White, James – Sector General 07 – Code Blue Emergency

food and supportive medication. Progress toward recovery was rapid thereafter.

The Earth-human healer gave advice on diet and medication dosage, and it was

free to examine the patient at any time, but I would not allow further surgical

intervention. I should explain that on Sommaradva, a surgeon will not share or

in any other way avoid personal responsibility for a patient. There was strong

criticism, both personal and professional, of my standpoint, particularly from

the Earth-human healer. I would not allow the patient to be moved to its ship

until eighteen days after the operation, when I was convinced that full

recuperation was assured.”

“She watched over me,” Chiang said, barking softly, “like an old mother hen.”

There was silence for what seemed to Cha Thrat to be a very long time, during

which everyone looked at the Melfan while it regarded the patient. It was

tapping one hard-tipped leg against the floor, but the sound it made was a

thoughtful rather than an impatient one.

Finally it said, “Without immediate surgical attention you would undoubtedly

have died as a result of your injuries, and you were fortunate indeed to receive

thenecessary attention from an entity completely unfamiliar j with your

physiological classification. Fortunate, too, in that the entity concerned was

not only skilled, resource-, ful, and deeply concerned with your aftercare, but

made the proper use of the limited facilities available to it. I can find no

serious fault with the surgical work performed here, and the patient is, indeed,

wasting the hospital’s time.”

Suddenly they were all looking at her, but it was the empath who spoke first.

“From Edanelt,” Prilicla said, “that is praise indeed.”

Chapter 3

THE private office of the Earth-human O’Mara was large, but the floor area was

almost entirely covered by a variety of chairs, benches, recliners and frames

designed for the use of the entities having business with the Chief

Psychologist. Chiang took the indicated Earth-human chair and Cha Thrat chose a

low, convoluted cage that looked as if it might not be too uncomfortable, and

sat down.

She saw at once that O’Mara was an old Earth-human. The short, bristling fur

covering the top and sides of its head, and the two thick crescents above its

eyes, were the gray color of unpainted metal. But the heavy muscle structure

apparent in the shoulders, upper limbs, and hands was not that of the other aged

Earth-humans she had seen. The flexible, fleshy covers of its eyes, which were

similar in color to its hair, did not droop as it studied her in every physical

detail.

“You are a stranger among us, Cha Thrat,” it said abruptly. “1 am here to help

you feel less strange, to answer questions you have been unable or unwilling to

ask of others, and to see how your present abilities can be trained^and extended

so that they may be put to the best possible use by the hospital.”

It turned its attention to Chiang. “My intention was to interview you

separately, but for some reason you wish to be present during my initial talk

with Cha Thrat. Can it be that you have heard, and believed, some of the things

the staff say about me? Do you have delusions of being a gentleman and Cha Thrat

a lady, albeit of a different physiological classification, who if not actually

in distress is a friend in need of moral support? Is that it,Major?”

Chiang barked quietly but did not speak.

“A question,” Cha Thrat said. “Why do Earth-humans make that strange

barking sound?”

O’Mara turned its head to regard her for a long moment, then it exhaled loudly

and said, “I had expected your first question to be more… profound. But very

well. The sound is called laughing, not barking, and in most cases it is a

psychophysical mechanism for the release of minor degrees of tension. An

Earth-human laughs because of a sudden relief from worry or fear, or to express

scorn or disbelief or sarcasm, or in response to words or a situation that is

ridiculous, illogical, or funny, or out of politeness when the situation or

words are nor funny but the person responsible is of high rank. I shall not even

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