eyes: "when in command of a detail outside the hull of said
space-ship he shall enforce, by the infliction of death or such other
penalty as he deems fit...."</p>
<p>The Lensman was rocked to the heels, but did not show it. Instead, he
took the captain's pen—his own, as far as Willoughby was concerned,
could have been filled with vanishing ink—and wrote George Olmstead's
name in George Olmstead's bold, flowing script.</p>
<p>Willoughby then took him aboard the good ship <i>Virgin Queen</i> and led
him to his cabin.</p>
<p>"Here you are, Mr. Olmstead. Beyond getting acquainted with the
super-cargo and the rest of your men, you will have no duties for a
few days. You have full run of the ship, with one exception. Stay out
of the control room until I call you. Is that clear?"</p>
<p>"Yes, sir." Willoughby turned away and Samms, after tossing his
space-bag into the rack, took inventory.</p>
<p>The room was of course very small; but, considering the importance of
mass, it was almost extravagantly supplied. There were shelves, or
rather, tight racks, of books; there were sun-lamps and card-shelves
and exercisers and games; there was a receiver capable of bringing in
programs from almost anywhere in space. The room had only one lack; it
did not have an ultra-wave visiplate. Nor was this lack surprising.
"They" would scarcely let George Olmstead know where "they" were taking
him.</p>
<p>Samms was surprised, however, when he met the men who were to be
directly under his command; for instead of one, or at most two, they
numbered exactly forty. And they were all, he thought at first glance,
the dregs and sweepings of the lowest dives in space. Before long,
however, he learned that they were not all space-rats and denizens
of Skid Rows. Six of them—the strongest physically and the hardest
mentally of the lot—were fugitives from lethal chambers; murderers
and worse. He looked at the biggest, toughest one of the six—a
rock-drill-eyed, red-haired giant—and asked:</p>
<p>"What did they tell you, Tworn, that your job was going to be?"</p>
<p>"They didn't say. Just that it was dangerous, but if I done exactly
what my boss would tell me to do, and nothing else, I might not even
get hurt. An' I was due to take the deep breath the next week, see?
That's just how it was, boss."</p>
<p>"I see," and one by one Virgil Samms, master psychologist, studied and
analyzed his motley crew until he was called into the control room.</p>
<p>The navigating tank was covered; no charts were to be seen. The one
"live" visiplate showed a planet and a fiercely blue-white sun.</p>
<p>"My orders are to tell you, at this point, all I know about what you've
got to do and about that planet down there. Trenco, they call it." To
Virgil Samms, the first adherent of Civilization ever to hear it, that
name meant nothing whatever. "You are to take about five of your men,
go down there, and gather all the green leaves you can. Not green in
color; sort of purplish. What they call broadleaf is the best; leaves
about two feet long and a foot wide. But don't be too choosy. If there
isn't any broadleaf handy, grab anything you can get hold of."</p>
<p>"What is the opposition?" Samms asked, quietly. "And what have they got
that makes them so tough?"</p>
<p>"Nothing. No inhabitants, even. Just the planet itself. Next to Arisia,
it's the God damndest planet in space. I've never been any closer to it
than this, and I never will, so I don't know anything about it except
what I hear; but there's something about it that kills men or drives
them crazy. We spend seven or eight boats every trip, and thirty-five
or forty men, and the biggest load that anybody ever took away from
here was just under two hundred pounds of leaf. A good many times we
don't get any."</p>
<p>"They go crazy, eh?" In spite of his control, Samms paled. But it
couldn't be like Arisia. "What are the symptoms? What do they say?"</p>
<p>"Various. Main thing seems to be that they lose their sight. Don't go
blind, exactly, but can't see where anything is; or, if they do see
it, it isn't there. And it rains over forty feet deep every night, and
yet it all dries up by morning. The worst electrical storms in the
universe, and wind-velocities—I can show you charts on that—of over
eight hundred miles an hour."</p>
<p>"Whew! How about time? With your permission, I would like to do some
surveying before I try to land."</p>
