Page 1 of Black Genesis




  Mission Earth 02: Black Genesis

  By L.Ron Hubbard

  Proofed: March, 23rd, 2002

  Scanned by Wickman99

  INTERNATIONAL ACCLAIM FOR

  Mission Earth

  "An incredibly good story, lushly written,

  vibrating with action and excitement, a

  gem."

  — A.E. van Vogt

  "You will lose sleep, you will miss appointments... if you don't force your­self to put it down... "

  — Orson Scott Card

  "... a big, humorous tale of interstellar

  intrigue in the classical mold. I fully

  enjoyed it."

  — Roger Zelazny

  "... fantastic adventure, beats like a strong pulse."

  — The Book World

  "Wry humor abounds — but never lets you relax for very long."

  — P.M. Busby

  "... a delicious read ... as one would

  expect from an experienced pro."

  — Washington Book World

  "Marvelous satire by a master of adventure."

  — Anne McCaffrey

  "Lively and entertaining ... a rollicking delight."

  — David Bischoff

  "... an outrageous and wildly funny read."

  — San Francisco Examiner

  "A wicked satire .. . more addictive than salt and peanuts!" — Gene Wolfe

  This book follows MISSION EARTH

  Volume 1 THE INVADERS PLAN

  Buy it and read it first!

  AMONG THE MANY CLASSIC WORKS BY L. RON HUBBARD

  Battlefield Earth

  Beyond the Black Nebula

  Buckskin Brigades

  The Conquest of Space

  The Dangerous Dimension

  Death's Deputy

  The Emperor of the Universe

  Fear

  Final Blackout

  Forbidden Voyage

  The Incredible Destination

  The Kilkenny Cats

  The Kingslayer

  The Last Admiral

  The Magnificent Failure

  The Masters of Sleep

  The Mutineers

  Ole Doc Methuselah

  Ole Mother Methuselah

  The Rebels

  Return to Tomorrow

  Slaves of Sleep

  To The Stars

  The Traitor

  Triton

  Typewriter in the Sky

  The Ultimate Adventure

  The Unwilling Hero

  Mission Earth

  Black Genesis

  THE BOOKS OF THE MISSION EARTH DEKALOGY*

  Volume 1

  The Invaders Plan

  Volume 2 Black Genesis

  Volume 3

  The Enemy Within

  Volume 4

  An Alien Affair

  Volume 5 Fortune of Fear

  Volume 6 Death Quest

  Volume 7

  Voyage of Vengeance

  Volume 8 Disaster

  Volume 9 Villainy Victorious

  Volume 10

  The Doomed Planet

  * Dekalogy—a group of ten volumes.

  L.RON

  HUBBARD

  Mission Earth

  VOLUME TWO

  Black Genesis

  BRIDGE PUBLICATIONS, INC.

  LOS ANGELES

  MISSION EARTH: BLACK GENESIS Copyright © 1986 by L. Ron Hubbard Library. All rights reserved. Printed in the United States of America.

  No part of this book may be used or reproduced in any manner whatsoever without written permission except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical articles or reviews. For information, address Bridge Publications, Inc., 4751 Fountain Avenue, Los Angeles, CA 90029

  The words "Mission Earth" and theare trademarks owned by L. Ron Hubbard Library.

  Original Jacket Painting by Gerry Grace.

  MISSION EARTH Cover Artwork

  Copyright © 1988 by L. Ron Hubbard Library.

  First Paperback Edition

  10 987654321

  Library of Congress No. 85-72029

  ISBN 0-88404-283-9 pbk. (U.S.) ISBN 0-88404-360-6 pbk. (Can.)

  Lyrics to the musical composition "St. James Infirmary" (also known as "Gamblers Blues") is used with the permis­sion of the owner, Copyright 1930 and renewed 1957 by Demon & Haskins Corporation.

  "Sing Sing Prison Blues" by Porter Grainger and Freddie Johnson. Copyright © 1925 by MCA Music, a division of MCA Incorporated, NYC. Copyright renewed. Used by per­mission. All Rights Reserved.

