First Lensman E. E. Smith (superbooks4u txt) đ
- Author: E. E. Smith
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âPos-i-tive-ly!â
Samms was called, and considered the matter for approximately one minute. âYour first idea was right, Jack. Let them go. The message may be helpful and informative, but the women would not. They know nothing. Congratulations, boys, on the complete success of Operation Red Herring.â
âOuch!â Jack grimaced mentally to his partner after the First Lensman had cut off. âThey know enough to be in on bumping you and me off, but that ainât important, says he!â
âAnd it ainât, bub,â Northrop grinned back. âModerately so, maybe, if they had got us, but not at all so now they canât. The Lensmen have landed and the situation is well in hand. It is written. Selah.â
âCheck. Letâs wrap it up.â Jack turned to the blonde. âCome on, Hazel. Out. Number Four lifeboat. Do you want to come peaceably or shall I work on your neck again?â
âYou could think of other places that would be more fun.â She got up and stared directly into his eyes, her lip curling. âThat is, if you were a man instead of a sublimated Boy Scout.â
Kinnison, without a word, wheeled and unlocked a door. Hazel swaggered forward, but the taller girl hung back. âAre you sure thereâs airâ âand theyâll pick us up? Maybe theyâre going to make us breathe space.â ââ âŠâ
âHuh? They havenât got the guts,â Hazel sneered. âCome on, Jane. Number Four, you said, darling?â
She led the way. Kinnison opened the portal. Jane hurried aboard, but Hazel paused and held out her arms.
âArenât you even going to kiss mama goodbye, baby boy?â she taunted.
âBetter not waste much more time. We blow this boat, sealed or open, in fifteen seconds.â By what effort Kinnison held his voice level and expressionless, he hoped the wench would never know.
She looked at him, started to say something, looked again. She had gone just about as far as it was safe to go. She stepped into the boat and reached for the lever. And as the valve was swinging smoothly shut the men heard a tinkling laugh, reminiscent of icicles breaking against steel bells.
âHellâsâ âBrazenâ âHinges!â Kinnison wiped his forehead as the lifeboat shot away. Hazel was something brand new to him; a phenomenon with which none of his education, training, or experience had equipped him to cope. âIâve heard about the guy who got hold of a tiger by the tail, but.â ââ âŠâ His thought expired on a wondering, confused note.
âYeah.â Northrop was in no better case. âWe wonâ âtechnicallyâ âI guessâ âor did we? That was a God-awful drubbing we took, mister.â
âWell, we got away alive, anyway.â ââ ⊠Weâll tell Parker his dope is correct to the proverbial twenty decimals. And now that weâve escaped, letâs call Spud and see how things came out.â
And Costigan-Jones assured them that everything had come out very well indeed. The shipment of thionite had been followed without any difficulty at all, from the spaceship clear through to Jonesâ own office, and it reposed now in Department Qâs own safe, under Jonesâ personal watch and ward. The pressure had lightened tremendously, just as Kinnison and Northrop had thought it would, when they set up their diversion. Costigan listened impassively to the whole story.
âNow should I have shot her, or not?â Jack demanded. âNot whether I could have or notâ âI couldnâtâ âbut should I have, Spud?â
âI donât know.â Costigan thought for minutes. âI donât think so. Noâ ânot in cold blood. I couldnât have, either, and wouldnât if I could. It wouldnât be worth it. Somebody will shoot her some day, but not one of usâ âunless, of course, itâs in a fight.â
âThanks, Spud; that makes me feel better. Off.â
Costigan-Jonesâ desk was already clear, since there was little or no paperwork connected with his position in Department Q. Hence his preparations for departure were few and simple. He merely opened the safe, stuck the package into his pocket, closed and locked the safe, and took a company ground-car to the spaceport.
Nor was there any more formality about his leaving the planet. Eridan had, of course, a Customs frontier of sorts; but since Uranium Inc. owned Eridan in fee simple, its Customs paid no attention whatever to company ships or to low-number, gold-badge company men. Nor did Jones need ticket, passport, or visa. Company men rode company ships to and from company plants, wherever situated, without let or hindrance. Thus, wearing the aura of power of his new positionâ âand Gold Badge Number Thirty Eightâ âGeorge W. Jones was whisked out to the uranium ship and was shown to his cabin.
Nor was it surprising that the trip from Eridan to Earth was completely without incident. This was an ordinary freighter, hauling uranium on a routine flight. Her cargo was valuable, of courseâ âthe sine qua non of interstellar tradeâ âbut in no sense precious. Not pirate-bait, by any means. And only two men knew that this flight was in any whit different from the one which had preceded it or the one which would follow it. If this ship was escorted or guarded the fact was not apparent: and no Patrol vessel came nearer to it than four detetsâ âVirgil Samms and Roderick Kinnison saw to that.
The voyage, however, was not tedious. Jones was busy every minute. In fact, there were scarcely minutes enough in which to assimilate the material which Isaacson had given himâ âthe layouts, flow-sheets, and organization charts of Works Number Eighteen, on Tellus.
And upon arrival at the private spaceport which was an integral part of Works Number Eighteen, Jones was not surprised (he knew more now than he had known a few weeks before; and infinitely more than the man on the street) to learn that the Customs men of this particular North American Port of Entry were just as complaisant as were those of Eridan. They did not bother even to count the boxes, to say nothing of inspecting them. They stamped the shipâs papers without either reading or checking them. They made a perfunctory search, it is true, of crewmen and quarters, but a low number gold badge was still a
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