<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XII" id="CHAPTER_XII"></SPAN>CHAPTER XII</h2>
<h3>Flying Visits—Via Projection</h3>
<p>"Well, what to do?" asked Seaton as he and
Rovol entered the laboratory, "Tear down this
fourth-order projector and tackle the big job?
I see the lens is here, on schedule, so we can hop right
into it."</p>
<p>"We shall have further use for this mechanism. We
shall need at least one more lens of this dense material,
and other scientists also may have need of one or two.
Then, too, the new projector must be so large that it
cannot be erected in this room."</p>
<p>As he spoke, Rovol seated himself at his control-desk
and ran his fingers lightly over the keys. The entire
wall of the laboratory disappeared, hundreds of beams
of force darted here and there, seizing and working raw
materials, and in the portal there grew up, to Seaton's
amazement, a keyboard and panel installation such as
the Earth-man, in his wildest moments, had never imagined.
Bank upon bank of typewriter-like keys; row
upon row of keys, pedals, and stops resembling somewhat
those of the console of a gigantic pipe-organ;
panel upon panel of meters, switches, and dials—all arranged
about two deeply-cushioned chairs and within
reach of their occupants.</p>
<p>"Whew! That looks like the combined mince-pie
nightmares of a whole flock of linotype operators, pipe-organists,
and hard-boiled radio hams!" exclaimed
Seaton when the installation was complete. "Now that
you've got it, what are you going to do with it?"</p>
<p>"There is not a control system in Norlamin adequate
for the task we face, since the problem of the projection
of rays of the fifth order has heretofore been of only
academic interest. Therefore it becomes necessary to
construct such a control. This mechanism will, I am
confident, have a sufficiently wide range of application
to perform any operation we shall require of it."</p>
<p>"It sure looks as though it could do almost anything,
provided the man behind it knows how to play a tune on
it—but if that rumble seat is for me, you'd better count
me out right now. I followed you for about fifteen
seconds, then lost you completely; and now I'm sunk
without a trace," said Seaton.</p>
<p>"That is, of course, true, and is a point I was careless
enough to overlook." Rovol thought for a moment, then
got up, crossed the room to his control desk, and continued,
"We shall dismantle the machine and rebuild it at
once."</p>
<p>"Oh no—too much work!" protested Seaton, "You've
got it about done, haven't you?"</p>
<p>"It is hardly started. Two hundred thousand bands
of force must be linked to it, each in its proper place,
and it is necessary that you should understand
thoroughly every detail of this entire projector," Rovol
answered.</p>
<p>"Why? I'm not ashamed to admit that I haven't got
brains enough to understand a thing like that."</p>
<p>"You have sufficient brain capacity; it is merely undeveloped.
There are two reasons why you must be as
familiar with the operation of this mechanism as you
are with the operation of one of your Earthly automobiles.
The first is that a similar control is to be installed
in your new space-vessel, since by its use you can attain
a perfection of handling impossible by any other system.
The second, and more important reason, is that neither
I nor any other man of Norlamin could compel himself,
by any force of will, to direct a ray that would take away
the life of any fellow-man."</p>
<p>While Rovol was speaking, he reversed his rays, and
soon the component parts of the new control had been
disassembled and piled in orderly array about the room.</p>
<p>"Hm—m—m. Never thought of that. It's right
too," mused Seaton. "How're you going to get it into
my thick skull—with an educator?"</p>
<p>"Exactly," and Rovol sent a beam of force after his<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_614" id="Page_614"></SPAN></span><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_613" id="Page_613">[Pg 613]</SPAN></span>
highly developed educational mechanism. Dials and electrodes
were adjusted, connections were established, and
the beams and pencils of force began to reconstruct the
great central controlling device. But this time, instead of
being merely a bewildered spectator, Seaton was an active
participant in the work. As each key and meter was
wrought and mounted, there were indelibly impressed
upon his brain the exact reason for and function of the
part, and later, when the control itself was finished and
the seemingly interminable task of connecting it up to
the output force-bands of the transformers had begun,
he had a complete understanding of everything with
which he was working, and understood all the means by
which the ends he had so long desired were to be attained.
