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+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78935 ***
+
+
+
+
+ Day’s Work
+
+ By Noel Loomis
+
+
+
+
+ =He came striding across the galaxies with feet that spanned eons as
+ well as parsecs, and with a goal in his mind--the goal of a creation
+ forbidden by members of the Council of the Gods. He wanted to create
+ a certain kind of biped!=
+
+
+
+
+Two of the gods had been arguing all morning. A galactic morning, that
+is--one sixth of the time it took Betelgeuse to complete its orbit
+around the circumference of a cross-section of the spiral whorl of the
+sprawling IX Galaxy--some four hundred and twenty thousand years.
+
+And the fury of the last nova explosion indicated that Mogar, ranking
+member of the IX Galactic Council, was becoming annoyed over his
+failure to browbeat Dalen, who had come up from the LIII Constellation
+Committee only a few eons before.
+
+But finally, just before noon, Mogar’s tremendous thought-force
+thundered at the younger god out of the Lesser Magellanic Cloud and
+rolled across ninety thought light-years of space to the constellation
+Bootes, where Dalen was trying to settle a territorial dispute between
+two solar system deputies who had been involved for eighteen centuries
+over the jurisdiction of a newly formed binary system.
+
+Mogar’s thought-force said: “Your theories are preposterous and
+repellent. No entity in physical shape can ever learn to live a useful
+life. For one thing, they seldom evolve the quality of infinite age.
+And records will show that in all the II Supergalaxy no species of
+biped with an opposed thumb has ever been able to live peacefully with
+itself. All such species are self-destructive.”
+
+A great rumbling came from the Cloud, accompanied by trillion mile
+streams of sullen fire, and then Mogar’s thought-force, muttered but
+still understandable at that distance, came again: “When you have
+been in the Council long enough to become oriented, you will see that
+these ideas of yours are nothing but sentiment, and have no place in a
+council of the gods.”
+
+The energy-nucleus that was Dalen absorbed these thoughts, and at
+length sent his answer back to the Cloud:
+
+“Sire, your venerable age and your seniority on the Galactic Council
+cause me to answer you with deep respect, but I find it impossible to
+agree.”
+
+Mogar’s thought returned like cosmic lightning: “Then you will, I
+suppose, appeal to the Supergalactic Conference.”
+
+Dalen evaded this trap. His answer swept back across the light-years of
+the galaxy’s length quietly but strongly:
+
+“Sire, I do not think that is necessary.”
+
+And of course it was not necessary. While all the nine gods in the
+Galactic Council had authority in any part of the galaxy, and even
+certain rights anywhere in the Milky Way Supergalaxy, in practice each
+member of the council ruled a particular sphere of the galaxy, and by
+unwritten law might do anything he wished in that region as long as he
+did not upset the dynamic balance of neighbor regions.
+
+That was where Mogar came in, and why it was necessary to secure
+his approval before actually beginning the experiment. For Mogar’s
+ancient seniority on the council and his resultant familiarity with
+all conditions in the Galaxy of Orion (the IXth) had made him a sort
+of deputy of the Supergalactic Conference, and they had actually given
+him a temporary appointment as Director of Creation in the IX Galaxy.
+Temporary, though he had already held it for several ages. The higher
+gods were very conservative.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+So it was most desirable to secure Mogar’s approval on any project
+involving creation, for creation involved the welfare of neighboring
+regions. But Mogar, long embittered by his own failure to advance
+beyond the Galactic Council, valued the small eminence his appointment
+gave him, and had adopted a policy of conservatism as his best means of
+preserving it. Therefore he could be expected to oppose on principle
+any experiment the failure or success of which might upset the dynamic
+balance of the galaxy and throw a shadow on his judgment, and the
+successes of which could only react favorably to the god who should
+bring it about.
+
+Dalen considered Mogar’s opposition for the century-long space of a
+galactic heart-beat. This wasn’t a good start for Dalen to make in the
+council.
+
+It was well known throughout the entire IV Universe that Mogar was old
+and crotchety, perhaps even vindictive. Those very weaknesses had long
+ago cost Mogar a seat in the Supergalactic Conference, but that wasn’t
+the worst of it. If Mogar had progressed in the usual fashion from the
+last Beginning, he would by now have had a seat in the mighty Cosmic
+Chamber.
