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White, James – Sector General 07 – Code Blue Emergency

rapidly, they can reproduce themselves. There are dozens of them in the room

with Cha Thrat, and they’re so small that more of them could be hidden in odd

corners all over the ship.

“Until we get a properly equipped and protected decontamination squad in there,”

Fletcher went on, “I have no choice but to seal and place a guard on the

boarding tube. This is something completely new to our experience, and it may

well be that the hospital will advise the complete destruction of the ship, and

its contents.

“If you will all think about it for a moment,” the Captain ended, sounding very

unhappy with itself, “you will realize that we cannot take the slightest risk of

that life-form getting onto this ship, or running loose in Sector General.”

There was silence for several moments while theythought about it, and Cha Thrat

thought about the strange thing that had happened, and was still happening, to

her.

While trying to help Rhone she had experienced a joining, and with it the shock

and disorientation and excitement of having her mind invaded, but not taken

over, by a personality that was completely alien to her. The effect had been

rendered even stranger and more frightening by the fact that the Gogleskan’s

mind had also contained material from a previous joining with a mind whose

memories were even more confusing, those of the Earth-human Conway. But this

sensation was entirely different. The approach and entry was gentle, reassuring,

and even pleasant, giving her the feeling that it was a process perfected after

a lifetime of experience. But like herself, this invader seemed to be badly

confused by the contents of her part-Sommaradvan, part-Gogleskan, and part

Earth-human mind and, because of that confusion, it was having trouble

controlling her body. She was still not sure of its intentions, but quite

certain that she was still herself and that she was learning more and more about

it with every passing second.

Murchison was the first to break the silence. It said, “We have protective suits

and cutting torches. Why don’t we decontaminate that compartment ourselves and

burn them all, including the one on the technician’s neck, and get Cha Thrat

back here for treatment while it still has some of its mind left? The hospital

people can finish the decontamination when we—”

“No,” the Captain said firmly. “If any of you medics go onto that ship, you

won’t be allowed back here.”

Cha Thrat did not want to join in because speaking would involve a minor mental

effort and consequent disruption in an area of her mind that she wished to

remain receptive. Instead, she moved her lower arms inthe Sign of Waiting, then

realizing that it meant nothing to non-Sommaradvans, held up one hand palm

forward in the Earth-human equivalent.

“I am confused,” Prilicla said suddenly. “Friend Cha is not feeling pain or

mental distress. It is wanting something very badly, but the emotional radiation

is characteristic of a source trying very hard to maintain calm and to control

its other feelings…”

“But it isn’t in control,” Murchison broke in. “Look at the way it was moving

its arms about. You’re forgetting that its feelings and emotions aren’t its

own.”

“You, friend Murchison, are not the emotion-sensitive here,” Prilicla said in

the gentlest possible of reproofs. “Friend Cha, try to speak. What do you want

us to do?”

She wanted to tell them to stop talking and leave her alone, but she desperately

needed their help and that reply would have given rise to more questions,

interruptions, and mental dislocations. Her mind was a bubbling stew of

thoughts, impressions, experiences, and memories that concerned not only her own

past on Sommar-adva and Sector General, but those of Healer Khone and

Diagnostician Conway. The new occupant was blundering about like an intruder

lost in a large, richly furnished but imperfectly lit household, examining some

items and shying away from others. This, Cha Thrat knew, was not the time to

leave it alone.

But if she answered a few of their questions, said just enough to keep them

quiet and make them do what she wanted, that might be the best course.

“I am not in danger,” Cha Thrat said carefully, “or in any physical or emotional

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curiosity: