The late afternoon sun, its
outlines shredded by ground-heat distortion and the continuous toxic gales that
swept the planet, wavered in and out of visibility in the brown sky like a dull
red and ragged-edged flag. When it set in a few hours' time there would be
total darkness. The moon was too dim to be seen through the turbulent and
nearly opaque atmosphere, and the stars had not been visible from the surface
for close on three centuries.
The world that was Trolann
raged and stormed and stank all around them as they paused for a moment outside
the first of the series of detoxification chambers that gave access to their
underground home, because they wanted to look at the familiar and abhorrent
scenery for what would be the last time.
Their lifesuit sensors told
of a film of insects and windblown spores that were trying vainly to penetrate
the superfine joints in the mechanisms that provided ground mobility, and kept
their visors clean so that they could see virtually nothing with more clarity.
"Not a druul in
sight," said Jasam. "It's safe to go in."
He pressed the activator on
the first entry seal with the suit's forward manipulator, then swept it around
to indicate the dull, wavering sun, the driving, poisonous fog and the blurred
outlines of the surface extensions of
their neighbors' homes. He looked at Keet and sighed.
"We had a good life
together here," he said, "and for the next few days" -he made an
attempt to lighten their mood as he went on"this hi-tech hole in the
ground will be a very happy home."
"Until we find a new
one," said Keet, impatient as always when he stated the obvious. "I'm
hungry and I want us out of these things."
"Me, too," said
Jasam with enthusiasm; then, in a more reasonable voice he went on. "But
there's no need to be hungry. The suit food is no worse than the stuff in the
larder. Since our final selection it's been the best available. So go ahead and
eat; that's as good a way as any of passing the decontamination time."
"No," said Keet
firmly. "I want us to eat together, every chance we get while we still
can, and not separately like a couple of working colleagues. Sometimes, Jasam,
you display the romantic sensitivity of, of a druul in heat."
He did not have to answer
this grossest of all personal insults because they both knew that she was
joking, and that people only joked about that particular form of hellish
Trolanni life in an attempt to hide their utter fear and loathing for it.
Besides, his answer would come later in actions rather than words.
Neither of them made use of
their built-in food supply while their suits went through the slow, tedious,
but absolutely necessary stages of surface cleansing with disinfectant sprays,
surface irradiation, and flash heating. Many of the microorganic and insect
life-forms that had recently evolved on the surface, when given the chance to
penetrate the defenses of a Trolanni household, had proved themselves capable
of wiping out the occupants in a few minutes. But when they both finally
emerged into the core living quarters, they were as sure as it was possible to
be that they were free of unwanted organic company.
Jasam stood for a moment
looking at Keet, or rather at the delicately contoured head, shapely body, and
short, tapering limbs of her
lifesuit, while she stared back at the taller, more ruggedly handsome, and
well-muscled shape that he wore. Protective suits were invariably as
well-formed and lifelike as their owners could afford. While still young
adults, Keet and himself had progressed to a level of excellence in their field
where they could afford the best. But the people inside those realistic
lifesuits were much smaller, more sickly, and, regrettably, not nearly as
beautiful as their handsome body coverings.
Outside them, however, they
could touch each other without a cybernetic interface diluting or crudely
enhancing every tactile sensation.
With intense but controlled
impatience he detached himself from the suit's visual, aural, and tactile
relays, its food and water spigots, and, even more cautiously, from the deeply
implanted waste-elimination systems. He had extricated himself before she did,
and watched her lovingly as she opened the long, abdominal seal and struggled
free like an adult newborn climbing slowly out of its mother's womb.
Her body, as did his own,
showed the areas of rash, the skin discoloration, the pocking and scars of past
skin eruptions that were the visible inheritance of living in an environment
that no longer supported their kind of life. But she looked little different
from the time he had seen her like this on their first night of mating, and she
was beautiful. When she freed herself, their beautiful and handsomely
proportioned lifesuits were left lying lifelessly on the floor as they crawled
eagerly towards each other.
When they had to pause for
a necessary rest, they ate a meal to which Keet had added various decorative
and olfactory touches to disguise the taste of their standard, aseptic, and
machine-processed food. But the searchsuit project chief had told them that
their unsuited time together would be limited to the next three days, and
eating and resting was not what they most wanted to do together. They tried not
to talk about the project, but there were times when their physical and emotional
resistance was so low that the subject sneaked up on them.
"I'm not complaining,
mind," said Keet, "but after three days of this we won't be at our
best for the surgeons. We'll be, well, very tired."
"They won't mind
that," Jasam replied reassuringly. "You weren't listening between the
lines during our last interview. Suit-insertion surgery, especially into an
experimental one of this complexity, will be a lengthy, unpleasant procedure
that requires conscious, cooperative, and relaxed subjects. Don't worry, about
it. At least we'll be in a physically relaxed condition before they go to work
on us."
Even though they were
already pressed together so tightly that such a thing was physically
impossible, Keet tried to snuggle even closer. She said softly, "This is
how babies are made."
"Not for us," he
replied sharply, and tried without much success for a gentler tone as he went
on. "If that had been possible, if either of us had been healthy enough
and fertile, we would never have been allowed to volunteer, much less be accepted
for Searchsuit Three. Instead we would have been buried more deeply and
protected behind even more detoxification chambers than we have here, and given
every comfort a mortal Trolanni could desire while teams of doctors tried to
provide the medical and psychological support that might enable the sickly
members of our poisoned species to procreate and our civilization to survive
beyond the next few generations. The emotional feelings or otherwise of the
couples concerned for each other would not have been the prime consideration.
Survival would have been a necessity, an artificially-supported evolutionary imperative
rather than a pleasure."
Once again Keet's
expression was reflecting her impatience at being reminded of things she had
not forgotten, and he was anxious not to spoil even a moment of their remaining
touching time together.
"We would be even more
debilitated than we are now," he added quickly, "but without having
as much fun."
Even though the honor of
being chosen to wear a searchsuit was
greater than that previously accorded to any two members of their race, the
pride they both felt was intense, so much so that there was little room in
their minds for personal fear. But they did not speak of the project again, and
neither did they look at the container that housed the tiny,
hermetically-sealed, and triple-protected sphere with its short-duration life
support into which they would climb when the project engineers signaled that
they were ready for the crew insertion. The few hours spent in that sphere,
while it was being transported under maximum protection from their home to the
project surgery, would be the last they could ever spend in physical contact
with each other.
The first searchsuit had
been intercepted and destroyed by the druul while it was still in atmosphere,
and the second, if it had succeeded in finding anything, had not returned to
report. Searchsuit Three was the most advanced and technologically sophisticated
fabrication to be produced by Trolanni science and, considering their planet's
deteriorating environment and diminished resources, it would almost certainly
be the last. On its success rested the hopes of their species.
It was a suit built for the
two of them and designed to cater to their physical needs for a period far
beyond their most optimistic projected lifetimes on Trolanni. In it they would
be in constant communication for as long as they lived. But the suit was
huge—bigger by far, and with more complex and wide-ranging control and sensory
systems, than either of its predecessors. So large was it that when they wore
it, they would never in their remaining lifetimes be able to touch each other
again. In spite of the greatly increased anti-druul defenses and the supporting
treatments provided by the project's engineers and psychologists, he wondered
if the dangers facing them would be mental rather than physical.
"At least," said
Keet, as if reading her mind, "we'll be able to play with our dolls."
The inner office of Sector
General's new administrator and chief psychologist resembled a medieval torture
chamber from the history of Earth, according to the memories of the current
DBDG mind donor he was carrying. But the resemblance was not close—partly
because a collection of tastefully-chosen views of non-terrestrial land and
seascapes hung on the walls, and partly because the torture devices were
actually weirdly shaped and deeply upholstered furniture. On these, the
other-species staff that had business with Administrator Braithwaite could sit,
squat, hang, or otherwise take their ease—assuming that whatever they had been
doing had not warranted the criticism of the most powerful being in the
hospital.
On this occasion Prilicla's
own conscience was clear, and as an empath he knew that the same condition
applied to his smartly uniformed companion, Captain Fletcher, who was standing
before the big desk beside him. The emotional radiation emanating from the
similarly Earth-human Administrator Braithwaite, composed as it was of a
strange combination of concern with a strong undercurrent of urgency, was such
that Prilicla knew they would not be invited to make use of the office furniture.
Even so, the other was for some reason feeling hesitant about speaking.
"Sir," said the
captain, glancing at Prilicla, who was hovering close to its shoulder and
stirring a few strands of its brown head-fur, "I was told that you wanted
to see me urgently. I met ' Senior Physician Prilicla on the way here, and it
had received the same message. We only work together on ambulance-ship rescue
missions, so presumably you have another job for Rhabwar?"
Braithwaite inclined its
head without speaking. Before its recent promotion to administrator it had been
a Monitor Corps officer like Fletcher, the principal assistant to the
then-Chief Psychologist O'Mara, and an outwardly imperturbable individual who
wore its uniform as if it had been born with it as a well-fitting and
wrinkle-free second skin. Now that it had resigned its commission, its
impeccably-tailored civilian clothing still gave the impression that it was
completely in control of itself and, in all physical and mental respects, ready
for inspection.
"Possibly," it
said finally.
Prilicla was beginning to
share the captain's growing feeling of puzzlement. He said, "The
administrator feels hesitancy, friend Fletcher. I can read emotions but not
thoughts, as you know, but I feel sure that friend Braithwaite would prefer
that we volunteered for this particular mission."
"I understand,"
said Fletcher. Still looking at the administrator, he went on. "We
appreciate the politeness, sir, but you must be pretty sure what our response
will be, so you would save time by simply telling us to volunteer. Rhabwar is maintained
in constant flight-readiness, as you well know. The technical and medical crew
haven't had any exercise with her for close on six months, and if the mission
is urgent. . . well, we can't hurry in hyperspace, so the only response time we
can save will be between this office and the dock and, of course, our ship's
speed in getting us out to jump distance." It hesitated and glanced
quickly towards Prilicla, radiating a degree of uncertainty so mild that it
was highly complimentary before it went on. "We volunteer."
Prilicla, who was far from
being physically robust, belonged to a species which considered cowardice,
moral or otherwise, to be its prime
survival characteristic. The possession of a highly developed empathic faculty
forced him to be agreeable to everyone in order to keep the emotional
radiation in his immediate surroundings as pleasant as possible. He spoke with
greater hesitation.
"Friend
Braithwaite," he said cautiously, "what precisely are we volunteering
for?"
"Thank you both,"
said the administrator, radiating relief. It pressed a key on its desk console
and went on. "I've transferred all the available information to your
ship's computer for later study. It isn't much, and all we know for sure is
that three distress beacons have been detonated within a standard day of each
other from the same location in Sector Eighteen. As we would expect from one of
the incompletely explored areas, the first two bore radiation signatures that
were new to us as well as being significantly different from each other in
signal strength and duration. The third was a Federation standard-issue beacon
belonging, we presume, to the Monitor Corps survey cruiser Terragar, which was
engaged in mapping that sector, and which must have responded to the earlier two
distress beacons. Our communications people don't know what to make of those
first two beacons, if they were in fact distress beacons. That's why I
hesitated about ordering Rhabwar to take this one."
Captain Fletcher's voice
and emotional radiation still reflected the puzzlement they were both feeling,
but Prilicla remained silent because he could feel that the other was about to
ask the questions he himself wanted answered.
"Sir," Fletcher
said respectfully, "your background is in other-species psychology, so you
may not be aware of the tech-v nical background. But if this potted lecture is
unnecessary, please tell me to shut up.
"Just as we know of
only one method of traveling in hy-perspace," it went on, "there is
only one way of sending a distress signal if a major malfunction occurs and a
vessel is stranded in normal space between the stars. Tight-beam subspace radio
is
not a dependable means of
interstellar communication from a ship, subject as it is to interference and
distortion from intervening stellar bodies as well as requiring inordinate
amounts of power to send, power which a distressed ship is unlikely to have
available. But a distress beacon doesn't have to carry intelligence. It is
simply a nuclear-powered single-use device which broadcasts a location signal.
It is a subspace cry for help which, in a matter of a few minutes or hours,
burns itself out.
"Answering such calls
for help from regions where the distressed vessel is almost certain to belong
to a new, star-traveling species," it concluded, "is the reason why
Rhabwar was built. I don't understand why you are hesitating, sir."
"Thank you,
Captain," said the administrator, showing its teeth briefly in the peculiarly
Earth-human snarl that denoted amusement. "Your explanation was clear,
concise, and unnecessary. My hesitancy is due to the fact that three seperate
distress beacons, two of them with radiation signatures that reveal a low order
of design sophistication, were released in the same area. There may be three
different and closely positioned ships out there, two of them belonging to a
new intelligent species and all of them in trouble. But my communications
specialists tell me that the first two appear to be crude devices which might
not be distress beacons at all. Instead the signals may have been the radiation
byproduct of a hyperspatial weapon of some kind. In short, they may not be
cries for help, but shouts of anger. You could find yourselves rescuing
other-species casualties who have been involved in an armed conflict. So be
careful, with our special ambulance ship as well as your own lives. That is
presupposing that Prilicla still intends to take part."
Its two recessed,
Earth-human eyes were fixed on Prilicla and it was radiating feelings
characteristic of a mind that is concealing something as it continued.
"More important matters may require your attention here. The chief medical
officer's position on Rhabwar is one for which you are overqualified. This
would be a good time to nominate a replacement."
Prilicla had been given a
legitimate, face-saving excuse for refusing a potentially very dangerous
mission, for which he was grateful; but he had also been asked a question
which, in an emergency situation like this one, required an immediate answer.
He said, "My principal
assistant, Pathologist Murchison, has much prior experience in ship rescue
operations and is entirely capable of replacing me—but, if you will pardon me
discussing your present emotional radiation in front of friend Fletcher here,
you are feeling unusually high levels of concern over this mission. That being
the case, I think that you would prefer me to accept it, which I do ... Ah, I
feel your relief, friend Braithwaite."
The administrator exhaled
slowly, showed its teeth again, pressed a stud on the desk's communicator, and
said briskly, "Thank you. Rhabwars crew members have now been alerted and
are on their way to the ship, so I need detain you no longer. Good luck, gentlemen."
Prilicla wasn't sure that
he liked being called a gentleman when he wasn't even an Earth-human, but he
knew that the term was intended as a courtesy and that friend Braithwaite's
feelings of concern for him were strong and sincere. He executed a steep, banking
turn and flew rapidly towards the office entrance, knowing from long
experience that no matter how fast he flew it would open in time to let him
through.
He knew that the captain
would not take offense at him using his natural advantages while traversing the
six levels and intervening corridor network to reach the ambulance ship's dock
before it did, because by now all of Rhabwar's personnel were engaged on a
similar race against time rather than against each other. Fletcher had to use
his large but nimble Earth-human feet and occasionally his voice and elbows to
negotiate the crowded corridors, while Prilicla either flew above everyone's
head or scampered along the ceilings on his six sucker-tipped legs as he met,
overtook, and passed above a constant succession of creatures who looked
visually horrendous, beautiful, repugnant, or
terrifying in their obvious
physical strength and frightening variety of natural weapons which, being
civilized members of the medical fraternity, they were rarely called on to use.
Besides, all * of them were his
colleagues and, in most cases, his friends.
Not for the first time
Prilicla asked himself why a fragile, delicately structured, insectile
Cinrusskin empath had decided to spend his professional life in Sector General,
surely one of the most dangerous working environments in the Galaxy for one of
the GLNO classification, but the answer was always the same.
Despite the fact that his
every waking moment was spent in a condition of perpetual vigilance verging on
terror that would have driven the majority of his species mad, he had
discovered that this was the only place and type of work that he wanted to be
and do. Doubtless a Healer of the Mind would have talked learnedly about deeply
buried death wishes, professional masochism, and the pathological need for
constant danger, and would have pronounced him psychologically abnormal if not
downright insane. But then, that diagnosis would have applied to the majority
of beings who had aspired to permanent positions in the multispecies medical
menagerie that was Sector Twelve General Hospital.
Considering his ability to
fly unobstructed above everyone else's heads, it was no surprise that he was
the first to board Rhabwar, where he logged his presence before moving quickly
to his tiny, deeply upholstered quarters, checking that both backup sets of his
gravity nullifiers were in operation. His cabin closely resembled the
cocoonlike living quarters of his home world, and its artificial gravity was
already set to Cinruss normal, which was slightly less than one-quarter of a
standard Earth G. He stretched his wings and limbs to full extension, then
distributed them into their most comfortable position for sleeping.
Cinrusskins, fragile but physically active, needed a lot of sleep; and he knew
that nothing important would be said or done until they were many hours into
hyperspace.
A few minutes later he
heard the captain coming along the
boarding-tube and climbing
the central well to the control deck, closely followed by the other three
Monitor Corps officers and the members of the medical team who collected on the
casualty deck. They were complaining loudly and bitterly at the sudden
interruption to their work or recreation, but all of the emotional radiation
they emitted was of controlled excitement rather than bitterness.
For a few moments he
eavesdropped on the emotional radiation filtering through to him from the
casualty and control decks. They all knew that he couldn't help doing that
because it was impossible to switch off his empathic faculty, so their emotional
radiation was subdued, well-controlled, and, at this range, restful. They knew better than to radiate unpleasant
feelings when their boss was trying to sleep.
The briefing tape provided
by Administrator Braithwaite had been played but not yet discussed, and their
feelings of curiosity, caution, and growing impatience filled the casualty
deck around him like a thick, emotional fog.
Captain Fletcher was
sitting on a padded Kelgian treatment frame, flanked by Lieutenants Dodds and
Chen, the communications and engineering officers respectively, while the
astrogator and current watch-keeping officer, Lieutenant Haslam, viewed the
proceedings through the control deck's vision link. Pathologist Murchison
occupied the swivel seat of the diagnostic console with its back turned to the
screen; Charge Nurse Naydrad had curled itself into a furry question mark on
the nearest bed; and the polymorphic Dr. Danalta sat in the middle of the deck
like a small green haystack from which it had extruded an ear and a single
stalked eye. In order to avoid even the slightest risk of injury from sudden,
unthinking movements of the others' limbs, Prilicla maintained a stable hover
close to the ceiling while they all stared at the wall screen below him.
"As we have just
seen," Prilicla said, "we will be entering what may be a unique
situation for us, and we will have to be very careful..."
We're always careful,"
Naydrad broke in, its mobile fur
rippling into waves of
impatience and anxiety. "How careful is Very'?"
Kelgians always said
exactly what they felt—because their mobile fur made their feelings plain, at
least to another member of their species—or they said nothing at all. He was
aware of all of Naydrad's feelings, spoken and otherwise, and ignored the
question because he intended to answer it anyway.
He went on. "The
information available is sparse and speculative. We will be faced with the
possible recovery of survivors from two distressed ships. One should be a
normal, straightforward rescue and should pose no problems because it is the
Corps' survey vessel Terragar, whose crew are Earth-human DBDGs. The second
vessel has a crew whose physiological classification is as yet unknown. With
survivors of two different species involved, one of which is ..."
"We assess the
position at the disaster site and rescue the casualties, of whichever species,
who are in the most urgent need of attention first," Pathologist Murchison
broke in quietly, its mind radiating the emotions of expectation, curiosity,
and confidence characteristic of one who is accustomed to meeting professional
challenges. "I don't see the problem, sir. This is what we do."
"... is possibly
responsible for causing the casualties on the first ship," Prilicla went
on firmly. "Or perhaps another, undistressed vessel or vessels in the area
have caused both sets of casualties. We must prepare and organize now for that
eventuality, beginning with a clarification of the chain of command."
For several minutes nobody
spoke. The level of their emotional radiation increased in strength and
complexity, but not to a stage where it was affecting him physically. The three
Monitor Corps officers were reacting with controlled restraint in the face of
possible danger, the feelings characteristic of the military mind. Murchison's
radiation was complex and negative, as was Naydrad's, but neither of them were
feeling strongly enough to vo-
calize their objections.
Unlike the others who were feeling minor non-specific anxiety and uncertainty,
Danalta projected the calm self-assurance of a shape-changer who felt itself to
be impervious to all forms of physical injury.
"Normally,"
Prilicla went on, "friend Fletcher here is in operational command of
Rhabwar until it arrives at a disaster site, after which it is the senior
medical officer, myself, who has the rank. But on this mission it may well be
that, initially at least, military tactics will be of more benefit to us than
medical expertise. I feel your agreement, friend Fletcher, and also that you
are wanting to speak. Please do so."
--The captain nodded.
"Have you and the other medics considered the full implications of what
you are saying? I realize that at present all this is pure speculation, but in
the event of our being faced with a situation of armed conflict, difficult—and
to all you medics, disagreeable decisions will have to be taken, and orders
issued by myself. If I am called on to make those decisions, my orders will
have to be obeyed without question or argument, no matter how objectionable
they will seem. This must be fully understood and accepted by everyone right
now—before, and not during or after, the event. Is it?"
"At any space accident
or surface disaster scene, that is how we obey Dr. Prilicla," Naydrad
said, its fur and feelings projecting puzzlement. "This is normal
procedure for us. Why are you stressing the obvious? Or am I missing
something?"
"You are," said
the captain, its emotional radiation as well as its voice quiet and under
control, as it spoke words it was feeling an intense reluctance to say.
"This ship is unarmed, but not without weapons of defense and offense.
Lieutenant Chen."
The engineering officer
cleared its breathing passages noisily and said, "For a limited duration,
no more than a few hours, our meteorite shield can be stiffened sufficiently to
give protection against shrapnel from missiles tipped with chemical-explosive
warheads. But if one was tipped with a nuclear device, we wouldn't have a
prayer."
Lieutenant Haslam, whose
astrogation speciality included long- and short-range ship handling, joined in
without being asked. It said, "My tractor-pressor beam array, which is
normally used on wide focus for docking or pulling in space wreckage for closer
examination, can be modified to serve as a weapon, although not a very
destructive one. Providing we can control the distance of the object and
precisely match its speed, the pressor focus can be narrowed to within a
diameter of a few feet to punch a hole in the opposition's hull plating. The
catch is that it would increase the already heavy meteorite-shield drain on our
power reserves, the shields would go down, and we'd be defenseless against
whatever form of nastiness the opposition wanted to throw at us."
"Thank you,
Lieutenant," said the captain. To the others it went on, "So you can
see that we are poorly equipped for a military operation. The point I am making
is that, should we encounter a situation of armed conflict or its aftermath, I
shall assess the tactical picture and the decisions thereafter will be mine.
These will include an immediate withdrawal to the safety of hyperspace if the
action is still in progress. If not, and if there are damaged vessels in the
area which I consider incapable of threatening our ship, I shall take, but not
necessarily follow, the advice of the senior medical officer regarding the
choice of which set of survivors, if any, is to be recovered first. These
should be the Monitor Corps Earth-humans rather than the new, other-species
casualties because—"
"Captain
Fletcher!" Murchison broke in, its words accompanied by an explosion of
shock and outrage that made Prilicla feel as if he had flown into a solid wall,
an effect reinforced by the emotional reactions of the other medics. "That
is not what we do here!"
The captain paused for a
moment to order its own thoughts and feelings, which closely resembled those of
its listeners, then continued quietly. "Normally, it is not, ma'am. I was
about to say that there are sound tactical and psychological reasons for
rescuing our own people
first. They at least know who and what we represent and can furnish us with
current intelligence regarding the situation, while the other people will be
confused, frightened, and probably injured aliens who will take one look at
us"
__he glanced quickly at the
medical menagerie around him—
"and feel sure that we
mean them harm. You must agree that it would be better to know something about
the strangers, however little, before attempting to rescue and treat them.
"In the event,"
it went on, looking up at the hovering Prilicla, "the decision and choice
may not be necessary. But if it is, the med team must be prepared to treat the
casualties in the order I designate. Is this clearly understood?"
It was, Prilicla knew,
because there were no strong feelings of negation coming from anyone, and the
surrounding emotional radiation was settling down to a level which enabled him
to maintain a stable hover. It was Naydrad, their specialist in heavy rescue,
who broke the lengthening silence.
"If nobody has
anything else to add," it said with an impatient ripple of its fur,
"I for one want to review the medical log and space-rescue techniques.
After six months in the hospital where all the patients are neatly stretched
out in beds or whatever, one gets a little rusty."
Without saying anything
else, the captain left the casualty deck, closely followed by the two junior
officers. Naydrad began running a visual summary of Rhabwar's early missions
and the often unorthodox rescue techniques involved while recovering
casualties. Murchison and Danalta joined it before the screen, probably because
it was the only thing that was moving, apart from Prilicla's wings. Their
emotional radiation was complex but firmly controlled as if they might be
holding back the urge to say something. Prilicla excused himself and flew up
the central well to his quarters so as to have the opportunity of thinking
without the close proximity of outside emotional interference—and, of course,
to give them the chance to relieve their feelings verbally. This is not what we
do here," Murchison had said.
He did not need Naydrad's
viewscreen to remind him of all the things they had done on Rhabwar, including
the rules they had broken or seriously deformed, because the memories were
returning as sharp, clear, and almost tactile overlays on the flickering grey
blur of hyperspace outside his cabin's viewport. Prilicla had an outstandingly
good memory.
He began with the briefing
on operational philosophy before the first and supposedly routine shakedown
cruise. It had been explained that over the past century the Monitor Corps, as
the Federation's executive and law-enforcement arm, had been charged with the
maintenance of the Pax Galactica, but because the peace they guarded required
minimum maintenance, they had been given additional responsibilities and an
obscenely large budget for stellar survey and exploration. In the very rare
event that they turned up a planet with intelligent life, they were also given
responsibility for the delicate, complex, and lengthy first-contact procedures.
Since its formation, the Corps' other-species communications and
cultural-contact specialists had found three such worlds and established
successful relations with them, to the point where they had become member
species of the Federation.
But there is a tendency for
travelers to meet other travelers, often in distress and far from home. The
advantage of meetings with other space travelers was that both species were
already open to the idea that intelligent and possibly visually horrendous beings
inhabited the stars—as opposed to contacting less advanced, planetbound
cultures, who would be much more suspicious and fearful of the terrifying
strangers who had dropped from their skies.
The trouble where the
travelers were concerned was that there was only one known system for traveling
in hyperspace, and one method—the nuclear-powered distress beacon—of calling
for help if a catastrophe occurred that marooned the distressed ship between
the stars. The result had been that many other highly intelligent and
technologically advanced species had been discovered with whom they could not
make contact because
they were nothing but dead
or dying organic debris lying tangled inside the wreckage of their starships.
With the rescue ships' medical officers unable to provide the required
assistance to completely alien life-forms, the casualties had been rushed to
Sector General, where a few of them had been successfully treated, while the
rest ended up in the pathology department as specimens whose worlds of origin
were unknown.
That was the reason why the
special ambulance ship Rhabwar had been constructed. Not only was it commanded
by an officer skilled in unraveling the puzzles presented by unique alien
technology, its crew included a medical team specialized both in ship-rescue
techniques and multi-species alien physiology. The result had been that since
their ship had been commissioned, seven new species had been contacted, and
subsequently became members of the Federation.
In every case this had been
accomplished—not by a slow, patient buildup and widening of communications
until the exchange of complex philosophical and sociological concepts became
possible, but by demonstrating the Federation's goodwill towards newly
discovered species by rescuing and giving medical or other assistance to
ailing, injured, or space-wrecked aliens.
The memories and images
were returning, sharp and clear. In many of them, unlike this time, he had not
borne the clinical responsibility for rescue and treatment because the
then-Senior Physician Conway had been in charge of the medical team, with
himself assisting as a kind of empathic bloodhound whose job was to smell out
and separate the dead from the barely living casualties. There had been the
recovery of the utterly savage and non-sapient Protectors of the Unborn whose
wombs contained their telepathic and highly intelligent offspring; and the
Blind Ones, whose hearing and touch had been so sensitive that they had learned
to build devices that enables them to feel the radiation that filtered down to
their world from the stars they would never see, even though they had traveled
between them; and there had been the Duwetti, the Dwerlans, the Gogleskans, and
the
others. All had presented
their particular clinical problems and associated physical dangers, especially
to a fragile life-form like himself who could literally be blown away by a
strong wind.
He wondered how the
present-day Diagnostician Conway would have handled the current situation,
where its beloved special ambulance was in danger of becoming a ship of war.
Certainly not by flying away to hide in its room.
It was four days later.
Beyond the direct-vision panel and on the main screen that was relaying the
control deck image, the flickering grey motion of hyperspace gave a final,
eye-twisting heave before dissolving into a view of normal space. Within a few
moments the relayed voice of Lieutenant Dodds on the sensors was telling them
and the ship's mission recorders what they were already seeing.
"We have emerged close
to a planet, Captain," it reported crisply. "The coloration and cloud
cover suggests an atmosphere capable of sustaining warm-blooded,
oxygen-breathing life and the vegetation to support it. Two ships are in close
orbit around the planet within fifty miles of each other. One is Terragar; the
other has a configuration that is new to us. Neither is showing serious
structural damage."
"Split the
screen," said the captain. "Give me maximum magnification on both.
Haslam, contact Terragar."
The casualty-deck screen
blurred suddenly, then showed images of the two ships that expanded rapidly
until they touched the edges of their display areas.
"Terragar is not
obviously damaged," said Dodds, contin-umg to describe what they were
seeing. "But it is tumbling slowly a pronounced lateral spin, and there is
no light from the
flight-deck canopy or the
viewports. Sir, it looks like they have no power, certainly not for attitude
control___"
"Or
communication," Haslam broke in. "They aren't responding to our
signal."
"The other ship also
appears to be unlit," Dodds continued, straying, "although that could
be explained by visual hypersen-sitivity on the part of the crew. The outer
hull is intact apart from two areas amidships about three and four meters in
diameter. They are deeply cratered, which suggests the recent presence of
intense heat accompanied by explosions. There is no evidence of the fogging that
would indicate escaping air or whatever it is that they breathe. Either their
safety bulkhead seals worked very fast, or the hits they sustained were lethal
and the ship is airless and probably lifeless.
"The outer hull,"
it added, "shows no evidence of anything recognizable as external weapons
launchers, or of the protective covers that would conceal such weapons. First
indications, sir, are that this vessel was a victim rather than an
attacker."
Even though half the length
of Rhabwar stretched between them and the emotional radiation was attenuated,
Prilicla could feel the captain coming to a decision.
"Very well," it
said. "Move in. Continue trying to raise Ter-ragar. I want to know what
happened here.. .. Power room; Chen, we're now too close to the planet to jump,
so stand by for maximum thrust on the main drive. Haslam, be ready to pull out
at the first sign of anything resembling a hostile action. I'll need the
fastest possible reaction time on this."
"Understood,"
said Haslam.
Around them the casualty
deck gave an almost imperceptible lurch as the artificial-gravity system
compensated for the sudden application of thrust. The repeater screen returned
to showing a single, unmagnified picture of the two ships as they grew larger
with diminishing distance.
Prilicla dropped lightly to
the deck, where he folded his wings and legs tightly before pulling on his
spacesuit. Murchison,
Naydrad, and Danalta were
already climbing into theirs, all radiating minor levels of excitement,
expectation, and caution. When he had checked his own air supply, antigravity
system, and suit thrusters, he looked around at the others in turn.
"The medical team and
powered litters are standing by, friend Fletcher," he reported.
"Thank you,
Doctor," the other replied. "We are closing with Terragar now."
Prilicla began to worry.
Although it was completely without weaponry, in overall structure Rhabwar had
been modeled on the Monitor Corps' heavy cruiser, a class of vessel whose broad
delta-wing configuration enabled it to be aerodynamically maneuvered within a
planetary atmosphere. But he was afraid that it was much too massive for it to
be capable of the small and precise movements in three dimensions that were
needed to bring it to within two hundred meters of the distressed ship. Bearing
in mind its tremendous mass and inertia, if Rhabwar were to collide with
Terragar it would sustain only superficial damage, while the other vessel would
have its hull caved in, with consequent disastrous injuries to its crew.
An ambulance wasn't
supposed to make medical work for itself.
But there was no sign of
worry or even uncertainty in the emotional radiation that was filtering down
from the control deck, so he moved to the direct-vision panel to watch the approaching
planet and the two orbiting ships that were being lit by the bright, tattered
carpet of clouds, consoling himself with the thought that his specialty was
other-species medicine and not ship-handling, and wondering what new
physiological challenges awaited them.
"Still no sign of life
or movement from the alien," Haslam
reported. Its voice was
calm and unemotional but it and everyone else on the control deck was radiating
intense relief. "The sensors
indicate low levels of
residual power from two areas amidships,
but in my opinion, not nearly
enough for a weapons power-up,
and the ship appears to
have been radiating its internal heat into space for several days without any
attempt to maintain living temperature levels, whatever they are for these
people. I'd say that the alien ship is a problem that can wait, sir."
"I agree," said
the captain, "but keep your eyes on it, just in case. Casualty deck?"
"Yes, friend
Fletcher," said Prilicla.
"We will be at one
hundred meters and motionless with respect to Terragars position in eleven
minutes," said the captain. "I realize that we will be at extreme
range for your empathic faculty, but please do your best to detect the crew's
emotional radiation, if there is any."
"Of course, friend
Fletcher."
The quality of the
captain's own emotional radiation belied the calmness in its voice, otherwise
it would not have wasted time and breath asking him to do the job that he was
here expressly to perform. But the crew of the distressed ship were all
Earth-human DBDGs. Perhaps it had friends among them.
He watched with the other
members of the team at the direct-vision panel as their ship closed with the
Monitor Corps survey vessel. Terragar was rolling, as well as slowly pitching
end over end. The canopy of the unlit control deck was moving past them at an
awkward angle which did not allow a clear view of the interior. But for one
brief moment the angle was right, and Prilicla was able to see movement.
"Friend
Fletcher," he said urgently. "I think I detected motion behind the
control canopy. Nobody else down here saw anything or they would be emoting
about it by now. It was just a glimpse, effaces, hands, and upper bodies of at
least three Earth-humans. They are alive, but the distance is extreme for an empathic
reading."
"We didn't see
anything, either," the captain replied, "but compared with your GLNO
sensorium, ours makes us feel as if we're wearing mittens and blindfolds.
Haslam, deploy the tractor beams and kill the spin on that ship. Position it
for a clear view
into the control canopy.
Then push across a cable with a communicator fitted with a two-way
sound-conduction pad. Land it, but gently, on the canopy. We badly need
information on this situation, and, of course, to know if anyone needs medical
attention."
The misty-blue light of two
of Rhabwar's tractor beams flickered out to focus on the bows and stern of the
Monitor ship, gradually reducing its spin. A moment later a thinner beam lifted
out the communicator, but held it midway between the two ships to wait for its
target to come to rest. Prilicla had a slightly longer and clearer view of the
people inside the canopy before they rolled out of sight.
"Friend
Fletcher," he said urgently, responding to feelings that she felt sure were
not all his own. "I saw four officers, that's the entire complement of a
survey vessel. They were waving at us, shaking their heads vigorously in your
DBDG non-verbal signal of negation, and showing the palms of their hands. One
was pointing repeatedly in the direction of the alien ship and our
communicator. The empathic range is extreme but they are radiating high levels
of agitation."
"I saw them,
too," said the captain. "They don't appear to be seriously injured;
they're about to be rescued and have little to feel agitated about. Still...
Haslam, is the alien ship doing anything to worry us?"
"No, sir," the
lieutenant replied. "It's still dead in the water, so to speak."
Prilicla paused for a
moment, nerving himself for the effort of saying something argumentative if not
disagreeable to another person whose irritated or angry reaction would bounce
back and hit him hard.
"It was their feelings
I read," he said carefully. "Because of the interference from the
emotional radiation around me, theirs were difficult to define. There was
agitation, however, and it had to be intense to reach me at this distance. May
I make a suggestion and ask a favor?"
The captain was feeling the
irritation characteristic of an entity whose ideas and authority were being
questioned, but it was quickly brought under control. It said, "Go ahead,
Doctor."
"Thank you," he
said, looking around the casualty deck to indicate that his words were for them
as well. "It is this. Would you please instruct your officers, as much as
they are able, to relax mentally and avoid intensive thinking or associated
feelings? I would like to get a clearer idea of what is bothering the Terragar
crew. I am having a bad feeling about this situation, friend Fletcher."
"And since when,"
said Murchison in a quiet voice that was just loud enough for the captain to
overhear it, "has a feeling of Prilicla's been wrong?"
"Do as the Doctor
says, gentlemen," the captain replied promptly, pretending that it hadn't
heard. "All of you make your minds blank"—it gave a soft Earth-human
bark—"or at least blanker than usual."
All over the ship, from the
control deck forward and the power room aft and from the medical team around
him, they were staring at blank walls and deck surfaces or the backs of closed
eyelids, those who had them, or were using whatever other means they had of
reducing cerebration and feeling. Nobody knew better than himself how difficult
it was to switch the mind to low alert and think of absolutely nothing, but
they were all trying.
Terragar's control canopy
had rolled out of sight, but that had no effect on the crew's emotional
radiation, which was still tenuous, confused, and at a strength that was barely
readable. But without the local empathic interference the individual feelings
were gradually becoming clearer and easier to define, and they were anything
but pleasant.
"Friend
Fletcher," said Prilicla urgently, "I feel fear and, intense
negation. For me to be able to detect them at this range, those feelings must
be extreme. The fear seems to be both personal and impersonal, the latter
emotion characteristic of a being who
fears a threat to others besides itself. I'm an empath, not a telepath, but
I'd say... Look, they're
coming into sight again-----"
He could see no details of
the four faces other than that
their mouths were opening
and closing. Their hands were gesticulating wildly, sometimes pointing at the
alien ship but more often towards Rhabwar and the communicator floating at the
end of its sensor cable midway between their two vessels. Their pale,
Earth-human palms were showing as they pressed them repeatedly against the
inside of the canopy.
What were they trying to
say?
"... They're pointing
at the alien ship and at us," he went on quickly, "but mostly at the
communicator you're sending over. And they're making pushing movements with
their hands. Their fear and agitation is increasing. I feel sure they want us
to go away."
"But why,
dammit?" said the captain. "Have they lost their senses? I'm just
trying to stabilize their ship and establish a communicator link."
"Whatever you're
doing," said Prilicla firmly, "it is making them fearful and they
badly want you to stop doing it."
One of the four gesticulating
crew members had moved quickly out of sight. Before he could mention it to the
captain, Fletcher spoke again. Its voice and the feelings that accompanied it
were calm and confident with the habit of command.
"With respect,
Doctor," it said, "the feelings you read from them make no sense, and
won't until we talk to them and they explain themselves and this whole damn
situation. We need that "formation before we can risk boarding the alien
ship. Haslam, love the communicator close and be ready to attach it when you've
killed the spin."
Please wait," said
Prilicla urgently, "and consider. The other crew aren't injured, they
emote no feelings of pain or phys-cal distress, only agitation at our close
approach. So the matter clinically urgent. It will do no harm if you move back
a short
distance, temporarily, just
to reassure them if nothing else. Friend Fletcher, I have a very bad feeling
about this."
He felt the captain's
continuing intransigence as well as the beginnings of hesitation as it spoke.
"I'm sorry,
Doctor," it said firmly. "My first requirement is to talk to them as
soon as—"
"Sir!" Haslam
broke in. "They're pulling free of our tractor beam, on their main
thrusters, for God's sake, at over three Gs. They've no attitude
control—otherwise they'd have checked their own spin by now. That's stupid,
suicidal! They're diving into atmosphere, and when they move farther ahead and
their ion stream hits us, we'll be toasted like a ..."
It broke off as the hot,
blue spear streaming from the other ship's main drive flickered and died,
immediately reducing the fear feelings coming from Rhabwar's control deck.
"Friend
Fletcher," said Prilicla gently, "I told you that they didn't want us
to close with them, but neither do they want to kill us."
The captain used an
Earth-human expression that his translator refused to accept.
"You were right,
Doctor," it went on, "but we'll need to get very close to them
indeed, unless we want to watch them burn up in atmosphere."
Terragar belonged to a
class of vessel that had been designed to operate in the weightless and airless
conditions of space, and to dock only with other ships or orbiting supply and
maintenance facilities. It was not an aerodynamically clean object and the
structural projections supporting its complex of long-range sensors and mapping
cameras made it resemble a cross between a falling brick and a stick insect.
The congenitally tactless Nay-drad observed that physically it bore a close
resemblance to their chief.
Even though he knew that
his Cinrusskin body was unusually well-formed and beautiful, Prilicla had
neither responded nor taken offense. Kelgians always said exactly what they
felt; telling a lie was for them a complete waste of time. It was the strong,
unspoken emotions of Naydrad and the others, the feelings of loyalty,
admiration, concern, and deep personal regard, that were important. Besides,
the crucial words and feelings were coming from the people on the control deck.
Catch up to them and kill
that spin," the captain was saying urgently. "There's no need to be
so gentle, dammit! Check all motion, refocus to full strength, and drag them
back. We have the power."
Yes, but no, sir,"
Haslam replied, its voice hurried but re-
spectful. "The tractor
acts on the nearest surface. If we drag them back too suddenly we'll peel off
most of their outer skin and external hull structures. I have to be gentle to
avoid pulling the whole ship apart."
"Very well," said
the captain. "Be gentle, then, but faster." "We're picking up
atmospheric heating," Dodd's voice reported; "so are they."
In the direct-vision panel
Prilicla could see the ponderously spinning shape of Terragar as the tractor
beam enclosed it in a pale blue mist and drew it closer. The tumbling action
was gradually slowing to a stop, but both ships were entering the upper
atmosphere much too quickly for the safety of the vessel ahead. Through the
confusion of emotional radiation coming from Rhabwar he could still feel the
intense fear mixed with dogged determination emanating from the other crew. His
empathic reading just did not make sense. Not for the first time, he wished he
could know what others were thinking instead of feeling.
"You're getting there,"
said the captain. "Once you kill the rest of that spin, try to position
them so they'll go in tail-first. The stern structure is stronger than the
forward section and will burn away slower than the control canopy. Can't you
slow them down faster than that?"
"In order," said
Haslam. "Yes, sir. No, sir. I'm trying, sir." The other ship was
stable and directly ahead of them, with its control canopy continuously in
view. The crew had donned heavy-duty spacesuits with the helmets thrown back.
Their mouths were opening and closing widely as if they were shouting, and they
were still making pushing motions with their hands. From his present viewpoint
Prilicla could not see the heating of the ship's stern, but the peripheral
sensor arrays and their spidery support structures were turning bright red and
being bent backwards by the tenuous gale of near-vacuum that was blowing past
them. Suddenly one of them tore free and there was a loud, metallic clang as it
glanced harmlessly off Rhabwar's superstructure.
"Why don't they use
their main thrusters again?" said Dodds, radiating anger and impatience.
"That would help us to
slow them down."
"I don't know,"
said the captain. A moment later it went
on. "Doctor, do you
have any answers?"
"Yes, friend
Fletcher," said Prilicla. "In spite of their fear and certainty of
imminent termination, they won't help you because they don't want us to come
near them. I don't know why they are doing this, either, but their reasons must
be very strong."
For a moment he felt the
emotional gale raging on the control deck, with the captain's mind its storm
center, then it became still with the calmness characteristic of a decision
taken and a
mind made up.
"I don't know why they
seem intent on suicide, Doctor," it said quietly, "but the fact that
they've put on their spacesuits suggests that they still retain some of their
will to survive. Whether they want to or not, I'm going to do my damnedest to
save them. Or are you suggesting otherwise?"
"I was not suggesting
otherwise, friend Fletcher," said Prilicla, "just warning you about
the way they are feeling. No rational person fully understands why another
intelligent being wants to commit suicide, but in every civilized culture we
have ever found, it is considered a person's bounden duty, regardless of
personal risk, to stop it from doing so."
The captain did not reply,
but he felt its gratitude as it said, "Haslam, slow them down. Be less
gentle."
From the ambulance ship's
position slightly above and behind the distressed ship. Prilicla could see
Terragar s stern section changing gradually from metallic grey through dull red
to glowing orange. The lattice support structure carrying the mapping sensors
were like bright yellow spiders' webs that sagged, melted, and were blown away
by the slipstream. With a dreadful certainty, Prilicla waited for Terragar to
explode into a disintegrating fireball. But incredibly, someone in Control was
radiating feelings of optimism.
"Sir," said
Haslam, "I think we may have done it. In a few more seconds their speed
will be slowed to the point where there will be no more atmospheric heating
beyond what they've already picked up. But they're not out of trouble
yet...."
The red-hot particles of
metallic fog were no longer streaming back from the other ship's superheated
stern, but to Prilicla, nothing else seemed to have changed.
"... Because,"
the lieutenant went on, "I estimate that in about twenty minutes the heat
from their stern will be conducted along the structure until it is evenly
distributed throughout the ship. By then the survivors will be in a bad way."
"Then lift us out of
atmosphere," said the captain. "Let the heat dissipate into space.
You're able to do that now without causing their hull to break up?"
The voices in Control were
calm but the feelings behind them, as were those of the medical team around
him, were not. The emotional radiation coming from the people on the other ship
was even worse.
"Yes, sir,"
Haslam replied. "But it will take an hour or more for all that heat to
radiate into space and until then it would be too hot, as well as too late, for
the rescue team to go in for them. By then they would be cooked in their own
juices if they aren't that way already."
"Please ignore the
lieutenant, Doctor," said the captain quickly. "Sometimes he has
about as much tact as a drunken Kelgian. How are the survivors?"
For a moment Prilicla was
silent as he watched the hot, red stain that was creeping inexorably forwards
along Terragar's hull, its progress clearly visible in spite of the bright
carpet of clouds and sunlit ocean unrolling rapidly below it. Suddenly the despair
he was feeling began to be diluted by excitement and hope.
"They are alive,"
he said, "but the emotional radiation is characteristic of beings who are
fearful and in intense discomfort. I am not a ship handler, friend Fletcher,
but may I make a suggestion?"
"You want to try to
recover them anyway," said the captain incredulously, "from a ship
that is nearly red-hot? You and your team would die in the attempt. The answer
is no."
"Friend
Fletcher," said Prilicla, "I am not emotionally capable of doing, or
even of thinking of doing, such a brave and stupid thing. Instead, I was about
to ask you to take both ships to the planetary surface as quickly as possible.
Our altitude is less than fifty miles above an equatorial ocean and there are
many islands, one with what looks like a sandy coastline coming over the
horizon. If we had enough time we might cool Terragar by immersion."
Lieutenant Haslam swore out
loud, something Prilicla had rarely heard it do in the presence of its captain
and never while the recorders were running, and said, "My God, it wants us
to dunk them in the ocean!"
"Can we do that,
Lieutenant?" said Fletcher. "Is there time?"
"There might be,"
Haslam replied, "but it will be close."
"Then do it,"
said the captain. "We'll need to reduce our rate of descent to zero by the
time we reach the surface, but to save time, hold off the deceleration until
we're a few miles above sea level. The sudden braking will put a strain on the
tractor beam, not to mention the other ship. Use your judgment, and try not to
pull it apart at this late stage. Nice idea, Doctor. Thank you. How are the
casualties?"
Friend Fletcher's
gratitude, hope, and excitement were clear for Prilicla to feel, so there had
been no need for the other to express them verbally. But when their ship was
involved in a situation where anything might happen and every incident, instrument
reading, and word were being recorded in case of an unforeseen calamity, he
knew that the captain's tidy mind would want the credit for the idea and its
gratitude to go on record.
"Still alive, friend
Fletcher," he replied formally: "Their
-motional radiation
indicates deep personal fear and despair but
- panic, and increasing
physical discomfort. They are not vis-
to me, but the indications
are that three of them are posi-
tioned closely together on
the control deck, which is probably the coolest place in the ship, and a fourth
one is farther aft. The rescue team is ready to go, on your signal."
Around him he could feel a
combination of anxiety, impatience, and excitement as his team checked
equipment that had already been checked many times. He remained silent because
there was nothing useful he could say, and kept his eyes on Ter-ragar and the
dull red tide of color that was creeping slowly towards its bow. He was
startled when it disappeared suddenly as both ships plunged through the dark
interior of a tropical storm. A few moments later it reappeared with a brief,
overall puff of steam as the rainwater boiled off its overheated hull. Ahead of
and below them, the smooth expanse of sunlit water was expanding and showing
the first wrinkling of the larger waves. There was no feeling of deceleration
because Rhabwar's artificial gravity system was maintaining the customary
one-G, but Terragar was feeling it. Two small areas of the other ship's hull
plating bulged outwards suddenly under the double pull of deceleration and the
tractor beam, but they didn't peel away. By now their speed was being measured
in tens rather than hundreds of miles per hour.
"This hasn't been what
I'd call a covert approach to a newly discovered planet," said the
captain, radiating sudden anxiety, "but we had no other choice. Did you
scan for intelligent-life signs?"
"Briefly, sir, on the
way down," said Haslam, "but the sensors are on record for later
study. They report zero atmospheric industrial pollutants, no traffic on the
audio or visual radio frequencies, and no indications of intelligent life.
Altitude, five hundred meters and descending. The coastline of the island
ahead is coming up."
"Right," said the
captain. "Check forward velocity to put us down no more than three hundred
meters offshore, and it will save a few minutes if there's a nice, even seabed
under us."
"There is," said
Haslam. "The sensors indicate hard-packed sand with no reefs or rock
outcroppings."
"Good," said
Fletcher. "Power room, in five minutes we'll be supporting two ships. I'll
need maximum power for the stilts."
"You'll have it,"
said Lieutenant Chen.
Their forward motion ceased
as they dropped slowly to within five hundred meters of the waves, which were
high and smooth and rounded so that each one seemed to throw back reflections
of the sun. Against that continually moving dazzle, the red coloration of Terragar
s hull had darkened almost to a normal, metallic grey, but the emotional
radiation from its officers belied the appearance of normality.
The medical team, already
suited-up and sealed, were watching him and the tremor that was shaking his
limbs. He felt Pathologist Murchison's sympathy. It was wanting to talk and to
help him—probably by trying to take his mind off the casualties by giving it
something more cerebral to think about—but when it spoke, the subject remained
the same.
"Sir," Murchison
said, "earlier you said that their emotional radiation indicated that they
were physically unharmed. Was there evidence of any psychological abnormality
present? Why would they try deliberately to commit suicide rather than let us
near them? By now they will have sustained overall burns or, if they kept their
suits sealed and their cooling units at maximum, massive dehydration and heat
prostration. But with respect, sir, there has to be something more wrong with
them. What else can we expect?"
"I don't know, friend
Murchison," Prilicla replied. "Remember, there was no suicidal
intent, just extreme determination not to let us approach their ship. They
tried very hard to get away from us, but it was the attitude of their ship
which took them into atmosphere, and that was accidental."
It was a guess rather than
anything as definite as a feeling, out he was wondering if there might be
something, or perhaps
someone, on their ship who
was no longer living, that they had not wanted Rhabwar's crew to go near. He
kept that thought to himself, and the pathologist rejoined the general silence
until it was broken by the captain.
"Deploy the
stilts," it said. "Drop them in, but gently. Immerse them for five
minutes."
Rhabwar was now positioned
directly above the other ship and holding it horizontally above the ocean with
a single tractor beam. Suddenly four more speared out in pressor mode, widely
angled so that the ship was supported by a pyramid of misty-blue stilts that
penetrated and pushed aside the water to rest solidly on the seabed. Terragar
dropped gently towards the waves.
There was a tremendous
explosion of steam and outflowing streamers of boiling water as it touched and
then slipped below the surface. Everything was obliterated by a dazzling white
fog for the few minutes it took for the strong, onshore breeze to blow it
clear. But there was nothing to see except a large circle of boiling and
bubbling ocean.
"Pull them up,"
said the captain.
The ship that rose into
view was barely recognizable as Terragar. Steam and furiously boiling water
were streaming out of the large gaps in the hull plating and where the entire
control canopy had burst open. It looked as if the tractor beam was holding the
ship not only up, but in one piece. Prilicla answered the question before the
captain could ask it.
"They are still
inside, friend Fletcher," he said, "but deeply unconscious and close
to termination. We need to get to them, now."
"Sorry, Doctor,"
said the captain, "but not right now. Our sensors say that their hull
interior is still too hot for your people to survive it, much less recover
casualties. Haslam, submerge them again, this time for ten minutes."
Once again the other ship
was immersed, but this time it seemed the sea above it was steaming rather than
boiling. The emotional radiation of the casualties remained unchanged. When
Terragar reappeared this
time, the water running down its sides and pouring from the gaps in its hull
was, according to the sensors, very warm rather than hot, and no longer a
threat to the rescue team.