<p>"A smart idea. A couple of the other boys had the same, but it didn't
help—they didn't come back. I'll give you two Tellurian days—no,
three—before I give you up and start sending out the other boats. Pick
out your five men and see what you can do."</p>
<p>As the boat dropped away, Willoughby's voice came briskly from a
speaker. "I know that you five men have got ideas. Forget 'em. Fourth
Officer Olmstead has the authority and the orders to put a half-ounce
slug through the guts of any or all of you that don't jump, and jump
fast, to do what he tells you. And if that boat makes any funny moves I
blast it out of the ether. Good harvesting!"</p>
<p>For forty-eight Tellurian hours, taking time out only to sleep, Samms
scanned and surveyed the planet Trenco; and the more he studied it, the
more outrageously abnormal it became.</p>
<p>Trenco was, and is, a peculiar planet indeed. Its atmosphere is not air
as we know air; its hydrosphere does not resemble water. Half of that
atmosphere and most of that hydrosphere are one chemical, a substance
of very low heat of vaporization and having a boiling point of about
seventy-five degrees Fahrenheit. Trenco's days are intensely hot; its
nights are bitterly cold.</p>
<p>At night, therefore, it rains: and by comparison a Tellurian downpour
of one inch per hour is scarcely a drizzle. Upon Trenco it really
<i>rains</i>—forty seven feet and five inches of precipitation, every night
of every Trenconian year. And this tremendous condensation of course
causes wind. Willoughby's graphs were accurate. Except at Trenco's
very poles there is not a spot in which or a time at which an Earthly
gale would not constitute a dead calm; and along the equator, at every
sunrise and every sunset, the wind blows from the day side into the
night side at a velocity which no Tellurian hurricane or cyclone,
however violent, has even distantly approached.</p>
<p>Also, therefore, there is lightning. Not in the mild and occasional
flashes which we of gentle Terra know, but in a continuous, blinding
glare which outshines a normal sun; in battering, shattering,
multi-billion-volt discharges which not only make darkness unknown
there, but also distort beyond recognition and beyond function the warp
and the woof of space itself. Sight is almost completely useless in
that fantastically altered medium. So is the ultra-beam.</p>
<p>Landing on the daylight side, except possibly at exact noon, would be
impossible because of the wind, nor could the ship stay landed for
more than a couple of minutes. Landing on the night side would be
practically as bad, because of the terrific charge the boat would pick
up—unless the boat carried something that could be rebuilt into a
leaker. Did it? It did.</p>
<p>Time after time, from pole to pole and from midnight around the clock,
Samms stabbed Visibeam and spy-ray down toward Trenco's falsely-visible
surface, with consistently and meaninglessly impossible results. The
planet tipped, lurched, spun, and danced. It broke up into chunks, each
of which began insanely to follow mathematically impossible paths.</p>
<p>Finally, in desperation, he rammed a beam down and held it down. Again
he saw the planet break up before his eyes, but this time he held on.
He <i>knew</i> that he was well out of the stratosphere, a good two hundred
miles up. Nevertheless, he <i>saw</i> a tremendous mass of jagged rock
falling straight down, with terrific velocity, upon his tiny lifeboat!</p>
<p>Unfortunately the crew, to whom he had not been paying overmuch
attention of late, saw it, too; and one of them, with a bestial yell,
leaped toward Samms and the controls. Samms, reaching for pistol and
blackjack, whirled around just in time to see the big red-head lay the
would-be attacker out cold with a vicious hand's-edge chop at the base
of the skull.</p>
<p>"Thanks, Tworn. Why?"</p>
<p>"Because I want to get out of this alive, and he'd've had us all in
hell in fifteen minutes. You know a hell of a lot more than we do, so
I'm playin' it your way. See?"</p>
<p>"I see. Can you use a sap?"</p>
<p>"An artist," the big man admitted, modestly. "Just tell me how long
you want a guy to be out and I won't miss it a minute, either way. But
you'd better blow that crumb's brains out, right now. He ain't no damn
good."</p>
<p>"Not until after I see whether he can work or not. You're a Procian,
aren't you?"</p>
