Healer, p.6

Healer, page 6

 part  #3 of  LaNague Federation Series

 

Healer
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  So would his fellow members of the bioscience department if he hadn’t quit when he did. Men who had looked his age when he first came to the university were now becoming large in the waist and gray in the hair and it was time to move. Already two colleagues had asked him where he was taking his youth treatments. Fortunately, IMC Central had offered him an important research fellowship in antimicrobial therapy and he had accepted eagerly.

  “You on a sabbatical from Derby?” she was asking.

  “No, I quit. I’m on my way to Tolive now.”

  “Oh, then you’re going to be working for the Interstellar Medical Corps.”

  “How did you know?”

  “Tolive is the main research-and-development headquarters for IMC. Any scientist is assumed to be working for the group if he’s headed for Tolive.”

  “I don’t consider myself a scientist, really. Just a vagabond student of sorts, going from place to place and picking up what I can.” So far, Dalt and his partner had served as an engineer on a peristellar freighter, a prospector on Tandem, a chispen fisher on Gelc, and so on, in a leisurely but determined search for knowledge and experience that spanned the human sector of the galaxy.

  “Well, I’m certain you’ll pick up a lot with IMC.”

  “You’ve worked for them?”

  “I’m head of a psychiatric unit. My spesh is really behavior mod, but I’m trying to develop an overview of the entire field; that’s why I took Chamler’s course.”

  Dalt nodded. “Tell me something, Ellen—”

  “El—”

  “Okay, then: El. What’s IMC like to work for? I must confess that I’m taking this job blindly; the offer came and I accepted with only minimal research.”

  “I wouldn’t work anywhere else,” she stated flatly, and Dalt believed her. “IMC has gathered some of the finest minds in the human galaxy together for one purpose: knowledge.”

  “Knowledge for knowledge’s sake has never had that much appeal for me; and frankly, that’s not quite the image I’d been given about IMC. It has a rather mercenary reputation in academic circles.”

  “The practical scientist and the practicing physician have limited regard for the opinions of most academicians. And I’m no exception. The IMC was started with private funds—loans, not grants—by a group of rather adventurous physicians who—”

  “It was a sort of emergency squad, wasn’t it?”

  “At first, yes. There was always a plague of some sort somewhere and the group hopped from place to place on a fee-for-service basis. Mostly, they could render only supportive care; the pathogens and toxins encountered on the distressed planets had already been found resistant to current therapeutic measures and there was not much the group could do on such short notice, other than lend a helping hand. They came up with some innovations which they patented, but it became clear that much basic research was needed. So they set up a permanent base on Tolive and started digging”

  “With quite a bit of success, I believe. IMC is reputedly wealthy—extremely so.”

  “Nobody’s starving, I can say that. IMC pays well in hopes of attracting the best minds. It offers an incredible array of research resources and gives the individual a good share of the profits from his marketable discoveries. As a matter of fact, we’ve just leased to Teblinko Pharmaceuticals rights for production of the antitoxin for the famous Nolevatol Rot.”

  Dalt was impressed. The Nolevatol Rot was the scourge of the interstellar traveler. Superficially, it resembled a mild case of tinea and was self-limiting; however, the fungus produced a neurotoxin with invariably fatal central-nervous-system effects. It was highly contagious and curable only by early discovery and immediate excision of the affected area of skin … until now.

  “That product alone would finance the entire operation of IMC, I imagine.”

  El shook her head. “Not a chance. I can see you have no idea of the scope of the group. For every trail that pays off, a thousand are followed to a dead end. And they all cost money. One of our most costly fiascoes was Nathan Sebitow.”

  “Yes, I’d heard he’d quit.”

  “He was asked to quit. He may be the galaxy’s greatest biophysicist but he’s dangerous—complete disregard of safety precautions for both himself and his fellow workers. IMC gave him countless warnings but he ignored them all. He was working with some fairly dangerous radiation and so finally his funds were cut off.”

