When a diminutive passenger named Thaxton comes aboard under the blessing of high authority, Captain Hanson assumes he’s just another bureaucratic nuisance. Lancelot Biggs knows better. The man doesn’t just listen—he reaches. Crew members feel it in the skull, a subtle pressure that turns guarded thoughts into open ledgers. And somewhere in the Saturn’s aft holds sits cargo that could land every soul on board in a Venusian prison.
With five days to travel and a naval cruiser closing in, the situation tightens by the hour. Thaxton claims he can read minds. He proves it. He predicts actions before they happen and forces confessions no one intended to make. Biggs sees the flaw others miss, but exploiting it means playing traitor in front of his captain and closest friend. If he misjudges the timing, the Saturn will be seized and the crew scattered behind bars.
Nelson S. Bond made Lancelot Biggs one of the most distinctive figures in early magazine science fiction. Bond’s stories appeared regularly in Astounding Science Fiction, Blue Book, and Amazing Stories, and he wrote a long-running series featuring Biggs as an awkward theorist who keeps rescuing practical men from impossible situations. In “The Genius of Lancelot Biggs,” Bond sharpens that formula to a razor’s edge, pitting mind against mind in a duel where the smallest miscalculation would cost everything.