<p>"Yeah. Midlands—North Central."</p>
<p>"What did you do?"</p>
<p>"Nothing much, at first. Just killed a guy that needed killing; but
the goddam louse had a lot of money, so they give me twenty five
years. I didn't like it very well, and acted rough, so they give me
solitary—boot, bandage, and so on. So I tried a break—killed six or
eight, maybe a dozen, guards—but didn't quite make it. So they slated
me for the big whiff. That's all, boss."</p>
<p>"I'm promoting you, now, to squad leader. Here's the sap." He handed
Tworn his blackjack. "Watch 'em—I'll be too busy to. This landing is
going to be tough."</p>
<p>"Gotcha, boss." Tworn was calibrating his weapon by slugging himself
experimentally on the leg. "Go ahead. As far as these crumbs are
concerned, you've got this air-tank all to yourself."</p>
<p>Samms had finally decided what he was going to do. He located the
terminator on the morning side, poised his little ship somewhat nearer
to dawn than to midnight, and "cut the rope". He took one quick reading
on the sun, cut off his plates, and let her drop, watching only his
pressure gages and gyros.</p>
<p>One hundred millimeters of mercury. Three hundred. Five hundred. He
slowed her down. He was going to hit a thin liquid, but if he hit
it too hard he would smash the boat, and he had no idea what the
atmospheric pressure at Trenco's surface would be. Six hundred. Even
this late at night, it might be greater than Earth's ... and it might
be a lot less. Seven hundred.</p>
<p>Slower and slower he crept downward, his tension mounting infinitely
faster than did the needle of the gage. This was an instrument landing
with a vengeance! Eight hundred. How was the crew taking it? How many
of them had Tworn had to disable? He glanced quickly around. None! Now
that they could not see the hallucinatory images upon the plates, they
were not suffering at all—he himself was the only one aboard who was
feeling the strain!</p>
<p>Nine hundred ... nine hundred forty. The boat "hit the drink" with a
crashing, splashing impact. Its pace was slow enough, however, and the
liquid was deep enough, so that no damage was done. Samms applied a
little driving power and swung his craft's sharp nose into the line
toward the sun. The little ship plowed slowly forward, as nearly just
awash as Samms could keep her; grounded as gently as a river steam-boat
upon a mud-flat. The starkly incredible downpour slackened; the Lensman
knew that the second critical moment was at hand.</p>
<p>"Strap down, men, until we see what this wind is going to do to us."</p>
<p>The atmosphere, moving at a velocity well above that of sound, was in
effect not a gas, but a solid. Even a spaceboat's hard skin of alloy
plate, with all its bracing, could not take what was coming next.
Inert, she would be split open, smashed, flattened out, and twisted
into pretzels. Samms' finger stabbed down; the Berg went into action;
the lifeboat went free just as that raging blast of quasi-solid vapor
wrenched her into the air.</p>
<p>The second descent was much faster and much easier than the first. Nor,
this time, did Samms remain surfaced or drive toward shore. Knowing now
that this ocean was not deep enough to harm his vessel, he let her sink
to the bottom. More, he turned her on her side and drove her at a flat
angle into the bottom; so deep that the rim of her starboard lock was
flush with the ocean's floor. Again they waited; and this time the wind
did not blow the lifeboat away.</p>
<p>Upon purely theoretical grounds Samms had reasoned that the weird
distortion of vision must be a function of distance, and his
observations so far had been in accord with that hypothesis. Now,
slowly and cautiously, he sent out a visibeam. Ten feet ... twenty ...
forty ... all clear. At fifty the seeing was definitely bad; at sixty
it became impossible. He shortened back to forty and began to study
the vegetation, growing with such fantastic speed that the leaves,
pressed flat to the ground by the gale and anchored there by heavy
rootlets, were already inches long. There was also what seemed to be
animal life, of sorts, but Samms was not, at the moment, interested in
Trenconian zoology.</p>
<p>"Are them the plants we're going to get, boss?" Tworn asked, staring
into the plate over Samms' shoulder. "Shall we go out now an' start
pickin' 'em?"</p>
<p>"Not yet. Even if we could open the port the blast would wreck us.