  “Well, it didn’t take him long to find a new home, I imagine.”

  “No, Kamedon offered him everything he needed to continue his work within days after he supposedly ‘quit’ IMC.”

  “Kamedon … that’s the model planet the Restructurists are pouring so much money into.”

  She nodded. “And Nathan Sebitow is quite a feather in its cap. He should come up with something very exciting—I just hope he doesn’t kill anybody with that hard radiation he’s fooling around with.” She paused, then, “But getting back to the question of knowledge for knowledge’s sake: I find the concept unappealing, too. IMC, however, works on the assumption that all knowledge—at least scientific knowledge—will eventually work its way into some scheme of practical value. Existence consists of intra- and extracorporeal phenomena; the more we know about those two groups, the more effective our efforts will be when we wish to remedy certain interactions between them which prove to be detrimental to a given human.”

  “Spoken like a true behaviorist,” Dalt said with a laugh.

  “Sorry.” She flushed. “I do get carried away now and again. Anyway, you see the distinction I was trying to make.”

  “I see and agree. It’s good to know that I’m not headed for an oversized ivory tower. But why Tolive? I mean, I’ve—”

  “Tolive was chosen for its political and economic climate: a noncoercive government and a large, young work force. The presence of IMC and the ensuing prosperity have stabilized both the government—and I use that term only because you’re an outsider—and the economy.”

  “But I’ve heard stories about Tolive.”

  “You mean that it’s run by a group of sadists and fascists and anarchists and whatever other unpleasant terms you can dig up, and that if it weren’t for the presence of the IMC the planet would quickly degenerate into a hell-hole, right?”

  “Well, not quite so bluntly put, perhaps, but that’s the impression I’ve been given. No specific horror stories, just vague warnings. Any of it true?”

  “Don’t ask me. I was born there and I’m prejudiced. But guess who else was born there, and I think you’ll know what’s behind the smear campaign.”

  Dalt pondered a moment, baffled. Pard, with his absolute recall, came to the rescue. (“Peter LaNague was born on Tolive.”)

  “LaNague!” Dalt blurted in surprise. “Of course!”

  El raised her eyebrows. “Good for you. Not too many people remember that fact.”

  “But you’re implying that someone is trying to smear LaNague by smearing his homeworld. That’s ridiculous. Who would want to smear the author of the Federation Charter?”

  “Why, the people who are trying to alter that charter: the Restructurists, of course. Tolive has been pretty much the way it is today for centuries, long before LaNague’s birth and long since his death. Only since the Restructurist movement gained momentum have the rumors and whispers started. It’s the beginning of a long-range campaign: you watch—it’ll get dirtier. The idea is to smear LaNague’s background and thus….

  “No, I’m on my way to Neeka. Have to lay over in orbit here to make a connecting jump. Never been down there,” he said, nodding at the globe below. “But how come you sound so sure?”

  “Because no one from ‘down there’ would ever say what you said,” El replied, and promptly lost interest in the conversation. The portly man paused, shrugged, and then drifted off.

  “What was that all about?” Dalt asked. “What did he say that was so un-Tolivian?”

  “As I told you before, we have a different way of looking at things. The human race developed on a tiny planet a good many light-years away and devised a technology that allows us to sit in orbit above a once-alien planet and comfortably sip intoxicants while awaiting a ship to take us down. As a member of that race, I assure you, I feel anything but insignificant.”

  Dalt glanced after the man who had initiated the discussion and noticed him stagger as he walked away. He widened his stance as if to steady himself and stood blinking at nothing, beads of sweat dropping from his face and darkening the blue of his jumper. Suddenly he spun with outstretched arms, and with a face contorted with horror, began to scream incoherently.

  El bolted from her seat without a word and dug a microsyringe from her hip pouch as she strode toward the man, who had by now collapsed into a blubbering, whimpering puddle of fear. She placed the ovid device on the skin on the lateral aspect of his neck and squeezed.