For to the ancient scientist the tasks he was then
performing were the merest routine, to be performed in
reflex fashion, and he devoted most of his attention to
transferring from his own brain to that of his young
assistant as much of his stupendous knowledge as the
smaller brain of the Terrestrial was capable of absorbing.
More and more rapidly as the work progressed the
mighty flood of knowledge poured into Seaton's mind.
After an hour or so, when enough connections had been
made so that automatic forces could be so directed as to
finish the job, Rovol and Seaton left the laboratory and
went into the living room. As they walked, the educator
accompanied them, borne upon its beam of force.</p>
<p>"Your brain is behaving very nicely indeed," said
Rovol, "much better than I would have thought possible
from its size. In fact, it may be possible for me to
transfer to you all the knowledge I have which might be
of use to you. That is why I took you away from the
laboratory. What do you think of the idea?"</p>
<p>"Our psychologists have always maintained that none
of us ever uses more than a minute fraction of the actual
capacity of his brain," Seaton replied after a moment's
thought. "If you think you can give me even a percentage
of your knowledge without killing me, go to it—I'm
for it, strong!"</p>
<p>"Knowing that you would be, I have already requested
Drasnik, the First of Psychology, to come here, and he
has just arrived," answered Rovol. And as he spoke,
that personage entered the room.</p>
<p>When the facts had been set before him, the psychologist
nodded his head</p>
<p>"That is quite possible," he said with enthusiasm,
"and I will be only too glad to assist in such an operation."</p>
<p>"But listen!" protested Seaton, "You'll probably
change my whole personality! Rovol's brain is three
times the size of mine."</p>
<p>"Tut-tut—nothing of the kind," Drasnik reproved
him. "As you have said, you are using only a minute
portion of the active mass of your brain. The same
thing is true with us—many millions of cycles would
have to pass before we would be able to fill the brains
we now have."</p>
<p>"Then why are your brains so large?"</p>
<p>"Merely a provision of Nature that no possible accession
of knowledge shall find her storehouse too
small," replied Drasnik, positively. "Ready?"</p>
<p>All three donned the headsets and a wave of mental
force swept into Seaton's mind, a wave of such power
that the Terrestrial's every sense wilted under the impact.
He did not faint, he did not lose consciousness—he
simply lost all control of every nerve and fiber as
his entire brain passed into the control of the immense
mentality of the First of Psychology and became a
purely receptive, plastic medium upon which to impress
the knowledge of the aged physicist.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>Hour after hour the transfer continued, Seaton
lying limp as though lifeless, the two Norlaminians
tense and rigid, every faculty concentrated upon the
ignorant, virgin brain exposed to their gaze. Finally the
operation was complete and Seaton, released from the
weird, hypnotic grip of that stupendous mind, gasped,
shook himself, and writhed to his feet.</p>
<p>"Great Cat!" he exclaimed, his eyes wide with astonishment.
"I wouldn't have believed there was as much
to know in the entire Universe as I know right now,
and I know it as well as I ever knew elementary algebra.
Thanks, fellows, a million times—but say, did you leave
any open spaces for more? In one way, I seem to know
less than I did before, there's so much more to find out.
Can I learn anything more, or did you fill me up to capacity?"</p>
<p>The psychologist, who had been listening to the exuberant
youth with undisguised pleasure, spoke calmly.</p>
<p>"The mere fact that you appreciate your comparative
ignorance shows that you are still capable of learning.
