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the skill to use that knowledge especially in surgery came only with time. Conway was looking
forward with conscious pride to spending his life acquiring that skill.
At an intersection Conway saw an FGLJ he knew a Tralthan intern who was humping his
elephantine body along on six spongy feet. The stubby legs seemed even more rubbery than usual and the
little OTSB who lived in symbiosis with it was practically comatose. Conway said brightly, "Good
morning," and received a translated and therefore necessarily emotionless reply of "Drop dead."
Conway grinned.
There had been considerable activity in and about Reception last evening. Conway had not been
called, but it looked as though the Tralthan had missed both his recreation and rest periods.
A few yards beyond the Tralthan he met another who was walking slowly alongside a small DBDG
like himself. Not entirely like himself, though DBDG was the one-group classification which gave the
grosser physical attributes, the number of arms, heads, legs, etc., and their placement. The fact that the
being had seven-fingered hands, stood only four feet tall and looked like a very cuddly teddy
bear Conway had forgotten the being's system of origin, but remembered being told that it came from a
world which had suffered a sudden bout of glaciation which had caused its highest life-form to develop
intelligence and a thick red fur coat would not have shown up unless the Classification were taken to
two or three groups. The DBDG had his hands clasped behind his back and was staring with vacant
intensity at the floor. His hulking companion showed similar concentration, but favoured the ceiling
because of the different position of his visual organs. Both wore their professional insignia on golden
armbands, which meant that they were lordly Diagnosticians, no less. Conway refrained from saying
good morning to them as he passed, or from making undue noise with his feet.
Possibly they were deeply immersed in some medical problem, Conway thought, or equally likely,
they had just had a tiff and were pointedly ignoring each other's existence. Diagnosticians were peculiar
people. It wasn't that they were insane to begin with, but their job forced a form of insanity onto them.
At each corridor intersection annunciators had been pouring out an alien gabble which he had only half
heard in passing, but when it switched suddenly to Terran English and Conway heard his own name being
called, surprise halted him dead in his tracks.
"& to Admittance Lock Twelve at once," the voice was repeating monotonously. "Classification
VTXM-23. Dr. Conway, please go to Admittance Lock Twelve at once. A VTXM-23& "
Conway's first thought was that they could not possibly mean him. This looked as if he was being
asked to deal with a case a big one, too, because the "23" after the classification code referred to the
number of patients to be treated. And that Classification, VTXM, was completely new to him. Conway
knew what the letters stood for, of course, but he had never thought that they could exist in that
combination. The nearest he could make of them was some form of telepathic species the V prefixing
the classification showed this as their most important attribute, and that mere physical equipment was
secondary who existed by the direct conversion of radiant energy, and usually as a closely cooperative
group or gestalt. While he was still wondering if he was ready to cope with a case like this, his feet had
turned and were taking him toward Lock Twelve.
His patients were waiting for him at the lock, in a small metal box heaped around with lead bricks and
already loaded onto a power stretcher carrier. The orderly told him briefly that the beings called
themselves the Telfi, that preliminary diagnosis indicated the use of the Radiation Theatre, which was
being readied for him, and that owing to the portability of his patients he could save time by calling with
them to the Educator room and leaving them outside while he took his Telfi physiology tape.
Conway nodded thanks, hopped onto the carrier and set it moving, trying to give the impression that
he did this sort of thing every day.
In Conway's pleasurable but busy life with the high unusual establishment that was Sector General
there was only one sour note, and he met it again when he entered the Educator room: there was a
Monitor in charge. Conway disliked Monitors. The presence of one affected him rather like the close
proximity of a carrier of a contagious disease. And while Conway was proud of the fact that as a sane,
civilized and ethical being he could never bring himself actually to hate anybody or anything, he disliked
Monitors intensely. He knew, of course, that there were people who went off the beam sometimes, and
that there had to be somebody who could take the action necessary to preserve the peace. But with his
abhorrence of violence in any form, Conway could not like the men who took that action.
And what were Monitors doing in a hospital anyway?
The figure in neat, dark green coveralls seated before the Educator control console turned quickly at
his entrance and Conway got another shock. As well as a Major's insignia on his shoulder, the Monitor
wore the Staff and Serpents emblem of a Doctor!
"My name is O'Mara," said the Major in a pleasant voice. "I'm the Chief Psychologist of this
madhouse. You, I take it, are Dr. Conway." He smiled.
Conway made himself smile in return, knowing that it looked forced, and that the other knew it also.
"You want the Telfi tape," O'Mara said, a trifle less warmly. "Well, Doctor, you've picked a real
weirdie this time. Be sure you get it erased as soon as possible after the job is done believe me, this
isn't one you'll want to keep. Thumb-print this and sit over there."
While the Educator head-band and electrodes were being fitted, Conway tried to keep his face
neutral, and keep from flinching away from the Major's hard, capable hands. O'Mara's hair was a dull,
metallic grey in colour, cut short, and his eyes also had the piercing qualities of metal. Those eyes had
observed his reactions, Conway knew, and now an equally sharp mind was forming conclusions
regarding them. [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
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