"Instructions,
Doctor?" said the captain.
Plainly the other was
feeling that their situation no longer contained a military threat and was
immediately passing the operational responsibility back to the senior medical
officer on site.
"Friend Fletcher,"
he said briskly, "please move the wreck towards the beach and place it in
the shallows at a depth that will not inconvenience us but where the wave
action will continue to cool it. We'll board with four antigravity litters
while friend Murchison remains with you to supervise the transfer and erection
of our field dressing station and the special equipment we may need. The
casualty deck will be reserved for the recovery of the possible other-species
survivors in orbit. As quickly as possible, use your tractor beam to position
the unit's structures, friend Murchison, and its equipment onshore within one
hundred meters of the wreck. Land Rhabwar farther inland at a minimum
distance of three hundred meters. Should you need to take off or change position
for operational reasons, you must not approach the medical station or the wreck
any closer than that from any direction until instructed otherwise."
The captain was radiating
puzzlement, feelings shared by everyone else on the ship, as it said,
"This is ridiculous, Doctor. Surely you are being unnecessarily cautious
about an unpowered and helpless wreck."
Prilicla paused for a
moment. When he spoke, he tried to sound resolute and inflexible, which was
very difficult for a Cin-nisskin empath even when he was carrying mind-partners
of a more heavyweight and psychologically positive species.
When we approached it in
orbit," he said, "Terragar used its last reserves of power to move away from us. Its
crew were willing to die rather than allow
our ship, or perhaps our crew members,
to make physical contact with them. The rescue team will shortly be making
physical contact with them, with extreme caution, naturally. But until we
discover the medical, psychological, or other reasons behind their apparently
suicidal or self-sacrificing action, I am expressly forbidding Rhabwar to do
so."
Sunlight shone through the
ragged-edged hole where the control-room canopy had been. The heat-discolored
instrumentation that the water had not already swept into tangled heaps on the
deck showed dead, blank readouts. The remains of the four control couches were
empty, with faintly steaming water flowing slowly between their support struts
as it ran away through cracks in the ruptured deck. But life was present, and
even though it was difficult to detect through the welter of emotional
radiation coming from the rest of the team, he knew that it was close by.
"Naydrad, Danalta,"
he said urgently, "please subdue your feelings. You're muddying the
emotional waters."
A moment later he pointed
towards a group of four tall cabinets set into the aft bulkhead. Heat
deformation had twisted one of the doors slightly open while the others looked
as if they had been fused shut. They were the standard ship furniture that
contained the crew's spacesuits Now they contained the crew as well, because
their structures had given an extra layer of protection against the heat.
For some reason these
people had been willing to die, Pril-
, a reminded himself again, but they had also wanted badly to live.
Quickly, Naydrad sliced off
the four doors with its cutting torch. Only three of the cabinets were
occupied, because earlier one of the officers had gone aft to start the main
thrusters manually when the ship had made its desperate attempt to pull away
from Rhabwar. But there was too much local emotional radiation for him to be
able to detect accurately the fourth man's distance or position. He could feel,
although the source was so faint that it might have been a hope rather than a
feeling, that the fourth officer was still alive. But there was no time to go
looking for it now because the other three needed immediate attention. Naydrad
and Danalta were already removing them from the cabinets. He tried to look at
their faces, but the inside of the visors were steamed up and the suits were
hot to the touch.
"Finish transferring
them to the litters," he said, moving closer to lay his hand gently on
each of them in turn, "then remove the spacesuits and all body coverings.
Friend Murchison, the vision pickups are running. Are you seeing this, and are
you ready to receive casualties?"
"Yes, sir," it
replied. "Rhabwar has lifted over the prefabricated med station, myself,
and the Earth-human burn medication onto the beach above the high-water mark.
Until now I was too busy even to notice if this world had a moon and tides. It
does. I'll be ready to take the casualties in fifteen minutes. Have you a
preliminary assessment for me, sir?"
Prilicla flew slowly over
the three Earth-humans. Rapidly but very gently, their suits and underlying
garments, apart from the small areas of scorched clothing still adhering to the
bodies, were being cut away by Naydrad and Danalta. The Earth-humans were too
deeply unconscious for their emotional radiation to trouble him, but the mere
thought of what they must have suffered before they had reached that state was
enough to make his hovering flight less than stable. In the hospital he had
seen Chief Dietitian Gurronsevas produce synthetic meat dishes that were less
well-cooked.
"All three casualties
are suffering from advanced heat pros-
tration and massive
dehydration," Prilicla replied in a clinical voice that belied his
underlying feelings. "Undoubtedly this followed the overload and apparent
recent failure—very recent, otherwise the casualties would have terminated by
now—of their suits' cooling systems. There is localized surface and subdermal
burning, with escharring in several areas to a depth of two centimeters, where
the internal metal stiffening of the suits made contact through the clothing,
or the wearer lost consciousness and allowed the front or side of its cranium
to fall against the heated interior of the helmets. There are third-degree
burns to the hands, feet, and crania, plus a narrow band encircling the waist,
with an estimated total body area of ten to fifteen percent. "Interim
treatment will be to place the casualties into individual litters," he
went on, giving the information friend Murchison needed while at the same time
issuing polite instructions to the two team members working beside him,
"with the canopies sealed and the refrigeration units reducing the ambient
temperature. Rehydration is a matter of urgency but must wait until your
facilities are available. Friend Naydrad will convey the three litters to you
and assist while I..."
"Then the fourth
officer terminated?" it broke in softly. "Perhaps not," he
replied. "I have a feeling, very tenuous and more likely only a wish, that
it is still alive somewhere aft. Friend Danalta will remain here to help me find
it."
Even at one hundred meters
distance he could feel Mur-chison's sudden burst of negativity and deep
concern.
Sir," it said,
"the captain has just informed me that the continuous strain on the fabric of that ship caused by
the braking action of the tractor beam, together with the atmospheric buffeting
during reentry, will have converted the interior into a heap of wreckage that
could collapse at any time. As well, the hull temperature at the stern is still
unacceptably high for would-be rescuers.
You will be at serious risk and may wish to reconsider your recent decision. I
suggest you send Naydrad with Danalta
to recover the missing
casualty ..."
Well," said the
Kelgian, its fur rippling under the protective garment, "isn't it nice to
be considered expendable?"
". .. while you bring
in the other litters," it went on. "From the condition of the first
three, it looks as though your surgical experience will be urgently required
here."
"I agree, friend
Murchison," said Prilicla. "But if Danalta or Naydrad found the
fourth crew member, neither of them would be able to know whether they were
recovering an unconscious or dead casualty without removing its suit, which
would be contraindicated in the high temperature levels aft. You know very well
that only I can feel and specify at a distance whether it is a casualty
requiring urgent attention, or a cadaver that can await recovery at more
convenient time."
He moved to the fourth
litter and climbed inside, sealing the pressure canopy behind him for maximum
protection before signaling with a forward manipulator for Danalta to proceed
aft.
"Please refrain from
going into maternal mode, friend Murchison," he added. "I promise to
be very careful."
The situation aft was much
worse than he had expected with an almost solid plug of wreckage barring their
way. Atmospheric heating and the tractor-beam stresses had caused the interior
hull plating to buckle and open up so that ragged, metal edges projected into
their path and opened wide cracks that allowed long, uneven triangles of
daylight to show through. He could feel the buildup of heat even through the
litter canopy and his own suit's laboring cooling system. But Danalta, as it
had done on many previous rescue operations, was proving once again that its
polymorphic species was the closest thing to a general-purpose organic tool
in the known universe.
His limbs were showing a
faint tremor which his polymorphic friend had noticed, but was forbearing to
mention, because the emotional radiation causing it was due to Prilicla's own
cowardice.
It was a terrible
psychological burden to be afraid all the time, of everything and everybody,
and of the harm that might be done
him by accident or intention. But there were compensations. A life-form with
hostile intent could not hide its feelings towards him, so he could either take
evasive action or, if it was intelligent, try to change the other's hostility
to feelings of disinterest or even friendship towards him. As a matter of pure
survival as well as to secure a pleasant emotional environment for himself, he
had made many good and protective friends. But there was nothing he could do
about stupid pieces of sharp-edged, inanimate matter except try to avoid them.
There was another ship's
officer to find, if it was still alive and emoting. Prilicla tried to allay his
own fear and widen his empathic range while he followed and coordinated his
litter's movements with those of the shape-changer.
Danalta was always a
minimal source of emotional interference because it rarely encountered
situations that caused it to have unpleasant feelings, and it was never afraid
because nothing—short of a major explosion, or being crushed between two
closing faces of massive colliding objects—could harm it. Now it was opening a
path through the hot, steaming devastation by extruding appendages of the
length, shape, and strength necessary to move obstacles aside or, with the
whole of its body, taking shapes that it was better not to think about as it
used itself as an organic pit prop that lifted masses of tumbled wreckage in
order to enable the litter to go through.
Fotawn, the planet where
Danalta's species had evolved, had been one of the least hospitable worlds to
be discovered by the Galactic Federation. It had a highly eccentric orbit and consequent
climatic variations so severe that an incredible degree of physical
adaptability had been necessary for its flora and fauna to survive on a world
of animal and vegetable shape-changers. Danalta's
people, its dominant life-form, were of physiologyical classification TOBS.
They had developed intelligence and an advanced
civilization based on the philosophical rather than the Physical sciences, not by competing in the matter of
natural weapons but by refining and perfecting their adaptive capabilities. In
prehistoric times, when members of the species were faced with stronger natural
enemies, their defensive options in order of preference had been protective
mimicry, flight, or the adoption of a shape frightening to the attacker. The
speed and accuracy of the mimicry suggested the possession of a high degree of
receptive empathy of which the species was not consciously aware.
With such effective means
of physical adaptability and self-protection available, the species was
impervious to disease and normal levels of physical injury, so that the
concepts of curative medicine and surgery had been completely incomprehensible
to its people. In spite of this, Danalta had applied for and been accepted at
Sector General for medical training.
Danalta's purpose in coming
to the hospital, it had insisted, had been selfish rather than idealistic. The
sixty-odd different life-forms who worked there were a unique and continuing
challenge to its powers of mimicry. Admittedly, it was being forced into using
all of its polymorphic abilities—to reassure beings who might be suffering from
serious physical or psychological malfunctions, by mimicking their shape and
vocal output if there were no members of their own species present to give
reassurance; or, in an accident situation with associated toxic pollution, it
could adapt its shape and tegument quickly so that urgently required treatment
would not be delayed because of time wasted in donning protective garments; or
during surgery it could extrude limbs and digits of the indicated shape and
function which were capable of quickly repairing damage to otherwise inaccessible
areas where organic damage or dysfunction had occurred. But it was simply
reacting to a challenge that no shape-changer of its race had ever faced before
and, while it was deriving much pleasure from the experience, it was not and
should not be called a doctor.
In turn, the hospital
authorities had insisted, gently but very firmly, that if it planned to
continue doing that kind of work at Sector General, there was nothing else they
could call it.
"Sir," said
Danalta suddenly, bringing his mind back to present time and space, "we've
reached the power room. The ambient temperature is unacceptably high for an
unprotected Earth-human DBDG, but the structure here is robust and less likely
to collapse on us. You may safely leave the litter. I'm trying reduce my
emotional radiation. Can you feel the casualty?"
"No," said
Prilicla; then immediately contradicted himself.
"Yes."
It was a feeling almost
without feeling, a mere expression of individuality and existence that was
characteristic of an entity very close to termination. It was tenuous with
extreme weakness or distance or both. Before signaling to move farther aft, he
looked quickly around the room. It, too, had been cracked open, but compared
with the wreckage-strewn compartments they had already passed through, this one
was almost neat except for an untidy heap of tools that looked as if they had
been thrown haphazardly onto the deck in front of a low, closed metal cabinet.
Perhaps someone had been urgently in need of shelter.
"In there," he
said, pointing and moving quickly towards it.
As they forced open the cabinet there was a sudden explosion of black, oily
vapor from the sponge plastic lining that had been melted by the heat, but the
casualty's suit was still intact so it had not breathed any of the highly toxic
gas. Inside they found the fourth officer on its knees and bent almost double.
Without trying to straighten the body they quickly lifted the spacesuited
figure onto the litter and laid it on its side. Apart from the deep red
coloration, the details of the face were blurred by internal condensation. The
emotional radiation suggested a life expec-tancy that could be measured in
minutes rather than hours.
Friend Danalta," he
said, glancing back at the way they had come,
this casualty is close to termination and the temperature here means
that we can't afford the time or the risk of opening its suit. Please look for
a faster way out of here. Try to find an opening in the hull large enough to
allow the litter through so we can ..."
"Doctor," the
voice of the captain broke in, "we can make that opening for you, as large
as you need. I've been monitoring your progress, I'm familiar with the ship's
layout, and I know exactly where you are. Please move clear of the hull on the
landward side and hold on to something solid.
"Haslam," he
continued quickly, "tractor beam, narrow-focus rapid push-pull to the aft
hull plating, just there."
The whole power room began
to vibrate in sympathy around them as a sudden, metallic screeching sound came
from a small area of the hull interior. The existing cracks in the structure
opened up as a large section of plating and internal trim was pulled outwards
and pressed inwards at a rate of once a second. For a moment the plating
fluttered like a metal flag in a high wind before it was whipped out of sight.
Sunlight poured into the compartment and with it, a clear, close view of the
beach and medical station.
"Thank you,
Captain," he said. "Friend Murchison, to save time I'm sending friend
Danalta with the fourth litter. The canopy will be sealed and the cooling
system set to maximum in the hope that the reduction in external temperature
will be conducted to the occupant. The casualty is still inside its suit which
should be removed as quickly as possible in a less hostile environment. I will
follow at once to assist you."
"Maybe not at once,
Doctor," said Danalta. Its voice was coming from what seemed to be a small
storage compartment farther aft.
He had been aware of a
sudden burst of emotion an instant before the shape-changer had spoken. Its
feelings were complex, a mixture composed predominantly of intense surprise and
curiosity. Before Prilicla could ask the natural question, Danalta gave the
answer.
"Doctor," it
said, "there is another casualty here. The physiological classification
is strange to me but, but I think I've found a stowaway."
The creature appeared to be
wearing a spacesuit so close-fitting that it seemed highly probable that its
general body configuration was identical in size and shape to its protective
garment. Physically the creature was a flattened ovoid with six appendages
growing at equal intervals from the perimeter, each terminating in long,
flexible digits encased in gauntlets that fitted like a coat of metallic paint.
There was a variety of what looked like specialized tools on the fingertips of
each of the thin, metal gauntlets. The rounded projection on what was
presumably the forebody, was almost certainly the cranium, but it was covered
by sensors rather than a transparent visor so that he was unable to obtain a
direct view of the facial tegument and features. There was a large area of
scorching covering the upper surface, or possibly the underside, of the body.
He couldn't be sure without removing the suit.'What is it, Doctor?" said
Danalta. "Is it alive?" I m not sure," he replied, and indicated
the fourth litter. "Move the Earth-human casualty ashore, quickly, and
assist Murchison and Naydrad with it until I join you or send for an-other
litter. I'll need this area to be clear of all other sources of emotional
radiation if I'm to be absolutely sure whether or not is present."
The emoting of Danalta and
the Earth-human casualty diminished with distance to merge with the faint,
background feelings of the medical team and the rest of the casualties. Without
false modesty Prilicla knew that out of the entire Cinrusskin race he possessed
one of the most sensitive and analytical empathic faculties his planetary
history had ever recorded. For several long minutes he concentrated on using
it.
And found nothing.
His disappointment was
severe enough to make his limbs tremble. He knew that he was capable of
detecting the emotional radiation of every species known to the Federation,
right down to the tiny, savage feelings of non-sapient insects, but this was a
thinking member of a new star-traveling species. Perhaps he had finally
encountered one that thought and felt on a sensory level that was beyond his
detection range. He was having feelings of personal doubt and inadequacy as
well as disappointment.
Sometime and somewhere, he
told himself as he lifted the scanner and keyed for the metal penetration
setting, everything has to happen for the first time.
Prilicla moved closer until
his head was only a few inches. from the bulbous swelling in the protective
garment which, in the majority of life-forms, was the location of the cranium
and the nerve center of the sensory equipment. Slowly and carefully he passed
the scanner over the area, continuing for several minutes to scan with his
feelings at ultra-short range while at the same time searching with the
instrument for clinical signs of life in any underlying organic material. He
could not believe it when he found neither. He even had trouble finding his
voice.
"Friend
Murchison," he said finally, "I have a casualty here which requires
further examination. Do you need me there?"
"We do, but not
urgently," the pathologist replied. It emitted a sudden burst of concern
before it brought the feeling under control. "You have been with that one
for over half an hour. The situation here is that all four casualties have been
cut free of their suits but there are a few small areas where pieces of burned
cloth-
ing and charred body tissue
are adhering, which will require surgical separation. The escharred areas and
deeper burn locations where obvious necrosis has taken place will need to be
trimmed away and the sites covered with surrogate skin until proper replacement
surgery is available at the hospital. Meanwhile, IV nutrients, rehydration,
and replacement of lost protein is currently under way while the casualties are
being supported on cushions of cool, sterile air. Their present condition is
critical but stable, and one of them, the last one you sent to us, is barely on
the plus side of terminal. We may lose that one. Earth-human vital organs don't
take kindly to being casseroled in their own juices. But you sound as if you
might have another casualty for us. Is it a new
boy on the block?"
Prilicla hesitated, then
said, "I'm not yet certain whether it is a casualty for treatment or a new
specimen for postmortem investigation. Certainly I've never encountered a
life-form like this one before, or seen references to anything like it in the
literature."
"Sounds
interesting," said Murchison, its matter-of-fact tone belying the mounting
curiosity it was feeling. "When can we see it? Shall I send Naydrad with a
litter to—"
"No," Prilicla
broke in. He could feel the other's surprise because normally he would never
have spoken so sharply to a subordinate. In a gentler voice he went on. "I
have the feeling that you have the clinical situation under control over there.
Continue as you are doing, but do nothing else until or unless I tell
YOU otherwise."
"Sir," it said,
emoting intense puzzlement. The feeling was being shared and reinforced by
Naydrad, Danalta, and the officers on Rhabwar who were monitoring the images
and conversations coming from Terragar. But Prilicla needed answers himself
before he could try to give them to others, and he had 0 pause for a moment to
steady his shaking limbs before he could return to the scanner examination.
Since he was the only
empath present, there was of course
nobody to know of or feel
his fear. The minds of the medical team were engaged exclusively with their own
clinical concerns, but the people on the ambulance ship had little more to do
than to monitor and observe his actions, and those observations would have
included the minor and continuing tremor in his limbs. Very soon friend
Fletcher would deduce the reason for his terror, if it and the others hadn't
done so already.
They knew as well as he did
that the crew of Terragar had sought desperately to avoid all contact with
their fellow officers and would-be rescuers, and that it was a virtual
certainty that the entity he was trying to examine was the reason. It came as
no surprise when the long period of silence was broken hesitantly by the captain.
"Doctor," it
said. "Possibly this is none of my clinical business, and I'll understand
if you tell me to shut up in your usual polite fashion, but your examination of
the alien casualty puzzles me. I've been watching you for the past half an hour
and have observed that while you began by closely approaching but not touching
the creature, for reasons that I think we both understand, you are now making
continuous contact with it. In what way has the situation changed? Is the
creature no longer a threat to you, and, if so, why is your body language
suggesting otherwise? And why are you examining every square inch of the body
surface, including its hands and individual digits which, in my layperson's
opinion, are not usually the site of life-threatening injuries?"
Prilicla was silent for a
moment while he tried to organize the results of his examination in a form that
would not embarrass him when the recording was played back, as it would be many
times, by the cultural-contact people.
"I began by assuming that
the air inside its suit was one of the oxygen-and-inert combinations used by
warm-blooded oxygen-breathers, and identified the species tentatively as physiological
classification CHLI. Sub-surface scanner investigation of the suit, and a
deeper, detailed examination of its content,
revealed the presence of
unique technology of a level of complexity that I am not qualified to assess.
The subsequent forensic investigation suggests that the position and sharply
defined area of heat damage to the suit—the head section, forward pair of
limbs, and particularly the attached digits which are literally fused
together—was sustained before, rather than after, the subject was taken on
board Terragar. The later atmospheric heating effects suffered by the ship had
no effect on the occupant. No doubt, friend Fletcher, you will wish me to help
you to make a more thorough investigation at a more convenient time.
"To summarize,"
he ended, "life—as we understand the term—is no longer present. I very
much doubt that it ever was." He felt the sudden burst of surprise and
curiosity from the medical team, but it was on a low level because their
attention was being concentrated on their Earth-human casualties. The captain's
emotional radiation was accompanied by words.
"Wait, Doctor,"
it said. "Do I understand you correctly? Are you saying that the subject
is a robot of unique and advanced design, and, and that it may be a casualty of
war?"
"I'm unwilling to
speculate on the available evidence, friend Fletcher," Prilicla replied,
"but judging by the sophistication of design and construction in this
mechanism, it may even be possible that we have discovered a non-organic form
of intelligent life. But I advise extreme caution during any subsequent examination,
because the actions of this creature or others like it may be the reason why
Terragar was trying so hard to avoid contact with us. We won't know more until
or unless the ship's officers are able to talk to us.
"Friend
Murchison," he added, "I'll be with you in five minutes."
"The sooner the
better," he heard Naydrad say. In spite of Murchison's earlier, reassuring
situation report, he could feel that it was speaking for all of them.
The field medical station
was a prefabricated, modular structure designed for use at the scene of space
construction accidents or planetary disaster-relief operations. It comprised a
self-contained, multiple-species operating room to which recovery wards,
medical-staff accommodation, and ancillary equipment could be added as
required. The OR was already in use and Rhab-war's pressor beams had lifted in
the less urgently required sections together with a couple of general-purpose
robots that were busily attaching them as he approached.
As if it were an
unconscious emotional preparation for the serious clinical problems ahead, a
childhood memory of his home world, like a waking dream, came flooding back to
calm his mind. In those days it had been himself who had been assembling
brightly-colored structures out of building-blocks on the sand, and peopling
them with legendary creatures out of his imagination who had strange and
varied capabilities for performing great deeds of good or evil on those in
their power—short of ending their lives, that was, because violent death was
something that even an adult Cinrusskin did not willingly think about. This
stretch of golden beach could have been the same, as was the green fringe of
vegetation inland that was too indistinct to appear alien and therefore
different. But there all similarity ended.
The steep, low-gravity
waves of Cinruss had been replaced by the low, smooth rollers that peaked and
foamed only as they broke in the shallows; and here the people inhabiting the
bright building blocks were more varied and wonderful than anything he could
ever have imagined as a child, and death was something that they thought about,
faced, and, in the majority of their cases, conquered every day of their lives.
But not today.
From Murchison and the
other team members he felt the sudden burst of sorrow, self-criticism, and near
anger characteristic of healers who had just lost a patient.
When he joined them a few
minutes later, Naydrad was moving the deceased casualty to an adjoining compartment
on a litter with a closed, opaque cover. The features of Captain Fletcher
looked silently down from the wall communicator screen, the fleshy edges of
its mouth pressed tightly together and its strong feelings tenuous with
distance. Two other casualties had been given preliminary treatment and were
floating above an enclosed, air-cushioned bed while Murchison and Dan-alta were
working on the remaining one. They were concentrating all of their attention
on excising the areas of charred tissue while covering the less severely
affected sections of the body surface with the thick, creamlike, clinging
medication that had been developed for the treatment of DBDG burn cases. It
would aid tissue regeneration, deaden pain on the patient's return to consciousness,
and protect against same-species airborne infection. The latter was the reason
why it was the pathologist alone who was dressed for a full aseptic operational
procedure.
Microorganisms that had
originated on one planet could not cross the species barrier to affect or infect
life-forms who had evolved on another. Naydrad felt the downdraft from
Prilicla's on its uncovered fur and looked up. I'm beginning to feel like a
redundant limb here," it said,
looking at the newly
arrived casualty with feelings of concern and impatience ruffling its mind and
its fur. "Will I help you to cut off its suit?"
As a specialist in heavy
rescue, Naydrad was the hospital's acknowledged expert at cutting all shapes
and sizes of injured space casualties out of their environmental protection and
underlying body coverings, if the species concerned wore them, without
inflicting further damage to the living contents. It made no effort to salvage
any part of the suit, but instead used its highspeed cutter to section the
entire surface, leaving it with so many connected incisions that the pieces
could be peeled away and discarded like the shell of a multiply cracked egg.
Except in the places where the material and underlying skin had fused together
into a single, charred mass, the uniform went the same way. While it was
dealing with those areas, Naydrad positioned the patient for him on its
frictionless bed of cooling air and began the rehydration process. Murchison
and Danalta joined them without comment and smoothly took over the procedure
while he withdrew to hover above the patient.
"How is it, sir?"
said Murchison. They both knew that it wasn't asking about the patient's
physical condition, which was clear to see, but the unseen emotional radiation
that only he could detect. "Can it withstand major surgery?"
"It is better than I
would have expected, and yes," Prilicla replied. "It has suffered
major trauma and as a result is deeply unconscious, but the emotional radiation
is characteristic of a being who, unconsciously, is still fighting to survive.
That situation could change for the worse if we don't operate quickly.
"This patient,"
he went on for the benefit of the recorders, "took shelter in a heavy
metal equipment cabinet. It was found in the kneeling position with its body
folded forward at the waist and steadied by one hand. That hand and its lower
limbs were in lengthy contact with metal whose heat was^aonducted through the
suit fabric to the feet and knees so that*these areas have
sustained deep charring
that involves the underlying circulatory system, muscles, and associated nerve
networks. The other two casualties have already lost their feet and lower
limbs. We may be able to save the hand on this one, which seems to have been
holding a non-conducting tool to keep it from direct contact with the hot
metal. Your feelings, friend Murchison, and those of the rest of you, indicate
that you have come to a decision, but I must ask the question verbally.
"Is there general
agreement," he ended, "that the lower legs should be removed without
delay?"
He was aware of their
feelings, so there was no real need for them to speak, but Murchison, who had
its own, peculiarly Earth-human form of empathy, was feeling Prilicla's need
for support and reassurance.
"Yes," it said
firmly.
Before anyone else could
reply, there was an interruption in the form of the captain clearing its
breathing passages. It said, "Much as I dislike watching major operative
procedures, especially on fellow officers of my own species who are personally
known to me, I've been forcing myself to do so. The reason is that, to my
medically untutored mind, and considering the literal hell they went through on
that ship, it seems to me that there is a strong possibility that none of these
casualties will survive."
It hesitated for a moment,
and he was able to detect distant feelings of embarrassment mixed with
determination as it went on. "To me the most urgent priority here is the
gathering of information, knowledge that could be of vital importance to a great
many beings throughout the Federation. After all, your patients were intent on
killing themselves, so restoring one of them to a condition in which he can
tell us why is ..."
"Friend
Fletcher," Prilicla broke in gently, "your words are giving rise to
intense feelings of disagreement and anger which the medical team is trying
hard not to verbalize, and in the present circumstances those words are an
unwanted distraction. The clinical condition of the three casualties is
critical but stable, and it is possible that they may not survive, much less
regain consciousness."
"In that case,"
the captain said, "why not bring one of them round in case they die before
they can give us the information we need? It will be tough on the person
concerned, but they are Monitor Corps, after all, and would be the first to
understand the priorities in this situation."
For a long moment Prilicla
tried hard to reduce the tremor that the other's suggestion had caused in his
limbs, but succeeded only in keeping his operating hands steady. Finally he
spoke.
"We will discuss this
matter at a more convenient time," he said, without his customary
politeness. "You may continue to observe, but you will refrain from making
any further suggestions until the procedure has been completed."
The captain remained silent
but watchful during the remainder of the operation, and the additional surgery
needed on the other two casualties. Prilicla assumed that the other was
breathing through its nasal openings because never before had he seen
Earth-human lips pressed so tightly and continuously together. But when it was
obvious to the layest of laypersons, which the captain was not, that the
procedures on all three patients was completed, it spoke again.
Dr. Prilicla," said
the captain, "we must have a serious talk as soon as possible after—"
"Captain
Fletcher!" Murchison broke in, its words calm and cold and quiet, although
the feelings that accompanied them shared none of those qualities. "Dr.
Prilicla has been operating here for nearly two hours, to which must be added
its rescue time on Terragar. By now a space officer in your position must be
aware of the physical limitations of the GLNO life-form, including its lack of
stamina which requires that it rest frequently and often. We're all tired right
now, and not just the boss ..."
It broke off as the captain
raised a hand for silence and said sharply, "I'm well aware of my senior
medical officer's requirements, and I had been about to say that we must talk
very seriously as soon as possible after it has rested. It may well be that
the situation we have here transcends any considerations of medical ethics.
Sleep well, Doctor."
After a final check of the
patients' monitors, Murchison, Naydrad, and himself retired, leaving Danalta on
watch. In the shape-changer's utterly savage home-planet environment, all
life-forms who required regular periods of unconsciousness to recharge their
organic batteries had not survived their unsleeping natural enemies to develop
intelligence, so remaining awake was no hardship for it. In the present
situation it extruded an eye and a large, sensitive ear which it kept trained
on the patient monitors. There were times when Prilicla almost envied the
unsleeping Danalta, but not often, because normally he needed and welcomed those
periods of non-thinking and non-feeling when he did not have to empathize with
anything or anybody.
When Cinrusskins slept,
there was an external sensory shutdown. Neither loud noises nor bright lights
nor the most acrid of smells would awaken them. Only a sharp, physical stimulus
or the close presence of a source of danger, a legacy of his own prehistoric
past, could do that. Even Cinrusskin dreams were brief, being nothing more than
a few subjective seconds of bright, confused imagery from the recently
experienced past or, as some of the more unorthodox Healers of the Mind argued,
from possible futures. They were nothing more than the steeply shelving
shallows at each end of a journey across the ocean of sleep.
In the fleeting dream
before awakening he had been examining the non-organic casualty on Terragar
again, but this time he was working in a thick, unseen cloud of anxiety and
there was a pair of Earth-human hands assisting him. He dismissed the dream as
another meaningless and random discharge of un--onscious brain activity, chose
a favorite breakfast from his food ispenser, then spent a few moments on the
improvement of his Appearance. He used an aromatic sponge to oil and polish his
head, thorax, exoskeleton,
and limbs, even though he knew that nobody on the ship would notice any
difference, before he contacted the casualty deck. Danalta reported that all
three patients were in a stable and clinically satisfactory condition, and that
they remained deeply unconscious with the monitors registering a slight but
continuing improvement in life signs. Prilicla's empathic readings gave
confirmation. Murchison and Naydrad were still in their quarters and emitting
the emotional radiation characteristic of deep and undisturbed sleep. He
decided to leave them in that condition, and face the coming confrontation with
the captain without their moral support—always bearing in mind, he reminded
himself dryly as he pressed the communicator stud, that for a Cinrusskin a very
gentle and flattering attack was the best form of defense.
"Friend
Fletcher," he began as the other's face appeared on his screen, "you
displayed great sensitivity, understanding and kindness in allowing me to rest
my fragile body and mind before discussing your own urgent concerns. But before
we do so, you will be pleased to know that the clinical condition of the three
injured officers is stable and their prognoses give grounds for guarded
optimism. At present they are deeply unconscious and are likely to remain in
that condition for many hours, perhaps up to few days. Following massive trauma
that stops short of termination, you Earth-human DBDGs have a great capacity
for physical and psychological recuperation, and in the present situation it
is the mental aspect which must be given consideration if useful information is
to be obtained from them.
"However," he
continued quickly, "should an attempt be made to revive one of them
prematurely, the consequent withdrawal of their anesthetic medication would
have two effects. The sudden return to high levels of pain, combined with the
medication-induced mental confusion, would render the necessarily short
conversation with them, especially any specific, technical information they
might try to give you during questioning, of doubtful value. As well, the
general shock to their
systems might cause them to
terminate before they were able to produce sense-bearing sounds.
"Other than the
clinical condition of my patients, friend Fletcher," he ended, "was
there anything else you wanted to discuss with me?"
The captain remained silent
for a long moment, then he heard it give a long sigh. Even though the emotional
range was extreme, he could almost feel the disappointment that accompanied
it.
"Dr. Prilicla,"
it said finally, "my primary need is for information regarding the
reasons for the earlier abnormal behavior of your patients. You've effectively
closed the first and most obvious source by pulling medical rank on me, for
which we are all relieved. But I still need that information, urgently. Can you
suggest another source?"
This time it was Prilicla's
turn to be silent.
"Perhaps you are not
yet mentally awake, Doctor," it went on. "Let me remind you that
we're here in answer to three distress calls. Two of them may or may not have
been due to the discharge of weapons by or at the alien ship, and the third was
a standard subspace distress beacon released by Terragar which was later
augmented by what seemed to be hand-signaled warnings to stay clear of the
alien vessel. As the ambulance ship in attendance, Rhabwar is expected to
report on the disaster and the action being taken to deal with it, or to
request and specify the help needed if we are incapable of handling the problem
ourselves. For technical reasons, that report will be necessarily brief, even
terse, but it must contain the essential information ..."
"Friend
Fletcher," Prilicla broke in gently, "I am fully aware the problems
and shortcomings inherent in subspace radio communication and, considering my long service as Rhabwar 's -nior
medical officer, it is impolite of you to suggest otherwise. But if you are
truly feeling concerned, I can assure you that I am Physically rested and mentally alert."
"Sorry, Doctor,"
said the captain, "I was being sarcastic. The point I'm making is that twenty-one
standard hours have passed since we arrived and no situation report signal has
gone off because, frankly, I have nothing to say about it that makes sense
even to me. But I have to say something or they will send another ship, or,
more likely, warships, to find out what happened to us, and that ship or ships
might also suffer the same fate as Terragar. That damage by beings unknown
could be construed as a hostile act and we might have the beginnings of a
war—pardon me, police operation—against the same persons unknown."
It took a deep breath and
in a calmer voice went on. "I still need solid information, no matter how
sparse, if for no other reason than to support my intended action of placing
all three of the ships involved in indefinite quarantine. The reasons must be
credible; otherwise our authorities might think that we have been so affected
by the situation that we must be considered psychologically suspect, in which
case they will send another ship anyway. But other than telling them to stay away
from us, what can I say? Have you a suggestion, Doctor? I hope."
"I have, friend
Fletcher," Prilicla replied, thinking how good it felt to be in possession
of a clear mind in a rested body. "But it may involve a small personal
risk for you."
"If the risk is
warranted," said the captain impatiently, "the size is unimportant.
Go on."
Prilicla went on.
"Until I know the exact nature of the threat, infection, or whatever that
seems to have been picked up by Terragar, I have asked that Rhabwar remain
separated from the medical team. That stricture still holds, but I may have
been a little overcautious because none of the team suffered any detectable
ill effects as a result of our brief visit to the ship, nor myself from my
examination of the damaged life-form found on board. I feel sure that, provided
the normal safety precautions are taken and we subject ourselves to external
sterilization procedures before and after the visit, we could conduct a
forensic examination of the wreck in safety. Whatever the damage inflicted by
the alien
hip, or by that life-form
found on board, it must have left some evidence of the kind of weapon
used—enough, perhaps, to complete your report. And the quality of the
information could well be better than that supplied by a semiconscious casualty
in intense pain. Do you have any comments, friend Fletcher?"
The captain nodded and
showed its teeth. "Three of them," it said. "The first is that
you should rest and clear your body and mind more often. The second and third
are, how soon can we meet, and where?"
Less than an hour later
Prilicla was watching the captain's Earth-human hands beside his as they began
the reexamination of the strange life-form, and suddenly he remembered his odd
waking dream. He was about to mention it, then had second thoughts. The captain
was not the sort of person with whom one discussed one's dreams.
Murchison reported that the
condition of the three casualties remained stable, and asked permission to go
along to assist with the forensic examination. It had insisted that as an
other-species pathologist its field covered all forms of intelligent life, and
not just the organic variety. Prilicla had heard few lamer excuses for
satisfying professional curiosity, which in Murchi-son's case was every bit as
intense as that of the captain and himself, but he had agreed. Murchison was his
principal assistant and the person most likely to inherit the senior medical
officer's position on Rhabwar—and besides, he was curious to see how it dealt
with a totally new situation.
That was why most of the
talking was being done into the recorder by Captain Fletcher, with Murchison
making an occasional interjection, while Prilicla spent long periods saying
nothing at all. Following a meticulous examination with the special scanner
provided by Lieutenant Chen—a scanner normally used to detect obscure symptoms
deep inside ailing machinery—the captain straightened up, placed the instrument
gently on the deck, and spoke with feelings of excitement and enthusiasm.
"This creature,
entity, artifact, or whatever," it said, "displays a degree of
design and structural sophistication well beyond
the Federation's present
capabilities—if it was, in fact, built by anyone or anything but itself. The
internal circuitry and actuator mechanisms are
so incredibly fine and intricate that at first I couldn't recognize them for
what they are. This thing wasn't just put together by watchmakers but by the
mechanical equivalent of a microsurgery team. I've traced several of the
peripheral nerve networks to a processing area in the central body which seems
to house the brain and heart equivalents. I can't be sure of this because that
location has been damaged and the contents fused by the heat and radiation
discharge that destroyed the creature. The sensory circuits underlying the
surface in the same area have also been burned out, probably by the same
agency, which may or may not have been a wide-focus heat weapon of some kind.
"But there is clear evidence throughout the whole body," it went on,
"of a highly developed self-repair capability of apparently indefinite
duration. Until it sustained that blast injury, this thing would have been
capable of regeneration and growth. Any organism that can do that is
technically alive."
Prilicla had a question but
Murchison asked it for him. Quickly it said, "Are you sure that your
subject isn't alive now?" "Don't worry, ma'am," the captain
replied. "How sure would you be if your subject's brain and heart had been
burned to a crisp? Besides, its muscles—I mean its actuator linkages— are
designed for light, precise work and are not all that robust. Physically it
would not represent a serious threat"—it smiled— "except possibly to
Dr. Prilicla."
Murchison returned the
other's smile, because practically everything larger than an Earth kitten was a
serious threat to Prilicla.
Something else is worrying
me," Murchison said, "I watched your internal scanner examination,
Captain, and saw that the subject's body is solidly packed with circuitry,
metal musculature, and sensory receptors. But why is it that particular shape?"
Fletcher remained silent,
radiating the confusion and impatience characteristic of a mind that had been
expecting a different question.
"Robotics isn't my
specialty," Murchison went on, "but isn't it usual for one to be
mechanically more functional? I mean, shouldn't it basically be a box with
locomotor appendages simpler and more versatile than the six limbs we are
seeing here; with a variety of specialized manipulators sprouting out of the
body without regard to aesthetic balance; and with all-around visual sensors
instead of just two in the head section? If this thing had been normally
organic we would classify it as a CHLI. Rather than adopting a functional
robotic shape, it seems clear that this body configuration is decidedly
organimorphic. My question is, why would a non-organic intelligence copy itself
on a CHLI?"
"Sorry, ma'am,"
the captain replied, looking and feeling apologetic. "I have no answers,
just a wild guess."
Murchison nodded and said,
"Which is?"
The captain hesitated, then
said, "This isn't my field, either. But think about the evolution of an
organic life-form as opposed to that of an intelligent machine. Ignoring the
religious perspective, the first begins as an accidental grouping of simple,
cellular forms which takes several millions of years of environmental adaptation
with other competing species to become the dominant intelligence. The second
doesn't do anything like that because, no matter how long it is given, a simple
tool like a monkey wrench can never evolve through the intermediate stage of a
lawn mower to become a superintelligent computer, at least, not without
outside help. That simple tool has to be created by someone in the first place,
and at some later stage the creator has to provide the machine with self-awareness
and intelligence. Only then would there be the possibility of further
self-evolution.
"I'm speculating, of
course," the captain went on, "but a further possibility is that the
beings who first bestowed on their machines the gift of self-aware, intelligent
life are a permanent part of their racial memory—or inherited design—and that
they made, or in gratitude made the choice to remain, in their CHLI creators'
image."
"In your opinion,
friend Fletcher," Prilicla asked, "would this entity have been capable
of disabling a starship?"
"No, Doctor," the
captain replied firmly. "At least, not directly. Although composed of
metal with plastic-insulated circuitry, the appendages were designed for
precise and delicate work rather than hard labor or fighting, although there
would have been nothing to stop it using those digits, as we DBDGs have been
known to do, to operate a variety of destructive weapons. I'll be looking for
anything like that when I'm searching the ship. All the evidence points to our
robot friend being dead on arrival, and the type of heat and blast injuries it
sustained were too unfocused to be caused by a Corps hand-weapon.
"And now," it
went on, looking at the opened seams in the hull plating of the ship all around
them, "I have to examine the body of a larger, metal cadaver, one that is
more familiar to me."
Prilicla used his
antigravity belt to move outside and fly forward to the control deck while
Murchison stayed with the captain, both to satisfy its curiosity and to help
move aside troublesome debris. There was minimal risk because both of them
were experienced in negotiating ship wreckage, and he was pleased that neither
their voices in his headset nor their feelings indicated that they were taking
risks.
When they rejoined him, the
two crescents of facial fur oove the captain's eyes, and its emotional
radiation, were indicating extreme puzzlement. / '
I don't understand
this," it said, gesturing aft. "Discounting the effects of atmospheric
heating and buffeting on the hull the way down, the ship's systems and
linkages—power, guidance life support—are all in pretty good mechanical order.
Why should one of the officers have had to go aft to operate the main thrusters
on manual? But that is what he did, and
the answer has to be here somewhere in control."
"Including, friend
Fletcher," said Prilicla, "the reason why the casualties wanted us to
stay away from their ship?"
"That, too,
Doctor," it replied. "And thank you for the reminder and gentle
warning, which I'm pretty sure is unnecessary. Pathologist Murchison reported
earlier that, apart from their severe burn trauma, there is nothing clinically
abnormal about the patients' condition. On the way here she also told me that
the only microbes present were the usual harmless, Earth-human bugs that came
on board with them and were trapped in the air-circulation system, plus a few
airborne varieties native to this world which cannot cross the planetary
species barrier and so need not concern us.
"I agree with everyone
exercising a high degree of caution," it went on, its feelings if not its
voice registering impatience, "but surely it is no longer necessary to
wear sealed suits, or for your team to continue working in an isolated,
prefabricated unit with limited facilities rather than on Rhabwar's casualty
deck. There is nothing to threaten us here."
"It must be
nice," said Murchison, radiating sarcasm, "to feel so sure of
yourself."
"Friend
Fletcher," Prilicla said quickly, in an attempt to reduce its growing
irritation and head off a possible exchange of verbal violence, "no doubt
you are quite right in everything you've said, but I, for physiological reasons
that have made my people a species of arrant cowards, am extremely cautious. Please
humor me."
The captain nodded and its
feelings once again became calmly analytical as it began its examination of the
damaged control consoles around them. It trained the vision pickup on each and
every item and discussed its observations for the recorders. Apart from a few
minutes checking with Naydrad on the condition of the casualties, they watched
in silence the progress of a technically-oriented postmortem as painstakingly
thorough as any the pathologist had performed on organic cadavers. Prilicla had
always derived pleasure from watching an expert at work,
and he knew that his
feelings of appreciation and admiration ere being shared by Murchison. But
finally the work was done and the captain was staring at them with an
expression and emotions that could only be described as a large and perplexed
question mark.
"This doesn't make
sense," it said. "The main and secondary computer systems are down.
That shouldn't happen. They are strongly encased, protected physically and
electronically in case of damage during a major malfunction or collision. They
perform the function of the black boxes in atmosphere craft so that, in the
event of an accident, the investigators have some idea of what went wrong. But
there was nothing structurally wrong with Ter-ragar except that all its
computers are dead, or as good as. This is ridiculous. With all our fail-safe
systems and protective devices,
that should not have
happened-----"
It broke off for a moment,
then with a sudden burst of emotion intense enough to make Prilicla tremble it
said, "Are you thinking what I'm thinking?"
"We're not telepaths,
friend Fletcher," said Prilicla gently. "You'll have to tell us what
you're thinking."
"I'd rather not tell
you anything just yet," said the captain, 'in case I'd be making a
complete fool of myself." It reached into its equipment satchel and
indicated one of the consoles whose plastic trim was only slightly
heat-discolored. "There may still be some life left in that one. Instead
of talking to you, maybe I'll be able to demonstrate my idea with this tester.
The instrument has a small screen so you'll have to move closer. But don't
touch it, or allow any of your equipment to make contact with it. That is very
important. Do you understood?"
"We understand, friend
Fletcher," said Prilicla. "We think," Murchison added.
With the pathologist's
feeling of bewilderment matching his own they watched in silence as the captain
expertly removed the console cover to lay bare the underlying circuitry. Then
with a magnetic clamp it attached the tester to a convenient bulkhead,
activated the display screen, unreeled one of the device's many probes, and
went slowly and carefully to work. If it had been a sick patient rather than a
malfunctioning machine, Prilicla thought, the other's movements could not have
been more delicate or precise.
Many minutes passed while
the display screen remained lit but blank, then suddenly it flickered and a
schematic diagram appeared. The captain bent closer, excitement diluting its
intense concentration.
"I'm into the ship's
main computer now," it said, "and there's something there. But I
don't recognize the ... What the hell!"
The image was breaking up
and generating random, geometrical lines and shapes that were drifting off the
four edges of the screen until all that remained was an expanse of sparkling
white noise. The captain swore and jabbed at several of its control studs
without result. Even the green POWER ON light was dead.
The type and intensity of
the captain's emotional radiation was beginning to worry Prilicla. He said,
"Something has happened, friend Fletcher. What is troubling you?"
"My tester just
died," said the captain. Suddenly it grabbed the instrument in both hands,
raised it high above its head and slammed it downwards with all of its strength
against the deck before adding, "And I was expecting it to happen,
dammit!"
"Temper,
Captain," said Murchison, radiating irritation and surprise as it bent
down to pick up the remains of the device.
"No!" said
Fletcher urgently. "Stay away from it. Probably there's no physical danger
to yourselves because it's dead, defunct. But don't touch it until we know the
technical reason for what happened here."
"Which was what?"
said Prilicla.
He spoke very gently
because the other's feelings were confused, fearful, excited, and radiating
all over the emotional spectrum. It was an unprecedented mental condition for
the usually calm and imperturbable captain to display. Murchison's feeling irritation at the other's brusque manner was being
replaced by the. clinical calm of a physician towards someone who might shortly
become a patient. But before the captain could reply, there was an interruption
from Naydrad speaking on their headsets.
"Dr. Prilicla,"
it said. "One of the casualties, the last one you brought in, has returned
to partial consciousness. Judging by its manner, it was the ship's commanding
officer. It is greatly agitated, its speech is slurred and unintelligible, and,
in spite of being immobilized, it is fighting all attempts at administering
further sedative shots. The self-inflicted additional trauma is causing a
marked deterioration in its clinical condition. If we patch you through, will
you speak to it? Or better still, come back here and try your projective
empathy on its mind?"
While the charge nurse was
speaking, Prilicla had been trying not to tremble at the thought of what the
severely burned and prematurely conscious patient was doing to itself. He said,
"Of course, friend Naydrad. I'll talk to it now and while I'm flying back
to join you. If it is Terragar's captain, then Rhabwar will have its family and
personal names on file. Quickly, please, find out what they are. Using them in
conversation will help reassure it, but I'll speak to it now."
"No," said
Fletcher. "I know his name. Let me talk to him."
He felt Murchison's earlier
calm disappear in an uncharacteristic flare of anger as it said, "What
the hell's got into you, Captain? This is a clinical matter. It is definitely
not in your area of expertise."
Both of their faces were
showing the reddening of temporarily elevated blood pressure, but the anger of
the captain was being overlaid by feelings of increasing certainty as it said,
"Sorry, ma'am. In this case it is, because right now I'm the only one here
who knows what happened."
The captain was not
allowing the intense sympathy and concern it was feeling to affect the calm,
unemotional tone of its voice as it spoke via the communicator screen to the
patient, but considering the urgency of the situation, Prilicla thought that
friend Fletcher's long-range bedside manner was very good.
"Captain Davidson,
George," it began. "This is Don Fletcher, Rhabwar. We were able to
land your ship, cool it in the sea, and recover your crew. Apart from the burn
injuries, which ire severe, you are in no immediate danger, and—please believe
me—neither are we.. . ."
No sentient creature,
Prilicla thought as an uncontrollable tremor shook his body, should ever have to
suffer such an intensity of pain, much less have to fight through it in an
attempt to produce coherent words. The captain's voice remained steady but its
normally pink, Earth-human face had paled to a bloodless yellow-grey.
"George," it went
on, "please stop threshing about in that litter and trying to fight your
medication, and most of all, stop trying to talk. Believe me, we know what is
troubling you and what you're trying to warn us about, and we appreciate the
effort. But right now you must relax and just listen to me...."
Captain Davidson was still
trying desperately to talk rather, listen, but its words lacked coherency even
to the listeners of its own species who did not need translators. The high
levels of pain and fear and urgency it was feeling had not diminished.
". . We received and
understood the hand signals and emotional radiation from your control
canopy," the captain went on, with a nod towards Prilicla, "and at no
time was direct physical contact made by Rhabwar either with Terragar or the
alien ship, and that situation will continue until the threat is fully understood.
In the meantime Rhabwar has been positioned at a safe distance along the beach
from this medical station that we have deployed to treat your survivors, and
the remains of your ship are also at a safe distance from both. Following the
recovery of your casualties, Terragar was boarded again and your ship interior
and the remains of the alien robot we found on board were thoroughly
investigated. As a result we know the reason for your desperate and apparently
suicidal attempts to avoid contact with our own ship. We deeply appreciate what
you were trying to do and tell us, but now we have received the message and
probably know more about the threat from that alien ship than you do."
Prilicla detected the
change in emotional radiation several seconds before Danalta spoke.
"The patient's
struggles have diminished slightly," the shape-changer reported quietly
without looking up from the patient. "It is no longer trying to speak,
but the monitor indicates continued muscular tension and elevated blood pressure.
You are getting through to it, Captain. I don't understand one word of your
explanation, but for the patient's sake, keep on talking." From the
evidence so far uncovered," Fletcher went on, ignoring the compliment and
at the same time trying to reduce Danalta's level of ignorance, "I would
say that the robot was floating free outside the other ship's hull and you
recovered it hoping that it might be a survivor or, if not, that it would at
least give you some idea of the form of
life you were trying to rescue. When they didn't respond to your radio signals,
you sent across contact-sensor plate and connecting cable which you attached
magnetically to the hull, hoping that it would be able to detect life signs or
movements that your computer would be able to process to give the exact
locations. But it was the direct cable connection between the sensor plate and
your computer that wrecked Terragar, In short, George, that alien vessel
doesn't affect or infect living people, it kills ships. It also infects, disables,
or kills any lesser form of computer-controlled device that comes into contact
with it.
"You turned up an
alien hot potato this time, George," the captain ended softly, "but
now it's our problem. So just relax, go back to sleep, and let us worry about
it."
Several minutes passed
without anyone speaking. From the medical team Prilicla detected feelings of
surprise, curiosity, and excitement caused by Fletcher's explanation, while
Captain Davidson's emotional radiation was that of a mind that was slipping
back into unconsciousness.
"The patient is again
responding to the sedative medication," he said, "and its life signs
are stabilizing. Thank you, friend Fletcher."
"Yes, indeed,"
said Murchison, radiating relief and gratitude. "That was very well done,
Captain." It looked at the broken test device lying on the deck and added,
"Now we know why you lost your temper and trashed that thing. I'd probably
have done the same."
Prilicla was feeling friend
Fletcher's gratitude and pleasure at the compliments, as well as its increasing
embarrassment. He said, "Have you enough information now to send your
subspace signal?"
"On the Terragar
situation, yes," the captain replied. "But I'd like to make the
report as informative as possible. We have to go into space to send it, so I
want to take a closer look at that alien ship before I do. Don't worry, I won't
make direct contact or do anything stupid like deploying another sensor
connection cable. Rhabwar will be back in three to four hours. And Doctor,
'I1 be visiting a hunk of
sick machinery so there will be no need for a medical presence."
"There is, friend
Fletcher," said Prilicla gently. "You are visiting a ship disaster
situation and, regardless of the type or condition of the casualties, as the
senior medical officer I should be there. About this I must insist."