Your capacity to learn is greater than it ever was before,
even though the waste space has been reduced. Much to
our surprise, Rovol and I gave you all of his knowledge
that would be of any use to you, and some of my own,
and still theoretically you can add to it more than nine
times the total of your present knowledge."</p>
<p>The psychologist departed, and Rovol and Seaton returned
to the laboratory, where the forces were still
merrily at work. There was nothing that could be done
to hasten the connecting, and it was late in the following
period of labor before they could begin the actual construction
of the projector. Once started, however, it
progressed with amazing rapidity. Now understanding
the system, it did not seem strange to Seaton that he
should merely actuate a certain combination of forces
when he desired a certain operation performed; nor did
it seem unusual or worthy of comment that one flick of
his finger over that switchboard would send a force a
distance of hundreds of miles to a factory where other
forces were busily at work, to seize a hundred angle-bars
of transparent purple metal that were to form the backbone
of the fifth-order projector. Nor did it seem
peculiar that the same force, with no further instruction,
should bring these hundred bars back to him, in a high
loop through the atmosphere; should deposit them
gently in a convenient space near the site of operations;
and then should disappear as though it had never
existed! With such tools as that, it was a matter of
only a few hours before the projector was done—a task
that would have required years of planning and building
upon Earth.</p>
<p>Two hundred and fifty feet it towered above their
heads, a tubular network of braced and latticed bars of
purple metal, fifty feet in diameter at the base and tapering
smoothly to a diameter of about ten feet at the top.
Built of a metal thousands of times as strong and hard
as steel, it was not cumbersome in appearance, and yet
was strong enough to be absolutely rigid. Ten enormous
supporting forces held the lens of neutronium immovable
in the exact center of the upper end; at intervals
down the shaft similar forces held variously-shaped<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_615" id="Page_615"></SPAN></span>
lenses and prisms formed from zones of force; in the
center of the bottom or floor of the towering structure
was the double controlling system, with a universal visiplate
facing each operator.</p>
<p>"Well, Rovol, that's that," remarked Seaton as the
last connection was made. "What say we hop in and
give the baby a ride over to the Area of Experiment?
Caslor must have the mounting done, and we've got time
enough left in this period to try her out."</p>
<p>"In a moment. I am setting the fourth-order projector
to go out to the dwarf star after an additional
supply of neutronium."</p>
<p>Seaton, knowing from the data of their first journey,
that the controls could be so set as to duplicate their feat
in every particular without supervision, stepped into his
seat in the new controller, pressed a key, and spoke.</p>
<p>"Hi, Dottie, what's on your mind?"</p>
<p>"Nothing much," Dorothy's clear voice answered.
"Got it done and can I see it?"</p>
<p>"Sure—sit tight and I'll send a boat after you."</p>
<p>As he spoke, Rovol's flier darted into the air and
away; and in two minutes it returned, slowing abruptly
as it landed. Dorothy stepped out, radiant, and returned
Seaton's enthusiastic caresses with equal fervor before
she spoke.</p>
<p>"Lover, I'm afraid you violated all known speed laws
getting me over here. Aren't you afraid of getting
pinched?"</p>
<p>"Nope—not here. Besides, I didn't want to keep
Rovol waiting—we're all ready to go. Hop in here with
me, this left-hand control's mine."</p>
<p>Rovol entered the tube, took his place, and waved
his hand. Seaton's hands swept over the keys and
the whole gigantic structure wafted into the air. Still
upright, it was borne upon immense rods of force toward
the Area of Experiment, which was soon reached.
