Alan E. Nourse Super Pack. Alan E. Nourse

Alan E. Nourse Super Pack - Alan E. Nourse


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from it. As he talked the Black Doctor sat back with his eyes half closed, his face blank, listening and nodding from time to time as the story proceeded.

      And Jack was carefully honest and fair in his account. “We were all of us lost, until Dal Timgar saw the significance of what had happened to Fuzzy,” he said. “His idea of putting the creature through the filter gave us our first specimen of the isolated virus, and showed us how to obtain the antibody. Then after we saw what happened with our initial series of injections, we were really at sea, and by then we couldn’t reach a hospital ship for help of any kind.” He went on to relate Dal’s idea that the virus itself might be the intelligent creature, and recounted the things that happened after Dal went down to talk to the spokesman again with Fuzzy on his shoulder.

      Through it all the Black Doctor listened sourly, glancing occasionally at Dal and saying nothing. “So is that all?” he said when Jack had finished.

      “Not quite,” Jack said. “I want it to be on the record that it was my failure in diagnosis that got us into trouble. I don’t want any misunderstanding about that. If I’d had the wit to think beyond the end of my nose, there wouldn’t have been any problem.”

      “I see,” the Black Doctor said. He pointed to Dal. “So it was this one who really came up with the answers and directed the whole program on this problem, is that right?”

      “That’s right,” Jack said firmly. “He should get all the credit.”

      Something stirred in Dal’s mind and he felt Fuzzy snuggling in tightly to his side. He could feel the cold hostility in the Black Doctor’s mind, and he started to say something, but the Black Doctor cut him off. “Do you agree to that also, Dr. Martin?” he asked Tiger.

      “I certainly do,” Tiger said. “I’ll back up the Blue Doctor right down the line.”

      The Black Doctor smiled unpleasantly and nodded. “Well, I’m certainly happy to hear you say that, gentlemen. I might say that it is a very great relief to me to hear it from your own testimony. Because this time there shouldn’t be any argument from either of you as to just where the responsibility lies, and I’m relieved to know that I can completely exonerate you two, at any rate.”

      Jack Alvarez’s jaw went slack and he stared at the Black Doctor as though he hadn’t heard him properly. “Exonerate us?” he said. “Exonerate us from what?”

      “From the charges of incompetence, malpractice and conduct unbecoming to a physician which I am lodging against your colleague in the Red Service here,” the Black Doctor said angrily. “Of course, I was confident that neither of you two could have contributed very much to this bungling mess, but it is reassuring to have your own statements of that fact on the record. They should carry more weight in a Council hearing than any plea I might make in your behalf.”

      “But—but what do you mean by a Council hearing?” Tiger stammered. “I don’t understand you! This—this problem is solved. We solved it as a patrol team, all of us. We sent in a brand new medical service contract from those people....”

      “Oh, yes. That!” The Black Doctor drew a long pink dispatch sheet from an inner pocket and opened it out. The doctors could see the photo reproductions of their signatures at the bottom. “Fortunately—for you two—this bit of nonsense was brought to my attention at the first relay station that received it. I personally accepted it and withdrew it from the circuit before it could reach Hospital Earth for filing.”

      Slowly, as they watched him, he ripped the pink dispatch sheet into a dozen pieces and tossed it into the disposal vent. “So much for that,” he said slowly. “I can choose to overlook your foolishness in trying to cloud the important issues with a so-called ‘contract’ to divert attention, but I’m afraid I can’t pay much attention to it, nor allow it to appear in the general report. And of course I am forced to classify the Lancet as a plague ship until a bacteriological and virological examination has been completed on both ship and crew. The planet itself will be considered a galactic plague spot until proper measures have been taken to insure its decontamination.”

      The Black Doctor drew some papers from another pocket and turned to Dal Timgar. “As for you, the charges are clear enough. You have broken the most fundamental rules of good judgment and good medicine in handling the 31 Brucker affair. You have permitted a General Practice Patrol ship to approach a potentially dangerous plague spot without any notification of higher authorities. You have undertaken a biochemical and medical survey for which you had neither the proper equipment nor the training qualifications, and you exposed your ship and your crewmates to an incredible risk in landing on such a planet. You are responsible for untold—possibly fatal—damage to over two hundred individuals of the race that called on you for help. You have even subjected the creature that depends upon your own race for its life and support to virtual slavery and possible destruction; and finally, you had the audacity to try to cover up your bungling with claims of arranging a medical service contract with an uninvestigated race.”

      The Black Doctor broke off as an attendant came in the door and whispered something in his ear. Doctor Tanner shook his head angrily, “I can’t be bothered now!”

      “They say it’s urgent, sir.”

      “Yes, it’s always urgent.” The Black Doctor heaved to his feet. “If it weren’t for this miserable incompetent here, I wouldn’t have to be taking precious time away from my more important duties.” He scowled at the Lancet crewmen. “You will excuse me for a moment,” he said, and disappeared into the communications room.

      The moment he was gone from the room, Jack and Tiger were talking at once. “He couldn’t really be serious,” Tiger said. “It’s impossible! Not one of those charges would hold up under investigation.”

      “Well, I think it’s a frame-up,” Jack said, his voice tight with anger. “I knew that some people on Hospital Earth were out to get you, but I don’t see how a Four-star Black Doctor could be a party to such a thing. Either someone has been misinforming him, or he just doesn’t understand what happened.”

      Dal shook his head. “He understands, all right, and he’s the one who’s determined to get me out of medicine. This is a flimsy excuse, but he has to use it, because it’s now or never. He knows that if we bring in a contract with a new planet, and it’s formally ratified, we’ll all get our Stars and he’d never be able to block me again. And Black Doctor Tanner is going to be certain that I don’t get that Star, or die trying.”

      “But this is completely unfair,” Jack protested. “He’s turning our own words against you! You can bet that he’ll have a survey crew down on that planet in no time, bringing home a contract just the same as the one we wrote, and there won’t be any questions asked about it.”

      “Except that I’ll be out of the service,” Dal said. “Don’t worry. You’ll get the credit in the long run. When all the dust settles, he’ll be sure that you two are named as agents for the contract. He doesn’t want to hurt you, it’s me that he’s out to get.”

      “Well, he won’t get away with it,” Tiger said. “We can see to that. It’s not too late to retract our stories. If he thinks he can get rid of you with something that wasn’t your fault, he’s going to find out that he has to get rid of a lot more than just you.”

      But Dal was shaking his head. “Not this time, Tiger. This time you keep out of it.”

      “What do you mean, keep out of it?” Tiger cried. “Do you think I’m going to stand by quietly and watch him cut you down?”

      “That’s exactly what you’re going to do,” Dal said sharply. “I meant what I said. I want you to keep your mouth shut. Don’t say anything more at all, just let it be.”

      “But I can’t stand by and do nothing! When a friend of mine needs help—”

      “Can’t you get it through your thick skull that this time I don’t want your help?” Dal said. “Do me a favor this time. Leave me alone. Don’t stick your thumb


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