  This is a work of science fiction, written as satire* The essence of satire is to examine, comment and give opinion of society and culture, none of which is to be construed as a statement of pure fact. No actual incidents are portrayed and none of the incidents are to be construed as real. Some of the actions of this novel take place on the planet Earth, but the characters as presented in this novel have been invented. Any accidental use of the names of living people in a novel is virtually inevitable, and any such inadvertency in this book is unintentional.

  *See Author's Introduction, Mission Earth: Volume One, The Invaders Plan.

  To you,

  the millions of science fiction fans

  and general public who welcomed me back to the world of fiction

  so warmly, and to the critics and media

  who so pleasantly

  applauded the novel "Battlefield Earth" It's great working for you!

  Voltarian

  Censor's

  Disclaimer

  To the degree that this book deals with a nonexistent planet ("Earth"), it is hereby deemed as "acceptable for entertainment only." At no time shall it or any portion of it in any form be permitted in any Voltarian study.

  The reader is thereby alerted and warned that "Earth" is completely fictional, fabricated and falla­cious, and that contact with such a planet (if it ever existed) is dangerous to your health.

  Lord Invay Royal Historian Chairman, Board of Censors Royal Palace Voltar Confederacy

  By Order of

  His Imperial Majesty

  Wully the Wise

  Voltarian

  Translator's

  Preface

  With all due respect to the Royal Censor, one man's fact is another man's fiction. Fortunately, being the Robotbrain in the Translatophone I don't qualify for that quandary.

  Also, to the degree I've never visited this place called Earth (which would be hard since it isn't there), I can't personally vouch for anything that I was given to trans­late. All I can do is take what is said and make the best of it.

  As Lord Invay points out, Earth does not exist on any astrochart and I have confirmed that. Since Soltan Gris (the narrator of this story) is a confessed criminal and well worthy of doubt (besides, anyone whose heroes are Sigmund Freud and Bugs Bunny also has other prob­lems), I did not rely on his account that Earth is about 22 light-years from Voltar. I thoroughly searched all astro-charts in my data banks, concentrating on everything within 2000 light-years out, but nothing was found to match his description. (Come to think of it, I have no idea why I should have an Earth database if there is no such place. I'll have to work on that.)

  The subject of light-years brings up a major problem I had translating portions of this into Earth language.

  There is no accepted vocabulary for hyperluminary phe­nomena simply because Earth scientists insist that there is no such thing and that nothing can travel faster than light. (This is the same group who also gave Earth other memorable nonsense like the "edge of the world" and the "sound barrier.") Thus, while most Earthlings have per­ceived the hyperluminary life-color that in Voltarian we call "ghrial," they don't have a name for it since it can't be reproduced as a shade of nail polish.
So I went with "yellow-green" as that is its luminary harmonic. (It is also the word most Earthlings use to try and describe it. Their problem is that they continuously have valid per­ceptions and experiences that they invalidate and so they get stuck in a very strange view of the world. Reality is apparently determined either by majority vote or govern­ment grant, with the latter holding veto power over the former.)

  Similarly with other basics like space, time, energy, motion and self, Earth scientists pursue these concepts like the dog chasing its tail or the man trying to jump on the head of his shadow. None of them—dog or scientist—have caught on as to why the objective eludes them so mysteriously. So I relied on the current vocab­ulary and made the best of it. (I hope no one back on Vol­tar catches me talking about "electron rings" or I'll be laughed out of the Machine Purity League.)

  As to characters, as Lord Invay said in the first volume, Royal officer Jettero Heller and the Countess Krak do exist. Soltan Gris (the narrator who gives me all my circuit-aches) is listed as a General Service officer but there is no further record of worth.

  For others who appear in this volume, I'm providing a Key to describe them as well as a few additional items. I had to rely on Gris's prison narrative, which isn't easy.

  (Gris's American Southern drawl, spoken with a North­ern Voltarian accent, has to be heard to be believed.)

  From there, you're on your own! There's only so much a Robotbrain can do!

  Sincerely,

  54 Charlee Nine

  Robotbrain in the Translatophone

  Key to BLACK GENESIS

  Absorbo-coat—Coating that absorbs light waves, mak­ing the object virtually invisible or undetectable.

  Antimanco—A race exiled long ago from the planet Manco for ritual murders.