Covered as the Area was with fantastic equipment, there
was no doubt as to their destination, for in plain sight,
dominating all the lesser instruments, there rose a stupendous
telescopic mounting, with an enormous hollow
tube of metallic lattice-work which could be intended for
nothing else than their projector. Approaching it carefully,
Seaton deftly guided the projector lengthwise into
that hollow receptacle and anchored it in the exact optical
axis. Flashing beams of force made short work of
welding the two tubes together immovably with angles
and lattices of the same purple metal, the terminals of
the variable-speed motors were attached to the controllers,
and everything was in readiness for the first
trial.</p>
<p>"What special instructions do we need to run it, if
any?" Seaton asked of the First of Mechanism, who
had lifted himself up into the projector.</p>
<p>"Very little. This motor governs the hour motion,
that one the right ascension. The potentiometers regulate
the degree of vernier action—any ratio is possible,
from direct drive up to more than a hundred million
complete revolutions of that graduated dial to give you
one second of arc."</p>
<p>"Plenty fine, I'd say. Thanks a lot, ace. Whither
away, Rovol—any choice?"</p>
<p>"Anywhere you please, son, since this is merely a
try-out."</p>
<p>"O. K. We'll hop over and tell Dunark hello."</p>
<p>The tube swung around into line with that distant
planet and Seaton stepped down hard, upon a pedal.
Instantly they seemed infinite myriads of miles out in
space, the green system barely visible as a faint green
star behind them.</p>
<p>"Wow, that ray's fast!" exclaimed the pilot, ruefully.
"I overshot about a thousand light years. We'll try
again, with considerably less power," and he rearranged
and reset the dials and meters before him. Adjustment
after adjustment and many reductions in power had to
be made before the projection ceased leaping millions of
miles at a touch, but finally the operators became familiar
with the new technique and the ray became manageable.
Soon they were hovering above what had been
Mardonal, and saw that all signs of warfare had disappeared.
Slowly turning the controls, Seaton flashed the
projection over the girdling Osnomian sea and guided it
through the impregnable metal walls of the palace into
the throne room of Roban, where they saw the Emperor,
Tarnan the Karbix, and Dunark in close conference.</p>
<p>"Well, here we are," remarked Seaton. "Now we'll
put on a little visibility and give the natives a treat."</p>
<p>"Sh-sh," whispered Dorothy, "they'll hear you, Dick—we're
intruding shamefully."</p>
<p>"No, they won't hear us, because I haven't heterodyned
the audio in on the wave yet. And as for intruding,
that's exactly what we came over here for."</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>He imposed the audio system upon the inconceivably
high frequency of their carrier wave and spoke
in the Osnomian tongue.</p>
<p>"Greetings, Roban, Dunark, and Tarnan, from Seaton."
All three jumped to their feet, amazed, staring
about the empty room as Seaton went on, "I am not here
in person. I am simply sending you my projection. Just
a moment and I will put on a little visibility."</p>
<p>He brought more forces into play, and solid images
of force appeared in the great hall; images of the three
occupants of the controller. Introductions and greetings
over, Seaton spoke briefly and to the point.</p>
<p>"We've got everything we came after—much more
than I had any idea we could get. You need have no
more fear of the Fenachrone—we have found a science
superior to theirs. But much remains to be done, and
we have none too much time; therefore I have come to
you with certain requests."</p>
<p>"The Overlord has but to command," replied Roban.</p>
<p>"Not command, since we are all working together for
a common cause. In the name of that cause, Dunark, I
ask you to come to me at once, accompanied by Tarnan
and any others you may select. You will be piloted by a
ray which we shall set upon your controls. Upon your
way here you will visit the First City of Dasor, another
planet, where you will pick up Sacner Carfon, who will
be awaiting you there."</p>
<p>"As you direct, so it shall be," and Seaton flashed
the projector to the neighboring planet of Urvania.
There he found that the gigantic space-cruiser he had
ordered had been completed, and requested Urvan and
his commander-in-chief to tow it to Norlamin, piloted
by a ray. He then jumped to Dasor, there interviewing
Carfon and being assured of the full co-operation of the
porpoise-men.</p>
<p>"Well, that's that, folks," said Seaton as he shut
off the power. "We can't do much more for a few days,
until the gang gets here for the council of war. How'd
it be, Rovol, for me to practice with this outfit while<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_616" id="Page_616"></SPAN></span>
you are finishing up the odds and ends you want to clean
up? You might suggest to Orlon, too, that it'd be a
good deed for him to pilot those folks over here."</p>
<p>As Rovol wafted himself to the ground from their
lofty station, Crane and Margaret appeared and were
lifted up to the place formerly occupied by the physicist.</p>
<p>"How's tricks, Mart? I hear you're quite an astronomer?"
said Seaton.</p>
<p>"Yes, thanks to Orlon and the First of Psychology.