Before any of his team
could voice their objections, which were based principally on concern for his
safety, he went on. "Don't worry, I shall take no unnecessary risks nor
allow friend Fletcher to do so. Are there any decontamination procedures you
can suggest before I transfer to Rhabwart"
Murchison and Fletcher
looked at each other for a moment while their feelings changed from concern to
a grudging acceptance of the inevitable.
"The usual organic decontamination
drill at the airlock," said the captain, "which is almost certainly
unnecessary, but I don't believe in taking chances, either...." It
gestured towards the tester lying on the deck. "... And, of course, don't
bring any computer viruses on board."
Even though the alien
vessel was clean, bright, shining, and highly streamlined—a clear indication
that it had taken off from a planetary surface rather than being assembled in
space—among themselves, Rhabwar' s officers were calling it the Plague Ship. As
a vessel crewed by robots it was probably as clean inside as it was out,
Prilicla thought as he watched the image enlarge beyond the edges of his
viewscreen, but then they were not talking about that sort of plague.
They moved in to a distance
of two hundred meters and began a series of slow circles around its
longitudinal axis. At close range, the only blemishes visible on the sleek hull
were the two
small craters with the heat
discoloration around them and an open access hatch cover with heat-damaged
equipment of some kind Projecting from it.
"There's something odd
about that hull damage," said the captain. "I would like a closer
look at it, or better still, a hands-on examination. I'm thinking aloud, you
understand, but what if I was to go over there in a lightweight suit, and
didn't touch it with any computerized test equipment, and even retracted the
suit antenna to reduce the risk of making metal-to-metal contact with the hull?
It would also mean not carrying a weapon, but that is normal practice in a
first-contact situation. At this short range I wouldn't need the antenna, and
as an added precaution I could wear non-conducting gauntlets, and insulated
covers for the boots, during the ..."
"Pardon the
interruption, friend Fletcher," said Prilicla quietly, "but I feel
you radiating intense curiosity. I have similar feelings and would like a
closer look, too. Admittedly the contamination we would be investigating is
non-organic, but the presence of a medical advisor could be an advantage."
The other radiated
indecision for a moment, then it made the soft, barking sound that Earth-humans
called laughter and said, "Right. But I have the feeling that if
Pathologist Murchison had been here she would give you an argument about that,
as well as subjecting me to a great deal of verbal abuse for allowing you to
take the risk. Chen?"
"Sir," replied
the engineering officer. "We intend closing to a distance of twenty
meters, very slowly," Fletcher went on. "Be ready to pull us out
again faster than that."
By the time Fletcher and
himself had suited-up and flown clear of Rhabwar's personnel lock, Prilicla had
had time for many second thoughts and had foolishly discarded all of them. It
was not always an advantage to carry Educator tapes whose donors were less cowardly
than himself, especially when he allowed them to influence his own thinking.
The alien vessel was now rolling ponderously at a distance of about thirty
meters, but no attempt had been made to kill its spin because the tractor beam
might have furnished an avenue for electronic infection. As they com-
pensated for its movement
with their suit thrusters, it felt as if they were tiny insects sandwiched
between the vast white wall that was the ambulance ship's hull and the silvery
surface of the alien vessel, with a broad, circular band that was divided into
star-sprinkled space above and the mottled carpet of the planetary cloud
blanket below them.
They used their suit
thrusters to bring themselves to a halt within three meters of the open hatch
cover. After a moment's hesitation, Fletcher edged closer and one of its hands
made fleeting contact with the metal projection, then gripped it firmly in
both.
"No harmful effects
noted," it said for the benefit of the recorders.
"The mechanism
projecting from the small compartment behind the hatch cover," it went on,
"appears to be a simple, extendible metal arm with a hinged outer section
that is capable of rotation horizontally and vertically through one hundred and
eighty degrees, and there is a gripping mechanism at its extremity. It has the
appearance of being an unsophisticated device used for placing in position on,
or removing objects from, the external hull. There is evidence of scorch
damage...."
While the captain continued
to describe in meticulous detail everything it was seeing and thinking,
Prilicla waited until the slow, rolling motion of the vessel caused them to
move close to the cratered area. With small, precisely timed bursts of thruster
power he maintained position about two meters above them. He was not a
forensics expert, but his visual acuity was exceptionally good and the type of
damage he was seeing, although probably caused by the same agency, displayed a
major inconsistency in its effect.
The first crater showed a
normal, circular depression whose depth was approximately half of its diameter
and with the interior and lip edges compressed and fused by the explosive
pressure of a high-temperature blast of some kind, but the second one was
entirely different. It had a shallower, ringlike formation with an area at its
center that showed pressure but minimal heat damage. Deep scratches covering
the area with what looked like small traces of silvery metal were adhering to
some of them. Even though he was trusting to visual observation alone, Prilicla
was sure that the metals of the hull and of that adhering to the scratches were
markedly dissimilar. He edged closer to make absolutely sure before he spoke.
"Friend Fletcher," he said, "there is something very odd here
that I would like you to see." "The compartment behind this access
hatch looks very odd, too," said the captain. It moved to join him and
looked in the direction of his pointing digit for a moment before it added,
"But you first, Doctor. What am I supposed to be seeing?"
"The difference in the
extent and depth of the damage at this and the other crater," he said.
"You can see that this crater is shallower than the first one and, while
the perimeter of this one has been fused by intense heat, the central area has
been depressed but is not as badly burned. There is deep scratching that
contains small traces of a brighter metal that is foreign to the surrounding
hull. It looks as if a large, fairly smooth metal object made heavy contact at
this spot. Friend Fletcher, the size and outline of the unburned area are
suggestive."
"You've got organic
microscopes there instead of eyes, Doctor," it said. "But suggestive
of what? I'm seeing what you're seeing, with great difficulty, but what should
I be thinking about it?"
"Your pardon, friend
Fletcher," said Prilicla. "I cannot be absolutely certain without
analyzing a specimen for purposes of comparison, but the traces of foreign
metal you see suggests that this is where the alien robot we found on Terragar
sustained its injuries or—since it was not an organic life-form—damage. The
weapon or other agency which blew a crater in the front of its body, also
blasted it backwards against the hull with the results you can see. Perhaps it
was trying to protect its ship from something, or someone. If the crew were
defenders rather than at-
tackers their lethal
assault on Terragar's computer systems may have been due to a panic reaction
following an earlier attack as ell as a simple, first-contact
misunderstanding."
"You could be
right," said the captain, "but I think you're giving them the benefit
of a very large doubt-----" It reached towards the equipment satchel at
its waist. "Grab my backpack and use your thrusters to hold me steady
while I scrape off a specimen."
"Friend Fletcher ...
!"
"Don't worry,
Doctor," said the other, radiating reassurance as it produced a short,
broad-bladed screwdriver. "This thing is too simple and stupid to be
infected by a computer virus.... Oops. That's strange."
While it had been scraping
hard to remove the largest of the specimens, the tool's sharp blade had
penetrated the hull and torn out a narrow triangle of metal. It was
surprisingly thin, structurally weak, and its underside was covered by the
fine, geometrical shapes of integral circuitry. When it had bagged the original
specimen, Fletcher removed the hull sample and placed it in an insulated box as
a precaution against possible electronic infection. The captain's accompanying
feelings of impatience and barely controlled excitement suggested that it would
rather be doing something else.
"I feel that you, too,
have found something interesting, friend Fletcher," said Prilicla.
"What is it?"
'I don't know," the
other replied. It secured the two specimens in its sample box before going on.
"I had time for a quick look into what seems to be a long, thin and
apparently empty compartment or corridor behind the access hatch. It would be
easier to show you, Doctor. There's enough room for both of us, and your extra
helmet light will help us see whatever is in there, and, if necessary, make a
fast retreat."
Their lights showed a
length of corridor leading inboard whose walls, except for a large cylindrical
structure on one side that was enclosed by seamless metal plating that was
warped and heat-discolored, were composed of a lightly-built, boxlike framework
that appeared to be non-metallic. Continuous lengths of open-mesh netting were
secured to and stretched tightly along all four inner surfaces of the framework
and, about thirty meters inboard, a similar netted passageway intersected
theirs at right angles. When the captain's foot caught accidentally in the
netting, the whole corridor vibrated for a moment before returning to
stillness.
"That wall netting
tells us one important fact about their level of technology," said
Fletcher, for the benefit of the recorder as well as Prilicla. "They don't
have artificial gravity. And look at the internal supporting structure of the
hull. It reminds me of the interior of one of Earth's old-time zeppelins—it's
just a light framework on which to hang a streamlined skin that will aid
passage through a planetary atmosphere."
"A skin,"
Prilicla reminded it gently, "that your second specimen suggests could be
one single, overall, multipurpose sensor.
"Yes, indeed,"
Fletcher said. It pointed at the warped metal Under near them and went on.
"I want to take a closer look at that later. From its size and shape I'd
say that it houses one of a air of matched hyperdrive generators which
malfunctioned, either by accident or through malicious intent, and caused them
to detonate a distress beacon."
Fletcher moved its vision
pickup carefully so as to sight it inboard between the open mesh of the net.
Prilicla pointed his helmet light in the same direction.
"Several more enclosed
structures are visible," it resumed. "All are solidly-built, some
with complicated shapes and many projections which badly needed that
streamlined outer hull. They appear to be joined to each other by a latticework
of structural-support members. All of the ones we can see are linked together
externally by short stretches of open-weave corridors like this one. But our
point of entry, which may not be the only one, was by a simple, close-fitting,
hinged cover that appears to allow access deep into the entire ship. It was
not a pressurized seal, and nowhere can we see anything like an airlock.
"But then," the
captain added, allowing itself a small bark, 'a crew of intelligent robots
wouldn't need air.
"There is no obvious
threat here at present," it went on, "so I shall continue the
investigation deeper inside the ship. In case of unforeseen developments,
Doctor, would you like to remain here so that you can make a fast
getaway?"
Prilicla was silent for a
moment while common sense and 18 evolutionary imperative of survival through
cowardice warred with the intensity of his curiosity, and lost.
"I would like to
remain here," he said, "but I won't. Lead the way."
The captain didn't reply
but its feelings regarding such stu-P«i behavior were very plain.
Slowly and carefully and
with many pauses while Fletcher directed its vision pickup at objects that
might or might not be of importance, they continued to move inboard while
Fletcher described everything it saw and deduced in its flat, unemotional,
observer's voice.
Their helmet lights showed
many cable looms running along the members that joined the large and small
structures and mechanisms that were coming into view. Some of the cable runs
were attached to the outer framework of the passages they were traversing, and
clearly visible. The individual lengths were color-coded, their graduation in
coloration and shading suggesting that the visual sensitivity of the ship's
crew was slightly higher than that of Prilicla's Earth-human companion, but
lower than his own. When they drew level with a large, blocky mechanism of
indeterminate purpose with what was obviously a control panel and two access
hatches on it, the captain's curiosity became so intense that Prilicla felt
obliged to issue a warning.
"No, friend
Fletcher," he said. "Look but don't touch."
"I know, I know,"
it replied with a flash of irritation. "But how else can I find out what
it is and does? I can't believe that these people—robots or whatever—would
plant a virus to booby-trap every internal control panel and hatch. That
wouldn't make sense. It would lead to a lot of unnecessary accidents among the
crew."
"The robot crew,"
said Prilicla, "should be resistant to their ship's computer
viruses."
"Good point,"
said the captain. "But so far there has been no sign of them. Are they in
their quarters? If so, what would the accommodations for a crew of robots look
like?"
It didn't speak again until
they came to the next intersection, a T-junction leading into a passageway that
led fore and aft to the limit of visibility provided by their helmet lights.
The support frames carried what seemed like hundreds of differently-coded cable
runs and the new passageway was obviously a main trunk route for crew members,
but it was no wider or deeper then any of the others they had encountered.
That suggested infrequent
traffic, Prilicla thought, or a small crew.
"We have to find out
what this ship can do," said the captain suddenly, "apart from simply
killing other ships. For our own defense we must learn and understand its
weapons capability and, if possible, that of its attacker. Next time I'll bring
something more intelligent than a screwdriver. A radiation sensor, perhaps,
that will work without being in direct contact with the target
object----"
"Friend
Fletcher," Prilicla broke in, "would you please be silent and
absolutely still?"
The captain opened its
mouth and shut it again without speaking. As it waited motionless, the
curiosity, puzzlement, and increasing anxiety it was radiating hung about it
like a thick fog.
"You may relax, friend
Fletcher, at least for a few minutes," said Prilicla finally, directing
his helmet light forward. "I thought I detected vibration in the corridor
netting that was not being made by us, and I was right. Something is moving aft
towards us. It is not yet visible. Shall we withdraw, I hope?"
"I want a look at it
first," said the captain. "But stay behind me in case hostilities
break out. Better still, you head back to Rhabwar, now."
The calm, controlled
expectancy with a minimum of fear that was being radiated by the other compared
very favorably with Prilicla's own cowardly feelings. He moved a few meters
behind the captain but no farther.
In the netting around them
the vibration increased, and suddenly it was within range of their helmet
lights, a flattened, ovoid shape that moved like an enormous blob of animated
quicksilver. The digits of the six short appendages spaced equally around its
body were grasping the netting expertly and using it
to pull the creature
rapidly towards them, but at a distance of ten meters or so it slowed to a
stop. Obviously it was watching them.
"Friend
Fletcher," Prilicla said anxiously, "don't open your satchel—a tool
could be mistaken for a weapon—or make any movements that might seem
threatening."
"I know the
first-contact procedures, Doctor," said the captain irritably. Slowly it
released its hold on the netting and extended its two empty hands
palms-outward.
A subjective eternity
passed that must have lasted all of ten seconds without a response from the
alien. Then its body rotated slowly through ninety degrees until the back or
underside was directly facing them. Its six tiny hands were tightly gripping
the netting all around it.
"It doesn't seem to be
armed and its action isn't overtly hostile," said the captain, glancing
backwards over its shoulder, "and plainly it doesn't want us to go any
farther. But what can the rest of the crew be doing? Moving to cut off our
retreat?"
"No, friend
Fletcher," said Prilicla in gentle disagreement. "I have a feeling
that..."
"Doctor," the
other broke in incredulously, "are you saying that you're detecting
feelings from this, this robot?"
"Again, no," he
replied, less gently. "It is what you would call a hunch, or a guess,
based on observation. I have the feeling that we are meeting half of the ship's
crew and that we met the damaged other half on Terragar. There are small differences
in size and body configuration which lead me to think that the damaged specimen
was the male and this one is the female equivalent. . .."
"Wait, wait," the
captain broke in again, its emotional radiation a confusion of surprise and
disbelief with a flash of the unsubtle humor associated with the cruder aspects
of reproduction. It went on: "Are you saying that the design of these
robots is so sophisticated that they have the means to reproduce sexually?
That would imply the implantation of a metallic sperm equivalent and an
exchange of non-organic DNA and ... It's ridiculous! I just can't believe that
robots, even highly intelligent robots,
would need a sexual act to reproduce their kind, and I didn't see anything
resembling sex organs on either of them."
"Nor did I," said
Prilicla. "As I've already told you, it was a simple matter of differences
in body mass and configuration. This one appears to be slimmer and more
graceful. But now I would like you to do something for me, friend Fletcher.
Several things, in fact."
The other's emotional
radiation was settling down but it didn't speak.
"First," Prilicla
went on, "I want you to move forward, slowly, until you've closed to half
the present distance from the robot, and observe its reaction."
The captain did so, then
said, "It hasn't moved and I think its hands are gripping the net even
more tightly. Obviously it doesn't want us to pass. What's the next
thing?"
"Move around behind
me," said Prilicla. "It may consider you to be a threat even though
you've taken no hostile action. Your body mass is over twice that of the robot,
your limbs are long and thick and strange to it. My body is also strange but I
don't believe anyone or anything would consider me a threat or, hopefully, wish
to harm me physically.
"Then I want you to
return to Rhabwar," he went on before the other could respond. "Move
the ship away, a distance of half a mile should be enough, and come back for me
when I signal. You will not have a long wait because fairly soon I will be
close to the limit of my physical endurance."
The other was radiating
such a combination of surprise, bewilderment, and intense concern for his
safely, that it was mak-mg his limbs tremble.
"Friend
Fletcher," he said firmly, "I need the area of this ship to be
totally clear of all extraneous emotional interference, especially yours."
The captain exhaled so
deeply that the sound in his headset like a rushing wind, then it said,
"You mean you want to be left alone and unprotected in an alien ship while
you try to pick up emotional radiation from a machine? With respect, Doctor, I
think you're mad. If I allowed you to do that, Pathologist Mur-chison would
have my guts for garters."
It was a colorful and
physiologically-inaccurate Earth-human expression Prilicla had encountered
before, and knew its meaning. He said firmly, "But you will allow it and
do exactly as I say, friend Fletcher, because this is a disaster site and I have
the rank."
Gradually the principal
source of emotional interference that was Fletcher diminished with distance as
the captain retraced its path to their entry point and jetted towards Rhabwar,
and a few minutes later the faint background of emotional noise from the
ambulance ship's crew was gone as well. Very slowly and cautiously Prilicla
extended one long, fragile arm and moved dose to the robot.
"I think I'm mad,
too," he said softly to himself.
Lightly he touched the
robot in the center of what he assumed was the cranial swelling on its
forebody. His gloves were nsulated but very thin and he was expecting anything
from a faint, tingling sensation to a lethal bolt of lightning, but nothing
happened at all.
He concentrated his entire
mind on his empathic faculty to force it into maximum sensitivity. As well as
receiving the emo-ional radiation of patients, injured casualties, and accident
sur-ivors, he possessed a projective empathic ability which, if the receiving
entity was not too distressed by fear or pain, could be used to pacify and
reassure. It was the reason why most people felt good around him and why he had
so many friends. As an id to focusing the effect rather than in an effort to
communicate, he began to speak.
"I mean you no
harm," he said. "If you are in trouble, sick, injured, or
malfunctioning, I want to help you. Disregard my liter shape and that of the
other person who was with me, and
the others you may meet. We
must look strange and frightening to you, but we all mean you well...."
He repeated the message
while continuing to project reassurance, sympathy, and friendship at maximum
intensity and, while doing so, he moved his hand to the middle of the robot's
body and changed his touch into a soft, gentle push.
Abruptly it released its
grip on the netting with four of its hands and used the other two to pull
itself rapidly away from him. It was about to disappear forward beyond the
range of his light when it paused and began to move back towards him again.
When it was about five meters distant it stopped, then began to move away more
slowly.
Plainly it wanted him to
follow it, which, after a moment of fearful hesitation, he did.
The passageway was leading
directly towards a complex structure that seemed to fill the interior of the
vessel's bow section. The bracing members radiating from it and the framework
of the passageway he was following were festooned with cable looms, many
showing the distinctive color-coding of the outer hull's sensor network.
He was beginning to feel
something.
"Are you doing
this," he called ahead to the to the robot he was following, "or is
it your superintelligent captain robot?"
It continued moving forward
without replying. There was nothing on its silvery body surface that resembled
a mouth, so probably it couldn't.
The feeling that came to
him was so tenuous that it verged on the insubstantial, but it was increasing
slowly in strength. At first he was unsure whether it was originating from one
mind or a group of them; then he decided that it was coming from two separate
thinking and feeling beings. Both of them felt distressed and frightened, and,
as well, one was puzzled and intensely curious while the other was radiating
the claustrophobic panic characteristic of close confinement and sensory
deprivation.
So far as he could feel,
neither of them were in any pain nor were they exhibiting the fear
characteristic of imminent termination, but then, he thought, thinking robots
might not have such feelings. For a more accurate emotional reading he needed
to get much closer to them, but that was triply impossible.
He was at the end of the
passage and facing the solid wall of the structure that probably housed them.
Although there was a convenient panel filled with colored buttons and switches,
he had no idea of the operating principles of the actuator mechanism that
would allow entry or the damage he might do—not least to himself—if he tried
and failed. And most important of all, he was fast running out of conscious
time.
Prilicla was still
frightened but for some odd reason he no longer felt threatened by his
situation. Still, it would be considered an act of utter stupidity and
carelessness if he were to fall asleep in the middle of an alien starship.
When Prilicla wakened he
felt rested and clearheaded but he was also feeling, in spite of the source
being half the ship's length away, the angry impatience of the captain. He had
been semicomatose from fatigue when he had returned from the alien vessel, and
had not been able to make a coherent report, and now friend Fletcher was
waiting to talk to him. The trouble was that he was still feeling so confused
by his discoveries inside the ship that the report would sound incoherent. He
needed more time to think.
Cowardice—both physical and
moral—and procrastination were second nature to him. He flew down the central
well to the casualty deck and used its communicator to contact Pathologist
Murchison for a detailed report on the condition of Terragar's casualties.
It told him that Captain
Davidson and the two surviving officers were stable, responding to the limited
treatment available in a temporary medical facility, and being maintained on a
regimen of IV feeding and heavy sedation. Personally, it felt that the
quarantine arrangements between the patients and the ambulance ship were
totally unnecessary, and a rapid casualty transfer to Rhabwar and a fast return
to Sector General for more aggressive treatment were indicated. It ended by
saying that the inves-
tigation and first-contact
situation with a bunch of intelligent robots was a technical matter and none of
their medical business Prilicla was unable to detect the pathologist's
emotional radiation from orbit, naturally, but he could imagine the intense
irritation and concern it and the rest of the team were feeling for their
patients. He also knew that friend Fletcher would be routinely monitoring all
radio traffic between the ship and the surface so that what he was about to
say would mean that he could not delay speaking to the captain any longer.
"Friend
Murchison," he said gently, "I don't foresee an immediate return to
Sector General because the situation here is becoming more complicated. There
are two other-species casualties on the alien vessel who may also require
attention...."
"Other-species
casualties!" it broke in. "Sir, with respect, we're not running a
bloody robot-repair shop down here."
"You are assuming that
the alien casualties are non-organic life forms," he replied. "That
may not be so. But I have no wish to answer the same questions twice, so keep
your communications channel open and listen in while I talk to the captain. I
can feel friend Fletcher very badly wanting to talk to me."
"You're right,
Doctor," said the captain as he flew onto the control deck a few minutes
later. It gestured towards the communicator whose monitor light was showing
and went on, "What was that all about? Other-species casualties? What did
you find after I left you alone back there?"
Prilicla hesitated, but not
for long because the other's impatience was so intense that it was making him
tremble. He said, "I'm not sure what it was that I found, and even less
sure of what it means...."
Briefly he described the
events following the captain's departure for Rhabwar, the silent but obvious
efforts of the robot crew member to entice him to follow it forward to the end
of the central passageway where he could go no farther, and all that he had
seen, thought, and felt there.
"... On the way
back," he continued, "I decided that I had enough time to spare
before I fell asleep to explore the ship's stern, and followed the passageway all the way aft. The inside of of that
ship is like a three-dimensional spider's web, with thin supporting and bracing
members, open-netting passageways,
and most of all, cable runs
linking the major internal structures. Considering the color-coding on the
majority of the cable looms I saw__especially those linking the microcircuitry
underlying the
ship's outer hull to what
is presumably the control center forward__there are close similarities in the
overall structure to the layout of major organs, musculature, and central
nervous system of an organic life-form. The skin is highly sensitive and we
know how it can react to an attack, or what it thinks is an attack, by an
outside agency.
"We were safe,"
he went on quickly, "because we entered through the damaged hatch, which
is analogous to a traumatized and desensitized surface wound. The forward
structure obviously houses the brain and . .."
"Wait, wait,"
said the captain, holding up one hand. "Are you telling me that the whole
ship is alive? That it's an intelligent, self-willed star-traveling machine
like its robot crew members, only bigger? And that all that stopped you getting
into its computer superbrain—or, from what we overheard you tell Pathologist
Murchison, its two superbrains—was a simple, structural impediment and your
lack of physical endurance?"
"Not exactly,"
Prilicla replied. "There has to be a non-organic interface, but I'm
beginning to suspect that the two controlling brains belong to organic
life-forms, with feelings. I won't be able to prove that until you find a way
of getting me into the brain housing.
I need to go back inside
that ship," he ended, "for an extended stay."
The captain and everyone
else on the control deck were staring at him, their emotional radiation too
complex for indi-ual feelings to be isolated. It was Murchison on the communicator
who broke the silence.
"Sir," it said,
"I strongly advise against this. We're not dealing with ordinary
casualties here ..."
"Define an 'ordinary
casualty,' " said Prilicla quietly.
"... being recovered
from the usual run of space wreckage," it went on, ignoring the
interruption. "This could be—in fact it was, so far as Terragar was
concerned—an actively hostile vessel. Its hyperdrive is out, but otherwise
there appears to be only superficial hull damage. In spite of your theory that
its sensors are only skin-deep, there may be internal booby-traps that could
injure or kill you because you don't understand the technology behind them.
Captain Fletcher is the specialist in other-species technology. At least let
him open up this metal cranium before you go in."
While Murchison had been
speaking, the captain had been nodding its head and radiating agreement.
"I agree with both of
you," Prilicla said. "The trouble is that while the captain is a
topflight solver of alien puzzles, it is not an empath. The moment-to-moment
feelings of the beings we are trying to recover could be a very important guide
to whether or not we are doing the rescue work properly. The captain and myself
will do it together.
"Friend
Fletcher," he said, gently changing the subject, "is the information
you have now enough to send that hyperspace message?"
"Enough for a
preliminary report," the captain replied, radiating anxiety. "My
problem will be making it short enough not to drain our power reserves."
Prilicla was well aware of
the problem. Unlike the detonation of a hyperspace distress beacon, which was
simply a location signal and an incoherent cry for help, this message had to
carry intelligence. It had to carry it in spite of all the intervening sun-spot
activity, charged gas clouds, and other forms of stellar interference that
would be tearing it into incoherent shreds. The only solution that had been
found was to make the message brief
and concise and to repeat
it as many times as the transmitting station's available power would allow so
that a receiver could process it filter out the interstellar mush, and piece
the remaining fragments together to obtain something like the original signal.
A surface station with virtually unlimited power reserves, a major space
installation like Sector General, or even one of the Monitor Corps' enormous
capital ships could send messages lengthy enough for later processing with
clarity. Smaller vessels like Rhab-war had to reduce the possibility of
additional local interference from a planet's gravity field by transmitting
their signals from space, and even then they had to trust to the experience and
intuition of the person manning the receiver.
But the captain was
radiating a level of anxiety greater than that warranted by simple concern over
the wording of a condensed situation report.
"Is the necessarily
compressed wording of the signal your only problem," Prilicla asked,
"or are the two new aliens a complication?"
"Yes, and no,"
the captain replied. "There will be too few words available for me to
include either complicated arguments or reasons for what I want done. Are you
quite sure that the two new ones you found are organic rather than robotic
life-forms? And would you object if the signal expressed doubt on that
point?"
"No, and no,"
said Prilicla. "The emotional contact was tenuous. Perhaps it is possible for
a really advanced computer to have feelings, but there is doubt in my mind.
Something else is worrying you, friend Fletcher. What is it?"
The captain sighed, and
embarrassment diluted its feelings of anxiety as it said, "This whole
situation is potentially very dangerous and, if it isn't handled correctly, it
could develop into a greater threat to the Pax Galactica than the Etlan War...
I mean, police action. I want to order this solar system to be placed
quarantine, interdicted to all service and commercial traffic
and contact forbidden to
all personnel other than those presently on-site. That includes medical
assistance, first-contact specialists or technical investigators, and there
must be no exceptions.
"My worry," it
ended quietly, "is whether or not my superiors will obey that
order."
In spite of its efforts at
emotional control, the captain was radiating a level of concern that verged on
outright fear. Fletcher, as Prilicla knew from long experience of working with
it, rarely felt fear even in situations where it would have been warranted.
Perhaps, considering their initial contact with the outwardly undamaged but
utterly devastated Terragar, the other was frightening itself needlessly. Or,
more likely, it understood the nature of this technological threat better than
could a medic like himself. Either way, it was a time to offer reassurance.
"Friend
Fletcher," he said, "please remember who and what you are. You are
the Corps' most experienced and respected specialist in the investigation of
unique other-species technology, otherwise you would not have been given
operational command of this, the greatest and most non-specialized recovery
vessel ever built. When your superiors consider this fact, I have no doubt that
your orders will be obeyed.
"I'm assuming,"
Prilicla went on, "that the medical team will remain here with Rhabwar
since we are best-suited to solving a unique problem that is both technological
and medical. However, allowances must be made for the natural curiosity of
your higher-ranking colleagues. They will probably send at least one fast
courier vessel for information-gathering purposes, in addition to the ship we
need to transfer the Terragar casualties to Sector General...."
"My point
exactly!" Fletcher broke in, a burst of anger briefly overshadowing its
anxiety. "A quarantine is either in force or it isn't, but for what may or
may not prove to be good, medical reasons, even you are willing to break it.
Everyone must be made to realize that we are faced with the technological
equivalent of a plague. You and your team know this, you've seen what it can
, for yourselves, and still
you are willing to compromise by ..." It raised its hands briefly and
radiated helplessness. "If I can't convince you, what chance is there of a
mere captain and glorified ambulance driver telling fleet commanders and and
higher what to do and making it stick? I don't have enough bloody rank."
"Together, friend
Fletcher," said Prilicla, "we might have enough. I suggest you draft the
signal you wish to send, and if you wouldn't mind, let me see it and perhaps
suggest amendments before transmission with a view to increasing its
effectiveness----
"I'd do that
anyway," the captain broke in angrily, "as a matter of professional
courtesy. But I won't promise to insert your changes. Considering the power
requirements, that signal must be clear, concise, and contain absolutely no
excess verbiage."
"... While you're
doing that," Prilicla went on gently, as if the interruption was a figment
of everyone's imagination, "I'll check on the condition of the Earth-human
casualties before trying to get close enough to identify the two on the alien
ship."
The captain was radiating
feelings of disbelief. "You mean you want to go back in there?"
"As soon as
possible," he replied.
Within the first few
minutes it became clear that he was not urgently required in the medical
station. Terragar's casualties were stable, responding well to treatment, and
showing signs of significant improvement although the grafting, reconstructive
surgery and lower-limb replacements should be done as soon as Practicable at
the hospital. But if he was reading correctly be-tween the lines of dialogue,
there was a problem. Unlike his em-Phatic faculty, intuition was not affected
by distance.
I think there is something
other than the patients' clinical condition worrying you, friend
Murchison," he said. "What is the Problem, and does it require my
presence?"
No, sir," the other
replied quickly. "I'm ashamed to say, the problem is sheer boredom. We're
all cooped up in this bunch of high-tech medical shoeboxes with virtually
nothing to fill our time except watch the patients getting better while outside
the sun is shining, the sea is blue, and the sand is warm. It's as environmentally
perfect as the hospital's recreation deck except that it's bigger and it's
real. Sir, it feels as if we're on vacation but confined to our hotel bedrooms.
"Subject to the usual
safety checks," it went on, "we'd like permission to take turns
exercising and relaxing outside. This really is a lovely place. The casualties
would benefit from the fresh air and sunshine as well, especially if our stay
here is likely to be extended. Is it?"
"It is," said
Prilicla. "Rhabwar will have to remain in orbit to investigate the alien
vessel and its crew, who may themselves be with you soon as casualties.
Permission granted, friend Mur-chison. But remember that this is a completely
strange as well as a pleasant world, so be very careful."
"You, too, sir,"
she replied.
He ended the transmission
as the captain pointed at its own screen and spoke.
"You wanted to see
this before I send it off," it said. "Well, what do you think?"
Prilicla hovered above the
screen for a moment, studying it, then he said, "With respect, friend Fletcher,
I think it is too polite, too subservient, and too long. You should tell your
superiors what you want done, as I will also do, without regard to the high
rank of those concerned. Because of our knowledge of the situation here,
limited as it is, we have the rank. May I?"
He felt Fletcher's
agreement before it could reply, and dropped his feather-light digits onto the
keyboard. The original draft, scaled down, moved to the corner of the screen
and the new one appeared. It read:
TO: GALACTIC FEDERATION EXECUTIVE;
COPIES FEDERATION MEDICAL COUNCIL; SECTOR TWELVE GENERAL HOSPITAL; MONITOR
CORPS HIGH COMMAND; SECTOR MARSHAL DERMOD,
FLEET COMMANDERS, ALL SHIP
CAPTAINS, AND OFFICERS OF SUBORDINATE RANK.
WITH IMMEDIATE EFFECT THIS SOLAR
SYSTEM IS TO BE PLACED IN QUARANTINE.
REASONS: UNIQUE TECHNOLOGICAL
AND/OR MEDICAL THREAT BY DISTRESSED ALIEN SHIP MOUNTING UNIQUE WEAPONRY
CAPABLE OF DESTROYING ALL SPACE VESSELS REGARDLESS OF SIZE OR POWER RESOURCES.
DISTANCE IS ONLY KNOWN SAFEGUARD.
THREE TERRAGAR SURVIVORS RECOVERED.
RHABWAR INVESTIGATING ALIEN SHIP AND TRYING TO CONTACT CREW.
REQUEST TWO COMMUNICATIONS VESSELS
TO BE STATIONED MINIMUM OF FIVE MILLION MILES DISTANCE TO RELAY LATER
INFORMATION AS IT BECOMES AVAILABLE. ALL OTHER VESSELS AND PERSONNEL REGARDLESS
OF SPECIALITY OR RANK ARE EXPRESSLY ORDERED TO STAY CLEAR.
NO REPEAT NO EXCEPTIONS. FLETCHER,
COMMANDING RHABWAR
PRILICLA SENIOR PHYSICIAN, SECTOR
GENERAL
For a long moment the
captain stared at the screen while it regained control of its feelings, then it
said reluctantly, "It's shorter and ... well, better. But Sector Marshal
Dermod doesn't usually receive messages like this from subordinates. He and his
staff will probably have a collective fit. I didn't realize, Doctor, that you
could be so, so .. ."
"Nasty?" said
Prilicla. "You're forgetting, friend Fletcher, that your sector marshal is
halfway across the Galaxy, and I am unable to detect its emotional radiation
over interstellar distances."
It was a rule of
interspecies medicine to which no exception had ever been found that pathogens
which had evolved on one world could not affect or infect any creature
belonging to another. There was nothing in this world's microbiology, therefore,
that could threaten her. But that did not stop Danalta, in the respectful
manner befitting a subordinate, from insisting that Murchison take no chances
with the life-forms that were large enough to see.
The shape-changer had
already scouted the beach, shallows, and the trees and undergrowth inland to a
distance of five hundred meters, for evidence of large and possibly harmful
life-forms. A few varieties of water-breathing and amphibious creatures inhabited
the shallows, tiny animals and insects crawled or flew among the tree roots and
branches, but none of them were large enough to constitute a physical threat.
This did not mean that they could be completely ignored. Pathogens could not
jump the off-world species barrier, Danalta reminded her unnecessarily, but
insects secreting organic toxins in poison sacs were capable of delivering
painful if not lethal stings, the crablike sea-dwellers could nip, and all of
them, should they feel threatened or hungry enough, could bite.
That was why she was
walking along a golden beach without the gentle abrasion of hot sand between
her toes while, " from her
uncovered face and the backs of her bare hands, much of the sun's heat was
being reflected away by her white rails In this situation she would have
preferred to wear much and the other members of the team would neither have
cared or noticed if she had worn nothing at all because Earth-humans were one
of the few intelligent species with a nudity taboo. The others covered
themselves only when their working environment required the wearing of body
protection. In spite of her advancing years, Peter kept telling her with
maximum ardor and minimum poetry—and when his brain was not so busy with
other-species mind partners that he was unsure of who and what he was and why
they were lying together—that she was in very good shape.
She wished he were with her
now, under this real sky rather than the artificial one on the hospital's
crowded recreation deck, with his mind his own, its professional concerns
forgotten, and his attention concentrated entirely on her. But, she supposed,
being the life-mate of the renowned Conway, Sector General's
Diagnostician-in-Charge of Other-Species Surgery, had to have a few
disadvantages. He couldn't take a vacation of opportunity like this just
because she wanted to and he probably needed it. She sighed and continued
walking.
Beside her Danalta rolled
silently over the sand. In keeping with the occasion, and because it liked to
give gratuitous exhi-'itions of its shape-changing prowess, it had adopted the
form a recreational plaything much-favored by Earth-humans, a large beach ball.
It was covered overall by triangles of garish red, - yellow and blue; the eye,
ear, and mouth were inconspicuous -. the visual effect was quite realistic, but
the track that it made in the sand was
too deep to have been made by an air-filled ball. Danalta regardless of the shape it took, was unable to reduce
its considerable body-weight. The pretty ball would never bounce. Would you
like to move inland?" said
Danalta, stopping suddenly an<} extruding a bright green, Earth-human hand
and index finger to point. "That hill is only a mile away and seems to be the
highest point on the island. From there we might be able to see features of
special interest to explore later, and possibly the nearer islands."
As well as being a
show-off, the polymorph was intensely curious about everything regardless of
shape or size, and the harder it was to mimic, the better it liked it.
"Fine," said
Murchison. "But in case we're needed urgently I want to stay as close as
possible to our patients. There's a stream that runs past the med station into
the sea. We'll go back and follow it inland to its source, which should be on
high ground. Do you agree?"
It was a rhetorical
question, and even though she wasn't in the habit of pushing her rank, they
both knew it. For the first hundred meters or so, the nearby environment could
have been that found on any sun-drenched, tropical island on her home world.
The stream was less than two meters wide but fast-flowing so that the stones on
its bed were washed clean and showed many different colors and patterns of
veining. It was only when her walk, and Danalta's roll, took them inland and
under the trees that the
differences began to
show. The chlorophyll-green of
the leaves looked the same but the shapes were subtly different as was the soft
carpet which was not of grass that grew along the banks of the stream from damp
earth that was not of Earth. A little shiver of pure wonder made her twitch her
shoulders, as it always did when she encountered a completely alien planet
that looked and felt so entirely familiar. Then as they moved deeper under the
trees, the amount of vegetation bearing large, sunflower-like blooms increased.
The petals on many of them had dropped away to reveal clusters of pale green .
fruit buds. There would be no problem with cross-pollination here, she thought
as the insects began to swarm.
Very definitely they were
like nothing on Earth. They ranged in size from the virtually invisible to
several stick-insect varieties whose bodies were nearly six inches long. A few of them
were rounded, black and shiny, with wings that beat so rapidly that they seemed to be surrounded by
a grey fog, but
majority were brightly
colored in concentric circles of yellow and red with multiple sets of wide,
slower-beating gossamer wings that threw back constantly changing, iridescent
highlights.
They were gorgeous, she
thought, and some of them made even Prilicla look dowdy.
Most of them were heading
towards Danalta, obviously attracted by the garishly colored beach-ball body
it had adopted.
"They seem to be
curious rather than hungry," said the shape-changer. "None of them
has tried to bite me."
"That's sensible of
them," said Murchison nervously as they lost interest in Danalta and began
moving towards her. "Maybe they've realized that you're
indigestible."
"Or I have the wrong
smell," it replied. "I've just now extruded an olfactory sensor pad.
There are a lot of strange smells in this area."
Smells, Murchison thought,
was not the word she would have used to describe them. The subtle combination
of scents being given off by the aromatic vegetation around them was something
that the fashion perfume houses on Earth would have sold their souls for. But
the insects were now homing in on her.
Instinctively she wanted to
swat them aside, but knew that might make them excited and hostile. Instead she
raised one hand very slowly to her opened helmet visor so that she could snap
it dosed at the first sign of an attack. Her hand remained there, tense and
motionless, for several minutes while the insects large and small swarmed
around her head without actually touching her race, until they lost interest
and returned to their own concerns.
Relieved, she lowered her
hand and said, "Apparently they're
non-hostile, They don't want to bite Earth-human DBDGs, either."
Which meant that, should
their stay on this island paradise be delayed for any reason, the Terragar
casualties could be moved outside for a few hours every day. She had always
been a believer in the efficacy of natural fresh air and sunshine in the
post-on treatment of casualties, a form of treatment not available in Sector
General.
Puzzled, she said, "No
animal or insect species, regardless of its size, can be universally friendly
and hope to survive. These seem to be the exception that proves the rule. Let's
move on."
The ground began to rise
gently, the trees opened out into a large clearing and the stream became a
wide, shallow pool whose bottom was covered by broad-leafed plants, each of
which floated a single, radiant bloom on the surface, and they saw their first
non-insect life-form.
Three fat, piglike animals
with mottled yellow-and-brown skin, narrow, conical heads, and sticklike legs
were wading in the shallows, nibbling at the flowers or pulling up the
subsurface greenery. When Murchison's shadow fell across them they made
bleating noises and ran splashing up the bank to disappear into the long
vegetation that was not grass. From all over the clearing and under the
surrounding trees came the sound of more bleating, and a much larger version
of the same animal pushed through the greenery to stand and look at them for a
moment before apparently losing interest and moving away.
"That must have been
Mama or Papa," said Murchison. "But have you noticed, even the adult
life-form is placid and unafraid and without aggressive tendencies or obvious
natural weapons, and so far we've seen no sign of any predators or prey.
Prilicla would just love this place. Have you seen any signs of
bird life?"
Murchison went down on one
knee and shaded her eyes with both hands in an attempt to reduce sky reflection
while she studied the subsurface features more closely. A few minutes later she
stood up again.
"None," said
Danalta, "but one must expect strangeness on a strange planet. Are you
ready to move on?"
The ground ahead began to
slope more sharply, and a few minutes
later they found the natural spring that was the source
of the stream bubbling out
of a crevice in the ground that was showing several flat outcroppings of rock.
The trunks and branches of the trees competing for the green areas between them
were stunted and carried fewer blossoms and buds so that the insect population
was proportionately diminished. But it was still a beautiful and relaxing
place, especially with the breeze off the ocean finding its way through the
thinning vegetation and cooling her face. Murchison took a deep breath of
fresh, scented air and let it out again in a sound that was a combination of a
laugh and a sigh of sheer pleasure.
Danalta, who found no
pleasure in fresh air, smells, or environmental beauty, extruded a pointing
hand and said impatiently. "We're within fifty meters of the highest
point of the island."
The rounded summit was
covered sparsely by trees, but not enough of them to obstruct their all-around
view over the island. Through the gaps in the intervening foliage, Murchison
could make out tiny areas of ocean, beach, and a section of the white
medical-station buildings. A scuffling sound on the ground made her swing
around to look at Danalta.
Its beach-ball
configuration was collapsing, flattening out and spreading across the ground
like a mottled red, yellow, and green pancake. Suddenly it rolled itself up
into a long, cylindrical, caterpillar shape with a great many legs, before
heading for the highest tree. She watched as it wound itself around the lower
trunk corkscrew-fashion and began to climb rapidly. The view from up there will
be much better," it said.
Murchison laughed and moved
to follow it. Silently she was calling herself all kinds of a fool because if
she were to become -Casualty through falling out of a tree she would never live
it down. But she was feeling like a
child again, when tree-climbing had figured high among her accomplishments, and
the sun was shining and all was right
with this world and she just didn't care.
"Earth-human DBDGs can
climb trees, too," she said. "Our prehistoric ancestors did it all
the time."
A few minutes later she was
as close to the top as it was safe to go, with one arm wrapped around the trunk
and a branch that looked strong enough to bear her weight gripped tightly between
her knees. Danalta, whose latest body-shape enabled it to distribute its
weight more evenly than her own, was clinging to the thinner branches a few
meters above her. The view over the island and beyond was perfect.
In all directions they
could see across the dark green, uneven carpet of treetops and clearings to the
ragged edges where it met the beach. The medical station looked like a
collection of white building-blocks standing in the dark, lengthening shadows
of approaching evening, and the ocean was empty except for a tight group of
pale blue swellings that were probably the mountaintops of a large island that
was below the horizon. Danalta extruded an appendage to point slightly to one
side of the distant mountains.
"Look," it said.
"I can see a bird. Do you?"
Murchison stared hard in
the indicated direction. She thought she saw a tiny, fuzzy speck almost
touching the horizon, but it could just as easily have been her imagination.
"I can't be sure.
..." she began, and broke off to stare at the thick cylindrical member
that was growing out of the top of Danalta's head. "Now what are you
doing?"
"I'm maximizing my
visual acuity," it replied, "by positioning a lens of long focal
length the required distance from my retina and making small focusing adjustments.
Since the material is organic and the viewing base is moving perceptibly in the
wind, some distortion is to be expected, but I'm sure that I can resolve the
image to show . . ."
"You mean you're
growing a telescope?" she broke in. "Dr. Danalta, you never cease to
surprise me."
"Definitely some kind
of bird," it said—obviously pleased at the compliment—and went on,
"with a small body, wide, narrow wings and a triangular tail whose outer
edges are uneven. At this distance the size is uncertain. It appears to be dark
brown or grey in color and non-reflective. It has a short, thick neck but I
cannot resolve any details of the head and there are no other body projections,
so presumably its legs are folded for aerodynamic reasons. The wings do not appear
to be beating and it seems to be soaring on the air currents. It is close to
the horizon and shows no sign of dropping below it.
"Birds did not evolve
on my home planet," it went on, "but I have studied the various
species with a view to possible mimicry. So far, the general appearance and
behavior of this one resembles that of a carrion-eater found on your own
planet. At this range anything else I could tell you would be mostly
guesswork."
"Let's go back to the
station," said Murchison quietly. "I want to be there before
sunset."
Danalta had spotted the
planet's first bird, she thought, as she climbed to the ground, and it seemed
to be the equivalent of an outsized vulture, with all that that implied. It was
silly to feel so disappointed just because this perfect-seeming world had shown
its first imperfection.
CHAPTER 14
Captain Fletcher and
Lieutenant Dodds were being extremely careful, Prilicla noted with approval,
and displaying a level of vigilance that elevated caution to the status of a
major art form. Phis time they were using Rhabwar's pinnace, a vehicle normally
used for evacuating space-wreck casualties whose condition was lot serious
enough to require litters, to move a variety of specially insulated test equipment
to a more convenient distance from the investigation site. All of the analyzers
had one or more backups, in case they probed a sensitive area and the alien
ship killed the instrument stone-dead as it had done to Terragars sensors.
Not for the first time the
captain was reminding them that he test instruments and even the pinnace were
expendable, but lot the people using them, which was the reason why they were
wearing insulated, self-powered spacesuits.
Rhabwar maintained its
distance with a communications channel open while they edged to a stop a few
meters above the damaged area of the alien's hull, then tethered their vehicle
loosely to it with a simple magnetic pad attached to a non-onducting cable.
"Sir," the
lieutenant said as they were exiting the vehicle, ;Dr. Prilicla says that this
damaged area of hull—what it calls he surface wound—has apparently become
desensitized to outside stimuli and we can safely make contact there. But
shouldn't we check to make sure that other areas haven't been affected due to a
power leakage or other deterioration in its sensor circuitry? I suggest making a few random tests. It
might be that this metal carcass is dead by now and our precautions are wasting
time."
"If it can be done
without you killing yourself, Lieutenant," said the captain, "then do
it. You agree, Doctor?"
"Yes," said
Prilicla. "That information would be helpful, friend Dodds. Especially if
you can find another access hatch that is closer to the ship's brain section.
From here we'll have to travel the internal walkways for more than half the
length of the ship. But be very careful."
"Of course," said
Dodds. "This might be the only life I've got."
They watched as it
positioned its powered suit a few meters from the hull and began the first
slow, lateral circuit of the ship that became a spiral leading forward. Several
times the lieutenant disappeared from view and Prilicla felt the captain's
controlled worrying, but Dodds was in sight when it made its find.
"Sir," it said
excitedly, "I've found what could be a cargo loading hatch. It's about ten
meters in diameter, flush-fitting, and the joins are so fine I almost missed
them. Inset is a two-foot rectangle, that looks as if it might give access to
the actuator controls. Along one side there is a group of three recessed buttons,
but I won't touch them until I have some idea of what they do and, in case
they're booby-trapped in some way, the order in which they should be pressed.
I'm moving closer with the sensor now. The magnetic pads are holding it to the hull.
I've switched on- So far, no response from the ship."
The captain's level of
worrying peaked then began to sub-side. It didn't speak.
"I'm using minimum
power on the sensor," the lieutenant went on, "so the image I'm
getting is by induction rather than direct contact with the underlying
circuitry, and pretty vague.
The wiring is complex, and
active. To trace the leads to the three actuator buttons, I'll need to clarify
the picture by using a little more power.... Bloody hell, the ship just did a
Terragar on it! I'm sorry, sir, we need another K-Three-thirty sensor. This one
just died."
"Don't worry about
it," said Fletcher. "It's expendable You're not. Continue your search
aft, report anything you find and then get back here and follow us inside.
We'll have to go in the long way."
To Prilicla it went on.
"This vessel's weapons system baffles me. So far there has been no sign of
missile launchers, focused radiation projectors, or anything that might be an
other-species equivalent. They could still be there and I just didn't recognize
them, but... I'm reminded of a porcupine."
Prilicla didn't ask the
obvious question because he knew it would be answered when the other's thoughts
stopped moving too fast for any possible verbal communication. They were inside
the ship at the first junction of the netting walkways and turning in the
direction of the control section before the other spoke.
"It is a small,
non-sapient Earth life-form," the captain went on, "with a soft body
that has no natural weapons of attack, but it possesses an overall covering of
body-spines that are long and sharp enough to discourage predators. If that was
the situation here, then killing Terragar's operating systems could have been a
mistaken act of self-defense because the aliens didn't know our ship was simply
trying to give assistance."
"A not entirely
comforting theory, friend Fletcher," said Prilicla. "It infers that
there are other species, or perhaps other members of their own species, who
wanted to attack it. Why? Do they consider it a threat of some kind, or their
prey? Either way, they were able to inflict heat and blast damage. Remember, offensive
weapons were used against this vessel."
"I know," said
the captain. It continued pulling itself along the netting for a moment before
it added, "But I'm beginning to wonder about that, too."
It did not elaborate
although its emotional radiation was characteristic of a mind engaged in
intense cerebration. Dodds reported finding another large hatch, presumably
used for load-ing fuel or cargo, close to the stern thrusters, then it rejoined
them while they were still halfway along the central walkway and heading
forward. There it was that a robot crew member—perhaps the same one, Prilicla
suggested quietly, or maybe it was the only one—emerged from a side walkway and
began pulling itself rapidly along the netting to meet them. It stopped about
five meters from the captain, who was in the lead, and spread itself out
starfish-fashion with its six hands gripping strands of the netting and barring
their path towards the control section.
"The last time this
happened, Doctor," Fletcher said, "you were alone, you gave it a
gentle push, and it moved back. Presumably the action was not meant as an
obstruction so much as a warning to move carefully. Do you agree? I'll try a
very gentle push, with my feet. In case it tries to shock me, my boots have thicker insulation."
The captain moved close,
spread out its hands to grasp the netting on both sides to stabilize itself,
then very slowly and carefully brought its feet forward to stop a few inches
from the center of the robot's body. Its push was gentle to the point of
imperceptibility.
There was no response. It
pushed a little harder, then with steadily increasing pressure, but the robot
only clung more tightly to the netting without moving back an inch.
"Friend
Fletcher," said Prilicla, "move back a little and let me past."
Without speaking but
radiating puzzlement and impatience, the other did so and flattened itself
against the netting while Prilicla' s pressure globe squeezed past. A few
seconds later he touched the robot's body gently. Immediately it released its
grip on the netting and moved back slowly towards Control. Prilicla likewise,
but as soon as Fletcher and Dodds began to follow him it barred the way again.
The meaning of its action was plain.
"Why will it allow you
past and not us?" said the captain "Does it think Earth-humans are
stronger and more of a physical threat to it than a Cinrusskin? It's right, of
course. But I've made no threatening moves towards it or ... I don't understand
this." "Maybe it doesn't like you, sir," said Dodds, laughing
nervously, "because your feet's too big."
Fletcher ignored its
lieutenant's insubordination as well as the anxiety that had caused it, and
said, "With respect, I don't intend to wait here doing nothing while you
and your robot friend socialize. Dodds and I will follow you to the next intersection,
then we'll try to find other walkways that will take us around to the control
section. Earlier you suggested that our metal friend might be the only
surviving crew member. If you're right, then it can't bar our movements and
stay with you at the same time. Keep your communicator channel open at all
times, Doctor, and have fun."
The robot hesitated in
obvious indecision when the two officers turned into a side walkway, although
Prilicla could not detect the emotional radiation that should have accompanied
it at such short range. But its movements were communicating feelings—someone
or something else's feelings—in a subtle form of body language that he could
read. There was a tenuous wisp of emotional radiation in the area, much too
faint to be readable, and he was now quite sure that this robot was a highly
sophisticated construct of limited intelligence which was little more than the
hands and eyes of an entity who, for reasons still to be discovered, could not
move.