  Apparatus, Coordinated Information—The secret police of Voltar, headed by Lombar Hisst and manned by criminals.

  Atalanta—Province on planet Manco settled by Prince Caucalsia who, per Folk Legend 894M, started a colony on Blito-P3 (Earth).

  Barben, I. G.—Pharmaceutical company controlled by Delbert John Rockecenter.

  Bawtch—Soltan Gris's chief clerk for Section 451 on Vol­tar.

  Bis—Intelligence officer of the Fleet and friend of Jet­tero Heller.

  Bittlestiffender, Prahd— Voltar cellologist found by Sol-tan Gris, who implanted Jettero Heller with transmitters so Gris could monitor Heller's sight and hearing.

  Blito—A yellow dwarf star with but one inhabitable

  planet in the third orbit (Blito-P3). It is about 22 1/2 light-years from Voltar.

  Blito-P3—Planet known locally as "Earth." It is on the Invasion Timetable as a future way-stop on Voltar's route toward the center of this galaxy.

  Blixo—Apparatus freighter that makes regular runs between Blito-P3 and Voltar. The voyage takes about six weeks each way.

  Bluebottles—Nickname given to the Domestic Police of Voltar.

  Bluejackets—An Apparatus nickname for members of the Fleet.

  Bolz—Captain of the Blixo.

  Caucalsia, Prince—According to Folk Legend 894M, he fled Manco during the Great Rebellion and set up a col­ony on Blito-P3.

  Caucasus—A mountain region between Turkey and Rus­sia, where survivors of Prince Caucalsia's colony fled when their island colony on Earth was destroyed.

  Cellology—Voltarian medical science that can repair the body through the cellular generation of tissues, including entire body parts.

  Chank-pop—A small, round ball that, when pressed, sprays a scented fog; used as a refresher on Voltar.

  Chorder-beat—An electronic instrument where the left hand chords and the right hand beats out a rhythm. It is played strapped to the stomach and makes a sinuous, suggestive sort of music.

  Code Break—Violation of Space Code a-36-544 M which prohibits alerting others that one is an alien. If this occurs, those alerted are destroyed and the violator is put to death.

  Coordinated Information Apparatus—See Apparatus.

  Crobe, Doctor—Apparatus doctor and cellologist who examined Jettero Heller for his mission. Crobe recom­mended beer and hamburgers as a basic Earth diet.

  Drunks—A Fleet nickname for members of the Appa­ratus.

  Exterior Division—That part of the Voltar government that reportedly contained the Apparatus.

  Fleet—The elite space fighting arm of Voltar to which Jet­tero Heller belongs and which the Apparatus despises.

  Flisten—A planet in the Voltar Confederacy, its human­oid inhabitants are long-nailed and yellow-skinned.

  Folk Legend 894M—The legend of how Prince Caucal­sia fled Atalanta, Manco, to Blito-P3 where he set up a col­ony called "Atlantis."

  Grand Council—The governing body of Voltar which ordered a mission to keep Blito-P3 from destroying itself so the Invasion Timetable could be maintained.

  Gris, Soltan—Apparatus officer in charge of Blito-P3 (Earth) Section 451 and an enemy of Jettero Heller.

  Heller, Hightee—Sister of Jettero Heller and most pop­ular entertainer in the Voltar Confederacy.

  Heller, Jettero—Combat engineer and Royal officer of the Fleet, sent by Grand Council order to Blito-P3.

  Hisst, Lombar—Head of the Coordinated Information Apparatus who, to keep the Grand Council from discov­ering his plan, sent Soltan Gris to sabotage Jettero Heller's mission.

  Hot Jolt—A popular Voltarian drink.

  Hypnohelmet—Device placed over the head and used to induce a hypnotic state.

  Invasion Timetable—A schedule of galactic conquest. The plans and budget of every section of Voltar's govern­ment must adhere to it. Bequeathed by Voltar's ancestors hundreds of thousands of years ago, it is inviolate and sacred and the guiding dogma of the Confederacy.

  Knife Section—Section of the Apparatus named after its favorite weapon.

  Krak, Countess—Condemned murderess, prisoner of Spiteos and sweetheart of Jettero Heller.

  Lepertige—Large catlike animal as tall as a man.

