Skylark Three - Cover

Skylark Three

Public Domain

Chapter 7: DuQuesne's Voyage

Far from our solar system a cigar-shaped space-car slackened its terrific acceleration to a point at which human beings could walk, and two men got up, exercised vigorously to restore the circulation to their numbed bodies, and went into the galley to prepare their meal--the first since leaving the Earth some eight hours or more before.

Because of the long and arduous journey he had decided upon, DuQuesne had had to abandon his custom of working alone, and had studied all the available men with great care before selecting his companion and relief pilot. He finally had chosen “Baby Doll” Loring--so called because of his curly yellow hair, his pink and white complexion, his guileless blue eyes, his slight form of rather less than medium height. But never did outward attributes more belie the inner man! The yellow curls covered a brain agile, keen, and hard; the girlish complexion neither paled nor reddened under stress; the wide blue eyes had glanced along the barrels of so many lethal weapons, that in various localities the noose yawned for him; the slender body was built of rawhide and whalebone, and responded instantly to the dictates of that ruthless brain. Under the protection of Steel he flourished, and in return for that protection he performed, quietly and with neatness and despatch, such odd jobs as were in his line, with which he was commissioned.

When they were seated at an excellent breakfast of ham and eggs, buttered toast, and strong, aromatic coffee, DuQuesne broke the long silence.

“Do you want to know where we are?”

“I’d say we were a long way from home, by the way this elevator of yours has been climbing all night.”

“We are a good many million miles from the Earth, and we are getting farther away at a rate that would have to be measured in millions of miles per second.” DuQuesne, watching the other narrowly as he made this startling announcement and remembering the effect of a similar one upon Perkins, saw with approval that the coffee-cup in midair did not pause or waver in its course. Loring noted the bouquet of his beverage and took an appreciative sip before he replied.

“You certainly can make coffee, Doctor; and good coffee is nine-tenths of a good breakfast. As to where we are--that’s all right with me. I can stand it if you can.”

“Don’t you want to know where we’re going, and why?”

“I’ve been thinking about that. Before we started I didn’t want to know anything, because what a man doesn’t know he can’t be accused of spilling in case of a leak. Now that we are on our way, though, maybe I should know enough about things to act intelligently, if something unforeseen should develop. If you’d rather keep it dark and give me orders when necessary, that’s all right with me, too. It’s your party, you know.”

“I brought you along because one man can’t stay on duty twenty-four hours a day, continuously. Since you are in as deep as you can get, and since this trip is dangerous, you should know everything there is to know. You are one of the higher-ups now, anyway: and we understand each other thoroughly, I believe?”

“I believe so.”

Back in the bow control-room DuQuesne applied more power, but not enough to render movement impossible.

“You don’t have to drive her as hard all the way, then, as you did last night?”

“No, I’m out of range of Seaton’s instrument now, and we don’t have to kill ourselves. High acceleration is punishment for anyone and we must keep ourselves fit. To begin with, I suppose that you are curious about that object-compass?”

“That and other things.”

“An object-compass is a needle of specially-treated copper, so activated that it points always toward one certain object, after being once set upon it. Seaton undoubtedly has one upon me; but, sensitive as they are, they can’t hold on a mass as small as a man at this distance. That was why we left at midnight, after he had gone to bed--so that we’d be out of range before he woke up. I wanted to lose him, as he might interfere if he knew where I was going. Now I’ll go back to the beginning and tell you the whole story.”


Tersely, but vividly, he recounted the tale of the interstellar cruise, the voyage of the Skylark of Space. When he had finished, Loring smoked for a few minutes in silence.

“There’s a lot of stuff there that’s hard to understand all at once. Do you mind if I ask a few foolish questions, to get things straightened out in my mind?”

“Go ahead--ask as many as you want to. It is hard to understand a lot of that Osnomian stuff--a man can’t get it all at once.”

“Osnome is so far away--how are you going to find it?”

“With one of the object-compasses I mentioned. I had planned on navigating from notes I took on the trip back to the Earth, but it wasn’t necessary. They tried to keep me from finding out anything, but I learned all about the compasses, built a few of them in their own shop, and set one on Osnome. I had it, among other things, in my pocket when I landed. In fact, the control of that explosive copper bullet is the only thing they had that I wasn’t able to get--and I’ll get that on this trip.”

“What is that arenak armor they’re wearing?”

“Arenak is a synthetic metal, almost perfectly transparent. It has practically the same refractive index as air, therefore it is, to all intents and purposes, invisible. It’s about five hundred times as strong as chrome-vanadium steel, and even when you’ve got it to the yield-point, it doesn’t break, but stretches out and snaps back, like rubber, with the strength unimpaired. It’s the most wonderful thing I saw on the whole trip. They make complete suits of it. Of course they aren’t very comfortable, but since they are only a tenth of an inch they can be worn.”

