White, James – Sector General 07 – Code Blue Emergency

“I do talk to them,” she said. “One especially, and it says that it likes

talking to me. I try not to favor any particular patient, but this one is more

distressed than the others. I shouldn’t be talking to it as I’m not qualified to

treat it, but nobody else can or will do anything for the patient.”

Tarsedth’s fur rippled with concern. “Is it terminal?” “I don’t know. I don’t

think so,” Cha Thrat replied. “It’s been a ward patient for a very long time.

Seniors examine it sometimes with advanced trainees present, and Thornnastor

spoke to it when the Diagnostician was in the ward with another patient, but not

to ask about its condition. I haven’t access to its case history, but I’m pretty

sure that the medication prescribed for it is palliative rather than curative.

It is not neglected or ill treated so much as politely ignored. I’m the only one

who will listen to its symptoms, so it talks to me at every opportu-nity. I

shouldn’t talk to it, not until I know what’s wrong with it, because I’m not

qualified.”

The movement of Tarsedth’s fur settled down to a more even rhythm as it said,

“Nonsense! Everybody is qualified to talk, and a bit of verbal sympathy and

encouragement can’t harm your patient. But if its condition is incurable, your

ward water would be teeming with Diagnosticians and Seniors intent on proving

otherwise. That’s the way things work here; nobody gives up on anybody. And your

patient’s problem will give you something to think about while you do the less

attractive jobs. Or don’t you want to talk to it?”

“Yes,” Cha Thrat said, “I’m very sorry for the great, suffering brute, and I

want to help it. But I’m beginning to wonder if it is a ruler, in which case I

should not be talking to it.”

“Whatever it is, or was, on Chalderescol,” Tarsedth said, “has no bearing, or

shouldn’t have, on its treatment as a patient. What harm can a little nonmedical

sympathy and encouragement do either of you? Frankly, I don’t see your

difficulty.”

Patiently Cha Thrat said again, “I’m not qualified.”

Tarsedth’s fur was moving in a manner that denoted impatience. “I still don’t

understand you. Talk, don’t talk to it. Do whatever you want to do.”

“I have talked to it,” Cha Thrat said, “and that’s what worries me— Is something

wrong?”

“Can’t it leave me alone!” said Tarsedth, its fur tufting into angry spikes.

“I’m sure that’s Cresk-Sar coming this way, and it’s seen our trainee badges.

The first question it will ask is why we aren’t studying. Can’t we ever escape

from its infuriating ‘I have .questions for you’ routine?”

The Senior Physician detached itself from a group of two other Nidians and a

Melfan who had been movingtoward the water’s edge and stopped, looking down at

them.

“I have questions for both of you,” it said inevitably, but unexpectedly went

on. “Are you able to relax in this place? Does it enable you to forget all about

your work? Your Charge Nurses? Me?”

“How can we forget about you,” Tarsedth said, “when you’re here, and ready to

ask us why we’re here?”

The Kelgian’s seeming rudeness was unavoidable, Cha Thrat knew, but her reply

would have to be more diplomatic.

“The answer to all four questions is, not entirely,” she said. “We were relaxing

but were discussing problems relating to our work.”

“Good,” Cresk-Sar said. “I would not want you to forget your work, or me,

entirely. Have you a particular problem or question that I can answer for you

before I rejoin my friends?”

Tarsedth was burrowing deeper into the artificial sand and pointedly ignoring

their tutor who, now that it was off duty, seemed to Cha Thrat to be a much less

obnoxious Nidian. Cresk-Sar deserved a polite response, even though the recent

topic of discussion, the psychological and emotional problems associated with

the removal of other-species body wastes, was not an area in which a Senior

Physician would have firsthand experience. Perhaps she could ask a general

question that would satisfy both the social requirements of the situation and

her own curiosity.

“As trainees,” Cha Thrat said, “we are assigned to the less pleasant, nonmedical

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