+
+So the situation exhibited still more serious aspects. Mogar, having
+seen many younger gods pass him in the long climb upward through the
+several eternities from the last Beginning, consistently delighted in
+showing younger gods their place, and under the Laws of Hierarchy,
+a younger god who lost face would be relegated to some quiet
+Constellation Committee until the next End and reorganization of the
+Cosmos. Mogar was known to throw obstacles in the way of every young
+and ambitious god, and then watch them sharply for a chance to catch
+them off-guard.
+
+Dalen knew these things. He had been warned by his friend, the
+middle-aged god Lennat, who had been one of Mogar’s early victims.
+Lennat had lost a test of strength with Mogar and had been assigned to
+the obscure constellation, Tracho, where there had not been even a nova
+explosion for more eons than Dalen could remember.
+
+Dalen considered these things, and he knew what billions of years of
+inactivity could do to a god’s mind. Even now he felt the lightly
+restraining touch of Lennat’s thought-force, a little dulled by long
+disuse. He felt grateful for Lennat’s interest, and yet he had an idea
+that was more than just that--it was an ideal.
+
+Dalen wanted to see a species evolve that could temper intelligence
+with sentiment.
+
+Dalen’s belief was that intelligence alone, even the unusually high
+forms developed by certain Arachnids and some Centipods, was not the
+most pleasing form of life. He believed that sentiment--even though
+unsupported in logic--had a definite place in the cosmic aim of finally
+conjunctive symbiosis, because it provided the most comfortable form of
+relationship, and there no longer was any argument even among the gods
+that comfort was the Ultimate Aim.
+
+So Dalen wished to give such an entity an opportunity to evolve. He
+knew there would be definite limitations. For one thing, there could be
+only two forms: avian or mammalian.
+
+The birds and the mammals were the only two forms that developed a
+great deal of conjunctive feeling, and so his choice was necessarily
+limited to them. He preferred avian for its ability to leave a solid
+surface, but he liked mammalian for its inevitable eagerness to develop
+an opposed thumb. And the opposed thumb, Dalen believed, was the
+quickest answer to any sort of technical progress.
+
+Some of the gods held that technical progress was undesirable, that any
+form of life would more quickly evolve into the abstract forms such as
+pure energy, thought-force, and so on, if they should lack technical
+ability. But Dalen saw desirable things in technics, as he saw
+desirable things in sentiment, and he had been determined for several
+ages that he would some day put his theory into effect.
+
+Just now Dalen hesitated, not because he was afraid, but from caution
+stirred by his knowledge of Mogar’s ancient shrewdness. Mogar mistook
+his hesitation for weakness, and his next thought rolled powerfully and
+triumphantly from the Magellanic Galaxy, across the intervening vacuum,
+back to the IXth and through its length to Bootes again:
+
+“Then, perhaps, you will challenge me.”
+
+Dalen perceived the note of condescension. He knew that Mogar had
+challenged many ambitious young gods, and had never lost a test, but
+still Dalen did not rise to the taunt.
+
+“No, sire, I am not at this time going to challenge you,” Dalen
+answered evenly.
+
+Mogar’s guffaw thundered across the intergalactic void.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But Dalen had not been elected to the council from the committeeship
+of the Constellation Hercules for his caution. At once he reached out
+to the other galaxy with his sensitive perceptory faculties and probed
+lightly at Mogar’s mind.
+
+Dalen recently had begun to suspect that the elder god had retained
+some of the lower mind-centers that were distinctly ungodlike. Now
+was a chance to find out. But almost as soon as Dalen tried, he was
+chagrined. He touched one of the intricately convoluted hyper-centers,
+but it was shielded.
+
+That was embarrassing. Mogar would know that he had tried, and by
+evening every god on the council would know that the newcomer from the
+LIII Constellation Committee had tried to probe old Mogar’s mind and
+had failed. But Dalen was not a god to back away from his chosen course.
+
+He felt that his power was somewhat diminished by the unusual distance,
+for Mogar was visiting outside his own galaxy today. Dalen channeled
+his energy through the fifth-dimension space-warp, which offered zero
+resistance, and in traversing the long parsecs of the galaxy, he gained
+six years in time before he reached the point in the galaxy nearest
+Mogar in the Cloud. There he halted and struck suddenly and with all
+the normal power of his faculties at the depths of Mogar’s mind.