Also, it would shear your head off, flush with the coaming, as fast
as you stuck it out. This wind should ease off after a while; we'll go
out a little before noon. In the meantime we'll get ready. Have the
boys break out a couple of spare Number Twelve struts, some clamps and
chain, four snatch blocks, and a hundred feet of heavy space-line....</p>
<p>"Good," he went on, when the order had been obeyed. "Rig the line from
the winch through snatch blocks here, and here, and here, so I can haul
you back against the wind. While you are doing that I'll rig a remote
control on the winch."</p>
<p>Shortly before Trenco's fierce, blue-white sun reached meridian, the
six men donned space-suits and Samms cautiously opened the air-lock
ports. They worked. The wind was now scarcely more than an Earthly
hurricane; the wildly whipping broadleaf plants, struggling upward,
were almost half-way to the vertical. The leaves were apparently almost
fully grown.</p>
<p>Four men clamped their suits to the line. The line was paid out. Each
man selected two leaves; the largest, fattest, purplest ones he could
reach. Samms hauled them back and received the loot; Tworn stowed the
leaves away. Again—again—again.</p>
<p>With noon there came a few minutes of "calm". A strong man could
stand against the now highly variable wind; could move around without
being blown beyond the horizon; and during those few minutes all six
men gathered leaves. That time, however, was very short. The wind
steadied into the reverse direction with ever-increasing fury; winch
and space-line again came into play. And in a scant half hour, when the
line began to hum an almost musical note under its load, Samms decided
to call it quits.</p>
<p>"That'll be all for today, boys," he announced. "About twice more and
this line will part. You've done too good a job to lose you. Secure
ship."</p>
<p>"Shall I blow the air, sir?" Tworn asked.</p>
<p>"I don't think so." Samms thought for a moment. "No. I'm afraid to take
the chance. This stuff, whatever it is, is probably as poisonous as
cyanide. We'll keep our suits on and exhaust into space."</p>
<p>Time passed. "Night" came; the rain and the flood. The bottom softened.
Samms blasted the lifeboat out of the mud and away from the planet. He
opened the bleeder valves, then both air-lock ports; the contaminated
air was replaced by the ultra-hard vacuum of the inter-planetary void.
He signaled the <i>Virgin Queen</i>; the lifeboat was taken aboard.</p>
<p>"Quick trip, Olmstead," Willoughby congratulated him. "I'm surprised
that you got back at all, to say nothing of with so much stuff and not
losing a man. Give me the weight, mister, fast!"</p>
<p>"Three hundred and forty eight pounds, sir," the super-cargo reported.</p>
<p>"My God! And all pure broadleaf! <i>Nobody</i> ever did <i>that</i> before! How
did you do it, Olmstead?"</p>
<p>"I don't know whether that would be any of your business or not."
Samms' mien was not insulting; merely thoughtful. "Not that I give a
damn, but my way might not help anybody else much, and I think I had
better report to the main office first, and let them do the telling.
Fair enough?"</p>
<p>"Fair enough," the skipper conceded, ungrudgingly. "What a load! And no
losses!"</p>
<p>"One boatload of air, is all; but air is expensive out here." Samms
made a point, deliberately.</p>
<p>"Air!" Willoughby snorted. "I'll swap you a hundred flasks of air, any
time, for any one of those leaves!" Which was what Samms wanted to know.</p>
<p>Captain Willoughby was smart. He knew that the way to succeed was to
use and then to trample upon his inferiors; to toady to such superiors
as were too strong to be pulled down and thus supplanted. He knew this
Olmstead had what it took to be a big shot. Therefore:</p>
<p>"They told me to keep you in the dark until we got to Trenco," he more
than half apologized to his Fourth Officer shortly after the <i>Virgin
Queen</i> blasted away from the Trenconian system. "But they didn't say
anything about afterwards—maybe they figured you wouldn't be aboard
any more, as usual—but anyway, you can stay right here in the control
room if you want to."</p>
<p>"Thanks, Skipper, but mightn't it be just as well," he jerked his head
inconspicuously toward the other officers, "to play the string out,
this trip? I don't care where we're going, and we don't want anybody to
get any funny ideas."</p>
<p>"That'd be a lot better, of course—as long as you know that your cards
are all aces, as far as I'm concerned."</p>
<p>"Thanks, Willoughby. I'll remember that."</p>
<p>Samms had not been entirely frank with the private captain. From
the time required to make the trip, he knew to within a few parsecs
Trenco's distance from Sol. He did not know the direction, since the
distance was so great that he had not been able to recognize any star
or constellation. He did know, however, the course upon which the
vessel then was, and he would know courses and distances from then on.
