White, James – Sector General 07 – Code Blue Emergency

itself in here to avoid what happened to the rest of its crew…”

She broke off, and Prilicla called urgently, “Friend Cha, why are you feeling

like that? What happened to you?”

“Nothing happened to me,” she replied, fighting to control her disappointment.

“I am holding the FGHJ now. There is no need to hurry. It is dead.”

“That explains why my sensors didn’t register,” Fletcher said.

“Friend Cha,” Prilicla said, ignoring the interruption, “are you quite sure”! I

can still feel the presence of a deeply unconscious mind.”

Cha Thrat drew the FGHJ toward her so that she could use her upper hands, then

said, “The body temperature is very low. Its eyes are open and do not react

tolight. The usual vital signs are absent. I’m sorry, it i dead and…” She

broke off to look more closely at th creature’s head, then went on excitedly.

“And I think know what killed it! The back of the neck. Can you s< it?""Not clearly," Prilicla replied quickly, obviously feeling her own growingexcitement, and fear. "One of those disklike objects is in the way.""But that's it," she said. "I thought at first that one of them had driftedagainst the cadaver and stuck to its head. But I was wrong. The thing attacheditself deliberately to the FGHJ with those thick white tendrils you can seegrowing from the edge of the disk. Now that I'm looking for them, I can see thatthey all have the tendrils and, judging by their length, the penetration intothe cadaver's spinal column and rear cranium is very deep. That thing is, orwas, alive, and could have been responsible for—""Technician," Fletcher broke in harshly, "get out of there!""At once," Prilicla said.Very carefully Cha Thrat released her hold on the dead FGHJ, removed her visionpickup, and attached its magnetic clips to a clear area of wall. She knew thatthe medical team would want to study this strange and abhorrent life-form thatwas infesting the ship before deciding how to deal with it. Then she turnedtoward the entrance, which now seemed to be very far away.The disks hung thickly like an alien minefield between the door and herself.Some of them were still moving slowly in the air eddies caused by her entry orby the blows with which she had so casually knocked them aside, or perhaps oftheir own volition. They presented views from every angle—the smooth surface ofthe mot-tied side, the gray and wrinkled reverse side, and the edges with theirfringe of limp white tendrils.She had been so busy searching for an FGHJ survivor that she had scarcely lookedat the objects she had mistaken for cakes of food or dried wastes floating inthe room. She still did not know what they were, only of what they were capable,which was the utter destruction of the highly trained and intelligent minds oftheir victims to leave them with nothing but the basic and purely instinctiveresponses of animals.The thought of a predator who did not eat or physically harm its prey, butgorged itself on the intelligence of its victim, made her want to seek refuge inmadness. She was desperately afraid of touching one of them again, but therewere too many of them for her to avoid doing so. But if any of them got in herway, Cha Thrat decided grimly, she would touch it, hit it, very hard.The gentle, reassuring voice of Prilicla sounded in her earpiece. It said, "Youare controlling your fear well, friend Cha. Move slowly and carefully anddon't—"She winced as a high-pitched, piercing sound erupted from the earpiece,signifying that too many people were talking to her at once and had overloadedher translator. But they realized immediately what was happening because theoscillation wavered and died to become one voice, the Captain's."Technician, behind yourBy then it was too late.All of her attention had been directed ahead and to the sides, where thegreatest danger lay. When she felt the surprisingly light touch, followed by asensation of numbness on the back of her neck, a cool, detached part of her mind

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