But if he was being seen or
his presence sensed in some other fashion through this robot, it or they might
have their own reasons other than sheer physical size why they preferred the
close approach of a Cinrusskin to that of Earth-humans. In which case it might
even be possible, considering the robot crew member's lack of hostility, that
they wanted to make contact with him.
That was why, when he
reached the point of his previous closest approach to the control section when
fatigue had forced turn to
Rhabwar, he stopped to hang motionless with one f\ holding lightly onto the
netting. The robot did the same. For a moment he looked at the small, recessed
panel with three colored buttons, which was plainly the actuator for » nearby
door, then with his free hand he reached forward slowly to bring a digit to a
stop one inch above each but-n in turn, then he withdrew the hand and used the
same finger to point at the robot. He repeated the process several times
before the crew member reacted. It moved back quickly the way they had come, to
stop at and block the nearest walkway
intersection.
Bitterly disappointed, he
thought, Now it doesn't want me here for some reason. Or did it? The background
emotional radiation was still too tenuous for clear definition, but he could
not feel anything that resembled strong rejection.
"Friend
Fletcher," he said into the communicator, "I have a feeling that I
may be about to make progress. But the robot, or the agency presently directing
it, is uneasy and has placed it on guard at the entrance to the walkway you and
friend Dodds are using. Our radio traffic must be detectable so they know that
I'm talking to you although they won't know what I'm saying. That will have to
wait until we're able to program our translation computer for their language,
which will be a separate problem. But right now I want to reassure these people
by appearing to give you orders which you will plainly be obeying without delay
or question. Will you comply, friend Fletcher?"
What orders?" said the
captain in a guarded voice. To vacate the forward section of the ship,"
said Prilicla, and move back to the place where we came on board. We must it
plain that you are no longer investigating the control Please do that
immediately."
But temporarily," said
the captain firmly. "This ship is crammed with unique technology which
includes a weapon that threaten the peace and stability of the Federation. It
has to be investigated."
'Of course, friend
Fletcher," said Prilicla, "but not now.
"Very well," the
other replied, radiating equal levels of ir-ritation, disappointment, and
impatience. "I won't promise not to look around back there, especially at
the circuitry of the hull sensors. But don't worry, we won't do anything to
worry your robot friend. And if you should get into trouble, Doctor, there's
something you should know.
"From where we are
now," it went on before he could respond, "we have a clear view
through the netting of a strongly supported, square-sectioned metal-walled
passageway leading from the big forward hatch that Dodds found to Control. I'd
say it was used to load bulk consumables or heavy equipment. Internally, the
structure shows no sign of the circuitry that underlies the hull. So if you
should need help quickly, we can cut a way into the passageway and get into
Control by the back door. I don't think a computer virus could travel up the
flame of my cutting torch.
"Keep this channel
open, your recorders on at all times, and be careful," the captain ended,
its feeling of concern for him making it give unnecessary warnings. "We're
moving back now."
Prilicla watched as they
withdrew towards the stern. When it was clear that they were not intending to
double-back to Control, the robot moved back quickly to Prilicla and the actuator
panel. This time he could sense no hesitancy in its body language, or that of
its controller, as it began tapping keys. He was noting the colors and sequence
for future reference when the forward wall became a large door that began
sliding into a recess.
When it was fully open,
bright orange lighting units placed at two-meter intervals and recessed into
what was presumably the ceiling came to life along the length of another
passageway that stretched ahead for close on thirty meters to another intersection.
All four surfaces were opaque, made either from metal or hardened plastic, and
covered with netting where it was not interrupted by transparent access
hatches. Deliberately he moved them slowly so as to give his vision pickup and
himself a past then to see what lay on the other side. Through one he had a
Shortened view of the passageway leading from control to the hull that Fletcher had mentioned earlier, but mostly
there were only regimented tangles of color-coded wiring. He was sensing faint
but definite feelings of uncertainty and impatience from somewhere.
.
As he reached the
intersection the robot remained clinging to the netting of the surface facing
him. It made no move to guide him or block his way, so it seemed that the
choice of direction was being left to him. Prilicla was aware of two distinct
sources of emotional radiation, both of them organic. The robot followed him as
he moved into the side passage on his right and towards the stronger of the
two. The passage ended at another door and actuator panel.
The source of emotional
radiation strengthened almost to the level of readability.
Again he positioned his
hand a few inches from the panel and, without actually touching the buttons,
moved his index finger from one to the other in the same sequence the robot
had used while opening the first door, then waited. Hopefully he was displaying
intelligence and memory as well as asking permission to proceed.
If the combination on this
door was different, and it was booby-trapped and he was being allowed to make a
mistake, then he might not survive the experience. The robot moved closer to
him but it did not interfere. He pressed the buttons, the door slid open, and
he moved slowly into the middle of another shorter, brightly lit passageway,
then stopped.
His emotional radiation was
so confused that for a long moment he could scarcely analyze it himself.
"Are you getting
this?" he said finally.
"Yes, Doctor,"
Haslam's voice replied from Rhabwar. It sounded excited. "But remember
to—"
"Getting what?"
the captain's voice broke in impatiently.
"I don't know,
sir," Haslam replied. "You'd have to see it for yourself. And Dr.
Prilicla, please remember to move your head and your helmet vision pickup very
slowly, and hold it steady on each area you are describing. In case of, well,
accidents. it’s very important if we're to
have sharp images for later”
Prilicla was well aware of
that fact, but perhaps the other was trying to reassure both itself and himself that he wouldn't be speaking
for posterity.
He ignored the remark and
went on. "As you can see, the surfaces of the walls, floor, and ceiling of
this stretch contain more transparent hatches than there are opaque surfaces,
and there is a major change in the configuration of the netting. It is no
longer attached to the wall surfaces and has instead been replaced by what
appears to be a light, open-lattice metal cylinder. It runs along the center of
the passageway, is strongly supported at each end and, I would say, forms a
convenient working position for crew members needing access to the systems
behind the transparent hatches. Between the cylindrical net and the transparent
hatches there isn't much room for maneuvering ..."
But then, I don't need
much, he added silently.
He moved forward along the
cylindrical net in a slow spiral so as to cover all the inner surfaces of the
passageway, speaking as he went. At one particularly large transparent panel he
moved a hand close to its actuator buttons without touching them. Immediately
the robot moved closer to nudge the hand away. He braced himself against the
net and pressed his helmet and vision sensor firmly against the transparency.
The robot did not react. Plainly this is a case of 'Look but don't touch,' he
went on.
"The wiring behind
this panel is similar to that in the damaged robot crew member we found on
Terragar. I'm holding the vision pickup
motionless against the panel so that you'll be able to use high
magnification on the image . . ."
I am," said Haslam
with enthusiasm. "That looks good,
Doctor, whatever it
is." -ere was an impatient sound of an Earth-human throat
" - cleared and the
captain said irritably, "Dammit, will I have to go back to Rhabwar to find
out what you're doing here?" Prilicla didn't reply at once because he had
moved to an-
other panel. Even though
the view revealed mechanisms and con nections much cruder in design and
fabrication than the previous one, once again his hand was pushed away from the
actuator mechanism.
He continued to describe
clearly everything he was seeing and thinking, but not what he was feeling. The
emotional radiation in the area was strengthening as he moved towards the
other end of the passageway, but it was not yet clear enough to describe even
to himself.
"... This area appears
to be dedicated to complex plumbing," he continued. "There are
single and grouped pipes, from half an inch to two inches in diameter and
distinctively color-coded. The fact that I was gently discouraged from opening
the access hatch is a measure of their importance. I can't remember seeing
piping with these codings on the way here. This makes me suspect that they are
a local phenomenon, and probably the conduits and metering devices for the
crew's air supply, water, or whatever other working fluid they use, and their
food. Now I'm moving closer to another large door and actuator panel at the
other end of the passageway and will try to open it.... No, I won't."
While he had been speaking
the robot had swarmed along to the opposite side of the cylindrical net and
interposed its body between Prilicla and the actuator panel. Gently he slowly
extended a hand and tried to move it aside.
It resisted strongly but
took no other action.
"Interesting," he
said. "Apparently it trusts me, but not enough to let me go all the way
in." To the captain he went on, "Friend Fletcher, earlier you
mentioned returning to Rhabwar to see what I am doing. Are you and the
lieutenant engaged on anything of vital importance at the moment?"
"We're investigating
the interior hull circuitry and the leads to the power source aft. But the
short answer is no, so stop wasting time being polite. What do you want me to
do?"
"I want both of you to
go back to Rhabwar," said Prilicla, «and await further instructions...
."
"That means leaving
you alone here," the captain broke in. »I don't feel happy about
that."
" Depending on how
well things go here," Prilicla continued, ignoring the interruption,
"I want you to send friend Dodds back with the portable holo projector and
the standard first-contact tapes. I detect no strong feelings of personal animosity
here, but if it will make you feel better, then the lieutenant may remain here.
But it must stay well away from the control section. For some reason the
Earth-humans, or maybe just the DBDG body configuration, make these people very
much afraid."
"Not all humanoids are
good guys," said Lieutenant Dodds. "Maybe they ran into some hostile
elements during the Etlan War...."
"The Etlan police
action," Fletcher corrected automatically, and went on. "They could
have had a bad experience with Earth-human look-alikes during the hostilities,
or have entirely different reasons that we don't yet understand. But Doctor,
are you saying that you're ready to open communications with them?"
"I'm ready to
try," said Prilicla.
He moved his helmet as
close to the door as the robot would allow, then closed his eyes and tried to
empty his mind of all distractive thoughts and feelings except for the tenuous
fog of emotional radiation that he was trying to isolate and identify.
As he had expected from a
survivor of a wrecked ship, the strongest
emotions were negative. There was fear that was being controlled with difficulty, and a deep, corroding
despair and concern that might or might not be personal, and pain. The pain was
not the acute form characteristic of trauma, although there as a little of that
present, too. It seemed to be more emotional than physical, and associated with
a feeling of imminent loss. But within that dark fog there was a pale glimmer
of curiosity, and wonder, trying
to shine through.
It was time Prilicla shone
a little light of his own. Literally Describing aloud what he was doing and
thinking, he began switching on and off his helmet spotlight, low enough to be
barely perceptible by his own eyes at first, then gradually increasing the
intensity. He didn't want the alien survivor to mistake the light for a weapon,
but he also wanted to know if he was being seen through the robot's eyes or if
there were other visual sensors in operation. When he began to detect feelings
of physical discomfort that were characteristic of sensory overload, presumably
a reaction to a light that was now dazzling it, he reduced the brightness until
its feeling of discomfort went away. Next he began flashing his light in an
attempt to transmit intelligence in a form that he hoped the other should
understand—simple arithmetic.
One flash of light followed
two seconds later by another, then two flashes in rapid succession. He repeated
the process with three, four, and five flashes as he tried to demonstrate
simple addition as well as his own possession of intelligence. A change in the
other's emotional radiation, a sudden feeling of interest, an understanding
combining with the background curiosity, told him that he had succeeded.
It was an immediate and
present response to his first attempt at communication, but now he needed to
know if he could continue the process at long range.
"Friend
Fletcher," he said, "you've seen and know what I've been doing. I'm
going to stop using my helmet light. Instead I want you to duplicate the
sequence and timing, but using your ship's external hull lighting. I won't be
able to see Rhabwar from here, so please tell me as soon as you begin."
"Right, Doctor,"
said the captain. "I'll need a moment to ... You've got it."
He didn't need the other's
words because the survivor was reacting exactly as it had done to his helmet
light, although the curiosity it was radiating was becoming tinged with
impatience.
Plainly it was wondering
what he was going to do next. That made two of them.
"Thank you, friend
Fletcher," he said. "You can stop signaling now."
He had expected but was
still relieved at the confirmation that the visual communication could be
continued from the ambulance ship, either by himself or—if he was undergoing
one of his frequent periods of regenerative unconsciousness—by one of the
others. But abruptly his relief was obliterated by a sudden explosion of fear
from the survivor. Even the movements of its robot had become agitated.
"I'm not doing
anything," he said sharply into his communicator. "What's happening
out there?"
"Nothing much,"
the captain replied promptly. "In order to save time loading and
off-loading it from the pinnace, Dodds is using his suit thrusters to bring the
holo projector to you. It's an awkward piece of equipment but he can manage; in
fact he's about to land on the hull as we speak. ..."
"Dodds," said
Prilicla urgently, "don't move! The alien survivor is terrified. Turn
back until I can find out why."
But he already knew why.
The holo projector was a large, intricate, and completely harmless piece of
equipment, but the survivor didn't know that. While its attention was being
directed at Rhabwar's lights, it had seen Dodds, one of the DBDG lifeforrns
which for some reason frightened it, about to land on its
•nip with what it must have
thought was a weapon. Except in the areas where the hull was damaged the ship
had external defenses. Terragar had learned that, to its cost. But now it
seemed there were no comparable internal
defenses.
A porcupine didn't need
spines on the inside.
As well as being sensitive
to others' emotions, Prilicla knew
* he was a good projective
empath. But he also knew that there
was no way to make a being who was in the grip of
intense fear feel good, or at least a little better, without first removing the
source. That was why he
concentrated all of his considerable empathic ability into the projection of
reassurance, sympathy and trust at a level of intensity that he could not
maintain for more than a few minutes. He also gesticulated on the off-chance
that the survivor could understand the gestures he was making while he spoke
into his communicator.
"I'm pointing back the
way I came," he said, "then making
pushing motions with my
hands to give the impression that I'm barring entry to anyone else. By now the
survivor should have seen friend Dodds turning back. I think it's working. The
fear is diminishing...."
Prilicla continued to emote
feelings of reassurance and sympathy until he was forced to stop and rest his
brain for a moment, but by then the survivor's feelings had returned to normal,
or at least to the level they had been before the approach of Dodds. But there
was still concern in the other's mind which was not for itself.
The robot followed close
behind him as he turned and moved out of the passageway, past the T-junction to
the door opposite. It made no attempt to interfere when he pressed the actuator
buttons on the opposite door. As well as being its sole protector, he was
beginning to think that it was the only source of vision that the first
survivor had.
The door opened into
another passageway that was identical in size and layout to the one he had just
left, but there the resemblance ended. Only two of the lighting units came on
as the door opened so that he had to use his helmet light to see through the
transparent access hatches.
"Are you seeing
this?" he said again, unnecessarily. "The plumbing and circuitry in this
area has sustained damage."
"We see it,
Doctor," replied the captain, who must have joined Haslam in control.
"And there are^signs that someone has been trying to effect repairs."
Two of the pipe junctions
had been wrapped in some form of metalized, adhesive tape, but not tightly
enough to prevent a rush of air or vaporized fluid from fogging the joints.
Behind the hatches he could see that many of the visible cable looms showing
patches of heat discoloration, and several had been
ruptured. One group, which bore the color-coding
indicating that it led from the hull sensors, had been pulled apart, opened and
the fine, hair-thin individual strands of wiring fanned outwards in preparation for splicing.
The repair work was nowhere
near completion. Prilicla indicated the areas of damage in turn, pointing at
the robot each time, then he pointed several times towards the damage and to
himself. He was trying to ask two questions— whether the robot was responsible
for the attempted repairs, and if Prilicla would be allowed to help complete
the work. If the robot or its director understood him, there was no way as yet
that they could answer. He moved to the inner door.
It was no surprise that the
robot was there first, its body covering the actuator buttons to bar his
entrance. But for now he would be content to touch the mind rather than the
body on the other side of the door.
The general emotional
texture was the same as he had detected from the other survivor, but the
content was shockingly different. This time there was physical as well as
emotional trauma. He couldn't even guess at what was causing the physical
discomfort, but there was a feeling of constriction, possibly of suffocation,
that was overlaid by fear, despair, and the dreadful, negative emotion characteristic
of utter isolation. He edged a little closer to the door and, as he had done
earlier, concentrated on rejecting reassurance, friendship, and sympathy.
It took longer this time,
possibly because he was tiring again, but finally there was a reaction.
Faintly, through the cloud of Nativity he detected surprise, curiosity, and a
feeling of hope. - began using his helmet light, but there was no change in the
other's emotional radiation. He asked the captain to duplicate sequence with
the ship's lighting. Still there was no response. Friend Fletcher," he
said, hiding his feelings with unemotional words, "I have detected the
presence of a second all survivor. Its emotional radiation suggests that they
are not i contact or presently aware of each other. The first one is distressed
but not seriously injured. The second one, whose sensory and life-support
systems are compromised as a result, I feel sure of it being closer to the
damaged side of their ship, is injured and short of food, air, and water. It is
also deaf, dumb, and blind.
"Full communications
with and between the two aliens must be established as soon as possible,"
he ended, "and both survivors must be extricated and treated without
delay."
"Doctor," said
the captain, "just how will we manage that?" "Thankfully I am
not the specialist in other-species technology, friend Fletcher," he
replied. "I'm returning to my quarters now to rest. Perhaps the solution
will come to me in my sleep.
The Terragar casualties
were progressing well enough to have their litters moved outside for a few
hours each day so that the psychological therapy of fresh air and sunshine
could reinforce the effects of her medication. The sun would warm and relax
and tan the pallor of long service in space from their bodies and, because this
world's ionization layer was intact, there would be no harmful aftereffects.
But she could not spend all of her free time in ministering-angel mode and
saying reassuring things to her patients even though, because of them being
officers and presumably gentlemen, they did not object to her company or
comment on her abbreviated dress. Now that their burns were healing to the
point where there was no longer the risk of her Earth-human pathogens getting
to them, she was not wearing her breathing mask and white coveralls.
Murchison's intention was
to walk completely around the island over the firm sand by the water's edge.
From their first hilltop observations three days earlier, she had estimated
that the trip would take just under two
hours and, while nobody had ever accused her of being antisocial, she would
have preferred to walk alone and avoid having to tell therapeutic half-truths
to a colleague. The casualties had progressed to the stage where they were
becoming restive and worrying less about whether or not the would survive than
how soon the transfer to Sector General for their reconstructive surgery would
take place. Danalta and Nay drad were asking the same questions, which were valid
and deserving of straight answers, but she had no hard information to give
them because she hadn't been given any herself.
When asked, during her
daily report to Rhabwar, the captain had stated that it was a medical matter
and referred her to her boss. Prilicla, in its gentle, inoffensive, but totally
immovable fashion, said that the timing was uncertain because they were trying
to communicate with and extricate two other-species casualties from the alien
vessel, that there were complications and the answer was "not soon."
She had passed this
information on to Naydrad and Danalta but not to the patients. They might be
disturbed by the thought that very soon the two beings who had been responsible
for destroying their ship might be lying in the beds beside theirs.
Obviously Danalta had grown
tired of being a multicolored beach-ball shape and had changed itself into a
more challenging shape, that of a Drambon Roller.
Outwardly it was a perfect
replica of the CLHG physiological classification native to the planet Drambo,
although she doubted that even Danalta could mimic the complex movements of the
original creature's internal organs which enabled it to roll continuously from
the moment of partuition until the end of its life.
Physically, a water-breathing
Roller resembled an animated donut that rotated vertically on its outer edge,
with a fringe of short, manipulatory tentacles sprouting from the inner circumference
and curving outwards on both sides to give balance at slow speeds. Between the
roots of the tentacles she could see that the shape-changer had perfectly
reproduced the series of gills as well as the visual equipment which operated
coeleostat fashion to compensate for its constantly rotating field of vision.
The original life-form had used a gravity feed system for circulation rather
than a muscular pump, which was why they died quickly when
weakness, accident, or an
attacking predator caused them to fall on
their sides and stop rotating. Her first experience of giving CPR. to a
stopped Drambon had been like rolling a floppy, half-inflated ground car's
inner tube around underwater. She laughed suddenly.
"That's very good,
Doctor," she said. "If there were another Drambon on the island, it
would find you irresistible."
Ahead of her, the donut
shape made a right-angle turn, stopped, and bent almost double in a bow of
appreciation at the compliment. Then it melted and slumped into a shapeless
mound of green jelly which sprouted vertically into a tall, erect,
yellowish-pink shape which oozed and melted into a near-perfect,
two-thirds-scale replica of Murchison herself.
It was smaller than she was
because Danalta was constrained by the limits of its own body mass and,
although the detail in the eyes, ears, and fingernails was very good, the edges
of her white swimsuit, hair, and eyebrows merged into the adjacent skin
coloration like the uniform and features painted on a toy soldier. She gave an
involuntary shudder.
Murchison had seen Danalta
take some weird and often repulsive shapes with a minimum of inner distress,
but for some reason this one was making her feel really uncomfortable.
Why don't you go for a walk
up to the hill?" Murchison said, more sharply that she had intended.
"I'm safe enough here on the beach. No insects, no crabs, no fish or
amphibians in the water to crawl out and attack me. You might find something
more interesting to mimic inland."
No danger large enough to
see," said the smaller Murchi-son, "but we're on an alien planet, remember?"
Being reminded of the
obvious had always irritated her, especially-y when, as now, she needed the
reminder. Even so, it was very difficult to believe that this wonderful place
was not on Earth ; She didn't reply
"So far we've seen
only one species of animal," said Danalta, unless the others are hiding
from us, and that one is boring to
mimic. But I sense your
annoyance. I'm sorry. Pathologist, is this body configuration not to your
liking?"
The half-sized Murchison,
with the exception of its communications-and-translator pack, began to subside
like melt ing wax into a pink, sluglike shape with a tiny mouth and a large
single eye. The real Murchison concentrated on looking out to sea.
Apologetically, it went on.
"If you would rather walk alone without distractions, I can take on an
aquatic form and keep pace with you without holding conversation. Or if you
would like to immerse yourself for a while, I can serve as a protective escort,
should one be necessary, although there is no evidence of any threat here, from
the land, sea, or air."
"Thank you," she
said.
That was what she had most
wanted to do since the beginning of today's walk, although, perversely, she
didn't want to appear too eager. As she continued walking, her peripheral
vision showed her Danalta entering the water and spreading out into a fiat,
carpet shape resembling an Earthly stingray with the addition of a high, dorsal
fin which had an eye at its tip to give both lateral stability and all-around
visibility.
She laughed suddenly and
thought, The people I have to work with!
Gradually her path curved
until the waves were breaking over and cooling her feet, then her calves and
around her knees. Her back was to the beach as she suddenly broke into a long,
high-stepping, splashing run, dived in, and began to swim.
The water was cold,
pleasantly so, and so clear that if there had been anything on the sandy bottom
larger than her thumbnail she would have seen it. After a few minutes of fast
swimming, most of it underwater, she rolled onto her back and floated with only
her face above the surface, comfortable in the embrace of an alien ocean which,
on this world as well as on Earth, had been the mother of all life. She was
looking up at the deep-blue sky and thinking that the casualties were well
enough to profit from therapeutic,
closely supervised immersion, when she saw the
There were two of them, not
quite overhead and circling, dipping
and banking slowly to take advantage of rising air currents They were so high,
a few thousand feet at least, that they almost
hidden by the glare from the sun, and at that altitude they could scarcely be
considered a threat. Nevertheless, feeling guilty rather than anxious over the
way she had been enjoying herself, Murchison raised an arm to wave at Danalta,
pointed up at them and then towards the beach.
It was time they returned
to their patients
And even higher above the
birds, in the orbiting Rhabwar, a similar thought was going through the mind of
Prilicla regarding a different set of patients. There was very little that he
could do for them until they had learned to trust not just their physician,
himself, but the DBDGs and their portable equipment of which, for some reason,
they were so afraid, because the specialized knowledge and experience of the
Earth-humans were vital if the treatment that one of them so urgently needed
was to have any hope of success.
"In my cubicle I've
been thinking as well as sleeping, friend Fletcher," he said. "Our
first problem here is one of communication and, more importantly, of reeducation,
but without the use of the portable audio-visual devices that are usual in
first-contact situations. Any such equipment—especially, it seems, when it is
carried by Earth-human DBDGs—is considered a ^eat. It also appears that suit
ancillary equipment such as helmet lights, thrusters, and even our vision
pickups which they may consider too low-powered to be dangerous, is allowable.
That is why I want you to—"
"We are agreed,"
the captain broke in, "that they feel com-ortable with you and are afraid
of us. It must be that physically our
smaller size, physical weakness, and obvious lack of natural make you
much less of a threat to them. Doctor, against
my advice you insist on
going back alone into that ship. not take the first-contact equipment with you?"
"Because," said
Prilicla gently, "I'm not sure whether it iss certain types of equipment,
you DBDGs, or both that they are afraid of. So far, my close presence has been
acceptable to them. Carrying the equipment with me might not be acceptable and
I might destroy their feeling of trust in me. I don't want to risk losing
that."
The captain nodded.
"We know you can detect their emotional radiation and to a lesser extent
project your own feelings of friendship towards them. That is communication of
a sort, but it isn't the same as exchanging the words and concepts necessary
for them to trust the rest of us as well. You have a problem, Doctor. Do you
also have a solution?"
"I may have,"
said Prilicla. "We already know from our simple light signals that they
have visual sensors on the undamaged area of their hull. The solution will
involve my presence inside the control section, where I will be able to monitor
their emotional responses, while you execute the first-contact visuals, highly
magnified and edited to fit our situation, outside the ship. Is this
technically feasible?"
The captain was silent for
a moment, radiating concern for his safety as well as the anticipation of
overcoming a technical challenge; then it said, "So you want me to project
tri-di images into the space between our ships. How big do they have to be?
"At least twice as
large as the other ship, friend Fletcher, he replied. "As yet we don't
know the degrees of resolution of their external visual equipment, so I want
every detail of your display to be clearly visible to all the sensors on that
side of their ship. Can do?"
The captain nodded again
and said, "Modifying the portable equipment to project externally will
take time, Doctor. More than enough time for you to sleep and think again on
the problem, and maybe find a solution that involves a lesser element of
personal risk for yourself."
"Thank you, friend
Fletcher"—ignoring the implied criti-"I enjoy resting, even, and
especially, when it isn't strictly necessary and other people are doing the
real work. But first I must discuss with you the exact content and presentation
of the election we will use, and, second, I need to pick your brains." The
captain radiated a silent mixture of curiosity and caution as if it were
expecting another surprise. It wasn't disappointed.
"In simple,
non-technical terms," he went on, "I would like guidance on how and
what to do in the damaged control section, as if you yourself were doing it.
Naturally this will mean us studying the visual records together."
"It took many years of
training in other-species technology to fill the brain you wish to pick,
Doctor," said the captain, sarcasm thick in its voice and its emotional
radiation. "Is that all?" "Not quite," said Prilicla.
"I'll have to remember to check on the condition of my less urgent,
Earth-human patients. But that will not involve extra work for you."
By the time the captain and
himself had completed their discussion, to the satisfaction of neither of them,
Prilicla got very little additional rest. Before releasing his consciousness
for sleep he called Murchison. The pathologist reported seeing two highflying
birds and, following its brief swim with Danalta, that the sea was safe for
short-term Earth-human occupancy. It said that as Naydrad hated getting its fur
wet and Danalta would be posted to seaward as a probably unnecessary guard, it
suggested that their patients, although not yet ambulatory, would benefit both
Physically and psychologically from a brief daily immersion in the sea followed
by a lengthier exposure to what was for Earth-human DBDGs fresh air and
sunshine. Understanding as he did from long experience of working among them
the emotional attraction that existed between Earth-human males and females, he
knew that the casualties would derive much pleasure from being bathed by an
entity of the opposite sex, and so would his assistant. He acquiesced.
He was dreaming of sunshine
and sand and the soft crashing of the
high, low-gravity waves of his native Cinruss when the idyllic scene was dissolved by the insistent sound of
his com communicator and the voice of the captain.
"Doctor
Prilicla," said the captain. "Wake up, it's show time."
This time Prilicla made the
trip alone, with the pinnace being guided by Haslam to the entry point on
remote control. If the robot crew member or, through its sensors, its superior
noticed the miniature, eye-level repeater screen that had been added to the
interior of Prilicla's helmet, it was not considered a threat because nothing
was done to impede his trip back to the control section. It wasn't absolutely
necessary that he have a picture of what would shortly be going on outside
since Fletcher could have told him about it via his communicator, but words
took time and good pictures were always faster, clearer, and less susceptible
to misinterpretation.
When he was deep inside the
control section he drifted as close as possible to the inner door that would
give access to the least injured of the ship's two organic survivors, a
position where he could
monitor the other's emotional responses with optimum accuracy. The robot
drifted passively less than a meter away. He knew that the tiny metal digits
encircling its body were capable of
ripping open his spacesuit in a matter of seconds, but he also knew or rather he felt fairly sure—that it would
remain passive unless he tried
to open the inner door. "Ready when you are, friend Fletcher," he
said.
A few seconds later an
immediate change in the alien's emotional radiation as well as the image on his
helmet screen told him that, in the space
between Rhabwar and the distressed alien ship, the show had begun.
"It sees the external
image," Prilicla reported excitedly "There are feelings of awareness,
curiosity, and puzzlement."
The captain didn't reply
but one of the other officers laughed softly and said in a voice not meant to
be overheard, "I would feel puzzled, too, if somebody projected the image
of a star field onto another star field."
The projected star field
remained unaltered for a few seconds, then slowly it began to shrink and
condense so that more and more stars moved in from the edges of the
three-dimensional projection until it took on the glittering, unmistakable,
spiral shape of the Galaxy itself.
The survivor's
concentration was now total.
Gradually the fine detail
of the image coarsened, the wisps and streamers of interstellar gas were
erased, and the number of stars was reduced to a few hundred which became large
enough to have been counted individually. One of them was highlighted inside a
circle of bright green and the circle increased rapidly in size until a
stylized representation of the star and its system of planets filled the
projection volume for a few seconds before the image changed again.
The viewpoint zoomed in on
that solar system's inhabited planet, showing the swirling, tattered cloud
formations that could not quite hide the continental outlines. As it swooped
closer and lower it slowed until the viewpoint was giving panoramic views of
the planetary surface, seascapes, ice fields, mountains, tropical greenery,
and great, sprawling cities with their interconnecting road systems. Then the
image was reduced suddenly in size and moved to one side so that it filled only
half of the projection.
The other half displayed an
equally detailed representation of the world's dominant intelligent life-form.
It was the picture of an
enormous, incredibly fragile flying insect with a tubular, exoskeletal body
that supported six sucker tipped pencil-thin legs, four even more delicately
fashioned and precise manipulators, and two sets of wide, iridescent, and
almost transparent wings. The head was a convoluted eggshell so finely
structured that the sensory organs, particularly the two large, lowing eyes
projecting from it, seemed ready to fall off at the first sudden movement. The
head, manipulators—some of them holding tools—and legs were bent or rotated to
demonstrate their limits of movement while the wings wafted slowly up and down
as they broke up and reflected iridescent highlights like mobile rainbows. It
was the picture of a Cinrusskin, one of the race generally held to be the most
beautiful and delicate life-forms known to the explored reaches of the galaxy.
Then the limb motions
ceased, the wings folded away, and the body was suddenly encased in a spacesuit
identical to the one Prilicla wore.
"As well as the
background discomfort, I detect feelings of surprise and growing
curiosity," Prilicla reported. "Go to the next stage."
They had shown a picture of
Prilicla's race first because he had already been seen by the alien casualty
and seemed to be trusted by it. But now its education and, hopefully, its
ability to trust had to be widened.
Next was shown the solar
system, planet, meteorology, rural and city environments of Kelgia, accompanied
by a picture of a single member of its dominant species. The undulating,
multi-Pedal, caterpillar-like body with its silver, continually mobile fur, the
narrow cone of a head, and the tiny forward manipulators, •roused no feelings
of antipathy in the casualty, nor did the similar Material on the crablike Melfan or the six-legged, elephantine
Tralthan life-forms that followed it. But when the Hudlar planet species were
shown, there was a subtle change. Hudla was a heavy-gravity world pulling four
Earth Gs whose nearly opaque atmosphere resembled a thick, dense soup, it was rich in the suspended animal and vegetable
nutrients on which the Hudlars lived.
It was a world of constant storms that had forced its natives to build
underground. Only a Hudlar could love it,
Prilicla thought, and then, not very much.
He said, "Now there
are feelings suggestive of fear and familiarity. It is as if the casualty is
recognizing a habitual enemy To most people, Melfans and Tralthans are visually
more horrendous than the smooth-bodied Hudlars, so it may well be that it is
the planet Hudla itself rather that its native life-forms that is causing this
reaction."
"Is this a guess,
Doctor," said the captain, "or one of your feelings?"
"A strong
feeling," he replied.
"I see," said the
other. It cleared its throat and added, "If your casualty considers Hudla
as something like home, I can feel a certain sympathy for it in spite of what
it did to Terragar. Shall I proceed?"
"Please," said
Prilicla, and the lesson continued.
Showing the planets and
living environments of the sixty-seven intelligent species that comprised the
Galactic Federation had never been their intention because the process would
have been unnecessarily long and this was, after all, a primary lesson. The
widely different types like the storklike, tripedal Nallajims, the
multicolored, animated Gogleskan haystacks, the slimy, chlorine-breathing
Illensans, and the radiation-eating Telfi, among others, were included, but so
also were the DBDG classifications from Earth, Nidia, and Orligia. Those three
were there deliberately because the prime purpose of the lesson was to instill
in the alien casualties a feeling of trust for their Earth-human rescuers.
"It isn't
working," said Prilicla, disappointed. "Every time you showed a DBDG,
regardless of its size or whether it was a large, hairy Orligian, an
Earth-human, or a half-sized, red-furred Nidian, the reaction was the same—one
of intense fear and hatred. It will be extremely difficult to make these people
trust you.
"What on Earth,"
said the captain, "could we ever have done to make them feel that
way?"
"It was not done on
Earth, friend Fletcher," said Prilicla. "Rut the show isn't over yet.
Please continue."
The format changed again.
Instead of showing individual planets and subjects, two- and three-member
groups comprising different species were shown meeting and talking, sometimes
with their children present, or working together on various technical
projects. In some of them they were encased in spacesuits while they rescued
other-species casualties from damaged ships. The pictures' application to the
present situation, he hoped, was plain. Then the scene changed again to show
all of the subjects, forming the rim of wheel and shown in scale, from the
diminutive Nallajims and Cinrusskins, up to the massive Tralthans and Hudlars
of more than ten times that body-weight. At the hub of the circle was shown a
tiny, glittering representation of the galaxy, from which radiated misty spokes
joining it to the individual species on the rim. Then the individual species
were pictured again, this time with all of them displayed as being the same
size, in order, it was again hoped, to illustrate equality of importance.
Several seconds passed. At this extreme range Prilicla could not feel, but he
could imagine the captain's anxiety as it spoke. "Well, Doctor," it
said urgently, "was there a response?" "There was, friend
Fletcher," he replied, "but I'm still trying for an exact analysis of
the emotional radiation. In conjunction with the background feelings of
anxiety, which may be caused by worry over its companion who it can no longer
contact, there -re strong feelings of excitement, wonder, and, I feel sure, comprehension.
I'd say that it understood our lesson."
When he didn't go on, the
captain broke the silence. It said, "I've the feeling that you're going to
say 'but.' "
But," Prilicla went on
obligingly, "every time you showed DBDG, the casualty also radiated deep
suspicion and distrust.These feelings are better than the earlier ones of
intense fear and
blind hatred, but only
fractionally. I feel certain that the casualty still doesn't want you DBDGs
anywhere near it."
For the first time in
Prilicla's long experience on ambulanceship operations, the captain used words
that his translator had not been programmed to accept, and went on. "Then
what the hell am I expected to do to change that?"
Before replying, Prilicla
looked slowly around the compart ment, pointed at one of the transparent
inspection covers, then moved close and began opening it. The robot drifted
nearby but made no attempt to interfere, even when he reached inside and after
hesitating and looking back as if to ask permission for what he was about to
do, he gently touched one of the cable looms. When he replied, he knew that his
vision pickup was showing the captain everything he had been doing.
"In very simple
pictorial terms, we've been talking big," he said, "by telling it
about a few of the Federation's species and the cooperation that exists between
their worlds and in space, like assisting distressed ships and—"
"If you remember my
advice," the other broke in, stressing the last word, "it was to
follow through on the ship-rescue sequence and show the casualties receiving
medical treatment. That, Doctor, would have clearly demonstrated our good intentions."
"And I did not take
your advice," Prilicla replied gently, "because of the possibility of
a misunderstanding. In the present climate of fear and distrust, the emotional
reaction of an alien— who would have been witnessing a multispecies medical
team, which would certainly have included at least one DBDG, carrying out a
surgical procedure on a casually—could not have been taken for granted. We know
nothing about the alien's physiology, environment, or medical practices, if it
has any. It may have decided that we were simply torturing captured casualties.
"You, friend
Fletcher," he said, when the other remained silent, "can do nothing
right now, apart from furnishing me with technical advice when needed. I've
already mentioned this idea to you, and your lack of enthusiasm for it was
understandable-But the time for showing pictures is over. As my Earth-human
gambling friends keep telling me, I must put my money where my mouth is.
"So now," he
ended, "we — or rather, I — must try to reinforce those pictorial lessons
with deeds."
He withdrew his hand
slowly, closed the transparent cover and pointed along the linking passageway
in the direction of the identical compartment on the damaged side of the ship.
Had the robot crew member been an organic life-form, he thought, it would have
been breathing down his neck. But it made no move to hinder him.
In the darkened compartment
he used his helmet light to open inspection panels and look and, if it didn't
look dangerous, to touch the scorched or ruptured cable looms and plumbing
inside all of them in turn. Still there was no interference from the robot. He
was beginning to feel less sure of himself and his ability to do this job when
the captain, demonstrating the strange mixture of empathy and understanding
possessed by Earth-humans, answered his question before it could be asked.
"You should start with
an easy one," said the captain. "High on the upper side of the first
inspection compartment you opened there are two fairly thick wires — one has
what seems to be pale blue insulation, and the other red. If you look carefully
you can see where they make a right-angle turn and disappear through a grommet
into what is presumably the ceiling of your corridor. The force of the
explosion caused a wiring break in one If them at the angle bend. Do you see
the ends of the bare wire Projecting from the torn insulation? Try to splice
it, but be careful :it to touch any metal in the area while you're working.
Your gauntlets are thin and we don't know how much current that °re will be
carrying. You'll need insulating tape to hold the splice together."
"My med satchel has surgical
tape," said Prilicla. "Will that do?”
"Yes, Doctor, but be
careful."
A few minutes later the
splicing operation was complete, the join was insulated, and all the lighting
fixtures in the corridor were on. The robot crew member was moving from one to
the other and, Prilicla hoped, reporting on the completion of one small repair
to the conscious survivor who was its chief. It wasn't much, but he had done
something.
"What next?" said
Prilicla.
"Now comes the
difficult part," said the captain, "so don't get cocky. The other
wiring affected is finer and with more subtle color-codings. Some of the
ruptured strands show heat discoloration, and you must trace these back to an
unaffected area so as to positively identify each end before joining them. The
complexity of the wiring makes me pretty sure that most of these breaks are in
the hull-sensor and internal-communications networks, and if a join were to be
mismatched, we could cause all kinds of trouble. It would be like
short-circuiting your hearing sensors to your eyes. We're in the strange
position of making repairs to systems whose purposes are totally unknown to us.
I wish I was there with the proper equipment to help you. This is going to be
delicate, precise, painstaking, and exhausting work. Are you up to it,
Doctor?"
Don't worry," said
Prilicla, "it's a little like brain surgery."
Even though the captain was
giving him the benefit of its wide-ranging technical expertise and guiding his
hands at every stage, the work went very slowly. An early splicing problem was
that some of the damaged fine-gauge wiring had burned away along several inches
of its length and the missing pieces had to be replaced. There was suitable
replacement material on Rhab-war and the captain offered to bring it himself,
in the hope that he would be allowed to assist Prilicla directly and so speed
up the process.
"Bring some food as
well, friend Fletcher," said Prilicla. I ve decided that it will also save
time if I don't have to return to the ship for meals. Or sleep."
Prilicla waited politely
until the expected objections were becoming repetitious, then said, "There
are risks, of course, but I’m being neither foolish nor foolhardy. My spacesuit
makes provision for the short-term elimination of body wastes, it has a small
airlock attachment for the introduction of food, and in the weightless
condition, padded rest furnishings are unnecessary for comfort. My thinking is
that if we want the survivor to trust us,we
must show that we trust it."
I agree, reluctantly,"
the other replied after a long pause.
"But if I can make it
plain that I'm helping you help it, maybe it will begin to trust me, too."
"That is the general
idea, friend Fletcher," he replied. "But at this delicate stage in
the contact procedure we shouldn't rush things."
"Right," said the
captain. "I'll bring the food, replacement wiring, and some simple,
non-powered tools that I think will help in your work. They will be inside a
transparent container so that the survivor and/or its robot will be able to see
exactly what it is getting. I'm coming now."
But when it was approaching
the alien ship, the emotional radiation of the survivor became apprehensive and
its robot left the compartment quickly on what was obviously an interception
course. Prilicla followed it and, when it was plain that the captain was not to
be allowed to enter the ship, he relieved the other of its package.
"Sorry, friend
Fletcher," he said as he did so, "I'm afraid that you're still
unwelcome here. But I've been thinking about a possible explanation for that,
and for the high sensitivity these people have towards external physical
contact, allied to the strange fact that, in both the ship and its crew robots,
their defenses are ultra-short range. Surely that is a strange type of weapon
to use in space."
"The weapon used
against them was not short-range," said the captain. "It blew a large
hole in their hull and, to a lesser degree, in the defunct crew robot we
examined. But go on."
"During your
show," Prilicla resumed, "I received the feeling that the survivor
was being given information for the first time. There was excitement, wonder,
but a strangely reduced level of surprise. It was almost as if the survivor was
expecting, or maybe just hoping, to meet other life-forms in space. If I'm
right, that would mean that interstellar travel was new to it, or that this was
its first time out and it was exploring, perhaps even searching for the planet
it has found. But when you showed the Hudla sequence, there I detected subtle
changes in its emotions. There was an odd combination of fear, dread, hatred,
and, strangely, familiarity. Hudla is not a pleasant world to people who are
not Hudlars and, I would guess, neither is the survivor's. I realize this is
speculation but I have the feeling that it went out looking for another and
better world. The presence of its ship in close orbit could mean that it found
it."
The other made a gesture of
impatience. "An interesting theory, but it doesn't take into account the
fact that an as-yet unknown agency used an offensive weapon against it."
Prilicla hated telling the
captain that he thought it was wrong, especially at this short range because he
would feel the other's annoyance at full intensity. He said gently, "Are
we quite sure about that? Consider the type of blast damage to the ship and the
robot taken aboard Terragar, and that this species may be new to interstellar
and hyperspatial flight and the distress beacons associated with it. Let's
suppose that they found an uninhabited planet, green and pleasant and without
the violent meteorology of home and that they signaled its position by detonating—not
a distress beacon because if they were new to space they would not expect
rescue—but a similar device that would give an accurate position fix. The
signaling device was untried and it blew up in their faces. That's the one we
suspected might be a weapons discharge. Terragar responded before we could and
needed to detonate its own distress beacon. But the point I'm making is that
the damage to the alien ship might have been accidental and
self-inflicted."
"I think you're
wishing rather than theorizing, Doctor," said the captain; then, after a
moment's thought, "But it's a nice theory. However, it doesn't explain
why their robots as well as their ship have such prickly hides. Plainly they
were expecting someone or something to attack them. And if you still think I'm
wrong, don't waste time being polite about it."
"Their defenses may be
automatic," said Prilicla. The captain did not reply. It was beginning to
have doubts which meant that the reflected annoyance caused by Prilicla':
words would be reduced. He
went on. "Consider the surface design of the ship's outer hull as well as
that of the robot's skin. Those surfaces can be touched without harm by organic
digits or simple, unsophisticated, non-powered tools. If we postulate a dense
or highly disturbed atmosphere on their home world, a thick, protective, and
streamlined covering would be necessary for survival, as it is on the Hudlars'
planet. But suppose they have an implacable natural enemy, perhaps an
intelligent and technically advanced one, and the ship's defensive weapons are
needed only on their environmentally-hostile home planet during the periods of
construction, takeoff, and landing.
"And if their
implacable enemy bears a physical resemblance to you DBDGs," he ended,
"that would explain much."
The captain made an
untranslatable sound. "I suppose we're lucky that they don't have a phobia
about outsized crabs or caterpillars, or six-legged elephants or even large
flying insects," it said, then went on briskly. "About this repair
job, Doctor. There will be considerable physical and mental stress involved.
The quality of any work suffers with the onset of fatigue, whatever the
profession. While your mind is clear, can you estimate how long you will be
able to function effectively before I should remind you to stop for
rest?"
Prilicla gave an estimate
that was on the generous side, knowing that the other would be sure to reduce
it. Nothing more was said until he had returned to the alien's control center,
after which the captain rarely stopped talking, but the words and tone were continually
reassuring.
"... Before its
insulated cover was pulled apart by the accident," Fletcher was saying,
"the cable loom you are working on enclosed ten individual lines. The
magnifier here tells me that they are too fine to carry a dangerous level of
current. But their color-coding is the same as the heavier cables that run to
and spread across the outer hull, so we may assume that they perform a similar
communications and/or sensory function.... Dammit,
I wish I could get in there
with the proper tools. Don't take that as a criticism, Doctor, you're doing
fine."
Prilicla remained silent
because the other had repeated its non-criticism and apology several times in
the last hour, and he was feeling excited and hopeful rather than irritated. An
internal, light-duty sensor and communications circuit was what he had been
looking for because it might mean that he had found the broken connection
between the comparatively uninjured and strongly emoting crew member and its
partner. Putting them in touch with each other again should go a long way to
proving their rescuers' good intentions. Carefully and with the delicacy of
touch possible only to one of his fragile race, he separated, stripped, and
began to splice the severed ends of a wire that was almost hair-thin.
Suddenly he jerked his
hands away as a burst of emotion exploded from the crew member at the other
side of the control center. In spite of the distance it was strong, sharp,
intensely uncomfortable, but brief. It faded within a few seconds and so, thankfully,
did the accompanying feelings of anger.
"What happened?"
said Fletcher sharply. "You jerked your hands away. Are you hurt?"
"No," Prilicla
replied; then after a moment's thought he went on, "I must have joined two
of the wrong wires. It made the survivor, maybe both of them, very
uncomfortable for an instant. The emotional radiation was characteristic of a
sharp, unpleasant sensation, as if someone was to cross our optic nerve with
our aural input then make a loud noise. Sorry, I'll have to be more
careful."
The captain exhaled loudly
and said, "Yes. But it was a natural mistake because all the wiring in
that loom has the same color-coding with subtle variations in shade. The
magnifier's enhanced imaging barely picks them up but your unassisted vision
can't, good as it is. Next time hold the wire ends to be joined where I can see
them clearly for my okay, then, if it doesn't cause
an adverse reaction, shield
the other wires from it while you spray on the insulation. That way you won't
risk a bared, spliced length making contact or short-circuiting against an
adjoining bare wire. Tell me if you've any doubts or problems about anything
you intend doing, Doctor, otherwise carry on. I think you're getting
there."
Prilicla carried on while
the captain furnished technical and moral assistance. There were no more
accidents, but there was an increasing level of emotional radiation emanating
from the survivor on the undamaged section of the control center. It was not
the sharp reaction characteristic of sudden discomfort, but a mixture of fear
and hope so intense that his empathic faculty received it almost as a physical
pain. Then suddenly there was a double explosion of feeling that made him pull
back because his whole body, as well as his hands were trembling. Slowly he
moved to the the inner door that he had not been allowed to enter and placed
his stethoscope against the bare metal.
"Doctor, you've got
the shakes," said the captain urgently. "Is there anything wrong with
you? What's happening?"
"Nothing is wrong with
me," said Prilicla unsteadily as he sought for his customary clinical
calm. "To the contrary, friend Fletcher. The two survivors are now
communicating with each other, presumably via the repaired circuitry. I'm
trying to pick up their language sounds, with a view to programming it into our
translation computer, but I can't hear anything. Possibly there is not enough
air to conduct sound or their speaking and hearing organs are enclosed in some
kind of helmet."
"Almost certainly that
is due to their control sections losing internal pressure," the other said
excitedly. "How are they feeling now?"
"At present their
emotional radiation is complex and confused although it is beginning to
clear," Prilicla replied as he tried to describe feelings that could not
be adequately conveyed in mere words. "There is a combination of relief,
excitement, and concern that is due, I feel sure, to the reestablishment of
interpersonal communication and the up-to-the-minute exchange of information.
That information would include the first survivor's reaction to the things we
have been doing for it as well as a description of the physical condition of
the second survivor which, my empathy tells me, is not good. Something will
have to be done for the second one as a matter of clinical urgency. Underlying
the emotional radiation from both sources, but still strong enough to be
unmistakable, there are feelings of gratitude."
"Good!" said the
captain. "If they're feeling grateful then they must know that you're
trying to help them. But do you think they're ready to to trust us, all of us,
after your good deed?"
Prilicla was silent for a
moment as he concentrated on the two sources of emotional radiation, one of
them attenuated with distance and the closer one faint because of physical
weakness and distress, then he said, "There is still a persistent
background fear in both entities that is due, I feel sure, to the fact that
both of them are now aware of the presence of their feared and hated DBDG
bogeyman. I may be wrong because I'm am empath, rather than a telepath, but I
feel that they aren't yet ready to make friends with their worst nightmare.
Something more must be done to help gain their trust, and my good deed has yet
to be completed."
The captain did not ask the
obvious question because it knew that the answer was forthcoming. Prilicla went
on. "My close-range analysis of the second survivor's emotional radiation
indicates that its body is so debilitated that it barely retains the ability to
think coherently. There is increasing physical discomfort, combined with a
feeling of urgency and intense, personal fear that is characteristic of a being
who is close to terminal suffocation, or dehydration, or both. To complete our
good deed more repairs are needed, to restore their air and working fluid supply."
"So now you've
delusions of being a plumber as well as a electrician," said the captain,
and laughed. "Right, Doctor, what exactly will you need?"
"As before, friend
Fletcher, I need directions," Prilicla replied, "because I have no
idea how to proceed. But first I want to show the robot, who is the eyes for at
least one of the survivors the sections of damaged piping that I'll be trying
to repair or replace. While I'm doing that, you can assess the situation and
tell me what needs to be done and how to go about doing it using replacement
material and basic, non-powered tools from Rhabwar.
"Also," he went
on, "I've noticed traces of vapor around some of the fractured piping in
here, indicating the escape of residual atmosphere or moisture although it
could, I suppose, be the remains of a toxic fluid used in a hydraulic actuator.
While you're assessing the repair requirements with me, I'll bag samples and
use my medical analyzer on it. If it is air or water rather than something
toxic, please reproduce it in bulk and send it over in transparent containers.
If the containers are marked with the same color-codings as that of the supply
pipes we're going to replace, that might further reassure the survivors. Leave
everything loosely tethered to the hull where I came on board for me to pick
up.
"We've fixed it so
that they can talk to each other," he ended, "but the conversation
will be short if one of them stops breathing."
The next two hours he
passed surveying the repair job, identifying the color-codings, and isolating
the fractured piping to be joined. He knew that the work would be less delicate
than splicing the damaged wiring, but the captain had grave doubts about his
ability to perform it.
"This isn't anything
like brain surgery, Doctor," it said. "What you'll need is brute
force rather than delicacy of touch. Your digits were never made to handle
manually-operated metal-cutters, the only kind these people will allow near them,
and heavy spanners. And your body is far too fragile to exert the leverage that
may be required. A pair of Earth-human hands with muscular backup are needed
for this job. I should be in there helping you."
Prilicla did not reply, and
the captain went on quickly, "I'll run another external visual for them,
the one showing ship repairs being carried out simultaneously by several
different species including Earth-humans. After what you've already done for
them, they might be more inclined to forget their DBDG phobia enough to trust
me a little. I'll wear a lightweight suit, with no powered instruments other
than the radio and a small cutting torch, and carry the piping and tools in
transparent containers as you suggested. Working together the repairs will take
a fraction of the time you'd need otherwise, and if one of them is running out
of air ..."
"I'm sorry, that will
not be possible right now . .." he began.
"At least let me try,
Doctor," the other broke in. "I can be over there with all we'll need
in less than an hour."
"... Because, friend
Fletcher," he ended, "in less than ten minutes' time, as soon as I
finish analyzing these air and fluid samples, I’ll be asleep."