“And a tenth of an inch of that stuff will stop a steel-nosed machine-gun bullet?”

“Stop it! A tenth of an inch of arenak is harder to pierce than fifty inches of our hardest, toughest armor steel. A sixteenth-inch armor-piercing projectile couldn’t get through it. It’s hard to believe, but nevertheless it’s a fact. The only way to kill Seaton with a gun would be to use one heavy enough so that the shock of the impact would kill him--and it wouldn’t surprise me a bit if he had his armor anchored with an attractor against that very contingency. Even if he hasn’t, you can imagine the chance of getting action against him with a gun of that size.”

“Yes, I’ve heard that he is fast.”

“That doesn’t tell half of it. You know that I’m handy with a gun myself?”

“You’re faster than I am, and that’s saying something. You’re chain lightning.”

“Well, Seaton is at least that much faster than I am. You’ve never seen him work--I have. On that Osnomian dock he shot twice before I started, and shot twice to my once from then on. I must have been shooting a quarter of a second after he had his side all cleaned up. To make it worse I missed once with my left hand--he didn’t. There’s absolutely no use tackling Richard Seaton without an Osnomian ray-generator or something better; but, as you know, Brookings always has been and always will be a fool. He won’t believe anything new until after he has actually been shown. Well, I imagine he will be shown plenty by this evening.”

“Well, I’ll never tackle him with heat. How does he get that way?”

“He’s naturally fast, and has practiced sleight-of-hand work ever since he was a kid. He’s one of the best amateur magicians in the country, and I will say that his ability along that line has come in handy for him more than once.”

“I see where you’re right in wanting to get something, since we have only ordinary weapons and they have all that stuff. This trip is to get a little something for ourselves, I take it?”

“Exactly, and you know enough now to understand what we are out here to get for ourselves. You have guessed that we are headed for Osnome?”

“I suspected it. However, if you were going only to Osnome, you would have gone alone; so I also suspect that that’s only half of it. I have no idea what it is, but you’ve got something else on your mind.”

“You’re right--I knew you were keen. When I was on Osnome I found out something that only four other men--all--dead--ever knew. There is a race of men far ahead of the Osnomians in science, particularly in warfare. They live a long way beyond Osnome. It is my plan to steal an Osnomian airship and mount all its ray screens, generators, guns, and everything else, upon this ship, or else convert their vessel into a space-ship. Instead of using their ordinary power, however, we will do as Seaton did, and use intra-atomic power, which is practically infinite. Then we’ll have everything Seaton’s got, but that isn’t enough. I want enough more than he’s got to wipe him out. Therefore, after we get a ship armed to suit us, we’ll visit this strange planet and either come to terms with them or else steal a ship from them. Then we’ll have their stuff and that of the Osnomians, as well as our own. Seaton won’t last long after that.”

“Do you mind if I ask how you got that dope?”

“Not at all. Except when right with Seaton I could do pretty much as I pleased, and I used to take long walks for exercise. The Osnomians tired very easily, being so weak, and because of the light gravity of the planet, I had to do a lot of work or walking to keep in any kind of condition at all. I learned Kondalian quickly, and got so friendly with the guards, that pretty soon they quit trying to keep me in sight, but waited at the edge of the palace grounds until I came back and joined them.

“Well, on one trip I was fifteen miles or so from the city when an airship crashed down in a woods about half a mile from me. It was in an uninhabited district and nobody else saw it. I went over to investigate, thinking probably I could find out something useful. It had the whole front end cut or broken off, and that made me curious, because no imaginable fall will break an arenak hull. I walked in through the hole and saw that it was one of their fighting tenders--a combination warship and repair shop, with all of the stuff in it that I’ve been telling you about. The generators were mostly burned out and the propelling and lifting motors were out of commission. I prowled around, getting acquainted with it, and found a lot of useful instruments and, best of all, one of Dunark’s new mechanical educators, with complete instructions for its use. Also, I found three bodies, and thought I’d try it out...”

“Just a minute. Only three bodies on a warship? And what good could a mechanical educator do you if the men were all dead?”

“Three is all I found then, but there was another one. Three men and a captain compose an Osnomian crew for any ordinary vessel. Everything is automatic, you, know. As for the men being dead, that doesn’t make any difference--you can read their brains just the same, if they haven’t been dead too long. However, when I tried to read theirs, I found only blanks--their brains had been destroyed so that nobody could read them. That did look funny, so I ransacked the ship from truck to keelson, and finally found another body, wearing an air-helmet, in a sort of closet off the control room. I put the educator on it...”