+
+He hit first the reflexive center, but there he met a solid wall of
+force, and then, because he could shift his probing lance faster than
+Mogar could erect shields, he stabbed at what would have been Mogar’s
+instinctive level. He was astounded to find that, too, protected.
+
+Dalen had expected to find the lower centers unguarded, because it
+required untold trillions of macro-ergs of energy to erect a single
+shield, and Mogar would spend centuries replenishing that energy from
+atomic dissolution. But also because attempting to probe an elder god’s
+mind was an audacious thing, and Dalen had not expected Mogar would
+anticipate it.
+
+But Mogar had, and was taking no chance. Dalen did not hesitate. He had
+committed himself, so he stabbed again, and this time with tremendous
+power. He funneled his probing force through the spiral timewarp of
+the sixth dimension, to give it infinitely compounded power, and with
+all this inconceivable kinetic momentum he stabbed repeatedly at
+successively lower layers of the elder’s mind, far past the instinctive
+and even into the inanimate--but without success.
+
+By now he was ashamed. The newcomer was now only a smart aleck. But
+Dalen had not finished. How the elder god at his age could endure the
+awful energy-drain of completely shielding himself was more than Dalen
+could understand. What Dalen did understand by now was that Mogar
+definitely would not allow anyone to penetrate his mind.
+
+That was a shock as Dalen realized the implications. Why should a god
+shield his mind-centers at such a frightful cost of energy? There could
+be but one answer, and it frightened Dalen a little. It meant that
+Mogar _did_ have disjunctive thoughts and perhaps even feelings. It
+meant that even if Mogar should withdraw his opposition nominally, he
+would be glad to see the experiment fail, and he might even help it to
+fail.
+
+That would be a vicious handicap for Dalen. The evolution of a race was
+subject to many perils; evolving a particular species was a hot-house
+sort of process that would take several billion years and much careful
+nurturing. If another god should be opposed, he could destroy the
+entire experiment, for instance, by dropping a spore of some malignant
+virus into the midst of the species--a virus for which the race would
+be unprepared and against which it would have no resistance. That was
+only one of infinite ways to eliminate an undesirable species.
+
+So now it was obvious to Dalen that his only recourse was to break down
+the barriers to Mogar’s mind. He had not intended this, but Mogar was
+forcing it. If he did break through the shields, then Mogar himself
+would be relegated, for the entire supergalaxy would know it instantly.
+
+So now Dalen, having unintentionally worked himself into a spot where
+it was relegation for one or the other, gathered his energy. There
+was one way in which he felt positive that he could break through
+Mogar’s protection, even at this great distance. This was by way of the
+ninth-dimension elliptical spiral. Dalen had never used it, for it was
+prohibited to any god below the council, but if he could manipulate it
+into operation he could combine it with the sixth and his infinitely
+compounded power would be also infinitely squared.
+
+There was one drawback. According to Dalen’s calculations, a
+combination of the sixth and the ninth would require an output on
+Dalen’s part of power to the extent of something like 8.4 times ten to
+the twentieth power macro-ergs-and that would be Dalen’s last effort.
+He would have to rest for a while after that. If it didn’t succeed, he
+reflected, there would be eternities to rest.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+He concentrated his energy facilities and spiraled them to full power,
+sucking the last quantum of pure energy from every available atom, even
+stripping binding energy, and poured it all into his utilization of
+the two dimensions. Dalen was a young god and a strong god, and it was
+utterly inconceivable that any god could stand up against that enormous
+combination of power.
+
+By now the entire IV Universe knew that he and Mogar were fighting
+it out. Tightness pervaded Dalen’s thought-force which was flung out
+along the edge of the galaxy. The mighty power of the two dimensions
+swirled together and lashed out across the interstellar void, gathering
+momentum as it traveled in ever-increasing spurts.
+
+Perhaps the very first tongue of this energy touched Mogar, when
+unexpectedly his chuckle--a little forced, it seemed to Dalen--rolled
+back across the void. He said, as if amused:
+
+“Where do you propose to hold this experiment?”