As Prilicla had expected,
the robot crew member's actions showed great agitation on the part of its
organic controller when the captain met him outside the hull and tried to enter
the ship. He had to point several times at the lengths of piping the other was
carrying and demonstrate, both by slicing one of the lengths of piping into
pieces with the tiny flame of the cutter and then by turning on the cylinder
taps briefly and releasing a small quantity of their contents into space to
show that they contained only gas, before the captain was allowed to come on
board. By the time they were in the damaged control section it was clear from
the emotional radiation of both survivors that the DBDG was feared as much as
it was trusted, and that the emotional balance could swing either way.
"Friend
Fletcher," he said, "do not make any sudden movements that might be
mistaken for a threat. In fact, until they become accustomed to your presence
it would be better if you did nothing except pass tools and parts to me, and
generally give the impression that I am your superior until I indicate—"
"As you are fond of
reminding me, Doctor," it said dryly, "on the disaster site you have
the rank."
The words were sarcastic
but the emotional radiation that accompanied them was free of rancor. Prilicla
went on. "... until
I indicate to the survivors
by acting out the requirement several times that I need your physical
assistance. We're lucky that their emotional radiation will tell me whether or
not they understand what I'm trying to do."
It wasn't very long before
he ran into trouble. One of the piping conduits had been twisted out of true so
that the joints and lock-nuts were jammed. They were too tight, or at least too
tight for Prilicla to move.
Several times he went
through the motions of trying to loosen it, then he pointed at the captain's
larger and stronger hands, withdrew, and indicated that the other should take
over. The robot edged closer, its damaged metal surfaces somehow reflecting the
fear and concern that its masters were feeling.
"You take over, friend
Fletcher," he said. "But move slowly, they're still terrified of
you."
The captain had to move
slowly because it required several minutes of maximum effort, and the cooling
element in its suit was just barely keeping the perspiration from fogging its
visor, before the sticking lock-nut was loosened, removed, and fitted with a
joint that would take the replacement piping. It chose a length that was
already fitted with a T-junction and valve, and it took much less time for it
to cut the pipe to size and make the join. Prilicla passed in the length of
hose from the two air tanks, which was attached to the junction. Several times
the captain indicated the color-coding on the old and new piping and the tanks.
The robot had moved into the inspection compartment and was crowding the
captain but not hampering its hands.
"I'm detecting great
anxiety," said Prilicla; then, reassuringly, "but there is also a
feeling of comprehension. I think they understand what we're trying to do for
them. I'm turning on the air now."
The earlier analyses had
shown that the survivor's atmosphere was similar to that used by the majority
of the warmblooded, oxygen-breathing species. No attempt had been made to
include the trace quantities of other gases so that the mixture
going in was in the usual
proportion of oxygen to nitrogen. For several minutes there was no emotional
reaction either from the distressed survivor or the other who was in contact
with it; then, suddenly, a slow trembling shook Prilicla's whole body.
"What's wrong?"
said the captain.
"Nothing," he
replied. "The breathing distress of the second survivor is being treated
although it is still suffering, possibly from hunger, thirst, or injuries, and
both of them are now radiating intense, positive feelings of relief and
gratitude which are giving me emotional pleasure. They are still afraid of you,
but their hatred and distrust are diminishing. Well done, friend
Fletcher."
"Well done
yourself," said the captain, radiating embarrassment at the compliment.
"Now that we've helped it to breathe, let's see if we can give it
something to drink and eat as well. There is staining around the broken end of
one of these pipes that looks like it might be dried-out liquid food. If your
analyzer confirms that, we could—"
"No, friend
Fletcher," he broke in, "there might not be time for that.
Psychologically the second survivor's condition has improved but I feel the
presence of increasingly severe debilitation associated with physical trauma.
From now on we have to know exactly what we're doing, or be told exactly what
to do, and do it fast. You brought spare air tanks, more than was needed for
the recent first-aid operation. If we empty them, would there be enough
atmospheric pressure to enable us to breathe and allow the transmission of
sound?"
He felt the other's initial
puzzlement dissolve into comprehension as it said, "So you're going to
try talking to them and asking for directions. If we knew anything about their
communications setup, especially how they convert radio into audio frequency,
we could simply talk on our own radios. As it is, we aren't sure yet whether or
not they have ears."
It shook its head and went
on. "The answer to your question is, I don't know. This section was close
to the area of hull damage and might leak like a sieve. We could try."
Prilicla said, "Yes,
but not here. We'll move back to the undamaged section with the first survivor.
All of the access panels in that compartment are a tight fit, probably an
airtight fit, as is the entrance door and the one into the area containing the
survivor. This is probably a crew safety measure and part of the ship design
philosophy. To increase the effect I'll spray on some of my plastic sealant. It
won't stop the doors from being opened later, but it will ensure minimum
leakage. While I'm doing that, you will want to make arrangements with
Rhabwar."
"That I will,"
said the captain. It withdrew from the tiny inspection chamber, closed the
access hatch tightly, and began talking rapidly into its suit radio as it
followed him to the other control section. By the time it had finished talking,
Prilicla had the compartment sealed and compressed air was hissing visibly and
then audibly from the fully opened tank valves.
"We don't seem to be
losing any air," said the captain after a few minutes, "and the
pressure is high enough to carry sound, or even to open our helmets, supposing
we were mad enough to do that."
"I believe we are mad
enough, friend Fletcher," said Prilicla. "Folding back our helmets
will be a further sign that we trust them and wish to be friends, as well as
removing the small additional voice distortion caused by our external
speakers. I hope our robot friend can hear and speak as well as see. Is Rhabwar
ready?"
"Projector and
translation computer standing by," the captain replied, unsealing its
helmet. "You speak first, Doctor. A privilege of rank."
With the words there was a
complex, background feeling of excitement, expectation, and minor relief
characteristic of a personally embarrassing situation to be avoided should the
attempt fail. Prilicla's own feeling was that it wouldn't.
He bent a forelimb almost
double and pointed at himself. Slowly and distinctly he said, "Prilicla,
Prilicla, Prilicla. I am Prilicla." Then he pointed behind towards the
inner door, and waited. When there was no response he indicated the captain and
nodded for it to try. The rapid, musical clicking of untranslated Cinrusskin
speech was difficult for other species to follow.
"Fletcher, Fletcher,
Fletcher," said the captain, indicating itself before pointing in the same
direction as Prilicla.
The robot made a short,
sharp sound like the squeaking of a rusty hinge.
"Was that a word,
dammit," said the captain in an angry undertone, "or a malfunctioning
robot?"
"A word, maybe more
than one," Prilicla replied. "It heard us, and I felt a flash of
understanding and urgency. Maybe its words are rapid, compressed, as in
Nallajim. Let's try again, and speak very slowly. Maybe it will do the same.
"Pril-ic-la," he
said slowly three times, repeating the earlier motions. The captain said and
did the same.
"Keet," said the
robot. A moment later it added, "Pil-ik-la, Flet-cha."
Prilicla gestured towards
the sealed door in front of them and said, "Keet," then pointed back
at the compartment they had just left.
"Jas-am," came
the reply.
"We're talking!"
For a moment the captain's relief and pleasure at the breakthrough swamped
most of the survivor's emotional radiation, but not the urgency.
"Not yet,"
Prilicla said. "We're exchanging personal-name sounds, but it's only a
start."
"Rhabwar here,"
the voice of Haslam sounding in their earpieces said. "I'm afraid the
Doctor is right, Captain. The computer needs more for an accurate translation:
verbs, accompanying actions, explanations, and a bigger vocabulary to link the
words together."
"Friend Haslam,"
he said, "Show the pictures of planets and
native species again,
please, but just those for Earth and Cinruss. Then patch in one of the survivor
life-forms and a world with no geographical features."
Prilicla watched the tiny
repeater screen in his suit as this was done. He said, "Fletcher is from
Earth, Prilicla is from Cinruss, Keet is from ..." and waited.
Without hesitation the
voice from the robot said, "Flet-cha, Ert; Pil-ik-la, Cin-russ; Keet,
Tro-lan."
"We're getting there,
Doctor," Haslam said excitedly; then, in a tone almost of apology it went
on. "Names and places of origin help, but they aren't enough for the
computer to begin structuring the language. We still need verbs and related
actions."
Unlike its outsize parent
in Sector General, Rhabwar's translation computer did not carry a record of
all of the intelligence-bearing clicks, moans, hisses, and chirps that were
used as speech by the members of the Galactic Federation, a vast store of data
which enabled it to compare the input of the new languages that were
discovered from time to time and produce a translation. But the ambulance ship
had proved on several previous occasions that it could do the same job, with a
little on-site help.
"Friend
Fletcher," he said, pointing at the material in the other's transparent
satchel, "I need a short piece of fine cable that can be pulled apart
easily, and a short length of piping. Do you have one that is thin-walled and
breaks without shattering into pieces?"
He felt the captain's
puzzlement dissolve in a flood of comprehension. It produced the cable,
wrapped it around his hand and pulled it apart, then he produced—not a pipe,
but a length of thin sleeving—and snapped it in two before handing the four
pieces to him. It said, "Yes and no, Doctor. This breaks without
splintering, but it needs an Earth-human's muscles to do it."
Prilicla indicated a
section of undamaged piping through one of the transparent access hatches, then
pointed back the way they had come towards the other survivor's position.
Holding a piece of the broken pipe in each hand, he brought them slowly
together at the faces of the original fracture and did the same with the severed
wiring. He repeated the movements several time before speaking.
"Wire, pipes," he
said, pointing at the captain and himself. "We join wires and pipes. We
fix wires and pipes. We repair"— he made a wide gesture that included the
ship all around them— "everything."
Through its robot crew
member's sensors, the first survivor already knew that they repaired things,
although it had not known the word for what they had been doing. He waited,
straining to detect the first feelings of comprehension that would tell him
that it understood the other, more important message that he was trying to
send. And when the crew robot spoke again, he knew that it did.
"Pil-ik-la,
Flet-cha," it said. "Fix Jasam."
The captain gave a loud,
barking laugh of sheer relief, which it cut short abruptly in case it might
have been mistaken for a threatening sound by the survivor. On Rhabwar, Haslam
sounded equally pleased.
"That's it!" said
the lieutenant. "We have a translation. Just talk to it naturally and mime
only if you think it might not understand a new action. The conversation will
be a bit stilted until you build up a vocabulary, but the computer is happy.
I'm relaying the translation through your headsets. Nice work. Any other
instructions?"
Prilicla's body was shaking
with a slow, even tremor of pleasure and relief that was tempered slightly by
the remembered emotional radiation from the second survivor, Jasam, which indicated
that clinically it was in very bad shape.
"Stand by, friend
Haslam," he said. "I need you to project more pictures. Edit the
previous run to show only the recovery of space-wreck casualties, then add
something on their transfer to and treatment on Rhabwar. Be brief regarding the
treatment, too much detail on surgical procedures might give the impression
that we go in for physical
torture. Concentrate on the before-and-after aspects, the badly injured
casualties, and then showing them cured. Run them as soon as you can."
Turning towards the inner
door and the robot hovering in front of it, he brought the two pieces of pipe
together slowly and said, "I fix slowly," and repeated the action and
words several times; then he moved them quickly into contact and said, "I
fix quickly." Then he pointed back the way they had come and added,
"I fix Jasam quickly," emphasizing the last word.
He felt understanding and
agreement coloring the ever-present deep concern, and said, "Keet, the
word for that is 'yes.''
He pointed in the direction
of Jasam and used the broken pipe to indicate, he hoped, that they were both
broken. Then he raised a hand to his eyes before pointing first at an undamaged
section of piping and then at the inner door of Keet's compartment.
"To fix the broken
Jasam," he mimed as he said the words, "I must see the unbroken
Keet."
Again there was
understanding, but with it there was a sudden return of the earlier fear and
hatred.
"Keep that accursed
druul away from us!" it said, so loudly that it must have been its
equivalent of a shout. "I don't trust it! We are both weakened and
helpless and it will eat us. We thought that interstellar space, at least,
would be clear of such vermin!"
Prilicla tried to ignore
the captain's scandalized emotional radiation, and said reassuringly,
"Don't be afraid, Fletcher won't touch you. Fletcher fixes machines.
Prilicla fixes people."
The captain's low-voiced
comment was lost in the sound of the inner door hissing open.
It revealed a small
compartment whose interior was an almost-solid mass of support brackets,
piping, and cable runs leading into a flattened oval dish at its center. The
upper half of the receptacle had a sealed, transparent cover that gave a clear
view of the co-captain of the ship. Physically Keet was classification CHLI
and closely resembled its robot crew member in size and shape except that
instead of the silvery metal skin there was
the veined brownish-pink of
organic tissue. A continuous control-and-sensor-input panel laterally encircled
the inner surface of the body container, and the operating keys were within
easy reach of the creature's short digits. Its food, water-supply, and
waste-extraction systems had been surgically implanted into the relevant
organs.
Prilicla's body shook
briefly with a feeling composed of pity, revulsion, and the claustrophobic fear
known only to free-flying beings like himself when he realized that the ship's
organic crew had been confined to their control and life-support pods with no
freedom to move, not even around their own ship.
They had been installed
with the rest of the ship's equipment.
From his medical satchel he
took his scanner, reversed it so that Keet could see the viewplate, and
demonstrated its function by touching it against parts of his own body, before
moving it close to the other's pod.
"This will not hurt
you," he said. "It will enable me to see inside your body so that I
can understand and fix anything that is wrong."
"Will you be able to
fix Jasam, too?"
Its speech was going and
coming through his translator now, clearly and with the possibility for
misunderstanding being reduced with every word. The prime rule during a
first-contact situation was to find out as much a possible about the other
life-form so as to further reduce that risk, and to tell the truth at all
times.
But it was also sound
medical practice to encourage a patient to talk about itself, or any other
pleasant subject in which it was interested, so as to take its mind off a
frightening or possibly embarrassing examination.
"I will try to fix
Jasam," he said. "But to do that, I must first discover everything I
can about you and your people. For the best results I would like to have full
knowledge, even though there is no way of knowing which pieces of information
will be
helpful during the repairs,
so just tell me about your partner, your lives, your customs, the food you eat,
and the things you like to do. In the event of an unsuccessful repair, which is
a faint possibility, who and where are your next of kin? You are a completely
new and scientifically advanced life-form and everything you say will be
interesting and useful.
"Tell me about
yourself, and your world."
A few minutes into the examination
there was an interruption. The two courier ships had arrived and, although
they were keeping station at the requested distance, their impatience for a
full report on the situation could almost be felt. The courier captains' voices
were being relayed through Rhabwar to the alien ship so that Prilicla and
Fletcher, but not the alien casualties, could hear them.
"This is not a good
time to stop and make reports, friend Fletcher," said Prilicla without
looking up from the scanner. "Just tell them that..."
"I know what to tell
them," said the other, and went on briskly. "A very delicate
first-contact situation is proceeding as we speak. The alien vessel has a crew
of two, both physiological classification CHLI; one is seriously injured and the
other less so. The medical examination and the contact procedure are being
conducted by Dr. Prilicla and are complicated by the fact that the casualties
have a rabid fear of all DBDG life-forms regardless of size, apparently because
of our close resemblance to a natural enemy on their home planet. All of the
proceedings so far have been recorded in case of accidents, but I ask that you
wait to avoid taking back an incomplete report that could be updated from hour
to hour."
"Understood,
sir," came the reply. "Over and listening out."
At first the casualty
seemed anxious to talk about the druul, and how much its race hated and feared
them, rather than about its world or itself. The proximity of Fletcher was
doubtless responsible for that. Prilicla continued to speak and to radiate verbal
and emotional reassurance while he plied his scanner and the captain kept its
distance. Gradually the subject widened but it always veered back to the hated
druul. Keet's species called themselves the Trolanni, and their world Trolann,
and over the past few centuries it had become a savage, frightful place of
unending war for its diminishing resources against the druul and the other
organic and inorganic pollutants that were fast making the once-populous world
uninhabitable for both of its intelligent species, as well as for most other
forms of life above the insect level.
Many attempts had been made
to check the self-poisoning of their overcrowded world and to impose strict
controls on the high degree of industrialization needed to support it if
irreversible chemical changes were not to increase the level of toxicity to
the point where the planetary biosphere would no longer be able to support
life. But preventative and curative measures on that scale required personal
sacrifices, self-control, and the cooperation of everyone concerned. A large
minority of the Trolanni, and all of the druul, refused to give it.
Possibly there were
individuals who thought differently, but as a population the druul decided that
the problem would be solved if the Trolanni and their food supply were
considered a natural resource and used exclusively for the benefit and continued
survival of the druul.
As a species the druul were
small, bipedal, vicious, fast-breeding, and utterly implacable where enemies,
sapient or otherwise, were concerned. From the dawn of history their rate of
scientific and technological achievement had been equal to the Trolanni, so
that the wars they had fought had been forced to a stop rather than being won.
In spite of many peace overtures by the Trolanni, the two species had lived in
a state of unfriendly coexistence until a war that was no longer stoppable was
being fought for the diminishing resources of the stinking, polluted,
near-corpse that was their planet. For many generations the druul had practiced
cannibalism, eating even the sickly young or the elderly or otherwise
unproductive people of their own race. They could not be defeated because there
were always more of them hungry and ready to fight. Apart from a few pockets of
weakening resistance and the latest Trolanni technology which defended them,
the planet belonged to the druul.
The only solution was for
the Trolanni to find a new, unpolluted and peaceful home.
"You found a new home
here," said Prilicla gently. "What went wrong?"
"A technical failure
of some kind," said Keet, radiating feelings of minor embarrassment and
apology. "I'm not the propulsion specialist. After finding an ideal world
it seemed as if we couldn't return home with the news. But we had signaling devices,
two of them, untried because none of the searchsuits had used them before then.
The first one malfunctioned and seriously damaged the hull. The second one was
modified, but it destroyed the doll who released it. Then the ship with the
druuls in it arrived."
"They weren't
druuls," said Prilicla. "It was a rescue ship that came to help
you."
"I'm sorry," said
Keet. "I know that, now."
Prilicla withdrew the
scanner and moved back. He had all the physiological data he needed for a
preliminary assessment of the other casualty's condition, but a lot more
non-medical information was needed. He said, "I'll stay in contact with
you, but we're moving over to look at Jasam now. Tell it not to be afraid;
neither friend Fletcher nor myself mean it any harm. Why did you attack the
first rescue ship?"
"We didn't," it
replied quickly. "It attacked our protective suit..."
For the few minutes it took
them to transfer to the other control module, Prilicla listened to Keet's
reassuring words to its life-mate and felt the growing trust in Fletcher and
himself that accompanied them even though they were feelings that Jasam had yet
to share.
"... That is what the
druul have been doing to us for hundreds of years," it continued,
"and many of our scientists think that they no longer know why they do it.
As individuals they are predominantly machines designed to attack and penetrate
our protective suits, as a nut is cracked to uncover its edible kernel,
although all too often the kernel itself is destroyed by the ferocity of the
onslaught so that there is no reward for the tiny, organic fraction that
controls the machines they have become. We Trolanni, at least, are whole,
sapient, and civilized, if very sickly, people inside our protective suits,
although with this two-body searchsuit with its vastly greater proportion of
machine-to-or-ganic life, we were forced to become more like the druul..
.."
So they thought of their
ship as a searchsuit, a bigger, more complex and specialized version of the
individual protective garment than those that the planet-based druul forced
them to wear. Interesting. Prilicla could feel the captain's mounting
excitement as Keet continued speaking, but he knew that friend Fletcher would
not interrupt the flow of information with a question that would shortly be
answered.
".. . In this
instance," it went on, "our hull protection was designed to safeguard
us for the short time we were in atmosphere before we entered space, where so
far the druul have been unable to go. The protection operates continuously in a
state of high alert, and instantly disrupts the computer-operated control and
life-support systems of any attacking machine-encased druul. But we never
expected to find them, or beings just like them, between the stars. That was
terrifying for us and there was nothing we could do."
"It would help us to
help Jasam and yourself," Prilicla said gently, "if your protective
device could be switched off. Can it?"
"No," said Keet,
"at least not by us. To do that, specialist knowledge and devices are
needed and these are available only on our home world. It must not be switched
off because its protection is needed during our second trip through
atmosphere, hopefully on our way home to report success in finding a new world.
But instead ... Please, will Jasam live?"
Sometimes, Prilicla
thought, as he noted the damage to its life-mate as well as the traces of dried
body fluid that were staining the joins where the metal and organic interface
was visible, it was not always advisable to tell the truth even in a
first-contact situation.
"There is a strong
possibility that we'll be able to save its life," he said.
"But not in
here," said the captain on their personal frequency that did not go
through the translator. Quickly and concisely it went on to explain why while
Prilicla tried to provide a more optimistic translation for the two Trolanni,
continuing his scanner examination of the second casualty as he spoke.
Jasam's injuries had been
due to the structural damage to its side of the searchsuit, caused by the
explosive failure of the first beacon they had released, which in turn had
caused multiple fracturing and dislocation of the life-support plumbing that
had been surgically implanted into its body. Its resultant external and
internal wounds were extensive and serious, he explained, but with the right
treatment they would not be life-threatening. He personally had repaired
organic damage that was much more severe and had returned the entity concerned
to full health.
"But in this
case," he went on, "the right treatment would first involve removing
Jasam and yourself from your vessel—"
"And leave us without
a suit!" Keet broke in. "And, and life support? We've already lost
our dolls—Jasam's destroyed, and mine damaged beyond the ability to do
sensitive repair work. No!"
They called their robot
crew members "dolls," Prilicla thought, and the accompanying
emotional radiation was indicative of the feelings held for a friend and helper
as well as for a pet or plaything. Curious—but satisfying that curiosity would
have to wait until the more urgent problem of removing them from their
ship-sized protective suit was settled.
"On Trolann," he
went on, projecting reassurance with every ounce of empathic energy in his
mind, "there must be doctors, healers, beings who cure or repair organic
disease or damage. To perform this work effectively there must be easy access
to the site of the trouble, so am I correct in thinking that they prefer the
sick or injured patient to be unclothed?"
"Yes," said Keet.
"But that is on Trolann. Out here ..."
"Out here," said
Prilicla gently, "you would be much safer. Rhabwar, the ship that you see
nearby, was expressly designed for and contains all the equipment necessary to
do such work, and it has done it many times. But the equipment is both bulky
and highly sensitive. If it was to be moved to your vessel, a difficult job in
itself, there would be a serious risk of the ship's protective devices disabling
its computer-operated circuitry, as it does with the druul machines. There
isn't much time left. Your life-support consumables, Jasam's especially, have
leaked away and are close to exhaustion.
"If both of you are to
survive," he ended, "You must agree and I must act, quickly."
There was a moment's
silence while Keet radiated growing uncertainty, then it said, "Both of
us? I, I thought one of us would stay in our searchsuit until the organic and
mechanical repairs were done, then Jasam would be reinserted and ... There is
very little organic damage to myself."
"I know," said
Prilicla. "But I will need your help and advice for the extraction
process. You will be conscious and aware and will be able to tell us exactly
what we have to do at every stage, and we will be able to use the experience
more easily to detach your more seriously injured life-mate. We have already
analyzed and reproduced your food, air, and working fluid, the last two of
which are very similar to our own. My present plan is to put both of you into a
covered litter that contains all your life-support requirements, and where you
will be able to give close, emotional support to Jasam during the transfer to
our ship and the organic-repair work afterwards."
There was another silence,
then Keet said, "Detaching Jasam is a difficult and specialized job that
is done only in case of an onboard emergency by a doll. Jasam's doll was killed
in the first explosion and mine was damaged in the second. The control
circuitry serving the forward cluster of fine, peripheral digits, the ones
needed for a complete body extraction, was burned out. My doll is incapable of
the delicate work that would be required. It is certain that we will both
die."
"That is not
certain," said Prilicla, "and is not even likely. Controlled by our
own sensitive digits will be even finer and more delicate mechanisms that are
capable of doing the work. We are widely experienced in the extraction of
damaged organic casualties from the wreckage of starships, and friend Fletcher
will make a very good doll."
The captain made a noise
that did not translate.
When Lieutenant Dodds and
the covered litter arrived it was met by Keet's doll and quickly escorted
forward to Prilicla and Fletcher in the control section. Guided by its mistress
and in spite of the impaired movement of its finer digits, the doll was able to
help and occasionally hinder Prilicla and the captain during the long and
physically uncomfortable process of detaching and extricating Keet from the
mass of control, communications, and life-support plumbing. It was a present
and obvious subject of interest to both Fletcher and himself, and in an attempt
to keep the Trolanni's mind off the continuing discomfort they were inflicting
as well as its deep concern for Jasam, whose communications line they had been
forced to sever temporarily, Prilicla began to question it with gentle
persistence about the dolls.
It was an interesting
change of subject.
"I don't know why you
find them of such interest," Keet protested, radiating minor
embarrassment. "They are toys, playthings, used mainly by the very young,
or some adults who feel the need to remind themselves of the kind of people
that we used to be in the past, when we could move freely and swim and climb
and play together and touch without being weighed down and smothered by heavy
and uncomfortable protective suits. The dolls are lifelike, life-sized, and
closely modeled after their owners, and while the children's are simple both in
mind and structure, those of the adults are highly sophisticated, and are
capable of a wide range of supportive functions and recreational activities
which their owners can enjoy vicariously and which in many cases answers a
psychological need.
"Jasam and I,"
Keet went on, "were to be enclosed permanently in a searchsuit where, for
operational reasons, we would be close but unable to make physical contact for
the rest of our lives. The project psychologists decided that a crew of two
specialized dolls—in design and function the most versatile and intelligent to
be built—would operate and maintain our search-suit and, it was thought, the
fact that they were exact copies of ourselves would help reduce our feelings of
loss and loneliness and so maintain our sanity."
Prilicla reached into the
restricted space the captain and the robot had cleared for him in the dense
mass of plumbing, and put a tiny clamp on the fine tube that carried the
liquefied food from the nearly empty reservoir through Keet's abdominal wall.
It was a little like brain surgery, he thought, involving as it did the
manipulation of delicate organs in a very confined space. He concentrated on
the work for several minutes until he was satisfied with it, then withdrew
before speaking.
"Did they?" he
said.
"They did," it
ended, "until we found this fresh, lovely, and untouched world and our
position beacons blew up, and your rescue ship blundered onto the scene."
It paused, then added, "I don't think you, or your druul-like helper, are
blundering now."
"Thank you," said
Prilicla, knowing that Keet's feelings were backing up its words. "But now
we have to transfer you to the litter and attend to some superficial wounding
caused by the extraction. The treatment will be quick and simple, a few sutures
and the application of a healing ointment suited to your metabolism. You won't
have an adverse reaction to it because it is identical to one of the
medications carried in your doll's medical kit
which, you will remember, we analyzed and reproduced earlier. Ready
everyone?"
It was like moving a limp,
half-cooked pancake through a three-dimensional maze of barbed wire, the
captain said on their private frequency. Prilicla had no idea what a pancake
was, his only Earth-human food weakness being spaghetti, and had to take the
other's word for it. But finally they had Keet out of its control cocoon, its
wounds treated, and resting comfortably in the litter.
"What now?" it
said.
"Now," Prilicla
replied, "we seal the litter and move it into Jasam's section, reconnect
the communications line so you'll be able to tell it what has been happening
while friend Fletcher and I do the same for our own people who must make
preparations to receive two new casualties. After that... My apologies, I need
to sleep again."
While they were moving the
litter to the other section of the control center, Prilicla quickly explained
the situation to Pathologist Murchison while transmitting visuals of the scene
that were being relayed to the surface by Rhabwar. The ground facility was more
spacious than the ambulance ship's casualty deck, and all of his medical staff
as well as the Terragar survivors were there. Keet and Jasam were talking
together and the captain was about to begin his situation report, both of which
were being recorded in case he needed to refer to them later, when he suddenly
lost touch with reality.
Captain Fletcher looked at
the sleeping Prilicla, lowered his voice, and, using a frequency that the two
aliens could overhear, spoke briskly.
"Courier Vessel
One," he said. "We can now report that the distressed alien ship is
non-hostile and that the damage inflicted on Terragar was due to a combination
of ignorance and a close-range defense system of high lethality that instantly
kills any ship's computer-controlled systems, but not the living organic contents, that touches it. This defense system remains
active and is an extreme danger to any investigating ship—regardless of size
and armament—making a close approach. It is imperative that you remain at your
present distance and that all other vessels be forbidden to enter this system
until a countermeasure has been found.
"The ship's planet of
origin is Trolann," it went on, "location as yet unknown, where the
Trolanni are losing a war that has lasted for many centuries with another
indigenous species, the druul, with whom it has been impossible to come to an
accommodation. Physically the druul bear a close resemblance to the DBDG
physiological classification, a fact which initially made the first-contact
procedure very difficult because they looked on Rhabwars Earth-human personnel
as natural enemies rather than rescuers. Now I believe that we have done enough
to earn their trust..."
"Our limited
trust," Keet broke in. "I trust Prilicla, and to a lesser extent you,
because you do as it asks and seem anxious to help us, but Jasam remains
fearful and untrusting. About the other ones who look like dmuls, I, too, am
uncertain."
"But that," said
the captain, "is because you haven't seen them helping you as Prilicla and
I have been doing. Their work is in the background, but it is being done. They
are not, never were, nor ever will be like the druul. May I continue with my
report?
"The Trolanni are of
physiological classification CHLI," he went on when Keet did not reply,
"warm-blooded oxygen-breathers, although there is very little breathable
oxygen remaining on their heavily polluted planet. They describe themselves as
an embattled minority of... Keet, what is the total number of Trolanni on your
planet?"
"Just under one
hundred thousand," it replied promptly.
"As few as that?"
said the captain, its face paling as it returned to its report and went on.
"In that case, and bearing in mind the fact that the Trolanni have a
limited space-travel capability, I strongly recommend that the Federation
mount a
disaster-relief and
evacuation operation to move them from their virtually uninhabitable planet to
another world, the world below us, in fact, which Keet and Jasam found for
their people before their ship was damaged in an attempt to signal its
location. I further recommend that provision be made to interdict all druul
offensive operations until the Trolanni are evacuated safely, after which, if
cultural reeducation is possible, we should determine the druul's needs for
continued survival and ..."
Inside the litter canopy,
Keet's body was twitching in great agitation. It said, "Aren't you going
to kill them all, or at least let them die fighting among themselves? That's
what they'll do if there's nobody else to fight. Or maybe you can't kill them.
Maybe you're favorably disposed towards them, more so than towards the
Trolanni, because the druul look like you. I'm sorry, but I think we were right
about you from the start. A helpful, apparently friendly druul is still a
druul. You disappoint us, Fletcher."
The captain shook his head.
"Our physically similar appearance has nothing to do with it. On Earth
there are creatures shaped like humans. In our prehistory, we developed
intelligence and ultimately civilization, but they did not, and to this day remain
non-sapient animals. They are not evil in themselves but are governed by animal
instincts that sometimes make them a danger to humans, and for this reason they
are confined, restricted, and cared for in their own areas where they cannot
harm us. If the druul are thinking animals, implacable, vicious, unable to be
taught civilized ways, or are incapable of governing their own instincts and
behavior, that—if it is possible for us to do it—is what would happen to them.
They would be isolated and Trolann would be interdicted by the Federation and
no contact with any other species allowed.
"But we would not
exterminate a species just because its long-term enemy thought it was
warranted," the captain ended. "The druul and you may not be able to
view each other or your problem with objectivity. Now, if you don't mind, I'd
like to return to my report___"
The captain resumed his
description of the situation on the alien ship and their plans for resolving it
while at the same time, by implication, mentally preparing the Trolanni
casualties for what was to come by describing the structural problems of casualty
extraction before the medical problems could be solved. But Keet was finding it
difficult to remain silent.
"Prilicla and you are
all right, I suppose," Keet said, "but are strangers of your kind
going to be handling us? That would frighten Jasam and me very much. He might
hurt himself even more trying to fight you off. We'd rather Prilicla did
everything. We like it."
"Everybody likes
Prilicla," said Fletcher, looking aside at the sleeping empath, "but
physically it is too weak to do everything itself. That's why it will need
heavy cutting equipment and the help of Dodds and Chen, two other Earth-humans
like myself, to clear a path to and enclose the area in a pressure envelope
before Prilicla can begin treating Jasam's injuries. But all of us, in my ship
and on the surface are the same as Prilicla. We all want to help cure Jasam and
yourself. While we're doing that, you'll come to know all of us, and trust us,
and tell us how we can help your people."
For a long time there was
silence while the captain crawled about in the wreckage surrounding Jasam's
control pod, marking structural members that would have to be cut away, lengths
of plumbing to be sealed off, and talking quietly. Everything he said formed
part of his report including—although the Trolanni might not have realized
it—the conversations with Keet and all the recorded material on the Terragar
landing and casualties.
Everything went into a
first-contact report.
"Jasam is very
worried," said Keet suddenly, "in case there are healers on the
surface who look like you. If there are, he doesn't want them to touch him. He
says he'd rather die. Why don't we go to the hospital you showed us, where
there are many healers who don't look like the druul?"
In a first-contact
situation the rule was to tell the truth but
to keep it as simple as
possible. The captain said, "My ship has been ordered to remain in this
vicinity to warn off any other vessels who might want to investigate your
searchsuit and suffer damage as a result. On Rhabwar there are four Earth-human
ship's officers including myself, and four healers. Prilicla, you already
know, is in charge; then an Earth-human female called Murchison who looks,
well, somewhat different than me; a Kel-gian who has twenty legs and is covered
with mobile fur; and a shape-changer called Danalta who can look like anything
or everything, even a Trolanni if it thought that shape would be reassuring to
you or your life-mate. There are also three Earth-humans who are badly damaged.
The medical team, with the exception of Prilicla, are down there in a special
healing facility, taking care of them. None of them, not even the Terragar casualties,
will want to harm you while you get to know us better. Besides, the repairing
of physical damage isn't everything. We think that it might make you feel
better and assist your non-medical healing if you were to spend some time
recuperating on the beautiful world Jasam and yourself have discovered for the
Trolanni."
There was no reply, and the
short silence was broken by the quiet voice of Prilicla speaking on the
captain's private frequency.
"I've been awake for
the past few minutes," he said, "and I could not have handled the
situation better if I'd done it myself. Thank you, friend Fletcher. Keet is
feeling greatly comforted and Jasam, who is still anxious and barely conscious,
shares its life-mate's reassurance. This would be a good time to call in
friends Dodds and Chen."
During the next three
hours, while the damaged area surrounding Jasam's control pod was being
isolated in a temporary pressure bubble and excised from its surrounding
control actuators, plumbing, and wiring, the lines between technical and
medical work were frequently blurred by the fact that Rhabwar's officers were
doing much more delicate work than that being Performed by Prilicla. Even
though he was not due to sleep for another four hours, by the time they were
finished and Jasam
was sharing the other half
of the pressure litter with Keet, he felt so tired that it was an effort for
him not to lose consciousness prematurely. The captain, who had not slept for
two Earth standard days and did not seem to be affected by fatigue, was concluding
its report to the courier vessels.
"... Friendly
relations have been established with the two Trolanni casualties who are ready
for transfer to Rhabwar and immediate onward transportation to the surface
medical station," he said crisply. "According to Dr. Prilicla, the
being Keet has superficial injuries and is in no danger, but the other one,
Jasam, is giving cause for concern. Urgent surgery is required, and the
prognosis is uncertain. You have everything you need to know, but I suggest
that you both remain on station, stay well clear of the alien ship's hull which
is still active and a continuing danger, and wait a few hours for the latest
good or bad news.
"From here on this is
expected to be a routine medical matter," it ended, "and we cannot
foresee anything going wrong."
At the medical station the
routines of the day had proceeded with a similar lack of drama, but the
surroundings were beautiful, relaxing, and much too pleasant for boredom to be
a consideration. The patients were in satisfactory medical and good
psychological shape following their twice-daily immersion in the shallows and
subsequent sun-drying, and had been moved indoors. The sun was within an hour
of setting, with its close-to-horizontal light reflecting off the reddish-white
breakers on a sea that was dark blue. It was the ideal time of day for another
walk around the island.
Inevitably accompanied,
Murchison thought irritably, by her shape-changing and by now totally redundant
guardian angel.
There was no real reason,
other than that she had never done so before and the team members and patients
might worry, why she should be back inside the station before nightfall. But to
reduce the unnecessary worrying all around, she decided not to break with
tradition by jogging instead of walking the distance, and to stop only for a
brief swim in her favorite beauty spot, a tiny, tree-fringed bay on the
opposite side of the island.
She was nearing it, and the
station was hidden by the curve of the shoreline behind her, when the sun began
to set, although from experience
she knew that there would be enough dusk left to see her way back. In the
shallows Danalta was keeping pace with her, arrowing through the breaking surf
and occasionally leaping into the air as it did its impression of a flying
fish. She was running fast over the firm, damp sand with her eyes down so as to
avoid the scattered white stones in her path when the shape-changer made a
noise that did not translate, and flopped rapidly out of the water and onto the
sand beside her. While it was still changing from an aquatic to a land mobile
form, what had been one of its fins thickened into a hand and it pointed ahead.
This, Murchison thought as
she slowed to a stop under the trees, is certainly an interesting change in the
in the usual scenery.
It was a smooth, flattened
mound covered with what looked like fibrous, greenish-brown vegetation, or
possibly scales or a form of seaweed, that floated in the water with a narrow
section of its forward edge projecting a few yards onto the sandy beach. It was
large enough to fill a quarter of the tiny inlet and she was reminded of an
outsize, beached whale.
"I'd say that this is
one of the objects we saw from the high ground that first day," she said,
"and now we're seeing it close-up. You have better vision than I have. Is
it alive?"
Danalta, whose land shape
was still indeterminate, enlarged an eye and said, "It has the general
appearance of a large sea mammal, although the breathing orifices and fins are
concealed from view or underwater. There is a slight overall body movement
that is probably due to wave action rather than respiration. It may be alive
and close to termination. But there is still a risk. Shall I investigate more
closely?"
"We will
investigate," she said, stressing the first word, "after we've
reported this in. But I'd say the risk is minimal." She pointed to the sky
above the beached creature and laughed quietly. "The vultures are
gathering again and that's always a strong contraindication for casualty
survivability."
The birds were circling
stiff-winged as they rode the updrafts
from the sandy beach that
was still radiating the day's heat, and they were lower and closer than she had
ever seen them before. Both bodies and their wide-spreading, leathery wings
were the same color and seemed to have the same texture as that of the beached
creature, and they looked mean. Instinctively she moved back under the
concealment of thick, overhanging branches, hoping they hadn't seen her.
Danalta remained motionless
except for lengthening his eye-stalk and bending it up to look at them.
"They aren't
birds," it said quietly, "they're flying machines, unpowered gliders.
Each one has a pilot."
For a moment Murchison was
too surprised to react, mentally or physically. This was supposed to be an
uninhabited world. According to Rhabwar's sensors it was completely lacking in
the signatures of cultivation, roads, electromagnetic radiation, industrial
smoke pollution, or any of the signs normally produced by intelligent life, and
certainly by an indigenous intelligence capable of building flying machines.
It came to her suddenly that the reason why the two gliders were flying so low
might be that their pilots wanted the high ground at the center of the island
to conceal the operation from the view of the medical station in case someone
there decided to look inland.
Fumbling in her haste,
Murchison pulled her communicator out of the equipment pouch at her waist and
had it almost to her lips when something large and soft and with many hairy
legs landed on her back and shoulders. Simultaneously another one of them
gripped her legs tightly so that she tripped and fell forwards, dropping the
communicator as she instinctively put out both hands to keep her face from
hitting the ground.
She was trying to reach for
the communicator again when another one landed on her arm before grabbing her
by the wrists and pulling them to her sides with small, hard pincers. She was
lifted a few feet from the ground and her body was rotated laterally, and she
felt her legs being wrapped together tightly in what -1 like very fine rope.
The turns continued up and past her hips,
pinioning both hands and
lower arms to her sides. She was able to get a close if intermittent look at
her captor Spiders.
Two of them were holding
and rolling her over while a third was producing from a body orifice the
continuous, fine white strand that was wrapping her up. Three others were
dropping lightly to the ground from overhanging branches on white strands that
were almost too thin for her to to see, their brownish-green body coloration
making them difficult to see against the vegetation until they landed. Each of
them was holding a thick, stubbly crossbow with their bolts notched and bowstrings
taut.
She had never had a fear of
Earthly spiders, and there were many more visually abhorrent creatures among
her friends and colleagues at Sector General, but that didn't mean that she
liked everything that walked on eight hairy legs, especially, as now, when they
were placing her life at risk.
Struggling to break free
did no good because the thin strands were very tough and she succeeded only in
leaving deep indentations and a few shallow cuts on her legs and forearms. She
opened her mouth wide and deliberately made loud, whooshing sounds while
inflating and deflating her lungs, hoping to demonstrate the need to go on
breathing which she would not be able to do if the strands around her chest
were too tight.
Whether they understood her
body language or that had been their original intention she didn't know, but
the white strands were exerting minimum compression on her rib cage. She could
breathe comfortably but not too deeply unless she wanted to risk cutting
herself. She could turn her head freely and even bend a little at the waist.
One of them took an interest in her translator pack and tried to tug it free,
but it and the medical pouch were an integral part of the equipment belt so the
creature didn't succeed. When it persisted she made a noise to indicate that it
was hurting her and it desisted. Then they rolled her face-upwards onto a
hammock made from woven plant fiber of some
kind and four of them each
lifted a corner and began carrying her towards the beach while the other two
followed. One of them, the one who had tried to get her translator, picked up
her communicator from the ground and began poking at it curiously. There was
no sign of Danalta.
She didn't know what the
shape-changer could do, but it should be able to think of something. So,
Murchison thought angrily, should she. For a moment she wondered if she was generating
her anger just to keep her growing fear at bay.
The sun had set but there
was still enough light to see the beach clearly, and the object she had thought
was a sea mammal. The smooth, outer covering was opening up to become a series
of low, triangular sails resembling those of an old-time Earth felucca, and
their supporting masts and rigging were still being raised, and the two flyers
had landed and were half carrying, half dragging their gliders towards it. But
her party, being closer, would board first. Plainly the spiders were excited
because they were making low, cheeping and chittering sounds to each other or
calling more loudly to the glider pilots and others on the ship. Suddenly there
was an interruption, a sound that had not come from any local throat.
"Speak, Pathologist
Murchison," said the loud, irritated voice of Charge Nurse Naydrad.
"If you don't want to say something, why are you using your communicator?
I have work to do. Stop wasting my time."
Her bearers stopped so
quickly that she almost rolled out of the litter, and the spider with her
communicator dropped it onto the sand and backed away, chittering shrilly in
alarm. Murchison laughed in spite of her problems. It was obvious what had happened
because she could see the two indicator lights glowing. The spider who had been
fiddling with it had inadvertently turned the reception volume to full as well
as switching on the device. But the communicator was active and, even though it
was lying in the sand several meters away and at extreme distance for a
handset, Naydrad was listening.
The spiders were used to
her making loud noises at them, but only when she was communicating discomfort,
and now she had to talk loudly to Naydrad. But there was the danger of arousing
their suspicions by making noises without a reason, when none of them was
touching or therefore hurting her. If they were to get the idea that a
conversation was going on, that she was calling for help, then they would
immediately silence her or the communicator. They were already trying to do the
latter by standing well back from it and pelting it with stones from the beach
rather than shooting their crossbow bolts at it. Luckily they had missed it so
far, but communicators were not robust instruments.
In an undertone Murchison
used language that was unladylike—her only unfeminine trait, according to her
life-mate— and thought quickly. There was very little time to send a message,
and none at all if one of those rocks connected. She took the deepest breath
she could without cutting herself and spoke slowly and clearly while hoping
that the excited chittering of the spiders all around her would keep them from
noticing the strange noises she was making.
"Naydrad, Murchison
here. Listen, don't talk, and copy. We have been captured by indigenous
intelligent life-forms, tentative classification GKSD ..."
The spiders weren't paying
any attention to her and were concentrating on their stone-throwing, which
wasn't accurate because the communicator continued to survive and show its indicator
lights.
"They appear to be sea
raiders of some kind," she went on more calmly. "They use large
sailing ships, unpowered aircraft, crossbows, and there is no evidence of metal
weapons. I've been tightly restrained but not hurt and am unable to see Danalta
..."
She broke off, realizing
that her last few words might have been a lie. It was hard to be sure in the
dimming twilight, but it seemed that the sand on one side of the communicator
was showing wind ripples. Then, suddenly, they were all around it as Danalta
did its impression of a patch of sandy beach. A moment later the device and its
indicator lights disappeared from sight.
The spiders threw a few
more stones, their voices sounding surprised and uneasy rather than angry at
this apparent display of magic, but with no target to aim at they were
beginning to lose interest. But a few stones would not bother Danalta, whose
hide, regardless of the shape it was covering, was impermeable to most classes
of low-velocity missiles. The important part was that it had rescued and was
protecting the communicator and, when the spiders left the scene, it would be
able to contact the medical station which would relay its report to Rhabwar.
Murchison was still feeling
anxious about her immediate future, but more hopeful than she had been a few
minutes earlier, when a loud, authoritative, chittering sound coming from the
spiders' vessel drew her attention towards it.
Several of the triangular
openings in the hull were open and emitting a dim yellow flickering glow which,
Murchison felt sure, had to be coming from oil lamps or candles. High on the
prow of the vessel and silhouetted against the darkening sky she could dimly
see the spider who seemed to be making all the noise. It was holding a tapering
black cone to its head that had to be a speaking trumpet. Beyond the beached
vessel and perhaps half a mile out to sea there was another vessel, identical
in size and shape and also showing a few patches of dim illumination. The view
of it was cut off by the body of one of the four spiders who raised her litter
and resumed their journey towards the beached ship.
They had not reacted
adversely while she had been speaking earlier, possibly because they had been
too busy stoning and talk-mg among themselves to notice or care, so she decided
to pass on the latest information before they all moved too far from the
capture point.
"Danalta," she
said, "the indications are that the GKSDs do
not have electric power or
radio communication. Another vessel of the same size and shape is entering the
bay and a third is on the horizon ..."
Murchison broke off as the
escort halted. One of them chit-tered loudly at her and began inserting a claw
between her body and the strands binding her, possibly checking on their
tightness. It was making her very uncomfortable so she shut up.
She didn't know if her
words had been heard, but she hoped that the small patch of beach that was
Danalta included a sandy ear.
The captain's face on the
casualty deck's viewscreen had the darkened pink color characteristic of strong
emotion, strong enough to filter down the length of the ship from the control
deck.
"Doctor," it
said, "I have an incoming message from the medical station which is being
relayed from Danalta who is somewhere else on the island. This, this is
ridiculous. It says that Pathologist Murchison has been captured by pirates of
some kind. But that world down there shows no evidence of sapient life. Have
your medics been using their medical supplies for recreational purposes? Would
you talk to them, please, before I say something grossly impolite?"
For an instant Prilicla
glanced towards the forms of the unconscious Jasam and the wide-awake Keet,
wondering whether or not he should switch off the translator, then decided to
leave it on. Secrecy in a first-contact situation was not a good thing.
"Of course, friend
Fletcher," he replied. "Patch them through."
As Danalta's report came
in, with occasional interjections from Naydrad, Prilicla wondered if he had
made the right decision about allowing Keet to overhear it. The Trolanni's
emotional radiation was becoming increasingly disturbed, but that of the
captain had changed from
irritation to deep concern. When the shape-changer's report ended, Fletcher spoke
before Prilicla could respond.
"Doctor," it said
urgently, "you will agree that this has become a predominantly tactical
and military, rather than a medical, problem. That being so, with or without
your permission, I must take charge."
"It is both a medical
and military problem, friend Fletcher," said Prilicla. "But the first
priority, military or medical, must be to have friend Murchison returned to us
safely and soon."
"My thought
exactly," said the captain. "But the position is delicate. We are now
faced with two first-contact situations that are running concurrently. The
Trolanni one is going well, but these intelligent spiders .. . Imagine, a
culture based on non-metal technology that possesses fighting ships, gliders,
uses crossbows, and has no electric power generation or radio communication.
They seem to have fire for lighting and perhaps cooking purposes but make no
large-scale industrial use of it. No wonder the sensors found no signs of
sapient life down there. An ambulance ship doesn't carry weapons, naturally,
but we'd have no trouble taking them on with our tractor beams and meteorite
shield..."
He paused and added,
"... if we were allowed."
Prilicla knew as well as
the captain how strict were the rules governing contact with any newly-discovered
planet that held intelligent life. If the culture had a space-travel capability
and the technology to support it, as well as the mind-set that had prepared
them for the possibility of meeting other life-forms among the stars, then the
contact procedure was straightforward. But if the indigenous race was
primitive, then a careful and covert assessment had to be made regarding the
long-term effects of making such a contact and a decision taken on whether or
not it should proceed.
There was always the danger
that strange beings dropping out of the sky in their thundering ships, even
though the entities concerned wanted only to help, would give rise to an
inferiority complex in an emerging culture, from which it might never recover.
A starship, the wreck of Terragar, had already landed and no doubt been spotted
by the reconnaissance gliders, so the Damage might already have been done. But
taking hostile action against them, even thought it would be in response to
Murchi-son's abduction, would most definitely be contraregulation-
"The gliders will
already have told their mother ships about the medical station," the
captain added, radiating worry. "$ the spiders decide to raid it from the
land or sea, it has no defenses
"Regardless of the
rules, friend Fletcher," he said firmly' we must somehow defend our people
and patients there without injuring any of the spiders. Agreed? As a tactician,
have you a plan for doing that?"
"I'll need to think
about that for a while," the captain replied. "But what about
Pathologist Murchison? We aren't trained or equipped to send in a rescue party,
and getting her out any other way would mean tearing the fabric of that spider
ship apart with tractor beams."
"Friend
Fletcher," said Prilicla, "you have a little til116 to think about
defending the medical facility while we are moving Jasam and Keet there or, if
necessary, moving the others b^ck on board Rhabwar. Regarding friend Murchison,
I want to discuss the pathologist's situation with friend Danalta, who is still
standing by and is close to the ships. It is a resourceful and versatile
guardian and intelligence-gatherer."
"That it is,"
said the captain. "I'll relay my radio traffic to you so that you'll know
what I'm doing. Breaking contact-While he was speaking to the shape-changer,
Prilicla could feel Keet's puzzlement and impatience, but the Trolanni didn't
interrupt with questions even after he had finished talking- He knew that
Danalta was concerned for friend Murchison's safety, out he was worried because
the shape-changer rarely worried about anything. He gave the other advice and
careful instructions and, hoping for the best, he was flying across to speak to
the increasingly impatient Keet when the captain's voice sounded in the
control-deck repeater.
"Courier One," it
was saying. "Regarding my situation report, I have an update for you. An
indigenous intelligent species has been discovered on the planet below. They
are physiological classification GKSD, possibly warlike, and possessing
limited, non-metal technology. Pathologist Murchison has been captured by them
but the latest information is that she is unhurt. Two separate first-contact
operations are now in progress. The damaged Trolanni vessel and this solar
system remain in quarantine. No other vessels are to approach. Leave with this
new information at once. Courier Two, you will stand by and listen out for further
developments. Off."
"Prilicla," Keet
said before he could speak, "I have heard and understood every word spoken
by you and the druul-like person, but the meaning of the words joined together
confuses me. Are Jasam and I in danger, or the Murchison person? Personally I
would not find the absence of this Murchison distressing, even though you have
assured me that it is a very good healer in spite of looking like a druul. But
you told me that this lovely world that Jasam and I have found was empty. Where
did these warlike spiders come from? We were wearing the last and best
searchsuit. Our people might never be able to build another. What is to happen
to us now?"
Even though a large
proportion of his feelings were engaged in worrying over friend Murchison's
safety, Prilicla radiated as much sympathy and reassurance as he could while
explaining the situation. He spoke truthfully, but because Jasam and Keet were
patients, he laced the truth heavily with optimism.
"Both of you will be
moved as quickly as possible to the surface," he said, "where I and
what remains of my medical team will be able to help Jasam, whose condition
requires urgent surgical treatment. The spiders are hostile, for reasons we
will not understand until we learn how to speak to them. We didn't know of
their existence until an hour ago, but we are strangers who
landed on their world
without permission and that can be a strong reason for hostility. Or perhaps,
as beings completely strange to their experience, they were curious and simply
wanted to investigate a new life-form. But they don't pose a physical threat,
except to friend Murchison, because our level of technology is far above
theirs.