“This is getting good. It sounds like a page of the old ‘Arabian Nights’ that I used to read when I was a boy. You know, it really isn’t surprising that Brookings didn’t believe a lot of this stuff.”

“As I have said, a lot of it is hard to understand, but I’m going to show it to you--all that, and more.”

“Oh, I believe it, all right. After riding in this boat and looking out of the windows, I’ll believe anything. Reading a dead man’s brain is steep, though.”

“I’ll let you do it after we get there. I don’t understand exactly how it works, myself, but I know how to operate one. Well, I found out that this man’s brain was in good shape, and I got a shock when I read it. Here’s what he had been through. They had been flying very high on their way to the front when their ship was seized by an invisible force and thrown upward. He must have thought faster than the others, because he put on an air-helmet and dived into this locker where he hid under a pile of gear, fixing things so that he could see out through the transparent arenak of the wall. No sooner was he hidden that the front end of the ship went up in a blaze of light, in spite of their ray screens going full blast. They were up so high by that time that when the bow was burned off the other three fainted from lack of air. Then their generators went out, and pretty soon two peculiar-looking strangers entered. They were wearing vacuum suits and were very short and stocky, giving the impression of enormous strength. They brought an educator of their own with them and read the brains of the three men. Then they dropped the ship a few thousand feet and revived the three with a drink of something out of a flask.”

“Must have been different from the kind handled by most booties I know, then. The stuff we’ve been getting lately would make a man more unconscious than ever.”

“Some powerful drug, probably, but the Osnomian didn’t know anything about it. After the men were revived, the strangers, apparently from sheer cruelty and love of torturing their victims, informed them in the Osnomian language that they were from another world, on the far edge of the Galaxy. They even told them, knowing that the Osnomians knew nothing of astronomy, exactly where they were from. Then they went on to say that they wanted the entire green system for themselves, and that in something like two years of our time they were going to wipe out all the present inhabitants of the system and take it over, as a base for further operations. After that they amused themselves by describing exactly the kinds of death and destruction they were going to use. They described most of it in great detail. It’s too involved to tell you about now, but they’ve got rays, generators, and screens that even the Osnomians never heard of. And of course they’ve got intra-atomic energy the same as we have. After telling them all this and watching them suffer, they put a machine on their heads and they dropped dead. That’s probably what disintegrated their brains. Then they looked the ship over rather casually, as though they didn’t see anything they were interested in; crippled the motors; and went away. The vessel was then released, and crashed. This man, of course, was killed by the fall. I buried the men--I didn’t want anybody else reading that brain--hid some of the stuff I wanted most, and camouflaged the ship so that I’m fairly sure that it’s there yet. I decided then to make this trip.”

“I see.” Loring’s mind was grappling with these new and strange facts. “That news is staggering, Doctor. Think of it. Everybody thinks our own world is everything there is!”

“Our world is simply a grain of dust in the Universe. Most people know it, academically, but very few ever give the fact any actual consideration. But now that you’ve had a little time to get used to the idea of there being other worlds, and some of them as far ahead of us in science as we are ahead of the monkeys, what do you think of it?”

“I agree with you, that we’ve got their stuff,” said Loring. “However, it occurs to me as a possibility that they may have so much stuff that we won’t be able to make the approach. However, if the Osnomian fittings we’re going to get are as good as you say they are, I think that two such men as you and I can get at least a lunch while any other crew, no matter who they are, are getting a square meal.”

“I like your style, Loring. You and I will have the world eating out of our hands shortly after we get back. As far as actual procedure over there is concerned, of course, I haven’t made any definite plans. We’ll have to size up the situation after we get there before we can know exactly what we’ll have to do. However, we are not coming back empty-handed.”

“You said something, Chief!” and the two men, so startlingly unlike physically, but so alike inwardly, shook hands in token of their mutual dedication to a single purpose.


Loring was then instructed in the simple navigation of the ship of space, and thereafter the two men took their regular shifts at the controls. In due time they approached Osnome, and DuQuesne studied the planet carefully through a telescope before he ventured down into the atmosphere.

“This half of it used to be Mardonale. I suppose it’s all Kondal now. No, there’s a war on down there yet--at least, there’s a disturbance of some kind, and on this planet that means war.”

“What are you looking for, exactly?” asked Loring, who was also examining the terrain with a telescope.

“They’ve got some spherical space-ships, like Seaton’s. I know they had one, and they’ve probably built more of them since that time. Their airships can’t touch us, but those ball-shaped cruisers would be pure poison for us, the way we are fixed now. Can you see any of them?”

