White, James – Sector General 05 – Sector General

radiation of everyone else—the minor embarrassments, the bursts of irri­tation,

the odd emotions associated with the feeling you Earth-humans call humor and the

like, are registering so strongly with me that I find difficulty in thinking

clearly.”

“1 see,” Conway said automatically, although he could not see at all. “Apart

from the hypersensitivity, are there any other symptoms?”

“Some unlocalized discomfort in the limbs and lower thorax,” Prilicla replied.

“I checked the areas with my scanner but could find no obstructions or

abnormalities.”

Conway had been reaching for his own pocket scanner but thought better of it.

Without taking a Cinrusskin physiology tape he would have only a vage idea of

what to look for, and Prides, Prilicla was a first-class diagnostician and

surgeon and if it said that there were no abnormalities then that was good

enough for Conway.

‘Cinrusskins are susceptible to illness only during child­hood,” Prilicla went

on. “The adults do occasionally suffer from nonphysical disturbances, and the

onset of symptoms, as

expected with psychological disorders, takes many forms, some of which resemble

my present—”

“Nonsense, you’re not going insane!” Conway broke in. But he did not feel as

sure as he sounded, and he was uncom­fortably aware that Prilicla knew his

feelings and was beginning to tremble again.

“The obvious course,” Conway said, trying to regain his clinical calm, “is to

desensitize you with a hefty sedative shot. You know that as well as I. But you

are too good a doctor to self-administer the indicated medication which would,

we both realize, simply be treating the symptoms, without first doing something

about the disease, like reporting it to me. Isn’t that so?”

‘That is so, friend Conway.”

“Right, then,” Conway said briskly. “You also realize that we can’t do anything

about curing the condition until we have you back in the hospital. In the

meantime we’ll treat the symp­toms with heavy sedation. I want you completely

unconscious. You are relieved of all medical duties, naturally, until we have

the answer to your little problem.”

Conway could almost feel the little empath’s objections while he was lifting it

gently into a pressure litter fitted with gravity nullifiers and the incredibly

soft restraints required by this uftrafragile species. Finally Prilicla spoke.

“Friend Conway,” it said weakly, “you know that I am the only medically trained

empath on the staff. Our patient wiil require extensive and delicate cerebral

surgery. If my condition precludes me from taking a direct part in the

operation, I wish to be treated in an adjacent ward where this abnormal

hyper-sensitivity will better enable me to monitor the EGCL’s un­conscious

emotional radiation.

“You know as well as I do,” it went on, “that brain surgery in a hitherto

unknown life-form is largely exploratory and very, very risky, and my empathic

faculty enables me to sense when surgical intervention in any area is right or

wrong. By becoming a patient I have lost none of my abilities as a diagnostic

empath, and for this reason, friend Conway, I want your promise that I will be

placed as close as possible to the patient and restored to full consciousness

while the operation is in progress.”

“Well—” Conway began.

“I am not a telepath, as you know,” Prilicla said, so weakly that Conway had to

increase the gain on his translator to hear

it. “But your feelings, if you do not intend to keep this promise, will be clear

to me.”

Conway had never known the normally timid Prilicla to be so forthright in its

manner. Then he thought of what the empath was asking him to do—to subject it,

in its hypersensitive state, to the emotional trauma of a lengthy operation

during which, because of the patient’s strange physiological classification and

metabolism, the effectiveness of the anesthetics could not be guaranteed. His

hard-held clinical detachment slipped for a moment and he felt like any

concerned friend or relative watch­ing a patient whose prognosis was uncertain.

Prilicla began to shake in its harness, but the sedative was taking effect, and

very soon it was unconscious and untroubled by Conway’s feelings for it.

“This is Reception,” a flat, translated voice said from the Control Deck’s main

speaker. “Identify yourself, please. State whether visitor, patient, or staff

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