"However," he
went on, "regardless of their species' level of intelligence or how
technologically primitive they are, this is their home world. The Federation,
our law-givers, would not allow the Trolanni to use your advanced technology to
take it from them, or to settle on it without the expressed permission and
agreement of the spiders-----"
"If we did not do
that," the weak voice of Jasam broke in, "we would be no better than
the druul."
Tactfully ignoring the
remark but pleased that it was joining in the conversation, Prilicla went on,
"But there are many worlds known to the Galactic Federation which are
without intelligent life. When both of you are fully recovered and able to
return in one of our ships to Trolann, we will show your people pictures of
these worlds, and analyses of their water, atmosphere, and surface plant and
animal life. Then we will make arrangements to move the Trolanni to the world
of your choice. ..."
"And will you
exterminate the druul," Keet interrupted, "so that we may leave
safely?"
"None of these
beings," said Jasam, speaking weakly, but answering for him, "will
exterminate anything or anyone, except possibly disease germs. How did they
ever fight their way to the top of their evolutionary trees to became their
planets' dominant species?"
Jasam," said Prilicla,
"I'm very pleased that you are awake and taking an interest in the
situation, but don't overtire yourself. You ask a question that will take a
long time to answer and you
may be unconscious again,
either from fatigue or boredom, before I finished answering it. Let me just say
that in our precivilized times none of us, including my own species, were this
well behaved. The medical monitors will signal any change in your condition, so
would you like me to leave you alone for a while so that Keet and yourself can
talk together about your future?"
He felt a sudden burst of
fear and sorrow from Keet, and one of lesser intensity from Jasam. They both
knew how close Jasam was to death just as they knew that he might be giving
them the chance to speak to each other for the last time. Before either of them
could respond, the captain's voice sounded in the repeater.
"Doctor, I have an
operational update for you," it said briskly. "We are now leaving
orbit on a descending path which will bring us down close to sea level about
three hundred miles from the island on the side opposite to the position of the
spider vessels. We estimate arrival in just under two hours. The same high
ground that they used to hide their presence from the station will also conceal
our approach. Naydrad and the two servos will be standing by to receive the
casualties. There has been nothing from Danalta or Murchison. Our sensors
report no land, sea, or air activity in the vicinity of the three spider ships,
so hopefully they are sleeping. You must be pretty close to your own limits of
endurance, Doctor, so you might like to do the same."
"Thank you, friend
Fletcher," said Prilicla, "that is good advice which I shall take at
once."
He had folded his wings and
was tethering himself loosely to an equipment support when he felt a subtle
change in Keet's emotional radiation. Normally its feelings, regarding its
mate, the druul, and their situation in general, were sharp and strong. It
loved and hated with equal intensity. But now there was a strange blurring and
softening of feeling as it spoke.
"I know that I cannot
read another person's emotions as well as you can," it said slowly,
"but from your words and actions here and on our searchsuit, I think—no, I
believe—that you feel a deep concern for Jasam's welfare, and mine. Is this
so?"
"Yes," he said,
trying to keep himself awake.
"On Trolann this
question would be considered an insult,
it went on, "implying
as it would a disgusting mental aberration am* perversion. But I think... Are
you feeling the same depth of concern for the safety of the druul-like healer
Murchison, as you do for Jasam?"
"Yes," said
Prilicla again.
The glider pilots carrying
their folded aircraft were the first to mount the boarding ramp, followed by
Murchison's bearer party and with the watchful spiders who carried only weapons
bringing up the rear.
The ramp, she saw, was
wide, surprisingly long, and formed a gently sloping bridge over the wavelets
and wet sand at the water's edge. It stretched between the large opening in the
ship's bow and the dry area farther up the beach. It was an incredible idea,
but she wondered if the spiders were sailors who didn't like getting their feet
wet.
Inside the ship she was
moved along a corridor whose roof was so low that if she hadn't been lying flat
on her back in a hammock, she would have scraped her face against the rough,
fibrous surface of the ceiling. Positioned at deck level about twenty meters
apart were lamps that flickered and, she thought, sniffing analytically,
smelled of some kind of vegetable rather than mineral oil. Each lamp floated in
a large wooden pan of water and there were two larger containers, one filled
with water and the other, sand, placed close by. She wondered if the spiders
were afraid of fire as well as water, then remembered that in the
wooden-sailing-ship days on Earth, fire had been a servant that had to be kept
under tight control.
After what seemed an
endless scrolling-down of dark, fibrous ceilings, her hammock was lowered to
the deck in a com-oartment that was about six meters square and high enough to
allow her to kneel upright if they untied her.
Plainly that was their
intention, because three of them lifted and turned her face-downwards while the
fourth opened its mouth and began to do something which softened and loosened
the strands around her body. Then they rolled her over and over slowly while
the fourth spider made delicate, slurping noises as the continuous strand was
sucked back into its body.
When it was finished, the
others left the room and it remained to wrap one of her ankles in a band of
thick, soft material, which was obviously padding because around it was tied
very tightly the end of another rope. It was thin, tough, and seemed to be woven
from plant fiber rather than originating inside a spider. The captor's
grotesque, insectile head bent over her ankle and it spat something at the rope
which hardened within a few seconds and covered the knot in a solid,
transparent seal. Then it tied the other end, which was long enough to enable
her to move anywhere inside the room and a little way beyond it, to a
structural support by the doorway and sealed it in similar fashion. It turned
to look at her for a moment before pointing with the nearest limb towards a
corner of the room at what looked like two low handrails with a flat wooden lid
set into the floor between them.
The spider moved across to
it, raised and pushed aside the lid, and indicated the square hole beneath it
before waving her forward and moving back itself.
The lighting in the room
was too subdued to show deep inside the opening, but even before Murchison
heard the regular, gurgling wave action of water at the bottom she knew what it
was—the body-wastes disposal facility. To show that she understood, but without
actually giving a full demonstration, she ; rasped the rails, one in each hand,
and hunkered down for a moment before replacing the lid. Apparently satisfied,
the spider was pointing at the contents of a shelf in the opposite corner of
the compartment.
It held three wooden
beakers, two tall and slim and the other one short and broad, all of them with
lids; one small, cuplike receptacle; a small stack of flat, wooden platters;
and a large open bowl that had neatly folded squares of soft fabric lying
beside it. On hands and knees she moved across to them quickly and lifted down
the narrow beakers in turn. She gave them a gentle shake before removing the
lids, sniffed, and decided that they contained water. The thicker one was filled
with round lumps of material that looked and felt like hairy potatoes.
Murchison straightened onto
her knees, turned and waved her hand vigorously at the spider, then pointed
down at her equipment pouch. She wasn't simply trying to attract its attention,
because it was already watching her closely, just trying to give it the
impression that her next movement would be overt, innocent, and harmless.
Slowly she unfastened the
flap and used one finger and thumb to lift out the narrow, white cylinder that was
her analyzer, which she put in the corner of her mouth so that she had both
hands free to to pour an inch of water into the drinking beaker. When she
touched the sensor tip of the analyzer into it, the readout showed many trace
elements but no toxicity, so she drank it down. From the solid-food container
she chose a small piece and broke it. The center was pale green and spongy and
gave off a faint odor that reminded her of cinnamon. She pushed the analyzer
into it in several places, but none of the readings showed anything to worry
her. She replaced the instrument and took a cautious nibble.
It wasn't completely
nauseating, she thought, but it would require a condition of near starvation to
make it palatable. Murchison was reminded of her first promotion to the Sector
General permanent staff, when her mixed-species former students had thrown a
party for her. On a dare she had eaten a piece of Kelgian warlgan cake. This
stuff tasted a little better.
She forced herself to
swallow it and say, "Thank you." The spider chittered briefly in
reply and backed to the doorway, where it continued to watch her.
For several minutes
Murchison sat on the hammock, which had been left on the floor, thinking about
what she should do next and, more importantly, what her captors were expecting
her to do next. Their technology was primitive, but in its own way, civilized.
Up until now they had shown no deliberate cruelty towards her, and they
possessed a high level of intelligence and flexibility of mind, which was shown
by their curiosity regarding her and their attempt to make her comfortable. It
would be natural in the circumstances for her to demonstrate a similar degree
of curiosity.
Using her feet with legs
bent almost double and with one supporting hand keeping her from falling onto
her back, Murchison began to tour the room. One wall was hung with coils of
rope in various thicknesses and another had shelves of wooden implements, some
of which looked like the pictures of marlin spikes she had seen in the history
books. No metal tools, implements, or even support brackets were visible.
Everything, even the deck, walls, and ceiling, seemed to be made of hard, dark
green, tightlywoven plant fiber except for the regular lines of thin, pale grey
that seemed to run through and reinforce all of them. She was pretty sure where
the grey material had come from because she had seen a few strands of it
binding the crossbows together, and as a supporting latticework on the wings
and fuselage of their gliders. With a tiny shiver of wonder Murchison tried to
comprehend a species whose advanced technology, its homes, sailing ships, and
aircraft, and who knew what else, was in part woven out of their own bodies.
The third wall was bare,
except at the two top corners where there was a large wooden ratchet
arrangement that enabled it to be tipped outwards from the vertical and away
from the edge of
the ceiling. Between them
there was a six-inch gap through which fresh air, cold now that the sun had
set, was blowing. Plainly this was the room's ventilation system. She moved to
the fourth wall that contained the door—with her spider guard filling it—the
lamp, and the fire-prevention arrangements. Intending to examine the workings
of the lamp closely with a view to adjusting the setting of its floating wick
to give more light, she reached fonwards.
Her fingers were more than
a foot away from it when she cried out in pain and surprise as a sticklike
forward limb cracked down across the back of her hand.
"Why the blazes did
you do that?" she cried, pressing the hand between her other arm and side
to deaden the pain.
The spider unlimbered its
crossbow and sent a bolt thudding into the floor in front of the lamp, then it
moved into the room, and with great difficulty loosened and pulled the crossbow
bolt from the floor and replaced it in its quiver before returning to the
doorway.
She had the answer to her
question. Clearly the message was, Hands off the lamp.
Up until then the spider
had not deliberately tried to hurt her and might not do so again unless, as
now, she tried to break their rules. She wondered how she would have felt if
their positions had been reversed. In this society a moment's carelessness
with a naked flame might well cause irreparable property damage in addition to
personal injury.
Losing, for example, what
was to them a complex, state-of-the-art aircraft would be devastating for the
pilot, who had probably woven important parts of its support structure from
its own body material. But the destruction of a large-scale, cooperative
enterprise like this ship, which must be a continuous, floating fire hazard,
would be a community disaster. Henceforth she would obey the rules and avoid
having her wrist slapped, or, better still, try to communicate with and
understand her captors so that such acts of minor physical chastisement would
no longer be necessary.
The time to begin talking
was now, but both her brain and her body were too tired to begin the long,
complicated and no doubt initially frustrating process of sign language and word
sounds that would be needed. She could, however, make a small
start.
She moved back to the wall
with the ventilator slit in it, pointed to the opening, and blew her breath out
noisily for a few seconds, shivered elaborately, and returned to the floor area
covered by the hammock. There she lay down lengthwise on her side along one
half of it, and pulled the surplus material across her legs and body and
tucking it under her chin. It was coarse-textured but warm. With the back of
one hand—which was no longer hurting—supporting the side of her face, she
looked along the deck at the now-horizontal picture of her guard.
"Good night," she
said quietly.
The spider made a low,
chittering sound.
She had no idea of how much
if anything of the recent pantomiming it had understood, but Murchison hoped
that she had conveyed the message that she had rendered herself voluntarily
immobile and there was no danger of her breaking any more rules for a while.
She lay watching it while it watched her, feeling the hard surface of the deck
through the hammock material and not expecting to sleep.
She awakened to find that
the lamp was out, the ventilation slit had been opened wide so that sunlight as
well as air was coming through it, and that during the night another large rectangle
of hammock material had been spread over her sleeping body. She felt stiff and
sore, but pleased, because it seemed that the process of communication had
already begun. When she raised herself onto one elbow and cleared her throat
quietly, her spider guard— she was pretty sure that it was the same one—opened
its eyes.
When she had stretched a
few times in the limited space available, and rubbed the stiffness out of her
muscles, Murchison lifted the lid of the waste-disposal opening, stared at the
spider for a moment. It backed out of the doorway and moved sideways out of
sight.
It was strange, Murchison
thought, that all of the civilized species known to the Federation had this
aversion to eliminating body wastes in public, or to witnessing the activity
in others. When she had washed and eaten—she was so hungry that the food
tasted horrible but on the plus side of inedible—she dissolved a small amount
of the food in the remains of the washing-water and with the corner of a cloth
daubed two simple sketches on the sunlit wall. Then she put her head around the
side of the doorway and beckoned for the spider to come back inside.
It was time to start
talking.
But her guard had other
ideas. It spat accurately onto the knot holding the other end of her
restraining rope, dissolving the seal, then made it into a tight coil which it
grasped in one claw. With the other one it indicated its crossbow and quiver
before it began tugging on the rope.
Politely she was being told
to follow it, or else.
In the event, she had no
need to worry because it became clear that her guard was showing her over the
ship while giving the hundred or more crew members a chance to look her over.
They pointed, waved limbs, and chittered excitedly at her, their body language
reflecting intense curiosity. But a quiet, clicking sound from her escort made
them keep their distance. She guessed that her spider was a superior officer of
some kind and that it was showing off a strange and interesting specimen that
it wished to keep as comfortable, if not as happy, as possible. Murchison could
live with that, especially as the technology of the ship itself was so strange
and interesting.
In a first-contact
situation, curiosity that was strong enough to overcome xenophobia in both parties
was a very good sign.
The vessel looked even
larger inside than out. Its smooth outer shell contained a structure that was
like a complicated three-dimensional maze. She estimated it to be about eighty
meters from prow to stern, sixty in the beam, and thirty to the highest point
of its turtlelike upper works which, so far as she co^ld see, enclosed five or
six levels of decking that were stepped back sharply so as to be covered by a
segmented outer shell that could be opened in whatever area and number was
required, to become sails and furnish highly directional wind propulsion. The
overall structural material must have been very light because, in spite of its
top-heavy appearance, the vessel rode very high in the water.
She wasn't surprised to
find that the two decks that were on and just above the water line had no sail
openings, ventilation, or natural lighting. The compartments on those levels
were large and filled with coils of rope, netting, and masses of eel-like creatures,
some of which were still twitching, that smelled like fish. She was glad when
her escort guided her back towards the fresh air and sunlight of the upper
decks.
But there was a steadily
diminishing supply of fresh air, she realized, and no sunlight at all. She was
pushed gently against a bulkhead and signaled to stay out of the way because it
appeared that the entire crew were moving about and working furiously to wind
in all of the sail segments and seal their outer shell. Just before the section
beside her closed to admit only a narrow band of light, she was able to see the
probable cause of all the frantic activity.
The sun had been covered by
the dark grey curtain of a rain squall that was running in from the sea.
On the way back to her
compartment Murchison had a lot to think about. This and the other two vessels
she had seen must be part of a fishing fleet that needed aerial reconnaissance
to direct them towards the shoals they trawled. The sails they used for
guidance and propulsion had to double as shelters in the event of a storm or
even a rain shower because, perhaps like cats and Kelgians and certain other
furred species in her experience, it was physiologically dangerous for them to
get wet.
These ships were manned,
for want of a better word, by very brave sailors indeed.
Back in her room the
ventilator had been closed to admit a narrow band of light and none of the
heavy rain that was rattling against the hull. The spider pointed to a formerly
empty shelf. During their absence someone, probably acting on its instructions,
had left them a small stack of wide, pale yellow dried leaves a thin,
short-handled brush, and a small wooden container of what looked like ink.
Considering the
spider-hostile weather outside, she thought again, this was a very good time to
begin talking.
Using its power-hungry
tractor beams in reverse rather than the noisy thrusters, Rhabwar had come in
low and quiet to transfer Prilicla and the Trolanni casualties to the station
before returning as it had come, to orbit where the captain would be able to
watch the spider ships without them seeing him, or if they did, they wouldn't
know that the new star in their sky was watching them.
"There are three
vessels," it reported simultaneously to the med station and the waiting
courier vessel, "but all are stationary with their bows resting on the
beach. Five gliders are flying around them at low altitude, too low for the med
station to spot them. A number of ship's personnel have been moving about on
the beach and under the nearby trees, but too few, I feel sure, for them to be
mounting an attack. In any case, the personnel concerned and the gliders went
back on board their ships about ten minutes ago and just before a rain cloud
blotted out the area.
"Doctor," it
added, "have you any medical or other developments that you want me to
relay to Courier Two?"
"None, friend
Fletcher," Prilicla replied.
'None?" the other
said. "What about your missing pathol-°gist? What's the shape-changer
doing about finding her? With
the increased number of
casualties I should think her presence is desirable right now."
"It is ..." he
began, when Naydrad, who had been assisting him with Keet's treatment, answered
for him in its usual tactless disregard for the fact that the listening patient
was wearing a translator.
"It is not desirable,
Captain," it broke in; "it is necessary. Physiologically the Trolanni
are an unusually complex life-form. This one will survive but its mate will
almost certainly not, unless Murchison, who is a specialist in other-species
pathology, returns to us soon. We are all concerned for her safety and the
possible loss of her unrivaled expertise."
Unlike the Kelgian, who
could not help saying exactly what it was thinking at any time, the captain
tried to be more circumspect.
"Your medical team is
two members short," it said gently, "and Danalta would be of more use
to you there than remaining in the vicinity of the bay. What I'm trying to say
is that Pathologist Murchison may not be returning to you. Isn't that a strong
possibility, Doctor?"
Prilicla felt a tremor
shaking his limbs and body, the significance of which Naydrad, but not Keet,
would understand. He controlled his emotions with difficulty and stilled his
body before he was able to speak.
"It is a possibility,
friend Fletcher," he said, "but I hope that it is a remote one.
Danalta lost contact with Pathologist Murchison shortly after its capture and
while it was still on the ground rescuing the communicator. The shape-changer
has since been trying to discover the ship to which friend Murchison was taken
and where within that ship it is being held, so far unsuccessfully-
"I shall not call off
this search," he went on, "because I have known Pathologist Murchison
for many years. I know its personality, its warmth, sympathy, humor, its
sensitivity, and in particular the intensity of feeling it holds for its
life-mate, and many other qualities that cannot be put into words. Of even more
irnportance, I know its emotional-radiation signature almost as well as I know my own.
"The spider ships are
at extreme range for my empathic faculty." he concluded, "and while I
cannot honestly say that I sense its presence at any given moment, if friend
Murchison was to terminate, I feel sure that I would know of it at once."
The captain broke contact
without speaking.
Murchison began with the
approach long-hallowed by tradition, even in the days before mankind had
learned how to leave Earth, by drawing pictures of the people and things she
wanted to name. They were small and simple; small for the reason that she
didn't know whether or not the supply of broad leaves was limited, and simple
because the ink ran like water and she had botched the first two attempts by
overloading the brush. She held the leaf horizontally sketch-upwards for the
few seconds it took the ink to dry, then showed it to the spider.
Pointing at herself and the
body outline in the sketch, she said, "Human." She repeated the
gestures and the word several times before pointing at the spider and its
outline and deliberately said nothing.
The silent questioning
seemed to work because one of her captor's clawlike digits moved down to touch
the spider outline. It made a low, clicking and cheeping noise that sounded
like, "Kritkuk."
Ignoring the sketches,
Murchison pointed at herself and then the spider, and repeated, "Human.
Kritkuk."
"Hukmaki," it
replied; and, more loudly, "Kritickuk."
The emphasis on the second
word, she thought, might be due to irritation at her not pronouncing it
correctly. But it wasn't doing such a hot job of pronunciation on
"human," either. She led a
different approach, knowing that it couldn't understand any of the words yet,
but hoping that it would get the message.
“You are speaking too
quickly for me," she said in her nor-
mal speaking tempo, then
went on slowly, "Please . . . speak... in ... a ... slow ... and . ..
distinct... voice."
Plainly it had understood
the message because this time, while the word didn't seem to be that much
slower, she was able to detect additional syllables in it.
She started to say it but
the word choked off into a cough. Taking a deep, calming breath she tried
again.
"Krititkukik,"
she repeated.
"Krititkukik," it
agreed.
Pleased at her first
linguistic success, but not wanting to waste time trying to teach it better
Earth-human pronunciation, she knelt down on the folded hammock and, with a new
leaf spread flat on the deck before her, she thought hard and began sketching
again.
Drawing two circles to
indicate their different planets in space might be too confusing at this stage
although, being a sailor, her spider would certainly use the stars for navigation
between its world's many islands and might be well aware of the fact that its
surface was round. Instead she drew a straight line to represent the horizon
across the widest part of a new leaf, placed a small circle with wavy lines
radiating from it to indicate that it was the sun and added the outline of the
island. Around and below it she drew small, flat crescent shapes to denote
waves, and on one side of it she drew three flat domes to depict the spider's
ships and not to scale, a glider flying above them. She pointed to each of the
symbols in turn.
"Sky," she said.
"Sun. Sea. Island. Ship. Glider."
The spider supplied the
equivalent word sounds, and a few of them she was even able to pronounce
without being corrected, but the other began walking around her in a tight
circle as if in agitation or impatience.
Suddenly it reached forward
and took the brush from her hand and began slowly and carefully to add to her
sketch. It drew three small, flat rectangles that had to be the buildings of
the medical station on the other side of the island. It reversed the brush and
used the dry end to point several times at the station.
She wasn't giving away
information that the spiders did not already know from their aerial
reconnaissance and they would have been stupid if they did not already know
that she had come from there, so she took another leaf and filled it with a
drawing of the medical-station buildings in greater detail. She showed the sand
below them sloping to the wavy lines of the sea and, on a clear area of sand,
four stylized figures: herself; the cylindrical shape with many short legs
along its base that was Naydrad; a featureless cone that was Danalta when it
wasn't being something else; and Prilicla. In outline the empath looked very
much like Krititkukik except for the two sets of wings and the fact that it was
a little distance above the ground. The spider remained motionless for the few
seconds, either in surprise or because it was waiting for the ink to dry, then
it pointed the brush first at Murchison herself, then used the end of its thin
handle to touch her image in the sketch, followed by those of the others, and
finally the station. It repeated the process, but this time when it touched
each of the four figures it followed by touching the buildings, and ended by
tapping repeatedly at the med station alone. Then it looked at her and made a
chitter-ing, interrogative sound.
It was saying, she felt
sure, that it knew all of them had come from the med station, but where had the
med station come from?
One of the most important
rules while opening first-contact proceedings with a less advanced species, was
not to display a level of technology that would risk giving the other party a
racial inferiority complex. Looking at this spider sea-captain, and considering
the degree of bravery, resourcefulness, and all-around adaptability required
for a profession that called for constant travel over a medium—water—that was
an ever-present and probably deadly danger to them, she did not think that her
spider would recognize an inferiority complex if it was to stand up and bite it
in its hairy butt. This time she fetched the water container before selecting
another, unmarked leaf. The horizon line she placed low down, with the island,
three ships, and med station sketched in less detail. Then she poured a little
water into her cupped hand, added a few drops of ink to darken it, and then
filled in the sky with a transparent grey wash which, she hoped, would indicate
that it was a night picture. When it was dry, instead of a sun she painted in a
few large and small dots at irregular intervals. A sailor was bound to know
what they were.
"Stars," she
said, pointing at each of the dots in turn.
"Preket," said
the spider.
She pointed to one of the
domelike ships and carefully pronounced the spider word for it,
"Krisit." Then she drew another one of them, this time high in the
night sky, pointed at it, then to herself and at the med station.
"Preket krisit,"
she said.
The spider's reaction was
immediate. It backed away from her and began chittering loudly and
continuously, but whether in surprise, excitement, fear, or some other emotion,
she couldn't say because it was speaking far too fast for her to understand any
of the words even if she had already learned some of them. It came closer and
jabbed a claw at the picture so suddenly that one edge of the leaf split apart.
Again and again it pointed at its three ships and the island, at the starship
and the medical station and then at the starship again. With the claw it pushed
at the starship so violently that the leaf was torn in two.
Plainly the other was
trying to tell her that the three ships and the island belonged to the spiders
and that it wanted the strangers to go away. Thinking about the kind of people
they were, armed fisherfolk with the capability for long-range reconnaissance,
it was possible that they preyed on others of their kind as well as their
ocean's fish. The visiting starship, especially if they thought that it was
manned by sea-raiders like themselves, had already established a base on their
island. They would considerate it a threat that must be driven off, captured,
or destroyed.
Somehow Murchison had to
show them that neither the visiting ship nor the medical station were a threat
and that they were in fact, the opposite. She held up both her hands, palms
outwards, for silence.
When it came, she lifted
the brush again and held it close to the other's face, but this time she didn't
use it to sketch. Instead she snapped off a couple of inches of the handle, at
the end opposite the hairs so that it remained usable, and held them apart for
a few seconds. Waiting until it seemed that she had all of the spider's
attention, she brought the broken ends together and spat delicately on the join
before handing both pieces back to the spider.
"Join it," she
said slowly. "Fix it. Mend it."
While she was speaking, the
other made sounds that seemed to have a questioning note, but immediately got
the idea. Onto the join it spat a very small quantity of the sticky saliva it
had used earlier to seal the knots of her restraining rope, and when it had
hardened, handed the brush back to her. Apart from the small gob of hardened
saliva where the repair had been made, the brush was a good as new. She began
sketching with it again.
This time she didn't bother
showing the island, ships, or sun. At the left of the picture she drew instead
a vertical line of four figures to represent herself, a spider, Naydrad, and
Prilicla. Slightly to the right of them she placed a similar line of figures,
except that her figure was divided by a narrow space at the waist and one of
her legs was separated by a short distance from her body. The figure of the
spider showed three limbs detached from its body, and similar radical
dismemberment to the forms of the Kelgian and her Cinrusskin chief. A little
farther to the right she drew a larger picture of the med-station buildings, followed
by another vertical line of figures that were whole again. To make her meaning
even clearer she drew four short arrows linking the damaged figures to the
station, and another four pointing from it to the whole figures.
Again she indicated the
join in the brush handle and said slowly, "We mend people."
The spider didn't appear to
understand her at all because it pushed the sketch away before retying the rope
around her ankle and sealing the knot. It left quickly without speaking.
Murchison threw the brush
angrily at the discarded sketch. The rain had stopped and sunlight was shining
through the narrow opening in the ventilation wall. She moved to it, hoping
that more light would lighten her spirits, and wound down the ratchet until it
was fully open.
Noise as well as light was
pouring in, but the excited chit-tering of crew members and the creaking of
wooden mechanisms could not drown out the single, loud clicking voice that was
almost certainly that of the captain using a speaking trumpet. On the beach
outside she could see spiders swarming over the other ships, opening their sail
seals and raising the boarding ramps.
Something important was
happening, Murchison thought, something that would almost certainly involve
this armed fishing-fleet opening hostilities against the medical station. Angrily
she returned to sit on the folded hammock, knowing that her lamentable recent
attempt at communication was certainly responsible for it and that she deserved
everything that was going to happen to her.
It was while she was
glowering despondently at the empty doorway that she noticed something amiss.
Beside it there had been an unlit lamp with single containers of water and sand
on each side of it, and now there were three containers there. Feeling greatly
relieved but completely undeserving of her sudden change in fortune, she spoke
quietly.
"Stop showing off,
Danalta," she said, "which barrel of sand is you?"
Throughout the ship the
sound of spider voices and the loud creaking and rumbling of wooden mechanisms
being operated reached a climax. The level of light coming from the corridor
increased and with it came a steady flow of warm air that could only be blowing
off the beach as the sail shields were opened fully and deployed. A moment
later the rocking action of the waves intensified as the ship pulled free of
the sand. The fleet had set sail and she knew its objective.
"They're going to
attack the med station," said Murchison urgently above the ship noises.
"We have to get back there to warn them___"
"You already have
warned them," said Danalta. Its sand-container shape, which had grown an
eye, ear, and mouth, moved sideways to reveal her communicator lying on the
floor with its TRANSMIT and RECORD lights blinking. "I was here during
your conversation with the spider, and Captain Fletcher, with the help of Dr.
Prilicla, who uses a similar form of language, says that it has almost enough
to program a translator for spider talk when we get back. Prilicla needs you
there, it needs all of the med team, as quickly as possible. One of the
Trolanni casualties is giving cause for serious concern."
She picked up the active
communicator and clipped it to
her equipment belt.
Apologetically she said, "For a while I forgot what I do for a living. I
must report to Prilicla at once."
"It will waste less
time," said Danalta firmly, "if you report to it in person.
Pathologist Murchison, we must return to the station, now."
Rarely had words been
spoken with which she was in more complete agreement, Murchison thought
fervently as she looked around her low, cramped, and highly uncomfortable
prison, but returning to the station was not going to be easy, especially for
her. She pointed at the ventilator opening.
"Those ships are
moving fast," she said, "and we're already two hundred meters from
the beach. Even if we left now, by the time I swam ashore and ran all the way
back, we might not get there until after the fleet arrived."
The sand container slumped
into a more organic shape and rolled up to her feet, growing a rudimentary jaw
with very sharp teeth as it came.
"With my assistance we
will both go by sea," said Danalta as it bit through the rope securing her
ankle. "Will I enlarge the ventilator opening for you?"
"No," she replied sharply. "It will
open widely enough to let me out. We don't want to damage their ship
unnecessarily. I was trying to make friends with them."
"Then jump," said
Danalta.
Instead of jumping she made
a long, shallow dive that took her about twenty meters from the ship's side
before she had to surface. She heard the splash of Danalta's less graceful
entry into the water, the excited chittering of spiders as more and more of
them spotted her, followed by the hissing plop of crossbow bolts striking the
water all around her. She took a deep breath and dived again, then wondered if
a few feet of water would make any difference to the penetration power of the
crossbow bolts when she could swim faster and maybe be more difficult to hit on
the surface. But the next time she came up for breath and looked back, she was
in time to hear the spider with the speaking
trumpet call out a few
loud, sharp syllables after which the shooting stopped.
Relieved and grateful, she
continued swimming. Then she wondered if her spider captain didn't want to hurt
her, or if it believed that it would recapture her with the others at the
station and simply wanted to save ammunition. A green, sharklike shape with a
long, corrugated horn growing from the top of its head broke the surface beside
her before she could make up her mind.
"Grasp the dorsal horn
firmly in both hands," said Danalta, "and hold on tight."
She was glad of the extra
grip afforded by the corrugations as the shape-changer picked up speed and its
wide, triangular tail whipped rapidly from side to side, thrusting it faster
and faster through the water. It was exhilarating and uncomfortable and a little
like water-skiing without the skis. Danalta was cutting through rather than
over the steep, breaking waves in the bay so that she had to twist her body and
her head backwards every time she needed to breathe, but doing so showed that
the distance between them and the pursuing ships was opening up. Laughing, she
wondered what her spider captain would think about her moving so fast through
the water that she was leaving a wake.
But she was beginning to
feel very cold, and Danalta was moving even faster and the water was slapping
and tugging and bursting in clouds of spray over her head, arms, and shoulders.
In spite of the warm, morning sunshine reflecting off the waves and spray, her
body temperature was dropping rapidly and the hands holding her to Danalta were
losing feeling. She realized suddenly that while her equipment belt had stayed
firmly in Place, the swimsuit hadn't.
The spider ships were
disappearing behind the curve of the coastline, and the wreck of Terragar and
the medical station were corning into sight. Within a few minutes they were in
the shallows m front of the buildings and the shape-changer was already turning
its fins into legs.
Murchison stamped about on
the sand and swung her arms briefly to return some heat to her body, then, still
shivering, she sprinted for the largest prefab structure that housed the
recovery ward. It was occupied by Naydrad and the three Earth-human casualties.
With her teeth chattering, she said, "Charge Nurse, please throw me a set
of my whites and ..."
"You look fine the way
you are, ma'am." said one of the Terragar officers, smiling broadly.
"The way I am,"
she said, beginning to pull on the tight, white coveralls, "is bad for
your blood pressure. Naydrad, where's Prilicla?"
"In the comm
room," said the Kelgian.
A faint tremor of pleasure
and relief shook Prilicla as the pathologist joined him before the
communicator screen where the face of the captain was staring out at them. He
said, "Friend Murchison, I'm glad to have you back with us, and I feel
that you are well but worried. Ease your mind. Friend Fletcher and Rhabwar will
be with us several minutes before the spider fleet arrives, so that we are in
no immediate danger from them."
"But, Doctor,"
said Murchison grimly, "they are in danger, deadly danger, from us."
"No, ma'am," the
captain joined in. "I've never held with the adage that attack is the best
form of defense. We will keep them away from the medical station until you
people are ready to transfer to Rhabwar. Minimum force, if any, will be used."
Prilicla could feel the
growing concern and impatience behind the words as Murchison went on.
"Please listen, Captain. Unknown to me at the time, Danalta was making a
record of my attempt at communication, but it didn't include the other things I
saw the spiders do earlier, the way they have to live with and use their
technology, or their behavior towards me and the, well, consideration one of
them showed. They are intelligent, brave, and resourceful people, but terribly
vulnerable."
"I understand,"
said the captain. "We'll try not to hurt them, but we do have to defend
the station, remember?"
"You don't
understand!" said Murchison. "The spiders use technology that is
partially organic, something we've never met before. All of their fabricated
structures large and small, their ships, gliders, tools, and, presumably, their
living accommodations, are partly woven of web strands from their own bodies.
I don't know how much they value this material, or how difficult or easy it
would be to replace, but damaging anything they've made might mean damaging
them, or a least a valuable piece of their personal property. You're on very
sensitive ground here, Captain."
Before the other could
reply, it went on quickly, "They use fire, but so far as I could see, only
for heavily protected lighting, and they seem to be so afraid of it that their
bodies as well as their structures must be highly flammable. And in spite of
being sailors, they also have an intense aversion to contact with water. Their
ships are designed so that the sails can be reconfigured to enclose the entire
upperworks so as to shelter them from rain and spray.
"I'm sorry,
Captain," it went on, and Prilicla could feel the apology backing up its
words, "for adding these complications to whatever defensive strategy
you've worked out. But if we are ever to establish friendly relations with
these people, which from personal contact I consider to be a strong probability,
you must not use any weapons against them that will generate heat. I'm thinking
of signal flares, normally non-harmful pyrotechnics, or any form of radiant
energy that would cause an electrical discharge. As well, you must not allow
any of their sea or airborne Personnel to fall in the water."
The captain was silent for
a moment and, thankfully, still well beyond Prilicla's empathic range. When it
spoke, its features and voice were calm and reflected none of what it must have
been feeling.
"Thank you for the
additional information, Pathologist Murchison," it said, glancing aside at
another screen. "We should be closing with the spider fleet approximately
one hundred and fifty meters off your beach in seventeen minutes. In that time
I shall try to modify my defensive strategy accordingly. However, you will
understand that operationally I do not do my best work with both hands tied
behind my back. Off."
Murchison shook its head at
the blank screen and moved to the room's big direct-vision panel. Prilicla
followed to hover above its shoulder as they watched the three spider vessels
that had rounded the curve of the island and were beginning to foreshorten as
they turned in to approach the station. All six of their gliders had been
launched and were making slow, tight circles in the sky above them. Distance
had reduced the chittering of their crews to a low, insect buzzing. The
pathologist's emotional radiation, he noted with approval, reflected wariness,
concern, growing excitement, but no fear.
"Friend Murchison,"
he said gently, indicating the big diagnostic screen on the other side of the
room, "this is a good opportunity for us to review the latest clinical
material on the two Trolanni. Patient Keet's condition was not life-threatening
and its treatment is progressing satisfactorily, but not so Patient
Jasam's."
The pathologist dipped its
head in affirmation and moved to the screen which was already displaying
enlargements of the two patients' scanner images. For several minutes it
studied them, magnifying and changing the viewpoint several times, while in the
direct-vision panel the spider ships drew closer. But unlike Prilicla, it had
no attention to spare for them.
Finally it said,
"Danalta told me there was a problem with Patient Jasam, and it was right.
But Patient Keet's condition, while not giving cause for immediate concern, is
not good. There is a general impairment of blood flow, and organic degeneration
in several areas that is not, I think, due to any recent trauma, and the
indications would support a diagnosis of sterility caused by a long-term dietary deficiency. But Patient Jasam
is in serious trouble. I advocate immediate surgical intervention. Would you
agree, sir?"
"Fully, friend
Murchison," he replied, gesturing towards the screen. "But there are
three main areas of trauma, deep puncture-wounding whose effect on nearby
organs is unknown. We should go in at once, certainly, but how, where and in
what order? This is an entirely new life-form to my experience."
The Earth-human's feelings
were predominantly those of concern, apology, and, strangely, an underlying but
slowly growing feeling of certainty.
"There is nothing
entirely new," it said, "under this or any other sun. Our Trolanni
friend's CHLI physiology has a similarity very slight I must admit—in its lack
of supporting skeletal structure and the fine network of blood vessels and
nerve linkages supplying the peripheral limbs and visual and aural sensors, to
those found in the Kelgian DBLF classification. There are also similarities in
its two fast-beating hearts to those of the light-gravity, LSVO and MSVK
life-forms. The digestive system is very strange, but the waste-elimination
process could belong to a scaled-down Melfan. If you believe the risk to be
acceptable, I think I know what is going on, or what should be going on in
there, but..."
It held up its hands with
the fingers loosely spread.
"... But I can't do it
with clumsy digits like these," it went on. "It would need much more
sensitive hands, yours, and the small, specialized members that the
shape-changer can grow to get into and support the awkward corners. You and
Danalta would perform the surgery. I could only assist and advise."
"Thank you, friend
Murchison," said Prilicla, wishing that the other could feel its gratitude
and relief. "We will prepare at once."
"Before we open Jasam
up .. ." it began, and broke off because all around them the loose
equipment in the room was vibrating to the increasing subsonic growl that
indicated Rhabwar
was making its low-level
approach. Irritably, and without even looking at the ships closing on the
beach, it raised its voice.
"I would like to make
a closer, hands-on examination of both patients," it went on, "for
purposes of comparison and to obtain physical confirmation of the scanner
findings."
"Of course," said
Prilicla. "But first give me a few minutes so that Naydrad can render them
unconscious."
"But why?" it
asked. "We're very short of time."
"I'm sorry, friend
Murchison," he replied, "but unlike the Terragar officers, the
Trolanni would take no pleasure in the sight of your body."
From the deeply upholstered
comfort of his control couch, which felt about as soft as a wooden plank due to
the body tension required to make him appear relaxed to his subordinates,
Captain Fletcher watched the image of the ships and aircraft of the spider
landing force as it expanded in his forward vision screen.
Rhabwar was not a large
vessel by Monitor Corps standards, but it was a little longer and its delta
wing configuration gave it more width than the big, flattened, turtlelike ships
of the opposition. The approach he had originally planned would certainly have
caused maximum non-offensive confusion, if not utter havoc and demoralization,
to the opposition. But he had remembered the words of Pathologist Murchison as
she had been telling him how he should do his job.
His idea had been to go in
low and fast and drag a sonic Shockwave along the length of the beach. He
didn't think that the ships would suffer or—except psychologically—their crews,
but the thought of what the air turbulence created by a supersonic fly-past
would do to those ridiculously flimsy gliders made it a bad idea. It wouldn't
be like shooting ducks, he thought, but more like blasting butterflies out of
the sky.
"Decelerate," he
said, "and bring us to a halt one hundred meters above the beach midway
between the station and the water-line.
Deploy three tractor beams in pressor mode at equal strength in stilt
configuration and hold us there."
"Sir," said
Haslam, "the slower approach is going to give them time to begin landing
their people on the beach."
The captain didn't reply
because he could see everything that was happening as well as the lieutenant
could and had arrived at the same conclusion.
"Dodds," he said.
"The opposition's ships are highly flammable. When we're in position,
swing around so that our tail flare will be directed inland. Then put out one
forward tractor to discourage the spider advance. Focus it to about ten meters'
surface diameter and change the point of focus erratically for maximum
turbulence as you play it back and forth along the beach across their path. The
idea is to create a localized sandstorm down there."
"Understood,
sir," said Dodds.
"Power room," he
went on briskly. "We'll be supporting the ship's mass on pressor beams
with no assist from the thrusters for a while. How long can you give us? A
rough estimate will do."
"A moment,
please," said the engineering officer; then, "Approximately
seventy-three minutes on full power drain, reducing by one-point-three percent
per minute until exhaustion and an enforced grounding seventeen-point-three
minutes later."
"Thank you,
Chen." said Fletcher, smiling to himself. The power-room lieutenant was a
man who disliked giving rough approximations. "I'm putting this operation
on your repeater screen. Enjoy the, ah, battle."
The misty-blue light given
off by their three immaterial stilts as well as that of the forward tractor
beam would be difficult for the spiders to see in the bright sunlight, so it
would seem that the ship drifting to a stop above them was virtually
weightless, or at least very lightly built like one of their own flying
machines.
"A suggestion,
sir," said Chen suddenly. "If your intention
is to make a blatant
demonstration of power that will discourage, and probably scare hell out of the
enemy without inflicting actual physical injury, this is the way to do
it___"
"The spiders aren't
our enemy, Lieutenant," said Fletcher dryly, "they just act that way.
But go on."
"But if they don't
discourage easily," the other continued, "we could be faced with a
siege situation so that balancing ourselves up here on power-hungry stilts
would be a short-term activity as well as running down our power reserves. My
suggestion is that we land and modify the meteorite shield to provide
hemispherical protection widely enough to cover the station and ourselves. That
way we can maintain the shield for a much longer period. Once we've made the
point, which we have, that we are large, dangerous, and, if necessary, can
float motionless in the air, there's no reason to continue doing so. With
respect, sir, I think we should land sooner rather than later."
Exactly the same thoughts had
been going through Fletcher's mind, but saying so to Lieutenant Chen would have
made the captain sound petty-minded in the extreme. But a development that the
other had not foreseen, at least not yet, was that if a spider aircraft should
fly into one of the pressor beams supporting Rhabwar's weight, it and its pilot
would be smashed flat into the ground.
"Thank you,
Chen," he said instead. "Your suggestion is approved. Haslam, take us
down. Dodds, kill the pressors but maintain the forward tractor to keep that
sandstorm going. Chen, how soon will the meteorite-shield modification be
ready?"
"It's difficult to be
precise," said Chen. "Fairly soon."
"Try to make it sooner
than that," he said.
The gliders had sheared off
at Rhabwar's approach but now they were circling back again, possibly thinking
that the grounding of the ship was a sign of weakness. All three of the spider
vessels had run their prows up onto the beach and the nearest one had its landing-ramp
lowered. The first few spiders were already crawling ashore with crossbows held
at the ready. Dodds
took a moment to check the
focus of his tractor beam. The landing party now numbered close on twenty,
with more of them coming down the ramps at intervals of a few seconds.
Directly in front of them a
carpet of sand twenty meters in diameter and about three inches deep rose high
into the air and exploded into a cloud as the tractor's point of focus was
vibrated erratically in and out. A thick curtain of fine, powdery sand dropped
in front of and a little on top of the spiders.
For a moment they milled
about uncertainly. Then Fletcher saw a spider with a large speaking trumpet
climb onto the superstructure of it ship to chitter loudly at them. At once
they split into two groups that crawled rapidly along the beach in opposite
directions. The sandstorm, its effect only slightly diminished by the fact that
the line of targets was lengthening, followed them.
The other two ships were
also disgorging spiders while the gliders were flying in tight circles above
Rhabwar and the station, although fortunately not low enough for them to hit
the meteorite shield when it came on.
"Sir," said Dodds
worriedly, "the sand doesn't appear to bother them very much, especially
now that all three landing parties are strung out along the beach. It looks as
though they are trying move out of sight and circle round behind us. Shall I
increase the power and area of focus, sir, to stir up more sand, or maybe try
to box them in by—"
"Deploying another
tractor would help," Haslam broke in. "I'm not doing anything else at
the moment."
"—By pulling in some
water instead of sand," Dodds continued, "and splashing it down in
their path? That might stop them spreading out sideways. They'd be caught
between the sea and a wet place."
Pleased with the lieutenant
because this was an idea Fletcher had not already thought of himself, he said,
"We're told that water has a very bad effect on them and we are, after
all, trying to be friendly. Try it, but be very careful not to dowse
them."
A few minutes later Dodds
said jubilantly, "They certainly
.
are afraid of the water;
they've stopped in their tracks. But now they're pushing inland again."
"Haslam," said
the captain, "man another tractor beam unit—Dodds will give you the
settings—and help him out. While he concentrates on the two farther parties,
you take the nearest one. Keep moving up and down the line of spiders trying to
advance on the station. Leave the waterplashing, if necessary, to Dodds. You
shower them with sand only. Try to spoil their ability to see where they're
going, and generally make them feel uncomfortable, but don't hurt them."
"Yes, sir," said
Haslam.
More and more spiders were
crawling down their ships' landing ramps, but not spreading out because of the
threat from the containing splashes of water. If the positions were reversed,
Fletcher thought, he would have been wondering why they were not being
constantly drenched by water instead of dusted with harmless sand, but then,
their minds might not share the same rules of logic.
Suddenly they were changing
tactics.
"Look at this,
sir," Dodds said urgently. "They're beginning to weave from side to
side, then darting into the falling sand. And when I'm dealing with one flank the
other one pushes forward and gains a meter or so of ground. I have to keep
changing the point of focus, narrowing it or moving the tractor beam back to
keep from hitting them. Chen, we're going to need that meteorite shield, like
now."
"The same thing is
happening here," Haslam said. "We'd need to drop a ton of sand on
this lot to discourage them. They take turns at running in, zig-zagging at
random, and . .. Hell, I hit one of them!"
It must have been the
briefest of touches on one side of the spider's body, but the tractor beam
lifted it two meters into the sand-filled air and flipped it onto it back. It
lay with its six limbs waving. Haslam withdrew his beam without being told as a
few of the others gathered round their injured companion to lift it back onto
its feet. Through the air which was now free of sand, Fletcher had a clear view
of the spiders further up and down the beach beginning to move purposefully
towards the station again. Then high on the superstructure of the middle ship
of the three, the spider with the speaking trumpet began chittering loudly at
them. The advance hesitated and slowed to a dead stop. Within a few seconds all
three spider landing parties had turned around and were hurrying back to their
ships, the injured one being half carried by two of its companions. The gliders
were already coming in to land close to their boarding ramps.
"I'm sorry about
hitting that one, sir," said Haslam, "and I don't think it was badly
hurt. But it looks as though we've taught them a lesson because they've decided
to pull out."
"Don't bet on that,
Lieutenant," said Fletcher dryly. He was raising his hand to point at the
scene in the forward viewscreen when the communicator chimed and its screen lit
with the image of Dr. Prilicla.
"Friend Fletcher,"
said the Cinrusskin. "The traces of emotional radiation emanating from
your crew have been characteristic of excitement, tension and concern, all of
which feelings have suddenly diminished in strength. A long and tricky surgical
procedure is about to be attempted—once, that is, we solve an associated
non-medical problem. Can you tell me whether or not we can proceed without
outside emotional interruptions or distractions?"
"Doctor,"
Fletcher said, laughing softly, "you will be free of distractions for the
rest of the day. Judging by the look of that sky there is a heavy rainstorm,
not just a squall, moving in. The spiders are returning to their ships as we
speak."
They watched the dark grey
clouds on the horizon expanding to fill the sky and the paler curtain of heavy
rain rushing closer. The spiders and their aircraft were safely on board and
the sail shields of the three ships were closed tight before the deluge
arrived, but they could hear it rattling and bouncing off
the flattened dome-like
hulls which, he realized suddenly, looked very much like umbrellas.
"This must be the
first time," Haslam said, "that a battle was called off because of
rain."
.
The patient had been
prepped for surgery, the operating team of Danalta, Naydrad, and himself had
been standing by the table for more than twenty minutes, and friend Murchison
was still trying to solve Prilicla's associated non-medical problem. It was trying
with such intensity to be patient and reasonable that its emotional radiation
was making him tremble.
"Keet," it was
saying, "your life-mate Jasam is unconscious and will not feel pain,
either during or while recovering from this procedure. You, however, are
feeling the non-material pains of concern, uncertainty, and the continuing
emotional trauma over what you think will be the loss of a loved one. To be
brutally honest, we may lose Jasam, but we would have a better chance of saving
it if you would cooperate by moving out of visual range. Untutored as you are
in medical matters, not seeing every incision, resection, and repair as they
take place would be easier on you, too. Besides, would Jasam want you to suffer
needlessly like this?"
Keet lay watching the
towel-draped form of its life-mate from its litter, which it had insisted be
moved into the operating room. It made no reply.
"In all my nursing
experience," said Naydrad, its fur ruffling in disapproval, "never
has the next of kin, or any other nonmedically-oriented relative, been allowed
to witness a procedure of this complexity. On all the civilized worlds I know
of, it is just not done. If this is the custom on Trolann, I think it is a misguided,
unnecessarily painful, completely wrong, and barbaric custom."
Prilicla was about to
apologize for Naydrad's forthright speech, but stopped himself because the
reasons for the Kelgian species' lack of tact had already been explained to it,
but Keet didn't give him a chance to talk.
"It is not the custom
on Trolann," it said, radiating anger at the insult. "But neither is
it the custom to have a druul present in our operating theaters working on us.
Ever."
He could feel the
pathologist beginning to lose its temper, but not completely, because the words
it used were intended to • achieve a precisely calculated effect.
Murchison said calmly,
"The experiences you shared on your ship, your searchsuit as you call it,
when Jasam was badly injured and you were unable to leave your control pod to
help or comfort or even to be physically close to it, has made a deep
impression on your mind. You don't want to be separated from Jasam—especially,
as now, when you think that there is the danger of never seeing it alive
again. I can understand and sympathize with that feeling.
"Perhaps this natural
concern for your life-mate," it went on, "has temporarily clouded
your intellect and memory, so I shall explain to you once again, that I, no
matter how large or small my physical resemblance to one of them, am not a druul.
Because of my greater knowledge in some areas I am here simply to advise on
problems which may arise during this procedure. I shall not be working on Jasam
directly or touching its body at any time. If you insist on being present
during this operation, you have my permission to stay. However, seeing your
life-mate under the knife will be distressing and psychologically damaging for
you, so I suggest that you watch me closely rather than Jasam, just in case I
should feel suddenly hungry and want to eat it."
"And they tell me
Kelgians are without tact," said Danalta.
"Whatever that
is," said Naydrad, its fur spiking in shock. "But the words were
inappropriate."
Prilicla knew that
Murchison was deliberately using shock tactics, and felt from Keet's emotional
radiation that they were beginning to work.
"From your observation
of Prilicla's work on your ship," the pathologist went on, "you know
that it is capable of the most delicate and precise healing. You also know that
it is hypersensitive to the emotions of those around it, and you must already
have realized that your intense feelings of fear, concern, and other emotions
can adversely affect its ability to perform the high level of surgery that is
required here. For that reason you must at all times keep a tight control of
your feelings, natural though they are, so as to avoid distracting Prilicla. Do
you understand and agree?"
The Trolanni did not reply,
but Prilicla could feel the intensity of Keet's emotional radiation begin to
subside as it fought, successfully, to control its feelings and impose a
measure of calm on itself. There was no need for it to speak to this frightful,
druul-like creature because there was understanding and agreement and, he noted
with pleasure, a feeling of apology.
"Thank you, friend
Murchison," Prilicla said. "We will begin...."
The high concentration of
light around the patient, Prilicla thought, during the few times he glanced up
to rest his eyes, when contrasted with the grey overcast outside the
direct-vision panel, made it seem almost as if night had fallen, and the final
time he looked up, the panel was black and it had. At intervals the quiet voice
of the captain had been reporting no visible activity from the spider ships,
and with the fall of darkness the infrared sensors were confirming its theory
that the spiders were not nocturnal creatures.
"Or at least,"
Naydrad added, much too loudly for the cap-
tain to miss hearing,
"they don't go out on rainy nights. Dr. Prilicla, I think you are in need
of sleep."
"And I feel sure that
you are, Doctor," said Murchison. "The patient's condition is still
critical, but stable enough for us to seal off the lower thoracic area and
suspend operations for a few hours. After all, the damage to the lungs where
the deep air lines were jerked out by the onboard explosion has been repaired,
and it is breathing pure oxygen with no mechanical assistance, as well as being
fed intravenously. Repairs to the lesions caused by the traumatic withdrawal of
the external feeding and waste-extraction systems can surely wait a little
longer for attention?"