+
+Dalen relaxed gratefully and allowed the controls to ease from his
+mind-centers. So Mogar had enough. Mogar had backed down. Only an old
+god of long seniority could do that without losing face, and also,
+Dalen understood, that was Mogar’s only way out. Dalen knew now that he
+would have broken through, and in a way he wished he had. It would have
+eliminated Mogar’s future unofficial opposition. But Mogar had chosen
+to break the deadlock, and that was Mogar’s right, so Dalen accepted
+the gesture.
+
+“I intend to develop a new solar system, to be known as the XXXVI, out
+on the fringe of the galaxy, and attached for administrative purposes
+to my home Constellation Hercules. I will choose one of those planets,
+sire, to be populated.”
+
+Mogar snorted so loudly it could be heard in the VIII Galaxy. “It will
+take you two billion years to get a biped. I say give the planet a
+shower of germanium isotope rays and everything but insects will kill
+themselves off quickly. Then in a few million years you will have an
+insect civilization to be proud of.”
+
+But Dalen was firm in his answer. “No, sire. I believe the
+opposed-thumb biped may prove to be a very desirable life-form.
+This planet will be only one of ten quadrillion in the Milky Way
+Super-Galaxy. I think it is not too extravagant to use it as an
+experiment. It is under the jurisdiction of my home constellation,
+sire,” he said pointedly.
+
+Now Mogar grumbled, and a billion cubic parsecs of cosmic dust exploded
+before his ire and streamed into the vacuum of intergalactial space.
+“Very well, then. I withdraw my opposition. But you will see that I am
+right, and at next week’s meeting I shall expect a report from you on
+the outcome.”
+
+“Yes, sire,” Dalen said respectfully. He turned in the space between
+two stars, and began traveling back toward Hercules. He felt now the
+astonishment in the minds of Lennat and the seven members of the
+council. Yes, Dalen was audacious. He was young and perhaps impetuous,
+to brave the wrath of a god like Mogar. Dalen knew now that the other
+members of the council felt as he did, that Mogar would go to any
+length to prevent Dalen’s success with the experiment.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Dalen resolved more firmly that it should succeed, but it was a heavy
+load that he bore as he made arrangements for two stars to meet in
+the outer void of the IX Galaxy. His realization of the difficulties
+ahead was lightened by only one thought: If he could create the race
+he wanted, he would be very proud. Even without Mogar’s opposition,
+the odds were heavy against him. The gods did not like to see their
+precedents broken.
+
+But the one thought lightened Dalen’s mind: if he should succeed,
+he would be very proud. No doubt it would mean his elevation to the
+Supergalactic Conference and perhaps even to the Dioclave. So Dalen’s
+mind-force was busy with ideas and plans. In fact, he realized a little
+wryly, he was almost exuberant. He had even selected a name for his
+experimental species. He would call it “Man,” and by this time next
+week the entire Supergalaxy would know whether an opposed-thumb biped
+could be a desirable entity.
+
+This was a good day’s work.
+
+
+
+
+ Transcriber’s note:
+
+
+ This etext was produced from Rocket Stories, September 1953 (Vol. 1,
+ No. 3.). Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the
+ U.S. copyright on this publication was renewed.
+
+ Obvious errors have been silently corrected in this version, but
+ minor inconsistencies have been retained as printed.
+
+ New original cover art included with this eBook is granted to the
+ public domain.