“Not yet. Too far away to make out details. They’re certainly having a hot time down there, though, in that one spot.”

They dropped lower, toward the stronghold which was being so stubbornly defended by the inhabitants of the third planet of the fourteenth sun, and so savagely attacked by the Kondalian forces.

“There, we can see what they’re doing now,” and DuQuesne anchored the vessel with an attractor. “I want to see if they’ve got many of those space-ships in action, and you will want to see what war is like, when it is fought by people, who have been making war steadily for ten thousand years.”

Poised at the limit of clear visibility, the two men studied the incessant battle being waged beneath them. They saw not one, but fully a thousand of the globular craft high in the air and grouped in a great circle around an immense fortification upon the ground below. They saw no airships in the line of battle, but noticed that many such vessels were flying to and from the front, apparently carrying supplies. The fortress was an immense dome of some glassy, transparent material, partially covered with slag, through which they saw that the central space was occupied by orderly groups of barracks, and that round the circumference were arranged gigantic generators, projectors, and other machinery at whose purposes they could not even guess. From the base of the dome a twenty-mile-wide apron of the same glassy substance spread over the ground, and above this apron and around the dome were thrown the mighty defensive ray-screens, visible now and then in scintillating violet splendor as one of the copper-driven Kondalian projectors sought in vain for an opening. But the Earth-men saw with surprise that the main attack was not being directed at the dome; that only an occasional ray was thrown against it in order to make the defenders keep their screens up continuously. The edge of the apron was bearing the brunt of that vicious and never-ceasing attack, and most concerned the desperate defense.

For miles beyond that edge, and as deep under it as frightful rays and enormous charges of explosive copper could penetrate, the ground was one seething, flaming volcano of molten and incandescent lava; lava constantly being volatilized by the unimaginable heat of those rays and being hurled for miles in all directions by the inconceivable power of those explosive copper projectiles--the heaviest projectiles that could be used without endangering the planet itself--being directed under the exposed edge of that unbreakable apron, which was in actuality anchored to the solid core of the planet itself; lava flowing into and filling up the vast craters caused by the explosions. The attack seemed fiercest at certain points, perhaps a quarter of a mile apart around the circle, and after a time the watchers perceived that at those points, under the edge of the apron, in that indescribable inferno of boiling lava, destructive rays, and disintegrating copper, there were enemy machines at work. These machines were strengthening the protecting apron and extending it, very slowly, but ever wider and ever deeper as the ground under it and before it was volatilized or hurled away by the awful forces of the Kondalian attack. So much destruction had already been wrought that the edge of the apron and its molten moat were already fully a mile below the normal level of that cratered, torn, and tortured plain.

Now and then one of the mechanical moles would cease its labors, overcome by the concentrated fury of destruction centered upon it. Its shattered remnants would be withdrawn and shortly, repaired or replaced, it would be back at work. But it was not the defenders who had suffered most heavily. The fortress was literally ringed about with the shattered remnants of airships, and the riddled hulls of more than a few of those mighty globular cruisers of the void bore mute testimony to the deadliness and efficiency of the warfare of the invaders.

Even as they watched, one of the spheres, unable for some reason to maintain its screens or overcome by the awful forces playing upon it, flared from white into and through the violet and was hurled upward as though shot from the mouth of some Brobdingnagian howitzer. A door opened, and from its flaming interior four figures leaped out into the air, followed by a puff of orange-colored smoke. At the first sign of trouble, the ship next it in line leaped in front of it and the four figures floated gently to the ground, supported by friendly attractors and protected from enemy rays by the bulk and by the screens of the rescuing vessel. Two great airships soared upward from back of the lines and hauled the disabled vessel to the ground by means of their powerful attractors. The two observers saw with amazement that after brief attention from an ant-like ground-crew, the original four men climbed back into their warship and she again shot into the fray, apparently as good as ever.

“What do you know about that!” exclaimed DuQuesne. “That gives me an idea, Loring. They must get to them that way fairly often, to judge by the teamwork they use when it does happen. How about waiting until they disable another one like that, and then grabbing it while its in the air, deserted and unable to fight back? One of those ships is worth a thousand of this one, even if we had everything known to the Osnomians.”

“That’s a real idea--those boats certainly are brutes for punishment,” agreed Loring, and as both men again settled down to watch the battle, he went on: “So this is war out this way? You’re right. Seaton, with half this stuff, could whip the combined armies and navies of the world. I don’t blame Brookings much, though, at that--nobody could believe half of this unless they could actually see it, as we are doing.”

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