"You are probably
right, friend Murchison," Prilicla replied, using the form of words that
was the closest he could come to telling anyone they were wrong. "But
there are still small traces of toxic material adhering to the ruptured bowel
walls, and I would like to remedy that before any cessation. Friend Naydrad,
stand by and apply suction where I indicate. Friend Danalta, be ready to follow
me in and support the area under the first lesion while I am suturing. Friend
Murchison, ease your mind. I promise not to fall asleep on the patient for at
least an hour. Now, let us resume."
Naydrad's equipment made a
low, derisive sound and its fur rippled in concern as it said, "This is
the strangest stomach-and-bowel arrangement I've ever encountered. Dr.
Prilicla, in coloration and structure, it resembles spaghetti, that
Earth-human food you like to eat. Is it strange to you, Pathologist?"
"In the light of my
earlier and non-serious remark about eating," said Murchison sharply,
radiating disapproval, "it is unseemly to mention food in the presence of
the next of kin. And no, the Dwerlans use a similar gastrointestinal tract,
although, I admit, not two of them working in tandem. There is nothing new in
multispecies medicine, just new combinations of the old. But this one is
particularly complex."
Keet moved restively on its
litter and said, "I don't seriously believe that any of you would want to
eat the offal of my life-mate. Even a druul would think twice about doing that.
But I can't see what is happening. Murchison, you're blocking my view."
"That was and remains
my intention," said Murchison. "It is kinder to tell you what is
happening after it has happened."
With Naydrad keeping the
operative field clear of unwanted fluid, and Danalta extruding the fine digits
that could insinuate themselves into the awkward crevices where no inflexible
surgical instrument could go so as to hold open the site of the damage,
Prilicla was able to see his way to perform the extremely delicate work of
repair that was necessary, As the procedure continued, Keet radiated intense
but—uncharacteristically for it—silent concern. Murchison was watchful but it
did not have to speak at all, because the organic territory they were occupying
was becoming increasingly familiar to them. But nearly half an hour later, it
did speak.
"Keet," Murchison
said, radiating an increasing level of pleasure and relief that the Trolanni
could not feel, "this is going well."
"Thank you,
Murchison," said Keet.
"You're welcome,"
said the pathologist. "But please remain quiet so as to avoid distracting
the team. There is more to do."
Feeling happier than it had
been since the start of the operation, Keet replied by not saying another
word. But Murchison was radiating a growing level of concern that was being
focused on Prilicla himself. Its words came as no surprise to him.
"You're tired,
sir," it said, "and the way your legs are wobbling shows that you
are badly in need of rest. The remaining work is simple tidying-up and can be
completed by Danalta and Naydrad under my direction. But there is another
complication which requires treatment. It isn't urgent or life-threatening, at
least so far as the life of the patient itself is concerned, and it can wait,
but I suggest we do it while we are in the area so as to avoid having to open
up the patient at a later date."
"Do what, and
why?" said Keet suddenly. "I don't want you cutting Jasam without a
very good reason."
Murchison ignored the
interruption but in its calm, lecturing voice managed to answer the questions
anyway,
"The problem is
principally medical and requires only minor surgery," it said, using its
pencil light as a pointer, "involving as it does infusions into the
patient's endocrine system, specifically the small gland in the area—just
there—which is partially atrophied and inactive due to a build-up of toxic material
that has been assimilated by the body over many years. With the removal from
its toxic home environment and the introduction of the indicated specifics,
the chances are that the gland in question can be restimulated to optimum
activity in a very short time, and certainly within the period of the patient's
recuperation."
"What are you talking
about?" said Keet.
"... Considering the
fact that Trolann's population is dangerously close to the point of
extinction," Murchison continued, "it would be advantageous after
they are transferred to their new world for as many Trolanni couples as
possible to be capable of reproducing their kind. With Patient Jasam's male
reproductive system, the treatment is simple and straightforward with no complications
foreseen. With Patient Keet, however, in common with the females of the other
life-forms in my experience, the mechanism of reproduction and child-bearing
is more complex. It would be better if you undertook that procedure yourself,
after you have slept, of course. Do you agree?"
For a moment Prilicla was
unable to speak. A sudden explosion of emotion from Keet, comprising as it did
a mixture of excitement, relief, and pleasure that verged on the joyous, was
sending a slow tremors along his body, wings and limbs. He was greatly pleased
but not surprised at the way his assistant had handled the situation, and he
knew for a fact that Murchison had made a Trolanni friend for life.
As the gale of pleasurable
emotion diminished, he withdrew
from the table, stretched
out his wings and limbs and refolded them tightly to his body before speaking.
"Well done, all of
you," he said. "Friend Murchison, both of your suggestions are
approved. Proceed at once with the work on Jasam, and explain to Keet that her
life-mate will be rendered unconscious for a period of continuous sedation that
will assist its healing, and that there will be nothing more constructive for
it to do during that time than to undergo the procedure you suggested."
"Don't worry, all that
will be explained to Keet," Murchison broke in. "But now, sir, will
you please go to sleep?"
The figures of Murchison,
Danalta, Naydrad, the two Trolanni, and the whole OR were beginning to fade
around him.
Happily he murmured,
"I am asleep."
The bad weather continued
with unbroken wind and heavy rain for the next six days, during which there
was, as expected, no resumption of the spider attack. Keet had successfully
undergone its minor surgery at Prilicla's hands and was waiting impatiently for
Jasam to be released from its continuing sedation. In space, Courier One had
returned with the latest news from the Federation, which consisted mainly of
ranking Monitor Corps officers and senior administrators worrying aloud about
what Rhabwars people were doing, or more accurately, what they were doing wrong
regarding this unique double first contact situation. Courier Two was waiting
impatiently to take back the latest situation report, and their excuses.
Captain Fletcher was trying
to think of a few good ones, and asking for help.
"I've drafted a report
on all this for the courier vessel," it said, radiating a mixture of
embarrassment and uncertainty as a jerky gesture of its hand indicated the
human and Trolanni casualties visible through the transparent wall of the
communications room, "but I wanted to consult with you, Dr. Prilicla,
with all of you, in fact, before sending it off. For reasons you will
understand, and of which I am not very proud, I didn't want the discussion to be
via communicator and be overheard by my officers. If this matter should come to
an enquiry, or even a court martial, I'd prefer them not to know and so spare
them the embarrassment of having to give evidence against me."
The captain had walked the
distance from Rhabwar in the pouring rain to say these things. Prilicla used
his projective empathy in an attempt to reassure the captain, but it wasn't
working very well. Naydrad was the first to speak.
"I don't understand
your problem, Captain," it said with a puzzled ruffle of fur. "With
Kelgians this situation would not arise. We would either recount the facts
accurately or, if we didn't want to disclose the information, not speak at all.
Earth-humans!"
"Unlike the charge
nurse whose species doesn't know how to lie," Danalta joined in, "I
have a capability for verbal misdirection, diplomacy, politeness or
therapeutic lying. But it is usually less complicated in the long run to tell
the truth."
The captain radiated worry
and impatience. It said, "But the truth is complicated, almost certainly
too complicated for our superiors to believe. Courier One took back the news of
the Trolanni first contact, which in the interim has gone fairly well, but the
continued success of which may depend on whether or not they both survive the
second contact with another intelligent species which includes Pathologist
Murchison's capture by pirates ..."
"That had a happy
ending," Murchison broke in, glancing out at the three rain-shrouded
vessels drawn up along the beach, and added, "so far."
"... As a result of
which," it continued, "the planet's indigenous species has virtually
declared war on us. This is no way to conduct a first contact operation, and
our temporal lords and masters will be gravely displeased with us, or with me,
at least. Courier One's captain said that there was serious talk about sending
one of the dedicated first contact ships, probably Descartes, to take over our
contact with the second species while advising us on how to conduct the first.
He also said that unique-science
investigation teams, which
would, of course, take all the necessary precautions, were being assembled to
unravel the Trolanni searchsuit technology and would be held back until an
assessment could be made regarding the possibly harmful psychological effects
of so much advanced space hardware appearing around the spiders' planet. But
when Courier Two takes back my latest report, including the news that—despite
the fact that the spiders are nowhere near achieving space flight, they might
not be given a terminal inferiority complex by seeing a few unexplained lights
in their sky—within a week near-space is likely to be filled with Monitor Corps
ships."
The captain stopped and
breathed heavily. That was due, Prilicla thought, to the fact that it had been
exhaling air at a controlled rate while speaking for several minutes without inhaling.
For Prilicla's sake it was trying to control its emotional radiation, which was
anything but pleasant.
"Friend
Fletcher," he said gently, "our areas of authority in this situation
are overlapping, so it follows that the responsibility, or the blame for it
going wrong, is also divided. However, it began as a medical problem with the
transfer of the casualties from Terragar, and later the two injured Trolanni
from their vessel to this station where, in order to protect both sets of
patients, I had to force you into taking military action in their defense. This
being so, the greater proportion of the blame must fall on me ..."
The other's worry tensions
were beginning to ease a little, but Prilicla could also feel an argument
coming on. Unlike the Earth-human physiological classification, he could
respirate and speak at the same time so he left no time for an interruption.
"... My advice would
be to tell the truth," he went on, "but omit the incident of friend
Murchison's capture and escape until a later time. Learning about it now would
worry the pathologist's life-mate, and knowing Diagnostician Conway as I do, it
would come out here and ..."
"He certainly
would," said Murchison softly.
"... complicate
matters," he went on. "While Conway has more than enough rank to take one of the hospital's
vessels out here, my thought is that there will be enough ships in the area as
it is without another worried life-mate joining us. Keet worrying about Jasam
produces enough sex-based emotional drama to go on with. I feel your agreement,
friend Murchison.
"As for the rest of
the report," he went on, "be complete and factual. No doubt you will
renew your warning regarding the danger of making direct ship-to-ship contact
with the Trolanni searchsuit. But also warn your superiors, politely if your
service career is to progress as it deserves, of the danger of well-intentioned
interference by people who will have much less knowledge and appreciation of
the problem than we have.
"You should also
relate in detail your concerns regarding the third and much more dangerous
first-contact operation that is coming up," he went on, "the one
involving the druul. As well as the opposing species being physically separated
and disarmed, which will require military intervention, the Trolanni must be
evacuated as a disaster-relief emergency. At a later time a similar exercise
will be required for the druul as well, who, because of the bad reputation they
have with the Trolanni, must be assessed for possible reeducation as candidates
for membership of the Federation. You could also suggest that the advice of
patients Jasam and Keet on the Trolann situation would be invaluable, providing
we are let alone to continue treating Jasam's very serious injuries and
building up their trust in us."
"But the
Trolanni-druul situation isn't the immediate problem . .." began the
captain.
"Of course it
isn't," said Prilicla. "But if you give the impression that it
is—that you, personally, consider these future problems to be of more
importance and difficulty than our present one—this should have a reassuring
effect on your superiors. If you express deep concern for and an understanding
of their future problems, they should feel that you are confident about solving
this one and leave us alone to get on with it without interference. As well, if
they try to help with our problem, I'm sure friend Keet will be able to furnish
us with more information on the Trolann situation to worry them. They might
decide that every time they try to help us with our troubles, you dump an even
greater problem in their laps, and desist."
"And what do I tell
them about the spider assault on the med station?" asked the captain.
"Just how do I make that sound like a minor problem?"
"You tell the
truth," Prilicla replied, "but not all of it. After an initial period
of misunderstanding, tell them that the spider first contact is ongoing."
"Ongoing it is,"
said the captain, "but from bad to worse. Dr. Prilicla, for such a timid,
inoffensive, and completely friendly entity, you have a nasty, devious, lying
mind."
"Why, thank you,
friend Fletcher," he replied, "for listing my most admirable
personality characteristics."
Murchison and Danalta made
amused sounds which did not translate while Naydrad ruffled its fur in
puzzlement, but before any of them could speak, the communicator chimed and its
screen lit with the features of Haslam.
"Sir," the
lieutenant said briskly, "our weather sensors indicate that the present
warm front will clear the island in five hours' time—just before nightfall,
that is—and it will be followed by an extensive high-pressure system that could
remain for the ensuing twelve to fifteen days. As well, there is another spider
fleet of three ships closing on us. Judging by their present heading and speed,
I'd say that they intend to pass south of us before morning for a landing on
the other side of the island. Would you like to return to the ship?"
The question was, of
course, rhetorical because the captain was already halfway to the entrance.
It came as no surprise that
the attack from inland did not develop until the afternoon of the following
day. By then the hot, high sun had dried off the rain-soaked vegetation, and
the moment-to-moment situation as it developed on Rhabwar's tactical screens
was being relayed to the med station's communicator with a commentary by the
captain.
Naydrad was with the
Trolanni patients, talking to Keet. Jasam was still deeply sedated but giving
no cause for concern while Danalta was doing tricks with itself in an attempt
to amuse the Terragar casualties who were complaining because they were missing
their daily dunk in the ocean. Only Murchison and himself were watching
developments, and the pathologist was radiating a strange mixture of
dissatisfaction and guilt.
The original three ships
beached near them were showing a few ventilation openings but had not lowered
their landing ramps. According to the captain this was an obvious attempt to
lull them into a false sense of security while a surprise attack was made from
the cover of the vegetation inland. The spider force could not know—because at
their level of technology, the very idea of being able to see at a distance in
darkness would not have occurred to them—that Rhabwar was fully aware of the
arrival of the new fleet; or that a vessel that could detect life signs in
space wreckage over thousands of miles' distance would have no trouble picking
up the movements and body heat of beings crawling under a thin covering of
overhanging branches.
"I hate it," said
Murchison suddenly, "when I have to watch brave, intelligent, but
undereducated people making fools of themselves like this. Are you feeling
godlike, Captain Fletcher?"
They heard the captain
inhale sharply and Prilicla felt the sudden surge of anger that was weakened
only by distance. But its voice remained calm as it replied, "Yes, in a
way. I see and know everything, and like a god I have to hide the truth from
them for their own good. I'd rather we stopped them before they hit the
meteorite shield. They've already seen us creating sand eddies and pulling
water into their path, and gratuitous displays of superscience can have a bad
effect on an emerging culture. Magic, apparent miracles, events which
contravene natural law as they know it, can give rise to new religious or
drastically change existing ones so that superstition can stultify scientific
and technological progress. These people don't need that."
"Sorry, Captain,"
said Murchison, "I spoke without thinking."
The other nodded and went
on. "The damage may already have been done. They've seen our ship fly, and
the med-station buildings, and we checked their first attack by throwing sand
at them and threatening to douse them with seawater, although neither stopped
them trying to attack us because it was the rainstorm that did that. Maybe
they think we were responsible for that, too. But allowing them to run into an invisible
wall like the meteorite shield could be too much for a primitive species to
take, brave and resourceful and adaptable though they are.
"The trouble is,"
it went on, "that we can't generate clouds of sand under the trees and
neither can we drag water that far without it spilling on the way. We can use
more power on the tractor to uproot trees and throw soil into the air, but not
with enough accuracy to keep some of the spiders from getting squashed.
Pathologist Murchison, didn't you mention earlier that they had a fear of fire
as well as water?"
"I did,"
Murchison replied, "but I'd rather you didn't use it because I'm not sure
whether the on-board fire precautions I saw were due to the material of their
ships being flammable, or their bodies."
"My idea is to
frighten them off without hurting them," said the captain. "Don't
worry, I'll be careful. But I'd like them to come close enough for Dr. Prilicla
to get an emotional reading from them. Specifically, why do they feel so
strongly about us that they are willing to go up against a completely strange
and obviously superior enemy?"
For nearly an hour they
watched the enhanced images of the spider force as it moved slowly nearer,
making use of all available cover and spreading out into line abreast formation
as it came. The captain said complimentary things about the spider commander's
tactical know-how as the center of the line held back to enable the formation
to form a crescent that would enclose the station and the grounded Rhabwar.
They had closed to just under one hundred meters before the captain spoke
directly to the station.
"Dr. Prilicla, are
they close enough to give you an emotional reading?"
"Yes, friend
Fletcher," he replied, "a strong but imprecise one. The strength as
well as the lack of precision is due to the large number of sources sharing the
same feelings. There is uncertainty and apprehension characteristic of fear
that is under control, and a general feeling of antipathy towards the enemy .
.."
"Blind xenophobic
hatred," the captain broke in. "I was afraid of that."
"As I've said, friend
Fletcher," said Prilicla, "It is difficult to be precise, but my
feeling is that they don't hate us so much as what we are doing."
"But we aren't doing
anything wrong," the other protested, "at least that we know about.
No matter, we have to stop them before they get any closer. Haslam, launch the
chemical pyrotechnics. Spread them in front of their line at twenty-meter intervals.
Dodds, use your tractor beam to pull off bunches of burning vegetation and drop
them into any smoke-free gaps. I want our perimeter protected by a line of fire
and smoke. Stand by to deploy the meteorite shield if that doesn't work."
Distress flares shot from
Rhabwar’s launchers made low, fiery arcs in the sky before landing at the
designated intervals among the trees.
"After three days'
heavy rain," the captain added for Murchison's benefit, "the
vegetation is still too damp for there to be any danger of us starting a
conflagration. We will be producing mostly light, steam, and smoke."
The intense blue light and
heat of the chemical flares, which had been designed to be seen across
thousands of miles of space,
caused the damp surrounding
vegetation to fairly explode into flame. Dodds picked at the hottest spots with
his tractor beam, moving clumps of burning branches into the intervening areas
where the vegetation had been unaffected. A dense pall of steam and smoke rose
into the sky so that the sun became a dark orange shape that wavered in and out
of visibility. A few minutes later they could see through the dissipating smoke
that the secondary fires were dying down, and those where the flares had landed
were not looking too healthy, but they had done their work.
"A wind off the sea is
blowing the smoke inland," said the captain. "The spider force is
withdrawing and heading back to their ships. So far as we can see, no injuries
have been sustained."
"Their emotional
radiation confirms," said Prilicla, "but they are badly frightened
and their dislike of us has increased."
"Sir," Lieutenant
Haslam reported before the captain could reply, "the ships on the other
side of the island must have seen the smoke. A glider has been launched. It is
slope-soaring over the high ground and heading this way, obviously to find out
what has been happening. I think we won this one."
"We won this battle,
Lieutenant," said the captain, "but not the war. If we win the war
that means we lose, because the only way to win this war is to stop it before
anyone gets hurt.
"I'm open to
suggestions."
For the remainder of the
day, between breaks for meals, checks on the patients, and a period of rest for
himself, they watched the glider overhead because there was nothing else of
interest happening. The spider aircraft was doing some very interesting things,
like signaling to its mother ship on the other side of the island and the three
vessels drawn up along the beach.
A large, circular panel
close to one wing-root had opened and begun spinning in the slipstream about
its two diametrically opposed attachment points. One face of the panel was
bright yellow while the other matched the overall brownish-green color of the
glider. The rotating disk was within easy reach of the pilot who used one of
its forelimbs to check the spin at irregular intervals to show either the
light or dark face to watchers below and on its more distant mother ship.
"Ingenious," said
the captain admiringly. "It's using the visual equivalent of Earth's
old-time Morse code. The spiders might not have radio but they can communicate
over short to medium distances. The rotating panel would have minimum effect
on the glider's flight characteristics, and any information being transmitted
would be passed slowly, although if necessary the message could last for as
long the glider remained aloft. Judging by the pauses in signaling, which last
for anything up to
fifteen minutes, I'd say
that there is a similar device on the mother ship and they are talking about
us."
"Sir," said
Haslam. "It's not heading back to its ship. Why is it still climbing? I
would have expected it to come down to take a closer look at us so that the
pilot would have more to talk about."
The captain exercised the
prerogative of a senior officer who did not know the answer by maintaining a
commanding silence.
The litters bearing all of
the patients were moved into the afternoon sunshine of the beach although, as
it had been in the recovery ward, the druul-like Earth-human casualties and
those from the Trolanni searchsuit were separated from visual contact by
portable screens. There were a few spiders moving about the beach, but they
stayed close to their ships and it was plain that another attack was not
imminent. To conserve power the meteorite shield had not been deployed so that
the patients could benefit from the sea breeze as well as the sunshine. They,
too, lay watching and talking about the slowly ascending glider. It was still
climbing late in the afternoon when the patients were moved indoors and when
the sun began to sink behind the high ground inland. When dusk fell at ground
level it was still climbing, tiny with distance but clearly visible in the
bright, orange light of the sun which for it had not yet gone down. It began
circling widely and performing slow, intricate aerobatics.
"Doctor," said
the captain, "I'm beginning to worry about what our flyboy is doing up
there. Its present altitude is close on five thousand meters and it must be cold
up there. In the circumstances of the recent attack it doesn't seem
appropriate for it to be showing off and selfishly enjoying itself like this.
It's possible that it is performing some form of sunset religious ritual that
the spiders, or maybe only their glider pilots, believe is important, but I
don't think so."
"What do you think,
friend Fletcher?" said Prilicla.
"The glider is far too
high for its swiveling wing panel to be
readable without a
telescope," the captain replied, "and I can't imagine a species so
afraid of fire as are the spiders being able to use it to process sand into
glass and cast lenses. My theory is that the aerobatics are another form of
signaling,"
It paused for a moment as
if expecting an objection, then went on, "Of necessity the vocabulary
would have to be restricted because there are only so many ways that a glider
can move in the air, so its report would have to be simplified, couched in
stock phrases that would be much less detailed than the visual Morse, and yet
it is trying to describe happenings unique in its species' experience. But that
high-flying aircraft and its message will be visible over a much greater
distance than the shorter-range but more fluent swiveling wing-panel
arrangement."
"Is there any support
for your theory, friend Fletcher?" asked Prilicla, feeling that he already
knew the answer. "Are there any spider vessels within visual range of this
hypothetical signal?"
"I'm afraid so,
Doctor," the captain replied. "Our radar isn't too accurate because
their aircraft and ships are made from organic rather than metallic,
reflective material. But it showed a fleet of six vessels, five of which
changed course towards us within half an hour of the glider rising above their
horizon. The other vessel headed in the opposite direction towards another
fleet that is still too distant for us to resolve the number of units. My guess
is that the sixth ship will launch a high-flying glider at first light tomorrow
to relay the signal.
"Very soon all of the
spiders on the surrounding ocean or on the land adjoining it will know we're
here," it added, "and a lot of them will come to do something about
it."
"But what will they
do, friend Fletcher?" said Prilicla, the sudden intensity of his own
anxiety overwhelming that of the captain. "We have not committed any
hostile acts towards them, we did nothing wrong, and when they attacked us we
did everything possible to avoid hurting them. If they would only stop and
think about what we did and, more importantly, from our ob-
vious position of strength
what we did not do, this problem coul be solved by—"
"We did nothing wrong
that we know of," the other inte: rupted. "But don't forget that
they're a new species. They me view our inaction as a sign of weakness or
inability to hurt then or maybe they just hate us for being here."
"If we could find a
way of talking to them," said Prilicla. " we could just tell them
that we don't want to be here, either, they might help."
Fletcher shook its head.
"Pathologist Murchison exchange a few words, nouns, personal names, or
whatever with what sh called her spider captain, but not enough for the
translation corr puter to do anything with them. And even if we were able to
tal to them, that doesn't mean they would believe us.
"I can't help thinking
about the bad old xenophobic da) on Earth," it went on, "and how we
would have reacted towarc an apparent invasion from the stars. We would
certainly not ha\> tried to talk, or even to think about talking. We would
have gathered our forces, as these people seem to be doing, and have at the
horrible alien invaders with everything we had."
Prilicla thought for a
moment, then said, "The Trolanni began by hating us, especially you
druul-like DBDGs, but the got over their phobia after you projected the
shortened Federation history lesson into space outside their searchsuit.
Tonight why not do the same? The spider ships are sure to have watch keepers on
duty during the night to rouse their crews if anything happens. Make something
happen, friend Fletcher."
The captain shook its head,
in indecision rather than negation. It said, "The Trolanni had star travel
and the advanced technology to support it and were half expecting to meet other
star-traveling species. The spiders don't and weren't. They would not
understand. We'd probably scare them even more, give then more cause to fear
and hate us and, well, we could end up seriously damaging the future
philosophical development of their whole
culture. Unless you can get an emotional reading from them to the contrary,
first-contact protocol forbids us doing anything like that."
"They are too distant,"
said Prilicla regretfully, "and there are too many of them emoting at once
for that kind of reading. All I can feel from here is a flood of hatred and
aversion. If we could entice one or even a few of them closer, their subtler
feelings could be analyzed. They will continue to stay away from us until the
next attack. During an attack they will not be emoting subtle feelings.
"The ideal solution
would be to find a way to make them talk to us," he ended, "and not
fight."
"Yes," said the
captain, and broke contact.
He joined the rest of the
medical team as they were moving the patients' litters onto the beach for their
daily supportive medication of fresh air and sunshine. A few minutes he spent
hovering above and exchanging a few words with them in turn, beginning with the
Terragar DBDG amputees before moving to the Trolanni CHLIs to join the quiet
conversation they were holding. Keet was well recovered and fully capable of
moving around without a litter and meeting the others, but the knowledge that the
druul-like healer and patients would not hurt either of them had not yet
penetrated to the deeper, emotional levels of its mind, so that it preferred to
stay on its litter behind the screens knowing that the other patients could not
leave theirs. Jasam was no longer in danger, but it would not help its
condition if it was forced into premature visual contact with the other DBDGs.
In any case, talking to the patients was not his primary reason for coming
outside.
The person who had already
spoken with the spiders, he had decided, was the logical one to reopen the
conversation.
An hour later, with
Prilicla hovering at its shoulder, the pathologist was walking slowly in the
direction of the sea and radiating feelings of mild disappointment because it
was unable
for reasons of personal
security to immerse itself. It was carrying a small sheet of plastic that had
been rolled, speaking-trumpet-fashion, into a cone because they had agreed that
using a mike and Rhabwar's thunderous external loudspeaker would have been
unnecessary vocal overkill. He was towing a small float containing the
translation-computer terminal.
"I know I exchanged
words with that spider captain, if that is what it is," said Murchison as
they crossed the line of disturbed sand where the meteorite screen had briefly
been switched on, "but only a few nouns and a verb, maybe two, and
stopping the others from shooting crossbow bolts at me might not have been an
act of friendship. It may not have wanted to waste ammunition in the sea
because it was expecting to capture all of us later."
For a moment it radiated
minor embarrassment, associated no doubt with a minor infringement of its
Earth-human nudity taboo, then went on, "When it saw me I was wearing the
only swimsuit I had with me, and this underwear is, well, differently styled
and colored. It might not recognize me again. I think you're expecting too much
of me, sir."
"Perhaps," he
replied, "I'm expecting a miracle. When you are ready, friend
Murchison."
They walked and flew for
about thirty meters beyond the mark in the sand left by the meteorite shield.
If it had been switched on they would have moved freely through it, for it was
designed to stop only incoming objects, but they would not have been able to go
back again. A few spiders were moving about close to their ships, and two of
them were moving back along a ramp they had built between the beach and the
wreck of Terragar, although what people who knew nothing of metal would think
of such a hard, nonorganic structure, was anyone's guess. Prilicla could feel
Murchison's irritation at being ignored as it lifted the speaking trumpet to
its mouth.
"Krisit," it
said, pointing at the nearest spider vessel, then turning to indicate Rhabwar.
"Preket krisit." It repeated the words several times before pointing
at itself and saying several
times, "Hukmaki."
Finally it pointed towards the spider vessel that had been first to arrive and
so presumably contained her spider captain, and shouted,
"Krititkukik."
There was no visible
reaction, but he could feel the cloud of hostility that was emoting from the
ships being laced with eddies of interest and curiosity. On the upperworks of
the nearest vessel a spider appeared and began chittering loudly and
continuously through its speaking trumpet, which was not directed at them. A
party of five spiders assembled around the end of the boarding ramp. Suddenly
they came scurrying towards them, unlimbering their crossbows as they came.
"Krititkukik,"
Murchison shouted again. "Humakik."
"They aren't coming to
talk," said Prilicla.
"I don't have to be an
empath to know that," Murchison said, radiating the anger of
disappointment. "Captain, the shield!"
"Right," said
Fletcher, "I'm powering it up for full repulsion in ten seconds from now.
You've got that much time to get back across the line or you stay out there
with your friends."
Prilicla banked sharply and
flew back the way he had come, weaving from side to side as the crossbow bolts
whispered past his slowly beating wings. Then he thought that evasive action
might not be such a good idea because the spiders were shooting while on the
move, which meant that their accuracy would suffer and he might dodge into one
of the bolts. He decided to do as Murchison was doing and move straight and
fast while giving them a steady target at which to aim and hopefully miss.
They crossed the disturbed
line of sand with a full two seconds to spare before the meteorite shield
stopped any more bolts from reaching them. The pathologist halted, turned, and
for a moment watched the bolts that were heading straight at them bouncing off
the shield and falling harmlessly onto the sand. The intensity of the spiders'
emotional radiation was such that he was forced to land, shaking
uncontrollably. The pathologist raised its speaking trumpet again.
"Don't waste your
breath, friend Murchison," he said. "If you speak they will not
listen. There are no calm, thinking minds among them. They feel only anger and
disappointment, presumably at not being able to harm us, and an intensity of
hatred and hostility so great that, that I haven't felt anything like it since
the Trolanni reaction when they thought friend Fletcher was a druul. Let's
return to our patients."
On their way back Prilicla
was walking rather than flying beside Murchison. He saw it looking at his
trembling limbs and felt its concern for the empathic pain he was feeling.
"Oh, well," it
said, knowing that he knew its feelings and trying to move to a less painful
subject, "at least we gave our bored, convalescent patients a little
real-life drama to amuse them."
Before he could reply,
Fletcher's voice sounded in their headsets.
"There'll be no
shortage of drama around here," it said, in the calm voice it had been
trained to use while reporting calamitous events. "The six spider vessels
nearing the other side of the island will join the three already there within
the next hour. An additional six units are hull-up on the horizon on this side,
and there are two other three-unit fleets, which according to our wind-strength
calculations, won't reach us until early tomorrow. All the indications are that
the spiders are mounting a combined land, sea, and air assault. Your patients
will have ringside seats."
Neither the Earth-human
DGDGs nor the Trolanni CHLIs were feeling worried by the impending attack
because both species were star-travelers and were aware of the effectiveness of
the meteorite shield. Terragars officers were feeling concern over the fact that
the ongoing first contact with the spiders was not going well, but they were
not deeply concerned because the ultimate responsibility for its mismanagement
was not theirs and in the meantime they were willing to enjoy the spectacle.
The feelings of Keet and Jasam were more selfish, radiating as they did intense
relief that they were both alive and likely to remain that way, as well as
general confusion at the strange things that were happening to and around them.
Murchison, Danalta, and Naydrad had their feelings under control. It was the
captain, whose voice was being relayed from Rhabwars control deck, who
vocalized its worries by telling them not to worry.
"There is no immediate
cause for concern," it said. "Our power pile will enable the life
support and ship's thrusters to be operated indefinitely; but not so, the
tractor-beam units and meteorite protection. In a planetary atmosphere they
drain five times the power required for operation in a vacuum, and this ship
was designed for speedy casualty retrieval rather than a duration
flight."
"You mean," said
Naydrad with an impatient ruffling of its fur, "that nobody expected us to
be fighting an interspecies war with an ambulance ship. How long have we
got?"
"Forty-six hours of
full shield deployment," it replied, "after which we'll have to lift
out of here, or remain unprotected until someone rescues us. I shall explain
the tactical situation as it unfolds...."
But they didn't need the
other's continuous evaluation and commentary because they could see everything
that was happening for themselves.
The three ships from the
other side of the island came into sight, hugging the shoreline and beaching
themselves in the spaces between the first three. All six vessels dropped their
landing ramps and opened the upper sail-shields where, Prilicla knew from
previous observations, the gliders would be launched. There was no other
visible activity and very little intership conversation. This was probably due,
the captain thought, to all of the battle orders having already being issued so
that they were awaiting only the signal to begin. The nearest six-unit fleet,
all its sail-shields deployed to catch the wind off the sea, was approaching
fast in line-abreast formation. Just above the horizon beyond them, at about
fifty degrees lateral separation, two more highflying gliders were performing
signal aerobatics for three more fleets which totaled fifteen units. They were
still below the horizon and would not, the captain estimated, arrive until
early the next day.
The six latest arrivals
found gaps in which to come aground and they, too, closed their sail-shields
apart from a few ventilation openings, and lowered their landing ramps. The
beach was becoming really crowded, Prilicla thought, so that Terragar had
disappeared from sight behind a line of giant, greenish-brown molluscs. There
came the sound of the senior spiders on each ship using their speaking
trumpets, followed by a lengthening silence.
"I don't think we'll
see any action today," said the captain.
"Plainly they are
waiting for the other fifteen ships to arrive before attacking us-----Oops, I
stand corrected."
Spiders were crawling down
the landing ramps of every ship to begin forming into lines on the dry sand
above the water's edge. All of them were armed with crossbows and, in addition,
eight of them carried between them what looked like two heavy battering rams
with sharply tapering points. Simultaneously gliders were being launched on
the seaward side, two from each ship.
They climbed slowly and
heavily into the wind off the sea, and only when they made slow, banking turns
towards the beach to take advantage of the thermals rising from the hot sand
was it possible to see that the gliders carried passengers as well as pilots and
that both were armed with crossbows.
The aircraft continued to
gain height slowly and steadily while the ground forces deployed three-deep
into a crescent formation, with the battering rams placed front and center,
before advancing on the med station and watching patients.
The captain's voice
returned, giving orders rather than a commentary.
"Dodds," it said
briskly, "shoot a couple of flares inland and drag them along the
perimeter. The vegetation has dried out since last time so be careful not to
start a major fire, just give me a line of burning bushes and smoke. There's no
sign of an attack developing from that quarter but I want to put them off the
idea in case they burn themselves."
"Sir," said
Haslam, "shall I whip up another sandstorm on the beach?"
"Negative," it
replied, "there's no point in wasting the power. Last time we didn't want
them to hit the meteorite shield, but they found out about it when they were
shooting at Murchison and Prilicla. But have your tractors ready just in case.
Dr. Prilicla."
"Yes, friend
Fletcher," he said.
"There is no risk to
your patients out there," it went on, "because there is no way that
the spiders can get through our
shield, but I don't know
what they might do to themselves while they're trying. It could be visually
unpleasant, so I advise moving them indoors before..."
The captain's next few
words were drowned by a wail of protest and accompanying emotional radiation.
"Thank you for the
suggestion, friend Fletcher," said Prilicla, "but I am receiving
strong vocal and emotional objections from my patients and staff, all of whom
would prefer to see the action at first hand."
"Bloodthirsty
savages," said the captain dryly, "and I'm not talking about the
spiders."
There were twelve ships drawn up along the beach, each one carrying two gliders and
a crew complement of anything up to two hundred. The bright yellow sand in
front of the station was disappearing under the brownish-green bodies of over
two thousand advancing spiders and, if it hadn't been for the knowledge that
the meteorite shield made them invulnerable, it would have been a terrifying
sight as the spiders halted about fifty meters from the shield and readied
their crossbows. Apart from the faint whisper of glider slipstreams as they
circled and climbed above the station, there was utter silence. Plainly, all
the necessary orders had already been given and they were awaiting only the
signal to attack.
"This is stupid,"
said Murchison from her position among the medical team grouped around and
below him. "They aren't going to get anywhere with this attack so why
don't they just forget it and go home? After all, we haven't hurt them in
anyway and we're trying hard not to, but if this foolishness goes on, someone
is sure to come to grief."
"We have hurt them,
friend Murchison," said Prilicla, "but not physically or in any other
way we can understand at present. Maybe we are horrible creatures from the sky,
the forerunners of more to come, who are invading their land. That is reason
enough, but I have the feeling there is another one. A large number of their
people are close enough to give me an emotional
reading. For some reason
they feel hatred, revulsion, and loathing for us. The feeling is intense and it
is shared by all of them."
"I can't believe that,
sir," Murchison protested. "When I was taken onto that ship there was
physical contact with the spider captain who treated me well, considering the
situation. It showed intelligence and intense curiosity. Maybe it was a scientist
of some kind with its feelings under strict control. I don't have an empathic
faculty like yours, but if it had been feeling hatred and revulsion as well as
curiosity I'm sure I would have felt it. My feeling now is that since my
escape, we may have done something to make them really hate us."
Before he could reply,
Naydrad curved its body into a flat L so that its narrow head was pointing
vertically upwards and said, "Even at the beginning of a battle their
pilots like to show off. Look at that."
At an altitude of about
three hundred meters the gliders that had been climbing singly or in small,
random groups above the full width of the beach had come together into a wide,
circular formation. For a few moments they circled nose-to-tail like the star
performers in an aerial display, then they banked inwards in unison, tightening
the circle until they were directly above the med-station buildings and the
watchers. The captain's voice returned.
"Nice
coordination," it said approvingly, "but I don't think they're showing
off. The pilots and passengers are unlimbering their crossbows with the idea,
I'd say, of shooting straight down at you. They probably figure that the bolts
will have more penetration with the gravity assist of a three-hundred-meter
fall. It's a sensible idea but, not knowing how our shield works, completely
wrong. ... Now what the hell are they doing?"
One of the gliders had
rolled into a near-vertical bank, tightening its circle and descending,
sideslipping off height as it came. It was followed quickly by another three
and then suddenly all of the aircraft were spiralling down towards them.
"Oh, no!" said
the captain, answering its own question. "Be-
cause their crossbow bolts
were stopped at ground level, they think the shield is a wall surrounding us
instead of a protective hemisphere. They're going to crash into an invisible
wall at full .. . Haslam, Dodds, deploy your tractors, wide focus and low power
in pressor node. Try not to wreck their gliders, just fend them off before they
hit it."
"Sir," Haslam
protested, "I need a few seconds to focus on every target...."
"And there are too
many targets," Dodds joined in.
"Do what you
can—" the captain had time to say before the first glider crashed into the
curving invisible surface of the shield.
It looked as if the
aircraft had broken up and collapsed into a loose ball of wreckage in midair
without any apparent cause. Both occupants were entangled in the structure as
it tumbled along the frictionless surface of the shield towards the ground. The
second pilot, guessing that some strange weapon was being used against them,
banked sharply in an attempt to climb up and away. But one wing struck the
shield, crumpled, and its main spar penetrated the fuselage. The aircraft spun
heavily into the frictionless surface and the passenger was thrown free before
its pilot and the crippled glider began to slip groundwards at an accelerating
rate.
"Haslam, Dodds, grab
them," said the captain sharply. "Ease them down gently. Right,
Doctor?"
"You're reading our
minds, friend Fletcher," said Prilicla; then, "Friend Naydrad,
instruct. .."
The fall of the first
glider was checked about five meters from the ground and eased down so gently
that it barely disturbed the sand, but the second one was caught two meters up
so that its speed and impact were only slightly diminished.
"... Instruct the
robots to return all patients to recovery at once," Prilicla went on. For
a moment he stared at the semicircle of waiting spiders that had begun to edge
closer while he tried to maintain stable hovering flight in spite of the almost
physical
impact of their emotional
hostility. He made a quick, mental calculation and spoke.
"Friend
Fletcher," he said, "will you please increase the ..."
"The diameter of the
meteorite shield by, I would estimate, ten metres," the captain broke in.
"Am I still reading your mind, Doctor?"
"You are, friend
Fletcher," he replied, looking up.
The perfect, circular
formation of the attacking gliders had broken up in disorder and the individual
aircraft were scattering wildly and trying to regain height, all except two
which had collided over an unshielded area of beach. They had each locked one
of their wings together so that they were rotating around their common center
of gravity and descending in an uncontrolled flat spin. Their rate of descent
was fairly slow so that the spiders under them had time to scurry clear of the
point of impact. They would hit too far away and there would be too many
uninjured and angry spiders in the area between for him to risk extending the
shield farther to try for a medical rescue. He hoped their friends would be
able to take care of them and relieve his team of the responsibility.
"Prepare for incoming
casualties," he said briskly. "Four patients, hostile and
noncooperative requiring physical restraint. Physiological classification GKSD
with no prior medical data on file. Impact trauma is expected with probable
external and internal thoracic damage, extensive limb fracturing, and
associated surface lesions. I will assess and assign the treatment priorities.
Naydrad, send the antigravity litters and rescue equipment. The rest of you,
let's go."
He flew towards the
wreckage of the first glider but Murchison, sprinting across the sand on its
long, shapely Earth-human legs, reached it seconds before he did. The litter
with the rescue gear came a close third.
"Both casualties are
deeply unconscious and pose no present danger," he said, "or future
danger, provided you get rid of those weapons. Do you need Danalta to
assist?"
Murchison shook its head.
He could feel its concern for the casualties, its excitement at being presented
with a new professional challenge and a flash of anger as it pulled the two
crossbows and quivers from the wreckage and threw them with unnecessary force
through the one-way protective shield at the surrounding spiders. It said
angrily, "For you two bloody idiots the war is over. Sorry, sir, my mind
was wandering. These two are badly entangled in wreckage with several limbs
trapped, and one thorax has been transfixed by a wing spar. Rather than cut
them free here and transfer them to litters, I feel sure that there would be
less trauma involved if we lifted them, wreckage and all, with a tractor beam
and placed them close to the treatment-bay entrance. That way we'll reduce the
risk of compounding their injuries before treatment."
"Your feeling is
correct, friend Murchison," he said, flying towards the second wreck.
"Do that."
Only the pilot in the
second wreck was unconscious while its passenger was radiating anger, fear, and
hatred. Suddenly it burst out of the wreckage and aimed its crossbow at him
while scurrying rapidly towards the station entrance. Prilicla flew high and took
vigorous evasive action while Danalta interposed its virtually indestructible
body to protect him, then extruded the limbs necessary to give chase and disarm
the fast-moving spider. But even a shape-changer of Danalta's ability needed a
few moments to change shape, and the spider was more than halfway to the open
entrance of the treatment room where Murchison and Naydrad were attending to
the casualties in the pile of wreckage that had been the first glider. Ignoring
the DBDG and CHLI patients still waiting to be moved indoors, it was heading
straight for the medical-team members, its crossbow cocked and aimed.
Suddenly it was rammed into
the ground, skidding to a halt in the sand and lying motionless, as a tractor
beam in pressor mode held it as if under a heavy glass plate to the ground.
"Sorry about
that," said Haslam, "I had to be fast rather than gentle. Let me know
when you want me to release it."
Murchison ran towards it
and stopped just outside the pressor field and bent forward for a closer look
as Danalta arrived.
"You damn near
squashed it flat, Lieutenant," it said a moment later. "Release it
now. There are no limb fractures that I can see, but there is evidence of
overall pressure trauma, asphyxiation, and it may already be
unconscious...."
"It is," said
Prilicla as he flew closer, "but not deeply."
"Right,"
Murchison went on. "Danalta, lose its weapon and help me transfer it to a
litter, under restraint. Naydrad, help me untangle the other two from this
wreckage."
A few minutes later Danalta
and himself were back at the other wreck. The thoracic injuries caused by the
penetration of the wing spar appeared to be life-threatening but its emotional
radiation was not characteristic of an imminent termination. With very little
help from Prilicla's fragile limbs and pitifully weak muscles, the
shape-changer extricated the pilot and transferred it, also under
precautionary restraint, to the waiting litter. By that time all of the other
patients had been moved indoors.
".. . Based on the
actions of your lone hero," the captain was saying on the treatment-room
communicator as they entered, "their attack strategy is plain. Deciding
that they couldn't get through what they thought was a protective wall, and
knowing from previous reconnaissance flights that there weren't many of us,
they decided to go over the wall and land an airborne force to kill us before
destroying the controls for the wall, except that it wasn't a wall. Considering
their incomplete information, it was a neat plan...."
"Our hero is regaining
consciousness," Murchison broke in. "Naydrad, hold its torso still so
I can scan it."
Prilicla flew nearer and
tried hard to project feelings of comfort and reassurance at the returning
consciousness. But it was so terrified and confused by its surroundings, and
emoting the dread characteristic of an entity expecting the worst of all
possible fates, that he could not reach it.
He glanced back through one
of the room's big windows at
the spider horde beyond the
shield, then up at the circling gliders as he felt the waves of hatred beating
in on him. If those feelings weren't rooted in pure xenophobia then something
the med team was doing or perhaps not doing was being badly misunderstood
because the spiders' hatred and loathing was mounting steadily in intensity.
But how could he explain a misunderstanding in the middle of a battle when all
he could do was feel but not speak? War, he thought sadly as he looked down at
the terrified casualty, was composed mostly of hatred and heroism, both of them
misplaced.
Apart from the glider pilot
pierced by the wing spar," Murchison dictated into the recorders as it
worked, "the spiders taken from the two wrecks are presenting with
multiple limb fractures but, according to my scanner, few of the expected internal
injuries. This is due to the fact that their bodies are encased in a tough but
flexible exoskeleton which bends rather than breaks. Three of them display
physical damage which, in a previously known physiological type, is a
condition which would be considered serious but not critical. One of these, the
spider who tried to attack the station singlehanded, if that's the right word,
got squashed by the pressor beam and sustained anoxia and minor limb
deformation. Both of these conditions are treatable by temporary supportive
splinting and a period of rest, so by rights it should go to the end of the
line. But these are new life-forms to us and that is the reason why, with Dr.
Prilicla's permission, I propose using the fourth and least damaged casualty as
a medical benchmark for its more seriously injured colleagues."
It broke off to look
searchingly at Prilicla before going on. "The mental condition of the
fourth casualty must be causing severe emotional distress to Dr. Prilicla,
perhaps of an intensity that could affect its work. For that reason I propose
to render the fourth casualty unconscious before proceeding with ..."
"Can that be done
safely?" Prilicla broke in.
"I believe so,
sir," it replied. "We know from experience that the metabolism, brain
structure, and associated nerve and sensory networks of insectoid life-forms
have much in common, as has the painkilling and anesthetic medication used on
them. Graduated and increasing doses will be administered to Spider Patient
Four and the effects noted and calibrated for use on the others."
"Proceed, friend
Murchison," he said, "and thank you."
Gradually the close-range
source of hatred, fear, and revulsion that was Spider Patient Four died away
to become the mild radiation signature characteristic of a mind that was no
longer capable of a sentient or sapient response. Strangely, the emotional
radiation emanating from the multitude of more distant sources was also
diminishing. The voice of the captain on their communicator gave the reason.
"The sun is going down
and the spider ground forces are withdrawing to their ships," it said, and
Prilicla could feel its pleasure and relief, "as are all of the gliders.
The attack is over for now. We'll remain alert for any hostile night activity
and kill the meteorite shield to conserve power."
"Next," said
Naydrad, ruffling its fur irritably, "it will want us to operate by
candlelight."
"Spider Patient Four
appears to be deeply unconscious," said Murchison, ignoring the remark,
"and there are no indications suggesting a physiological rejection of the
anesthetic. Do you detect any emotional radiation to the contrary, sir?"
"I do not, friend
Murchison," said Prilicla. "Now let us proceed at once with the patient
who is most grievously ill. Friend Naydrad, is Spider One ready for us?"
"As ready as it will
ever be," the nurse replied with another impatient tufting of its fur.
"I have immobilized the patient on its undamaged side but otherwise have
done nothing. Carpentry was not included in my medical training."
Nor in mine, thought
Prilicla. He led the way towards the glider
pilot's operating frame and projected reassurance as he said "The accurate
cutting, smoothing, and extraction of splintered wood from the deeply perforated carapace of the patient and the
rebuilding of the damaged exoskeleton
and limbs are, to my mind a form of carpentry in that initially we shall be
cutting wood. Let us begin-"
The impact that had torn
the wing spar loose at its fuselage attachment point had also driven it
transversely into the pilot's underbelly and upwards until it had penetrated the inner surface of the beings thick,
leathery carapace, where it emerged for a few inches beyond it, that natural
body-armor had resisted penetration to the extent that it had caused the
structural member to bend and break in a classic example of a greenstick fracture inside the abdominal contents,
and removing the broken-but-still-joined spar, including the splinters and
pieces of binding cord adhesive material, and
tattered wing fabric still attached to it could cause more damage than
that inflicted by the original entry
wound.
The few inches of spar projecting through the hole it had made in
the carapace they left until later. The earlier scanner examination had shown
that the wooden member was pressed so tightly into surrounding tissues that it
had sealed off most of the damaged blood vessels and reduced the bleeding in
the area That section of spar could safely be left in place for the time being
while the more urgent repair work in the abdominal area was attempted
Prilicla began by
surgically enlarging the entry wound to give Danalta and himself more space to
work, since speed rather than minimal surgery was required here. Carefully he
slid a fine laser knife with an angled blade focus along the spar to the point
where it had fractured and bent. There was a brief puff of vapor as he cut it
in two and the small quantity of wood, spider blood,
and body fluid in the area
dried up or boiled away
"Naydrad'" said
Prilicla, "withdraw the spar smoothly along the original angle of entry
and apply suction where I indicate. Danalta,
be ready to help me control the bleeding and subsequent repairs. Murchison,
remove foreign material from the lost blood and retain it for possible
reuse...."
There were a large number
of spiders around, he thought, but he was not in a position to ask for volunteer
blood donors.
"... We will ignore
any loose splinters for now," he went on, "and tidy up later. But
Murchison, keep track of them in case they find a way into the circulatory
system. Gently, Naydrad, begin the withdrawal."
Before the section of spar
had been pulled free of the wound, Murchison's scanner was showing copious
bleeding from two of the major blood vessels that it had been compressing.
He said quickly,
"Naydrad, suction, let's see what we're doing. Danalta, clamp off the
bleeders while I go after the the torn section of bowel. Murchison, enlarge the
image of the operative field by four, and hold it as steady as you can."
Danalta was waiting with a
blocky hand resting against one of the operating-frame supports to steady it,
and with two long, pencil-thin fingers already extruded. When the digits
reached the severed blood vessels they divided in half and each one grew two
wide, wafer-thin spatulate tips which wrapped themselves gently around two
veins above and below the tears and tightened until the blood diminished to a
trickle and stopped. Prilicla inserted his own long, featherlike digits into
the wound and isolated and tied off the torn length of bowel in a more orthodox
fashion with running sutures.
"The tearing is too
irregular and widespread for us to attempt a dependable, long-term
repair," he said, "so we'll have to do a resection after completely
removing the affected length. But not too much of it. The digestive and
waste-elimination system in this species has a lesser redundancy of internal
tubing than have our Earth-human and Kelgian friends. Naydrad, be ready with a
sterile biodegradable sleeve with a fifty-day dissolution period. By that time,
judging by our patient's basal metabolism, healing should be complete. Friend
Murchison?"
"I agree," it
said, radiating controlled concern. "But, sir, can I make a suggestion?
Two, in fact. One is that we don't spend too much time on the tidiness of the
work. The patient's vital signs, when compared with those of the spiders with
minimal injures, are not good. Taking into consideration the severe trauma
caused by it being transfixed by that wing spar, the other suggestion is that
you do the remaining repair work from your present operating site rather than
cutting open a flap of carapace, which would certainly increase the amount and
duration of the trauma."
"Very well," he
replied and felt her relief, "we'll do it that way."
Even though it was being
performed for the first time on a member of a hitherto-unknown species, the
procedure was in most respects routine. That was because the other-species Educator
tapes that had been impressed on his Cinrusskin mind contained physiological
and medical data as well as the surgical knowledge of five other intelligent
life-forms—Kelgians, Melfans, Earth-humans, Tralthans, and the light-gravity
Eurils—as well as his own. There were only so many ways, in spite of the wide
variety of outward physical differences, that the internal plumbing of a
warm-blooded oxygen breather could be put right, and he had good second-hand
surgical knowledge of most of them. He was relieved to find that the spider
physiology shared a few minor similarities with the Kelgian caterpillars and
his own Cinrusskin species, but he had to keep searching for others.
Prilicla cringed mentally
as he shuffled through the welter of other-species thoughts and impressions
that filled his mind with apparently warring alien entities. Without the
Educator tape system the practice of all but the simplest forms of
other-species surgery and medicine would have been impossible, but the tapes
had one serious, psychological disadvantage that barred their use to all but
the most stable, adaptable, and, he suspected in his own case, the most
cowardly and non-resistant of minds. That was because the tapes did not
transfer only the clinical information
possessed by the donor
minds but their entire personalities, which included all of their pet peeves,
phobias, short tempers, and greater or lesser psychological faults as well.