  “He’ll quiet down in a minute,” she told a concerned steward as he rushed up. “Send him down to IMC Central on the next shuttle for emergency admission to Section Blue.” The steward nodded obediently, relieved that someone seemed to feel that things were under control. And sure enough, by the time two fellow workers had arrived, the portly man was quiet, although still racked with sobs.

  “What the hell happened to him?” Dalt asked over El’s shoulder as the man was carried to a berth in the rear.

  “A bad case of the horrors,” she replied. “No, I’m serious.”

  “So am I. It’s been happening all over the human sector of the galaxy, just like that: men, women, all ages; they go into an acute, unremitting psychotic state. They are biochemically normal and usually have unremarkable premorbid medical histories. They’ve been popping up for the past decade in a completely random fashion and there doesn’t seem to be a damn thing we can do about them,” she said with a set jaw, and it was obvious that she resented being helpless in any situation, especially a medical one.

  Dalt gazed at El and felt the heaviness begin. She was a remarkable woman, very intelligent, very opinionated, and so very much like Jean in appearance; but she was also very mortal. Dalt had resisted the relationship she was obviously trying to initiate and every time he weakened he merely had to recall Jean’s hate-contorted face when he had deserted her.

  I think we ought to get out of microbiology, he told Pard as his eyes lingered on El.

  (“And into what?”)

  How about life prolongation?

  (“Not that again!”)

  Yes! Only this time we’ll be working at IMC Central with some of the greatest scientific minds in the galaxy.

  (“The greatest minds in the galaxy have always worked on that problem, and every ‘major breakthrough’ and ‘new hope’ has turned out to be a dead end. Human cells reach a certain level of specialization and then lose their ability to reproduce. Under optimum conditions, a century is all they’ll last; after that the DNA gets sloppy and consequently the RNA gets even sloppier. What follows is enzyme breakdown, toxic overload, and finally death. Why this happens, no one knows—and that includes me, since my consciousness doesn’t reach to the molecular level—and from recent literature, it doesn’t seem likely that anyone’ll know in the near future.”)

  But we have a unique contribution to make— (“You think I haven’t investigated it on my own, if not for any other reason than to provide you with a human companion of some permanence? It’s no fun, you know, when you go into those periods of black despair.”)

  I guess not. He paused. I think one’s on its way.

  (“I know. The metabolic warning flags are already up. Look: why not take up with this woman? You both find each other attractive and I think it will be good for you.”)

  Will it be good for me when she grows into a bitter old woman while I stay young?

  (“What makes you think she’ll want you around that long?”) Pard jibed.

  Dalt had no answer for that one.

  The shuttle trip was uneventful and when El offered to drive him from the spaceport to his hotel, Dalt reluctantly accepted. His feelings were in a turmoil, wanting to be simultaneously as close to and as far from this woman as possible. So to keep the conversation safe and light, he made a comment about the lack of flitters in the air.

  “We’re still pretty much in the ground-car stage, although one of the car factories is reportedly gearing for flitter production. It’ll be nice to get one at a reasonable price; the only ones on Tolive now were shipped via interstellar freight and that is expensive!”

  She pulled her car alongside a booth outside the spaceport perimeter, fished out a card, and stuck it into a slot. The card disappeared for a second or two and then the booth spat it out. El retrieved it, sealed her bubble, and pulled away.

  “What was that all about?”

  “Toll.”

  Dalt was incredulous. “You mean you actually have toll roads on this planet?”

  She nodded. “But not for long … not if we get a good supply of flitters.”

  “Even so, the roads belong to everybody—”

  “No, they belong to those who built them.”

  “But taxes—”

  “You think roads should be built with tax money?” El asked with a penetrating glance. “I use this road maybe once or twice a year; why should I pay anything for it the rest of the time? A group of men got together and built this road and they charge me every time I use it. What’s wrong with that?”

  “Nothing, except you’ve got to fork over money every time you make a turn.”

