White, James – Sector General 05 – Sector General

seeing the answer, magnified by the EGCL, was causing Prilicla’s wings to go

into the series of slow, rippling undulations which indicated intense pleasure

in a Cin-russkin. It also counteracted the aches which he and everyone else were

feeling from the pateint. He thought, What a weird experience the cultural

contact specialists were going to have with this species.

Aloud he said, “The process of reflecting and magnifying the feelings, hostile

or otherwise, of the people around them is a defense mechanism which would,

naturally, be at its most effective when the being is helpless, vulnerable, or

uncon­scious. With a return to consciousness the effect seems to diminish but

the empathic reflections are still strong. The result is that everyone around

them will have an empathic faculty not unlike Prilicla’s, and yet the EGCLs are

deaf to each other’s emotional radiation because they are transmitters only.

“Being like Prilicla,” he went on, looking across at the empath, “is something

of a mixed blessing. But the EGCL would be a nice perspn to have around if we

were having a good time — ”

“Control here,” the voice of the Captain broke in. “I have some information on

your patient’s species. Federation Ar­chives have signaled the hospital to the

effect that this race — their name for themselves is the Duwetz — was contacted

briefly by an exploring Hudlar ship before the formation of the Galactic

Federation. Enough information was obtained for the basic Duwetz language to be

programmed into the present-day trans­lation computers, but contact was severed

because of serious psychological problems among the crew. We are advised to

proceed with caution.”

“The patient,” Prilicla said suddenly, “is awake.”

Conway moved closer to the EGCL and tried to think pos­itive, reassuring

thoughts toward it. He noted with relief that the biosensors and associated

monitors were indicating a weak but stable condition; that the damaged lung was

again working satisfactorily and the bandages immobilizing the two rejoined

appendages were firmly in position. The extensive suturing on the muscular apron

and ambulatory pad at the base were well up to Thornnastor and Edanelt’s high

standards, as were the deftly inserted staples which gleamed in neat rows where

the carapace fractures had been. Obviously the being was in con­siderable

discomfort in spite of the painkilling medication Thonnastor had synthesized for

its particular metabolism. But Pain was not the predominant feeling it was

transmitting, and rear and hostility were entirely absent.

Two of its three remaining eyes swiveled to regard them while the other one was

directed toward the viewport where Rector Twelve General Hospital, now almost

eight kilometers Aslant, blazed like some vast, surrealistic piece of jewelry

against the interstellar darkness. The feelings which washed -Tough them, so

intensely that they trembled or caught their breathss or rippled their fur, were

of curiosity and wonder.

“I’m not an organ mechanic like you people,” O’Mara said stiffly, “but I would

say that with this case the prognosis is favorable.”

The ambulance ship Rhabwar had mad the trip from Sector General to the scene of

the supposed disaster in record time and with a precision of astrogation, Conway

thought, which would cause Lieutenant Dodds to exhibit symptoms of cranial

swelling for many days to come. But as the information was displayed on the

Casualty Deck’s repeater screens, it be­came clear to the watching medical team

that this was not going to be a fast rescue—that this might not, in fact, be a

rescue mission at all.

The fully extended sensor net revealed no sign of a distressed ship, nor any

wreckage or components of such a ship. Even the finely divided, expanding cloud

of debris which would have indicated a catastrophic malfunction in the veseel’s

reactor was missing. All there was to be seen was the characteristic shape of a

dead and partially fused distress beacon at a distance of a few hundred meters

and, about three million kilometers beyond it, the bright crescent shape which

was one of this systems P!anets.

Major Fletcher’s voice came from the speaker. The Captain did not sound pleased.

“Doctor,” he said. “We cannot assume that this was a simple false alarm.

Hyperspace radio distress beacons are highly expensive hunks of machinery for

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