Many times the hospital's
diagnosticians as well as his fellow senior physicians had described the
process as an experience of multiple schizophrenia viewed from the inside, as
the donor entities apparently struggled with the tape recipient for possession
of its mind. The effect was purely subjective, naturally, but where mental or
physical discomfort was concerned there was no real difference so far as he was
concerned. His own method of dealing with the problem, a solution which had
sorely perplexed the hospital's department of other-species psychology because
most intelligent beings were incapable of acting in such cowardly fashion, had
been to offer no resistance at all to the donor mind and to use its information
no matter which of them thought they were boss of their mental world.
But in the physical world,
while an other-species entity was occupying most of his mind, he had to
remember to behave like a weak and incredibly fragile Cinrusskin and, if his
donor entity should be a heavy-gravity Hudlar or Tralthan with a body-weight
measured in tons, not to throw his non-existent weight around.
Like himself the spiders
possessed six legs, but they were much more heavily muscled and he doubted if
"cowardice" was in common usage in their vocabularies.
Even with Naydrad pressing
down on the remainder of the spar where it projected through the carapace while
Danalta and himself drew it out from underneath, the second half of the procedure
took longer because the repair work to the lacerated blood vessels in the area,
while operationally similar, was both more delicate and more awkwardly
situated. But finally it was done, the operative field was cleared of foreign
debris and the abdominal wound sutured and a small, sterile plate placed over
the exit wound in the carapace. The repair work that remained was urgent and
necessary but not life-threatening.
The glider impact had
broken three of the patient's limbs,
with one of them sustaining
a double fracture that had come close to being a traumatic amputation.
"We have already
ascertained," he said with a glance towards Murchison, "that the
limbs on this species are exoskeletal and are composed of hardened, organic
cylinders with no external sensors or muscle system apart from those serving
the digits at the extremities. They use a proprioceptor system which enables
the brain to know the exact, three-dimensional position of a limb with respect
to the body at any given time, and movement is controlled hydraulically by the
increase or reduction of internal fluid. Much of this fluid has been lost
because of its injuries, but the supply should be replaced artificially with
sterile fluid until it is replaced naturally in the manner of other species who
automatically restore blood or other body fluids to the required volume.
"With this
patient," he went on, "we will use the accepted procedure for joining
exoskeletal fractures and encase them in a rigid collar of the required length.
We will begin with the left forward member and ... I'm tired, Murchison, but
still operational. Control your feelings, you are emoting like a nagging
life-mate!"
The other was radiating
concern rather than irritation but it did not reply.
"I'm sorry, friend
Murchison," he apologized a moment later, "for my lack of
concentration and mental confusion. Certain aspects of the procedure brought
my Earth-human and Kel-gian tape-donor personalities to the forefront of my
mind, and that is not a polite combination."
Murchison laughed quietly
and said, "I guessed as much. But look out of the window, it's morning
already. This has been a long op and you must be close to the limits of your
endurance. With the experience we've already gained on this one, treating its
limb fractures and the superficial injuries of the other spider casualties will
be simple by comparison. The rest of the cases are non-urgent so that if we do
encounter problems, they can wait until you waken. But I'm sure the rest of us
can handle them."
"I'm sure you
can," said Prilicla, looking at it through a thickening fog of fatigue
that was becoming opaque to coherent thought. "But there is something
about this one that concerns me, subtle differences in the external and
internal body structure from that of your benchmark patient in recovery. This
is a new species to us. The pilot may have sustained impact injuries that at
first were not as obvious as physical trauma, deformation, and internal-organ
displacement, perhaps, which ..."
He broke off as Murchison
laughed, louder this time, and there was an explosion of amusement from it and
the other members of the team that momentarily hid their feelings of concern
for himself.
"Perhaps you were
concentrating so much on the surgical details," Murchison said, "that
you were too busy to notice or identify the differences you mentioned. They are
due to the fact that our benchmark patient is a female and this one isn't."
"You are right, I must
be tired," he said, joining and adding to their waves of amusement as he
flew unsteadily to the large, flat top of an instrument cabinet in a corner of
the room and settled onto it. "But I shall observe and try to stay awake
until all of our spiders are treated."
He surprised himself by
doing just that before his increasing physical and mental fatigue rendered
sentience and sapience next to impossible. With all of the spider patients
treated and transferred to the recovery room, his last conscious impression
was of Murchison standing before the communicator and speaking to the captain.
"I've already tried to
talk to one of them," it was saying, "and I'd like to try again using
simplified first contact procedure. These people aren't space-travelers so I
won't need the complicated Federation historical material used during the
Trolanni contact. There's nothing else to do here at the moment except
brood about the nasty
things that could happen to us. So I want to try talking to them again. What do
you think?"
"I think yes,
ma'am," Fletcher replied. "Give me half an hour to modify the
program, then I'll stand by to advise on its usage. There are eight more spider
ships hull-up on the horizon and another twenty on the radar screens but still
no activity on the beach. That situation will certainly change before long and
the result will be a lot of people, possibly including ourselves, being killed.
"Talking our way out
of this trouble," it ended, "is the preferred option."
Prilicla wakened suddenly
with the feeling that he had been caught up in a riot. Many strident,
other-species word sounds and waves of angry emotional radiation were beating
into his mind. Suddenly terrified and still befuddled with sleep, he wondered
if the meteorite shield had failed and the spiders were overrunning the
station. But then his slowly clearing mind and empathic faculty made him aware
that the loudest sounds and strongest feelings were emanating from two principle
sources, one of which was long-familiar to him, and both of them were in the
adjoining recovery ward.
Not trusting his trembling
wings to fly, he walked unsteadily into the other room to find out what was
happening.
With the exception of the
recently treated and still-unconscious spider pilot and Captain Fletcher, who
was staring at the proceedings from the ward communicator screen, everyone in
the ward was trying to talk at the same time, so much so that parts of the
conversations were lost in the derisive beeping of the ward translator going
into overload. Farther down the ward the Terragar casualties and Keet were
arguing, heatedly but in tones low enough for them to hear the quiet voice of
Jasam, who was postoperatively debilitated but recovering well, making a contribution.
But most of the vocal and emotional noise was coming from the argument between
Murchison and the glider pilot's uninjured passenger.
The spider passenger was
arguing... ?
Surprised but not yet
knowing if he should be pleased, he turned up the output volume of his own
translator unit and, borrowing a phrase from his Earth-human mind partner that
seemed appropriate in the circumstances, said, "Will everyone please shut
the hell up?" When the arguments tapered off into silence, he added,
"Except you, friend Murchison. The spider passenger's words are being
translated. We can talk to and understand each other now, and make peace
before anyone else is hurt. This should be the best possible news, but instead
it feels as if a war is starting. Explain."
The pathologist inhaled and
exhaled slowly as it strove to regain its customary emotional equilibrium
before speaking; then it said, "As you know, I'd already learned a few
words of their language when I was captured, and with the help of the captain's
first-contact material and a lot of sign language, we were able to make
ourselves understood to the point where the translation computer could take
over and finish the job. We can now talk to each other, and that includes
talking with the other patients and staff, but we aren't communicating. It
won't believe a damn thing I or anyone else says to it." Murchison spread
her arms out horizontally to full extension with the palms of its hands facing
each other. "There's a credibility gap this wide."
"I understand,"
said Prilicla. He began walking towards the disbelieving spider, slowly in case
his appearance might frighten it, to stop beside its litter. It was capable of
ambulation but was being firmly restrained by webbing for its own as well as
for the other patients' protection. Then spreading his wings he took off to
maintain a stable hover close to the ceiling where he was sure of getting
everyone's attention.
"What the hell are
you," said the spider, its chittering speech
serving as a background to
the accurately translated words, "some kind of performing bloody
pet?"
He ignored Naydrad's
agitated fur and the choking sounds Murchison was making and replied, "No,
I am the entity in charge of the people here." Because the members of his
medical team already knew what was required, it was to the Trolanni and
Earth-human patients that he went on. "Everyone, please be quiet and, so
far as you are able, stop emoting for the next few minutes. I must be free of
extraneous emotional interference if I am to obtain an accurate reading of
this patient's feelings and the reasons for the hostility the spiders show towards
us... ."
"I'm not a
spider," the patient broke in, "I am Irisik, a Crextic, and a free
and intelligent member of the floating clan Sitikis, who will shortly join the
other clans in wiping you off the face of our world. And if you don't know the
reason for our hostility, then in spite of the strange and wondrous magic you
have used against us, you are very stupid."
"Not stupid, just
ignorant," said Prilicla, trying to maintain his stable hover in spite of
the gale of strong emotion blowing up at him; "but ignorance is a
temporary condition that can be relieved by the acquisition of knowledge. You
have feelings of fear, anger, intense hatred, and loathing towards us. If you
will tell me why you feel this way, I will tell you why there is no reason for
the Sitikis to have these feelings. A simple exchange of knowledge about
ourselves will solve the problem."
"Your problem, not
ours," said Irisik, looking towards the injured glider pilot. "You
will satisfy your curiosity regarding your victims as well as your hunger. In
the end we will be eaten with the rest of your catch."
"I've told it over and
over again that we don't eat people. ..." Murchison began angrily, then
stopped as Prilicla made the Cinrusskin gesture for silence.
"Please," he
said. "I want to hear this patient speaking to me and no one else. Irisik,
what makes you think that we eat people?"
Irisik inclined its head,
the only part of its body free of the litter restraints, towards Murchison.
"This other stupid one," it said, "has been telling me many
things, including the lie that it wants us to go on living. That, a sane,
adult, reasoning person cannot and will not believe. Don't waste time telling
me new and even more fantastic lies. You know the answer to your question, so
don't pretend that either one of us is stupid."
Prilicla was silent for a
moment. Considering the other's emotional state, and in particular its behavior
and verbal coherency in a situation that was unique in its experience and
which it fully believed would have only a lethal outcome, he found Irisik's
behavior admirable. But not the feelings of solid self-certainty and disbelief
that surrounded the creature's mind like a stone wall.
Murchison, he knew, would
already have given it a simplified version of the work of the Federation, the
Monitor Corps, the hospital, and the special ambulance ship nearby and the duties
its crew performed, clearly without success. He thought of explaining that he
himself felt only sympathy for its fears which would in a short time be proved
groundless. But he felt sure, and his feelings were rarely wrong, that the wall
of certainty surrounding the other's beliefs and disbeliefs was impervious to
anything he could do or say.
Perhaps the wall could only
be demolished from within.
"To the
contrary," he continued, "pretend that I and everyone else here is
stupid. You are an intelligent, logical being who has good reasons for feeling
and believing as you do, so share these reasons with us. Whether you believe
what I am telling you now or not, we do not intend to do anything to anyone
here, apart from feeding them, for the rest of the day. So if you were to talk
about yourself, your world and your people and why you believe the things you
do, the day or days will pass for us in an
interesting manner. If what
you tell us is particularly interesting, it may be that so much time will pass
that..."
"Shades of
Scheherazade," said Murchison quietly.
No doubt it was an obscure
reference from something in the pathologist's Earth-human past, but this was
not the time to go off on historical tangents. He went on. "... that your
friends will be able to find a way of rescuing you. There is a saying among our
people, Irisik, that while there is life there is hope."
"We have a similar
saying," the other said.
"Then talk to us,
Irisik," said Prilicla. "Tell us the things you think we already
know, and with them the many things that you know we don't know. Is there
anything we can do to make you feel more comfortable, apart from letting you go
free, before you begin?"
"No," said
Irisik. "But how do you know I won't tell you lies, or exaggerate the
truth?"
"We won't,"
Prilicla replied, settling to the ground beside the other's litter. "As
strangers we might not be able to tell the difference, but the lies or
exaggerated truth will be equally interesting to us. Please go on, and begin
with the reason why you think we will eat you."
Irisik was radiating fear,
anger, and impatience, but it spent a few moments getting these feelings under
control before it spoke.
"You will eat
us," it began, "because your actions from the start made it clear
that that is why you are here. Piracy and food-gathering raids are well known to
us, unfortunately, but they are by other sea clans who are too uncivilized, or
too lazy, to fish or practice the arts of plant and animal husbandry and find
it easier, like you, to steal rather than to cultivate. We don't know where you
came from except that it was somewhere in the sky, but from the first time you
were observed by the Crextic who walk the clouds, your intentions were clear.
As a precaution they maintained a height too great for them to view your
activities in detail, or to see you take our growing food into your great white
ship. In fact, many of us could not believe that you could be so shortsighted,
stupid, and criminal as to take immature livestock that would rob us not only
of the animals, but of the many generations of food beasts that would have
followed, but we were shown to be wrong... ."
... While the living food
and fruit was still too immature and small to be seen by the cloud-walkers,
Irisik went on to explain, the other strange animals that the strangers used
for food had been clearly visible to them. They had observed how these
creatures had been tethered to litters, how they had had their walking limbs
removed to prevent them from escaping, how they had been exposed to sunlight
and been periodically washed in the sea in order to remove wastes and harmful
parasites and render them more fit for consumption.
While it had been speaking,
Prilicla felt Murchison trying very hard to control its feelings of shock and
abhorrence and its vain attempts to maintain silence. He didn't try to stop it
speaking because it was wanting to ask the questions that he badly wanted
answered himself.
"Some of these are
members of our own species," Murchison said, gesturing towards the
Terragar casualties. "Do you think we would eat them? Would Kritik—I mean
Krititkukik—have eaten me?"
"Yes, to both
questions," Irisik replied without hesitation. "It is stupid to waste
a supply of edible food, regardless of the emotional connections, if any, that
one may have with the source. It is not pleasant for the immediate family or
friends of the deceased, and many choose to eat only the smallest of morsels
and pass the remainder to hungry or needy strangers who have no memories of or
emotional ties with the meal. But it must be done if the essence of a beloved
parent or siblings is to continue into the future. Plainly it is the same with
you people."
Murchison's emotional
radiation was so confused that it was unable to speak. Irisik went on.
"Knowing your intentions and reason for being here, we spread the word
about you and set about assembling all of the sea clans in this ocean. Some of
them are little more than pirates and food robbers like you, and normally we
would prefer to shoot our crossbows at them as sky-talk to their ships to ask
for their cooperation, but everyone agreed to forget our differences for the
present in order to kill the strangers.
"You may think me
guilty of exaggeration," it went on, "but I assure you that the
Crextic ships already assembled around this island are only a small fraction of
those which will arrive within the next few days. In spite of your fire
throwers, your invisible weapons that hurl sand and water at us, and your magic
shield, we will smother and crush you with our cloud-walkers and surface
fighters. The cost to us will be extreme, but we must ensure that no more of
your kind are tempted to raid our world.
"And I must correct
your mistake," it continued into the shocked silence. "Krititkukik is
not a name, it is the title of the leader of our sea clan. It would have eaten
your most desirable parts, as is its right, before sharing you with the rest of
the crew. Being a sensitive person as well as one who was filled with scientific
curiosity, and knowing that you were a strange but intelligent source of food
with feelings, it would have concealed from you as long as possible the fact
that you were to be eaten. Sometimes I think the Krititkukik lacks the quality
of ruthlessness necessary to a leader."
Prilicla caught a brief,
complex burst of emotion whose meaning was unmistakable, composed as it was of
the strange combination of yearning, tenderness, and a feeling of grief over
the impending loss of someone with whom one was deeply and emotionally
involved. They were the feelings, he felt sure, of and for a life-mate.
"Believe me,"
said Prilicla, "you will be together again soon."
"I don't believe
you," said Irisik, "or anything else that you or the other meat
gatherers say to me."
"I understand,"
said Prilicla, "so I shall instruct my meat gatherers, as you insist on
calling them, not to speak to you at all. You and the other sources of meat may
talk to each other if and when either of you wish. The charge nurse will
continue to administer food, medication, and to periodically check on your
condition and that of the others, but without speaking to you..."
"Good," said
Naydrad, rippling its fur. "I hate being called a liar, especially when my
people don't even know what a lie is."
"... until, that
is," he ended, "you ask to speak to us. All other members of the
medical staff including myself will leave you now."
Irisik was radiating
surprise, confusion, and uncertainty. It said, "I know you aren't telling
the truth, but your lies are interesting and I want to listen to more of them
before I am killed. Please stay."
"No," said
Prilicla firmly. "Until you believe that you are being told the truth,
including the truth that we mean no harm to you, your people, or your world and
the animal life here, we will not speak again. And remember, I know exactly how
you are feeling about everything from moment to moment, and it is impossible
to lie with the emotions. When I feel that you are ready to believe me, I shall
speak with you again."
He led Murchison and
Danalta into the communications room where Fletcher, displaying the symptoms of
Earth-human elevated blood pressure, was glaring at them from the viewscreen.
His two assistants were bursting to speak, but the captain got its question in
first.
"Doctor," it
said, "this is an unnecessary waste of time. I know the feelings of a person
of your medical seniority and emotional sensitivity must be hurt at being
treated as a liar. You wouldn't be human—I'm sorry, I mean Cinrusskin—if you
didn't feel angry about that six-legged doubting Thomas. But I'm
sure that with a little
more patience and forbearance on your part you will be able to convince it
that..."
"I know its present
feelings, friend Fletcher," Prilicla broke in, "well enough to know
that I won't be able to change them. It is a strong-minded, stubborn entity who
considers itself to be one of the many victims around it who are shortly to be
terminated and eaten. It won't believe us, but hopefully our other so-called
victims will be able to disabuse it and the other spider patients of that
idea."
"Very quickly, I
hope," Fletcher said, its features losing some of their high color.
"If there is a sustained attack lasting more than thirty-six hours, the
screen will go down. Before then we will have to make a main-drive takeoff and
crisp a few hundred spiders. That is not the Federation's idea of making
friendly contact with another intelligent, if temporarily misguided, species.
All our careers are on the line here, apart from the psychological trauma we'll
suffer if things go that badly wrong."
"Yes, friend
Fletcher," said Prilicla, feeling the other's tortured, emotional
radiation all the way from the ship and trying to do something about it.
"But there is a precedent. This is on a smaller, less bloody scale, but
remember what happened when Sector General was caught in the middle of the
Federation-Etlan War. Due to massive overcrowding the casualties from both
sides were treated in the same ward. There is a close similarity to our present
situation."
"Is there," said
the captain, its mind obviously contemplating a future where all was
desolation. Irritably it added, "I wasn't there, Doctor, and it wasn't a
war. It was a large-scale police action."
Prilicla well remembered
that vicious and incredibly violent battle which had been waged around Sector General,
when six of the Federation's sector subfleets including three of its capital
ships had opposed a much heavier force from the Etlan Empire, whose ruler had
fed his people totally wrong information about the other side. He didn't want
to argue with the captain who, like the rest of its Monitor Corps colleagues,
were touchy about the fact that their organization comprised the greatest
assemblage of military might that the galaxy had ever known.
But Prilicla had been there
and it had certainly felt like a war.
The sun shone down on the
golden beach, the white, lacy edge of the deep-blue sea, and on the many ships
assembling around the island that were continually launching their gliders.
Apart from a small working party of spiders who were engaged in transferring
odd pieces of Terragars equipment to the beach, there was no ground activity
visible, but the aerial bombardment was unceasing.
Instead of carrying an
armed passenger as payload, the gliders were loading up with the equivalent
weight in rocks, climbing to an altitude of about two thousand meters and
dropping them on the med station. More often than not, their aim was wide of
the mark, but on the off-chance that some of those ridiculously unsophisticated
missiles would pierce the flimsy structures, injuring or killing the patients
or team members inside, the meteorite shield had had to be deployed. Everyone
was safe for the time being, but that time was limited.
Another battle, verbal rather
than physical, was raging between the spider patients and the other occupants
of the recovery ward. Apart from Naydrad, that was, who had turned off its
translator and whose fur was moving in gentle, restful waves while it watched
the medical monitors in case the various blood pressures rose above acceptable
safety limits. And in the com-
munications room yet
another and more polite war of words was raging between the other members of
the medical team and Captain Fletcher and his crew.
"We can't understand
why you're waiting, Doctor," the captain said as it restated the position
in unnecessarily simple language for the recorders. "Plainly your idea
isn't working. We now have shield power for less than twenty-one hours'
duration. With no power to spare for pressor beams to lift us to an area of sea
that is clear of ships, it will have to be an environmentally unfriendly
takeoff on main thrusters. The vegetation on this half of the island, not to
mention the spiders and their ships, will be toast. Go in and explain the
scientific facts of life to Irisik and the spider pilot, now that it has
regained consciousness. I know this is a hard decision for both of us to make,
Doctor, but we can't sacrifice Rhabwars crew and the Trolanni patients by
letting a bunch of misguided spiders overrun and kill us."
It softened its tone, and
in spite of the distance separating them, Prilicla could feel the other's
determination overriding its reluctance to cause emotional distress to an
empathic friend as it went on. "You have the medical rank in the present
situation, Doctor, but in this instance I am disputing it. So tell your spider
patients, as gently but firmly as you can, that they are not to be eaten but
they must leave us and return to their vessels at once before they, and the
crews of the ships along the beach, die in the fires we will light during our
takeoff. You can move the injured glider pilot in one of your litters, with
the power unit and circuitry set for a non-catastrophic self-destruct shortly
after they reach their ships. For a pre-space age species they've already been
contaminated with too much advanced technology as it is."
"Friend
Fletcher," said Prilicla gently, "please don't be feeling so
uncomfortable about your threat to depose the senior medical officer during a
medical emergency, and do nothing hasty. Irisik is one cynical spider and I
have a strong feeling, amounting to a virtual certainty that it wouldn't
believe anything I told it, which is why I shall tell it nothing and allow what
it thinks are the other sources of
food to do the talking. Please wait, watch the ward vision pickup, and
listen... ."
Naydrad had just finished
its round of patient observations and had curled its caterpillar-like body into
its relaxer frame in front of the monitor screens when the silence was broken
by one of the Terragar casualties.
"Charge Nurse,"
it said, "I'm starving to death."
"Your self-diagnosis
is not confirmed by the monitor readings," Naydrad replied.
"Considering the fact that your lower ambulatory limbs are missing and
your food requirements are proportionately reduced, terminal malnutrition would
only occur if fluids as well as food were to be withheld for twenty-plus
standard days. Lunch will be in three hours. Until then, compose yourself and
try to think beautiful thoughts."
"He can't think
beautiful thoughts," another one of the Terragar casualties joined in,
"and neither can I, because Pathologist Murchison hasn't been in for
nearly three days. I like her around even if the spiders are keeping her from
dunking us in the ocean ..."
The other Earth-human
patients radiated feelings of approval and minor disappointment while making
whistling sounds that did not translate.
"... but why," it
ended, "won't she come in and talk to us?"
Unable to lie, Naydrad
elected to remain silent.
"Among my
people," said Irisik, speaking for the first time that day, "it is
considered socially indelicate, unless the entity concerned is a close family
relation or a loved one, to hold a lengthy conversation with what is in effect
one's next meal. To do such a thing would unsettle the emotions as well as the
digestion, and this one is delicate in its handling of your feelings. After
all, your two walking limbs are missing and yet you feel no hostility towards
it, the person who ate them. Or is it a religious thing with you, and you know
that the food you contribute in this way enables part of your being to survive
into the indefinite future?"
"No!" said the
Terragar casualty, radiating irritation and impatience. "It isn't
religious. She doesn't eat intelligent entities. .. ."
"But all living
creatures have intelligence," Irisik broke in. "Are you saying that
it eats only vegetation?"
"No," said the
other. "Meat is eaten, not frequently, and only when it originates from
beings of very low intelligence."
"Like you?" asked
Irisik in a disparaging voice. After a moment, it went on. "But who sets
the level of intelligence for edibility? You yourself do not appear to be of
very low intelligence, so I suspect that a process of mental persuasion,
perhaps reinforced by the use of mind-altering poisons rather than a spiritual
belief in survival after death, is used to hide from you your status as a food
animal. The mental persuasion must be both subtle and strong if it can make
you, an apparently young and healthy person whose body has already been
partially eaten, argue on behalf of your eater.
"My own mind," it
added, "would not be so easily influenced, especially by another member
of my own species."
"But my legs weren't
eaten, dammit," the other replied. "They were cooked, maybe, but
definitely not eaten. I was there and remember exactly what happened to
them."
"They might look like
outsized druuls," said Keet, joining the conversation, "but we know
that they don't eat people, they repair them."
"Or perhaps you only
believe that you know what happened," Irisik went on, "because
mental influence or chemicals have been used to influence you into thinking
that way. It is natural among civilized beings to conceal the true facts from
their prey so that they will not dwell unnecessarily on their fate, and remain
content until the ultimate moment." It swiveled its head towards the
Trolanni patient. "Food appearance and presentation are important.
Repairing its wounds, so as to avoid the possibility of a premature death, is
a sensible course if the food is to live and remain fresh until the time for
consumption arrives.
There is no reason why
living food should be made to suffer unnecessarily."
Prilicla felt a brief
eruption of fear and uncertainty from the two Trolanni which they controlled
and negated within a few seconds. From its litter, Jasam said weakly,
"When a bunch of outsized druuls tried to tether and board our searchsuit,
we had the same idea. But the others who came along later placed themselves in
great personal danger while retrieving the first group and learning to
communicate with us and repairing our injuries. Plainly they were taking far
too much trouble, when we had time to think about it, for a very meager
addition to their food supply. As a species we are deeply frightened about our
future survival, and these druul-like creatures and the others from their two
ships have promised to help us to solve your problems, but we have no fears
regarding our survival as individuals. Neither should you."
Irisik paused before
replying. "You say that you and your captors have walked the web between
the stars, in ships with structures so hard that they have been neither woven
nor grown, and that you have the knowledge to make and use many wondrous tools
to build and repair these vessels and the sailors who fly in them. By your
standards we Crextic are not educated. But I know the difference between
education and intelligence and, with respect, an educated person can also be
gullible."
Keet lost its patience.
"I know that skepticism is supposed to be a sign of intelligence, but this
is ridiculous. You are a seagoing spider who disbelieves people who have
sailed among the stars. It's a waste of time trying to make you see sense
because you probably haven't got any. Your mind is tightly closed."
The growing irritation and
impatience from both Trolanni did not quite blot out the quieter, more complex
emotional radiation coming from Irisik. The Crextic's mind was beginning to
suffer from the first stirrings of self-doubt.
For an instant Prilicla
wondered if he should go in and join the conversation, then decided against it.
A phrase used by Chief
Dietitian Gurronsevas back
at the hospital came to him, regarding the preparation of food. He would let
Irisik stew in its own juices for a while. He could feel growing uncertainty
and a need to ask questions, but decided to wait for Irisik to voice them.
Keet left its litter and
and moved quickly to the row of the Terragar casualties.
"There is something
that Jasam and I must say to you," it began. "It is an apology for
the way that our searchsuit defense systems caused you to be burned and lose
limbs. We could not believe that anyone who looked like a druul could want only
to help us, but we were wrong. We ask your forgiveness and, if and when we
return to Trolann, we offer help with the replacement of the burned limbs. Our
technology on the interfacing of organic and inorganic materials is advanced.
Your metal limbs would be linked to the relevant nerve connections to produce
the sensations of pressure, touch, and temperature you knew in the past,
although possibly not with the former degree of sensitivity, and be visually
indistinguishable from the missing ones. Your fellow officers on Rhabwar, who
have had firsthand experience of our searchsuit technology, will confirm this.
Unless you have psychological or religious objections to ..."
"We haven't,"
said one of the casualties.
"Could they be made
four or five inches longer than the old ones?" asked another, and
explained, "I've always wanted to be tall as well as handsome."
The third made a derogatory
sound that did not translate, and gradually the conversation became
increasingly general, serious, and animated as Keet, Jasam, and the Terragar
casualties talked about their respective futures.
When Irisik tried to join
in, it was pointedly ignored. Its emotional radiation, Prilicla noted with
satisfaction, was revealing a strange mixture of growing indecision and
increasing certainty.
"... I know that the
druul are not nice people," one of the Terragar casualties was saying,
"but the Federation won't..."
"Not nice?" Keet
broke in. "They are vicious, cunning, implacable, depraved vermin who
want only to kill and, if possible, eat, everyone and everything who is not a
druul. And they have been known to eat their own casualties rather than waste
time and resources in treating them. They should be wiped out, exterminated
down to the last member of their merciless and murderous species."
"... As I was
saying," the Earth-human went on, "the Federation will not instruct
its Monitor Corps to exterminate a whole species just on your say-so, and they
know that we wouldn't do it if they did. That would make us as uncivilized and
savage as you say they are. Instead they will investigate the druul and—"
"Maybe you have
sympathy, a fellow feeling towards them," Jasam broke in, radiating sudden
suspicion, "because they look so very much like you. People can give
sympathy, kindness, and even affection towards pets or dolls or smaller
editions of themselves. Until they turn vicious which, believe me, they
will."
"I do believe
you," said the other, "but we're talking about an intelligent species
here. We have no right to destroy them. The Federation will subject them to a
covert sociological and psychological assessment. If they are as blindly
antisocial as you say, they will almost certainly be isolated on their home
planet to survive as best they can, fight each other to mutual extinction, or
demonstrate to us over a lengthy period that they have learned sense and are on
the way to true civilization, in which case we would help them as we are
planning to help you."
The two Trolanni were
silent, angry, and disappointed, but their more subtle feelings were rendered
unreadable because of the buildup of emotional radiation coming from Irisik.
But it, too, remained silent as the Monitor Corps officer continued speaking.
"Your people will also
be assessed," it went on, "but as a technologically advanced
star-traveling species, that will be a formality. Over the past century we
have discovered several planets, as fresh and clean and unpolluted as this one
and without indigenous intelligent life, that would suit your requirements.
Considering the relatively few Trolanni remaining on your dying home world,
transportation for yourselves, and your personal possessions and technical
support hardware, would be no problem... ."
Feelings of pride and
enthusiasm suffused the words like a bright, emotional fog as it went on.
"... We have Emperor-class capital ships—technically, vessels of war
although they haven't been used as such since the Etlan police action. Their
beam weapons will clear large areas of ground for building and cultivation,
and colonization transports and specialist officers to advise on moving your
population to a new, clean world. We will help you while you are getting
established, but not too much because taking over the responsibility
completely would be psychologically undesirable. You might become overly
dependent on us rather than independent. That's an important part of the
Federation's first-contact philosophy. And you can forget about the druul.
Unless they begin to show evidence of civilized behavior they won't be going
anywhere."
"But wait," said
Jasam, radiating sudden worry. "You're talking about moving a planetary
population. You will need very big ships."
"Don't worry,"
said the other, "we have big ships."
While they had been
speaking, the pressure of Irisik's emotional radiation had been building up to
the point where angry words would be its only release. Prilicla knew to the
split second when it would speak.
"You are talking and
behaving as if I am not here," it said furiously. "It is not easy for
me to say this, for I am a person of rank and influence among my fishing clan,
but there is a possibility that I have misunderstood the situation and I wish
to speak to all of you about that."
"They may not wish to
speak to you," said Naydrad, breaking its long silence, "or even
listen to you."
The Crextic glider pilot,
who was still post-operatively debilitated from its recent major surgery but
was otherwise recovering well, spoke for the first time.
Slowly and weakly it said,
"Irisik is the mate of our clan's Krititkukik, our senior captain and
fleet commodore. As such she is rarely placed in a position where it is
necessary for her to apologize for anything, but she is trying to do so now.
She is an independent, strong-willed, intelligent, and abrasive person who must
be finding the process of apologizing very difficult."
"Cloud-walker,"
said Irisik sharply, "your tone lacks respect. Be quiet or, or I'll bite
your head off."
"Promises," said
the pilot softly.
Prilicla concurred. Judging
by Irisik's emotional radiation it was finding it very difficult to apologize,
but not impossible. Now was the time for him to rejoin them and, so far as the
Crextic patients were concerned, start laying down Federation law and telling
them the unpleasant truth—possibly more unpleasant than their earlier personal
fear of being eaten—about their present situation. But the spider had come to
a crucial decision, and from the dialogue that was developing and the
accompanying emotional radiation, Prilicla knew what it was. He was flying
slowly and happily into the recovery ward when the captain spoke urgently from
the communicator.
"Doctor," it
said, "the heavies have arrived. Three Monitor Corps cruisers, the
cultural contact vessel Descartes and Sector Marshal Dermod's flagship
Vespasian, no less. He has been appraised of our situation but says,
regrettable as it is, that we must not risk jeopardizing the successful
Trolanni contact by allowing them and our other casualties to be killed due to
our bungled contact with the Crextic. The sector marshal says we must on no
account sacrifice our own people and two members of an intelligent,
star-traveling species. It says that it was a difficult decision but he had to
make it. We are ordered to move all casualties to Rhabwar, warn off the
spiders, and take off forthwith."
Prilicla's flight path
wavered for a moment, then steadied as
he said, "Right now
that would be very inconvenient, friend Fletcher. Please tell the sector marshal
that our second contact with the Crextic is ongoing and at a delicate stage
which must not be interrupted by a hasty evacuation, and remind it that this is
predominantly a medical emergency, with all that implies."
"But, but you can't
say that, dammit," the captain burst out. "Not to a sector
marshal!"
"Be diplomatic,"
said Prilicla, resuming his flight.
Prilicla flew into the
recovery ward and hovered above and between the lines of patients. He was
noticed but ignored. Considering the conversation that was taking place between
Irisik and Keet he could live with the delay, for a while.
". .. It seems that I
have been completely wrong in my assessment of this situation," Irisik
was saying, "and when they learn about it the Crextic will be grateful for
the healing that was done for us here. But these healers are strange creatures,
not unfriendly but still frightening. I don't know how long it would take, if
ever, for us to come to like them...."
"Dr. Prilicla,"
the captain broke in. "The sector marshal rejects your suggestion and
orders an immediate return of the medical team and casualties to Rhabwar. We
can warn the Crextic to move clear before taking off, and hope they heed the
warning. I'm sorry, Doctor. Start evacuating your casualties at once."
"Friend
Fletcher," said Prilicla, "please ask the ..." At that point one
of his Educator tape donors, a straight-talking Kelgian, slipped suddenly to
the forefront of his mind and he ended, "We've begun to make good progress
here, so tell Sector Marshal Dermod to stay the hell out of my fur!"
"... You've said that
your home world is poisoned and dying and that there aren't many Trolanni left
on it," Irisik was saying. "Here there are many islands, particularly
those close to the polar continents where high seas and treacherous currents
make them dangerous for plant and animal cultivation but which you, with your
greater knowledge and machines, could use. So why go to another and perhaps
less suitable world when you would be welcomed here?
"You bear a closer
physical resemblance to the Crextic than these others," it went on,
"so that even the most intellectually timid among us would have no
difficulty in accepting you as strange but helpful neighbors. You Trolanni
would be too few in numbers to threaten us and your knowledge is too valuable
for us to waste it by hurting you...."
"That," said one
of the Terragar casualties, using one of its obscure Earth-human sayings,
"would be like killing the geese that lay golden eggs."
Prilicla was well pleased
at the way things were going, but it was a time to be tough and, to use another
Earth-human expression, tell the Crextic a few home truths.
".. . If you have an
ethical problem with this," Irisik continued, "as we would have if
the positions were reversed, think of it as paying ground rent, or a simple
exchange of knowledge for a peaceful and pleasant living space. In time we
would learn fully to understand and trust each other, and in more time you
could show us how to harvest the metals that you have said lie deep beneath our
surface, and work them into machines which will enable the Crextic one day, as
these others do, to walk the web between the stars...."
"Doctor!" the
captain's voice broke in urgently. "Look at your ward repeater screen. All
the Crextic vessels are launching their gliders and ground forces. Get your med
team and casualties back to to Rhabwar. Now, Doctor."
Prilicla looked at the
repeater screen which showed spiders pouring out of the nearer ships and
forming up on the beach while their gliders were moving in thermal-seeking
circles above the hot sand as they strove for height. He felt sure, but not
very
sure, that the Crextic
would wait until more force arrived and that an attack wasn't imminent.
"Friend
Fletcher," he said, "if you've been listening you'll know that we are
making good progress ..."
"Not to all of
it," the captain broke in. "We're too busy here readying the ship for
a hot blastoff. But everything said was and is being relayed to Vespasian.
We've no time to retrieve the buildings and non-portable equipment, so just
get your people out of there."
".. . and it would be
a major crime to throw it away," Prilicla continued, as if the other had
not spoken. "Neither, I feel sure, would it favorably impress our Trolanni
friends if we were to burn all the nearby Crextic ships and many hundreds of
sailors just to save the lives of a few patients and medical staff."
"So we are to be
killed—" Irisik began, its anger and disappointment outweighing its
personal fear. "You lied to us."
"... You will now have
realized, friend Fletcher, that the ward translator is on and our conversation
is open," he said, then continued briskly. "Naydrad, use the robots
to help you move the Trolanni and Earth-human casualties to Rhabwar. Please
link my translator to the ship's external speaker system. The Crextic patients
and I are going out and will try to talk some sense into their Krititkukik.
Murchison, Danalta, set the other Crextic litters and restraints for remote
control and quick release on my command, then assist Naydrad with the other
patient transfers."
"No, sir," said
Murchison, radiating feelings that were a strange combination of affection,
respect, and downright mutiny. It glanced towards the shape-changer who
twitched its upper body in assent, and added, "We are staying with
you."
"As will I," said
Keet.
He knew from the intensity
of their emotional radiation that he could not make them change their minds.
There were occasions, he thought gratefully, when insubordination had its
place. It was obvious that the captain thought otherwise and was voicing its
feelings without the usual verbal niceties.
"Are you losing your
mind entirely, Doctor?" it said angrily. "And have you no control at
all over your medical staff? Explain our situation to your spider patients,
urge them to pass it on to their friends, and tell them that they will all die
if they don't move away fast. And don't dare go outside. The meteorite shield
has been withdrawn to support the launch system...."
Prilicla turned down the
volume on his headset and addressed the Crextics.
"We have no intention
of eating or harming any of you," he said while the irate voice of the
captain muttered in the background, "and you have a choice. You are free
to go with the other casualties to the safety of our ship. Or leave here now
with me, to rejoin your friends and help me convince them that I am telling the
truth. If we can't do that, then we and many hundreds of them will be burned to
death.
"The next attack is
about to begin so there isn't much time to stop it," he went on as he took
control of the spider pilot's litter. "I am asking for an immediate
meeting with your Kritit-kukik and will explain the situation to you as we move
outside. ..."
Although the preparations
for the attack were continuing, the Krititkukik came out to meet them without
hesitation. It was a responsible commander, Irisik insisted, who preferred to
win a battle with the minimum possible butcher's bill. But it was still at a
distance when the pathologist drew his attention to a difference in its
appearance. A tubular collar into which variously-colored twigs and vegetation
had been woven was encircling its long, thin neck.
"It wasn't wearing
that when I met it on its ship," said Murchison. "Is it an insignia
of rank?"
"No," said
Irisik.
The spider's emotional
radiation was far from unpleasant but it was so intense, poignant, and deeply
personal that it made Prilicla waver in flight. Similar feelings were reaching
him from
the approaching
Krititkukik. Considering the intimate nature of those feelings, he did not
expect Irisik to elaborate, but it did.
"It is the Collar of
First Mating," it said through a surge of emotion, "worn by the male
as self-protection and as a compliment to his partner's sexual ardor which
could and might be aroused to the point where the female loses control and
bites off her mate's head. There have been no cases reported for many
centuries, and now it is worn only twice. On the night of first mating as a
promise of the life of loving to come, and when the life of one aged partner or
the other is about to end in gratitude for the life and loving that has gone
before."
The effect of its words on
the females Murchison and Keet, and on the male subject of the discussion,
Krititkukik, forced Prilicla to drop to the sand before he was forced to make
an undignified crash-landing. Again, as he had done in the ward, he allowed
Irisik and Keet, with a little help from the recuperating glider pilot and the
other two Crextic casualties, to make the conversation run while he monitored
the emotional radiation of all concerned.
The Krititkukik was a
highly intelligent being whose credence was not won easily, but when it was an
equally intelligent and much-loved life-mate who was leading the attack on the
basis of all its hard-held beliefs, the battle, although lengthy, was lost from
the start.
Finally it said,
"Suppose I believe you, Irisik, which is what I would like to do; the
sailors of the other Krititkukikii assembled on and around this island may not.
They want to kill the strangers, no matter what the cost, to keep more of them
from coming and eating our people. . .."
"You saw what happened
to me when I crashed into their invisible shield," the glider pilot broke
in. "They don't eat people, they make them well again. Look at what they
did for me."
"We made the same
mistake at first," Keet joined in, "when the strangers tried to help
rescue us from our wrecked ship. But they healed my life-mate, who was in a
much worse condition than your glider pilot, and now both of them will live.
And we certainly don't want to eat spiders. Irisik has invited the few of my
species who are left to join you on your beautiful, unspoiled world, and in
return we will teach you, in the years or the centuries to come, how to leave
it and walk the star web that connects it to the other worlds, in peace and
prosperity...."
"Yes, yes," said
the Krititkukik, its level of resistance dropping but not quite to zero.
"Irisik and you and the tall, soft, lumpy one who escaped from my ship
have already told me all of this, many times. But it is like a story told to
please young children, full of good things that are not real. And like children
you have tried to frighten us with threats of a great fire when your ship lifts
into the sky if we do not behave. Why should we believe you? You have helped a
few of my people, including my life-mate, and promised great things for the
future, and threatened much death and devastation now when your great ship
with its invisible shields rises into the sky, but the strangers face no
punishment for not telling us the truth and risk nothing and . .."
"We risk our
lives," said Prilicla, breaking in gently. He indicated the disturbance in
the sand that had shown the surface limits of the meteorite shield and went on,
"We no longer have protection. You can kill us now and we could do nothing
to stop you. But if you don't call off your attack we will be burned to death
with all of your people on this beach. Think about that, Krititkukik, and about
the reasons we have given you for this risk we are taking, and believe what we
say."
Prilicla could feel the
other's growing uncertainty, but there was no indication of immediate hostile
action being planned. He went on. "Why don't you test the truth of what
I'm saying with your weapon?"
"Doctor, this is
madness!" Fletcher's broke in. The other must have been shouting for its
voice to sound so loud, considering the reduced gain on Prilicla's headset.
"I'm going to pull you in with tractor beams before you get everyone
killed. I mean all of you, including the Crextic casualties—that way we can
save a few of them though they probably won't love us for it... ." Its
tone, although still loud, softened a little. ". . . The transfer will be
sudden, and will be very rough on you physically, Doctor, but you are, after
all, heading back to the best hospital in the galaxy for treatment. ..."
It broke off again as a
more authoritative but quieter voice— too quiet for Prilicla to distinguish the
individual words—broke in, then the captain went on. "Sir? But, but you
can see that an attack is developing as we speak. I understand, sir. No action
on my part unless expressly ordered by you."
Prilicla didn't ask for
clarification because the situation around him was at too delicate a stage. He
felt the sudden agitation of Keet and the medical-team members as the
Krititkukik unlimbered its crossbow and loosed a single bolt, which flew
through the intervening space unhindered until it clattered against the wall of
the med station and fell onto the sand. The crossbow was replaced and it raised
its speaking trumpet. First it spoke to the gliders circling above them, then
to the sailors assembling on the beach. But this time their translators were
online so that they could understand as well as hear everything it was saying.
All of the Crextic ground
forces and gliders were being ordered to cease offensive actions and return
without delay to their ships, with the exception of one aircraft which was
instructed to gain altitude so that it could perform the signal aerobatic that
would transmit the same message to the more distant ships and aircraft. The
relief of the people all around bathed Prilicla in a bonfire glow of friendship
and warmth, but again there was one exception.
"There is
disagreement," the Krititkukik said. "More than a quarter of the
Crextic assembled here are little more than pirates, violent, unsubtle people
with whom we normally would have no dealings. But they are influencing the
others. In an effort to convince them of your good feelings for all of the
Crextic, I told them that your ship was defenseless, but that if they attacked
and forced it to leave, it would kill many hundreds of us as it went. The
cloud-walkers' signals are of necessity short, simple, and incapable of
carrying closely reasoned arguments. This uncivilized element disbelieves me
and they intend to press home their attack, very soon."
With its words the bright,
warm emotional cloud of pleasure and relief coming from the people surrounding
him congealed suddenly into a dark, icy cloud of fear and angry disappointment.
For the first time in his life, Prilicla could think of nothing that he could
say that would help relieve their emotional distress. Even though it must have
heard the Kritikukik's words on Rhabwar's aural sensors, friend Fletcher, too,
was silent or at a loss for words.
But the silence was not complete.
There was a faint growling sound, so deep that was felt in the bones as well as
being heard through the ears, that seemed to be coming from everywhere and
nowhere. From the top of its shapeless body Danalta extruded an ear that
resembled a fleshy dish-antenna, and shortly afterwards grew a hand with one
upwardly-pointing digit. They followed its direction and looked up.
Vespasian was making a slow
and increasingly thunderous approach.
The Monitor Corps'
Emperor-class battleships were unable to land on a planetary surface because of
the complex antennae, weapon mounts, and other structural projections sprouting
from a hull so vast that, even at an altitude of several miles it looked like
another shining metal island, except this island was floating on its four
ravening underlets. Looking tiny beside the vast capital ship, its escort of
three cruisers traced wide, fiery circles around it, their thunder sounding
falsetto by comparison.
Ponderously avoiding the
spider ships in the area, Vespasian closed on the bay and dropped to less than
one thousand meters' altitude, its underlets exploding the surface of the sea
into dazzling white clouds of steam that boiled upwards to almost ob-
scure its vast underside
and making it seem that it was riding on self-generated clouds.
For a few moments it hung
there, the incredibly loud, hissing thunder making it impossible for anyone to
hear themselves or anyone else speak. Then it withdrew, again avoiding the
spider ships in the area as it began a rapid ascent spacewards, accompanied by
its cruiser escorts. When the noise reduced to something less than deafening,
a new voice sounded over Rhabwars external speakers.
It said, "Dr.
Prilicla, Sector Marshal Dermod. I have found that a prior show of police force
can often avert a riot by forcing the rioters to calm down and see sense. I am
now returning my ships to orbit and withdrawing their sound pollution so as to
give everyone down there a chance to talk together which, with your help and a
little more of your creative insubordination, I'm sure they will.
"You have done very
well, Dr. Prilicla," it ended. "Very well indeed."
By the evening of the following
day, the majority of the Crextic vessels had withdrawn from the island to
return to their various homelands, the exceptions being the flagships of the
Kri-titkukikii from every clan fleet, and their advisors. During the days and
weeks that followed, many gliders were continually airborne, flying at the
cold, upper limits of their operational capability as they signaled the
results of the talks that were going on in what had been the medical station,
to the other relay gliders farther afield.
There was plenty going on,
although the negotiations between the Federation's cultural-contact
specialists from Descartes and the Crextic representatives—but strangely, not
with the Tro-lanni, whom the spiders considered their new friends—as often as
not, resembled non-violent riots. But one of Sector Marshal Dermod's cruisers
kept station on the island, maintaining a distance and altitude that would not
inconvenience the signaling gliders.
Only once, when it seemed
that the negotiations might degenerate into physical violence, did the sector
marshal order it to make a low pass over the medical station, to remind anyone
who might be thinking of using muscle instead of mind, where the real strength
lay. Apart from the horrendous noise of its passage, no spider injuries were
sustained, and the Monitor Corps negotiators pointedly ignored the incident,
but thereafter the talking continued more peaceably.
For the ensuing three weeks
Prilicla spent his every waking moment with them, including the times when he
had to eat, a process which startled but did not disgust the spiders. When the
cultural-contact specialists from Descartes expertly plied their tri-di
projections to illustrate and explain in detail the organization and political
ramifications of the Galactic Federation to the Crextic—the two Trolanni
present had already seen most of it—the spiders' feelings reflected in turn
incredulity, wonder, fear, and distrust. By pinpointing the individual
emotional radiation of the person concerned, he was able to subtly guide the
contact specialist into a conversational area that the other found more reassuring.
Captain Fletcher was also
content because a cargo shuttle, too small to do more than scorch an
insignificant area of sand on the beach, was plying between the orbiting
Vespasian and Rhabwar, carrying with the relays of cultural-contact specialists
the fuel cells and organic and engineering consumables that would shortly
result in a virtual refit and resupply of its beloved ambulance ship so that it
could again take off with a pressor-beam assist and not burn up half the island
as it left.
Then the day came when
Prilicla knew that their work on the spider planet was complete, because the
supply shuttle touched down with no supplies on board since it carried instead
no less a personage than Sector Marshal Dermod.
The dark green Monitor
Corps uniform with its insignia of rank and quietly impressive ribbons meant
nothing to the Trolanni and Crextic gathered in what had been the station's
recovery ward, but the habit of command in its manner said all that was
necessary about it as a person—a person who meant exactly what it said.
"My warmest
compliments to everyone here who has been involved in successfully concluding
this epoch-making agreement between three different intelligent species,"
it said. "Not only has there been it a first contact between the
Federation and the Trolanni, but a second contact with ourselves and the
Crextic, and another possible future contact with the druul-----"
It looked along the line of
joined litters which served as a conference table and raised a hand to quell an
outburst from Keet and Jasam, then went on. "... I know that you have
already discussed this matter with my subordinate officers and members of the
medical team, but I am required to restate our position officially. Federation
law forbids us to exterminate any intelligent species, regardless of the past
and present evidence of their concerted violence and antisocial behavior
towards others. Instead, a rigorous and lengthy psychological and sociological
assessment will be conducted regarding the possibility of their reeducation.
Should the findings go against them and, as our Trolanni friends have insisted,
they turn out to be nothing but intelligent and amoral animals, they will not
be exterminated. Instead their world will be placed under Federation Interdict
until they either become civilized, which seems improbable, or they exterminate
themselves.
"The Trolanni
currently living among them," it went one, "will be evacuated and
transferred, at the invitation of the Crextic, to this planet to share a part
of it with them, and to cooperate in the future to the benefit of both species.
"Such an event as this
has no precedent in the history of the Federation," Dermod continued, glancing
up at the hovering Prilicla, "and we were worried in case it did not
succeed and we had the druul-Trolanni conflict repeat itself here. But my
em-pathic advisor assures me that the Crextic and Trolanni feelings, based as
they are on mutual help and future scientific and commercial advantages, are
honest and will be more long-lasting than any agreement based on empty
diplomacies. As a precaution we will observe the situation from orbit. If the
cultural contact fails, we will move the Trolanni to another planet which has
no sapient life-forms to oppose their resettlement, but I do not foresee that
happening because this is a
contact that the Crextic and the Trolanni both want and need. At no time will
we interfere in disputes which you are plainly capable of solving yourselves,
nor will we give unwanted technical help, because psychologically that would be
bad for both species. In time, perhaps not too long a time as progressing
cultures go, I can foresee the Trolanni and the Crextic being welcomed into
the Galactic Federation.
"But our more
immediate plan," it went on briskly, "is to take Jasam and its
searchsuit back to Trolann to explain the situation to its people, advise them
regarding the evacuation, and begin instructing our scientists regarding the
organic-cybernetic interface and the lifesuit technology they use for
self-defense. This will have important applications far beyond their use as
fully-sensitive limbs for amputees. Meanwhile Keet has elected to remain here
with Irisik to prepare everyone concerned for the arrival of the first Trolanni
evacuees. The medical station will be left here for their use as will the
remains of Terragar. Both will be a constant reminder of the future that lies
ahead for both species.
"Rhabwar," it
added, looking at Prilicla and then Captain Fletcher, "will return to
Sector General when convenient."
"Thank you, friend
Dermod," said Prilicla.
"Doctor!" the
captain said, its face deepening in color and its emotional radiation
reflecting shock and embarrassment. "You don't talk that way to a, to a
sector marshal!" To its superior officer, it went on quickly, "Please
excuse Dr. Prilicla, sir, it sometimes takes friendly informality to excess.
And yes, sir, we can leave within the hour."
"A degree of
informality is acceptable," said the sector marshal, its eyes turning
towards Prilicla, "especially from someone who has achieved so much here.
I feel no insult at your mode of address, little friend, and your empathic
faculty is already telling you that, among other things...."
There was an unusual
feeling of warmth and expectancy emanating from the sector marshal that was
characteristic of a
pleasure soon to be shared.
It showed its teeth in the grimace Earth-humans called a smile.
". . . Besides,"
it went on, "just before leaving for this meeting I received a signal
from Administrator Braithwaite at the hospital to say that you have been
appointed, or, more precisely, you have been elected unanimously to the rank of
Diagnostician. My warmest congratulations, friend Prilicla."
To Captain Fletcher it
added dryly, "As I recall them, my words were 'when convenient,' not 'as
soon as possible.' One does not give orders to a Sector General
Diagnostician."