+
+
+
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78935 ***
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+ <meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1">
+ <title>
+ Day’s Work | Project Gutenberg
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+<body>
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78935 ***</div>
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<h1>
+Day’s Work
+</h1>
+
+<p class="f15 center">By <strong>Noel Loomis</strong></p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop"><div class="chapter"></div>
+<blockquote>
+<p><b>He came striding across the galaxies with feet
+that spanned eons as well as parsecs, and with a goal in his mind—the
+goal of a creation forbidden by members of the Council of the Gods. He
+wanted to create a certain kind of biped!</b></p>
+</blockquote>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop"><div class="chapter"></div>
+
+<p class="p2">Two of the gods had been arguing all morning. A galactic morning,
+that is—one sixth of the time it took Betelgeuse to complete its
+orbit around the circumference of a cross-section of the spiral whorl
+of the sprawling IX Galaxy—some four hundred and twenty thousand
+years.</p>
+
+<p>And the fury of the last nova explosion indicated that Mogar,
+ranking member of the IX Galactic Council, was becoming annoyed
+over his failure to browbeat Dalen, who had come up from the LIII
+Constellation Committee only a few eons before.</p>
+
+<p>But finally, just
+before noon, Mogar’s tremendous thought-force thundered at the younger
+god out of the Lesser Magellanic Cloud and rolled across ninety
+thought light-years of space to the constellation Bootes, where
+Dalen was trying to settle a territorial dispute between two solar
+system deputies who had been involved for eighteen centuries over the
+jurisdiction of a newly formed binary system.</p>
+
+<p>Mogar’s thought-force
+said: “Your theories are preposterous and repellent. No entity in
+physical shape can ever learn to live a useful life. For one thing,
+they seldom evolve the quality of infinite age. And records will
+show that in all the II Supergalaxy no species of biped with an
+opposed thumb has ever been able to live peacefully with itself.
+All such species are self-destructive.”</p>
+
+<p>A great rumbling came from
+the Cloud, accompanied by trillion mile streams of sullen fire, and
+then Mogar’s thought-force, muttered but still understandable at
+that distance, came again: “When you have been in the Council long
+enough to become oriented, you will see that these ideas of yours are
+nothing but sentiment, and have no place in a council of the gods.”</p>
+
+<p>The energy-nucleus that was Dalen absorbed these thoughts, and at
+length sent his answer back to the Cloud:</p>
+
+<p>“Sire, your venerable age
+and your seniority on the Galactic Council cause me to answer you with
+deep respect, but I find it impossible to agree.”</p>
+
+<p>Mogar’s thought
+returned like cosmic lightning: “Then you will, I suppose, appeal to
+the Supergalactic Conference.”</p>
+
+<p>Dalen evaded this trap. His answer
+swept back across the light-years of the galaxy’s length quietly but
+strongly:</p>
+
+<p>“Sire, I do not think that is necessary.”</p>
+
+<p>And of course it
+was not necessary. While all the nine gods in the Galactic Council had
+authority in any part of the galaxy, and even certain rights anywhere
+in the Milky Way Supergalaxy, in practice each member of the council
+ruled a particular sphere of the galaxy, and by unwritten law might
+do anything he wished in that region as long as he did not upset the
+dynamic balance of neighbor regions.</p>
+
+<p>That was where Mogar came in, and
+why it was necessary to secure his approval before actually beginning
+the experiment. For Mogar’s ancient seniority on the council and his
+resultant familiarity with all conditions in the Galaxy of Orion (the
+IXth) had made him a sort of deputy of the Supergalactic Conference,
+and they had actually given him a temporary appointment as Director of
+Creation in the IX Galaxy. Temporary, though he had already held it for
+several ages. The higher gods were very conservative.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>So it was most
+desirable to secure Mogar’s approval on any project involving creation,
+for creation involved the welfare of neighboring regions. But Mogar,
+long embittered by his own failure to advance beyond the Galactic
+Council, valued the small eminence his appointment gave him, and had
+adopted a policy of conservatism as his best means of preserving it.