He seemed quite interested in increasing our Earthly
knowledge. I certainly know much more than I had
ever hoped to know of anything."</p>
<p>"Yeah, you can pilot us to the Fenachrone system now
without any trouble. You also absorbed some ethnology
and kindred sciences. What d'you think—with Dunark
and Urvan, do we know enough to go ahead or should
we take a chance on holding things up while we get acquainted
with some of the other peoples of these planets
of the green system?"</p>
<p>"Delay is dangerous, as our time is already short,"
Crane replied after a time. "We know enough, I believe;
and furthermore, any additional assistance is
problematical; in fact, it is more than doubtful. The
Norlaminians have surveyed the system rather
thoroughly, and no other planet seems to have inhabitants
who have even approached the development attained
here."</p>
<p>"Right—that's the way I dope it, exactly. We'll wait
until the gang assembles, then go over the top. In the
meantime, I called you over to take a ride in this projector—it's
a darb. I'd like to shoot for the Fenachrone
system first, but I don't quite dare to."</p>
<p>"Don't <i>dare</i> to? You?" scoffed Margaret. "How
come?"</p>
<p>"Cancel the 'dare'—change it to 'prefer not to.' Why?
Because while they can't work through a zone of force,
some of their real scientists—and they have lots of
them, not like the bull-headed soldier we captured—may
well be able to detect a fifth-order ray—even if they
can't work with them intelligently—and if they detected
our ray, it'd put them on guard."</p>
<p>"You are exactly right, Dick," agreed Crane. "And
there speaks the Norlaminian physicist, and not my old
and reckless playmate Richard Seaton."</p>
<p>"Oh, I don't know—I told you I was getting timid
as a mouse. But let's not sit here twiddling our thumbs—let's
go places and do things. Whither away? I want
a destination a good ways off, not something in our own
back yard."</p>
<p>"Go back home, of course, stupe," put in Dorothy,
"do you have to be told every little thing?"</p>
<p>"Sure—never thought of that," and Seaton, after a
moment's rapid mental arithmetic, swung the great tube
around, rapidly adjusted a few dials, and stepped down
upon a pedal. There was a fleeting instant of unthinkable
velocity; then they found themselves poised somewhere
in space.</p>
<p>"Well, wonder how far I missed it on my first shot?"
Seaton's crisp voice broke the stunned silence. "Guess
that's our sun, over to the left, ain't it, Mart?"</p>
<p>"Yes. You were about right for distance, and within
a few tenths of a light-year laterally. That is fairly
close, I should have said."</p>
<p>"Rotten, for these controls. Except for the effect of
relative proper motions, which I can't calculate yet for
lack of data. I should be able to hit a gnat right in the
left eye at this range—and the difference in proper motions
couldn't have thrown me off more than a few hundred
feet. Nope, I was too anxious—hurried too much
on the settings of the slow verniers. I'll snap back and
try it again."</p>
<p>He adjusted the verniers very carefully, and again
threw on the power. Again there was the sensation of
the barest perceptible moment of unimaginable speed,
and they were in the air some fifty feet above the ground
of Crane Field, almost above the testing shed. Seaton
rapidly adjusted the variable-speed motors until they
were perfectly stationary, relative to the surface of
the earth.</p>
<p>"You are improving," commended Crane.</p>
<p>"Yeah—that's more like it. Guess maybe I can learn
in time to shoot this gun. Well, let's go down."</p>
<p>They dropped through the roof into the laboratory
where Maxwell, now in charge of the place, was watching
a reaction and occasionally taking notes.</p>
<p>"Hi, Max! Seaton speaking, on a television. Got
your range?"</p>
<p>"Exactly, Chief, apparently. I can hear you perfectly,
but can't see anything," Maxwell stared about the empty
laboratory.</p>
<p>"You will in a minute. I knew I had you, but didn't
want to scare you out of a year's growth," and Seaton
thickened the image until they were plainly visible.</p>
<p>"Please call Mr. Vaneman on the phone and tell him
you're in touch with us," directed Seaton as soon as
greetings had been exchanged. "Better yet, after you've
broken it to them gently, Dot can talk to them, then
we'll go over and see 'em."</p>
<p>The connection established, Dorothy's image floated
up to the telephone and apparently spoke.</p>
<p>"Mother? This is the weirdest thing you ever imagined.