  Manco—Similar to Blito-P3 and home planet of Jettero Heller and Countess Krak and the source of Folk Legend 894M.

  Manco Devil—Mythological spirit native to Manco.

  Meeley—Landlady of Soltan Gris.

  Odur—See Oh Dear.

  Oh Dear—Nickname for Odur, a clerk in Soltan Gris's Section 451,

  Raht—An Apparatus agent on Blito-P3 who, with Terb,

  was assigned by Lombar Hisst to help Soltan Gris sabo­tage Jettero Heller's mission.

  Rockecenter, Delbert John—Native of Blito-P3 who con­trols the planet's fuel, finance, governments and drugs.

  Roke, Tars—Astrographer to the Emperor of Voltar, Cling the Lofty. Roke's discovery that Earth was destroy­ing itself prompted the Grand Council to send Jettero Heller on mission.

  Section 451—A Section in the Apparatus headed by Sol-tan Gris that is responsible for just one minor star, Blito, and one inhabitable planet in the 3rd orbit (Blito-P3) known locally as "Earth."

  Ske—Driver for Soltan Gris.

  Snelz—Apparatus platoon commander at Spiteos, who befriended Jettero Heller and the Countess Krak when they were prisoners there.

  Space Code a-36-544 M Section B—Section of the Vol­tarian Space Code that prohibits landing and prema­turely alerting the population of a target planet that is on the Invasion Timetable. Violation carries the death penalty.

  Spiteos—The secret mountain fortress and prison run by the Apparatus on the planet Voltar where the Countess Krak and Jettero Heller had been imprisoned.

  Spurk—Owner of "The Eyes and Ears of Voltar" com­pany who was killed by Soltan Gris to steal the micro-devices that he had Prahd Bittlestiffender implant in Jet­tero Heller.

  Stinger—A flexible whip about eighteen inches long with an electric jolt in its tip-lash.

  Tayl, Widow Pratia—Nymphomaniac on Voltar.

  Terb—Apparatus agent on Blito-P3 who, with Raht, has been assigned by Lombar Hisst to help Soltan Gris sabo­tage J
ettero Heller's mission.

  Too-Too—Nickname for Twolah, a clerk in Soltan Gris's Section 451.

  Tug One—Powered by the feared Will-be Was time drives, it had been in storage since its sister ship, Tug Two, reportedly blew up.

  Tup—An alcoholic beverage on Voltar.

  Twolah—See Too-Too.

  Voltar—The seat of the 110-planet Confederacy that was ruled by Cling the Lofty as the Emperor, through the Grand Council, at the time of Jettero Heller's mission. The empire is over 125,000 years old.

  Will-be Was—The feared time drives that allow Jettero Heller to cover the 22 1/2-light-year distance between Blito-P3 (Earth) and Voltar in a little over three days.

  Zanco—Cellological equipment and supplies company on Voltar.

  831 Relayer—Used to boost the signals from the audio and optical bugs implanted in Jettero Heller so that Sol-tan Gris can secretly monitor everything Jettero sees and hears.

  PART TWELVE

  To My Lord Turn, Justiciary of the Royal Courts and Prison, Government City, Planet Voltar, Voltar Con­federacy

  Your Lordship, Sir!

  I, Soltan Gris, late Secondary Officer of the Coor­dinated Information Apparatus, Exterior Division of the Voltar Confederacy (Long Live His Majesty Cling the Lofty and All 110 Planets of the Voltar Dominions), in all humbleness and gratitude am herein forwarding the second volume of my accounting of MISSION EARTH.

  I am still relying on my notes, logs and strips to record everything as you requested. In this way, I hope to prove to you that my incarceration in your fine prison is well founded.

  At the same time, I'm sure Your Lordship will see that nothing was my fault, especially the violence described earlier. Jettero Heller is to blame for every­thing that happened. Until his appearance, I was merely another Secondary Officer in the Apparatus. That I hap­pened to be the head of Section 451 meant little. Section 451 had only one yellow dwarf star that had only one pop­ulated planet (Blito-P3) that its inhabitants called Earth.

  Like many other planets, Earth was on the Invasion Timetable. It wasn't to be conquered for another cen­tury, so there was no urgency about the scouting mission