+Therefore he could be expected to oppose on principle any experiment
+the failure or success of which might upset the dynamic balance of the
+galaxy and throw a shadow on his judgment, and the successes of which
+could only react favorably to the god who should bring it
+about.</p>
+
+<p>Dalen considered Mogar’s opposition for the century-long space
+of a galactic heart-beat. This wasn’t a good start for Dalen to make
+in the council.</p>
+
+<p>It was well known throughout the entire IV Universe
+that Mogar was old and crotchety, perhaps even vindictive. Those
+very weaknesses had long ago cost Mogar a seat in the Supergalactic
+Conference, but that wasn’t the worst of it. If Mogar had progressed
+in the usual fashion from the last Beginning, he would by now have had
+a seat in the mighty Cosmic Chamber.</p>
+
+<p>So the situation exhibited still
+more serious aspects. Mogar, having seen many younger gods pass him
+in the long climb upward through the several eternities from the last
+Beginning, consistently delighted in showing younger gods their place,
+and under the Laws of Hierarchy, a younger god who lost face would be
+relegated to some quiet Constellation Committee until the next End and
+reorganization of the Cosmos. Mogar was known to throw obstacles in
+the way of every young and ambitious god, and then watch them sharply
+for a chance to catch them off-guard.</p>
+
+<p>Dalen knew these things. He had
+been warned by his friend, the middle-aged god Lennat, who had
+been one of Mogar’s early victims. Lennat had lost a test of strength
+with Mogar and had been assigned to the obscure constellation, Tracho,
+where there had not been even a nova explosion for more eons than
+Dalen could remember.</p>
+
+<p>Dalen considered these things, and he knew what
+billions of years of inactivity could do to a god’s mind. Even now
+he felt the lightly restraining touch of Lennat’s thought-force, a
+little dulled by long disuse. He felt grateful for Lennat’s interest,
+and yet he had an idea that was more than just that—it was an ideal.</p>
+
+<p>Dalen wanted to see a species evolve that could temper intelligence
+with sentiment.</p>
+
+<p>Dalen’s belief was that intelligence alone, even
+the unusually high forms developed by certain Arachnids and some
+Centipods, was not the most pleasing form of life. He believed that
+sentiment—even though unsupported in logic—had a definite place in
+the cosmic aim of finally conjunctive symbiosis, because it provided
+the most comfortable form of relationship, and there no longer was
+any argument even among the gods that comfort was the Ultimate Aim.</p>
+
+<p>So Dalen wished to give such an entity an opportunity to evolve. He
+knew there would be definite limitations. For one thing, there could
+be only two forms: avian or mammalian.</p>
+
+<p>The birds and the mammals were
+the only two forms that developed a great deal of conjunctive feeling,
+and so his choice was necessarily limited to them. He preferred avian
+for its ability to leave a solid surface, but he liked mammalian
+for its inevitable eagerness to develop an opposed thumb. And the
+opposed thumb, Dalen believed, was the quickest answer to any sort
+of technical progress.</p>
+
+<p>Some of the gods held that technical progress
+was undesirable, that any form of life would more quickly evolve into
+the abstract forms such as pure energy, thought-force, and so on, if
+they should lack technical ability. But Dalen saw desirable things in
+technics, as he saw desirable things in sentiment, and he had been
+determined for several ages that he would some day put his theory
+into effect.</p>
+
+<p>Just now Dalen hesitated, not because he was afraid, but
+from caution stirred by his knowledge of Mogar’s ancient shrewdness.
+Mogar mistook his hesitation for weakness, and his next thought rolled
+powerfully and triumphantly from the Magellanic Galaxy, across the
+intervening vacuum, back to the IXth and through its length to Bootes
+again:</p>
+
+<p>“Then, perhaps, you will challenge me.”</p>
+
+<p>Dalen perceived the note
+of condescension. He knew that Mogar had challenged many ambitious
+young gods, and had never lost a test, but still Dalen did not rise
+to the taunt.</p>
+
+<p>“No, sire, I am not at this time going to challenge
+you,” Dalen answered evenly.</p>
+
+<p>Mogar’s guffaw thundered across the
+intergalactic void.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>But Dalen had not been elected to the council from
+the committeeship of the Constellation Hercules for his caution. At
+once he reached out to the other galaxy with his sensitive perceptory
+faculties and probed lightly at Mogar’s mind.</p>
+
+<p>Dalen recently had
+begun to suspect that the elder god had retained some of the lower
+mind-centers that were distinctly ungodlike. Now was a chance to
+find out. But almost as soon as Dalen tried, he was chagrined. He
+touched one of the intricately convoluted hyper-centers, but it was
+shielded.</p>
+
+<p>That was embarrassing. Mogar would know that he had tried,
+and by evening every god on the council would know that the newcomer
+from the LIII Constellation Committee had tried to probe old Mogar’s
+mind and had failed. But Dalen was not a god to back away from his
+chosen course.</p>
+
+<p>He felt that his power was somewhat diminished by the
+unusual distance, for Mogar was visiting outside his own galaxy today.