We're not really here at all you know—we're
actually here in Norlamin—no, I mean Dick's just sending
a kind of a talking picture of us to see you on earth
here.... Oh, no, I don't know anything about it—it's
like a talkie sent by radio, only worse, because I
am saying this myself right now, without any rehearsal
or anything ... we didn't want to burst in on you without
warning, because you'd be sure to think you were
seeing actual ghosts, and we're not dead the least bit ... we're
having the most perfectly gorgeous time you ever
imagined.... Oh, I'm so excited I can't explain anything,
even if I knew anything about it to explain. We'll
all four of us be over there in about a second and tell
you all about it. 'Bye!"</p>
<p>Indeed, it was even less than a second—Mrs. Vaneman
was still in the act of hanging up the receiver when
the image materialized in the living room of Dorothy's
girlhood home.</p>
<p>"Hello, mother and dad," Seaton's voice was cheerful
but matter-of-fact. "I'll thicken this up so you can see
us better in a minute. But don't think that we are flesh
and blood. You'll see simply three-dimensional talking
pictures of ourselves, transmitted by radio."</p>
<p>For a long time Mr. and Mrs. Vaneman chatted with
the four visitors from so far away in space, while Seaton
gloried in the working of that marvelous projector.</p>
<p>"Well, our time's about up," Seaton finally ended the
visit. "The quitting-whistle's going to blow in five
minutes, and they don't like overtime work here where
we are. We'll drop in and see you again maybe, sometime
before we come back."<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_617" id="Page_617"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Do you know yet when you are coming back?" asked
Mrs. Vaneman.</p>
<p>"Not an idea in the world, mother, any more than we
had when we started. But we're getting along fine,
having the time of our lives, and are learning a lot besides.
So-long!" and Seaton clicked off the power.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>As they descended from the projector and walked
toward the waiting airboat, Seaton fell in beside
Rovol.</p>
<p>"You know they've got our new cruiser built of dagal,
and are bringing it over here. Dagal's good stuff, but
it isn't as good as your purple metal, inoson, which is the
theoretical ultimate in strength possible for any material
possessing molecular structure. Why wouldn't it be
a sound idea to flash it into inoson when it gets here?"</p>
<p>"That would be an excellent idea, and we shall do so.
It also has occurred to me that Caslor of Mechanism,
Astron of Energy, Satrazon of Chemistry, myself, and
one of two others, should collaborate in installing a very
complete fifth-order projector in the new <i>Skylark</i>, as
well as any other equipment which may seem desirable.