He was well content.</p>
<p>A couple of uneventful days passed. Samms was again called into the
control room, to see that the ship was approaching a three-sun solar
system.</p>
<p>"This where we're going to land?" he asked, indifferently.</p>
<p>"We ain't going to land," Willoughby told him. "You are going to take
the broadleaf down in your boat, close enough so that you can parachute
it down to where it has to go. Way 'nuff, pilot, go inert and match
intrinsics. Now, Olmstead, watch. You've seen systems like this before?"</p>
<p>"No, but I know about them. Those two suns over there are a hell of
a lot bigger and further away than they look, and this one here,
much smaller, is in the Trojan position. Have those big suns got any
planets?"</p>
<p>"Five or six apiece, they say; all hotter and dryer than the brazen
hinges of hell. This sun here has seven, but Number Two—'Cavenda',
they call it—is the only Tellurian planet in the system. The first
thing we look for is a big, diamond-shaped continent ... there's only
one of that shape ... there it is, over there. Notice that one end is
bigger than the other—that end is north. Strike a line to split the
continent in two and measure from the north end one-third of the length
of the line. That's the point we're diving at now ... see that crater?"</p>
<p>"Yes." The <i>Virgin Queen</i>, although still hundreds of miles up, was
slowing rapidly. "It must be a big one."</p>
<p>"It's a good fifty miles across. Go down until you're dead sure that
the box will land somewhere inside the rim of that crater. Then dump
it. The parachute and the sender are automatic. Understand?"</p>
<p>"Yes, sir; I understand," and Samms took off.</p>
<p>He was vastly more interested in the stars, however, than in delivering
the broadleaf. The constellation directly beyond Sol from wherever he
was might be recognizable. Its shape would be smaller and more or less
distorted; its smaller stars, brilliant to Earthly eyes only because
of their nearness, would be dimmer, perhaps invisible; the picture
would be further confused by intervening, nearby, brilliant strangers;
but such giants as Canopus and Rigel and Betelgeuse and Deneb would
certainly be highly visible if he could only recognize them. From
Trenco his search had failed; but he was still trying.</p>
<p><i>There</i> was something vaguely familiar! Sweating with the mental
effort, he blocked out the too-near, too-bright stars and studied
intensively those that were left. A blue-white and a red were most
prominent. Rigel and Betelgeuse? Could that constellation be Orion? The
Belt was very faint, but it was there. Then Sirius ought to be about
there, and Pollux about there; and, at this distance, about equally
bright. They were. Aldebaran would be orange, and about one magnitude
brighter than Pollux; and Capella would be yellow, and half a magnitude
brighter still. There they were! Not too close to where they should be,
but close enough—it was Orion! And this thionite way-station, then,
was somewhere near right ascension seventeen hours and declination plus
ten degrees!</p>
<p>He returned to the <i>Virgin Queen</i>. She blasted off. Samms asked very
few questions and Willoughby volunteered very little information;
nevertheless the First Lensman learned more than anyone of his fellow
pirates would have believed possible. Aloof, taciturn, disinterested to
a degree, he seemed to spend practically all of his time in his cabin
when he was not actually at work; but he kept his eyes and his ears
wide open. And Virgil Samms, as has been intimated, had a brain.</p>
<p>The <i>Virgin Queen</i> made a quick flit from Cavenda to Vegia, arriving
exactly on time; a proud, clean space-ship as high above suspicion as
Calpurnia herself. Samms unloaded her cargo; replaced it with one for
Earth. She was serviced. She made a fast, eventless run to Tellus. She
docked at New York Spaceport. Virgil Samms walked unconcernedly into
an ordinary-looking rest-room; George Olmstead, fully informed, walked
unconcernedly out.</p>
<p>As soon as he could, Samms Lensed Northrop and Jack Kinnison.</p>
<p>"We lined up a thousand and one signals, sir," Northrop reported for
the pair, "but only one of them carried a message, and it didn't make
sense."</p>
<p>"Why not?" Samms asked, sharply. "With a Lens, <i>any</i> kind of a
message, however garbled, coded, or interrupted, makes sense."</p>
<p>"Oh, we understood what it said," Jack came in, "but it didn't say
enough. Just 'READY—READY—READY'; over and over."</p>
<p>"What!" Samms exclaimed, and the boys could feel his mind work. "Did
that signal, by any chance, originate anywhere near seventeen hours and
plus ten degrees?"</p>
<p>"Very near. Why? How did you know?"</p>
<p>"Then it does make sense!" Samms exclaimed, and called a general
conference of Lensmen.</p>
<p>"Keep working along these same lines," Samms directed, finally. "Keep
Ray Olmstead in the Hill in my place. I am going to Pluto, and—I
hope—to Palain Seven."</p>
<p>Roderick Kinnison of course protested; but, equally of course, his
protests were over-ruled.</p>
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