+Dalen channeled his energy through the fifth-dimension space-warp,
+which offered zero resistance, and in traversing the long parsecs of
+the galaxy, he gained six years in time before he reached the point
+in the galaxy nearest Mogar in the Cloud. There he halted and struck
+suddenly and with all the normal power of his faculties at the depths
+of Mogar’s mind.</p>
+
+<p>He hit first the reflexive center, but there he met
+a solid wall of force, and then, because he could shift his probing
+lance faster than Mogar could erect shields, he stabbed at what would
+have been Mogar’s instinctive level. He was astounded to find that,
+too, protected.</p>
+
+<p>Dalen had expected to find the lower centers unguarded,
+because it required untold trillions of macro-ergs of energy to erect
+a single shield, and Mogar would spend centuries replenishing that
+energy from atomic dissolution. But also because attempting to probe
+an elder god’s mind was an audacious thing, and Dalen had not expected
+Mogar would anticipate it.</p>
+
+<p>But Mogar had, and was taking no chance.
+Dalen did not hesitate. He had committed himself, so he stabbed
+again, and this time with tremendous power. He funneled his probing
+force through the spiral timewarp of the sixth dimension, to give it
+infinitely compounded power, and with all this inconceivable kinetic
+momentum he stabbed repeatedly at successively lower layers of the
+elder’s mind, far past the instinctive and even into the inanimate—but
+without success.</p>
+
+<p>By now he was ashamed. The newcomer was now only a
+smart aleck. But Dalen had not finished. How the elder god at his age
+could endure the awful energy-drain of completely shielding himself
+was more than Dalen could understand. What Dalen did understand by
+now was that Mogar definitely would not allow anyone to penetrate
+his mind.</p>
+
+<p>That was a shock as Dalen realized the implications. Why
+should a god shield his mind-centers at such a frightful cost of
+energy? There could be but one answer, and it frightened Dalen a
+little. It meant that Mogar <i>did</i> have disjunctive thoughts
+and perhaps even feelings. It meant that even if
+Mogar should withdraw his
+opposition nominally, he would be glad to see the experiment fail, and
+he might even help it to fail.</p>
+
+<p>That would be a vicious handicap for
+Dalen. The evolution of a race was subject to many perils; evolving
+a particular species was a hot-house sort of process that would take
+several billion years and much careful nurturing. If another god should
+be opposed, he could destroy the entire experiment, for instance,
+by dropping a spore of some malignant virus into the midst of the
+species—a virus for which the race would be unprepared and against
+which it would have no resistance. That was only one of infinite ways
+to eliminate an undesirable species.</p>
+
+<p>So now it was obvious to Dalen
+that his only recourse was to break down the barriers to Mogar’s
+mind. He had not intended this, but Mogar was forcing it. If he did
+break through the shields, then Mogar himself would be relegated, for
+the entire supergalaxy would know it instantly.</p>
+
+<p>So now Dalen, having
+unintentionally worked himself into a spot where it was relegation for
+one or the other, gathered his energy. There was one way in which he
+felt positive that he could break through Mogar’s protection, even at
+this great distance. This was by way of the ninth-dimension elliptical
+spiral. Dalen had never used it, for it was prohibited to any god
+below the council, but if he could manipulate it into operation he
+could combine it with the sixth and his infinitely compounded power
+would be also infinitely squared.</p>
+
+<p>There was one drawback. According to
+Dalen’s calculations, a combination of the sixth and the ninth would
+require an output on Dalen’s part of power to the extent of something
+like 8.4 times ten to the twentieth power macro-ergs-and that would be
+Dalen’s last effort. He would have to rest for a while after that. If
+it didn’t succeed, he reflected, there would be eternities to rest.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>He
+concentrated his energy facilities and spiraled them to full power,
+sucking the last quantum of pure energy from every available atom, even
+stripping binding energy, and poured it all into his utilization of
+the two dimensions. Dalen was a young god and a strong god, and it was
+utterly inconceivable that any god could stand up against that enormous
+combination of power.</p>
+
+<p>By now the entire IV Universe knew that he and
+Mogar were fighting it out. Tightness pervaded Dalen’s thought-force
+which