The security of the Universe may depend upon the
abilities and qualities of you Terrestrials and your vessel,
and therefore <i>nothing</i> should be left undone which
it is possible for us to do."</p>
<p>"You chirped something then, old scout—thanks. You
might do that, while I attend to such preliminaries as
wiping out the Fenachrone fleet."</p>
<p>In due time the reinforcements from the other planets
arrived, and the mammoth space-cruiser attracted attention
even before it landed, so enormous was she in comparison
with the tiny vessels having her in tow. Resting
upon the ground, it seemed absurd that such a structure
could possibly move under her own power. For
two miles that enormous mass of metal extended over
the country-side, and while it was very narrow for its
length, still its fifteen hundred feet of diameter dwarfed
everything near by. But Rovol and his aged co-workers
smiled happily as they saw it, erected their keyboards,
and set to work with a will.</p>
<p>Meanwhile a group had gathered about a conference
table—a group such as had never before been seen together
upon any world. There was Fodan, the ancient
Chief of the Five of Norlamin, huge-headed, with his
leonine mane and flowing beard of white. There were
Dunark and Tarnan of Osnome and Urvan of Urvania—smooth-faced
and keen, utterly implacable and ruthless
in war. There was Sacner Carfon Twenty Three
Forty Six, the immense, porpoise-like, hairless Dasorian.
There were Seaton and Crane, representatives
of our own Earthly civilization.</p>
<p>Seaton opened the meeting by handing each man a
headset and running a reel showing the plans of the
Fenachrone; not only as he had secured them from the
captain of the marauding vessel, but also everything
the First of Psychology had deduced from his own
study of that inhuman brain. He then removed the
reel and gave them the tentative plans of battle. Headsets
removed, he threw the meeting open for discussion—and
discussion there was in plenty. Each man had
ideas, which were thrown upon the table and studied, for
the most part calmly and dispassionately. The conference
continued until only one point was left, upon
which argument waxed so hot that everyone seemed
shouting at once.</p>
<p>"Order!" commanded Seaton, banging his fist upon
the table. "Osnome and Urvania wish to strike without
warning, Norlamin and Dasor insist upon a formal
declaration of war. Earth has the deciding vote. Mart,
how do we vote on this?"</p>
<p>"I vote for formal warning, for two reasons, one of
which I believe will convince even Dunark. First, because
it is the fair thing to do—which reason is, of
course, the one actuating the Norlaminians, but which
would not be considered by Osnome, nor even remotely
understood by the Fenachrone. Second, I am certain
that the Fenachrone will merely be enraged by the warning
and will defy us. Then what will they do? You
have already said that you have been able to locate only
a few of their exploring warships. As soon as we declare
war upon them they will almost certainly send out
torpedoes to every one of their ships of war. We can
then follow the torpedoes with our rays, and thus will
be enabled to find and to destroy their vessels."</p>
<p>"That settles that," declared the chairman as a shout
of agreement arose. "We shall now adjourn to the projector
and send the warning. I have a ray upon the
torpedo, announcing the destruction by us of their vessel,
and that torpedo will arrive at its destination in less
than an hour. It seems to me that we should make our
announcement immediately after their ruler has received
the news of their first defeat."</p>
<p>In the projector, where they were joined by Rovol,
Orlon, and several others of the various "Firsts" of
Norlamin, they flashed out to the flying torpedo, and
Seaton grinned at Crane as their fifth-order carrier beam
went through the far-flung detector screens of the
Fenachrone without setting up the slightest reaction.
In the wake of that speeding messenger they flew
through a warm, foggy, dense atmosphere, through a
receiving trap in the wall of a gigantic conical structure,
and on into the telegraph room. They saw the
operator remove spools of tape from the torpedo and
attach them to a magnetic sender—heard him speak.</p>
<p>"Pardon, your majesty—we have just received a first-degree
emergency torpedo from flagship Y427W of fleet
42. In readiness."</p>
<p>"Put it on, here in the council chamber," a deep voice
snapped.</p>
<p>"If he's broadcasting it, we're in for a spell of hunting,"
Seaton remarked. "Nope, he's putting it on a tight
beam—that's fine, we can chase it up," and with a narrow
detector beam he traced the invisible transmission
beam into the council room.</p>
<p>"'Sfunny. This place seems awfully familiar—I'd
swear I'd seen it before, lots of times—seems like I've
been in it, more than once," Seaton remarked, puzzled,
as he looked around the somber room, with its dull,
paneled metal walls covered with charts, maps, screens,
and speakers; and with its low, massive furniture. "Oh,
sure, I'm familiar with it from studying the brain of
that Fenachrone captain. Well, while His Nibs is absorbing
the bad news, we'll go over this once more.