  “Not necessarily. Members of a given community usually get together and pool their money for local streets, build them, and leave them at that; and business areas provide roads gratis for the obvious reason. As a matter of fact, a couple of our big corporations have built roads and donated them to the public—the roads are, of course, named after the companies and thus act as continuous publicity agents.”

  “Sounds like a lot of trouble to me. It’d be a lot simpler if you just made everyone ante up and—”

  “Not on this planet it wouldn’t be. You don’t make Tolivians do anything. It would take a physical threat to make me pay for a road that I’ll never use. And we tend to frown on the use of physical force here.”

  “A pacifist society, huh?”

  “Pacifist may not be—” she began, and then swerved sharply to make an exit ramp. “Sorry,” she said with a quick, wry grin. “I forgot I was dropping you off at the hotel.”

  Dalt let the conversation lapse and stared out his side of the bubble at the Tolivian landscape. Nothing remarkable there: a few squat trees resembling conifers scattered in clumps here and there around the plain, coarse grass, a mountain range rising in the distance.

  “Not exactly a lush garden-world,” he muttered after a while.

  “No, this is the arid zone. Tolive’s axis has little deviation relative to its primary, and its orbit is only mildly ellipsoid. So whatever the weather is wherever you happen to be, that’s probably what it’ll be like for most of the year. Most of our agriculture is in the northern hemisphere; industry keeps pretty much to the south and usually within short call of the spaceports.”

  “You sound like a chamber-of-commerce report,” Dalt remarked with a smile.

  “I’m proud of my world.” El did not smile.

  Suddenly, there was a city crouched on the road ahead, waiting for them. Dalt had spent too much time on Derby of late and had become accustomed to cities with soaring profiles. And that’s how the cities on his homework! of Friendly had been. But this pancake of one- and two-story buildings was apparently the Tolivian idea of a city.

  SPOONERVILLE said a sign in Interworld characters. POP: 78,000. They sped by rows of gaily colored houses, most standing alone, some interconnected. And then there were warehouses and shops and restaurants and such. The hotel stood out among its neighboring buildings, stretching a full four stories into the air.

  “Not exactly the Centauri Hilton,” Dalt remarked as the car jolted to a halt before the front entrance.

  ‘Tolive doesn’t have much to offer in the way of tourism. This place obviously serves Spoonerville’s needs, ‘cause if there was much of an overflow somebody’d have built another.” She paused, caught his eyes, and held them. “I’ve got a lovely little place out on the plain that’ll accommodate two very nicely, and the sunsets are incredible.”

  Dalt tried to smile. He liked this woman, and the invitation, which promised more than sunsets, was his for the taking. “Thanks, El. I’d like to take you up on that offer sometime, but not now. I’ll try to see you at IMC tomorrow after my meeting with Dr. Webst”

  “Okay.” She sighed as he stepped out of the car. “Good luck.” Without another word she sealed the bubble and was off.

  (“You know what they say about hell and fury and scorned women,”) Pard remarked.

  Yeah, I know, but I don’t think she’s like that … got too good a head on her shoulders to react so primitively.

  Dalt’s reserved room was ready for him and his luggage was expected to arrive momentarily from the spaceport. He walked over to the window which had been left opaque, flipped a switch, and made the entire outer wall transparent. It was 18.75 in a twenty-seven-hour day—that would take some getting used to after years of living with Derby’s twenty-two-hour day—and the sunset was an orange explosion behind the hills. It probably looked even better from El’s place on the plains.

  (“But you turned her down,”) Pard said, catching the thought. (“Well, what are we going to do with ourselves tonight? Shall we go out and see what the members of this throbbing metropolis do to entertain themselves?”)

  Dalt squatted down by the window with his back against the wall. “I think I’ll just stay here and watch for a while. Why don’t you just go away,” he muttered aloud.

  (“I can’t very well leave …”) “You know what I mean!”

  (“Yes, I know what you mean. We go through this every time we have to uproot ourselves because your associates start giving you funny looks. You start mooning over Jean—”)

 

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