+was flung out along the edge of the galaxy. The mighty power of the
+two dimensions swirled together and lashed out across the interstellar
+void, gathering momentum as it traveled in ever-increasing spurts.</p>
+
+<p>Perhaps the very first tongue of this energy touched Mogar, when
+unexpectedly his chuckle—a little forced, it seemed to Dalen—rolled
+back across the void. He said, as if amused:</p>
+
+<p>“Where do you propose to hold this experiment?”</p>
+
+<p>Dalen relaxed gratefully and allowed the
+controls to ease from his mind-centers. So Mogar had enough. Mogar
+had backed down. Only an old god of long seniority could do that
+without losing face, and also, Dalen understood, that was Mogar’s
+only way out. Dalen knew now that he would have broken through, and
+in a way he wished he had. It would have eliminated Mogar’s future
+unofficial opposition. But Mogar had chosen to break the deadlock,
+and that was Mogar’s right, so Dalen accepted the gesture.</p>
+
+<p>“I intend
+to develop a new solar system, to be known as the XXXVI, out on the
+fringe of the galaxy, and attached for administrative purposes to my
+home Constellation Hercules. I will choose one of those planets, sire,
+to be populated.”</p>
+
+<p>Mogar snorted so loudly it could be heard in the
+VIII Galaxy. “It will take you two billion years to get a biped. I
+say give the planet a shower of germanium isotope rays and everything
+but insects will kill themselves off quickly. Then in a few million
+years you will have an insect civilization to be proud of.”</p>
+
+<p>But Dalen
+was firm in his answer. “No, sire. I believe the opposed-thumb biped
+may prove to be a very desirable life-form. This planet will be only
+one of ten quadrillion in the Milky Way Super-Galaxy. I think it
+is not too extravagant to use it as an experiment. It is under the
+jurisdiction of my home constellation, sire,” he said pointedly.</p>
+
+<p>Now
+Mogar grumbled, and a billion cubic parsecs of cosmic dust exploded
+before his ire and streamed into the vacuum of intergalactial space.
+“Very well, then. I withdraw my opposition. But you will see that I am
+right, and at next week’s meeting I shall expect a report from you on
+the outcome.”</p>
+
+<p>“Yes, sire,” Dalen said respectfully. He turned in the
+space between two stars, and began traveling back toward Hercules. He
+felt now the astonishment in the minds of Lennat and the seven members
+of the council. Yes, Dalen was audacious. He was young and perhaps
+impetuous, to brave the wrath of a god like Mogar. Dalen knew now that
+the other members of the council felt as he did, that Mogar would go
+to any length to prevent Dalen’s success with the experiment.</p>
+
+<hr class="tb">
+
+<p>Dalen
+resolved more firmly that it should succeed, but it was a heavy load
+that he bore as he made arrangements for two stars to meet in the outer
+void of the IX Galaxy. His realization of the difficulties ahead was
+lightened by only one thought: If he could create the race he wanted,
+he would be very proud. Even without Mogar’s opposition, the odds
+were heavy against him. The gods did not like to see their precedents
+broken.</p>
+
+<p>But the one thought lightened Dalen’s mind: if he should
+succeed, he would be very proud. No doubt it would mean his elevation
+to the Supergalactic Conference and perhaps even to the Dioclave. So
+Dalen’s mind-force was busy with ideas and plans. In fact, he realized
+a little wryly, he was almost exuberant. He had even selected a name
+for his experimental species. He would call it “Man,” and by this time
+next week the entire Supergalaxy would know whether an opposed-thumb
+biped could be a desirable entity.</p>
+
+<p>This was a good day’s work.</p>
+
+<hr class="chap x-ebookmaker-drop">
+
+<div class="chapter"></div>
+<div class="transnote">
+
+<h2 class="nobreak" id="Transcribers_note">Transcriber’s note:</h2>
+
+<blockquote>
+<p>This etext was produced from Rocket Stories, September 1953 (Vol. 1,
+No. 3.). Extensive research did not uncover any evidence that the U.S.
+copyright on this publication was renewed.</p>
+
+<p>Obvious errors have been silently corrected in this version, but minor
+inconsistencies have been retained as printed.</p>
+
+<p>New original cover art included with this eBook is granted to the
+public domain.</p>
+</blockquote>
+</div>
+<div style='text-align:center'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 78935 ***</div>
+</body>
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+
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+[Project Gutenberg](https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for eBook [#78935](https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/78935)