You, Carfon, having the biggest voice of any of us ever
heard uttering intelligible language, are to give the
speech. You know about what to say. When I say 'go
ahead' do your stuff. Now, everybody else, listen. While
he's talking I've got to have audio waves heterodyned
both ways in the circuit, and they'll be able to hear any
noise any of us make—so all of us except Carfon want
to keep absolutely quiet, no matter what happens or what<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_618" id="Page_618"></SPAN></span>
we see. As soon as he's done I'll cut off the audio sending
and say something to let you all know we're off
the air. Got it?"</p>
<p>"One point has occurred to me about handling the
warning," boomed Carfon. "If it should be delivered
from apparently empty air, directly at those we wish to
address, it would give the enemy an insight into our
methods, which might be undesirable."</p>
<p>"H—m—m. Never thought of that ... it
sure would, and it would be undesirable," agreed Seaton.
"Let's see ... we can get away from that by broadcasting
it. They have a very complete system of
speakers, but no matter how many private-band speakers
a man may have, he always has one on the general wave,
which is used for very important announcements of wide
interest. I'll broadcast you on that wave, so that every
general-wave speaker on the planet will be energized.
That way, it'll look as if we're shooting from a distance.
You might talk accordingly."</p>
<p>"If we have a minute more, there's something I
would like to ask," Dunark broke the ensuing silence.
"Here we are, seeing everything that is happening there.
Walls, planets, even suns, do not bar our vision, because
of the fifth-order carrier wave. I understand that, partially.
But how can we see anything there? I always
thought that I knew something about rays, but I see that
I do not. The light-rays must be released, or deheterodyned,
close to the object viewed, with nothing opaque
to light intervening. They must then be reflected from
the object seen, must be gathered together, again heterodyned
upon the fifth-order carrier, and retransmitted
back to us. And there is neither receiver nor transmitter
at the other end. How can you do all that from our
end?"</p>
<p>"We don't," Seaton assured him. "At the other end
there are all the things you mentioned, and a lot more
besides. Our secondary projector out there is composed
of forces, visible or invisible, as we please. Part of
those forces comprise the receiving, viewing, and sending
instruments. They are not material, it is true, but they
are nevertheless fully as actual, and far more efficient,
than any other system of radio, television, or telephone
in existence anywhere else. It is force, you know, that
makes radio or television work—the actual copper, insulation,
and other matter serve only to guide and to
control the various forces employed. The Norlaminian
scientists have found out how to direct and control pure
forces without using the cumbersome and hindering material
substance...."</p>
<p>He broke off as the record from the torpedo stopped
suddenly and the operator's voice came through a
speaker.</p>
<p>"General Fenimol! Scoutship K3296, patrolling the
detector zone, wishes to give you an urgent emergency
report. I told them that you were in council with the
Emperor, and they instructed me to interrupt it, no
matter how important the council may be. They have
on board a survivor of the Y427W, and have captured
and killed two men of the same race as those who destroyed
our vessel. They say that you will want their
report without an instant's delay."</p>
<p>"We do!" barked the general, at a sign from his
ruler. "Put it on here. Run the rest of the torpedo report
immediately afterward."</p>
<p>In the projector, Seaton stared at Crane a moment,
then a light of understanding spread over his features.</p>
<p>"DuQuesne, of course—I'll bet a hat no other Terrestrial
is this far from home. I can't help feeling sorry
for the poor devil—he's a darn good man gone wrong—but
we'd have had to kill him ourselves before we got
done with him; so it's probably as well they got him.
Pin your ears back, everybody, and watch close—we
want to get this, all of it."</p>
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