First Lensman E. E. Smith (superbooks4u txt) đ
- Author: E. E. Smith
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âLensman Olmstead, of Alphacent, sir,â his secretary announced.
âGood! Send him in, please.â
The stranger entered. The two men, after staring intently at each other for half a minute, smiled and shook hands vigorously. Except for the fact that the newcomerâs hair was brown, they were practically identical!
âIâm certainly glad to see you, George. Bergenholm passed you, of course?â
âYes. He says that he can match your hair to mine, even the individual white ones. And he has made me a wig-makerâs dream of a wig.â
âMarried?â Sammsâ mind leaped ahead to possible complications.
âWidower, same as you. And.â ââ âŠâ
âJust a minuteâ âgoing over this once will be enough.â He Lensed call after call. Lensmen in various parts of space became en rapport with him and thus with each other.
âLensmenâ âespecially you, Rodâ âGeorge Olmstead is here, and his brother Ray is available. I am going to work.â
âI still donât like it!â Kinnison protested. âItâs too dangerous. I told the Universe I was going to keep you covered, and I meant it!â
âThatâs what makes it perfectly safe. That is, if Bergenholm is sure that the duplication is close enoughâ ââ âŠâ
âI am sure.â Bergenholmâs deeply resonant pseudo-voice left no doubt at all in any one of the linked minds. âThe substitution will not be detected.â
â⊠and that nobody knows, George, or even suspects, that you got your Lens.â
âI am sure of that.â Olmstead laughed quietly. âAlso, nobody except us and your secretary knows that I am here. For a good many years I have made a specialty of that sort of thing. Photos, fingerprints, and so on have all been taken care of.â
âGood. I simply can not work efficiently here,â Samms expressed what all knew to be the simple truth. âDronvire is a much better analyst-synthesist than I am; as soon as any significant correlation is possible he will know it. We have learned that the Towne-Morgan crowd, Mackenzie Power, Ossmen Industries, and Interstellar Spaceways are all tied in together, and that thionite is involved, but we have not been able to get any further. There is a slight correlationâ âbarely significantâ âbetween deaths from thionite and the arrival in the Solarian System of certain Spaceways liners. The fact that certain officials of the Earth-Screen Service have been and are spending considerably more than they earn sets up a slight but definite probability that they are allowing spaceships or boats from spaceships to land illegally. These smugglers carry contraband, which may or may not be thionite. In short, we lack fundamental data in every department, and it is high time for me to begin doing my share in getting it.â
âI donât check you, Virge.â None of the Kinnisons ever did give up without a struggle. âOlmstead is a mighty smooth worker, and you are our prime coordinator. Why not let him keep up the counterespionageâ âdo the job you were figuring on doing yourselfâ âand you stay here and boss it?â
âI have thought of that, a great deal, and have.â ââ âŠâ
âBecause Olmstead can not do it,â a hitherto silent mind cut in, decisively. âI, Rularion of North Polar Jupiter, say so. There are psychological factors involved. The ability to separate and to evaluate the constituent elements of a complex situation; the ability to make correct decisions without hesitation; as well as many others not as susceptible to concise statement, but which collectively could be called power of mind. How say you, Bergenholm of Tellus? For I have perceived in you a mind approximating in some respects the philosophical and psychological depth of my own.â This outrageously egotistical declaration was, to the Jovian, a simple statement of an equally simple truth, and Bergenholm accepted it as such.
âI agree. Olmstead probably could not succeed.â
âWell, then, can Samms?â Kinnison demanded.
âWho knows?â came Bergenholmâs mental shrug, and simultaneously:
âNobody knows whether I can or not, but I am going to try,â and Samms endedâ âalmostâ âthe argument by asking Bergenholm and a couple of other Lensmen to come into his office and by taking off his Lens.
âAnd thatâs another thing I donât like.â Kinnison offered one last objection. âWithout your Lens, anything can happen to you.â
âOh, I wonât have to be without it very long. And besides, Virgilia isnât the only one in the Samms family who can work betterâ âsometimesâ âwithout a Lens.â
The Lensmen came in and, in a surprisingly short time, went out. A few minutes later, two Lensmen strolled out of Sammsâ inner office into the outer one.
âGoodbye, George,â the redheaded man said aloud, âand good luck.â
âSame to you, Chief,â and the brown-haired one strode out.
Norma the secretary was a smart girl, and observant. In her position, she had to be. Her eyes followed the man out, then scanned the Lensman from toe to crown.
âIâve never seen anything like it, Mr. Samms,â she remarked then. âExcept for the difference in coloring, and a sort ofâ ââ ⊠well, stoopinessâ ââ ⊠he could be your identical twin. You two must have had a common ancestorâ âor severalâ ânot too far back, didnât you?â
âWe certainly did. Quadruple second cousins, you might call it. We have known of each other for years, but this is the first time we have met.â
âQuadruple second cousins? What does that mean? How come?â
âWell, say that once upon a time there were two men named Albert and Chester.â ââ âŠâ
âWhat? Not two Irishmen named Pat and Mike? Youâre slipping, boss.â The girl smiled roguishly. During rush hours she was always the fast, cool, efficient secretary, but in moments of ease such persiflage as this was the usual thing in the First Lensmanâs private office. âNot at all up to your usual form.â
âMerely because I am speaking now as a genealogist, not as a raconteur. But to continue, we will say that Chester and Albert had four children apiece, two boys and two girls, two pairs of identical twins, each. And when they grew upâ âhalf way up, that is.â ââ âŠâ
âDonât tell me that we are going to suppose that all those identical twins married each other?â
âExactly. Why not?â
âWell,
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