White, James – Sector General 07 – Code Blue Emergency

expect a visit from O’Mara quite soon.

“When asked if we could bring you lecture material,” it ended apologetically,

“Cresk-Sar said no.”

It did not make any difference how it was broken, she thought after they had

gone, the news was equally bad. But the sudden, raucous sound of her bedside

communicator kept her from dwelling for too long on her troubles.

It was Patient AUGL-One Sixteen who, with Charge Nurse Hredlichi’s cooperation,

was shouting into one of the Nurses’ Station communicators from the entrance to

the Chalder ward. It began by apologizing for the physiological and

environmental problems that kept it from visiting her in person, then told her

how much it was missing her visits—the Earth-human wizard O’Mara, it said,

lacked her sympathetic manner and charm—and it hoped she was recovering with no

physical or mental distress.

“Everything is fine,” she lied. It was not a good thing to burden a patient with

its medic’s troubles, even when the medic was temporarily a patient. “How are

you?”

“Very well, thank you,” the Chalder replied, sounding enthusiastic in spite of

the fact that its words were reaching her through two communicators, a

translator, and a considerable quantity of water. “O’Mara says that I can leave

and rejoin my family very soon, and can start contacting the space

administration on Chalder about my old job. I’m still young for a Chalder, you

know, and I do really feel well.”

“I’m very happy for you, One Sixteen,” Cha Thrat said, deliberately omitting its

name because others might be listening who were not entitled to use it. She was

surprised by the strength of her feelings toward the creature.

“I’ve heard the nurses talking,” the Chalder went on, “and it seems like you are

in serious trouble. I hope all goes well for you, but if not, and you have to

leave thehospital… Well, you are so far from Sommaradva out here that if you

felt like seeing another world on your way home, my people would be pleased to

have you for as long as you liked to stay. We’re pretty well advanced on

Chalderescol and your food synthesis and life-support would be no problem.

“It’s a beautiful world,” it added, “much, much nicer than the Chalder ward…”

When the Chalder eventually broke contact, she settled back into the pillows,

feeling tired but not depressed or unhappy, thinking about the ocean world of

Chalderescol. Before joining the AUGL ward she had studied the library tape on

that world with the idea of being able to talk about home to the patients, so

she was not completely unfamiliar with the planet. The thought of living there

was exciting, and she knew that, as an off-planet person entitled to call

Muromeshomon by name, its family and friends would make her welcome however long

or short her stay. But thoughts like that were uncomfortable because they

presupposed that she would be leaving the hospital.

Instead she wondered how the normally shy and gentle Chalder had been able to

prevail upon the acid-tongued Hredlichli to use the Nurses’ Station communicator

as it had done. Could it have forced cooperation by threatening to wreck the

place again? Or, more likely, had the Chalder’s call to her been supported,

perhaps even suggested, by O’Mara?That, too, was an uncomfortable thought, but

it did not keep her awake. The continuing spell of the Earth-human wizard or the

medication it had prescribed, or both, were still having their insidious effect.

During the days that followed she was visited singly and, where physiological

considerations permitted, in small groups by her classmates. Cresk-Sar came

twicebut, like all the other visitors, the tutor would not talk about medical

matters at all. Then one day O’Mara and Diagnostician Conway arrived together

and would discuss nothing else.

“Good morning, Cha Thrat, how are you feeling?” the Diagnostician began, as she

knew it would.

“Very well, thank you,” she replied, as it knew she would. After that she was

subjected to the most meticulously thorough physical examination she had ever

experienced.

“You’ve probably realized by now that all of this wasn’t strictly necessary,”

Conway said as it replaced the sheet that had been covering her body. “However,

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